Super Saints Podcast

Saints and Lovers of the Holy Eucharist

July 13, 2022 Brother Joseph
Super Saints Podcast
Saints and Lovers of the Holy Eucharist
Show Notes



“All power has been given to me in Heaven and on earth.  Go therefore and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all things whatever I have commanded you.  And know that I will be with you always, until the end of time”. Matthew 28:19-20

Family, we have a Treasure, of so great a magnitude it has kept our Church alive and strong and protected against millenniums of struggle with the devil who has been trying to destroy us since he tempted Jesus on the Mount of Temptation in Jericho.  And how has He been able to keep that promise to us, that promise of being with us, living within our souls, giving us strength to stand up against the powers of hell? He is always with us in the Sacrament of His Body and Blood, the Eucharist.  He gave us that gift freely while He was on earth. He was actually preparing us for the time when He would not be with us physically.  At Capharnaum He taught us:

 “I Myself am the living bread, come down from Heaven.  If anyone eats of this bread, he shall live forever; the bread I will give is My Flesh, for the life of the world. [1]

And then on Holy Thursday evening, in the upper room in Jeerusalem, He handed each of the Apostles bread, blessed and broken.  “Then taking bread and giving thanks, He broke it and gave it to them, saying: ‘This is My Body to be given for you.  Do this as a remembrance of Me.’ He did the same with the cup after eating, saying as He did so: ‘This Cup is the New Covenant in My Blood which will be shed for you. Truly I say to you, I will not drink again of the fruit of the vine until that day when I drink it new in the Kingdom of God.[2]

On Easter Sunday, after He had risen from the dead, and appeared to the Apostles in the Upper Room, Our Lord Jesus walked with two disciples who were returning home to Emmaus, thinking that Jesus was dead as was His movement.  Jesus walked alongside of them, although they did not recognize Him as being Jesus.  He spoke softly but firmly to them.  He explained that Jesus had to do what He did to fulfill scripture.  He quoted the scripture passages which affirmed what He was saying.  When they arrived at Emmaus, He kept going, as if He were continuing on His journey.  They pleaded with Him to stay with them.  “Stay with us; it is nearly evening – the day is practically spent.  So He went in to stay with them.  When He had seated Himself with them to eat, He took bread, pronounced the blessing, then broke the bread and began to distribute it to them.  With that their eyes were opened and they recognized Him; whereupon He vanished from their sightThey said to one another, ‘Were our hearts not burning inside us as He talked on the road explained the Scriptures to us?”[3]  But they recognized Him in the breaking of the bread, the Eucharist.

Our belief in the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist has been the binding force and the cause of great struggle for Christians since the beginning.  Down through the centuries, Saints and Holy People have shed their blood to defend the Eucharist.  The first who comes to mind, a Saint of the early Church is St. Ignatius of Antioch, who as he was being dragged off to Rome to be sacrificed to wild lions in the Coliseum, wrote letters to St. Polycarp asking him to correct the errors being made with reference to the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist.  Another famous story is that of the young Roman boy, St. Tarcisius, who volunteered to bring the Bod

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