Institution of the Real Presence
                               
    Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J.

Our focus here is on the institution of the Real Presence. What do we
mean? We mean what Christ did at the Last Supper, He now is doing
every time Mass is offered. Why? Because on Holy Thursday He ordained
the Apostles as priests and thus gave them a share in His own power of
transubstantiation. What had been bread and wine becomes the body and
blood of Christ. How? By words of consecration.

What is the Real Presence? The most authoritative teaching: on the Real
Presence is the solemn definition of the Council of Trent.

The body and blood, together with the soul and divinity of our Lord Jesus
Christ and, therefore, the whole Christ is truly, really and substantially
contained in the sacrament of the most Holy Eucharist.

What is the Church saying? She is saying the same identical Jesus who
was conceived at Nazareth, born in Bethlehem, crucified on Calvary; who
rose from the dead on Easter Sunday and ascended into heaven on
Ascension Thursday – this same Jesus, the whole Christ (totus Christus) is
now on earth in the
Blessed Sacrament of the Eucharist.

Why the Real Presence? It is not hard to see why Christ is now on earth, in
the fullness of His humanity and divinity. He promised to be with us all
days, even to the end of the world. He wanted us to profess our faith in His
Incarnation, our hope in His omnipotence as the Incarnate God, and our
love for Him, the Creator who became a man, and who now dwells in our
midst, no less truly, although invisibly to our bodily eyes, than He lived
visibly among His contemporaries in first century Palestine.

How to Respond to the Real Presence. We commonly and correctly speak
of Eucharistic Adoration. We should, because in the Eucharist is present
the whole Christ, the Incarnate Son of God.

During His visible stay on earth, He received the adoration of those who
believed in Him, What did they believe? They believed one who looked like
a man, spoke and acted like a man, was really the living God.

We believe it is the same Jesus Christ now present in the Holy Eucharist.
What do we see? Only what looks like bread and tastes like wine. What do
we believe? We believe this is no longer bread and wine, but Jesus Christ,
the man who received His humanity from His Mother Mary, but who is the
Second Person of the Trinity who existed from all eternity.

Adoration, therefore, is the primary response of our faith to the Real
Presence.

But that is only the foundation. On this worship of adoration, we should
build the whole edifice of the spiritual life.

We should express our love for Him since He is now on earth as the proof
of His love for us.

We should ask Him for what we need, since He promised to give us
everything we ask for in His name.

We should talk with Him, since that is why He is present. He wants us to be
present too, by communicating with Him our deepest thoughts and
receiving from Him the illuminations and inspirations only He can confer.

We should not hesitate to ask Him to work miracles, now, as He had
performed wonders during His visible stay in Palestine. All it takes is faith
on our part: faith in His Incarnation, faith in His Real Presence, and faith in
His power to do what is humanly impossible, because He is the Almighty
One.

Copyright © 2003 by Inter Mirifica