THE MASS, THE EUCHARIST:
WHAT ARE YOUR QUESTIONS?
The title of my reflection for this Holy Thursday morning
is, “The Mass, The Eucharist: What Are Your Questions?”
On Holy Thursday we look at, we consider, we ponder, the
great mystery of the Mass, the Last Supper, the Passover. We think about when Jesus celebrated
a Sacred Meal with his disciples on the night before he died. We’ll do that in
this parish at the one Mass we celebrate this day: our Holy Thursday
celebration – tonight at St. John Neumann Church at 7:30.
We'll be celebrating the Passover and the Exodus which moves into the Christian
Passover and the Christian Exodus.
Last night, I was wondering about what to preach on this
morning. I’ve spoken at this 8 AM Holy Thursday Service – every year for the past 10
years or so.
Pause. Silence.
Finally, a question hit me. I’ve been going to Mass and
communion for some 67 years now. After all those Masses and communions, I have
to have some questions about the Mass. What are they? If I had to come up with
one question, what would it be?
The key questions that hit me were: When and why did Jesus
come up with this idea of using bread and wine – and saying, “This is my Body….
This is my Blood…. Take and Eat….. Take and drink…. and Do this in memory of
me”?
Why bread, why wine, why these words? Why these actions? Why
this ceremony, ritual, sacred meal?
Why? Why? Why?
For starters, I realized I really don’t know when he came up with
this idea.
For starters, I realized I can come up with some reflections
to the why?
First the when…. Did the idea hit him during some Passover
meal celebration with Mary and Joseph while growing up in Nazareth?
The Passover Meal was celebrated every year at this time to
remember and to recall that this was a way of thanking God for making us a
people – for calling us out of slavery – so a nobody can become a somebody -
redeeming us from the Pharaoh – as Moses lead us through the waters of the Reed
Sea – into the desert – and to head for the Promised Land. In a rush, with blood on their doorposts - at that
meal, we Jews took bread, took wine, and ate the Pascal Lamb – to recall that moment
of freedom from long ago – but this time eating more slowly.
I’m sure Jesus asked at that meal what every youngest son
asked at that meal, “Why is this night different from every other night?” And
Joseph told his son about Moses – with all the words in the scriptures about
this very night.
When did Jesus come up with this idea of the Mass? The
Eucharist? The Lord’s Supper? We know from our readings tonight – and during
this Holy Week - that the Passover meal
surely had something to do with it.
Or did the thought hit him in everyday daydreaming – from everyday
scenes? Seeing farmers planting wheat seeds…? Seeing vineyard workers picking grapes …? Seeing
a father breaking bread and breaking off a piece of that and handing it to his
child…? Seeing a mom giving her child a sip of her wine…?
Or did he cry when he saw people hungry and starving for
daily bread? Did he cry when he saw religious worship and rituals being done by
rote and simply being lip service?
Those might be the when’s – indefinite when’s at that.
The why is more significant. The why is more my question
more than any question. Why did Jesus choose bread and wine? Why did he choose
the Passover Meal? Why did Jesus tell us to do this in memory of me? Why did
Christians following Jesus celebrate this meal, this Mass, over and over and
over again?
Was it because Jesus saw people who were physically hungry – for bread, for wine, for
anything?
Was it because Jesus saw people who were spiritually hungry?
We know both. We’ve experienced both.
Was it because bread, wine, to become bread and wine, that they
have to go through a long process of dying – wheat being crushed to become
flour – grapes being crushed to become wine. And then the long wait – life is a
lot of waiting. And Jesus knew he was about to crushed – broken – killed.
Was it because a loaf of bread – is one loaf – but when
broken – can become many pieces – can enter many stomachs – uniting a whole
community of people – different people – but becoming one by means of a meal?
So too wine. So too the Pascal lamb.
And we’ve experienced many meals – Thanksgiving, Sunday
dinners, anniversary meals, a great dinner out with friends – a cookout – when
laughter and joy was the sound all around.
Was it because a table and an altar – where a sacred meal
takes place – where a meeting can take place – where a family meal or meeting
can take place – can give us a sense of being centered – connected. It’s nice
to have a place at the table. Some people feel they don’t. Some times some
people like the idea of upstairs – downstairs – and they want to in the up and
put down others.
Was it because a meal is a great time to share words and
food, bread and wine and food?
Was it because a meal is a good time to share not just bread
and wine, but words – words about our life together and life apart. The family
that eats together stays together. The family that does not talk with each
other – and is unaware that they don’t eat together – will not stay together.
The family that does not make sacrifices for each other
won’t stay together.
The family that does not pray together won’t stay together.
The family that does not see their common story – common
heritage – common connection – are not in communion with each other.
The family, the people, who are not really present to each
other, while they eat and afterwards – are not getting what Jesus was about:
being really present – not just in tabernacles, not just in bread and wine, but
in the Body of Christ, member with member as Paul was to tell us – and each
part of this body – is important. We all need each other: those who are handy,
those with a lot of heart, those who see what is needed, those who have an ear
for what is happening, and those who do the footwork.
Was it because a meal is all about service – serving and
being served – and we all need to get that – from the shopping and arranging
the meal – going to the next village to prepare for everything – to the washing
of feet – to the seating each other – to the breaking of the bread – sharing
the cup – listening to each other – and never betraying each other.
Why? Why? Why?
When? When? When?
Today – this Holy Thursday – we ponder these questions once
again.
The title of my reflection is: “The Mass, The Eucharist: What
Are Your Questions?”
What are your questions?
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