Gospel Reflection
Corpus Christi
22 June 2025, Church Year C
Reprinted by permission of the “Arlington Catholic Herald”

Bread and Wine
By Fr. Jack Peterson



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On his last night walking the streets of this broken world, Jesus bestows the supreme gift of the Eucharist — the blessing of his Divine Presence as the fulfillment of his promise to remain with us until the end of time. It is common to save the best gift for last. When masterminding this way of giving himself, Jesus could not give us anything more spectacular.

Jesus’ choice of bread and wine to be the chosen symbols that would veil the real presence of his precious Body and Blood was very deliberate. Melchizedek, the great king and “priest of God Most High,” made an offering to Abraham of bread and wine. Bread and wine are central elements of the Passover meal that God instructed the Hebrew people to celebrate every year in remembrance of being set free from hundreds of years of slavery to the Egyptians. Jesus transformed water into wine and multiplied the loaves of bread during his public ministry. These two events pointed to the Eucharist.

A good number of Jesus’ followers were shocked when Jesus taught them about this future gift during the Bread of Life discourse in John’s Gospel. “How can this man give us his flesh to eat?” (Jn 6:52) In fact, many turned away and no longer followed Jesus as a result of this remarkable pledge to remain present to us in the Eucharist and be a source of nourishment for our earthly journey to the Father.

For those who remained faithful to the Master, prayerful reflection and trust in the truth and goodness of all that Jesus said and did turn this initial shock to profound gratitude and belief in this promised gift. Jesus is the Second Person of the Holy Trinity, wonderfully one with the Father. Jesus is the eternal Word of the Father. His Word is truth. So, when Jesus grasped the hand of the deceased daughter of Jairus and commanded her to rise, she stood up and began to eat. When Jesus said to the sinful woman at the Pharisee’s home, “your sins are forgiven,” she left reconciled with God through the mercy offered by our precious Lord. When Jesus awoke in the boat that was being tossed by the storm, he “rebuked the wind, and said to the sea, ‘Peace! Be still!’ And the wind ceased, and there was great calm” (Mk 4:39). For those with faith in Christ, there is no need to doubt his capacity or his will to transform bread into his Body and wine into his Blood.

The ancient sequence sung at Mass for today’s solemnity states most poetically, “This the truth each Christian learns, Bread into flesh he turns, To his precious blood the wine: Sight has failed, nor thought conceives, But, a dauntless faith believes, resting on a power divine.”

Finally, I would like to note that the Eucharist is a gift of love. The Lord had to go, and he wanted to stay. He had to go to the cross and accomplish the will of the Father; and he wanted to stay and remain with his beloved disciples. So, in his great wisdom and love, Jesus conceived a way to do both. He fashioned a whole new way to be united with his disciples. St. Luke makes note of a very profound desire of Our Lord as he reclined at table with them for the last time, “I have earnestly desired to eat this Passover with you before I suffer” (Lk 22:15). This desire to be with them and institute the sacrament of the Eucharist was the fruit of his divine love. He saved his best gift for last. The same sequence continues: “Very bread, good shepherd, tend us, Jesu, of your love befriend us, you refresh us, you defend us, your eternal goodness send us.”

I would like to conclude with a brief reflection on the Eucharist by St. Thomas Aquinas: “O precious and wonderful banquet that brings us salvation and contains all sweetness! Could anything be of more intrinsic value? Under the old law it was the flesh of calves and goats that was offered, but here Christ himself, the true God, is set before us as our food. What could be more wonderful than this? No other sacrament has greater healing power; through it sins are purged away, virtues are increased, and the soul is enriched with an abundance of every spiritual gift. It is offered in the Church for the living and the dead, so that what was instituted for the salvation of all may be for the benefit of all. Yet, in the end, no one can fully express the sweetness of this sacrament, in which spiritual delight is tasted at its very source, and in which we renew the memory of the surpassing love for us which Christ revealed in his passion. It was to impress the vastness of this love more firmly upon the hearts of the faithful that our Lord instituted this sacrament at the Last Supper.”


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