The Eucharist is the 'memory bank' of the Church

Friday, Mar. 27, 2015
The Eucharist is the 'memory bank' of the Church + Enlarge
By Msgr. M. Francis Mannion
Pastor emeritus of St. Vincent de Paul Parish

When we celebrate the origin of the Eucharist on Holy Thursday, we cast our minds back to the Last Supper, which Jesus shared with his disciples on the night before he died. However, the Sacrament of the Eucharist is related not only to the Last Supper, but to every Mass celebrated down through the centuries.
The Eucharist is imprinted with the life of the Church from the beginning and is the “memory bank” of God’s people.
The great Anglican Benedictine Gregory Dix, at the end of his monumental book The Shape of the Liturgy, describes the historical career of the Eucharist as beautifully as any writer ever has.
Dix writes: “Men have found no better thing than this to do for kings at their crowning and for criminals going to the scaffold; for armies in triumph or for a bride and bridegroom in a little country church; for the proclamation of a dogma or for a good crop of wheat; for the wisdom of a parliament or a mighty nation or for a sick old woman afraid to die; for a school boy sitting for an examination, or for Columbus setting out to discover America; for the famine of whole provinces or for the soul of a dead lover.”
The Eucharist, Dix says, has been celebrated in thankfulness “because my father did not die of pneumonia; for a village headman much tempted to return to fetish because the yams had failed; because the Turk was at the gates of Vienna; for the repentance of Margaret; for the settlement of a strike; for a son for a barren woman; for Captain so-and-so, wounded and prisoner of war; while the lions roared in the nearby amphitheatre; on the beach at Dunkirk; while the hiss of scythes in the thick June grass came faintly through the windows of the church; tremulously, by an old monk on the fiftieth anniversary of his vows; furtively, by an exiled bishop who had hewn timber all day in a prison camp near Murmansk; gorgeously, for the canonization of S. Joan of Arc.”
The holy sacrament, writes Dix, has been celebrated “in every conceivable human circumstance,” and “for every conceivable human need,” in every century, every country, every continent. The Eucharist has been woven into the history of the Christian people over the centuries, and in turn, it carries that history within itself.
Accordingly, when we approach the Eucharist, we are at one with all who have celebrated this blessed sacrament across the ages.
Fr. Dix’s litany could be expanded in inexhaustible directions. There are the barely-remembered Masses celebrated for the first time in the newly discovered regions of the world. Every diocese of the New World has (or wishes to have) such an event in its annals.
Millions of Americans still remember the funeral Mass of John F. Kennedy. The final Mass of Archbishop Oscar Romero continues to inspire and unify a whole region of the Church.
We can all add our personal lists: the Mass on the day or our marriage or ordination; the funeral Mass for a parent, spouse, child, or friend; the Mass at the close of a great pilgrimage which marked a personal turning point; a Mass attended in great pain during a severe personal crisis.
The tragic and glorious history of the Christian people lives on in the Eucharist, which will its completion only at the heavenly banquet. This rite is the greatest which history can ever know, and is yet, in Fr. Dix’s words, “a thing of absolutely simplicity.”

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