• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

  • CF has always been a site that welcomes people from different backgrounds and beliefs to participate in discussion and even debate. That is the nature of its ministry. In view of recent events emotions are running very high. We need to remind people of some basic principles in debating on this site. We need to be civil when we express differences in opinion. No personal attacks. Avoid you, your statements. Don't characterize an entire political party with comparisons to Fascism or Communism or other extreme movements that committed atrocities. CF is not the place for broad brush or blanket statements about groups and political parties. Put the broad brushes and blankets away when you come to CF, better yet, put them in the incinerator. Debate had no place for them. We need to remember that people that commit acts of violence represent themselves or a small extreme faction.

This Sunday, Four Ways Jesus Replicates Himself in Every Parish in the World

Michie

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Feb 5, 2002
183,845
67,017
Woods
✟6,019,850.00
Country
United States
Gender
Female
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
Sunday is Corpus Christi in the United States, the Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ, Year C. It is a day to celebrate the Eucharist, which is uniquely the real presence of Jesus Christ. It only looks like bread: The host becomes the whole Christ — body, blood, soul and divinity.

But the readings this Sunday show that the host itself is just one of the ways Jesus replicates himself before (and after) Mass. Here are five takeaways from Sunday Readings columns at this site and the Extraordinary Story podcast.

First: In the Eucharist, Jesus replicates himself to be at our side in our church.

The reading from Luke is often called the multiplication of the loaves, and Church Fathers, the Catechism and eminent theologians throughout the years call what happens in the story “multiplication,” so that’s not wrong.

But as Erasmo Leiva-Merikakis points out, writing about Matthew’s version of the story, “the text carefully stresses the passing of the loaves from hand to hand,” and he asks, “In whose hands were the loaves in fact ‘multiplied?’ … Apparently the bread grew in the distribution of it, as a result of both Jesus’s blessing and of the disciples’ collaboration with him.”

St. Thomas Aquinas quotes St. Hilary saying essentially the same thing. “The five loaves are not multiplied into more, but fragments take the place of fragments, the substance growing whether upon the tables or in the hands that took them up, I know not.”

Aquinas also quotes St. Rabanus Maurus saying Jesus “creates no new food items, but having taken what the disciples had, he gave thanks.”

Continued below.