Where the solemnity of Corpus
Christi is not observed as a holy day,
it is assigned to the Sunday after Trinity Sunday.
Anglicans have certain reservations about this Sunday’s provisions. Many of them
would use a set of propers provided for the Thanksgiving for the Institution
of Holy Communion on the previous Thursday, but few would want its propers to
replace those of this Sunday. They also express some reservation about doctrinal
feasts (but see Trinity Sunday!) as opposed to the anamnesis of events in salvation
history.
Nevertheless, the very genius of Scripture ensures that the readings set forth
saving events rather than doctrines. And whatever the final disposition of An
Agreed Statement on Eucharistic Doctrine, published in 1971 by the Anglican-Roman
Catholic International Commission, may be, one can at least go forward with the
confidence that many of us talk what is very largely a common language about
this subject.
Reading
I: Deuteronomy 8:2-3, 14b-16a
This passage comes from a recital of the events of the Exodus
and of the wanderings of the Israelites in the desert. It recalls
especially the trials to which the people were exposed—hunger,
thirst, fiery serpents, and scorpions—and the provisions
that Y(HWH) made to relieve them: the water from the rock and
the manna.
Paul himself treated the water from the rock and the manna as types of the two
great Christian sacraments of baptism and holy communion (1
Corinthians 10:1-4);
and in the discourse of the bread from heaven in John 6, part of which will be
read
as the gospel of this day, the manna is likewise treated as a type of the Eucharistic
Bread.
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Responsorial
Psalm: 147:12-13, 14-15, 19-20
The same selection of verses from Psalm 147 is provided for
the second Sunday after Christmas. It is appropriate for any
festal occasion, but its particular relevance to Corpus Christi
is found in the second line of the second stanza: “he
fills you with the finest of wheat.”
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Reading
II: 1 Corinthians 10:16-17
One might have expected that the second reading for this
solemnity would be 1
Corinthians 10:1-4, in which Paul interprets
the manna of Deuteronomy 8 typologically of the Eucharist. Instead, we
have a Eucharistic passage from a later point in the same chapter.
It is becoming the commonly accepted view that in verse 16 Paul is quoting a
traditional Eucharistic formula. This is indicated by the quite Jewish expression “the
cup of blessing.” The verb “we bless” is also Jewish (berakah) and
contrasts with Paul’s usual preference for the Greek equivalent, eucharistein, “to
give thanks.”
The idea of “participation” [koinonia]
in the body/blood is probably also Pauline, though Hellenistic, and represents
an exegesis of the words over the bread and the cup. Koinonia has not
merely a symbolic but a strong realistic sense.
“
Body and blood” refer
not to things in themselves but to an event and a person— to Christ giving
himself in his redemptive death. In holy communion he offers real participation
in himself as he gives himself to his sacrificial death.
This language draws
out explicitly the meaning of his words and actions at the Last Supper.
People have often wondered why the usual order—bread/cup—is reversed
here and have sometimes speculated that there were early communities that celebrated
the Eucharist in this order. This is hardly likely, for Paul himself cites another
traditional formula in chapter 11 with the normal order—bread/cup.
The reversal must be explained from the fact that Paul wishes to give further
comment of his own upon the bread/body word and drops the cup/blood word out
of the picture.
For verse 17 has to be seen as Pauline comment. And it involves
a remarkable shift of sense. The word “body,” used Christologically
and sacramentally in the traditional formula, is now taken up in an ecclesiological
sense.
The body is now not the bread but “we,” the community that
participates
in Christ’s sacramental body in the Supper. “Participation in Jesus
and
his (sacramental) body” becomes identical with incorporation into the Church
as the Body of Christ (Ernst Käsemann).
Doubtless Paul is led to this exegetical step because of the difficulties at
Corinth, which he will elaborate upon in the next chapter. The Corinthians held
an all too individualistic attitude toward the Eucharist. For them, it was a
guarantee of personal salvation.
For Paul, however, it binds one not only to
Christ but also to one’s neighbors, to the Christian community, with all
the
obligations that entails. The Eucharist has a horizontal as well as a vertical
direction.
It was this passage that inspired St. Augustine to write his well-known words: “If
you wish to understand the body of Christ, hear the Apostle speaking to the faithful:
‘Now you are the body and members of Christ.’ If you, then, are the body and
members of Christ, your mystery is laid on the Table of the Lord, your mystery
you receive” (Letter 272).
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Gospel:
John 6:51-58
The bread discourse from John
6 has been much discussed in recent years. The problems are: (1) Is the whole
discourse Eucharistic? (2) Are only verses 51c-58 Eucharistic? (3) Are verses
51c-58 a later addition to the text?
It is clear that verse 51c (“and the bread which I shall give for the life
of the world is my flesh”) represents a turning point in the discourse.
The first part speaks throughout of the bread from heaven as typified by the
manna. “Eating” is then a metaphor for faith.
The word “flesh,” introduced
for the first time in verse 51c, could also refer to the incarnation
rather than
to the Eucharist, though the words “shall give for the life of the world” extend
the thought beyond the incarnation itself to the atoning death.
But when we get
to verse 53, which speaks not only of eating the flesh but also of drinking the
blood of the Son of man, the Eucharistic reference is beyond all doubt. This
led Bultmann to regard verses 51c-58 as an interpolation by an ecclesiastical
redactor.
In the view of the present writer, the discourse is to be viewed as an integrated
whole, without resort to the interpolation hypothesis. The background of the
whole chapter is the early Church’s celebration of the Eucharist proper
in the context of a meal.
The first part of the discourse, down through verse
51b, which
focuses on the bread from heaven, is, we would suggest, a meditation on the agape.
The second half, verses 51c-58, is a meditation on the Eucharist proper and is
based on a Johannine tradition of the institution narrative.
Looked at from another perspective, the whole discourse outlines the events of
salvation history, the coming of the Christ as the bread from heaven into the
world in the incarnation (vv. 26-51b), the surrender of himself in his atoning
death (v. 51c), the availability of his surrendered life as the nourishment of
the faithful in holy communion (vv. 53-58)
John does not regard the sacrament
as a thing in itself, detached from the total saving event of Christ, but as
the means by which this saving event is constantly made available for present
participation in the life of the Church.
We note, too, how in Johannine idiom the double aspect of the Eucharist expressed
in the earlier institution narratives (Paul and the Synoptists) is preserved.
The
Eucharist makes the past present for participation (“flesh” and
“blood” referring back to Christ’s death on Calvary), and it
makes
the future (“I will raise him up at the last day”; “will live
because of me”; and “will live for ever”) equally present (“has
eternal life”).
Note also that the Eucharistic part of the discourse does
not lose sight of the manna typology: “not such as the fathers ate and
died.”
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Reginald H. Fuller |
Copyright © 1984
by The Order of St. Benedict, Inc., Collegeville, Minnesota.
All
rights reserved. Used by permission from The Liturgical
Press, Collegeville, Minnesota 56321
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Preaching the Lectionary: The Word of God for the Church Today
Reginald H. Fuller. The Liturgical Press. 1984 (Revised Edition),
pp. 104-107.
New in 2006, the third edition!
To purchase or
learn more about the third edition of Preaching the Lectionary go
to http://www.litpress.org/Detail.aspx?ISBN=0814627927
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Used by permission of Liturgy Training Publications. This art may be reproduced only by parishes who purchase the collection
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