HUMAN SOLIDARITY THROUGH THE BLOOD OF JESUS
CORPUS CHRISTI
Saint Cecilia Catholic Community, Palm Springs, CA
June 03, 2018 – 10:30 AM
Exodus 24:3-8 Psalm 116:12-13;5-18
Hebrews 9:11-15 Mark 14:12-16;22-26
+ In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Spirit, AMEN.
Today is the feast of Corpus Christi, a Latin expression
that means, “Body of Christ.” In many churches, the people will hear homilies
on Eucharistic adoration, the image of the Church as the Body of Christ, and
lots of music about identifying bread with Christ’s Body. We will be doing some
of that, too. In fact, today’s Mass will include “One Bread, One Body,” and finish
with a rousing rendition of, “I am the Bread of Life,” but this morning I’m
going to talk specifically about the blood of Jesus. After all, the Church
calendar denominates today as “The Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ,”
so today we’re going to give the Blood of Jesus some semblance of equal time,
which is particularly appropriate, considering that we commemorate the shedding
of the blood of Jesus every time we celebrate Mass.
We often think
of our blood as defining who we are. We think of ourselves in terms of our
bloodlines. In Judaism, one is Jewish if
one has a Jewish mother. A matrilineal system of kinship makes infinite sense:
the blood that runs through a child’s veins in the womb comes from her or his
mother. Applying that idea to myself, I am Polish. My mother was Polish, born
of a Polish mother. Sharon, however, is Russian. She was born in New Jersey to
a Russian mother who was born of a Russian mother. Poles and Russians are both Slavic
people; that’s perhaps why Sharon and I get along so well. It’s also perhaps
why we both have at least a small amount of musical talent. That Slavs are
musically inclined is amply demonstrated by the lives of Poles like Frédéric
Chopin and Ignacy Paderewski, and Russians Sergei Rachmaninoff and Peter Tchaikovsky,
and of course,. Natalya’s fabulous piano-playing here every Sunday. Natalya, like Sharon, is Russian.
Just as the blood of our mothers gave us life, so too did
Mary, from whom Jesus derived His blood. We as a church hold that Jesus is
fully divine and fully human. Mary is essential to the incarnation, because She
gave Jesus His human nature. That Jesus could bleed demonstrates that Jesus
shared a common humanity with us. Just as we bleed, Jesus did, too.
But to truly understand Jesus, we must understand His Jewish
background. Jesus was not a Christian. He was born a Jew, lived as a Jew,
prayed as Jew, and died a Jew. For Jesus, the scriptures were the Old
Testament, that compilation of forty-six books that comprises more of the Bible
than do the twenty-seven books of the New Testament.
In the Old Testament, blood has significant theological
meaning. The Passover celebration remembers the blood on the doorposts of houses
of the Hebrew people in Egypt and their deliverance in the Exodus through the
Red Sea. Blood can also symbolize woes and terrors. Traditionally, however,
blood is associated by Jews with death and sacrifice. You may recall the story
of Cain murdering his brother Abel. You may recall that they were arguing over
what kind of sacrifice is most pleasing to God, perhaps the first recorded
“worship war” in Judeo-Christian history, and like those of those resulting
from the Protestant rebellion of the 16th Century, it resulted in the loss of
human life. When God confronted Abel about it, Abel’s blood cried out to God
from the ground, prompting God to ask Cain where Abel was and to remind him
that he was his brother’s keeper.
Israelite worship is depicted in Exodus, Leviticus, and
Numbers, derived from what scholars called the P, or “priestly source” that
originated after the Jews returned from the Babylonian Exile. A most prominent
feature of ancient Jewish worship is animal sacrifice, which was quite typical
of other religions of the tribes in the area where the Jews were situated. Like
those other tribes, the Jews were known for bloody animal sacrifices wherein
animals were slaughtered and burned on and altar, first in the moveable
tabernacle of the Jewish tribes wandering in the desert after the Exodus from
Egypt, and then in the Temple at Jerusalem. The Jews of that era had very
specific regulations for animal sacrifices, described in considerable detail in
the books of Exodus and Leviticus. The most important part of any animal
sacrifice, however, was the disposal of the blood at the altar. Whether dashed
against its sides, or smeared on its horns, this ritual act made the sacrifice
valid; in fact, it distinguished sacrifice from mere slaughter.
Those sacrifices were offered as gifts to God. Most common
was the so-called “burnt offering”, where entire animals were consumed by fire
attempting to win God’s favor. And then there was also a so-called “sin
offering”, wherein animals were sacrificed to appease God’s anger at human sin.
Blood can symbolize life rather than death, and can be
regarded as an agent of purification rather than defilement. We can see the
shedding of blood by Jesus as a source of life rather than death, because in
Judaism, blood represents life itself. That
when we are without blood we are dead is an undisputed biological fact. However, Jews believed people were not
supposed to drink blood. That is why many of the Jews to whom Jesus preached
could not stomach His sayings in the Bread of Life discourses in the Gospel of
John, wherein Jesus said, “whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood will have
eternal life.” Jews today who observe Kosher dietary restrictions that arose
from the Book of Leviticus insist on meat being prepared such that the blood be
drained from the animal after slaughter before it is butchered for human
consumption. The theory is that no living creature can eat life itself because
all the lives belong to God as does human life.
The author of our second reading from Hebrews, whose
identity is unknown, contrasts the sacrifices of the Jewish high priest on the
Day of Atonement with the sacrifice of Christ on Good Friday. In Judaism, the
Day of Atonement, known as Yom Kippur, was anciently celebrated with the
sacrifice of a bull and a goat. The bull would be killed and its blood
spattered on the Ark of the Covenant (that’s the place in a Jewish house of
worship where the Torah is stored), as a sin offering for the sins of the
priest, while a goat was sacrificed and its blood spattered on the Ark for the
sins of the people, whatever they may have been. (I guess they used a bull for
the clergy because they’re more sinful!) In any event, however, the sacrifice
of the blood of Jesus was different. His sacrifice happened in God’s heavenly
tabernacle and involved His own precious blood, rather than animal blood.
The blood of Jesus as purifier reminds me of a prayer in the
traditional Anglican liturgy that reads in part “…that our bodies may be made
clean by His body [that is, the body of Jesus], and our souls washed through His
most precious blood...” When I heard this prayer Sunday after Sunday as a
little boy, I wondered if there was some bodily organ inside ourselves called
the soul, hypothesizing that what I drank from the chalice would somehow find
its way there and clean it. As I matured, however, I learned that the author of
the prayer intended it to be allegorical, not literal.
The underlying message is that when we receive the sacrament
of the Eucharist, it doesn’t just pass through us like common food. Holy
Communion is beyond ordinary bread and wine.
As the Real Physical Presence of Jesus within us, it operates on a
mysterious, primordial level. Holy Communion does something to us. That’s why, since I was a little kid, I have
always made it my business, come what may, to get myself to Holy Communion
every week, and will continue to do so. I never take any vacation that does not
include going to Mass at least once a week.
As St. Theresa of Avila tells us, “There is no better help to perfection
than frequent Communion.” Let us also not forget Venerable Father John of Avila,
who said: “Whoever deters souls from frequent Communion does the work of the
devil. Yes; for the devil has a great horror of this sacrament, from
which souls derive immense strength to advance in divine love.”
Get that. The sacrament of the Eucharist gives us strength
to advance in divine love. There, Father John hits the nail on the head. Christianity
is a religion based on love, a love that begins with God. When we receive Holy Communion, we receive
God’s grace, that is, another way of saying, we receive God’s love; therefore,
it’s no surprise that Vatican Two declared the Eucharist to be, “the source and
summit of Christian life.”
Holy Communion focuses our minds on God, and when our minds
are truly and exclusively on God, the Devil cannot invade our conscience and
lead us away into the path of evil. Holy Communion is just that, communion, a
sharing of the Body and Blood of Christ.
That is why we drink from a common cup rather than individual cups. I
know some churches do use individual cups, but my opinion is that such a custom
emphatically denies the solidarity of communion between brothers and sisters in
Christ gathered around the Altar of God. But even more destructive of that
solidarity is excluding people from communion, for whatever reason, which I
regard as a total derogation of a person as a member of God’s family, a family
based on God’s love freely offered to all. We as a church must offer communion
made holy by God as a sign of human solidarity, if we are to credibly preach
solidarity to the world beyond our walls. When we allow a crack in that
solidarity, we give the devil an opening to sneak into us and do his mischief
of dividing us against each other.
It is God’s love that made us what we are, and keeps us
going. God’s love for humanity knows no boundaries. God’s love draws us all
together as one family. Just as each individual person is created in God’s
image as God’s beloved children, so too must human communities reflect God’s
image.
The red blood running through our veins and arteries, the
same blood that ran through the Body of Jesus, unites us in solidarity as one
family of God. Yet so many forces in our world want to divide humanity into
opposing camps in competition with each other for survival, natives versus
immigrants, majority race versus minority races, taxpayers versus transfer
payment recipients, and on and on. We saw that in the 2016 elections, as those controlling
political advertising exploited those rivalries for their own gains. Public
policy based on what will work most compassionately and efficiently, based on
objective facts and neutral scientific criteria, was replaced by policy viewed
through ideological lenses. The common blood that binds humanity to one another
in solidarity was nowhere mentioned by either liberal or conservative
politicians. The result is policies that benefit individuals and groups rather
than the common good.
Until we replace competition with cooperation, all, not just
a few, individuals will not truly be able to better their lot in life. Pope
Paul the Sixth aptly crystalized the problem when he proclaimed, in his
encyclical, Populorum Progressio, when he declared, “Development of the
individual necessarily entails a joint effort for the development of the human
race as a whole.” The language of that encyclical recognized human
interdependence and its relation to the common good. Human rights and human solidarity are equally
dependent on each other as mutual necessities.
Joint efforts require cooperation, not rivalries, but what
has happened is that competitive individualism has been augmented with
competition between rival groups, nation against nation, political party
against political party, and so on, with the recognition of our common humanity
as people created in God’s image as God’s children nowhere to be found. Whether
we are talking about individual or group rights, the principle is the same: no
one has any rights unless they are willing to accept duties of reciprocity and
cooperation. Equality and mutuality are the cornerstones of a truly humane
world grounded in solidarity arising from the recognition of basic human rights
for all as the basics of human dignity: food, clean air and water, shelter,
medical care, intimacy, and education.
Yes, I am proud of my Polish blood, but I am even prouder of
my humanity, as a person created in God’s image, who shares human blood with every
other person on the planet, the same blood as Jesus. As a priest, I serve not
only Saint Cecilia’s as its shepherd, but the entire people of God. So too,
must all of you also in your respective ministries, lay or ordained. You are not
a better person than others because you are white, because you are educated,
because you are wealthy, or because you are American. The same red blood runs
through your veins as that of all of humanity. As difficult as that might be for you to
accept, it is the truth.
I will close with some words from Pope Francis. I don’t
agree with him on everything…I wish I could change his mind on ordaining women
and same sex marriage…but he offers the entire world much of value. In July,
2013, in Rio De Janeiro, he declared,
“Everybody, according to his or her particular opportunities
and responsibilities, should be able to make a personal contribution to putting
an end to so many social injustices. The culture of selfishness and
individualism that often prevails in our society is not, I repeat, not what
builds up and leads to a more habitable world: rather, it is the culture of
solidarity that does so; the culture of solidarity means seeing others not as
rivals or statistics, but brothers and sisters. And we are all brothers and
sisters!" AMEN.
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