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Wednesday, September 14

Holy Eucharist




The pinnacle of Christian worship has always been the celebration of the Eucharist. I know that many of our readers have been affected by the Presence. I'd like to hear more.

As the 'Prayer of Humble Access' beautifully puts it in the Prayer Book,

"We do not presume to come to this thy Table, O merciful Lord,
trusting in our own righteousness,
but in thy manifold and great mercies.
We are not worthy so much as to gather up the crumbs under thy Table.
But thou art the same Lord, whose property is always to have mercy;
Grant us therefore, gracious Lord,
so to eat the flesh of thy dear Son Jesus Christ, and to drink his blood,
that our sinful bodies may be made clean by his body,
and our souls washed through his most precious blood,
and that we may evermore ever dwell in him, and he in us.
Amen
"



And as the hymn says,

"At His feet the six wingèd seraph,
Cherubim with sleepless eye,
Veil their faces to the
Presence,
As with ceaseless voice they cry:
Alleluia, Alleluia
Alleluia, Lord Most High
!"

Post a Comment

11 Comments:

  1. Blogger Constantine said...

    Indeed it is the pinnacle! Not the homily (though this is important too).

    I just don't get it very often. I always feel so guilty, so I stay seated or walk behind the family so they don't see me not receiving communion.

    8:01 AM, September 15, 2005  
  2. Blogger fatherneo said...

    A very special meaning to you indeed Mr. Holder. Many years.

    Mr. C, why so guilty? When's the last time you confessed your sins to your spiritual father?

    10:58 AM, September 15, 2005  
  3. Blogger voixd'ange said...

    C!!!! You remind me of the story of the man who stood beating his breast asking forgiveness while the self righteous one congratulated himself on his piety... Who did Christ say was forgiven?

    11:33 AM, September 15, 2005  
  4. Blogger existentialist said...

    Ready for something off the hook?
    I think it's erotic.
    I think it's God making love to the human soul.
    ;)

    11:43 PM, September 15, 2005  
  5. Blogger Constantine said...

    Padre,

    Spiritual father? I don't have one. Do you know of a Fr. Zossima in the Mile High City? As to your other question, it's been a while.

    What are your thoughts on taking/receiving THE sacrament for the benefit of or thinking about someone else? A kind of vicarious or substitutionary action if you will. This is what I do when I do garner the courage to take our Lord's body and blood. I'm fairly sure the chief theological Doctor of the Church, St. Aquinas, would not care for this, but I'll defer to you for some insight and wisdom if you care to proffer it.

    7:14 AM, September 16, 2005  
  6. Blogger voixd'ange said...

    I liked the picture, for what it is worth...

    5:52 PM, September 16, 2005  
  7. Blogger jazztheo said...

    Father,

    I don't mean to quibble with such beautiful words but since the creation of my people (African-Americans) about 3 centuries ago, Eucharist has not been the pinacle of our worship. I think we have experienced the presence but is there a higher level of presence that your are calling us too?

    7:50 PM, September 16, 2005  
  8. Blogger fatherneo said...

    Amy,
    Since when is Fr. Neo the 'guy from the movie?' It's Fr. Neo encountering the numinous.

    Jazztheo,
    Truly your tradition is the only original American tradition, and a wonderful one at that. Don't forget though, that in the 'old time religion' of Africa, Holy Eucharist was/is indeed the pinnacle of worship. In fact, in many ways, North Africa led the way in early Christian worship--and it was quite Eucharistic.

    10:45 PM, September 18, 2005  
  9. Blogger fatherneo said...

    Jazzy,
    The only American religious tradition I meant to say...

    10:46 PM, September 18, 2005  
  10. Blogger jazztheo said...

    I've read church history and am aware that the pinnacle of African worship was Holy Eucharist. But I am wrestling with this uniquely created American tradtion. That is not African as you describe it, nor accepted as American. I'm living life on the hyphen.

    9:18 AM, September 19, 2005  
  11. Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Hi once again.
    I have been reading a book that made a comment or two that made me think of you all here.

    Copy:
    The word religion comes from a root word that means "bind together." Thus the word actually means unity, oneness, wholeness.

    Unfortunately, religions have been institutions instead of perceptions, something you join rather than a transcendence you experience. We have been conditioned to believe that God works exclusively through the machinery of an ecclesiastical body. We need to refresh ourselves with the vision of Paul's sermon on Mars Hill:

    "The god who made the world and everything in it, being Lord of heaven and earth, does not live in shrines made by man, nor is he served by human hands, as though he needed anything, since he himself gives to all men life and breath and everything......Yet he is not far from each one of us, for 'In him we live and move and have our being'." Acst 17:24-25, 27-28

    (4 paragraphs later)
    Certainly this has application in our relation to God: We are not just acted upon by God, but we are the activity of God expressing as us.

    What do you think?

    Gary

    2:04 PM, September 22, 2005  

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