The Power of Faith Tested by
the Eucharist
“This saying is hard; who can
accept it?” was the complaint of the first disciples to hear Jesus
pronounce the immortal words, “I am the living bread that came down from heaven…the bread that
I will give is my flesh for the life of the world” (Jn 6:51). It was a decisive moment. A
schism formed in the group of disciples, and some of them walked away,
scandalized by the Eucharistic teaching.
It has always been so. The Church’s
fidelity to the truth of the Eucharist – that the Blessed Sacrament is
the Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity of Jesus Christ Himself – has
been the dividing line for believers in all ages. The phrase, “This
saying is hard,” echoes through the centuries…because it
is hard!
“Apparently,” notes Msgr. Romano
Guardini in his book, Meditations Before Mass, “there is no genuine belief without battle.” He is right: the
Eucharist is a truth for which we must fight.
Let’s face it. Our belief that this
consecrated bread and wine is actually God Himself…well, even for many sincere believers
that’s a bridge too far. The history of heretical alterations of that
teaching and outright rejections of it is clear evidence that it needs
to be defended in every day and age.
However, our faith will grow strong
only to the extent that we hold fast to this divine teaching. It is
eternal truth.
Msgr. Guardini says that “revealed
truth is neither a continuation nor a new dimension of earthly truth;
it’s something that completely overthrows earthly truth.” That is why
Jesus didn’t alter His words in the slightest when the disciples
grumbled. He didn’t call the defectors back when they abandoned
Him.
Rather, He forced them to make an
either-or decision. Either
what this man says is true or it isn’t. Either I surrender to it or I
reject it. There is no
middle ground, “only a hard, pure demand for a decision,” says
Guardini.
The Apostles didn’t understand the
full mystery any more than we do, but they surrendered to it and were
strengthened by God’s grace when they did. Their faith was tested by
the Eucharist, and, Msgr. Guardini adds that “it was to such
rigorously tested men that Jesus entrusted the mystery of the Holy
Eucharist.”
We must also go through this trial
by fire. To have faith in what the Church believes about the Eucharist
means you and I must fight for it. We must engage in battle, sometimes
with those closest to us, who may walk away shaking their heads like
many of the first hearers of the teaching.
This is not a theoretical
possibility in today’s world. Because of the general loss of faith, it
may require us to gently correct those who presume to receive the
Eucharist when they are living in contradiction to the truth and/or in
a state of unrepentant mortal sin. True believers cannot stand by idly
and let this hypocrisy take root in their hearts!
We may be ridiculed by the growing
number of militant atheists in our society or challenged to explain
how we can be so silly as to believe in a God who sacrificed His Son
in such a scandalous way. In the face of such a challenge, we will be
forced to take up arms.
So be it. That is the burden of
the true believer: “There is no genuine belief without battle.” The
scandal of the Eucharist continues to this day, and we are its tested
warriors.
Thanks for joining me in this
series on the bread of life discourse and let's continue to be Faithful
Echoes of the Eucharist.
Yours in Christ,
Thomas J McKenna http://www.catholicaction.org/
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