The Power of Eucharistic Adoration - Bishop Barron

The Power of Eucharistic Adoration - Bishop Barron's Sunday Sermon
Posted on 06/02/2024
Bishop BarronThe Power of Eucharistic Adoration - Bishop Barron's Sunday Sermon

Friends, we come to the great Feast of Corpus Christi—the Body and Blood of Christ. This year, as the Church in the US is going through a lengthy Eucharistic Revival, it’s good for us once again to turn to this greatest of sacraments. What I want to do today is to talk about a spiritual practice that has become very dear to me in the course of my life—and that is Eucharistic Adoration.

Watch The Power of Eucharistic Adoration - Bishop Barron's Sunday Sermon here

GOSPEL

Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ (Corpus Christi)

Mark 14:12–16, 22–26
Friends, today’s Gospel focuses on the spiritual power of the Eucharist. A central claim of the Catholic Church is that Jesus is substantially present under the forms of bread and wine. His presence is not simply evocative and symbolic, but rather real, true, and substantial.


To verify this scripturally, look at the accounts of the Last Supper in Matthew, Mark, and Luke—and also in Paul. But look especially at the sixth chapter of John’s Gospel. Jesus says, “Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you do not have life within you.” And when they object, Jesus does not soften his language; he intensifies it. 


This is the ground for the Church’s defense of the Real Presence. How can we make sense of it? It has everything to do with who Jesus is. If he were simply an ordinary human being, his words would have, at best, a symbolic resonance. But Jesus is God, and what God says, is. 


Thus, when Jesus’ words over the bread and wine are spoken, they change into what the words signify. They become really, truly, and substantially the Body and Blood of the Lord.