Year B, 12 Pentecost John 6:51-58
One
of the things I was able to do on my sabbatical was sit in the pew with my 5
year old son. He had lots of
questions. On the one hand, I welcomed
the questions because they were relevant and it was a way for him to engage in
the service. On the other hand, I didn’t
want it to be disruptive. One question
that came up fairly often occurred during the Eucharistic Prayer when the
priest held up the wine and said, “Drink this all of you, this is my blood of
the new Covenant.”
“That’s
Jesus’ blood? Are we drinking Jesus’ blood?”
Now this was not the first time someone has asked me this. Especially growing up Roman Catholic, I would
get that question a fair amount. But
this was the first time I attempted to explain it to a 5 year old. The typical Episcopal answer would be, “Well
it’s a mystery. We know God is present,
but we don’t know how.” I knew this answer would not go over well. So I just said, “No----but it helps us
remember Jesus.” Now, this was hard for
me, because the answer is so much more complex (and would probably be deemed
heresy by many, but this was the best I could do for someone who takes
everything literally.
I
know that you all have been hearing about the bread of life for several weeks
now. It would be easy to assume that today’s
Gospel reading is just a repeat of the past readings. It certainly has elements
of previous verses, but it’s different. In
the verses for today Jesus got a lot more literal and the people listening were
not pleased about it.
Talking
about “flesh and blood” might seem unusual in today’s context (that is if we
were not celebrating communion.)
However, it was probably not that jarring for Jesus’ original audience. That phrase is a Hebrew idiom that refers to
the whole person (hearts, minds, hopes, dreams, everything.) Therefore it wasn’t that strange for Jesus to
be talking about flesh and blood. But
where Jesus got into hot water was when he referred to his blood and his body.
Once he had their attention, he got even more specific: “Very truly, I tell
you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have
no life in you.” You know Jesus is
serious, when he starts with, “Very truly.” Which makes his reference to his
flesh and his blood that much more alarming and gory.
Of
course many theologians and biblical scholars have used these words from John
to debate the theology of the Eucharist, but few people can agree on the
meaning. Consequently different denominations define communion in different
ways. Over the centuries, we have let
our perspective on the Eucharist tear us apart.
I understand this to an extent, because it’s critical to our faith. But it’s heart breaking to me that a sacrament
that is supposed to bring us together is the one that has also torn us
apart.
Augustine
of Hippo was one of the greatest theologians of all time. He lived in the 5th
century, 1000 years before there was a split between Roman Catholics and
Protestants. That means both Catholics
and Protestants get to claim him as their own. I can resolve that argument
right now because he was obviously an Episcopalian. In all seriousness, it’s a sad irony that
different sides fight over him to support their denominational views because
for Augustine, the most important thing about the Eucharist is the unity that
represents and the unity it can and should bring to humanity.
In the Episcopal Church
we attempt to show that in our liturgy when we gather together around the altar
and drink from one cup. Unfortunately, we have not been able to do that in a
year and a half. Some people worry that
has negatively affected the celebration of communion. And so even those in our
one small denomination have begun to debate the Eucharist with more fervor.
Yet, even I, raised in
the Roman Catholic Church and rather passionate about communion, found that
compromise didn’t have to mean we were diluting the sacrament. At some point I realized that it wasn’t the
presentation that was the most important thing.
The most important thing was the sacrament itself, the way it can
transform us from the inside, the way it can transform our community. Augustine
wrote, “Take and eat the body of Christ… Lest there be division among you, eat
of what binds you together.”
I
think it’s essential to celebrate diversity and what makes us unique. It would be wrong for us to pretend that we are
all the same or that we agree on everything, or even most things. However, let us never forget that what binds
us together is constant. What divides us is temporary. Why do we spend so much
time arguing about temporal things?
No
matter how we distribute or receive communion, we believe God’s presence is
there, tangibly. It’s a gift that Jesus gave us and a gift that will never run
out. In a time when change seems like
our only constant, my prayer for all of us is that we can cling to that which
doesn’t change. That is God’s presence
with us in the sacraments of the church- God’s incredible display of love and
compassion he displayed in sending his son to earth. Cling to that. Hold on to it with all you are and all you
have. The rest will pass. God’s love for us—God’s desire that we are
unified in that love—that will last forever.
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