
POST-SYNODAL
APOSTOLIC EXHORTATION
SACRAMENTUM CARITATIS
OF THE HOLY FATHER
BENEDICT XVI
TO THE BISHOPS, CLERGY,
CONSECRATED PERSONS
AND THE LAY FAITHFUL
ON THE EUCHARIST
AS THE SOURCE AND SUMMIT
OF THE CHURCH'S LIFE AND MISSION
INDEX
Introduction
[1]
The food of truth [2]
The development of the eucharistic rite [3]
The Synod of Bishops and the Year of the
Eucharist [4]
The purpose of the present Exhortation [5]
PART ONE:
THE EUCHARIST, A MYSTERY TO BE BELIEVED
The Church's eucharistic faith
[6]
The blessed Trinity and the
Eucharist
The bread come down from
heaven [7]
A free gift of the Blessed Trinity [8]
The Eucharist: Jesus the true
Sacrificial Lamb
The new and eternal covenant
in the blood of the Lamb [9]
The institution of the Eucharist [10]
Figura transit in veritatem [11]
The Holy Spirit and the Eucharist
Jesus and the Holy Spirit [12]
The Holy Spirit and the eucharistic celebration
[13]
The Eucharist and the Church
The Eucharist, causal
principle of the Church [14]
The Eucharist and ecclesial communion [15]
The Eucharist and the Sacraments
The sacramentality of the
Church [16]
I. The Eucharist and Christian
initiation
The Eucharist, the fullness of Christian
initiation [17]
The order of the sacraments of initiation [18]
Initiation, the ecclesial community and the
family [19]
II. The Eucharist and the
sacrament of reconciliation
Their intrinsic connection [20]
Some pastoral concerns [21]
III. The Eucharist and the
anointing of the sick [22]
IV. The Eucharist and the
Sacrament of Holy Orders
In persona Christi capitis [23]
The Eucharist and priestly celibacy [24]
The clergy shortage and the pastoral care of
vocations [25]
Gratitude and hope [26]
V. The Eucharist and matrimony
The Eucharist, a nuptial sacrament [27]
The Eucharist and the unicity of marriage [28]
The Eucharist and the indissolubility of
marriage [29]
The Eucharist and Eschatology
The Eucharist: a gift to men
and women on their journey [30]
The eschatological banquet [31]
Prayer for the dead [32]
The Eucharist and the Virgin Mary
[33]
PART TWO:
THE EUCHARIST, A MYSTERY TO BE CELEBRATED
Lex orandi and lex credendi
[34]
Beauty and the liturgy [35]
The Eucharistic celebration, the
work of “Christus Totus”
Christus totus in capite et in
corpore [36]
The Eucharist and the risen Christ [37]
Ars celebrandi
[38]
The Bishop, celebrant par
excellence [39]
Respect for the liturgical books and the
richness of signs [40]
Art at the service of the liturgy [41]
Liturgical song [42]
The Structure of the Eucharistic
Celebration [43]
The intrinsic unity of the
liturgical action [44]
The liturgy of the word [45]
The homily [46]
The presentation of the gifts [47]
The Eucharistic Prayer [48]
The sign of peace [49]
The distribution and reception of the Eucharist
[50]
The dismissal: “Ite, missa est” [51]
Actuosa participatio
[52]
Authentic participation [53]
Participation and the priestly ministry [53]
The eucharistic celebration and inculturation
[54]
Personal conditions for an “active
participation” [55]
Participation by Christians who are not Catholic
[56]
Participation through the communications media
[57]
Active participation by the sick [58]
Care for prisoners [59]
Migrants and participation in the Eucharist [60]
Large-scale celebrations [61]
The Latin language [62]
Eucharistic celebrations in small groups [63]
Interior participation in the
celebration
Mystagogical catechesis [64]
Reverence for the Eucharist [65]
Adoration and Eucharistic
devotion
The intrinsic relationship
between celebration and adoration [66]
The practice of eucharistic adoration [67]
Forms of eucharistic devotion [68]
The location of the tabernacle [69]
PART THREE:
THE EUCHARIST, A MYSTERY TO BE LIVED
The Eucharistic form of the
Christian life
Spiritual worship – logiké
latreía (Rom 12:1) [70]
The all-encompassing effect of eucharistic
worship [71]
Iuxta dominicam viventes – living in accordance
with the Lord's Day [72]
Living the Sunday obligation [73]
The meaning of rest and of work [74]
Sunday assemblies in the absence of a priest
[75]
A eucharistic form of Christian life, membership
in the Church [76]
Spirituality and eucharistic culture [77]
The Eucharistic and the evangelization of
cultures [78]
The Eucharist and the lay faithful [79]
The Eucharist and priestly spirituality [80]
The Eucharist and the consecrated life [81]
The Eucharist and moral transformation [82]
Eucharistic consistency [83]
The Eucharist, a mystery to be
proclaimed
The Eucharist and mission [84]
The Eucharist and witness [85]
Christ Jesus, the one Saviour [86]
Freedom of worship [87]
The Eucharist, a mystery to be
offered to the world
The Eucharist, bread broken
for the life of the world [88]
The social implications of the eucharistic
mystery [89]
The food of truth and human need [90]
The Church's social teaching [91]
The sanctification of the world and the
protection of creation [92]
The usefulness of a Eucharistic Compendium [93]
Conclusion
[94]
INTRODUCTION
1. The sacrament of charity
(1), the Holy Eucharist is the gift that Jesus
Christ makes of himself, thus revealing to us
God's infinite love for every man and woman.
This wondrous sacrament makes manifest that
"greater" love which led him to "lay down his
life for his friends" (Jn 15:13). Jesus did
indeed love them "to the end" (Jn 13:1). In
those words the Evangelist introduces Christ's
act of immense humility: before dying for us on
the Cross, he tied a towel around himself and
washed the feet of his disciples. In the same
way, Jesus continues, in the sacrament of the
Eucharist, to love us "to the end," even to
offering us his body and his blood. What
amazement must the Apostles have felt in
witnessing what the Lord did and said during
that Supper! What wonder must the eucharistic
mystery also awaken in our own hearts!
The food of truth
2. In the sacrament of the
altar, the Lord meets us, men and women created
in God's image and likeness (cf. Gen 1:27), and
becomes our companion along the way. In this
sacrament, the Lord truly becomes food for us,
to satisfy our hunger for truth and freedom.
Since only the truth can make us free (cf. Jn
8:32), Christ becomes for us the food of truth.
With deep human insight, Saint Augustine clearly
showed how we are moved spontaneously, and not
by constraint, whenever we encounter something
attractive and desirable. Asking himself what it
is that can move us most deeply, the saintly
Bishop went on to say: "What does our soul
desire more passionately than truth?" (2) Each
of us has an innate and irrepressible desire for
ultimate and definitive truth. The Lord Jesus,
"the way, and the truth, and the life" (Jn
14:6), speaks to our thirsting, pilgrim hearts,
our hearts yearning for the source of life, our
hearts longing for truth. Jesus Christ is the
Truth in person, drawing the world to himself.
"Jesus is the lodestar of human freedom: without
him, freedom loses its focus, for without the
knowledge of truth, freedom becomes debased,
alienated and reduced to empty caprice. With
him, freedom finds itself." (3) In the sacrament
of the Eucharist, Jesus shows us in particular
the truth about the love which is the very
essence of God. It is this evangelical truth
which challenges each of us and our whole being.
For this reason, the Church, which finds in the
Eucharist the very centre of her life, is
constantly concerned to proclaim to all,
opportune importune (cf. 2 Tim 4:2), that God is
love.(4) Precisely because Christ has become for
us the food of truth, the Church turns to every
man and woman, inviting them freely to accept
God's gift.
The development of the
eucharistic rite
3. If we consider the
bimillenary history of God's Church, guided by
the wisdom of the Holy Spirit, we can gratefully
admire the orderly development of the ritual
forms in which we commemorate the event of our
salvation. From the varied forms of the early
centuries, still resplendent in the rites of the
Ancient Churches of the East, up to the spread
of the Roman rite; from the clear indications of
the Council of Trent and the Missal of Saint
Pius V to the liturgical renewal called for by
the Second Vatican Council: in every age of the
Church's history the eucharistic celebration, as
the source and summit of her life and mission,
shines forth in the liturgical rite in all its
richness and variety. The
Eleventh Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod
of Bishops, held from 2-23 October 2005 in
the Vatican, gratefully acknowledged the
guidance of the Holy Spirit in this rich
history. In a particular way, the Synod Fathers
acknowledged and reaffirmed the beneficial
influence on the Church's life of the liturgical
renewal which began with the
Second Vatican Ecumenical Council (5). The
Synod of Bishops was able to evaluate the
reception of the renewal in the years following
the Council. There were many expressions of
appreciation. The difficulties and even the
occasional abuses which were noted, it was
affirmed, cannot overshadow the benefits and the
validity of the liturgical renewal, whose riches
are yet to be fully explored. Concretely, the
changes which the Council called for need to be
understood within the overall unity of the
historical development of the rite itself,
without the introduction of artificial
discontinuities.(6)
The Synod of Bishops and the
Year of the Eucharist
4. We should also emphasize
the relationship between the recent Synod of
Bishops on the Eucharist and the events which
have taken place in the Church's life in recent
years. First of all, we should recall the Great
Jubilee of the Year 2000, with which my beloved
Predecessor, the Servant of God John Paul II,
led the Church into the third Christian
millennium. The Jubilee Year clearly had a
significant eucharistic dimension. Nor can we
forget that the Synod of Bishops was preceded,
and in some sense prepared for, by the
Year of the Eucharist which John Paul II
had, with great foresight, wanted the whole
Church to celebrate. That year, which began with
the
International Eucharistic Congress in
Guadalajara in October 2004, ended on
23 October 2005, at the conclusion of the XI
Synodal Assembly, with the canonization of five
saints particularly distinguished for their
eucharistic piety: Bishop Józef Bilczewski,
Fathers Gaetano Catanoso, Zygmunt Gorazdowski
and Alberto Hurtado Cruchaga, and the Capuchin
Fra Felice da Nicosia. Thanks to the teachings
proposed by John Paul II in the Apostolic Letter
Mane Nobiscum Domine (7) and to the helpful
suggestions of the Congregation for Divine
Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments,(8)
many initiatives were undertaken by Dioceses and
various ecclesial groups in order to reawaken
and increase eucharistic faith, to improve the
quality of eucharistic celebration, to promote
eucharistic adoration and to encourage a
practical solidarity which, starting from the
Eucharist, would reach out to those in need.
Finally, mention should be made of the
significance of my venerable Predecessor's last
Encyclical,
Ecclesia de Eucharistia (9), in which he
left us a sure magisterial statement of the
Church's teaching on the Eucharist and a final
testimony of the central place that this divine
sacrament had in his own life.
The purpose of this
Exhortation
5. This Post-Synodal Apostolic
Exhortation seeks to take up the richness and
variety of the reflections and proposals which
emerged from the recent
Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of
Bishops – from the
Lineamenta to the Propositiones, along the
way of the
Instrumentum Laboris, the Relationes ante
and post disceptationem, the interventions of
the Synod Fathers, the auditores and the
fraternal delegates – and to offer some basic
directions aimed at a renewed commitment to
eucharistic enthusiasm and fervour in the
Church. Conscious of the immense patrimony of
doctrine and discipline accumulated over the
centuries with regard to this sacrament,(10) I
wish here to endorse the wishes expressed by the
Synod Fathers (11) by encouraging the Christian
people to deepen their understanding of the
relationship between the eucharistic mystery,
the liturgical action, and the new spiritual
worship which derives from the Eucharist as the
sacrament of charity. Consequently, I wish to
set the present Exhortation alongside my first
Encyclical Letter, Deus Caritas Est, in which I
frequently mentioned the sacrament of the
Eucharist and stressed its relationship to
Christian love, both of God and of neighbour:
"God incarnate draws us all to himself. We can
thus understand how agape also became a term for
the Eucharist: there God's own agape comes to us
bodily, in order to continue his work in us and
through us" (12).
PART ONE
THE EUCHARIST, A MYSTERY
TO BE BELIEVED
"This is the work of God: that
you believe
in him whom he has sent" (Jn 6:29)
The Church's eucharistic faith
6. "The mystery of faith!"
With these words, spoken immediately after the
words of consecration, the priest proclaims the
mystery being celebrated and expresses his
wonder before the substantial change of bread
and wine into the body and blood of the Lord
Jesus, a reality which surpasses all human
understanding. The Eucharist is a "mystery of
faith" par excellence: "the sum and summary of
our faith." (13) The Church's faith is
essentially a eucharistic faith, and it is
especially nourished at the table of the
Eucharist. Faith and the sacraments are two
complementary aspects of ecclesial life.
Awakened by the preaching of God's word, faith
is nourished and grows in the grace-filled
encounter with the Risen Lord which takes place
in the sacraments: "faith is expressed in the
rite, while the rite reinforces and strengthens
faith." (14) For this reason, the Sacrament of
the Altar is always at the heart of the Church's
life: "thanks to the Eucharist, the Church is
reborn ever anew!" (15) The more lively the
eucharistic faith of the People of God, the
deeper is its sharing in ecclesial life in
steadfast commitment to the mission entrusted by
Christ to his disciples. The Church's very
history bears witness to this. Every great
reform has in some way been linked to the
rediscovery of belief in the Lord's eucharistic
presence among his people.
The Blessed Trinity and the
Eucharist
The bread come down from
heaven
7. The first element of
eucharistic faith is the mystery of God himself,
trinitarian love. In Jesus' dialogue with
Nicodemus, we find an illuminating expression in
this regard: "God so loved the world that he
gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him
should not perish but have eternal life. For God
sent the Son into the world, not to condemn the
world, but that the world might be saved through
him" (Jn 3:16-17). These words show the deepest
source of God's gift. In the Eucharist Jesus
does not give us a "thing," but himself; he
offers his own body and pours out his own blood.
He thus gives us the totality of his life and
reveals the ultimate origin of this love. He is
the eternal Son, given to us by the Father. In
the Gospel we hear how Jesus, after feeding the
crowds by multiplying the loaves and fishes,
says to those who had followed him to the
synagogue of Capernaum: "My Father gives you the
true bread from heaven; for the bread of God is
he who comes down from heaven, and gives life to
the world" (Jn 6:32-33), and even identifies
himself, his own flesh and blood, with that
bread: "I am the living bread which came down
from heaven; if anyone eats of this bread, he
will live forever; and the bread which I shall
give for the life of the world is my flesh" (Jn
6:51). Jesus thus shows that he is the bread of
life which the eternal Father gives to mankind.
A free gift of the Blessed
Trinity
8. The Eucharist reveals the
loving plan that guides all of salvation history
(cf. Eph 1:10; 3:8- 11). There the Deus
Trinitas, who is essentially love (cf. 1 Jn
4:7-8), becomes fully a part of our human
condition. In the bread and wine under whose
appearances Christ gives himself to us in the
paschal meal (cf. Lk 22:14-20; 1 Cor 11:23-26),
God's whole life encounters us and is
sacramentally shared with us. God is a perfect
communion of love between Father, Son and Holy
Spirit. At creation itself, man was called to
have some share in God's breath of life (cf. Gen
2:7). But it is in Christ, dead and risen, and
in the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, given
without measure (cf. Jn 3:34), that we have
become sharers of God's inmost life. (16) Jesus
Christ, who "through the eternal Spirit offered
himself without blemish to God" (Heb 9:14),
makes us, in the gift of the Eucharist, sharers
in God's own life. This is an absolutely free
gift, the superabundant fulfilment of God's
promises. The Church receives, celebrates and
adores this gift in faithful obedience. The
"mystery of faith" is thus a mystery of
trinitarian love, a mystery in which we are
called by grace to participate. We too should
therefore exclaim with Saint Augustine: "If you
see love, you see the Trinity." (17)
The Eucharist: Jesus the true
Sacrificial lamb
The new and eternal covenant
in the blood of the Lamb
9. The mission for which Jesus
came among us was accomplished in the Paschal
Mystery. On the Cross from which he draws all
people to himself (cf. Jn 12:32), just before
"giving up the Spirit," he utters the words: "it
is finished" (Jn 19:30). In the mystery of
Christ's obedience unto death, even death on a
Cross (cf. Phil 2:8), the new and eternal
covenant was brought about. In his crucified
flesh, God's freedom and our human freedom met
definitively in an inviolable, eternally valid
pact. Human sin was also redeemed once for all
by God's Son (cf. Heb 7:27; 1 Jn 2:2; 4:10). As
I have said elsewhere, "Christ's death on the
Cross is the culmination of that turning of God
against himself in which he gives himself in
order to raise man up and save him. This is love
in its most radical form." (18) In the Paschal
Mystery, our deliverance from evil and death has
taken place. In instituting the Eucharist, Jesus
had spoken of the "new and eternal covenant" in
the shedding of his blood (cf. Mt 26:28; Mk
14:24; Lk 22:20). This, the ultimate purpose of
his mission, was clear from the very beginning
of his public life. Indeed, when, on the banks
of the Jordan, John the Baptist saw Jesus coming
towards him, he cried out: "Behold, the Lamb of
God, who takes away the sin of the world" (Jn
1:29). It is significant that these same words
are repeated at every celebration of Holy Mass,
when the priest invites us to approach the
altar: "This is the Lamb of God who takes away
the sins of the world. Happy are those who are
called to his supper." Jesus is the true paschal
lamb who freely gave himself in sacrifice for
us, and thus brought about the new and eternal
covenant. The Eucharist contains this radical
newness, which is offered to us again at every
celebration. (19)
The institution of the
Eucharist
10. This leads us to reflect
on the institution of the Eucharist at the Last
Supper. It took place within a ritual meal
commemorating the foundational event of the
people of Israel: their deliverance from slavery
in Egypt. This ritual meal, which called for the
sacrifice of lambs (cf. Ex 12:1-28, 43-51), was
a remembrance of the past, but at the same time
a prophetic remembrance, the proclamation of a
deliverance yet to come. The people had come to
realize that their earlier liberation was not
definitive, for their history continued to be
marked by slavery and sin. The remembrance of
their ancient liberation thus expanded to the
invocation and expectation of a yet more
profound, radical, universal and definitive
salvation. This is the context in which Jesus
introduces the newness of his gift. In the
prayer of praise, the Berakah, he does not
simply thank the Father for the great events of
past history, but also for his own "exaltation."
In instituting the sacrament of the Eucharist,
Jesus anticipates and makes present the
sacrifice of the Cross and the victory of the
resurrection. At the same time, he reveals that
he himself is the true sacrificial lamb,
destined in the Father's plan from the
foundation of the world, as we read in The First
Letter of Peter (cf. 1:18-20). By placing his
gift in this context, Jesus shows the salvific
meaning of his death and resurrection, a mystery
which renews history and the whole cosmos. The
institution of the Eucharist demonstrates how
Jesus' death, for all its violence and
absurdity, became in him a supreme act of love
and mankind's definitive deliverance from evil.
Figura transit in veritatem
11. Jesus thus brings his own
radical novum to the ancient Hebrew sacrificial
meal. For us Christians, that meal no longer
need be repeated. As the Church Fathers rightly
say, figura transit in veritatem: the
foreshadowing has given way to the truth itself.
The ancient rite has been brought to fulfilment
and definitively surpassed by the loving gift of
the incarnate Son of God. The food of truth,
Christ sacrificed for our sake, dat figuris
terminum. (20) By his command to "do this in
remembrance of me" (Lk 22:19; 1 Cor 11:25), he
asks us to respond to his gift and to make it
sacramentally present. In these words the Lord
expresses, as it were, his expectation that the
Church, born of his sacrifice, will receive this
gift, developing under the guidance of the Holy
Spirit the liturgical form of the sacrament. The
remembrance of his perfect gift consists not in
the mere repetition of the Last Supper, but in
the Eucharist itself, that is, in the radical
newness of Christian worship. In this way, Jesus
left us the task of entering into his "hour."
"The Eucharist draws us into Jesus' act of
self-oblation. More than just statically
receiving the incarnate Logos, we enter into the
very dynamic of his self-giving." (21) Jesus
"draws us into himself." (22) The substantial
conversion of bread and wine into his body and
blood introduces within creation the principle
of a radical change, a sort of "nuclear
fission," to use an image familiar to us today,
which penetrates to the heart of all being, a
change meant to set off a process which
transforms reality, a process leading ultimately
to the transfiguration of the entire world, to
the point where God will be all in all (cf. 1
Cor 15:28).
The Holy Spirit and the Eucharist
Jesus and the Holy Spirit
12. With his word and with the
elements of bread and wine, the Lord himself has
given us the essentials of this new worship. The
Church, his Bride, is called to celebrate the
eucharistic banquet daily in his memory. She
thus makes the redeeming sacrifice of her
Bridegroom a part of human history and makes it
sacramentally present in every culture. This
great mystery is celebrated in the liturgical
forms which the Church, guided by the Holy
Spirit, develops in time and space. (23) We need
a renewed awareness of the decisive role played
by the Holy Spirit in the evolution of the
liturgical form and the deepening understanding
of the sacred mysteries. The Paraclete, Christ's
first gift to those who believe, (24) already at
work in Creation (cf. Gen 1:2), is fully present
throughout the life of the incarnate Word: Jesus
Christ is conceived by the Virgin Mary by the
power of the Holy Spirit (cf. Mt 1:18; Lk 1:35);
at the beginning of his public mission, on the
banks of the Jordan, he sees the Spirit descend
upon him in the form of a dove (cf. Mt 3:16 and
parallels); he acts, speaks and rejoices in the
Spirit (cf. Lk 10:21), and he can offer himself
in the Spirit (cf. Heb 9:14). In the so-called
"farewell discourse" reported by John, Jesus
clearly relates the gift of his life in the
paschal mystery to the gift of the Spirit to his
own (cf. Jn 16:7). Once risen, bearing in his
flesh the signs of the passion, he can pour out
the Spirit upon them (cf. Jn 20:22), making them
sharers in his own mission (cf. Jn 20:21). The
Spirit would then teach the disciples all things
and bring to their remembrance all that Christ
had said (cf. Jn 14:26), since it falls to him,
as the Spirit of truth (cf. Jn 15:26), to guide
the disciples into all truth (cf. Jn 16:13). In
the account in Acts, the Spirit descends on the
Apostles gathered in prayer with Mary on the day
of Pentecost (cf. 2:1-4) and stirs them to
undertake the mission of proclaiming the Good
News to all peoples. Thus it is through the
working of the Spirit that Christ himself
continues to be present and active in his
Church, starting with her vital centre which is
the Eucharist.
The Holy Spirit and the
eucharistic celebration
13. Against this backdrop we
can understand the decisive role played by the
Holy Spirit in the eucharistic celebration,
particularly with regard to transubstantiation.
An awareness of this is clearly evident in the
Fathers of the Church. Saint Cyril of Jerusalem,
in his Catecheses, states that we "call upon God
in his mercy to send his Holy Spirit upon the
offerings before us, to transform the bread into
the body of Christ and the wine into the blood
of Christ. Whatever the Holy Spirit touches is
sanctified and completely transformed" (25).
Saint John Chrysostom too notes that the priest
invokes the Holy Spirit when he celebrates the
sacrifice: (26) like Elijah, the minister calls
down the Holy Spirit so that "as grace comes
down upon the victim, the souls of all are
thereby inflamed" (27). The spiritual life of
the faithful can benefit greatly from a better
appreciation of the richness of the anaphora:
along with the words spoken by Christ at the
Last Supper, it contains the epiclesis, the
petition to the Father to send down the gift of
the Spirit so that the bread and the wine will
become the body and blood of Jesus Christ and
that "the community as a whole will become ever
more the body of Christ" (28). The Spirit
invoked by the celebrant upon the gifts of bread
and wine placed on the altar is the same Spirit
who gathers the faithful "into one body" and
makes of them a spiritual offering pleasing to
the Father (29).
The Eucharist and the Church
The Eucharist, causal
principle of the Church
14. Through the sacrament of
the Eucharist Jesus draws the faithful into his
"hour;" he shows us the bond that he willed to
establish between himself and us, between his
own person and the Church. Indeed, in the
sacrifice of the Cross, Christ gave birth to the
Church as his Bride and his body. The Fathers of
the Church often meditated on the relationship
between Eve's coming forth from the side of Adam
as he slept (cf. Gen 2:21-23) and the coming
forth of the new Eve, the Church, from the open
side of Christ sleeping in death: from Christ's
pierced side, John recounts, there came forth
blood and water (cf. Jn 19:34), the symbol of
the sacraments (30). A contemplative gaze "upon
him whom they have pierced" (Jn 19:37) leads us
to reflect on the causal connection between
Christ's sacrifice, the Eucharist and the
Church. The Church "draws her life from the
Eucharist" (31). Since the Eucharist makes
present Christ's redeeming sacrifice, we must
start by acknowledging that "there is a causal
influence of the Eucharist at the Church's very
origins" (32). The Eucharist is Christ who gives
himself to us and continually builds us up as
his body. Hence, in the striking interplay
between the Eucharist which builds up the
Church, and the Church herself which "makes" the
Eucharist (33), the primary causality is
expressed in the first formula: the Church is
able to celebrate and adore the mystery of
Christ present in the Eucharist precisely
because Christ first gave himself to her in the
sacrifice of the Cross. The Church's ability to
"make" the Eucharist is completely rooted in
Christ's self-gift to her. Here we can see more
clearly the meaning of Saint John's words: "he
first loved us" (1 Jn 4:19). We too, at every
celebration of the Eucharist, confess the
primacy of Christ's gift. The causal influence
of the Eucharist at the Church's origins
definitively discloses both the chronological
and ontological priority of the fact that it was
Christ who loved us "first." For all eternity he
remains the one who loves us first.
The Eucharist and ecclesial
communion
15. The Eucharist is thus
constitutive of the Church's being and activity.
This is why Christian antiquity used the same
words, Corpus Christi, to designate Christ's
body born of the Virgin Mary, his eucharistic
body and his ecclesial body.(34) This clear
datum of the tradition helps us to appreciate
the inseparability of Christ and the Church. The
Lord Jesus, by offering himself in sacrifice for
us, in his gift effectively pointed to the
mystery of the Church. It is significant that
the Second Eucharistic Prayer, invoking the
Paraclete, formulates its prayer for the unity
of the Church as follows: "may all of us who
share in the body and blood of Christ be brought
together in unity by the Holy Spirit." These
words help us to see clearly how the res of the
sacrament of the Eucharist is the unity of the
faithful within ecclesial communion. The
Eucharist is thus found at the root of the
Church as a mystery of communion (35).
The relationship between
Eucharist and communio had already been pointed
out by the Servant of God John Paul II in his
Encyclical
Ecclesia de Eucharistia. He spoke of the
memorial of Christ as "the supreme sacramental
manifestation of communion in the Church" (36).
The unity of ecclesial communion is concretely
manifested in the Christian communities and is
renewed at the celebration of the Eucharist,
which unites them and differentiates them in the
particular Churches, "in quibus et ex quibus una
et unica Ecclesia catholica exsistit" (37). The
fact that the one Eucharist is celebrated in
each Diocese around its own Bishop helps us to
see how those particular Churches subsist in and
ex Ecclesia. Indeed, "the oneness and
indivisibility of the eucharistic body of the
Lord implies the oneness of his mystical body,
which is the one and indivisible Church. From
the eucharistic centre arises the necessary
openness of every celebrating community, of
every particular Church. By allowing itself to
be drawn into the open arms of the Lord, it
achieves insertion into his one and undivided
body." (38) Consequently, in the celebration of
the Eucharist, the individual members of the
faithful find themselves in their Church, that
is, in the Church of Christ. From this
eucharistic perspective, adequately understood,
ecclesial communion is seen to be catholic by
its very nature (39). An emphasis on this
eucharistic basis of ecclesial communion can
also contribute greatly to the ecumenical
dialogue with the Churches and Ecclesial
Communities which are not in full communion with
the See of Peter. The Eucharist objectively
creates a powerful bond of unity between the
Catholic Church and the Orthodox Churches, which
have preserved the authentic and integral nature
of the eucharistic mystery. At the same time,
emphasis on the ecclesial character of the
Eucharist can become an important element of the
dialogue with the Communities of the Reformed
tradition (40).
The Eucharist and the Sacraments
The sacramentality of the
Church
16. The Second Vatican Council
recalled that "all the sacraments, and indeed
all ecclesiastical ministries and works of the
apostolate, are bound up with the Eucharist and
are directed towards it. For in the most blessed
Eucharist is contained the entire spiritual
wealth of the Church, namely Christ himself our
Pasch and our living bread, who gives life to
humanity through his flesh – that flesh which is
given life and gives life by the Holy Spirit.
Thus men and women are invited and led to offer
themselves, their works and all creation in
union with Christ." (41) This close relationship
of the Eucharist with the other sacraments and
the Christian life can be most fully understood
when we contemplate the mystery of the Church
herself as a sacrament. (42) The Council in this
regard stated that "the Church, in Christ, is a
sacrament – a sign and instrument – of communion
with God and of the unity of the entire human
race." (43) To quote Saint Cyprian, as "a people
made one by the unity of the Father, the Son and
the Holy Spirit," (44) she is the sacrament of
trinitarian communion.
The fact that the Church is
the "universal sacrament of salvation" (45)
shows how the sacramental economy ultimately
determines the way that Christ, the one Saviour,
through the Spirit, reaches our lives in all
their particularity. The Church receives and at
the same time expresses what she herself is in
the seven sacraments, thanks to which God's
grace concretely influences the lives of the
faithful, so that their whole existence,
redeemed by Christ, can become an act of worship
pleasing to God. From this perspective, I would
like here to draw attention to some elements
brought up by the Synod Fathers which may help
us to grasp the relationship of each of the
sacraments to the eucharistic mystery.
I. The Eucharist and Christian
initiation
The Eucharist, the fullness of
Christian initiation
17. If the Eucharist is truly
the source and summit of the Church's life and
mission, it follows that the process of
Christian initiation must constantly be directed
to the reception of this sacrament. As the Synod
Fathers said, we need to ask ourselves whether
in our Christian communities the close link
between Baptism, Confirmation and Eucharist is
sufficiently recognized. (46) It must never be
forgotten that our reception of Baptism and
Confirmation is ordered to the Eucharist.
Accordingly, our pastoral practice should
reflect a more unitary understanding of the
process of Christian initiation. The sacrament
of Baptism, by which we were conformed to
Christ,(47) incorporated in the Church and made
children of God, is the portal to all the
sacraments. It makes us part of the one Body of
Christ (cf. 1 Cor 12:13), a priestly people.
Still, it is our participation in the
Eucharistic sacrifice which perfects within us
the gifts given to us at Baptism. The gifts of
the Spirit are given for the building up of
Christ's Body (1 Cor 12) and for ever greater
witness to the Gospel in the world. (48) The
Holy Eucharist, then, brings Christian
initiation to completion and represents the
centre and goal of all sacramental life. (49)
The order of the sacraments of
initiation
18. In this regard, attention
needs to be paid to the order of the sacraments
of initiation. Different traditions exist within
the Church. There is a clear variation between,
on the one hand, the ecclesial customs of the
East (50) and the practice of the West regarding
the initiation of adults, (51) and, on the other
hand, the procedure adopted for children. (52)
Yet these variations are not properly of the
dogmatic order, but are pastoral in character.
Concretely, it needs to be seen which practice
better enables the faithful to put the sacrament
of the Eucharist at the centre, as the goal of
the whole process of initiation. In close
collaboration with the competent offices of the
Roman Curia, Bishops' Conferences should examine
the effectiveness of current approaches to
Christian initiation, so that the faithful can
be helped both to mature through the formation
received in our communities and to give their
lives an authentically eucharistic direction, so
that they can offer a reason for the hope within
them in a way suited to our times (cf. 1 Pet
3:15).
Initiation, the ecclesial
community and the family
19. It should be kept in mind
that the whole of Christian initiation is a
process of conversion undertaken with God's help
and with constant reference to the ecclesial
community, both when an adult is seeking entry
into the Church, as happens in places of first
evangelization and in many secularized regions,
and when parents request the sacraments for
their children. In this regard, I would like to
call particular attention to the relationship
between Christian initiation and the family. In
pastoral work it is always important to make
Christian families part of the process of
initiation. Receiving Baptism, Confirmation and
First Holy Communion are key moments not only
for the individual receiving them but also for
the entire family, which should be supported in
its educational role by the various elements of
the ecclesial community. (53) Here I would
emphasize the importance of First Holy
Communion. For many of the faithful, this day
continues to be memorable as the moment when,
even if in a rudimentary way, they first came to
understand the importance of a personal
encounter with Jesus. Parish pastoral programmes
should make the most of this highly significant
moment.
II. The Eucharist and the
Sacrament of Reconciliation
Their intrinsic relationship
20. The Synod Fathers rightly
stated that a love for the Eucharist leads to a
growing appreciation of the sacrament of
Reconciliation. (54) Given the connection
between these sacraments, an authentic
catechesis on the meaning of the Eucharist must
include the call to pursue the path of penance
(cf. 1 Cor 11:27-29). We know that the faithful
are surrounded by a culture that tends to
eliminate the sense of sin (55) and to promote a
superficial approach that overlooks the need to
be in a state of grace in order to approach
sacramental communion worthily. (56) The loss of
a consciousness of sin always entails a certain
superficiality in the understanding of God's
love. Bringing out the elements within the rite
of Mass that express consciousness of personal
sin and, at the same time, of God's mercy, can
prove most helpful to the faithful.(57)
Furthermore, the relationship between the
Eucharist and the sacrament of Reconciliation
reminds us that sin is never a purely individual
affair; it always damages the ecclesial
communion that we have entered through Baptism.
For this reason, Reconciliation, as the Fathers
of the Church would say, is laboriosus quidam
baptismus; (58) they thus emphasized that the
outcome of the process of conversion is also the
restoration of full ecclesial communion,
expressed in a return to the Eucharist. (59)
Some pastoral concerns
21. The Synod recalled that
Bishops have the pastoral duty of promoting
within their Dioceses a reinvigorated catechesis
on the conversion born of the Eucharist, and of
encouraging frequent confession among the
faithful. All priests should dedicate themselves
with generosity, commitment and competency to
administering the sacrament of Reconciliation.
(60) In this regard, it is important that the
confessionals in our churches should be clearly
visible expressions of the importance of this
sacrament. I ask pastors to be vigilant with
regard to the celebration of the sacrament of
Reconciliation, and to limit the practice of
general absolution exclusively to the cases
permitted, (61) since individual absolution is
the only form intended for ordinary use. (62)
Given the need to rediscover sacramental
forgiveness, there ought to be a Penitentiary in
every Diocese. (63) Finally, a balanced and
sound practice of gaining indulgences, whether
for oneself or for the dead, can be helpful for
a renewed appreciation of the relationship
between the Eucharist and Reconciliation. By
this means the faithful obtain "remission before
God of the temporal punishment due to sins whose
guilt has already been forgiven." (64) The use
of indulgences helps us to understand that by
our efforts alone we would be incapable of
making reparation for the wrong we have done,
and that the sins of each individual harm the
whole community. Furthermore, the practice of
indulgences, which involves not only the
doctrine of Christ's infinite merits, but also
that of the communion of the saints, reminds us
"how closely we are united to each other in
Christ ... and how the supernatural life of each
can help others." (65) Since the conditions for
gaining an indulgence include going to
confession and receiving sacramental communion,
this practice can effectively sustain the
faithful on their journey of conversion and in
rediscovering the centrality of the Eucharist in
the Christian life.
III. The Eucharist and the
Anointing of the sick
22. Jesus did not only send
his disciples forth to heal the sick (cf. Mt
10:8; Lk 9:2, 10:9); he also instituted a
specific sacrament for them: the Anointing of
the Sick.(66) The Letter of James attests to the
presence of this sacramental sign in the early
Christian community (cf. 5:14-16). If the
Eucharist shows how Christ's sufferings and
death have been transformed into love, the
Anointing of the Sick, for its part, unites the
sick with Christ's self-offering for the
salvation of all, so that they too, within the
mystery of the communion of saints, can
participate in the redemption of the world. The
relationship between these two sacraments
becomes clear in situations of serious illness:
"In addition to the Anointing of the Sick, the
Church offers those who are about to leave this
life the Eucharist as viaticum." (67) On their
journey to the Father, communion in the Body and
Blood of Christ appears as the seed of eternal
life and the power of resurrection: "Anyone who
eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal
life and I will raise him up on the last day"
(Jn 6:54). Since viaticum gives the sick a
glimpse of the fullness of the Paschal Mystery,
its administration should be readily provided
for. (68) Attentive pastoral care shown to those
who are ill brings great spiritual benefit to
the entire community, since whatever we do to
one of the least of our brothers and sisters, we
do to Jesus himself (cf. Mt 25:40).
IV. The Eucharist and the
Sacrament of Holy Orders
In persona Christi capitis
23. The intrinsic relationship
between the Eucharist and the sacrament of Holy
Orders clearly emerges from Jesus' own words in
the Upper Room: "Do this in memory of me" (Lk
22:19). On the night before he died, Jesus
instituted the Eucharist and at the same time
established the priesthood of the New Covenant.
He is priest, victim and altar: the mediator
between God the Father and his people (cf. Heb
5:5-10), the victim of atonement (cf. 1 Jn 2:2,
4:10) who offers himself on the altar of the
Cross. No one can say "this is my body" and
"this is the cup of my blood" except in the name
and in the person of Christ, the one high priest
of the new and eternal Covenant (cf. Heb 8-9).
Earlier meetings of the Synod of Bishops had
considered the question of the ordained
priesthood, both with regard to the nature of
the ministry (69) and the formation of
candidates.(70) Here, in the light of the
discussion that took place during the last
Synod, I consider it important to recall several
important points about the relationship between
the sacrament of the Eucharist and Holy Orders.
First of all, we need to stress once again that
the connection between Holy Orders and the
Eucharist is seen most clearly at Mass, when the
Bishop or priest presides in the person of
Christ the Head.
The Church teaches that
priestly ordination is the indispensable
condition for the valid celebration of the
Eucharist.(71) Indeed, "in the ecclesial service
of the ordained minister, it is Christ himself
who is present to his Church as Head of his
Body, Shepherd of his flock, High Priest of the
redemptive sacrifice." (72) Certainly the
ordained minister also acts "in the name of the
whole Church, when presenting to God the prayer
of the Church, and above all when offering the
eucharistic sacrifice." (73) As a result,
priests should be conscious of the fact that in
their ministry they must never put themselves or
their personal opinions in first place, but
Jesus Christ. Any attempt to make themselves the
centre of the liturgical action contradicts
their very identity as priests. The priest is
above all a servant of others, and he must
continually work at being a sign pointing to
Christ, a docile instrument in the Lord's hands.
This is seen particularly in his humility in
leading the liturgical assembly, in obedience to
the rite, uniting himself to it in mind and
heart, and avoiding anything that might give the
impression of an inordinate emphasis on his own
personality. I encourage the clergy always to
see their eucharistic ministry as a humble
service offered to Christ and his Church. The
priesthood, as Saint Augustine said, is amoris
officium, (74) it is the office of the good
shepherd, who offers his life for his sheep (cf.
Jn 10:14-15).
The Eucharist and priestly
celibacy
24. The Synod Fathers wished
to emphasize that the ministerial priesthood,
through ordination, calls for complete
configuration to Christ. While respecting the
different practice and tradition of the Eastern
Churches, there is a need to reaffirm the
profound meaning of priestly celibacy, which is
rightly considered a priceless treasure, and is
also confirmed by the Eastern practice of
choosing Bishops only from the ranks of the
celibate. These Churches also greatly esteem the
decision of many priests to embrace celibacy.
This choice on the part of the priest expresses
in a special way the dedication which conforms
him to Christ and his exclusive offering of
himself for the Kingdom of God. (75) The fact
that Christ himself, the eternal priest, lived
his mission even to the sacrifice of the Cross
in the state of virginity constitutes the sure
point of reference for understanding the meaning
of the tradition of the Latin Church. It is not
sufficient to understand priestly celibacy in
purely functional terms. Celibacy is really a
special way of conforming oneself to Christ's
own way of life. This choice has first and
foremost a nuptial meaning; it is a profound
identification with the heart of Christ the
Bridegroom who gives his life for his Bride. In
continuity with the great ecclesial tradition,
with the
Second Vatican Council (76) and with my
predecessors in the papacy, (77) I reaffirm the
beauty and the importance of a priestly life
lived in celibacy as a sign expressing total and
exclusive devotion to Christ, to the Church and
to the Kingdom of God, and I therefore confirm
that it remains obligatory in the Latin
tradition. Priestly celibacy lived with
maturity, joy and dedication is an immense
blessing for the Church and for society itself.
The clergy shortage and the
pastoral care of vocations
25. In the light of the
connection between the sacrament of Holy Orders
and the Eucharist, the Synod considered the
difficult situation that has arisen in various
Dioceses which face a shortage of priests. This
happens not only in some areas of first
evangelization, but also in many countries of
long-standing Christian tradition. Certainly a
more equitable distribution of clergy would help
to solve the problem. Efforts need to be made to
encourage a greater awareness of this situation
at every level. Bishops should involve
Institutes of Consecrated Life and the new
ecclesial groups in their pastoral needs, while
respecting their particular charisms, and they
should invite the clergy to become more open to
serving the Church wherever there is need, even
if this calls for sacrifice. (78) The Synod also
discussed pastoral initiatives aimed at
promoting, especially among the young, an
attitude of interior openness to a priestly
calling. The situation cannot be resolved by
purely practical decisions. On no account should
Bishops react to real and understandable
concerns about the shortage of priests by
failing to carry out adequate vocational
discernment, or by admitting to seminary
formation and ordination candidates who lack the
necessary qualities for priestly ministry (79).
An insufficiently formed clergy, admitted to
ordination without the necessary discernment,
will not easily be able to offer a witness
capable of evoking in others the desire to
respond generously to Christ's call. The
pastoral care of vocations needs to involve the
entire Christian community in every area of its
life. (80) Obviously, this pastoral work on all
levels also includes exploring the matter with
families, which are often indifferent or even
opposed to the idea of a priestly vocation.
Families should generously embrace the gift of
life and bring up their children to be open to
doing God's will. In a word, they must have the
courage to set before young people the radical
decision to follow Christ, showing them how
deeply rewarding it is.
Gratitude and hope
26. Finally, we need to have
ever greater faith and hope in God's providence.
Even if there is a shortage of priests in some
areas, we must never lose confidence that Christ
continues to inspire men to leave everything
behind and to dedicate themselves totally to
celebrating the sacred mysteries, preaching the
Gospel and ministering to the flock. In this
regard, I wish to express the gratitude of the
whole Church for all those Bishops and priests
who carry out their respective missions with
fidelity, devotion and zeal. Naturally, the
Church's gratitude also goes to deacons, who
receive the laying on of hands "not for
priesthood but for service." (81) As the Synod
Assembly recommended, I offer a special word of
thanks to those Fidei Donum priests who work
faithfully and generously at building up the
community by proclaiming the word of God and
breaking the Bread of Life, devoting all their
energy to serving the mission of the Church.
(82) Let us thank God for all those priests who
have suffered even to the sacrifice of their
lives in order to serve Christ. The eloquence of
their example shows what it means to be a priest
to the end. Theirs is a moving witness that can
inspire many young people to follow Christ and
to expend their lives for others, and thus to
discover true life.
V. The Eucharist and Matrimony
The Eucharist, a nuptial
sacrament
27. The Eucharist, as the
sacrament of charity, has a particular
relationship with the love of man and woman
united in marriage. A deeper understanding of
this relationship is needed at the present time.
(83) Pope John Paul II frequently spoke of the
nuptial character of the Eucharist and its
special relationship with the sacrament of
Matrimony: "The Eucharist is the sacrament of
our redemption. It is the sacrament of the
Bridegroom and of the Bride." (84) Moreover,
"the entire Christian life bears the mark of the
spousal love of Christ and the Church. Already
Baptism, the entry into the People of God, is a
nuptial mystery; it is so to speak the nuptial
bath which precedes the wedding feast, the
Eucharist." (85) The Eucharist inexhaustibly
strengthens the indissoluble unity and love of
every Christian marriage. By the power of the
sacrament, the marriage bond is intrinsically
linked to the eucharistic unity of Christ the
Bridegroom and his Bride, the Church (cf. Eph
5:31-32). The mutual consent that husband and
wife exchange in Christ, which establishes them
as a community of life and love, also has a
eucharistic dimension. Indeed, in the theology
of Saint Paul, conjugal love is a sacramental
sign of Christ's love for his Church, a love
culminating in the Cross, the expression of his
"marriage" with humanity and at the same time
the origin and heart of the Eucharist. For this
reason the Church manifests her particular
spiritual closeness to all those who have built
their family on the sacrament of Matrimony. (86)
The family – the domestic Church (87) – is a
primary sphere of the Church's life, especially
because of its decisive role in the Christian
education of children. (88) In this context, the
Synod also called for an acknowledgment of the
unique mission of women in the family and in
society, a mission that needs to be defended,
protected and promoted. (89) Marriage and
motherhood represent essential realities which
must never be denigrated.
The Eucharist and the unicity
of marriage
28. In the light of this
intrinsic relationship between marriage, the
family and the Eucharist, we can turn to several
pastoral problems. The indissoluble, exclusive
and faithful bond uniting Christ and the Church,
which finds sacramental expression in the
Eucharist, corresponds to the basic
anthropological fact that man is meant to be
definitively united to one woman and vice versa
(cf. Gen 2:24, Mt 19:5). With this in mind, the
Synod of Bishops addressed the question of
pastoral practice regarding people who come to
the Gospel from cultures in which polygamy is
practised. Those living in this situation who
open themselves to Christian faith need to be
helped to integrate their life-plan into the
radical newness of Christ. During the
catechumenate, Christ encounters them in their
specific circumstances and calls them to embrace
the full truth of love, making whatever
sacrifices are necessary in order to arrive at
perfect ecclesial communion. The Church
accompanies them with a pastoral care that is
gentle yet firm, (90) above all by showing them
the light shed by the Christian mysteries on
nature and on human affections.
The Eucharist and the
indissolubility of marriage
29. If the Eucharist expresses
the irrevocable nature of God's love in Christ
for his Church, we can then understand why it
implies, with regard to the sacrament of
Matrimony, that indissolubility to which all
true love necessarily aspires. (91) There was
good reason for the pastoral attention that the
Synod gave to the painful situations experienced
by some of the faithful who, having celebrated
the sacrament of Matrimony, then divorced and
remarried. This represents a complex and
troubling pastoral problem, a real scourge for
contemporary society, and one which increasingly
affects the Catholic community as well. The
Church's pastors, out of love for the truth, are
obliged to discern different situations
carefully, in order to be able to offer
appropriate spiritual guidance to the faithful
involved.(92) The Synod of Bishops confirmed the
Church's practice, based on Sacred Scripture
(cf. Mk 10:2- 12), of not admitting the divorced
and remarried to the sacraments, since their
state and their condition of life objectively
contradict the loving union of Christ and the
Church signified and made present in the
Eucharist. Yet the divorced and remarried
continue to belong to the Church, which
accompanies them with special concern and
encourages them to live as fully as possible the
Christian life through regular participation at
Mass, albeit without receiving communion,
listening to the word of God, eucharistic
adoration, prayer, participation in the life of
the community, honest dialogue with a priest or
spiritual director, dedication to the life of
charity, works of penance, and commitment to the
education of their children.
When legitimate doubts exist
about the validity of the prior sacramental
marriage, the necessary investigation must be
carried out to establish if these are
well-founded. Consequently there is a need to
ensure, in full respect for canon law (93), the
presence of local ecclesiastical tribunals,
their pastoral character, and their correct and
prompt functioning (94). Each Diocese should
have a sufficient number of persons with the
necessary preparation, so that the
ecclesiastical tribunals can operate in an
expeditious manner. I repeat that "it is a grave
obligation to bring the Church's institutional
activity in her tribunals ever closer to the
faithful" (95). At the same time, pastoral care
must not be understood as if it were somehow in
conflict with the law. Rather, one should begin
by assuming that the fundamental point of
encounter between the law and pastoral care is
love for the truth: truth is never something
purely abstract, but "a real part of the human
and Christian journey of every member of the
faithful" (96). Finally, where the nullity of
the marriage bond is not declared and objective
circumstances make it impossible to cease
cohabitation, the Church encourages these
members of the faithful to commit themselves to
living their relationship in fidelity to the
demands of God's law, as friends, as brother and
sister; in this way they will be able to return
to the table of the Eucharist, taking care to
observe the Church's established and approved
practice in this regard. This path, if it is to
be possible and fruitful, must be supported by
pastors and by adequate ecclesial initiatives,
nor can it ever involve the blessing of these
relations, lest confusion arise among the
faithful concerning the value of marriage (97).
Given the complex cultural
context which the Church today encounters in
many countries, the Synod also recommended
devoting maximum pastoral attention to training
couples preparing for marriage and to
ascertaining beforehand their convictions
regarding the obligations required for the
validity of the sacrament of Matrimony. Serious
discernment in this matter will help to avoid
situations where impulsive decisions or
superficial reasons lead two young people to
take on responsibilities that they are then
incapable of honouring. (98) The good that the
Church and society as a whole expect from
marriage and from the family founded upon
marriage is so great as to call for full
pastoral commitment to this particular area.
Marriage and the family are institutions that
must be promoted and defended from every
possible misrepresentation of their true nature,
since whatever is injurious to them is injurious
to society itself.
The Eucharist and Eschatology
The Eucharist: a gift to men
and women on their journey
30. If it is true that the
sacraments are part of the Church's pilgrimage
through history (99) towards the full
manifestation of the victory of the risen
Christ, it is also true that, especially in the
liturgy of the Eucharist, they give us a real
foretaste of the eschatological fulfilment for
which every human being and all creation are
destined (cf. Rom 8:19ff.). Man is created for
that true and eternal happiness which only God's
love can give. But our wounded freedom would go
astray were it not already able to experience
something of that future fulfilment. Moreover,
to move forward in the right direction, we all
need to be guided towards our final goal. That
goal is Christ himself, the Lord who conquered
sin and death, and who makes himself present to
us in a special way in the eucharistic
celebration. Even though we remain "aliens and
exiles" in this world (1 Pet 2:11), through
faith we already share in the fullness of risen
life. The eucharistic banquet, by disclosing its
powerful eschatological dimension, comes to the
aid of our freedom as we continue our journey.
The eschatological banquet
31. Reflecting on this
mystery, we can say that Jesus' coming responded
to an expectation present in the people of
Israel, in the whole of humanity and ultimately
in creation itself. By his self-gift, he
objectively inaugurated the eschatological age.
Christ came to gather together the scattered
People of God (cf. Jn 11:52) and clearly
manifested his intention to gather together the
community of the covenant, in order to bring to
fulfilment the promises made by God to the
fathers of old (cf. Jer 23:3; Lk 1:55, 70). In
the calling of the Twelve, which is to be
understood in relation to the twelve tribes of
Israel, and in the command he gave them at the
Last Supper, before his redemptive passion, to
celebrate his memorial, Jesus showed that he
wished to transfer to the entire community which
he had founded the task of being, within
history, the sign and instrument of the
eschatological gathering that had its origin in
him. Consequently, every eucharistic celebration
sacramentally accomplishes the eschatological
gathering of the People of God. For us, the
eucharistic banquet is a real foretaste of the
final banquet foretold by the prophets (cf. Is
25:6-9) and described in the New Testament as
"the marriage-feast of the Lamb" (Rev 19:7-9),
to be celebrated in the joy of the communion of
saints (100).
Prayer for the dead
32. The eucharistic
celebration, in which we proclaim that Christ
has died and risen, and will come again, is a
pledge of the future glory in which our bodies
too will be glorified. Celebrating the memorial
of our salvation strengthens our hope in the
resurrection of the body and in the possibility
of meeting once again, face to face, those who
have gone before us marked with the sign of
faith. In this context, I wish, together with
the Synod Fathers, to remind all the faithful of
the importance of prayers for the dead,
especially the offering of Mass for them, so
that, once purified, they can come to the
beatific vision of God. (101) A rediscovery of
the eschatological dimension inherent in the
Eucharist, celebrated and adored, will help
sustain us on our journey and comfort us in the
hope of glory (cf. Rom 5:2; Tit 2:13).
The Eucharist and the Virgin Mary
33. From the relationship
between the Eucharist and the individual
sacraments, and from the eschatological
significance of the sacred mysteries, the
overall shape of the Christian life emerges, a
life called at all times to be an act of
spiritual worship, a self-offering pleasing to
God. Although we are all still journeying
towards the complete fulfilment of our hope,
this does not mean that we cannot already
gratefully acknowledge that God's gifts to us
have found their perfect fulfilment in the
Virgin Mary, Mother of God and our Mother.
Mary's Assumption body and soul into heaven is
for us a sign of sure hope, for it shows us, on
our pilgrimage through time, the eschatological
goal of which the sacrament of the Eucharist
enables us even now to have a foretaste.
In Mary most holy, we also see
perfectly fulfilled the "sacramental" way that
God comes down to meet his creatures and
involves them in his saving work. From the
Annunciation to Pentecost, Mary of Nazareth
appears as someone whose freedom is completely
open to God's will. Her immaculate conception is
revealed precisely in her unconditional docility
to God's word. Obedient faith in response to
God's work shapes her life at every moment. A
virgin attentive to God's word, she lives in
complete harmony with his will; she treasures in
her heart the words that come to her from God
and, piecing them together like a mosaic, she
learns to understand them more deeply (cf. Lk
2:19, 51); Mary is the great Believer who places
herself confidently in God's hands, abandoning
herself to his will. (102) This mystery deepens
as she becomes completely involved in the
redemptive mission of Jesus. In the words of the
Second Vatican Council, "the blessed Virgin
advanced in her pilgrimage of faith, and
faithfully persevered in her union with her Son
until she stood at the Cross, in keeping with
the divine plan (cf. Jn 19:25), suffering deeply
with her only-begotten Son, associating herself
with his sacrifice in her mother's heart, and
lovingly consenting to the immolation of the
victim who was born of her. Finally, she was
given by the same Christ Jesus, dying on the
Cross, as a mother to his disciple, with these
words: ‘Woman, behold your Son."' (103) From the
Annunciation to the Cross, Mary is the one who
received the Word, made flesh within her and
then silenced in death. It is she, lastly, who
took into her arms the lifeless body of the one
who truly loved his own "to the end" (Jn 13:1).
Consequently, every time we
approach the Body and Blood of Christ in the
eucharistic liturgy, we also turn to her who, by
her complete fidelity, received Christ's
sacrifice for the whole Church. The Synod
Fathers rightly declared that "Mary inaugurates
the Church's participation in the sacrifice of
the Redeemer." (104) She is the Immaculata, who
receives God's gift unconditionally and is thus
associated with his work of salvation. Mary of
Nazareth, icon of the nascent Church, is the
model for each of us, called to receive the gift
that Jesus makes of himself in the Eucharist.
PART TWO
THE EUCHARIST, A MYSTERY
TO BE CELEBRATED
"Truly, truly, I say to you, it
was not Moses who gave you the bread from
heaven;
my Father gives you the true bread from heaven"
(Jn 6:32)
Lex orandi and lex credendi
34. The Synod of Bishops
reflected at length on the intrinsic
relationship between eucharistic faith and
eucharistic celebration, pointing out the
connection between the lex orandi and the lex
credendi, and stressing the primacy of the
liturgical action. The Eucharist should be
experienced as a mystery of faith, celebrated
authentically and with a clear awareness that
"the intellectus fidei has a primordial
relationship to the Church's liturgical action."
(105) Theological reflection in this area can
never prescind from the sacramental order
instituted by Christ himself. On the other hand,
the liturgical action can never be considered
generically, prescinding from the mystery of
faith. Our faith and the eucharistic liturgy
both have their source in the same event:
Christ's gift of himself in the Paschal Mystery.
Beauty and the liturgy
35. This relationship between
creed and worship is evidenced in a particular
way by the rich theological and liturgical
category of beauty. Like the rest of Christian
Revelation, the liturgy is inherently linked to
beauty: it is veritatis splendor. The liturgy is
a radiant expression of the paschal mystery, in
which Christ draws us to himself and calls us to
communion. As Saint Bonaventure would say, in
Jesus we contemplate beauty and splendour at
their source. (106) This is no mere
aestheticism, but the concrete way in which the
truth of God's love in Christ encounters us,
attracts us and delights us, enabling us to
emerge from ourselves and drawing us towards our
true vocation, which is love. (107) God allows
himself to be glimpsed first in creation, in the
beauty and harmony of the cosmos (cf. Wis 13:5;
Rom 1:19- 20). In the Old Testament we see many
signs of the grandeur of God's power as he
manifests his glory in his wondrous deeds among
the Chosen People (cf. Ex 14; 16:10; 24:12-18;
Num 14:20- 23). In the New Testament this
epiphany of beauty reaches definitive fulfilment
in God's revelation in Jesus Christ: (108)
Christ is the full manifestation of the glory of
God. In the glorification of the Son, the
Father's glory shines forth and is communicated
(cf. Jn 1:14; 8:54; 12:28; 17:1). Yet this
beauty is not simply a harmony of proportion and
form; "the fairest of the sons of men" (Ps
45[44]:3) is also, mysteriously, the one "who
had no form or comeliness that we should look at
him, and no beauty that we should desire him"
(Is 53:2). Jesus Christ shows us how the truth
of love can transform even the dark mystery of
death into the radiant light of the
resurrection. Here the splendour of God's glory
surpasses all worldly beauty. The truest beauty
is the love of God, who definitively revealed
himself to us in the paschal mystery.
The beauty of the liturgy is
part of this mystery; it is a sublime expression
of God's glory and, in a certain sense, a
glimpse of heaven on earth. The memorial of
Jesus' redemptive sacrifice contains something
of that beauty which Peter, James and John
beheld when the Master, making his way to
Jerusalem, was transfigured before their eyes
(cf. Mk 9:2). Beauty, then, is not mere
decoration, but rather an essential element of
the liturgical action, since it is an attribute
of God himself and his revelation. These
considerations should make us realize the care
which is needed, if the liturgical action is to
reflect its innate splendour.
The Eucharistic celebration, the
work of "Christus Totus"
Christus totus in capite et in
corpore
36. The "subject" of the
liturgy's intrinsic beauty is Christ himself,
risen and glorified in the Holy Spirit, who
includes the Church in his work. (109) Here we
can recall an evocative phrase of Saint
Augustine which strikingly describes this
dynamic of faith proper to the Eucharist. The
great Bishop of Hippo, speaking specifically of
the eucharistic mystery, stresses the fact that
Christ assimilates us to himself: "The bread you
see on the altar, sanctified by the word of God,
is the body of Christ. The chalice, or rather,
what the chalice contains, sanctified by the
word of God, is the blood of Christ. In these
signs, Christ the Lord willed to entrust to us
his body and the blood which he shed for the
forgiveness of our sins. If you have received
them properly, you yourselves are what you have
received." (110) Consequently, "not only have we
become Christians, we have become Christ
himself." (111) We can thus contemplate God's
mysterious work, which brings about a profound
unity between ourselves and the Lord Jesus: "one
should not believe that Christ is in the head
but not in the body; rather he is complete in
the head and in the body." (112)
The Eucharist and the risen
Christ
37. Since the eucharistic
liturgy is essentially an actio Dei which draws
us into Christ through the Holy Spirit, its
basic structure is not something within our
power to change, nor can it be held hostage by
the latest trends. Here too Saint Paul's
irrefutable statement applies: "no one can lay
any foundation other than the one that has been
laid, which is Jesus Christ" (1 Cor 3:11). Again
it is the Apostle of the Gentiles who assures us
that, with regard to the Eucharist, he is
presenting not his own teaching but what he
himself has received (cf. 1 Cor 11:23). The
celebration of the Eucharist implies and
involves the living Tradition. The Church
celebrates the eucharistic sacrifice in
obedience to Christ's command, based on her
experience of the Risen Lord and the outpouring
of the Holy Spirit. For this reason, from the
beginning, the Christian community has gathered
for the fractio panis on the Lord's Day. Sunday,
the day Christ rose from the dead, is also the
first day of the week, the day which the Old
Testament tradition saw as the beginning of
God's work of creation. The day of creation has
now become the day of the "new creation," the
day of our liberation, when we commemorate
Christ who died and rose again (113).
Ars
celebrandi
38. In the course of the
Synod, there was frequent insistence on the need
to avoid any antithesis between the ars
celebrandi, the art of proper celebration, and
the full, active and fruitful participation of
all the faithful. The primary way to foster the
participation of the People of God in the sacred
rite is the proper celebration of the rite
itself. The ars celebrandi is the best way to
ensure their actuosa participatio. (114) The ars
celebrandi is the fruit of faithful adherence to
the liturgical norms in all their richness;
indeed, for two thousand years this way of
celebrating has sustained the faith life of all
believers, called to take part in the
celebration as the People of God, a royal
priesthood, a holy nation (cf. 1 Pet 2:4-5, 9)
(115).
The Bishop, celebrant par
excellence
39. While it is true that the
whole People of God participates in the
eucharistic liturgy, a correct ars celebrandi
necessarily entails a specific responsibility on
the part of those who have received the
sacrament of Holy Orders. Bishops, priests, and
deacons, each according to his proper rank, must
consider the celebration of the liturgy as their
principal duty (116). Above all, this is true of
the Diocesan Bishop: as "the chief steward of
the mysteries of God in the particular Church
entrusted to his care, he is the moderator,
promoter, and guardian of the whole of its
liturgical life" (117). This is essential for
the life of the particular Church, not only
because communion with the Bishop is required
for the lawfulness of every celebration within
his territory, but also because he himself is
the celebrant par excellence within his Diocese
(118). It is his responsibility to ensure unity
and harmony in the celebrations taking place in
his territory. Consequently the Bishop must be
"determined that the priests, the deacons, and
the lay Christian faithful grasp ever more
deeply the genuine meaning of the rites and
liturgical texts, and thereby be led to an
active and fruitful celebration of the
Eucharist" (119). I would ask that every effort
be made to ensure that the liturgies which the
Bishop celebrates in his Cathedral are carried
out with complete respect for the ars
celebrandi, so that they can be considered an
example for the entire Diocese (120).
Respect for the liturgical
books and the richness of signs
40. Emphasizing the importance
of the ars celebrandi also leads to an
appreciation of the value of the liturgical
norms. (121) The ars celebrandi should foster a
sense of the sacred and the use of outward signs
which help to cultivate this sense, such as, for
example, the harmony of the rite, the liturgical
vestments, the furnishings and the sacred space.
The eucharistic celebration is enhanced when
priests and liturgical leaders are committed to
making known the current liturgical texts and
norms, making available the great riches found
in the General Instruction of the Roman Missal
and the Order of Readings for Mass. Perhaps we
take it for granted that our ecclesial
communities already know and appreciate these
resources, but this is not always the case.
These texts contain riches which have preserved
and expressed the faith and experience of the
People of God over its two-thousand-year
history. Equally important for a correct ars
celebrandi is an attentiveness to the various
kinds of language that the liturgy employs:
words and music, gestures and silence, movement,
the liturgical colours of the vestments. By its
very nature the liturgy operates on different
levels of communication which enable it to
engage the whole human person. The simplicity of
its gestures and the sobriety of its orderly
sequence of signs communicate and inspire more
than any contrived and inappropriate additions.
Attentiveness and fidelity to the specific
structure of the rite express both a recognition
of the nature of Eucharist as a gift and, on the
part of the minister, a docile openness to
receiving this ineffable gift.
Art at the service of the
liturgy
41. The profound connection
between beauty and the liturgy should make us
attentive to every work of art placed at the
service of the celebration. (122) Certainly an
important element of sacred art is church
architecture, (123) which should highlight the
unity of the furnishings of the sanctuary, such
as the altar, the crucifix, the tabernacle, the
ambo and the celebrant's chair. Here it is
important to remember that the purpose of sacred
architecture is to offer the Church a fitting
space for the celebration of the mysteries of
faith, especially the Eucharist. (124) The very
nature of a Christian church is defined by the
liturgy, which is an assembly of the faithful
(ecclesia) who are the living stones of the
Church (cf. 1 Pet 2:5).
This same principle holds true
for sacred art in general, especially painting
and sculpture, where religious iconography
should be directed to sacramental mystagogy. A
solid knowledge of the history of sacred art can
be advantageous for those responsible for
commissioning artists and architects to create
works of art for the liturgy. Consequently it is
essential that the education of seminarians and
priests include the study of art history, with
special reference to sacred buildings and the
corresponding liturgical norms. Everything
related to the Eucharist should be marked by
beauty. Special respect and care must also be
given to the vestments, the furnishings and the
sacred vessels, so that by their harmonious and
orderly arrangement they will foster awe for the
mystery of God, manifest the unity of the faith
and strengthen devotion (125).
Liturgical song
42. In the ars celebrandi,
liturgical song has a pre-eminent place. (126)
Saint Augustine rightly says in a famous sermon
that "the new man sings a new song. Singing is
an expression of joy and, if we consider the
matter, an expression of love" (127). The People
of God assembled for the liturgy sings the
praises of God. In the course of her
two-thousand-year history, the Church has
created, and still creates, music and songs
which represent a rich patrimony of faith and
love. This heritage must not be lost. Certainly
as far as the liturgy is concerned, we cannot
say that one song is as good as another. Generic
improvisation or the introduction of musical
genres which fail to respect the meaning of the
liturgy should be avoided. As an element of the
liturgy, song should be well integrated into the
overall celebration (128). Consequently
everything – texts, music, execution – ought to
correspond to the meaning of the mystery being
celebrated, the structure of the rite and the
liturgical seasons (129). Finally, while
respecting various styles and different and
highly praiseworthy traditions, I desire, in
accordance with the request advanced by the
Synod Fathers, that Gregorian chant be suitably
esteemed and employed (130) as the chant proper
to the Roman liturgy (131).
The structure of the Eucharistic
Celebration
43. After mentioning the more
significant elements of the ars celebrandi that
emerged during the Synod, I would now like to
turn to some specific aspects of the structure
of the eucharistic celebration which require
special attention at the present time, if we are
to remain faithful to the underlying intention
of the liturgical renewal called for by the
Second Vatican Council, in continuity with
the great ecclesial tradition.
The intrinsic unity of the
liturgical action
44. First of all, there is a
need to reflect on the inherent unity of the
rite of Mass. Both in catechesis and in the
actual manner of celebration, one must avoid
giving the impression that the two parts of the
rite are merely juxtaposed. The liturgy of the
word and the Eucharistic liturgy, with the rites
of introduction and conclusion, "are so closely
interconnected that they form but one single act
of worship." (132) There is an intrinsic bond
between the word of God and the Eucharist. From
listening to the word of God, faith is born or
strengthened (cf. Rom 10:17); in the Eucharist
the Word made flesh gives himself to us as our
spiritual food. (133) Thus, "from the two tables
of the word of God and the Body of Christ, the
Church receives and gives to the faithful the
bread of life." (134) Consequently it must
constantly be kept in mind that the word of God,
read and proclaimed by the Church in the
liturgy, leads to the Eucharist as to its own
connatural end.
The liturgy of the word
45. Together with the Synod, I
ask that the liturgy of the word always be
carefully prepared and celebrated. Consequently
I urge that every effort be made to ensure that
the liturgical proclamation of the word of God
is entrusted to well- prepared readers. Let us
never forget that "when the Sacred Scriptures
are read in the Church, God himself speaks to
his people, and Christ, present in his own word,
proclaims the Gospel"(135). When circumstances
so suggest, a few brief words of introduction
could be offered in order to focus the attention
of the faithful. If it is to be properly
understood, the word of God must be listened to
and accepted in a spirit of communion with the
Church and with a clear awareness of its unity
with the sacrament of the Eucharist. Indeed, the
word which we proclaim and accept is the Word
made flesh (cf. Jn 1:14); it is inseparably
linked to Christ's person and the sacramental
mode of his continued presence in our midst.
Christ does not speak in the past, but in the
present, even as he is present in the liturgical
action. In this sacramental context of Christian
revelation (136), knowledge and study of the
word of God enable us better to appreciate,
celebrate and live the Eucharist. Here too, we
can see how true it is that "ignorance of
Scripture is ignorance of Christ" (137).
To this end, the faithful
should be helped to appreciate the riches of
Sacred Scripture found in the lectionary through
pastoral initiatives, liturgies of the word and
reading in the context of prayer (lectio
divina). Efforts should also be made to
encourage those forms of prayer confirmed by
tradition, such as the Liturgy of the Hours,
especially Morning Prayer, Evening Prayer and
Night Prayer, and vigil celebrations. By praying
the Psalms, the Scripture readings and the
readings drawn from the great tradition which
are included in the Divine Office, we can come
to a deeper experience of the Christ-event and
the economy of salvation, which in turn can
enrich our understanding and participation in
the celebration of the Eucharist (138).
The homily
46. Given the importance of
the word of God, the quality of homilies needs
to be improved. The homily is "part of the
liturgical action" (139), and is meant to foster
a deeper understanding of the word of God, so
that it can bear fruit in the lives of the
faithful. Hence ordained ministers must "prepare
the homily carefully, based on an adequate
knowledge of Sacred Scripture" (140). Generic
and abstract homilies should be avoided. In
particular, I ask these ministers to preach in
such a way that the homily closely relates the
proclamation of the word of God to the
sacramental celebration (141) and the life of
the community, so that the word of God truly
becomes the Church's vital nourishment and
support (142). The catechetical and paraenetic
aim of the homily should not be forgotten.
During the course of the liturgical year it is
appropriate to offer the faithful, prudently and
on the basis of the three-year lectionary,
"thematic" homilies treating the great themes of
the Christian faith, on the basis of what has
been authoritatively proposed by the Magisterium
in the four "pillars" of the
Catechism of the Catholic Church and the
recent
Compendium, namely: the profession of faith,
the celebration of the Christian mystery, life
in Christ and Christian prayer (143).
The presentation of the gifts
47. The Synod Fathers also
drew attention to the presentation of the gifts.
This is not to be viewed simply as a kind of
"interval" between the liturgy of the word and
the liturgy of the Eucharist. To do so would
tend to weaken, at the least, the sense of a
single rite made up of two interrelated parts.
This humble and simple gesture is actually very
significant: in the bread and wine that we bring
to the altar, all creation is taken up by Christ
the Redeemer to be transformed and presented to
the Father. (144) In this way we also bring to
the altar all the pain and suffering of the
world, in the certainty that everything has
value in God's eyes. The authentic meaning of
this gesture can be clearly expressed without
the need for undue emphasis or complexity. It
enables us to appreciate how God invites man to
participate in bringing to fulfilment his
handiwork, and in so doing, gives human labour
its authentic meaning, since, through the
celebration of the Eucharist, it is united to
the redemptive sacrifice of Christ.
The Eucharistic Prayer
48. The Eucharistic Prayer is
"the centre and summit of the entire
celebration" (145). Its importance deserves to
be adequately emphasized. The different
Eucharistic Prayers contained in the Missal have
been handed down to us by the Church's living
Tradition and are noteworthy for their
inexhaustible theological and spiritual
richness. The faithful need to be enabled to
appreciate that richness. Here the General
Instruction of the Roman Missal can help, with
its list of the basic elements of every
Eucharistic Prayer: thanksgiving, acclamation,
epiclesis, institution narrative and
consecration, anamnesis, offering, intercessions
and final doxology (146). In a particular way,
eucharistic spirituality and theological
reflection are enriched if we contemplate in the
anaphora the profound unity between the
invocation of the Holy Spirit and the
institution narrative (147) whereby "the
sacrifice is carried out which Christ himself
instituted at the Last Supper" (148). Indeed,
"the Church implores the power of the Holy
Spirit that the gifts offered by human hands be
consecrated, that is, become Christ's Body and
Blood, and that the spotless Victim to be
received in communion be for the salvation of
those who will partake of it" (149).
The sign of peace
49. By its nature the
Eucharist is the sacrament of peace. At Mass
this dimension of the eucharistic mystery finds
specific expression in the sign of peace.
Certainly this sign has great value (cf. Jn
14:27). In our times, fraught with fear and
conflict, this gesture has become particularly
eloquent, as the Church has become increasingly
conscious of her responsibility to pray
insistently for the gift of peace and unity for
herself and for the whole human family.
Certainly there is an irrepressible desire for
peace present in every heart. The Church gives
voice to the hope for peace and reconciliation
rising up from every man and woman of good will,
directing it towards the one who "is our peace"
(Eph 2:14) and who can bring peace to
individuals and peoples when all human efforts
fail. We can thus understand the emotion so
often felt during the sign of peace at a
liturgical celebration. Even so, during the
Synod of Bishops there was discussion about the
appropriateness of greater restraint in this
gesture, which can be exaggerated and cause a
certain distraction in the assembly just before
the reception of Communion. It should be kept in
mind that nothing is lost when the sign of peace
is marked by a sobriety which preserves the
proper spirit of the celebration, as, for
example, when it is restricted to one's
immediate neighbours (150).
The distribution and reception
of the Eucharist
50. Another moment of the
celebration needing to be mentioned is the
distribution and reception of Holy Communion. I
ask everyone, especially ordained ministers and
those who, after adequate preparation and in
cases of genuine need, are authorized to
exercise the ministry of distributing the
Eucharist, to make every effort to ensure that
this simple act preserves its importance as a
personal encounter with the Lord Jesus in the
sacrament. For the rules governing correct
practice in this regard, I would refer to those
documents recently issued on the subject. (151)
All Christian communities are to observe the
current norms faithfully, seeing in them an
expression of the faith and love with which we
all must regard this sublime sacrament.
Furthermore, the precious time of thanksgiving
after communion should not be neglected: besides
the singing of an appropriate hymn, it can also
be most helpful to remain recollected in
silence. (152)
In this regard, I would like
to call attention to a pastoral problem
frequently encountered nowadays. I am referring
to the fact that on certain occasions – for
example, wedding Masses, funerals and the like –
in addition to practising Catholics there may be
others present who have long since ceased to
attend Mass or are living in a situation which
does not permit them to receive the sacraments.
At other times members of other Christian
confessions and even other religions may be
present. Similar situations can occur in
churches that are frequently visited, especially
in tourist areas. In these cases, there is a
need to find a brief and clear way to remind
those present of the meaning of sacramental
communion and the conditions required for its
reception. Wherever circumstances make it
impossible to ensure that the meaning of the
Eucharist is duly appreciated, the
appropriateness of replacing the celebration of
th