Monday, October 15, 2012

Board Prayer



Please visit the following links to access the board Prayer:

Board Prayer - English

Board Prayer - French


Betty

Betty Brush
Religious Studies, Religion and Family Life
Consultant, WECDSB

Saturday, October 13, 2012

The Year of Faith - Let's Pray


Good Morning.

In honour of the opening day (October 11th) of the Year of Faith, I am asking all schools to end their day with the new Board Prayer.  The Board Prayer was distributed to all employees at our Together in Faith Day on
September 21st.  In this Year of Faith, Pope Benedict XVI is asking Catholic communities to come together in prayer.  It is the power of this "praying as a community" that he believes will truly transform our world.

Let us pray for one another today, that we may evangelize others by our love in action.
God Bless,
Betty

Synod on the New Evangelization


Good Morning,

Our guest speaker at Together in Faith Day, Fr. Thomas Rosica,CSB, has been chosen by Pope Benedict to attend the Synod of Bishops in Rome as the chief media person for the English-speaking countries. The link below is an update of the happenings in Rome at the synod.  It takes a minute to download but it is well worth watching as Rosica give a clear summary of the discussion at the synod.  To the right of the screen there is a second short video of Rosica as well.  It too is an interesting update about media and the church.


The Year of Faith as it Relates to Vatican II


As you are aware, Pope Benedict XVI has declared October 11th as the beginning of The Year of Faith.  October 11th was chosen because on this day, fifty years ago, the Second Vatican Council officially began under the leadership of Pope John XXIII.

The announcement to convene the Second Vatican Council shocked the Roman Catholic world to its core.  On January 25, 1959, within three months of his election to the pontificate, Pope John XXIII announced his intention to call an ecumenical council to bring about the renewal and reform of all aspects of church life.  Not all members of the church approved of this decision.  It was a radical one:  for a church steeped in tradition, this meant change, and for many, the church was perfect the way it was.  Why change it?

Vatican II forced Roman Catholics to think differently about their church, themselves, how they live their faith, and how they witness to this faith to the world.  All of the documents of Vatican II deal in one way or another with the church itself.  Lumen Gentium, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, focuses on how the church understands its inner structure.  The document begins by putting the church in its place: "Christ if the Light of all nations":  the church's beginnings are in Jesus Christ, not in itself.

The relationship of the church to the world is discussed in Gaudium et Spes, Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World - the council surveys the "signs of the times" and the challenges that the modern world faces.  The church knew it could no longer ignore what was going on in the world around it and what was happening to the world's citizens, especially in the wake of two world wars, the horrors of the Holocaust, and the fears of the Cold War.  Thus, the church accepted the challenge of addressing the needs of all of humanity and not just the Catholic faithful.

One major aspect of the church's engagement with the world was the council's resolve to enter into dialogue with other Christians and with the world's other major religions with Unitatis Redintegratio, Decree on Ecumenism, and Nostra Aetate, Declaration on the Relation of the Church to Non-Christian Religions, especially Judaism.

In being church for the world and in nourishing the lives of its believers, the council declared that the liturgy is the "summit and source" of the Christian life.  Liturgy and the Christian life are inseparable, and nothing is more central to the church than its liturgy.  Sacrosanctum Concilium, Constitution of the Sacred Liturgy deals with the renewal and reform of the mass, and how it was celebrated, especially the introduction of the vernacular from the Latin, immediately affected the lives of believers in parishes.

While the reform of the liturgy certainly had a profound effect on the lives of Catholics, perhaps the most profound reform was the change in attitude toward the place of the laity in the structure of the church.  In Apotolicam Actuositatem, Decree on the Apostolate of Lay People, we see that the journey of the laity in the Roman Catholic church can be summarized in three words:  inclusion, exclusion, revolution.  It is the story of a journey!

When we recall some of these major themes from the Second Vatican Council - the church in the world, its ecumenical and interfaith dialogue, its liturgy, and the role of the laity - we must ask:  Is there a foundation that unites them?  There is no doubt whatsoever about what the council declares this foundation to be:  it is the word of God as revealed in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.  The Christian life, as summarized in Dei Verbum, Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation is the Second Vatican Council's pronouncement on the Bible.  It examines the use of the Bible in the Roman Catholic tradition from the time when Catholics were not encouraged to read the Bible, up to the present time, when the laity are not only encouraged to read it and make it the foundation of their Christian lives, but to proclaim the word of God to the world.

Tomorrow begins The Year of Faith!  In the words of Pope John XXIII, may we ever be "stirring ourselves out of established routines and looking for new approaches, ever open to the rightful claims of the age in which we live, so that in every way Christ can be proclaimed and made known.  

Year of Faith Web Resources



Good Afternoon,

Please find attached some possible websites with resources for The Year of Faith.
I have also sent to each school 2 copies of the Catholic Organization for Life and Family (COLF) leaflet entitled, "The Gospel of Everyday Life:  An adventure worth sharing!"   You can also access this document at www.colf.ca 

COLF is co-sponsored by the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) and is the organization that the bishops have chosen to work with on materials for The Year of Faith.
October 11, 2012 begins our Year of Faith.  I will be sending out information as it is made available.  Please share with your staffs.

Betty


Web Resources Year of Faith


1)Reflections and Articles from Contemporary Spiritual Writers

index.htm
Joyce Rupp is a spiritual writer of considerable wisdom. The site offers reflections, prayers and poetry for the spiritual journey

Father Ron Rolheiser O.M. I

Fr. Ron  Rolheiser is a well- respected spiritual writer whose weekly column are translated into many languages.  His columns provide inspiration and nourishment for many. This site also offers a link to receive his columns via e-mail twice a week


Father Henri Nouwen spent many years as a university teacher, and at L’Arche.. His work continues to nourish many people throughout the world. This website offers a link to daily inspirations as well as the opportunity to share in a virtual community.

This website provides reflections on the writings of Jean Vanier. Offers the option of
subscribing to a daily reflection


Daily reflections and writings from Richard Rohr, one of America’s most respected spiritual writers

This website includes a number of articles by Parker Palmer to inspire reflection and prayer


2)Living our Faith – Prayer, Reflection

Creighton University online ministries provides a variety of resources for adults. This website offers daily reflections on the readings of the day , as well as additional articles and inspiration Advent, Lent and Easter


Daily reflections on what it means to live as people of faith

Loyola Press is a ministry offered by Jesuits. This website provides resources for faith development for children, families and adults.
On this site one can find information about the basics of the Catholic faith, a link t subscribe to a daily 3 minute retreat and a daily reflection a weekly connection to the Sunday readings with questions and reflection for families and school children

Subscribe to daily retreats


This link will provide you with a daily inspiration

Resource for prayers for families and teens

Prayer and daily reflections from the Irish Jesuits

Comprehensive prayer resources from the Passionist community

Looking for prayer ‘on the go’  to download  to your mp3


Reflection and Activities on Sunday Readings and Gospel




3) Learning about Our Faith

Catechism online
Catechism

Provides a variety of information about the basics of our Catholic faith

comprehensive website on Gospels and other New Testament writings
by Father Felix Just S.J.


A Comprehensive website of Papal Documents and Encyclicals of Catholic Social
Teachings
A study guide for Educators on the Corporal Works of Mercy

WFMP Conference


When Faith Meets Pedagogy 2012 Conference
October 25, 26 and 27, 2012
DoubleTree by Hilton/Toronto Airport.
"Proclaim and Celebrate the Good News"

Keynote Speakers
Marina Nemat, "Prisoner of Tehran"
Sr. Maureen Sullivan, O.P. "Vatican II"

Once again our Board will sponsor a limited number of participants.

The WECDSB will pay for occasional coverage (Thursday p.m. and all day Friday)
and the conference fee ($268.00) for interested teachers

Please contact your OECTA unit president for further sponsorship

If you are interested in attending, please BBS Betty Brush by October 12, 2012.
(Please do not put forward a name on someone else's behalf.)

A Thanksgiving Thought

Just a thought . . .

There are many times in our lives
when we realize we have taken something for granted.
Often, it is when it is no longer there,
or when we look back and realize
what a gift something or someone has been in our lives.
Sometimes, in a moment of grace,
we are fully present to the gift before us
and give heartfelt thanks.
This Thanksgiving Day weekend
presents us with the opportunity
to express our thanks and appreciation
for what we have received and what
we have been able to give back.

Don't forget to give thanks . . .


World Teacher Day - October 5th



Friday, October 5th is World Teacher Day.
Below is a special blessing for Catholic Teachers.

Lord Jesus,
light of the world and saviour of all,
you have been sent by our heavenly Father
to be our teacher, our Lord, and our brother.

Give your special blessings to these men and women
who dedicate their lives as Catholic teachers.
May they continue to grow in your wisdom.
Guide them in their studies and in their lessons,
and help them to teach young and old your saving power
by their word and by their example.
May they bring their students to a clearer understanding of your love,
and may their actions always reflect the gospel values you hold so dear.

Lord Jesus,
hear our prayer,
for you are our Lord and Master Teacher
for ever and ever.

AMEN.

The Year of Faith




The Year of Faith



The pope said the observance would begin
October 11, 2012
the 50th anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Council
and conclude
Nov. 24, 2013
the feast of Christ the King.


"It will be a moment of grace and commitment to an ever fuller conversion to God, to reinforce our faith in him and to proclaim him with joy to the people of our time," the pope said in his homily.

Pope Benedict explained his intention more fully in "Porta Fidei" ("The Door of Faith"), an apostolic letter released Oct. 17 to formally announce the special year.

"Faith grows when it is lived as an experience of love received and when it is communicated as an experience of grace and joy," the pope wrote.

He said the Catechism of the Catholic Church, first published in 1992, should serve as the handbook for helping Catholics rediscover the truths of faith and deepen their understanding of church teaching.

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, he said, will publish a "note" to help people live the year "in the most effective and appropriate ways at the service of belief and evangelization."
In his apostolic letter, the pope said the year's focus will be on Jesus Christ because "in him, all the anguish and all the longing of the human heart finds fulfillment."

Special Event





WINDSOR ESSEX COUNTY DEVELOPMENT & PEACE
FALL EDUCATION WORKSHOP 2012
SAT OCT 20   9:30AM- 2:30 PM
 
 ST. ALPHONSUS PARISH HALL
( OWNTOWN WINDSOR) 98 PARK ST E.
 
 
WELCOME TO A VERY SPECIAL WORKSHOP
ABOUT CATHOLIC SOCIAL TEACHING
 
LUNCH SERVED (VEGETARIAN CHOICE)
      
BRING A FRIEND                             CAR POOL
 
PLEASE CALL BONNIE & BOB DRAGO  if any questions &
TO REGISTER    519-972-5590

There was an article in yesterdays' Windsor Star re "Bishops block foreign aid program"
Our workshop will be addressing this & our London Diocese Council feels this may be a blessing in disguise, as we will be focusing on "Catholic Social Teaching"
Love & Peace
Bonnie & Bob Drago

Commentaries on the Golden Rule


Re:  Commentaries on the Golden Rule

Dear Catholic educators:

Scarboro Missions is proud to announce the publication of these Golden Rule commentaries which can be downloaded free of charge from our site. We know you will find these to be of tremendous educational value in your work.Researchers have discovered hundreds of expressions of the Golden Rule – from ancient and modern sources as well as from religious and non-religious sources. Research efforts have also uncovered numerous commentaries on the Golden Rule from well-known individuals in a number of fields.A number of these commentaries are presented in this compilation. Featured here are scientists, philosophers, politicians, writers, business people, religious leaders, companies, organizations and others.Included among these many Golden Rule commentators are Mahatma Gandhi, Mark Twain, Charles Dickens, J.C. Penney, Charles Darwin, Karen Armstrong, Deepak Chopra, Frederick Douglass, President John F. Kennedy, President Barack Obama, Pope Benedict XVI, Steven Covey, Dale Carnegie and Jeffrey Wattles (Golden Rule scholar)Below is the link to these commentaries. Please feel free to forward this link and announcement through your communities and networks for use in newsletters, bulletin boards, websites, mailing lists, list-serves, blogs, Facebook pages, twitter, etc.

This document is also available in PDF format to facilitate crisp and clear printing. Here is the link:https://www.scarboromissions.ca/Golden_rule/golden_rule_commentaries.php

Peace

Paul McKenna2685 Kingston Rd.Toronto, OntarioCanada    M1M 1M4tel.  416-261-7135  ext. 296www.scarboromissions.ca
Scarboro Missions Interfaith Dept.
"God is too big to fit into one religion"         Bumper Sticker





Fr. Rosica's Keynote Address to Windsor Essex Catholic DSB - Faith Day







To All: 

On Friday morning, September 21, 2012, Fr. Thomas Rosica, C.S.B., President and Vice Chancellor of Assumption University delivered the keynote address to nearly 2000 Catholic educators, administrators, support staff, trustees and pastoral ministers who gathered together in the St. Denis Centre of the University of Windsor for the "Together in Faith Day."

Fr. Rosica was introduced with these words:

Rev. Thomas Rosica, C.S.B. is a priest of the Congregation of St. Basil since 1986.  Born in Rochester, New York, he received his Bachelor's of Arts in Italian and French Language and Literature from St. John Fisher College in May 1980.  From 1985 - 1987, he served as deacon and priest at St. John the Baptist Church in Amherstburg and was instrumental in the establishment of St. Thomas of Villanova High School.  His Basilian superiors then assigned him to graduate studies in Sacred Scripture at the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Rome and the Ecole Biblique in Jerusalem from 1987-1994.

Upon completion of his graduate studies, he served from 1994 - 2000 as Executive Director and Pastor of the Newman Centre Catholic Mission at the University of Toronto and lectured in Scripture at the University of Toronto, St. Peter's Seminary and King's College in London, and here at Assumption University.

In 1999, Fr. Rosica was appointed by the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops as the CEO and National Director of World Youth Day 2002 and the Papal visit of Pope John Paul II to Toronto.  In July 2003, he became the founding chief executive officer of Canada's first national Catholic television network Salt and Light Catholic Media Foundation.  In February 2009, Pope Benedict XVI appointed Fr. Rosica consultor to the Pontifical Council for Social Communications at the Vatican.  For the October 2012 Synod of Bishops on the New Evangelization that begins in two weeks, the Vatican has named Fr. Rosica as the English language Press Secretary.  He will be the voice of the Synod to the English speaking world.

On December 1, 2011, Fr. Rosica was appointed president of Assumption University in Windsor, Ontario while still holding his position at Salt + Light in Toronto.  He is working very closely with our school board.  Fluent in several languages, Fr. Rosica is a published author and well known lecturer around the world.   He has received significant awards from Pope John Paul II, the Government of Italy, and the State of Israel, and has been honored twice by Queen Elizabeth for his work with young people.

Attached please find the text of his address as well as a jpeg file of Caravaggio's "The Call of St. Matthew" that was referred to in the presentation.

Fr. Thomas Rosica, C.S.B.

Catholic Men's Conference



Twenty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time


Quality communication  


Jesus Heals Deaf Mute Man

Twenty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time – September 9, 2012
The readings for this Sunday are: Isaiah 35:4-7; James 2:1-5; Mark 7:31-37

In the magnificent piece of biblical poetry in Isaiah 35:4-7 (today’s first reading) the prophet Isaiah announces the end of the Babylonian captivity. The Exodus of God’s people from bondage in Egypt became a model for thinking about salvation and a symbol of the great pilgrimage of the human family towards God. The prophet Isaiah encountered a dispirited community of exiles. Isaiah responded by recalling the joyous memories of the Exodus from Egypt.

A second exodus is in store, symbolized by the healing granted to the blind, the lame, and the mute, and new life to the dead. Delivered and saved by God, all peoples shall return to their own land by way of the desert, in a new exodus. Isaiah prophecies that there shall be one, pure road, and it will be called the way of holiness upon which the redeemed shall walk.In the midst of the desert, streams will break forth. God’s saving power also embraces afflicted humans, healing every ill that comes upon people. Isaiah addressed specific afflictions that God would heal: “Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf unstopped; then the lame shall leap like a deer, and the tongue of the mute sing for joy.”

Isaiah’s prediction of this abundant, new life underlies Mark’s understanding of Jesus’ cure of “a deaf man who had an impediment in his speech” (Mark 7:31-37). Mark’s story of the healing of this hearing and speech impaired man invites us to consider some important points about sickness and suffering in the New Testament.

Sick people

Sick people in the Bible are those who have fallen from an appropriate human state or condition of human integrity or wholeness. Jesus heals people by restoring them to a proper state: Those who are leprous are made clean, blind people see, mute persons speak, etc.

We have little information about how Jesus’ healings episodes were accomplished. Jesus did not perform miracles as someone waving a magic wand or clicking his fingers. The man cured by Jesus was deaf and dumb; he could not communicate with others, hear his voice and express his feelings and needs. The sigh uttered by Jesus at the moment of touching the ears of the deaf man tells us that he identified with people’s suffering; he participated deeply in their misfortune and made it his own burden.

“Ephphatha, Be opened!”

The early Church was so impressed by the healing miracle of the deaf man that it attached deep significance to it, incorporating the Lord’s action into the Baptismal Rite of new Christians. To this day, the minister of baptism puts his fingers into our ears and touches the tip of our tongue, repeating Jesus’ word: “Ephphatha, Be opened!” He has made both the deaf hear and the dumb speak.

We learn by hearing and listening

Sight deals with things, while hearing deals with human beings. Sight has to do with science, with observation, with objectivity. Hearing has to do with personal relationships, with subjectivity. When I use my eyes to look at people or things, I am in complete control of the information that comes to me, for I can shut my eyes when I wish. When I am reading the words of scripture by myself, I can close my eyes and stop reading. But the ear is unlike the eye. I cannot shut my ear. The only way I can stop the sound is to leave the room!

We learn about other people by hearing and listening to what they have to say. Language reveals the inside of another person, something sight can never do. If we want to learn about God, we must listen to his Word with all our heart, all our soul and all our mind.

When we read the Bible, do we “hear” what it says? The Bible does not tell us to read the Word of God but to hear it, to listen to it. That is the great Jewish prayer: “Shema, Israel,” “Hear, O Israel.” Someone else must read the Word so that I may hear it and truly understand it.

Biblical faith cannot be individualistic but must be communal. Speaking and hearing involve mutual submission. Mutual respect and submission is the essence of community, and the only way I can get away from hearing is to leave the room, to leave the community and go off by myself. Sadly this is the case for many who have left the Church community and claim to have found freedom, autonomy, and truth in solitude, away from the community of faith!
What they have found is not solitude, but loneliness, selfishness and rugged individualism. Authentic hearing and listening involve submission to authority and membership in community.

Physical and spiritual deafness

spiritual_Deafness_300x200

The healing stories reflect Jesus’ intimate, powerful relationship with God and his great compassion. He healed with words, touch and physical means. Physical deafness and spiritual deafness are alike; Jesus confronted one type in the man born deaf, the other type in the Pharisees and others who were unreceptive of his message. Jesus was concerned not only with physical infirmity but also spiritual impairment and moral deafness.

Our contemporary world has grown deaf to the words of Jesus, but it is not a physical deafness, it is a spiritual deafness caused by sin. We have become so used to sin that we take it as normal and we have become deafened and blinded to Jesus and his daily call to us.

If deafness and dumbness consist in the inability to communicate plainly with one’s neighbour or to have good relationships, then we must acknowledge that each of us is in some way impaired in our hearing and speech. What decides the quality of our communication, hearing and speech is not simply to speak or not to speak or hear, but to do so or not to do so out of love.

We are blind and deaf when we show favouritism or discrimination because of the status and wealth of other people (see James 2:1-5). We fail to recall that divine favour consists in God’s election and promises (James 2:5).

We are deaf when we do not hear the cry for help raised to us and we prefer to put indifference between our neighbour and ourselves. In doing so we oppress the poor and blaspheme the name of Christ (James 2:6-7).
Parents are deaf when they do not understand that certain dysfunctional behaviours of their children betray deep-seated cries for attention and love.
We are deaf when we turn inward and close ourselves to the world because of selfishness, pride, resentment, anger, jealousy and our inability to forgive others.

We are deaf when we refuse to recognize those who suffer in the world around us, and do not acknowledge glaring situations of inequality, injustice, poverty and the devastation of war.

We are deaf when we refuse to hear the cry of the unborn, of those whose lives are in danger because they are elderly, handicapped, and chronically ill, while others wish to end their lives out of misguided mercy.

Beethoven’s deafness

The German composer and virtuoso pianist Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) was one of the most loved composers of all time. What I never knew until recently was that Beethoven started losing his hearing at the age of 28. The deafness gave Beethoven insights into that which existed beyond that which could be seen and heard.

Beethoven was aware of the oneness of music with God from a very early age. And he was conscious of this while composing his music. “Ever since my childhood my heart and soul have been imbued with the tender feeling of goodwill. And I have always been inclined to accomplish great things.” In many of his letters Beethoven expresses his desire to serve God and humanity with his music. “Almighty God, you see into my heart … and you know it’s filled with love for humanity and a desire to do good.”

Beethoven’s life is a paradox. On one hand, his solitary life was burdened by his deafness and on the other his spiritual insights flashed through his music. Many a times his deafness drove him to the edge and he cursed it. Yet, he also accepted it. It may have been out of frustration, but there was an acceptance of the divine will.

Today may the words Jesus spoke over the deaf man be addressed once again to each of us: “Ephphatha, Be opened!” May our ears, eyes and hearts be opened to the Gospel!

Fr. Thomas Rosica, CSB
CEO, Salt and Light Catholic Media Foundation

Twentieth Sunday in Ordinary Time


Health food for the soul  


John 6: Jesus, the Bread of Life

Twentieth Sunday in Ordinary Time – August 19, 2012
The readings for this Sunday are: Proverbs 9:1-6; Ephesians 5:15-20; John 6:51-58

In chapter six of John’s Gospel (v. 41-51), Jesus speaks of himself as “the living bread that came down from heaven” and invites his hearers to eat of this bread – that is, to believe in him.

He promises that those who do so will have eternal life. Jesus compares himself to the manna that came down from heaven to sustain the people of Israel in the wilderness. It is a vivid image that certainly evokes important memories for the people of Israel.

Then in John 6:51, Jesus says, “The bread that I will give for the life of the world is my flesh.” Then his hearers ask: “How can this man give us his flesh to eat?” Did they respond in this way to give Jesus a chance to explain himself? Surely, they may have imagined, Jesus meant to say something else. After all, to eat someone’s flesh appears in the Bible as a metaphor for great hostility (Psalms 27:2; Zechariah 11:9). The drinking of blood was looked upon as an abomination forbidden by God’s law (Genesis 9:4, Leviticus 3:17; Deuteronomy 12:23).

Yet Jesus responds to the question by further explaining his initial declaration with explicit terms: “Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise them up on the last day; for my flesh is true food and my blood is true drink. Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood abides in me, and I in them.”No observant Jew would consider eating human flesh. We may ask ourselves: “Why couldn’t Jesus continue using such pleasant terms as “abiding,” “dwelling,” “living in me” terminology? Was he advocating pure cannibalism with such vivid imagery and language?

Flesh and blood

Jesus makes his sacrifice on behalf of the world – not just Israel (see also John 3:16-17). The Hebrew expression “flesh and blood” means the whole person. To receive the whole Jesus entails receiving his flesh and blood. To encounter Jesus means, in part, to encounter the flesh and blood of him. For those who receive Jesus, the whole Jesus, his life clings to their bones and courses through their veins. He can no more be taken from a believer’s life than last Saturday’s dinner can be extricated from one’s body.

True reception of Jesus

GIRL KNEELS AS SHE RECEIVES COMMUNION FROM POPE

In our cerebral approach to religion we often assume that what really matters is believing some important religious dogmas or truths. Receiving Jesus can be reduced to a matter of intellectual assent. There are times, however, when we can be particularly grateful that the presence of Christ is not something that can be recognized cerebrally, but can be received by other means as well.

The bread that Jesus used to feed the 5,000 on the mountaintop was something less than true bread, because it satisfied the people’s hunger only momentarily. By way of contrast, Jesus’ flesh and blood are true food because “whoever eats of this bread will live forever” (v 51) – and “has eternal life” (v 54).

“I am the living bread that came down from heaven” (v 51a). This “living bread” parallels the “living water” that Jesus offered the Samaritan woman (4:10). To eat of this bread, in this context, means the once-and-for-all action of accepting or believing in Christ.

Historical background

It is important to be aware of two things that were happening at the time of the writing of this Gospel that might have influenced John the Evangelist to emphasize the eating of Jesus’ flesh and the drinking of his blood.

The first was the influence of Docetic and Gnostic heresies, both of which considered flesh to be evil and denied that Christ could have a physical body. The second was Jewish discrimination against Christian believers. Christians who observed the Lord’s Supper were likely to be banned from synagogues.

The Eucharist fulfils the meaning hidden in the gift of manna. Jesus thus presents himself as the true and perfect fulfillment of what was symbolically foretold in the Old Covenant. Another of Moses’ acts has a prophetic value: To quench the thirst of the people in the desert, he makes water flow from the rock. On the “feast of Tabernacles,” Jesus promises to quench humanity’s spiritual thirst: “Let anyone who is thirsty come to me and drink. As the Scripture has said, ‘Out of the heart of the one who believes in me shall flow rivers of living water’” (John 7:37-38).

The ways we eat

Our eating style reflects and affects who and what we are. It identifies our approach to life. If we examine various societies and cultures, we see that each has its traditional foods and food rituals. “I am of Italian descent. I often eat spaghetti, lasagna, tortellini alla panna or pizza,” or “I am a real American. I eat hamburgers, hot dogs, steak, coke, and French fries.”

“I am Québecois. I feast on poutine and drink maple syrup.” The French eat crepes, Belgians eat waffles, Chinese eat rice, Palestinians and Israelis eat falafel, the Swiss eat chocolate, and Inuit eat whale blubber. In short, the “way we eat” reveals how we identify ourselves. It reflects and often determines our worldview, our values, and our entire approach to life.

Institution of the Eucharist

Foods are much more than just a collection of nutrients; they are a wealth of influences and connotations. Rare foods and spices are treasured as special culinary delights. Some foods are worshiped in various cultures as having an unusual holiness or are avoided altogether. The type of food we choose can affect our moods. Hot, spicy, or stimulating foods may influence many of us toward hot-temperedness or nervousness. Cooling foods can relax us and give us peace of mind. Foods can help us celebrate and can comfort us when we mourn. They are a sign of love and are a means of uniting people on many occasions.

The “ways we eat” are an important part of our heritage. The soul is not nourished by physical bread, as the body is. The food we eat is actually a combination of both a physical and a spiritual entity. The body is nourished by the physical aspects, or nutrients, contained in the foods we eat; the soul is nourished by the spiritual power which enlivens the physical substance of all matter, including food.

For all who seek the presence of Christ, Jesus’ teaching in John’s Gospel is good news indeed: “We are what we eat.” We become what receive in the Eucharist. This week, let us examine our spiritual diets and look at the things that truly give us life, and those things that are junk foods that don’t lead us to eternal life.

Fr. Thomas Rosica, CSB
CEO, Salt and Light Catholic Media Foundation