Monday, June 8, 2026

 

Monday of the Tenth Week in Ordinary Time

(II Kings 17:1-6; Matthew 5:1-12)

Both readings today speak of the Lord’s care for those who love Him.  The context of the first reading is important.  Elijah is announcing to King Ahab God’s guilty verdict.  Israel’s ruler has married a pagan woman and worshipped her god.  Having spoken truth to power, Elijah is forced into exile.  He might perish, but the Lord has ravens bring him food.

Once again, we hear the gospel pronouncing happiness to those who overcome pride and do good.  Although the world may be blind to their sanctity, the Lord will not let it go unrewarded.  He will grant Jesus’ faithful disciples the most wanted real estate of all, a place in the Kingdom of heaven.

As good as it sounds and as reliable as it has been, we may still doubt God’s beneficence.  Doubting and temporizing, we don’t place ourselves in God’s hand when in trouble.  Like me, you probably ask yourself why God is so good to you.  We just cannot place ourselves outside the infinite reach of His mercy.

Sunday, June 7, 2026

SOLEMNITY OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST

(Deuteronomy 8:2-3, 14-16; 1 Corinthians 10:16-17; John 6:51-58)

We might call this time of the year “the season of the great mysteries.” Last Sunday we celebrated the Holy Trinity, known as the central mystery of the Christian faith. Although it does not belong to this season, the mystery of the Incarnation, or Christmas, is also of extraordinary importance. Likewise, the Resurrection of Jesus from the dead holds a transcendent place among the mysteries of our faith. We complete this list of principal mysteries with the feast we celebrate today: the Body and Blood of Christ, or Corpus Christi.

Before reflecting on this solemnity, it is important to understand what a mystery of faith is. It is not a puzzle to be solved by the human mind. Rather, it is a revelation from God to be contemplated, accepted, and incorporated into our lives. We speak, for example, of the “mysteries of the Rosary,” such as the Assumption of Mary and the Transfiguration of the Lord. By contemplating them, we realize that they are not entirely beyond our grasp. Through the grace of the Holy Spirit, we too hope will be assumed into the Kingdom of God where we shall behold Christ’s glory.

When we speak of the “Body and Blood of Christ,” we are referring to the Eucharist, the sacrament that strengthens and deepens our relationship with Jesus Christ. In his presence we experience the first glimmers of eternal life. In this way, we move toward the universal human goal of everlasting happiness. Today’s readings teach us what this sacrament is and how it transforms our lives.

In the Gospel, Jesus declares that he gives his own body to eat and his own blood to drink. Because the Jews respond with disbelief, Jesus emphasizes that he is not speaking figuratively. He repeats what he has just said but uses an even stronger expression: whoever eats his flesh remains in him. How can the flesh of a person be consumed without violating human dignity? The answer introduces us to the Eucharistic mystery. Eucharistic bread has been inwardly transformed into Christ’s Body for the benefit of the one who eats it. Human dignity is not violated because what is consumed is the appearance and qualities of bread, not those of human flesh. Yet beneath the appearance of bread remains the reality of Christ’s Body.

As evidence of this mystery, the Body of Christ does not diminish within the person who receives it; rather, it grows. In the second reading, Saint Paul asks, “The bread that we break, is it not a participation in the body of Christ?” Of course it is. The Body of Christ, which is also the Church, grows as we are strengthened by the Eucharist. In a famous statement, Saint Augustine explains this phenomenon: ordinary food is transformed into the person who eats it; but when we receive the Body of Christ, it is the communicant who is transformed into Christ.

The Eucharist is also food for the journey. The first reading comes from Moses’ final address to the Israelites. There he reminds them that the Lord fed them with another extraordinary “bread” in the desert. That “bread,” the manna, enabled them to continue their journey and become the People of God. In the same way, the Eucharist enables us to persevere through the struggles of life. Through it we can overcome temptations, grow in charity, and endure life’s trials until we reach our final destination with God.

The mysteries of faith are not meant only to be contemplated; they are also meant to be lived. With regard to the Body and Blood of Christ, living this mystery requires that we give positive answers to several questions. Do we give the Eucharist the honor it deserves by preparing to receive it through the proper fast, by seeking forgiveness for our sins, and by responding with a sincere “Amen” when it is handed to us? Do we observe the commandments and teachings of the Church, cooperate with the initiatives of our parish, and take an active role in its ministries? Finally, are we preparing for the end of our life by treating our family members with love, sharing our abundance with the poor, and avoiding evil?

Although living in this way requires effort, it is well worth it. It is no accident that the Eucharist, the Body and Blood of Christ, is called “the source and summit” of our Catholic faith.  It is the source because it nourishes us on the journey, and it is the summit because it becomes the heavenly banquet.

 

Friday, June 5, 2026

 

Memorial of Saint Boniface, Bishop and Martyr

(II Timothy 3:7-10; Mark 12:35-37)

The two readings today are deceptively rich in ideas.  In the first, St. Paul reminds Timothy of the different uses of Scripture.  Beyond its help in praying, the Word of God instructs and can be used to refute mistaken beliefs.  In today’s gospel Jesus employs Scripture for this third purpose.

Jesus has won the crowd’s esteem by overcoming the challenges of his religious adversaries.  Now he instructs the people with a display of mastery over the Holy Writ.  He brings up a claim of the scribes that the Messiah is merely the Son of David.  Later he will tell the Sanhedrin that he is the Messiah, the Son of God who will sit on God’s right hand.  For now, he just shows how even David recognizes that the Messiah (or Christ) is more than his Son; he is also his Lord.  Jesus uses Psalm 110 to make his point.  David presumedly wrote the psalm, which says: “The Lord [that is God] said to my Lord [that is Christ], ‘Sit at my right hand …’”

We cannot underestimate the value of Scripture. St. Jerome said, "Ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ."  Scripture is like a roadmap to get us through life safely.  If we do not consult it regularly, we are going to lose our way to salvation.

Thursday, June 4, 2026

 

Thursday of the Ninth Week in Ordinary Time

(II Timothy 2:8-15; Mark 12:28-34)

We nod affirmingly to the words of Jesus in today’s gospel.  “Yes,” we say, “we are to love God above all and to love our neighbors as ourselves.”  But then, as Paul points out in the first reading, we quibble about words.  “What does it mean to say, “above all”?  we ask, and “How can I be expected to show the same love to another household as I do my own?”

Responses to our queries need not be abstract.  “Above all” means that we realize, as Bishop Robert Barron frequently says, that our lives are not about ourselves but about God.  We are to seek what He wants of us, not what we may like for ourselves.  I might enjoy watching sports events at the bar with my friends on Sunday evenings, but my conscience – that is God speaking -- tells me to spend time at the nursing home visiting an old relative.

As everything else in the world, love should be ordered.  We can hardly pay as much attention to the needs of all who are around us as we do to ourselves and our families.  Loving our neighbor as ourselves means that we don’t forget them as we proportion our resources.  Certainly, our children have a greater claim on our time than the neighbor’s children.  But those children too require our consideration and effort. 

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

 Memorial of Saint Charles Lwanga and Companions, Martyrs

 II Timothy 1:1-3.6-12; Mark 12:18-27)

In A Grief Observed, his memoir of dealing with the death of his wife, C.S. Lewis exhibits no euphoria about eventual reunion.  He almost dismisses the idea saying that it is not biblical and, in any case, cannot be a replay of earthly bliss.  In this last remark Lewis reflects the surprising teaching of Jesus in today’s gospel.

 The context of the passage is a debate between Jesus and a group of Sadducees, the priestly party which does not believe in the resurrection of the dead.  The Sadducees propose to Jesus a ridiculous scenario of seven brothers marrying in succession the same woman in order to give the first brother-husband an heir.  Then they pose the question, “’At the resurrection when they arise, whose wife shall she be?’’’  Jesus responds that the Sadducees misunderstand the nature of resurrected life where marriage between man and woman does not exist.

 Although Christians eagerly look forward to eternal life, it is best that we not try to describe it.  Saying that it is like an eternal honeymoon seems to conflict with what Jesus is saying here.  Describing it as an eternal liturgy is likely to take away many people’s interest.  The idea of an eternal banquet may raise more interest, but sound theologians have commented that there is no corporal satiation in heaven.  We just don’t know what eternal life is like, yet we do know that it brings happiness eminently worth striving for.