Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ (Corpus Christi)
Corpus Christi is the solemn feast dedicated specifically to celebrating and honoring the Real Presence of Jesus Christ in the Holy Eucharist, meaning His Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity.
In the first reading, Moses tells Israel: “Remember… the Lord fed you with manna… to make you understand that one does not live by bread alone” (Deut. 8:2–3). God was teaching His people that hunger is not only physical. Beneath our schedules, successes, and struggles, there is a deeper hunger: to be loved, to be forgiven, to be strengthened, and to be brought home.
Jesus answers that hunger in the Gospel with words that startled His listeners and still stretch us today: “I am the living bread that came down from heaven… whoever eats this bread will live forever” (Jn 6:51).
I want us to notice that Jesus does not merely give advice. Jesus gives Himself.
At every Eucharist, Christ does not say, “Remember my ideas.” Jesus says, “Take and eat.” The One who multiplied loaves now becomes our food. The Creator enters creation and places Himself into our hands.
St. Paul deepens this mystery: “Because there is one bread, we who are many are one body” (1 Cor 10:17). The Eucharist is never a private spirituality. We receive one Lord and become one people. The altar must shape how we speak at home, how we forgive in our families, how we welcome strangers, and how we love those who are difficult.
A gentle test of our Eucharistic faith is this: after receiving Christ, do we become a little more like Christ?
Today Jesus still says: “You do not have to survive on scraps of hope. Come and receive My life.”
And perhaps the greatest miracle of Corpus Christi is not that bread becomes Christ but that by receiving Christ, ordinary people like us, slowly become His presence in the world. Do you want to …?
Your Priest,
Father Charles Enyinnia