Eucharist as Wedding Feas1

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    Eucharist as Wedding Feast - 3

    Mystical Marriage

    by Ernest Falardeau, SSS, Associate Editor

    Printed inEmmanuel Magazine, June 2001

    Introduction

    The fathers of the church, especially in their commentaries on the Song of Songs, movefrom the metaphor of the Wedding Feast of God with his people to the relationship

    between God and the individual soul. St. John of the Cross in his Canticle draws the same

    picture. John of the Cross, St., The Spiritual Canticle in Collected Works...Transl. ByKieran Kavanaugh, OCD and Otilio Rodriguez, OCD. Washington: ICS Publ., 1979, p

    393-568.

    The covenant relationship between God and his people is concretized and personalized ineach persons relationship to God in Christ.

    St. Johns Discourse on the Bread of Life (Jn 6:22-59) would refer to this reality. Just as

    Christ has life from the Father, so the one who eats his body and drinks his blood, sharesin the divine and eternal life of the Risen Lord.

    A Loving Relationship

    The Eucharist is a wedding feast, because it is a loving communion with Jesus Christ, theRisen Lord. The purpose of eucharistic communion is a deeper and more intimate

    relationship with Jesus Christ. In the final analysis, this union with Christ is at the very

    heart of the Christian life. St. Paul speaks of it often: For me to live is Christ...it is nolonger I who live, it is Christ who lives in me... (Phil 1:21; Gal 2:20) Gregory of Nyssa,

    in his commentary on the Song of Songs waxes eloquent about this relationship and

    invites his readers to find it in the deeper meaning of the Scriptures:

    ...that she was as far from arriving at perfection as those who had not yetmade a beginning....I indeed [says she] laid hold on love for the One I

    desire, but the object of my love has flown from the net of my thoughts....I

    was calling him by name, as far as I was able to discover names for theNameless, but there was no name whose sense could attain the One I was

    seeking. Gregory of Nyssa, Homily 6 (GNO VI:180 as quoted by Richard

    A. Norris, The Soul Takes Flight: Gregory of Nyssa and the Song ofSongs, The Anglican 25 (1996) no. 2, p.20 (October). In our search for

    God, we find him in Jesus Christ, his Son and the love of the Trinity. We

    follow the lead and direction of the Holy Spirit who is poured out in the

    Eucharist, the Bread of Life by which we share in the life of the Father.The Word was made flesh that we might have eternal life. And the Bread

    of Life gives us that life in abundance. It is bread broken and wine poured

    out. It is the body of Christ and his blood given for the life of the world.

    At some point in the ascent of Gods mountain the bridegroom beckons to the bride tocome and feast. Wisdom prepares a banquet of choice morsels and fine wines (Prov 9:2).

    This banquet is a foretaste of the banquet of heaven. It is the banquet of the Eucharist -

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]
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    sign and symbol of Gods love for each of us. Sign and symbol of the love of Jesus Christ

    who lay down his life that we might live, who shares his life with us as we hear his word

    and share his bread of life and cup of salvation.

    Contemplation

    St. Peter Julian Eymard spoke of an acquired contemplation. Peter Julian Eymard, St.

    Constitutions of the Congregation of the Most Blessed Sacrament, St. Meinrad, IN, TheAbbey Press, 1959, no. 17:

    The best way of adoring Our Lord, however, is that which the Holy Ghost inspires and

    fosters in a humble and upright heart. Let each one, therefore, be attentive to his ownspecial grace and, as one called to the better part with Mary, advance in recollection and

    in the virtue of holy love at the feet of the Lord.

    A soul that is diligent in following the Holy Spirit will eventually come to a point in its

    spiritual journey when it will rest in the Lord. Realizing the futility of concepts andwords, a person eventually rests in Gods love and in the ineffable groans of the Holy

    Spirit. The Spirit prays in us as in a temple. We pray in him as the very substance of

    Gods love in the Trinity.

    The mystics, especially Teresa of Avila and John of the Cross speak of an even deepermysticism, but that contemplation is Gods pure gift. It is not something of our doing or

    meriting. It is Gods to give or withhold. But the terms and metaphors that are used arethose of the Scriptures, of mystical marriage, of bride and groom. Teresa of Avila, St.,

    The Life of Teresa of Jesus: The Autobiography of St. Teresa of Avila, ed. by E. Allison

    Peers, Garden City, NY: Image Books, 1960.John of the Cross, St. op. cit. We can only give God praise and thanks for the mystics

    who have told us about this experience, still we can appreciate it as an insight into Gods

    dealings with each of us. The infinity of Gods love and the longing response, the

    yearning in each of us, is something we share in common.An elderly priest now deceased, once told me, virtually in tears, of his longing for God

    and heaven. Another told me with simple gratitude that he felt his life was complete and

    that he awaited death with great serenity and hope. They were prepared for the banquet.The Eucharist had done its work. Jesus Christ was at the center of their lives. They

    longed to see their friend face to face. They had contemplated him in the eucharistic

    sacrifice and in hours of eucharistic prayer. Now they longed to see him endlessly inrealms of clearer light. Marty Haugen, We Walk By Faith, verse 4. Wedding Feast

    Can we recall the joy we have experienced at weddings? I remember my very first

    memory of this kind, when my aunt and uncle were married. We had ice cream (a rare

    treat in the 1930's) and all kinds of wonderful food. Everyone was dressed for theoccasion. The family was being extended another time. We welcomed new members and

    looked forward to more cousins to share our life and our joy.

    A wedding feast is about joy and food and relationships. As a priest, I have shared manyweddings, rehearsal dinners and wedding receptions. They are among the most joyful

    moments of family life. A priest shares these moments among his people. As a counselor

    and confidant, he helps couples to celebrate an important decision in their lives, and tomark its sacred and solemn moments. Often a life-time bond is established in the process.

    And the spirit of the occasion is always remembered. In the Catholic rite, marriages are

    celebrated at a Eucharist. In the Orthodox understanding of marriage, it involves the

    stephanosis (blessing of the crowns and crowning of the bride and broom) in the context

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    of the Eucharist. In the Orthodox rite (and in many Eastern Catholic rites) the epiclesis

    (prayer to the Holy Spirit) in the sacrament of marriage is much like the epiclesis of the

    Eucharist. The Holy Spirit unites bride and groom, just as the Holy Spirit transforms thebread and wine into the body and blood of Christ. Marriage is related to the body of

    Christ which is the church, hence the invoking of the Holy Spirit.

    Ecclesia DomesticaIt should be no surprise, therefore, that the family is considered the ecclesia domestica -

    the domestic church, the church of the home. John Paul II, Pope, Familiaris Consortio

    #21.If the church is the body of Christ, then the family is the body of Christ in the home. We

    begin to grasp the profound insight of St. Paul as he wrote to the Ephesians that the love

    of husband and wife is the mystery the sacred sign and profound revelation of the love

    of Christ for the church (Eph 5:32).There was a time, in the early church, when there were only domestic churches, Vincent

    P. Branick, The House Church in the Writings of Paul, (Zacchaeus Studies: New

    Testament), Wilmington, DE: M. Glazier, 1989.

    i.e. when Christians gathered in the homes of prominent members. There is somethingabout the intimacy and conviviality - the joy and sharing - of that time that needs to be

    recaptured today. Konrad Raiser, Opening Up Ecumenical Space, Address at theInternational Meeting of Interchurch Families at the Ecumenical Centre, Geneva

    (Switzland), July 25, 1998.

    The hospitality and the love of Christians and their care for each other should underlieeven our most solemn liturgies. Many of our Protestant brothers and sisters have

    recovered in many ways, some of these dimensions of the Eucharist in their liturgy.

    Interchurch Families

    We cannot resist a reference to interchurch families who sense the ecclesia domesticavery deeply. They especially sense the division of the church in their daily lives. The

    church is one but divided. This reality is experienced in the daily life and prayer of the

    family. It is especially acute as the interchurch family gathers for Eucharist each Sunday.There is always a feeling of something missing. There is a unity that is the object of

    prayer and hope, but is not yet fully realized.

    They think of Christs prayer for unity, and how closely related it is to his gift of theEucharist. That they may all be one. As you, Father, are in me and I am in you, may they

    also be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me(Jn 17:21).

    This conscious need for the Eucharist to become a full sign of unity among Christians is

    something for all of us. Interchurch couples feel the divisions more acutely. But they alsoexperience the hope and the possibility of unity. They model for us a world yet to come, a

    prayer yet to be answered, a reality yet to be achieved.

    In Christ Paul experienced the love of Christ for him. It compelled him to return Christslove in a life poured out in ministry and self-sacrifice. Love is nourished by Gods word,

    and by the love of Christ. Pauls life was ever in Christ and with him. For me to live is

    Christ (Phil 1:21)Paul reached the heights of mystical union with Christ. He experienced in his body the

    brand marks of Christ (Gal 6:17). Like Francis of Assisi, he was raised to the heights of

    mystical experience and contemplation (2Cor 12:2). This is something beyond our

    experience, but it is not beyond our admiration. Through the mystics we glimpse some

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    sense of the breadth and length and height and depth, and know the love of Christ that

    surpasses knowledge, so that we may be filled with all the fullness of God (Eph 3:18-

    19).Our modest task is to imitate their example. Our prayer is that we might share the

    masters table. Our hope is that some day we will share with them the eternal and

    everlasting banquet of heaven, a feast for a king, a feast for those who follow the Lamb, awedding feast to which we are all invited. The only condition of admittance is that we are

    clothed with Christ as the wedding garment (Mt. 22:11-12).