AD SENSE

24th Week, Monday, Sept 12

 24th Week, Monday, Sept 12

1 Cor 11:17-26, 33 / Luke 7:1-10

Paul rebukes the Corinthians; Your meetings do more harm than good.

Early Christians met each week for a "fellowship meal." Paul calls this meal the "Lord's Supper." In the context of this "fellowship meal," or "Lord's Supper," Christians celebrated the Eucharist, or Mass.

In today's reading, Paul rebukes the Corinthians for abuses that are starting to take place at the Lord's Supper. Factions are forming; some people are refusing to share their abundance with their poorer brothers and sisters; other people are even getting drunk.

These abuses are destroying the proper atmosphere of sharing and love for the celebration of the Eucharist.

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How filled with sharing and love are we when we celebrate the Eucharist? "The effect of our sharing in the body and blood of Christ is to change us into what we receive." Pope St. Leo the Great

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Paul makes a strong statement against the Corinthians for their division between rich and poor at the Eucharistic celebration. Underlying his reprimand is that the Corinthians act against something basic to Christianity: the Eucharistic body of Christ builds up the Church as his ecclesial body. If they eat the one body of Christ and share the same cup, they ought to be one. They are to be the sign of the unity of all humankind in Christ.

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Saintly Pagan

To have the kind of faith that fills God with admiration is no small feat! The faith and conduct of the unnamed Roman officer were so profound that his words have entered the Rite of Communion in the Holy Mass. He definitely deserved it, for he exhibited many evangelical virtues: a profound faith that honored God and confessed his own unworthiness; deep trust that Jesus would do the right thing for his servant; genuine concern for the welfare of his servant – being an officer, he had far greater matters to busy himself with and no one would have faulted him if he hadn’t cared for his ailing servant; though a Roman official, he respected the religious traditions of the Jews and provided them with a synagogue… What greater proof Jesus needed for his love of God and neighbor! This saintly pagan must definitely serve as a model for us, Christians.

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As much as we strive for perfection, we also have to admit that nothing can be perfect. No matter how the word is used, such as "the perfect car", or "the perfect program", or "the perfect fit", in time to come, something will give way, and what can go wrong will go wrong. As much as the Church is divine and human, many a times the human aspect of the Church seems to come across more prominently with its failures and shortcomings. But this is actually nothing new. It has happened before, such that even at the essentials and fundamentals, the weakness of the human aspect of the Church had manifested.

In the early Church, St. Paul highlighted one area that had degenerated into profanity, and of all things it is the Eucharist. Something had gone really wrong that even when the community came for the Eucharist, there were separate factions and discrimination and some were even getting drunk. Obviously, the sense of the sacred and reverence for the divine had diminished to an almost sacrilegious level. It cannot be denied that in this present day and age of the Church, there were occasions when the divine liturgy is subjected to human sacrilege. 

We the Church are called to manifest the divine presence of God especially in our liturgy, but there are times when the devotees of other religions show us that they have a deeper reverence for the divine. Like Jesus said of the centurion in the gospel: Not even in Israel have i found faith like this. Let us strive to be a people of faith, to be a people that shows others how to revere God and how to offer Him a worthy worship. We do not need to have a perfect worship; we only need faith to offer God a worthy worship.

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Prayer

Father, whose purpose it is to unite everyone in Jesus your Son, do not allow us to have separate tables or exclusive reservations neither for the Eucharist nor in our communities. Whatever way we come, rich or poor, saints or sinners, healthy or weak, keep us united in mutual respect and love in the one body of your Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen