THE REAL PRESENCE.
Eucharistic Meditations.
By Saint Peter Julian Eymard.
CATHOLIC TRUTH SOCIETY of OREGON No. Pr138 (1938).
Eucharistic Meditations by Saint Peter Julian Eymard.
THE EUCHARISTIC VEIL.
Cur faciem tuam abscondis?
Why hide You Your face? (Job 13:24).
I.
WHY is Our Lord veiled beneath the Sacred Species in the Most Blessed
Sacrament?
It is difficult to get accustomed to this hidden state of Our Lord. We must frequently insist upon this truth; for we must believe firmly and practically that although Our Lord Jesus Christ is veiled, He is really and substantially present in the Holy Eucharist.
But why this silent presence, this impenetrable veil? We are often tempted to
say:
“Lord, show us Your face!”
Our Lord makes us feel His power; He draws us to Himself; He keeps us
respectful; but we do not see Him. And it would be so sweet, so good to hear
words from Our Lord’s lips!
‘What a consolation for us
were He to show Himself!’ What an assurance of being His friend! For He would
supposedly show Himself only to those He loves.
II.
WELL, Our Lord is more lovable when hidden than if He were to show Himself. He
is more eloquent when silent than if He were to speak. And what we look upon as
a punishment is an effect of His love and goodness.
Yes, if He were to show Himself as He is, we would be unhappy; the contrast of His virtues, of His glory would humiliate us. We would say: “What! A Father so good, with children so miserable!” We would not dare approach Him or show ourselves. Now that we know only His kindness, we come at least without fear.
And everybody comes to Him. Let us suppose that Our Lord were to manifest
Himself to the good only, — for since His Resurrection, He cannot reveal
Himself to sinners — who would dare rank himself among the good? Who would not
dread coming to church lest Jesus Christ, on not finding him good enough, would
not manifest Himself to him? People would grow envious of one another. The
proud alone would dare think enough of themselves to come to Our Lord.
Whereas under the present
order of things everyone has equal rights and can take it for granted that he is
loved.
III.
BUT perhaps the sight of Our Lord’s glory would convert us?
No, no! We cannot convert
people by dazzling them. The Jews became idolaters at the foot of a flaming
Sinai; the Apostles talked nonsense on Mount Thabor.
We would be either frightened
or elated by Our Lord’s glory, but not converted. The Jewish people were afraid
to come near Moses after his face shone with divine light. “No, Lord, please
remain hidden; that is better for us. I can thus draw near to You and at least
hope that You love me since You drive me not away.”
But would not the great power of His words convert us?
The Jews heard Our Lord for three years; were they converted? A mere
handful of them. The human words of Our Lord, those that strike the ear, will
not convert us; the words of His grace will. Now, Our Lord in the Blessed
Sacrament speaks to our heart, and that ought to be enough for us, for His
words are real.
BUT
if I could at least experience Our Lords love, some of its ardent flames, I
would love Him much more; they would transform my heart and set it ablaze with
love!
We mistake feeling for love.
When we ask Our Lord ‘to make us love Him’, we expect Him to make us feel that
we love Him.
Things would come to a sorry pass were He to listen to us. No! Love means sacrifice, the gift of our will and submission to that of God.
The virtue of strength is the fruit of Eucharistic contemplation and of
Communion, — which is perfect union with Jesus. The sweetness of it is
short-lived; strength alone endures. And what are we in need of against
ourselves and the world if not strength? Strength brings us peace.
Do you not feel at peace in the presence of Our Lord? That proves that you love Him. What more do you want?
When two friends get together, they spend their time looking at each other and
in telling their love for each other. They are wasting their time; for their
affection is not thereby increased. But separate them for a while; they will
think of each other and recall each other’s face; they long for each other.
The same is true of Our Lord.
What did the Apostles do during the three years they lived with Him?
He has hidden Himself in order
to have us ponder over His goodness and His virtues; in order that our love
might become serious, disengaged from the senses, content with the strength and
peace of God.
LET
us sum up what we have said. Our Savior is really present beneath the
veils of the Sacrament, but He denies us the view of His body so as to
have us abide in His love, in His adorable personality. If He were to show
Himself, or even a ‘single ray of His glory’, one trait of His adorable
countenance, we would forget Him and abide in that manifestation of
Himself. But He has told us His body is not our end; it is but a step to help
us reach first His soul and then His divinity through His soul.
We have His love to guide us thither.
The strength of our love will
bring complete certitude to our faith. The senses having been reduced to
silence, our soul will enter into communion with Jesus Christ; and since Jesus
is happiness, repose, and joy, the more intimately we commune with Him, the
happier we shall be.
THE MYSTERY OF FAITH.
Hoc est opus Dei ut credatis in Eum.
This is the work of God, that you believe in Him. (John 6:29.)
I.
OUR Lord wants us to remember all He did for us on earth, and to honor His
presence in the Most Blessed Sacrament by meditating on all the mysteries of
His life.
To make the mystery of the Last Supper more vividly present to us, He was not content with giving us the Gospel narrative; He left us a living, personal reminder: His very Self, His adorable Person.
Although Our Lord is in our midst, we cannot see Him, nor can we picture to
ourselves the manner of His presence in the Eucharist.
Our Eucharistic Lord, however, has frequently appeared. Why did He not permit
pictures of these august apparitions to be preserved?
Ah! Our Lord is well aware that pictures would only result in drawing us away
from the reality of His actual presence under the sacred veils of the
Eucharist.
But if I could see, would I not have more faith? Do we not love better what we
see?
Yes, the senses may confirm my wavering faith. But our risen Lord does
not want our perverted senses to reach Him; He demands pure faith.
He has not only a body but a soul as well. He does not want to be loved as bodies are loved; He wants us to go straight to His Soul with our minds and our hearts, without using our senses to discover Him.
For that matter, although Our Lord is truly present in the Blessed Sacrament in
body and in soul, He abides therein after the manner of spirits. Spirits cannot
be analyzed or dissected; neither can they be reached with the senses.
II.
BESIDES, why should we complain? Our Lord has arranged everything harmoniously.
The Sacred Species do not touch Him, nor do they form part of Him. They are
however, inseparably united to the sacramental Christ. They are, as it were,
the terms of His presence. They tell us where He is. They localize Him. Our
Lord could have taken a purely spiritual manner of existence; but then, how
could we find Him? Where could we look for Him?
Let us thank this good Savior! He is not hidden, but only veiled. A hidden object practically does not exist for us; we do not know where it is. But we can possess a veiled object; we are sure of it even though we do not see it.
Does it not already mean a great deal to us to know that our friend is at our
side, that he is really there? Well, you can see where Our Lord is. Look at the
Sacred Host; you are sure He is there.
III.
OUR Lord veils Himself for our good and our advantage, to force us to study His
soul, His intentions, and His virtues in Himself. If we saw Him, we would be
satisfied to admire His appearance, we would have for Him only sentimental
love; Our Lord wants us to love Him with a love of sacrifice. It is hard for Our
Lord thus to veil Himself. He would prefer to show His divine countenance which
drew so many hearts to Him in His mortal life; but He veils it for our good.
Our mind is thus forced to study the Eucharist; our faith is spurred on; we acquire a deeper understanding of Our Lord.
Instead of showing Himself to our eyes, He shows Himself to our soul. Through
His own light, He notifies us of His presence in us. He is both the light and
the object we must contemplate in that light; He is the object and the means of
our faith.
The clearness of one’s insight
into the Eucharist is proportioned to one’s greater or lesser love and purity
of life. Our Lord said so: “He that loves Me, shall be loved of My Father: and
I will love him, and manifest myself to him.”
Our Lord gives to souls of
prayer a deep understanding of Himself; He never deceives them.
He varies His grace of light.
He directs it now to one point of His life, now to another. And since the
Eucharist is the glorification of all the mysteries, Jesus Christ becomes
Himself the object of our meditation, no matter what its topic may be.
IV.
HOW much easier it is, consequently, to meditate before the Blessed Sacrament
than at home!
At home, we are in the
presence of the immensity of God; here, we are in the presence of Our Lord, Who
is very close to us.
And since the heart follows the mind, since affection follows knowledge, it becomes easier to love in the presence of the Most Blessed Sacrament. Love is then actual, since it has for its object Jesus living before us and renewing all His mysteries in the Eucharist.
He that meditates on the mysteries in themselves, without giving them life
through the Eucharist always feels that something is missing, and he harbors a
regret in spite of himself. “Oh, that I had been there!” he says to himself.
But in the presence of the
Most Blessed Sacrament, what is there to regret, to desire? All the mysteries
live anew through the Savior’s presence. Our love actually enjoys Him. Whether
you are thinking of the mortal life of Jesus or of His risen life, you know that
Jesus Christ is there with His body, His soul, and His divinity.
Let us therefore put these ideas into practice. No matter what mysteries are represented in our imagination, let us strengthen and quicken the remembrance of them through the presence of Jesus Christ.
Let us then remember that Our Lord is in the Host in all His different states,
and in His entirety. He who does not realize that, lives in darkness; his faith
is always weak and fails to make him happy.
Let our faith be active and thoughtful; that is what will make us happy. Our Lord wants to bring us happiness all by Himself. No man can make us happy; even piety cannot do it of itself. We need a piety that has fed on the Eucharist; for happiness comes only from the possession of God, and in the Eucharist, we own God.
THE LOVE OF JESUS IN THE EUCHARIST.
Nos credidimus caritati quam habet Deus in nobis.
We have believed the charity, which God has to us.
(1 John 4:16.)
WE believe in the love of God for us. That is a profound saying.
Belief in the truth of the words of God is required of every Christian; but
there is another belief, which is more perfect and is the crown of the first:
belief in divine love.
Belief in the divine truths will be vain if it does not lead to belief in divine love.
What is this love, in which we must believe?
It is the love of Jesus Christ; the love, which He manifests to us in the Eucharist, a love that is Himself, a living and infinite love.
They, who are satisfied with believing in the truth of the Eucharist, love not
at all, or very little.
But what proofs of His love does Our Lord give us in the Eucharist?
I.
FIRST of all, we have His word, His veracity.
Jesus tells us that He loves us, that He instituted His Sacrament only out of love for us. Therefore, it is true.
We believe an honest man on his word. Why should we not trust Our Lord as much?
When someone wants to give his friend a proof of his love, he tells him
personally that he loves him and he gives him an affectionate handshake.
Well, Our Lord sends neither angels nor ministers to assure us of His love; He
comes in person. Love will have no go-between.
And so, He perpetuates Himself only to tell us over and over again: “I love
you. You see that I love you!”
Our Lord was so afraid we
might forget Him that He took up His abode among us. He made His home with us
so that we might not be able to think of Him without thinking of His love. By
giving Himself thus and insisting on this gift, He hoped not to be forgotten.
Whoever gives serious thought to the Eucharist, and especially whoever partakes
of it, cannot help feeling that Our Lord loves him. He feels that in Him he has
a father. He feels that he is loved as a child and that he has a right to come
to his Father and speak to Him. In church, at the foot of the tabernacle, he is
in his Father’s home; he feels that he is indeed.
Ah! I understand why people
like to live near a church, in the shadow of their Father’s house!
And so, Jesus in the Most
Blessed Sacrament tells us that He loves us; He tells us interiorly and makes
us feel it. Let us believe in His love.
II.
DOES He love me personally?
To this, there is but one answer; do we belong to the Christian family? In a family, do not the father and the mother love each one of their children with an equal love? And if there were any preferences, would they not be for the weakest and frailest child?
Our Lord’s sentiments toward us are at least those of a good father; why deny
Him this quality?
Besides, see how Our Lord manifests His personal love for each one of us. Every
morning He comes to see each one of His children in particular, to converse
with them, to visit them, to embrace them. Although He has repeated this so
many times, He is as gracious and as loving at His last visit as He was at the
first. He is as young as ever and is not tired of loving us and giving Himself
to each one of us.
Does He not give Himself whole and entire to each one? And if a greater number
come to receive Him, does He divide Himself up? Does He give less to each one?
If the church is full of adorers, can they not all pray to Jesus and converse
with Him?
Is not each one listened to and his prayer granted as if he were the only one
in church?
Such is the personal love of Jesus for us. Each one may take it all for himself
and wrong no one; the sun gives all its light to each and everyone of us; the
ocean belongs whole and entire to each and every fish. Jesus is greater than us
all. He is inexhaustible.
III.
THE persistency of the love of Jesus in the Most Blessed Sacrament is another
undeniable proof that He loves us.
An almost incalculable number of Masses are celebrated every day; they follow one another almost without interruption. But how distressing it is for an understanding soul to realize that very often no one is present to hear or assist at these Masses, in which Jesus offers Himself up for us! While Jesus is crying mercy on this new Calvary, sinners are insulting God and His Christ.
Why then does Our Lord renew His sacrifice so often, since men do not profit by
it?
Why does Our Lord remain day and night on so many altars to which no one comes
to receive the graces He is offering so lavishly?
He loves, He hopes, and He waits!
If He came down on our altars on certain days only, some sinner, on being moved
to repentances might have to look for Him and, not finding Him, have to wait.
Our Lord prefers to wait himself for the sinner for years rather than keep him
waiting one instant; having to wait would perhaps discourage the sinner in his
attempt to break with the slavery of sin.
Oh! How few reflect that Jesus loves them that much in the Most Blessed
Sacrament!
And yet all these things are true! We have no faith in the love of Jesus! Would we treat
a friend, or any man at all, as we do Our Lord?
THE EUCHARIST, THE CENTRE OF OUR LOVE.
Manete in Me.
Abide in Me. (John 15:4.)
I.
THE heart of man needs a centre of affection and expansion. As a matter of
fact, when God created the first man He said:
“It is not good for man to be alone; let Us make him a help like unto himself.”
And the Imitation also says: “Without a friend you can not well
live.”
Well, Our Lord in the Most
Blessed Sacrament wants to be the centre of all hearts, and He tells us: “Abide
in Me. . . . Abide in My love.”
What does abiding in Our Lord’s
love mean? To abide in His love is to make His Eucharistic love the centre of
our life, the only source of our consolation; it is to cast ourselves into the
Heart of Jesus in our afflictions, in our sorrows, in our deceptions, in the
circumstances in which the heart un-bosoms itself more spontaneously. He
invites us to do so.
“Come to Me, all you that labor
and are burdened, and I will refresh you.”
To abide in His love is, in
time of joy, to refer our happiness to Him; for delicacy of friendship wants a
friend with whom to share its joys.
To abide in His love is to
make the Eucharist the centre of our desires: “Lord, I desire this only if You
desire it. I will do this to please You.”
To abide in His love is to delight in surprising Him with some gift, or some little sacrifice.
To abide in His love is to live by the Eucharist; to guide ourselves in our
actions by His thought, and to make it a point unswervingly to prefer the good
service of the Eucharist to everything else.
Alas! Is Jesus in the Eucharist
(‘Jesus Eucharistic’) really our centre?
Perhaps in time of
extraordinary difficulties, or of very fervent prayer, or of urgent need; but
in everyday life, do we think, do we reflect, do we act in Jesus as in our
centre?
II.
WHY is Our Lord not my centre?
Because He is not yet the ego
of my ego; because I am not completely under His control, under the
inspiration of His will; because I have desires that are vying with the desires
of Jesus within me; because He does not mean everything to me. And yet, a child
works for his parents, an angel for his God; I ought therefore to work for my
Master, Jesus Christ.
What am I to do? I must enter
into this centre, abide in it, and act in it, not indeed by the sentiment of
His sweetness, which does not depend on me, but by repeated attempts, by the
homage of every action. Come, O my soul! Leave the world; come, but of yourself;
renounce yourself; and go to the God of the Eucharist. He has an abode in which
to receive you; He longs for you; He wants to live with you, to live in you. Abide
therefore in Jesus present in your heart, live in your heart; live in the
goodness of Jesus in the Eucharist (‘Jesus Eucharistic’).
O my soul, study Our Lord in you,
and do nothing but by Him.
Abide in Our Lord. Abide in
Him through a sense of devotedness, of holy joy, of readiness to do
whatever He will ask of you. Abide in the Heart and the peace of Jesus
Eucharistic
III.
WHAT impresses me is that this
centre of the Eucharist is hidden,
invisible, altogether interior, and, for all that, most real, living, and
sustaining.
Jesus draws the soul
spiritually into the wholly spiritualized state that is His in the Sacrament.
What, in fact, is the nature of the life of Jesus in the Most Blessed Sacrament? It is entirely hidden, all interior.
He conceals therein His power and kindness; He conceals His divine Person.
And all His actions and virtues take on this simple and hidden character.
He requires silence around Him. He no longer prays to His Father “with a strong
cry and tears” as in the Garden of Olives, but through His self-abasement.
All graces come from the Host. From His Eucharist, Jesus sanctifies the world,
but in an invisible and spiritual manner.
He rules the world and the Church without either moving or speaking.
Such must the kingdom of Jesus be in me, all interior. I must gather myself up
around Jesus: my faculties, my understanding, and my will; and my senses, as
far as possible. I must live of Jesus and not of myself, in Jesus and not in
myself. I must pray with Him, immolate myself with Him, and be consumed in the
same love with Him. I must become in Him one flame, one heart, one life with
Him.
What nourishes this centre is
something similar to God’s call to Abraham: egredere (Go forth out of your
country); it is the renouncing and abandoning of outside things; the turning to
those within and the losing of oneself in Jesus. This manner of life is more
pleasing to His Heart and gives greater glory to His Father; that is why Our
Lord desires it ardently. He tells us: “Come out of yourself and follow Me into
solitude where, alone with you, I will speak to your heart.”
This life in Jesus is nothing
other than the love of predilection, the gift of self, the intensifying of
union with Him; through it, we take root, as it were, and prepare the
nourishment, the sap of the tree. Regnum Dei intra vos est. “The
kingdom of God is within you.”
IV.
THERE is no centre other than Jesus, and Jesus Eucharistic.
He tells us: “Without Me you can do nothing.” He alone gives grace. He reserves
to Himself the distribution of it in order to oblige us to come to Him and ask
Him for it.
He wants thus to establish and foster union with us. He reserves to Himself the
right of giving consolation and peace, so that in sorrows and combats we may
have recourse to Him. He wants to be the heart’s only happiness. He has placed
this centre of repose in none other than himself: Manete in Me. And lest
we should ever miss Him when we come to Him, He remains always at our
service, always ready, always lovable.
He is continually drawing us to Himself. The life of love is nothing other than this continual attraction of us to Him.
Alas! I am so little established in this centre of love! My aspirations to
Jesus are still so imperfect, so rare, and so interrupted, often for long hours
at a time! And yet, Jesus tells us repeatedly: “He that eats My Flesh, and
drinks My Blood abides in Me, and I in him.”
GOD IS THERE!
Vere Dominus est in loco isto, et ego nesciebam!
Indeed the Lord is in this place, and I knew it not!
(Genesis 28:16.)
I.
In order to form a fair judgment of a family, we must see whether the law of
respect is observed. When you meet with a family in which the children and
servants are obedient and respectful, you can say:
“Here is a good and happy family.”
The respect and honor given to parents is the religion of the family, just as
respect for the sovereign or his representatives is the religion of societies
We are not asked to honor the qualities of the individual, but his authority, which comes from God.
We owe respect to Our Lord; that is our first duty. Under pain of failing in
our duties towards Our Lord, we must have for him a spontaneous respect, a
respect of instinct that should require no premeditation.
It must be in the nature of an impression in us. We must honor Our Lord
wherever He is; His dignity as God-Man requires it. In His name, every knee
bows in heaven, on earth, and in hell.
In heaven, the angels
prostrate themselves before His Majesty in trembling adoration; the place of Our
Lord’s glory is also the place where He receives sovereign respect.
Every creature on earth has
obeyed Our Lord. The sea adored Him by becoming solid beneath His feet. The sun
and the heavenly bodies mourned Him; they honored Him while men were cursing
Him.
And in hell the damned tremble
beneath the justice of the severe Judge of the living and the dead.
II.
RESPECT for the presence of Our Lord should not have to be reasoned out. When
the court or the King is announced, all stand; it is instinctive.
When the Sovereign goes by, everyone pays him reverence. A spontaneous movement of respect and deference greet him everywhere. He who is no longer of that sentiment or who wishes to destroy it in others is no longer a man.
Catholics have much reason to blush for their lack of respect in Our Lord’s
presence. I am speaking only of spontaneous respect.
Enter a synagogue; if you speak or do not behave properly, you are expelled.
Before entering a mosque, you are requested to take off your shoes. All these
infidels have nothing real in their temples, but we have everything. In spite
of that, their respect far surpasses ours.
Our Lord might very well say the devil is honored more than He is. “I have
brought up children . . . but they have despised Me.”
I ask mothers whether they would be pleased to be disowned publicly by their
children. Why do we do to Our Lord what would offend us so much if it
were done to us? Why are we less sensitive when Our Lord’s honor is at stake
than when our own petty dignity is?
Nothing could be more false. Our dignity, in fact, comes to us from no one but
God, by reflection from Him to us. When, therefore, we allow respect for Our
Lord to be lost, we destroy the respect due to our own selves.
Oh! If Our Lord were to punish us for our lack of respect as we deserve!
God had Heliodorus scourged for profaning His temple; but there is more than
the temple here. (2 Maccabees 3:21-40)
Let us, therefore, give Our Lord this first homage of a sentiment of respect as soon as we come into His presence. We are but wretches if we allow levity or carelessness to precede this homage.
Yes, our greatest sins against faith come from our lack of respect.
III.
He who believes, knows where he is going when he goes to church: he is going to
Our Lord Jesus Christ. On entering the church, he says to all his occupations,
like Saint Bernard: “Stay here at the door. I feel the need of seeking comfort
and strength from God.”
Act in the same manner. You
know how much time you are to spend in church, forget everything else. If you
come to pray, you do not come to transact business. And if you are pestered
with distractions and worries, turn them all out of doors without getting
troubled over them. Persevere in prayer and make acts of reparation and of
respect. Take a better posture, and let Our Lord see that you detest your
distractions. By your respectful attitude, if not by the attention of your
mind, you are still proclaiming His divinity, His presence; were you to do only
that, you would be doing a great deal.
Watch a saint enter a church.
He goes in without concerning himself with those who are already there. He
concentrates on Our Lord and forgets everything else. In the presence of the
Pope, we hardly give a thought to cardinals and bishops. And in heaven the
saints do not idle away their time honoring one another; to God alone they give
all honour and glory. Let us imitate them; Our Lord is the only one in church.
Remain quiet for a moment
after you have come into church; silence is the greatest mark of respect, and
the first disposition for prayer is respect. Most of our dryness and lack of
devotion in prayer is due to our lack of respect for Our Lord on entering the
church; to our disrespectful posture.
Let us therefore take the firm resolution to foster in ourselves this instinctive respect; we do not have to appeal to reason for that. Must Our Lord prove His presence to us every time we enter the church? Must He always send us an angel to tell us that He is there?
It certainly would be most unfortunate if He did, but, alas! quite necessary.
IV.
YOU owe Our Lord exterior respect, which is the prayer of the body. Nothing
helps so much the prayer of the soul. See with what religious care the Church
has regulated the minutest details of exterior worship. It must then be that
this prayer gives great glory to Jesus Christ. He gave us the example of
exterior worship by praying on His knees; tradition tells us He prayed with
arms outstretched in the form of a cross and lifted up to heaven. The Apostles
have handed down to us this manner of praying; the priest uses it during the
Holy Sacrifice.
Since our body has received its life from God and lives on the divine favors that are constantly showered upon it, does it not owe God something? We must then make it pray by giving it an attitude full of respect.
Careless postures of the body unnerve the soul, whereas a crucifying posture
strengthens and helps her. You must not torment yourself by taking too
uncomfortable a posture, but let it be stern enough. Postures that denote too
much familiarity are out of place in the presence of God; they breed contempt.
Love Our Lord; be tender and affectionate towards Him, but never exaggeratingly
familiar. Dryness and lack of devotion in prayer are nearly always the result
of disrespect in posture.
When you are travelling or when you are saying extra prayers at home, you may
take a less uncomfortable posture, but in the presence of Our Lord, you must
also adore externally with your senses. Remember how strict God was on this
point in the Old Law, and what a number of preparatory details the Levites had
to go through. God wanted to make them feel their dependence on Him and prepare
them to pray well.
Our piety is agonizing because we lack this external respect. I know that we
should not tremble with fear before God, nor be afraid to come into His
presence; but, on the other hand, neither should we seem to be despising Him.
An austere posture helps us to pray better; we refuse this help in order to
satisfy our sensuality. We imagine we are tired; how often our imagination
deceives us! If the Pope were passing by, our imaginary fatigue would not
prevent us from remaining on our knees. And even supposing that we are really
tired, why be so afraid of suffering, which gives wings to prayer? We should at
least have even then a becoming and grave posture. Let the lay people sit down
if they are tired, but in a becoming manner; they should not slouch in their
seats. Let them not take any position that would tend to weaken the soul’s
energy and render it unfit for prayer. We religious; however, should remain on
our knees; that is the correct posture for an adorer. If we grow tired, we
should stand up; that, too, is a respectful posture. We should never sit down.
Let us be soldiers of the God of the Eucharist. And if our heart is not burning
with love, let our body at least bear witness to our faith and our desire to
love and to do things properly.
Let our body therefore take the attitude of prayer, of adoration. Let us all
form the court of our King Jesus: Keep the presence of the Master in your
thoughts; impress your mind with the truth of it. Let all your
attentions be for Our Lord Jesus Christ! Vere Dominus est in loco isto. ‘Indeed
the Lord is in this place.’ Yes! Truly, the Lord is here.
(Thanks to the Monstrance Press.)
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