Readings: Acts 9:1-20; Psalm 117:1bc-2; John 6:52-59
It’s funny how so many people who take the entire Bible quite literally, thus reading many of its books in a flat, two-dimensional way, refuse to take the text literally in some instances when it is, in fact, meant to be taken more or less literally. Jesus’ Bread of Life Discourse, found in the sixth chapter of Saint John’s Gospel, is one such instance.
It’s clear from the Greek, the language in which the entire New Testament was originally written, that when the Lord spoke of eating His flesh and drinking His blood, He was speaking in what we might call real terms. His words, as the reaction of those who heard them clearly shows, are shocking. This is why some of them ask, “How can this man give us [his] flesh to eat?”1
Consider, too, that the setting is the synagogue in Capernaum. What Jesus says in this passage is not just mind-blowing but, at least to Jewish ears, maybe even downright blasphemous. Even if He were not talking about His own flesh and blood, or what sounded like human flesh and blood, Jews do not drink or even eat blood. It is strictly forbidden. So, let's not be too harsh on those who heard these words and were, well, disburbed by them.
Jesus says this before He institutes the Eucharist at the Last Supper. It also bears noting that, unlike the institution narratives in the Synoptic Gospels (i.e., Matthew, Mark, and Luke), the inspired author of Saint John’s Gospel writes about the Lord washing the feet of His closest disciples.2 What is important to note is that, despite the literal nature of these words, at the words of consecration, the dead body of Jesus does not plop down on the altar to be divvied up.
Theologically, the two most difficult matters to address are the Blessed Trinity and the Holy Eucharist, perhaps followed by the hypostatic union. The reason why is that these are deep, fundamental, and unfathomable mysteries of Christian faith.
First off, it's important to start with the reality that the Lord is not dead but resurrected and alive. Being truly human and resurrected, He has a body. Second, if we understand the consecrated bread and wine to be transformed into Christ’s body and blood in a capharnaitic way, considering His resurrection, there would be only a very limited amount of Him to consume. In the context of the Eucharist, “capharnaitic” is often referred to as “physicalism.”
In this context, "physicalism" means that, rather than understanding the mode of Christ’s Eucharistic presence in a sacramental and substantial way, it is understood in what can be be described as a gross and primitive way. In fact, physicalist understandings of the Eucharist, reported miracles notwithstanding, are condemned by the Church. Rather, transubstantiation refers to a change in substance while the accidents remain.
A substantial change, which, in the Eucharist, is effected by the Holy Spirit, is a real change. This substantial change is not a physical change. In metaphysical terms, one might say in this way the Holy Spirit makes Christ's presence more real.
Believing in Christ's real presence in the Eucharist is what Aquinas would call a truth of faith. It is of faith because it is something we know only because God revealed it, this is also makes it, theologically speaking, a mystery. But even truths of faith need to be explored by human reason. After all, faith seeks understanding. It's important these things makes sense without deviating from divine revelation. This is one reason why we need the Church.
One of the reasons the Church is so clear on this is because during her earliest centuries, Christians were often accused of engaging in cannibalism. No doubt, this is what the people gathered in the Capernaum synagogue thought Jesus was suggesting.
Let’s not forget that Christ is really present in the Eucharistic celebration (with no celebration, there is no Eucharist- divorcing the Blessed Sacrament from the Mass is a huge mistake) in four ways: in the gathering of the baptized, in the person of the priest, in the proclamation of the scriptures, and in the transformed elements of bread and wine.3
Because the Holy Spirit is the mode of Christ’s resurrection presence, the Eucharist is the most real encounter with the Risen Lord one can have. It is through Holy Communion and all the sacraments that Christ gives Himself to us totally. Such an encounter, as Saint Paul’s encounter shows, is life-changing. It is notable that after he was baptized, Paul ate and regained his strength. Is there a detectable Eucharistic undertone in this? Maybe.
It is important to grasp that, at its core, to believe in the real, sacramental presence of Christ in the Eucharist is to believe in His Resurrection from the dead. By exercising His priestly ministry in the Mass, our Risen Lord makes present His triumph over death. This is why “whoever eats this bread will live forever.”4
1 John 6:52.↩
2 See John 13:1-17.↩
3 Second Vatican Council. Dogmatic Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy (Sacrosanctum Concilium), sec. 7↩
4 John 6:58.↩






