When you approach the Sacraments, you’re approaching a powerful sign, because it’s a sign that makes men holy; it brings about what it signifies. We’ve got bread and wine. We associate bread with nourishment and sustenance. We associate wine with festivity and hilarity. What does that mean for us? They bring [these graces] to bear in our lives, which is the virtue of charity. They stir us up. They kindle the grace of charity in our hearts and make flame forth more ardently.
How do you get bread? How do you get wine?… Out of many grains, one loaf, and out of many grapes, we fill one chalice. So too, out of many Christians, the celebration of the most holy Eucharist makes the people of God. It makes the mystical body and makes one Church. My encouragement is that sometimes when we go to Mass, and we’re like, I have to get everything out of Mass now. But if we just attend to the signs patiently, trusting that God will make us as holy as he makes us, and that these signs are ordained and instituted for our sanctification — then there’s a lot to profit from there.
When you hear these conversations about identity, it’s clear that everyone wants to be unique and everyone wants to belong. It seems like those things are in tension, but I don’t think they’re contradictory. I think you can see them play out in the mystical body, because God has a place for us in his body. It might be small and it might be humble, but it’s precious. He wills it for us, but it also knits us together with the Christian community. It gives us a home and a genuine place in which to abide.
--Fr. Gregory Pine OP
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