Year A
Solemnity of Body and Blood of
Christ
Second Sunday after Pentecost
Image
Spiritual Sustenance
Points to note
If there is a celebration
of First Communion, it will be good to refer to it, especially if any of the
children know of family or friends who will be receiving Jesus for the first
time at that celebration.
The key thing in this
discussion is that we are both body and spirit.
Each has its own realm and each has its own sustenance. The Holy Communion is spiritual food for our
spiritual bodies. To me this is the
simple answer to differentiating between the Real Presence of the Body of Jesus
and apparent appearance of bread.
In the past, we used to
struggle with insisting that the communion wafer is really the body of Jesus,
just that it doesn’t look it. For me, it
is the real body of Jesus, spiritual body and not physical body, though
One more point, this is
the day in our annual liturgical calendar when we celebrate the consecration at
the Last Supper, not Holy Thursday.
Liturgy
Acclamation before the
Gospel
Alleluia! Alleluia!
I am the living bread which has come down from heaven,
says the Lord, anyone who eats this bread will live for ever.
Alleluia!
Gospel
Jesus
has just fed the multitudes with bread and is teaching the disciples about the
significant of the miracle.
The Lord be with you.
All: And also with you.
A Reading from the Holy Gospel according to St
John
All: Glory to you O Lord
(Jn 6:51-58)
Jesus said to the Jews:
“I am the living bread which has come down
from heaven.
Anyone who eats this bread will live for
ever;
and the bread I shall give is my flesh,
for the life of the world.”
Then the Jews started arguing with one another: “How can this man give
us his flesh to eat?” they asked. Jesus
replied:
“I tell you most solemnly,
if you do not eat the flesh of the Son of Man
and drink his blood, you will not have life
in you.
Anyone who does eat my flesh and drink my
blood
has eternal life, and I shall raise him up on
the last day.
For my flesh is real food and my blood is
real drink.
He who eats my flesh and drink my blood
lives in me and I live in him.
As I, who am sent by the living Father,
myself draw life from the Father,
so whoever eats me will draw life from
me.
This is the bread come down from heaven;
not like the bread our ancestors ate: they
are dead,
but anyone who eats this bread will live for
ever.
This is the Gospel of the Lord
Dialogue
Let’s start with
everyone’s favourite topic: food. What
is your favourite food?
Why do we eat? To keep
us alive. To keep us healthy. To give us strength. Elaborate on each of these. How long can we last without food?
You said we eat to give us
strength. Give us strength to do what?
Elaborate on the kind of work that we will do with strength in us.
Explain
that each one of us alive have a physical body as well as a spirit. Having one without the other would normally
mean that you are dead. Explain that
just as the physical body eats physical food to stay alive, keep its physical
body healthy and get physical strength to do physical work, our spirits too
need spiritual food to be spiritually alive, spiritually healthy and get
spiritual strength to do spiritual work.
What kind of spiritual food do we get?
What kind of spiritual work do we do?
Explain to the younger children
that we do not expect them to do much spiritual work yet, that is why they do
not need the Holy Communion yet.
If we eat physical food
but do not do any physical work, where will that food go? Eventually,
down the toilet. I would imagine,
therefore, that if we do not do any spiritual work after eating spiritual food,
that spiritual food will go down a spiritual toilet and we really do not want
that to happen to the Holy Communion that we eat, do we?
If there is time
Explain that the mass is
where we eat our spiritual food and it is mealtime just like our dinner time at
home. At home, we have a dining table,
with a table cloth, and food & drink on the table. At mass, we have a dining table (the altar),
with a table cloth (altar cloth), and food & drink on the table (bread
& wine).
Just like the dining table,
we also have table manners for the meal at mass. We have to turn up on time, dressed properly,
with clean hands (and clean spirits). It
is also a good opportunity to go through the table manners again with those who
are going for communion:
·
Ask for the food
politely (palm raised high, as if you are really eager for it, and don’t grab
it before it reach your palm)
·
Put it in your mouth
straight away (and not play with your food) with the non-receiving hand instead
of popping it all into your mouth
·
Eat it quietly,
with the mouth closed and no chewing noise (yes, you can chew: your physical
teeth is biting into the physical bread, not the spiritual Body of Jesus)
·
Say thank you,
with an acknowledgement (some people do a sign of the cross) and a prayer.
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