
Blessed Sacrament Procession 2026, Lincoln. Nebraska, Southern Nebraska Register.
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[Jesus said] “Amen, amen, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you do not have life within you.” John 6:53.
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During the course of the centuries as recorded in the Hebrew Bible, God became clearer and clearer as to who and what the Divine Presence meant. One of the first revelations was power (without which, of course, no-one would have taken divine revelation seriously). But look at the way God revealed divine power: One very old, barren lady, Sarai/Sarah, actually giggled at the prophecy that she was to bear a child (Genesis 17). But she did! God’s power is unlimited! And through the course of the centuries, God gradually revealed the meaning of divine presence. And perhaps the culmination of that gradual revelation was the invitation to become God’s friend, God’s intimate. It began with Moses at the burning bush on Mount Sinai (Exodus 3). Why friendship? Because, for the first time, God revealed the Divine Name to Moses, “YAHWEH”, or “I AM WHO AM”. That established a relationship between God and humanity forever. It carried with it a fundamental intimacy, a trust and a hope each placed in the other. Then the whole Hebrew people at Mount Sinai solemnly pledged allegiance to God, and God agreed to be their God through thick and thin. So the life of God and the life of the people were symbolically linked together, symbolized by the blood of slaughtered animals sprinkled over a stone altar (symbolizing God), and over the people, establishing the Covenant between them and God. And that provided the model for Jesus at the Last Supper. There the blood of animals was replaced by none other than the blood of the Savior of the World, and the consecrated bread becoming his flesh. And today’s gospel is, as it were, a premonition of what was to come – and the challenge it represented to all who heard it. And note the gradual intensity of this linkage of God to us: A verbal covenant between Abraham and God; the intimacy of Moses, representing the people, and God, symbolically linked by the blood of sacrificed animals. And then the ultimate: Jesus inviting all of us to take himself, literally and figuratively, into ourselves. Remember the words of the Mass at the consecration: “This is the chalice of my blood, the blood of the New and Eternal Covenant which will be poured out for you….” – as opposed to the old and now surpassed Covenant. God now invites us to join him as he becomes part of us as we consume his very self. The progression could go no further! Jesus raised the old Covenant, established at Sinai, to the actual union between us humans and the Almighty Godhead at the Last Supper. And remember his words: “Do this in memory of me”, and we do, each time Mass is celebrated.
And so, on this day in many parts of the world today, the consecrated bread, Jesus himself, is displayed throughout the local neighborhood in a grand procession. Usually with incense before the Host, the host contained in a glorious monstrance, under a grand canopy, for the Lord of the World to be seen by all, as the Lord of All walks among his people. And note the words of the first reading today: “not by bread alone does one live, but by every word that comes forth from the mouth of the Lord”. These were the very words of Jesus fighting off the temptations of the Devil as he grew hungry on the 40-day pilgrimage in the desert after his baptism. Yes, food keeps you going day after day, but it is the spirit which keeps us alive throughout all times, bad as well as good. Are we hungry or full up physically? Spiritually alive or despairingly dead? Alert to those around us, or clueless in dealing with the world? Like the Lord, we should interact with those around us positively, lovingly, generously, as all Christians should, setting an example which would make the Lord happy.
So today is a joyful feast day, literally getting us out of the house one way or another. We may be walking hand in hand with the Lord through familiar streets, demonstrating our devotion to The One, or attending Mass, uniting ourselves with God intimately though Communion and emerging strengthened with the love of God which is without limit. And we give thanks for the generosity Jesus shows both in the totality of his sacrifice for us, and his promise to be with us until the end of time. All we have to do is agree, and walk with him as our friend, our support and our surest guide. May God bless us all!

The Grandest Corpus Christi Procession in the World! Valencia, Spain, 2023, Festival Universe.
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