From Jesus Our Eucharistic Love, Fr. Stefano M. Manelli

Jesus in the Eucharist is God Among Us

When St. John Marie Vianney arrived at the remote little village of Ars, someone said to him sourly, “Here there is nothing to be done.”

“Then, there is everything to be done,” replied the Saint. And he began immediately to act.

What did he do? He rose at two o’clock in the morning and went to pray near the altar in the dark church. He recited the Divine Office, he made his meditation, and he prepared himself for Holy Mass. After the Holy Sacrifice, he made his thanksgiving. Then he remained at prayer until noon.

He would be always kneeling on the floor without any support, with a Rosary in his hand and his eyes fixed on the tabernacle. Things continued this way for a short time.

Then he had to start changing his timetable; and things reached a point requiring radical changes in his program.

The Eucharistic Jesus and the Blessed Virgin Mary, little by little, drew souls to that poor parish, until the Church did not seem big enough to contain the crowds, and the confessional of the holy Curé became swamped with endless lines of penitents.

He was obliged to hear confessions for ten, fifteen, eighteen hours in a day!

How did such a transformation ever come about?

There had been a poor Church, an altar long unused, an abandoned tabernacle, an ancient confessional, and a priest with no resources and little talent.

How could such a wonderful change develop in that unknown village?

St. Pio at San Giovanni Rotondo

We can ask the same question today regarding San Giovanni Rotondo, a town on Mt. Gargano, Italy.

Until a few decades ago it was an obscure, unknown place amid the rough crags of a promontory. Today, San Giovanni Rotondo is a center of spiritual and cultural life and its reputation is international.

Here, too, there had been an unpromising, sickly friar, an ancient, dilapidated little friary, a small neglected Church, with altar and tabernacle left ever alone to this poor friar, who wore out his beads and his hands in the untiring recitation of the Holy Rosary.

How did the change come about? What caused the wonderful transformation that came to Ars and to San Giovanni Rotondo, so that hundreds of thousands, and perhaps millions, of persons have come to these places from every part of the earth?

Only God could work such transformations using, according to His ways, “the things that are not to bring to naught the things that are” (1 Cor. 1: 28).

It is all due to Him, to the divine and infinite power of the Eucharist, to the almighty force of attraction which radiates from every tabernacle, and which radiated from the tabernacles of Ars and San Giovanni Rotondo, reaching souls through the ministry of those two priests, true “ministers of the tabernacle” (Heb. 13: 10) and “dispensers of the mysteries of God” (1 Cor. 4: 1).

The Emmanuel

Let us ask the question: What is the Eucharist? It is God with us. It is the Lord Jesus present in the tabernacles of our churches with His Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity.

It is Jesus veiled under the appearance of bread, but really and physically present in the consecrated Host, so that He dwells in our midst, works within us and for us, and is at our disposal.

The Eucharistic Jesus is the true Emmanuel, the “God with us” (Mt. 1: 23).

“The faith of the Church,” Ven. Pope Pius XII teaches us, “is this: That one and identical is the Word of God and the Son of Mary who suffered on the Cross, who is present in the Eucharist, and who rules in Heaven.”

The Eucharistic Jesus is here with us as a brother, as a friend, as spouse of our souls. He wishes to enter within us to be our Food for eternal life, our love, our support. He wants to make us part of His mystical Body in which He would redeem us and save us, and then take us into the kingdom of Heaven to settle us in an everlasting bliss of love.

With the Eucharist, God has truly given us everything.

St. Augustine exclaimed: “Although God is all-powerful, He is unable to give more; though supremely wise, He knows not how to give more; though vastly rich, He has not more to give.”

When St. Peter Julian Eymard came to Paris, he was lodged in a very poor house in which many necessities were lacking. But when someone complained and another took pity on him, the Saint would respond, “The Blessed Sacrament is there. That is all that I need.”

When persons would approach him to obtain graces, help and comfort, the Saint would respond, “You will find all in the Eucharist: the warm words you want to hear, the knowledge and the miracles you need— yes, even the miracles.”

 

“At the hour of death the Holy Masses you have heard devoutly will be your greatest consolation.”
(Illustration: Angelo von Courten,1848 – 1925)

Every day I post great quotes, book suggestions, article links, sermons, etc. on my Finer Femininity Facebook Page! For those who don’t do Facebook, download the FF App and click on the Facebook icon. You will get all those goodies without the distractions of Facebook! A great feature…thank you Ocean Star Apps!

Available on Android and Iphones!

 

Swirly Floral flourish Red Violet

Visit My Book List for some great reading suggestions!

Save

Save