Homily of His Holiness Benedict XVI
during a Mass and Eucharistic Procession
on the Solemnity of Corpus Domini

Square before the Basilica of
St John Lateran
Thursday, 26 May 2005

On the Feast of Corpus Domini, the
Church relives the
mystery of Holy Thursday in
the light of the Resurrection. There
is also a Eucharistic Procession on
Holy Thursday, when the Church
repeats the exodus of Jesus from the
Upper Room to the Mount of Olives.
In
Israel, the night of the Passover was celebrated in the
home, within the intimacy of the family; this is how the
first Passover in Egypt
was commemorated, the night in which the blood of the paschal
lamb, sprinkled on the crossbeam and doorposts of the
houses, served as protection against the
destroyer.
On that night, Jesus
goes out and hands Himself over to
the betrayer, the
destroyer, and in so doing,
overcomes the night, overcomes the
darkness of
evil. Only in this way is the
gift of the Eucharist, instituted in the Upper Room,
fulfilled: Jesus truly gives
His Body and
His Blood. Crossing over the threshold of
death, He
becomes living Bread,
true manna,
endless nourishment for
eternity. The flesh becomes
the Bread of Life.
In the Holy Thursday procession, the
Church accompanies
Jesus to the
Mount of Olives: it is the authentic desire of the
Church in
prayer to keep watch with Jesus,
not to abandon
Him in the
night of the world, on the night of
betrayal, on the night of the
indifference of many people.
On the Feast of Corpus Domini, we again go on
this procession, but in the joy of
the Resurrection. The
Lord is risen and leads us. In the
narrations of the Resurrection there
is a common and essential feature; the
angels say: the
Lord "goes
ahead of you to Galilee, where you will see Him" (Matthew
28:7).
Taking this into deep consideration, we can say that
this "going ahead" of
Jesus implies a
two-way direction.
The first is, as we
have heard, Galilee. In Israel, Galilee was
considered to be the doorway to the pagan world.
And in reality, precisely on the mountain in Galilee, the
disciples see Jesus, the
Lord, Who
tells them: "Go... and make disciples of all
the nations" (Matthew 28:19).
The other preceding direction
of the Risen One appears in the
Gospel of St John, in the words of Jesus
to Mary Magdalene: "Do not hold Me, for
I have not yet ascended to the Father" (John 20:17).
Jesus goes before us
next to the Father, rises to the
heights of God and invites us to
follow Him. These
two directions on the
Risen One's journey are not
contradictory, for both indicate the path to follow
Christ.
The true purpose of our journey is
communion with God.
He Himself is the house of many
dwelling places (cf. John 14:2ff.); but we can be elevated to
these dwelling places only by going "towards
Galilee", traveling on the pathways of the world, taking the
Gospel to all nations, carrying the gift
of His love to the
men and
women of all times.
Therefore, the journey of the Apostles extends to
the "ends of the earth" (cf. Acts
1: 6ff.). In this way, Sts Peter and Paul went all the way to
Rome, a city that at that time was the centre of the known world,
the true caput mundi.
The Holy Thursday procession accompanies
Jesus in
His solitude towards the via
crucis. The Corpus Domini
procession responds instead in a symbolic way to the mandate of the
Risen One:
I go before you to Galilee. Go to the extreme ends of
the world, take the Gospel to the world.
Of course, by faith,
the Eucharist is an
intimate mystery. The
Lord instituted the
Sacrament in the Upper Room,
surrounded by His new family,
by the 12 Apostles, a
prefiguration and anticipation of the
Church of all times.
And so, in the liturgy of the ancient
Church, the distribution of
Holy Communion was introduced with
the words Sancta sanctis: the
holy gift is intended for those who
have been made holy.
In this way a response was given to the exhortation of
St Paul to the Corinthians: "A
man should examine himself first; only then should he eat of the bread
and drink of the cup..." (1Corinthians 11:28).
Nevertheless, from this intimacy that is a most personal
gift of the
Lord, the strength of
the Sacrament of the
Eucharist goes above and beyond the
walls of our Churches. In this
Sacrament, the
Lord is always journeying to meet the world. This
universal aspect of the Eucharistic presence
becomes evident in today's festive procession.
We bring Christ,
present under the sign of bread, onto the streets of our city. We
entrust these streets, these homes, our daily life, to His goodness.
May our streets be streets of Jesus!
May our houses be homes for Him and
with Him! May our life of every day
be penetrated by His presence.
With this gesture, let us place under
His eyes the
sufferings of the sick,
the solitude of young people and the
elderly, temptations,
fears - our entire life. The
procession represents an immense and public
blessing for our city:
Christ is, in person, the
divine Blessing for the world. May
the ray of His blessing extend to us
all!
In the Corpus Domini
procession, we walk with the Risen One
on His journey to meet the entire
world, as we said. By doing precisely this, we too answer
His mandate: "Take,
eat... Drink of it, all of you" (Matthew 26:26ff.).
It is not possible to "eat"
the Risen One, present under the
sign of bread, as if it were a simple piece of bread. To eat this
Bread is to
communicate, to enter into
communion with the person of the living
Lord. This communion,
this act of "eating", is truly
an encounter between two persons,
it is allowing our lives to be
penetrated by the life of the One Who
is the Lord, of the
One Who is my
Creator and Redeemer.
The
purpose of this communion, of this
partaking, is the assimilation of my life with
His, my transformation and conformation into
He Who is living
Love. Therefore, this
communion implies
adoration,
it implies the will to
follow Christ, to follow the
One Who goes ahead of us.
Adoration and procession
thereby make up a single gesture of
communion; they answer
His mandate: "Take
and eat".
Our procession finishes in front of the Basilica of
St Mary Major in the encounter with Our
Lady, called by the dear Pope John Paul II, "Woman
of the Eucharist". Mary,
Mother of the
Lord, truly teaches us what entering into
communion with
Christ is: Mary
offered her own
flesh, her
own blood to
Jesus and became a living tent of the
Word, allowing
herself to be penetrated by His
presence in body and spirit.
Let us pray to
her, Our
Holy Mother, so that she
may help us to open our entire being, always more, to
Christ's presence; so that
she may help us to follow
Him faithfully,
day after day, on the streets of our
life.
Amen

Pope Benedict XVI
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