Life’s Most Important Decision

Aside

Life’s Most Important Decision

 During a person’s life there are many fundamental decisions one must make. But is there one decision that is clearly the most important decision of all, which often effects all other decisions? One can investigate many of the critical decisions in one’s life; the choice of friends and acquaintances, the career or occupation one chooses, the selection of a spouse, the location where one lives. These are all crucial decisions for anyone. Each one of these decisions will significantly affect one’s life.

As important to one’s life each of these decisions is to one’s happiness, there is still one decision that is more important and substantive than any of these. It is a decision that will affect all other decisions. It is the paramount, central decision in life. This decision is, “Does one accept the existence of a personal God or not?” The answer that each individual submits for this question will influence all other decisions.

If this decision is so critical to one’s life, then why do so few people spend the time and effort to thoroughly review the issue of God’s existence? God as defined as the omnipotent, eternal, holy, loving being who is creator of all existing things, including humans, either exists or he does not exist? The answer one accepts will be fundamental to who the person is and how he/she lives life. Wandering in a state of uncertainty or lack commitment will provide one with only a groping and unsteady ambivalence in life.

Answer the question, “Does God exists or not?”  If God exists, then one’s life begins its search for the ultimate meaning. If one answers, God does not exist, then the search for an ultimate meaning in life will be fruitless, futile, and doomed to frustration.

One needs to come to terms with this question, “does God exist or not?’ One’s life is at stake; the most important decision one will make.

 

The Eucharist is Love

Aside

The Eucharist is Love

“Jesus said to the Jews: ‘I am the living bread which has come down from heaven. Anyone who eats this bread will live forever; and the bread that I shall give is my flesh, for the life of the world.”

“Then the Jews started arguing with one another: ‘How can this man give us his flesh to eat?’ they said. Jesus replied: ‘I tell you most solemnly, if you do not eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you will not have life in you. Anyone who does eat my flesh and drink my blood has eternal life, and I shall raise him up on the last day. For my flesh is real food and my blood is real drink. He who eats my flesh and drinks my blood lives in me and I live in him. As I, who am sent by the living Father, myself draw life from the Father, so whoever eats me will draw life from me. This is the bread come down from heaven; not like the bread our ancestors ate: they are dead, but anyone who eats this bread will live for ever.’”   –  John 9: 51-58

“The Eucharist is not a private prayer or a beautiful spiritual experience, it is not a simple commemoration of what Jesus has done in the Last Supper .The Eucharist is a ‘memorial,’ that is, an act that actualizes and makes present the event of the death and resurrection of Jesus: the bread is truly His Body given to us; the wine is truly His Blood that has been shed.”        Pope Francis   16 August Angelus Address 2015

“If we could comprehend all the good things contained in Holy Communion, nothing more would be wanting to content the heart of man.”
— St. John Vianney

These two dimensions of the Eucharist – its being both the “source” and “summit” of Christian spirituality – reveal how the Eucharist, being Christ Himself, brings God and man together in a saving dialogue, a mutually giving and receiving relationship. In short, in a covenant of love. The Eucharist is at once the Father’s gift of Himself in Christ to us and, through Christ, our offering of Christ and, with Him, of ourselves – our minds and hearts, our daily lives – to the Father.   Mark Brumley

“There is no good trying to be more spiritual than God. God never meant man to be a purely spiritual creature. That is why He uses material things like bread and wine to put the new life into us. We may think this rather crude and unspiritual. God does not: He invented eating. He likes matter. He invented it.”
— C.S. Lewis,

“Do not receive Christ in the Blessed Sacrament so that you may use him as you judge best, but give yourself to him and let him receive you in this Sacrament, so that he himself, God your saviour, may do to you and through you  whatever he wills”.  St. Cajetan

“ The Lord Jesus himself declares: This is my body. Before the blessing contained in these words a different thing is named; after the consecration a body is indicated. He himself speaks of his blood. Before the consecration something else is spoken of; after the consecration blood is designated. And you say: “Amen,” that is: “It is true.” What the mouth utters,  let the mind within acknowledge; what the word says, let the heart ratify.”   St. Ambrose

“We can today approach our Lord by means of the sacraments, especially and pre – eminently the Eucharist. And through the sacraments there flows to us, from God, through the human nature of the Word, a strength which cures those who receive the sacraments with faith    (cf. St. Thomas Aquinas, “Summa theologiae”, III, q

“The devotion to the Eucharist is the most noble, because it has God as its object; it is the most profitable for salvation, because it gives us the Author of Grace; it is the sweetest, because the Lord is Sweetness Itself.”
— Pope St. Pius X

After contemplating the clear instructions and pronouncements of Jesus Christ and the thoughts of his saints and followers expressed above, there is just one question to be answered by each Catholic. Why doesn’t each and every catholic “move heaven and earth” in quest of receiving the Eucharist frequently?  Why?