Anyways, I had some thoughts that I'd like to share that occurred to me during the last class, which was on the Eucharist. I asked myself, why bread and wine as the two used to become the Precious Body and Blood? God has a good reason for everything he does, He is the Ultimate Good.
So as I was listening to the presentation I was pondering the reasons, and here's what I came up with:
Bread: -Grown up from the earth as wheat, a symbol of God the Creator.
-Harvested, and made into dough, the work of human hands, symbolizing the work that God the Son Incarnate would do as a man
-Baked using fire, symbolizing the cleansing and inspiring fire of the Holy Spirit
(And now that I think of it, bread is made in that order, and that is the order in which God revealed Himself to man. Cool.)Wine: -A fruit of the Earth, like wheat, symbolizing God the creator
-Harvested, and pressed, again showing the labor of humanity, and Christ in His humanity
-And barreled or bottled and stored, for long periods of time until wine is produced, symbolizing Patience, which is a gift of the Holy Spirit
And these are only my personal thoughts that occurred that night, which led me to research even more, coming across these two great articles at Catholic Answers.
http://www.catholic.com/magazine/articles/why-wheat-bread
http://www.catholic.com/magazine/articles/why-grape-wine
And I'm sure there are many other reasons as to why; there are many examples in the life of Jesus in which He either uses, speaks of, or makes a miracle out of either of these two consumables.
But even better from that night, and wonderfully enough my thoughts on the bread and wine were geared towards the Trinity, there was a surprise visitor from out of state. He was the priest from the parish in Syracuse, NY that had closed down, and from which our parish was buying the contents to fill our new church building. And wouldn't you know it, it was Holy Trinity Catholic Church? Of course it was, and he told use great details about his old parish. He was born and raised there, and eventually became the pastor. He assured us that he couldn't have been happier that all of the items were going to be used for what they were made for, the worship of God.
I knew all of these statues, and altars, and all the things they've presented to us that will go in the church were very sacred items, from an old parish and I was glad they would be used. But to hear a story behind it, to see the face of the priest who's known the place all his life, it just added an even more rich and beautiful origin than we could have imagined. It was quite a blessing to hear him speak so lovingly about it.
Later in the talk, before the visiting priest gave his story, some were discussing Eucharistic miracles, and from a previous post, here's one that I've heard many times:
http://sheldensense.blogspot.com/2012/03/having-doubts.html
And the link straight to YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6PJ8BORx1p8
Take care,
~Nick
Making something from nothing. Taking a small piece of Earth and making it something nourishing. Seems like the ultimate, most basic skill and gift. Interesting that Jesus was a carpenter and not a baker or brewer? Would have been a different ball game if Jesus was a brewer, right?
ReplyDeleteImagine the possibilities! Although the origins of beer tend towards sustaining monks during Lent and times of fasting, maybe God knew for it to be a feast of sorts might be a bit much. He knows how we can be, after all. :)
DeleteHopefully we'll be seeing you next bud.