Behold, Christ! 10 Ways to Increase Belief in the Eucharistic Lord

THE MYSTERY OF THE EUCHARIST: Special Section commentary

(photo: Franciscan University of Steubenville)

In Caesarea Philippi, Jesus asked who people said he was, and his two polls showed that only one person — Peter — said he believed Jesus was who he truly was, the Messiah and Son of God (Matthew 16:13-20).

In July, the Pew Research Center asked U.S. Catholics who or what they understood the Eucharist to be. The response, like the one Our Lord received in Caesarea, was sobering.

Only 50% of U.S. Catholics said that they knew the Church’s teaching that, after the consecration, the bread and wine are totally changed into Jesus’ Body and Blood; 45% said that the Church teaches that the “bread” and “wine” are only symbols, and 5% didn’t know what the Church teaches.

Even among the 50% of those who were aware of the Church’s teaching, a third said that they still regarded the Eucharist as a symbol, leaving only 31% who actually believed the Church’s teaching.

In addition, 69% of Catholics said that they believe that the Eucharist was just a symbol — that Jesus is not on the altar after the consecration, or in the tabernacle, or in us after Holy Communion.

Rather than news, the report was a confirmation of what had long been known and inferred: There is a grave crisis in Eucharistic faith. That crisis is ultimately at the root of many others: low Mass attendance, shuttered parishes, closed schools, insufficient priestly vocations, waning Catholic influence in society, growing secularism and, as Pope Emeritus Benedict incisively wrote in April, even the clerical sexual abuse of minors.

That’s why the results have justly been occupying the attention of bishops, priests, commentators and all those who care about the Church and the Lord.

Many have focused on the need for much better catechesis across the board. That’s absolutely true, but inadequate and shortsighted. Christianity is not a classroom trying to help people pass a standardized test, but a way of life.

Even if the results came back and 100% of surveyed Catholics identified the Church’s teaching with precision and affirmed faith in it, the larger question would remain: Are they living Eucharistic lives, with Jesus in the Eucharist as the source, summit, root and center of their existence?

Knowing and believing are indispensable steps, but the goal is Eucharistic living. This is something that goes far beyond mere Sunday Mass attendance. It’s whether we live in holy communion with the Risen Lord incarnate in the Eucharist, whether we draw our life from him, whether we permit him from within to make our life a commentary on the words of consecration.

Knowing how we got here is key to knowing how to respond adequately.

After the Second Vatican Council, there were many ideas and practices that undermined knowledge and faith in the Real Presence. Some priests, religious and theologians advanced a desacralizing ideology that, falsely claiming to be the “Spirit of Vatican II,” attacked Eucharistic piety, destroyed high altars and altar rails, banished tabernacles to side altars or chapels and basically sought to effect a Copernican shift in Eucharistic focus away from worshipping God and onto idolatry of the community.

Many of these iconoclasts taught in seminaries and Catholic universities, where, with impunity, they diabolically derided Eucharistic adoration as the superstitious “worship of a breadbox” and persecuted seminarians who wanted to make Holy Hours or requested to have exposition of the Blessed Sacrament in their seminary chapels. These incidents, sadly, were not isolated, and such critical responses to Eucharistic piety certainly impacted those future priests who didn’t know the faith well enough to recognize the voice of false prophets.

But that’s not the principal explanation for the loss of Eucharistic faith (and understanding). The bigger reason is a series of practices with regard to the Eucharist that, regardless of the intentions in inaugurating them, impacted what the faithful know and believe.

The ancient aphorism lex orandi, lex credendi reminds us that how we pray impacts what we believe. The way we have spoken about the Eucharist in word and body language, in music and architecture, over the last half-century has unquestionably impacted what people understand and believe.

Consider a few of these “upgrades” in prayer style ushered in after the Council: the location and beauty of the tabernacle, the posture with which we receive Holy Communion, the pace at which Holy Communion is distributed, the direction of our worship, the liturgical vocabulary we use, the widespread encouragement and allowance of almost everyone — in a state of mortal sin or not — to receive, the accessibility of churches for prayer, the frequency of Eucharistic adoration, and the Eucharistic piety of the priests and others who lead the Church’s prayer. All these components matter to how and why the Church believes in the Real Presence.

How, then, do we increase knowledge and faith of the reality of Jesus in the Eucharist?

It begins with taking seriously what the Church believes and courageously living it, so that others might come to believe. Faith is not just taught but caught, and everything the Church does ought to help people catch it.

I’d like to mention 10 pastoral practices for consideration. I hope in doing so that we can get beyond the “liturgical wars,” beyond even our preferences, to concentrate on what is truly conducive to communicating clearly and effectively the Church’s Eucharistic faith:

Encourage priestly Eucharistic piety. Priests have the greatest role and responsibility for turning the situation right-side up. There’s a difference between priests who live truly Eucharistic lives and those who don’t. It’s manifested in the way they pray rather than recite the Mass, handle and distribute the Eucharist, put reverence into genuflections, celebrate Mass on their days off, pray before the Blessed Sacrament, promote Eucharistic adoration (and perhaps even take the inconvenient early morning hours in their parish’s 24-hour adoration program!), refer in their preaching to Jesus in the Eucharist, and sit in the confessional to provide people an opportunity to receive the Eucharist worthily. Eucharistic priests form Eucharistic parishes — and Eucharistic parishes not only survive but thrive and renew the Church.

Place the tabernacle in the center of the sanctuary. If we know the Eucharist is truly the King of Kings, why would we put him anywhere else than in the most important place? Moreover, wouldn’t our tabernacles be the most exquisite item in the whole Church, to convey this truth and love?

Pray before the Eucharistic Jesus. If we believe that in the Eucharist Jesus fulfills his promise to be with us always until the end of time (Matthew 28:20), and we recognize that people need Jesus, then we must provide access to him.

Locked churches, however common, are a scandal. They’re shut, of course, out of safety, lest the Church suffer vandalism, but a frequently visited church is often a remedy for such concerns — especially when a pastor vigorously promotes prayer and adoration with a sense of shared responsibility throughout the parish. Eucharistic adoration may be itself the most important element in the turnaround, for no one worships bread.

Make daily Mass a parish mainstay. If the Eucharist is really Jesus, then is there anything more important we can do on Mondays or Thursdays or any day than receive Jesus each and every day of the week? Daily Mass changes a believer from someone who fulfills a Sunday duty to someone who treats the Eucharistic Lord with generous love.

Administer Holy Communion with care. Catholics believe receiving Jesus Christ is the most incredible moment in human life. Why would we ever hurry it? In many parishes, extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion have become quasi-ordinary, contrary to Church norms, lest the distribution of Holy Communion and, therefore, Mass, “take too long.” But emphasizing “efficiency” or a desire for liturgical “inclusivity” over this encounter between God and his beloved is unwise and counterproductive.

Cultivate a reverence in receiving. It is certainly possible for people to receive the Lord devoutly in their hands while standing. We shouldn’t forget, however, that when Thomas Cranmer, with Machiavellian discernment, was seeking to destroy Eucharistic piety in post-Reformation England, he did it principally through promoting Communion in the hands while standing. If men drop to their knees to propose to beloved future brides, can’t we kneel out of love to receive Our Lord? Doesn’t Holy Communion on the tongue far better communicate the sense of receiving the Eucharist as a gift? Since we seldom kneel except for God, and hardly ever allow others to put things into our mouths (unless it be the bride and groom feeding each other wedding cake!), such a gesture would communicate the uniqueness of what we’re doing.

Orient worship more conspicuously toward God. A priest who devoutly prays the Mass can convey the theocentrism of the Church’s liturgy no matter what direction he is facing. But the potential for priests to become the center of attention, and for faithful to think that the Church’s worship is self-referential, is much greater when priests face the people. One of the reasons why many young Catholics are gravitating toward the traditional Latin Mass, I’m convinced, is because they believe ad orientem worship more easily and effectively communicates a sense of the sacred and facilitates prayerfully preparing for the most sacred moment in human life. Especially in those circumstances when priests are not the most graceful celebrants, orienting the new order of the Mass more exclusively and explicitly toward the Real Presence of the God-man would help ameliorate the crisis.

Live the Church’s teaching about worthy reception. We do not transmit faith in the Real Presence when we permit anyone and everyone, regardless of whether they’re in a state of grace or not, to receive the Eucharist. This concerns not just those who obstinately persist in manifest grave sin, like Catholic politicians with scandalous public or private lives, but also Catholics who have committed serious sins yet to be absolved. It also concerns (without any comment on the state of their souls as such) non-Catholics who are not yet in communion.

People — and especially children — notice whether we take the holiness of Jesus in the Eucharist seriously or treat the Eucharist like a piece of cake at a birthday party. Our example instructs.

 Clarify Eucharistic terminology. Our vocabulary must communicate our faith. We should boldly use the terms “sacred Body” and “precious Blood.” Mention of “bread” and “wine” at all — even “Eucharistic bread” or “consecrated wine” — confuses the faithful and doesn’t communicate the truth. This is particularly important for catechists and liturgical ministers. We also need to be particularly careful about what is taught through liturgical music. “Look beyond the bread you eat” is heretical. Singing a catchy mantra, “Eat this bread; drink this cup,” teaches something far different from “Eat my flesh; drink my blood.”

Love like you mean it. If we really believe the Eucharist is Jesus, and we love him, then such love for Our Lord should show, lavishly. St. Thomas Aquinas wrote in one of his Eucharistic hymns, quantum potes, tantum aude (“Dare to do all you can”). The more we do — such as organize Corpus Christi processions, initiate 40-hour devotions and perpetual adoration in the parish, attend Eucharistic conventions, sponsor Eucharistic healing services — the more we will convey our Eucharistic faith.

As I make these suggestions, I’d like to emphasize that not only is none of them “against Vatican II” or against the authentic liturgical reforms of the last 50 years, but each is meant to bring about the central liturgical aim of the Council: the “full and active participation by all the people,” and not just in the liturgy but in what the liturgy is meant to accomplish: Bring us into communion with Christ by the power of the Holy Spirit.

I’d also like to underline that none of the ideas is new or original. In fact, many are already being implemented in various parishes, dioceses, religious communities, schools and movements — and in general have led to flourishing counterindications to the Pew Research Center’s troubling report.

Putting Jesus in the Holy Eucharist in his proper place leads to great vitality. Not doing so leads to decline and death. That’s the choice the Church faces regarding its members.

Who do we say that the Eucharist is?

Father Roger Landry is a priest of the Diocese of Fall River, Massachusetts.