Liturgy

Community Mass
Thank you to Year 12 students, especially the Student Representative Council, who prepared Community Mass this morning. Thank you also to Fr Tony Lusvardi SJ. Fr Tony has given us permission to print his homily. See below.
Next week, the liturgy will be prepared by Year 11 Pilgrimage students. Anyone can be part of the Community Mass - just come to the Chapel at 8:00am. After Mass, people can get a coffee to go before heading off to work and other commitments.
Community Mass details:
- College Chapel
- Fridays in term time
- Starts: 8:00am and concludes 8:30am
Congratulations
This Sunday is the Feast of Corpus Christ and lots of Year 4 students are excited to be making their First Holy Communion in various parishes this weekend. Congratulations to the students and their families. We look forward to publishing their names and photos next week!
Information from parishes regarding sacraments is available on the College website. If you have further questions, don’t hesitate to ask!
Please contact:
- Mary-Anne Lumley
mary- anne.lumley@cewa.edu.au
9383 0513. - Your parish priest or Sacrament Coordinator
- The Archdiocesan website.
Good News for the Feast of Corpus Christi
‘Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you do not have life within you.’
A few years ago, in Boston, I was talking to a group of kids preparing for their first communion, and one of them asked me, “If we eat the body of Jesus, does that mean we’re cannibals?”
I thought it was a good question. What Jesus teaches us about the Eucharist is not easy to understand. In the Gospel, Jesus’ teaching provokes arguments and even causes some of his disciples to leave him. But he doesn’t back down. The Catholic Church, I’m happy to say, has also never backed down from the faith that the Eucharist is the Body and Blood of Jesus. It’s not a prop in a play. It is not a mere symbolic reminder. It’s not a visual aid from before the days of PowerPoint. It may not look or taste like flesh and blood, but Jesus forces us to make a choice—do we believe our own senses or do we believe him? It’s the same choice required to believe in eternal life, which we have never seen. Do we trust his words? And if we do, does that make us cannibals?
Last week I said that God’s way of being is different than our way of being, just like Harry Potter exists in a different way than J.K. Rowling exists. The great mystery of Christian faith is that God has become one of us to share our way of being. Even more amazing, by entering into our life, he allows us to participate in his life. He gives us access to his divine way of being. Not even J.K. Rowling can do that.
Our best glimpse of the new life God wants to give us is the Resurrection of Jesus. You remember that after the Resurrection, Jesus appeared in the body. His body even had wounds—but those wounds didn’t hurt anymore. He was still Jesus but appeared so differently that at first some of his disciples didn’t recognize him. He was not limited by time and place; he appeared where he wanted, even inside locked rooms. His new way of being changed his body.
When we eat the Body of Christ in the sacrament, we are eating his sacramental body, not his natural body. Our natural bodies are subject to all kinds of limitations—that’s why we get sick and die—but our resurrected bodies will not be subject to those same limitations. And sacraments are those entry points where heaven touches earth, where we pass from our natural way of being to a way of being that is divine and eternal.
If you ate someone’s natural flesh, you’d have to kill him, and that would make you a cannibal. We’ve only got a limited amount of natural flesh. But we’re not eating Jesus’ natural flesh; we’re eating his sacramental flesh. And the sacraments are part of a reality where our limitations begin to give way to a new way of life. When we eat Body of Jesus, we do not destroy it; instead, the ‘bread that came down from heaven’ makes us a part of him.
© Tony Lusvardi
The reflection for this Sunday’s Gospel is from Jesuit, Father Tony Lusvardi. Father Tony grew up in the USA and has taught English for the US Peace Corps in Kazakhstan and administered three small parishes on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota. For the past six years he has lived in Rome, firstly completing his licence and doctorate in sacramental theology, and now, teaching sacramental theology at the Gregorian University.
Fr Tony is with us in the College for two more weeks.