Although this "Vortex" episode was aired last Wednesday, April 4, the message is timeless:
And here's the script:
As we
approach Holy Thursday – and the three holiest days of the year – tthe Church
invites
us to turn our thoughts to the physical suffering of Our Blessed Lord… in the
body.
And as
we reflect on those sufferings – and quietly cringe when we think heavily on
them – we can’t help but think that Our Blessed Lord’s motivation was love: to
back up his words with actions, to prove that He meant what He said.
Now
this raises a curious point. He said He loves us with no limit. And that he
made this
especially
and abundantly clear to His disciples at the Last Supper underscores a deep
truth
for us.
The
Catholic Church has held from its first moment that Our Blessed Lord is present
– Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity, really truly and substantially – under the
appearance of
bread
and wine in the Holy Eucharist.
For a
God who loves with an infinite love, the truth of the Real Presence of Our Lord
in
the Eucharist
almost becomes, you could say, a NECESSITY. It falls into the category
of
HAVING to be true. It MUST be true.
Why?
Because it’s opposite would be unthinkable. IMPOSSIBLE. How could God claim to
love us with an infinite love – and have it within His power to be present physically
among us – body, blood, soul, and divinity – and then choose NOT to be present?
The Divine
Lover deliberately and willfully choosing to NOT be with His beloved when He
has it in His power to easily do so would be a God who did not love completely.
Mankind could stand at the Last Judgment and accuse its God of not loving to
the
absolute
full measure and last inexhaustible ounce He could muster. And mankind would be
right.
The
Catholic Church’s teaching on the Real Presence of Our Lord in the Eucharist is
not
a
proposition to be debated – yea or nay – for to reject it is to reject the idea
that God loves completely, which is to make a liar out of God.
It is
to be accepted in all its mystery, because at the end of the day, that’s what
love
proposes
and love in turn embraces. It’s just that simple; and love’s most mysterious
aspect is its simplicity.
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