Chapter Chaplain's Homily Reflection - GOD GIVES HIMSELF SO HIS PEOPLE MAY LIVE
GOD GIVES HIMSELF SO HIS PEOPLE MAY LIVE Today, the Church invites us to stand before one of the greatest mysteries of our faith - the mystery of a God who does not simply give gifts, but a God who gives Himself so that His people may live. From the very beginning, this has been God’s way of loving. In the first reading, Moses gives the Israelites a last-minute instruction before they cross the Jordan into the Promised Land, while he goes off to his eternal reward. Afraid that they might become complacent and forget their God once they got comfortable in this new land, reminds Israel, “Remember the desert. Remember the hunger. Remember the manna. Hunger taught them dependence, and manna taught them trust. Manna was not just food. It was God giving Himself in care, presence, and fidelity. The manna taught Israel: Your life comes from Me. Your future depends on me. I will sustain you even when you cannot sustain yourself. The desert becomes the first great revelation that God gives Himself so His people may live. The manna was only the beginning. It was a promise, a foreshadowing, a whisper of something greater. And then, in the Gospel, Jesus fulfills that promise. Here, he does not say: “I will give you bread, he says: “I AM the Bread of Life.” “I will show you where to find life.” He says, “Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has life within them.” This is the astonishing truth of Corpus Christi: God becomes our real food, our strength, and our life. When you come forward at Communion, you are not receiving something. You are receiving Jesus. The same Jesus who walked the desert with Israel. The same Jesus who multiplied loaves. The same Jesus who hung on the Cross. The same Jesus who rose from the dead. The same Jesus who loves us more than we can imagine. Why does He do this? Because He knows our hunger. The Eucharist is God’s answer to every human hunger—our hunger for meaning, our hunger for belonging, our hunger for forgiveness, our hunger for love.” Regarding meaning, every person asks: Why am I here? What is my life for? In the Eucharist, Christ gives the answer not as an idea but as a gift of Himself. Meaning is found in self-giving love. The Eucharist is Christ saying, “Your life has value because I give Myself for you. “It reveals that our purpose is communion — with God and with one another. It is the answer to our hunger for belonging. Loneliness is one of the deepest wounds of modern life. In the Eucharist, Christ draws us into His Body, the Church. We do not just attend Mass; we become part of Christ. We do not just gather with others; we become one Body with them. The Eucharist is the antidote to isolation: You belong because you are part of Christ’s Body. It is the answer to our hunger for forgiveness. Every heart carries guilt, regret, or wounds. The Eucharist is the memorial of the sacrifice that forgives sins. It presents the same Christ who died for us. It strengthens the soul against sin. It heals what is broken. While Confession forgives mortal sin, the Eucharist heals the roots of sin by uniting us to Christ’s mercy. It is the answer to our hunger for love. Every human being longs to be loved fully, faithfully, unconditionally. In the Eucharist, Christ gives the total gift of Himself: “This is my Body, given for you.” There is no greater love than this (Jn 15:13). The Eucharist is the Presence of the One who loves us perfectly. Therefore, at this Mass, Jesus gives Himself; not just His teachings, not just His miracles, not just His blessings - but His very Body and Blood. This is the God we worship: a God who would rather die than live without us, a God who would rather feed us with His own life than let us starve spiritually. So today, on this feast of Corpus Christi, let us remember who we receive. Let us approach the altar with awe, with gratitude, with hunger. And let us leave this church as people who have been fed— fed with the very life of God.
Fr. Imo
Chaplain
Arrowhead Desert Valley Chapter
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