Showing posts with label Eucharist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eucharist. Show all posts

Tuesday, 3 November 2015

Karl Adam, Eucharist, Mass, the Sacrament of the Altar

THE SPIRIT OF CATHOLICISM
Karl Adam

Excerpt Karl Adam Spirit of Catholicism pp 19_22
Chapter II: Christ in the Church
Intimate union of the Church with Christ. Manifested in her dogma which centres round Christ, in her moral teaching which aims at making men like to Christ, in her worship which is performed through Christ. The sacraments, especially the Sacrament of the Altar, a working of Christ among His people. The same union of the Church with Christ shown in her pastoral and teaching office, in her sacramental doctrine, in her disciplinary authority. The whole structure permeated and bound together by Christ. 

(Pages 19-22) There is no two-fold morality in the Church, since there is but one Christ to be formed. But the ways and manners in which men strive towards this goal are infinitely various, as various as the human personalities which have to mature and grow up to the stature of Christ. Very many of the faithful will be able to form the image of Christ in themselves only in very vague and general outline. Yet, just as nature at times sees fit to give of her best and to manifest her superabundant power in some perfect types, even so the fullness of Christ which works in the Church breaks out ever and again in this or that saintly figure into brilliant radiance, in marvels of self- surrender, love, purity, humility and devotion. Professor Merkle's book[3] may provide even outsiders with some insight into the deep earnestness and heroic strength with which the Church in every century of her existence has striven after the realization of the image of Christ, after the translation of His spirit into terms of flesh and blood, after the incarnation of Jesus in the individual man.

And the worship of the Church breathes the same spirit, and is as much interwoven with Christ and full of Christ as is her morality. Just as every particular prayer of the liturgy ends with the ancient Christian formula: "Per Christum Dominum nostrum," so is every single act of worship, from the Mass down to the least prayer, a memorial of Christ, an "anamnesis Christou". Nay, more, the worship of the Church is not merely a filial remembrance of Christ, but a continual participation by visible mysterious signs in Jesus and His redemptive might, a refreshing touching of the hem of His garment, a liberating handling of His sacred Wounds. That is the deepest purpose of the liturgy, namely, to make the redeeming grace of Christ present, visible and fruitful as a sacred and potent reality that fills the whole life of the Christian. In the sacrament of Baptism—so the believer holds—the sacrificial blood of Christ flows into the soul, purifies it from all the infirmity of original sin and permeates it with its own sacred strength, in order that a new man may be born thereof, the re-born man, the man who is an adopted son of God. In the sacrament of Confirmation, Jesus sends His "Comforter," the Spirit of constancy and divine faith, to the awakening religious consciousness, in order to form the child of God into a soldier of God. In the sacrament of Penance Jesus as the merciful Savior consoles the afflicted soul with the word of peace: Go thy way, thy sins are forgiven thee. In the sacrament of the Last Anointing the compassionate Samaritan approaches the sick-bed and pours new courage and resignation into the sore heart. In the sacrament of Marriage He en-grafts the love of man and wife on His own profound love for His people, for the community, for the Church, on His own faithfulness unto death. And in the priestly consecration by the imposition of hands, He transmits His messianic might, the power of His mission, to the disciples whom He calls, in order that He may by their means pursue without interruption His work of raising the new men, the children of God, out of the kingdom of death.  

The sacraments are nought else than a visible guarantee, authenticated by the word of Jesus and the usage of the apostles, that Jesus is working in the midst of us. At all the important stages of our little life, in its heights and in its depths, at the marriage-altar and the cradle, at the sick-bed, in all the crises and shocks that may befall us, Jesus stands by us under the veils of the grace-giving sacrament as our Friend and Consoler, as the Physician of soul and body, as our Saviour. St. Thomas Aquinas has described this intimate permeation of the Christian's whole life by faith in the sacraments and in his Savior with luminous power.[4] And Goethe, too, in the seventh book of the second part of his "Dichtung und Wahrheit," speaks warmly of it, and he closes his remarks with the significant words: "How is this truly spiritual whole broken into pieces in Protestantism, a part of these symbols being declared apocryphal and only a few admitted as canonical. How shall we be prepared to value some highly when we are taught to be indifferent to the rest?" 

But the sacraments which we have enumerated are not the deepest and holiest fact of all. For so completely does Jesus disclose Himself to His disciples, so profound is the action of His grace, that He gives Himself to them and enters into them as a personal source of grace. Jesus shares with His disciples His most intimate possession, the most precious thing that He has, His own self, His personality as the God-man. We eat His Flesh and drink His Blood. So greatly does Jesus love His community, that He permeates it, not merely with His blessing and His might, but with his real Self, God and Man; He enters into a real union of flesh and blood with it, and binds it to His being even as the branch is bound to the vine. We are not left orphans in this world. Under the forms of bread and wine the Master lives amid His disciples, the Bridegroom with His bride, the Lord in the midst of His community, until that day when He shall return in visible majesty on the clouds of heaven. The Sacrament of the Altar is the strongest, profoundest, most intimate memorial of the Lord, until He come again. And therefore we can never forget Jesus, though centuries and millennia pass, and though nations and civilizations are ever perishing and rising anew. And therefore there is no heart in the world, not even the heart of father or mother, that is so loved by millions and millions, so truly and loyally, so practically and devotedly, as is the Heart of Jesus.
Thus we see that in the sacraments, and especially in the Sacrament of the Altar, the fundamental idea of the Church is most plainly represented, the idea, that is, of the incorporation of the faithful in Christ. And therefore the Catholic can only regard that criticism of the sacraments as superficial, which derives them, not merely in this or that external detail, but in their proper content and dominant meaning, from non-Christian conceptions and cults, as for instance from the pagan mysteries. On the contrary the sacraments breathe the very spirit of primitive Christianity. They, as instituted by Christ Himself, are the truest expression and result of that original and central Christian belief that the Christian should be inseparably united with Christ and should live in Christ. In Catholic sacramental devotion Christ is faithfully affirmed and experienced as the Lord of the community, as its invisible strength and principle of activity. In the sacraments is expressed the fundamental nature of the Church, the fact that Christ lives on in her.
Therefore dogma, morality and worship are primary witnesses to the consciousness of the Church that she is of supernatural stock, that she is the Body of Christ.

Karl Adam - EWTN.com

·         
Karl Adam has brilliantly succeeded in achieving his purpose and "The Spirit of Catholicism" now stands as one of the finest introductions to the Catholic faith  ...
You visited this page on 01/11/15.

THE SPIRIT OF CATHOLICISM
Karl Adam

Professor Merkle's book[3] 



Monday, 8 June 2015

Luisa Piccarreta. Most Holy Eucharist placed his Sacramental Life in the Heart of His Mother.

Ecce Panis Angelorum   
Angel with Host (c. 1860), Sébastien-Melchior Cornu (1804–1870), Louvre Museum, Paris

Sunday, 7 June 2015

Luisa Piccarreta, Most Holy Eucharist placed his Sacramental Life in the Heart of His Mother


Sunday 7 2015-06-07.
The Body and Blood of Christ (Corpus Christi)
COMMENT: The Solemnity followed the cloister procession with the Blessed Sacrament and during the hours had adoration at the tabernacle n the Church.
The extreme uplifting thoughts and prayer came from pages from Luisa Piccarreta.
Most Holy Eucharist placed his Sacramental Life in the Heart of His Mother.
Below two versions of the entry of the Diar can be contemplated over.
... Donald
PS. Later to find art of BVM of the Most Holy Sacrament.

FIAT Vol 21 Redacted   23 Feb 1927 - 26 May 1027

VOLUME 21
J.M.J.
Fiat!!!



 Version Print 1995 ‘passages. Use the title here      
[Our Lord Jesus Christ, in instituting the Most Holy Eucharist, placed his Sacramental Life in the Heart of His Mother. The Most Holy Virgin of sorrows found the secret of her strength in the Divine Will, because This contains immeasurable Strength].    
 .     


April 16, 1927

I was reliving the Hour when Jesus gave us the Most Holy Eucharist when Jesus moved inside me.

He said, “My daughter, before I act, I need at least one creature to store My Act and keep It safe and secure.  When I instituted the Most Holy Sacrament, I looked for such a creature, and My Queen Mom offered Herself as a vessel for My Act where I could store this great gift.”

She said, ‘My Son, I offered You my womb and my whole being for Your Conception, where I kept You safe and secure.  Now I’m offering You a mother’s Heart as a vessel for this great treasure.  I will arrange my affections all around Your Sacramental Life, my beating heart, my love and my thoughts.  I will defend You with My Life; you will be surrounded by a loving assembly that will protect You.  I promise to repay You for this great gift.  Trust Your Mom; I will defend Your Sacramental Life.  You made Me Queen of all Creation, so I have the right to summon all the light of the sun around You, to worship and adore You.  I will assemble the sea, the sky full of stars and all the inhabitants of the air around you and they will give You love and glory.’

My Mom gave Me proof certain that She would faithfully guard My Sacramental Life within Her treasury, and then I instituted the Most Holy Sacrament.  She was the only creature worthy enough to keep, protect and defend My Act.  Now, when creatures receive Me and I enter them, I bring the actions of My inseparable Mom with Me.  This is the only way I can perpetuate My Sacramental Life.  Whenever I want to do some great work, one that I treasure, I first have to choose a creature to store My gift, someone who will thank Me adequately.”

That’s how it is in the natural order.  When a farmer sows his seed, he doesn’t throw it in the middle of the street; he has to have a small plot of land.  First he works it by digging furrows, and then he sows the seed.  After that, he covers it with earth, to protect it.  He anxiously waits for the harvest in order to be reimbursed for his work and the cost of the seed he entrusted to the earth.  Consider someone else who wants to craft a beautiful work of art.  First he prepares the raw materials and arranges to display it somewhere, and then he and then he works on it.  That’s what I’ve done with you.  First  I chose you, then I prepared you, and finally, I entrusted you with revelations concerning My Will as  a great gift.  I entrusted the destiny of My Sacramental Life to My beloved Mother, and now I will hand over the destiny of the Kingdom of My Will, because you I can trust.”

Then I continued thinking about everything my beloved Good had done and how much He suffered during the course of His Life until He resumed His discourse. 

He said, “My daughter, My Life down here was very short, and most of it hidden.  Nevertheless, even though it was brief, My Humanity was animated by Divine Will, so there was no limit to the number of good things I did.  The whole Church is nourished by My Life; She drinks Her fill from the fountain of My Doctrine.  Each one of My Words is a spout pouring into the mouth of every Christian.  Every one of My examples is better than the sun’s illumination.  They warm and nourish the greatest sanctities to maturity.  Consider all the Saints, all the good they have done and all the pain they heroically suffered.  In comparison, especially considering how short My Life was, they were tiny little flames next to the bright sun.” 

In contrast, consider all the pain, humiliation, confusion and all the accusations My enemies inflicted on Me during the course of My Life and Passion.  Since Divine Will reigned within Me, all these insults only confounded and humiliated My tormentors.  In fact, since Divine Will was within Me, I was like the sun when the clouds are low.  They might offend the sun if they darken the face of the earth by briefly blocking its vivid solar light.  However, the sun just laughs at these clouds, after all, their life, floating in the air, is very brief.  Even a light wind is enough to dissipate them, while the blazing sun continues triumphantly dominating the entire earth in full daylight.”

That’s how it was with Me.  Everything My enemies inflicted on Me, including My death, were like clouds covering My Humanity.  However, they could not touch the Sun of My Divinity.  As soon as the powerful wind of My Divine Will shifted, the clouds dissipated.  Brighter than the sun, I rose again, glorious and triumphant, and My enemies were more humiliated than ever.” 

My daughter, when My Will fully reigns within the soul, minutes are like centuries filled with everything good.  However, where It does not reign, a soul could live for centuries and not experience more than a few minutes’ worth of goodness.  If My Will reigns in the soul, whatever humiliation, contradiction or pain she suffers are the same clouds.  The wind of the Divine Fiat blows them over those who are then humiliated for daring to touch the bearer of My Eternal Volition.”

Later on, I thought about my Holy Mom, Her Heart pierced with sorrow, saying farewell to Her Jesus, dead in the tomb.

I thought, “How could She possibly have enough strength to leave Him?  Even though He was dead, it was still Jesus’ body.  Her maternal love must have overwhelmed Her, it had to be hard to take that first step away from that lifeless body.  Yet, She did; such heroic strength!” 

As I thought about it, my sweet Jesus moved inside me.

He said, “My daughter, you want to know how My Mom had the strength to leave Me.  The real secret of Her strength was that My Will reigned within Her.  She lived within a Will that was Divine rather than human; She had immeasurable strength.  Moreover, pierced as She was, when My Mama left Me in the sepulcher, My Will immersed Her within two immense seas; one of sorrow, and the other, larger, was one of joy and beatitude.  The sea of sorrow gave Her martyrdom, the sea of joy, contentment.” 

Her beautiful soul followed Me into Limbo for the feast the Patriarchs, Prophets, Her mother and father, and our dear Saint Joseph made for Me.  My presence transformed Limbo into Paradise.  In My pain, We were inseparable, so it was right and just that She be present at this first festival of the creatures.  She had the strength to depart from My body simply because Her joy was so great.  She withdrew to await My Resurrection as the fulfillment of Redemption.  Joy sustained Her in sorrow, and sorrow sustained Her in joy.”

Those who possesses My Will have strength, power, and joy; she has everything she needs.  You experience this yourself when you are without Me and you feel burnt out.  The light of Divine Fiat forms Its sea within you, making you happy and giving you life.”





  
April 16, 1927

How Our Lord made the deposit of His Sacramental Life in the Heart of the Most Holy Virgin.  The great good that a life animated by the Divine Will can do.  How, in Her sorrows, the Most Holy Virgin found the secret of Her strength in the Divine Will.

I was doing the Hour in which Jesus instituted the Most Holy Eucharist; and Jesus, moving in my interior, told me:  “My daughter, when I do an act, first I look to see whether there is at least one creature in whom to place the deposit of My Act, so that she may take the good I do, and keep it safe and well defended. 
“Now, when I instituted the Most Holy Sacrament, I looked for this creature, and My Queen Mama offered Herself to receive this Act of Mine and the deposit of this great gift, saying to Me:  ‘My Son, just as I offered You my womb and my whole being in Your Conception, to keep You safe and defended, I now offer You my maternal Heart in order to receive this great deposit, and I line up, around Your Sacramental Life, my affections, my heartbeats, my love, my thoughts—all of Myself, to keep You defended, surrounded by cortege, loved, protected.  I Myself take on the commitment to repay You for the great gift You are giving.  Trust Your Mama, and I will take care of the defense of Your Sacramental Life.  And since You Yourself have constituted Me Queen of all Creation, I have the right to line up around You all the light of the sun as homage and adoration, the stars, the heavens, the sea, all the inhabitants of the air—I place everything around You, to give You love and glory.’
“Now, ensuring a place for Myself in which to put this great deposit of My Sacramental Life, and trusting My Mama, who had given Me all the proofs of Her faithfulness, I instituted the Most Holy Sacrament.  She was the only worthy creature who could keep, defend and protect My Act.  See, then, when creatures receive Me, I descend into them together with the acts of My inseparable Mama; and only because of this can I perpetuate My Sacramental Life.  Therefore, whenever I want to do a great work worthy of Me, it is necessary that I first choose one creature—first, in order to have a place in which to put My gift; second, to be repaid for it. 
“They do the same also in the natural order.  If a farmer wants to sow a seed, he does not throw it in the middle of the street, but he goes in search of a little field.  First he works it, he forms the furrow, and then he sows the seed in it; and to keep it safe, he covers it with earth, anxiously waiting for the harvest in order to be repaid for his work, and for the seed that he entrusted to the earth.  Someone else wants to form a beautiful object:  first he prepares the raw materials, the place in which to put it, and then he forms it.  So I have done for you:  I chose you, I prepared you, and then I entrusted to you the great gift of the manifestations of My Will; and just as I entrusted the destiny of My Sacramental Life to My beloved Mother, in the same way I wanted to trust you, entrusting to you the destiny of the Kingdom of My Will.”
Then, I continued to think about all that my beloved Good had done and suffered during the course of His Life; and He added:  “My daughter, My Life down here was extremely short, and I spent most of it hidden.  But even though it was so very short, since My Humanity was animated by a Divine Will, how many goods did I not do?  The whole Church takes from My Life, drinking Her fill at the fount of My Doctrine.  Each Word of Mine is a fountain placed at the mouth of each Christian; each one of My examples is more than sun that illuminates, warms, fecundates, and makes the greatest sanctities mature.  If one wanted to compare all the Saints, all the good, all of their pains and their heroism, placed before My very short Life, they would always be tiny little flames before the great sun. 
“And since the Divine Will reigned in Me, all the pains, the humiliations, confusions, contrasts, accusations that the enemies gave Me during the course of My Life and of My Passion—everything served to their own humiliation and to their own greater confusion.  In fact, since a Divine Will was in Me, it happened with Me as with the sun, when the clouds, extending through the lower air, seem to want to give affront to the sun by obscuring the surface of the earth, covering momentarily the vividness of the solar light.  But the sun laughs at the clouds, because they cannot have perennial life in the air—their life is fleeting; a small wind is enough to make them dissolve, while the sun is always triumphant in its fullness of light that dominates and fills the whole earth.
“The same happened with Me.  Everything that My enemies did to Me, and even My very death, were like many clouds that covered My Humanity.  But the Sun of My Divinity they could not touch; and as soon as the wind of the power of My Divine Will moved, the clouds dissolved and, more than sun, I rose again, glorious and triumphant, leaving the enemies more humiliated than before. 
“My daughter, in the soul in whom My Will reigns with all Its fullness, minutes of life are centuries—and centuries of fullness of all goods; while wherever It does not reign, centuries of life are only minutes of goods that they contain.  And if the soul in whom My Will reigns should suffer humiliations, contrasts and pains, these are like clouds that the wind of the Divine Fiat unloads over those who, to their own humiliation, have dared to touch the bearer of My Eternal Volition.”
After this, I was thinking about the sorrow of my Mama, when, sorrowful and pierced in Her Heart, She departed from Jesus, leaving Him dead in the sepulcher; and I thought to myself:  “How can it be possible that She had so much strength as to be able to leave Him?  It is true that He was dead, but it was always the body of Jesus.  How could Her maternal love not consume Her, rather than letting Her take one step alone away from that extinguished body?  Yet, She left Him.  What heroism, what strength!” 
But while I was thinking of this, my sweet Jesus moved in my interior and told me:  “My daughter, do you want to know how My Mama had the strength to leave Me?  All the secret of Her strength was in My Will reigning in Her.  She lived of a Will that was Divine—not human, and therefore She contained the immeasurable strength.  Even more, you must know that when My pierced Mama left Me in the sepulcher, My Will kept Her immersed within two immense seas—one of sorrow, and another, more extensive, of joys and beatitudes; and while that of sorrow gave Her all the martyrdoms, that of joy gave Her all the contentments. 
“Her beautiful soul followed Me into Limbo, and was present at the feast that all the Patriarchs, the Prophets, Her father, Her mother and our dear Saint Joseph made for Me.  With My presence, Limbo became Paradise; and I could not do without letting She who had been inseparable from Me in My pains, be present at this first feast of the creatures.  And Her joy was so great, that She had the strength to depart from My body, withdrawing and waiting for the fulfillment of My Resurrection as the fulfillment of Redemption.  Joy sustained Her in sorrow, and sorrow sustained Her in joy. 
“To one who possesses My Will, neither strength, nor power, nor joy can be lacking; rather, she has everything at her disposal.  Do you not experience this within yourself when you are without Me and you feel consumed?  The light of the Divine Fiat forms Its sea, it makes you happy, and it gives you life.”


sacredspace102.blogspot.com  
A podcast of this week's programme is available here. The Apostolate of Eucharistic Adoration Our Of The Blessed Sacrament

Sunday, 18 May 2014

COMMENT: Translation of Bl. Columba Marmion OSB

COMMENT:
This inscribed  quotation is to the heart of Bl. Columba's Eucharistic conference.
The above  reference is from 'A Word in Season, Augustine Press 2001.
The translation of these lines read captivatingly. Enlightening are the words in this version, "So true is this that in a prayer between the offertory and consecration the Church refers explicitly to the union between our sacrifice and that of the bridegroom", at the Eucharistic Sacrifice. 
On the other side, the older translation from the Sisters of Tyburn, has  very meticulous following of the words , to the Latin quotations and footnote references. 
It is immensely interesting to look at 1925 'Christ of the Life of the Soul', the pages 258-259 to the Reading above.


Second Reading
From the writings of Blessed Columba Marmion, O.S.B. (Le Christ Vie de l’Ame, 366-368). Trs. 1925  


Marmion-abbot_circa_1918
  
We must give everything to God
We are called to be united with Christ in his sacrifice, and with him to offer ourselves. If we are willing, he takes us with him, immolates us with himself, and lifts us into the Father's presence as an oblation of fragrant sweetness. It is our very selves thatwe must offer with Jesus. If the faithful share through bap­tism in Christ's priesthood, Saint Peter tells us, it is in order that they may offer spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God through Jesus Christ. So true is this that in a prayer between the offertory and consecration the Church refers explicitly to the union between our sacrifice and that of the bridegroom: Lord our God, make these gifts holy, and through them make us a perfect offering to you. 

++++++++++++++++++.
by this prayer-our union with Christ in this sacrifice. The wine repre­sents Christ, the water represents the people, as was said by St. John in the Apocalypse and was confirmed by the Council of Trent: Aquae populi sunt.60

We must be united to Christ in His immolation and offer ourselves with Him; then He takes us with Him, He immolates us with Him, He bears us before His Father, in odorem suavitatis. It is ourselves we must offer with Jesus Christ. If the faithful share, through baptism, in the priesthood of Christ, it is, says St. Peter, that they may" offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ": Sacerdotium sanctum, ofJerre sptrituales hostias acceptabiles Deo per Jesum Christum. 61 This is so true that in more than one prayer following the offering about to be made to God, the Church while awaiting the moment of the consecration, lays stress on this union of our sacrifice with that of her Bridegroom. "Vouchsafe, O Lord ", she says" to sanctify these gifts, and receiving the oblation of this spiritual victim, make us an eternal sacrifice to Thyself": Propitius, Domine, quae­sum us, haec dona sanctifica, et hostiae spiritualis oblations suscepta, NOSMETIPSOS tibi perfice munus aeternum. 62 

But in order that we may be thus accepted by God, the offering of ourselves must be united to the offering Christ made of Himself upon the cross and renews upon the altar. Our Lord substituted Himself for us in His immolation; He took the place of us all, and that is why when He died we, in principle, died with Him: Si tenus pro omnibus mortuus est, ergo omnes mortui SUn!.63 For this mystical death to take place effectually in each one of us, we must unite ourselves to His sacrifice on the altar. And how are we to unite ourselves to Christ Jesus in this character of victim? By yielding ourselves, like Him, to the entire accomplishment of the Divine good pleasure.

It is for God to dispose fully of the victim offered to Him; we must be in this essential attitude of giving all to God, of making our acts of self-renunciation and mortification, of accepting the sufferings and trials of each day for love of Him, so that we may be able to say, like Jesus Christ at the moment of His Passion: Ut cognoscat mundus quia diligo Patrem, sic facio. That is to offer ourselves with Jesus. Let us offer the Divine Son to His Eternal Father and offer ourselves with this cl holy Host" in the same dispositions that animated the Sacred Heart of Christ upon the cross: intense love of His Father and of our brethren, ardent desire for the salvation of souls, and full abandonment
________________________________________________________________________________________________________
60 Apoc. xvii, I'). Hac mixtione , ipsius populi fidelis cum capite Christo unio rep-
raesentatur, Sess. xxii, c. 7.  01 I Pctr , ii , 5.
82 Mass for Whit Monday. This prayer (Secret) is to be found likewise in the Mass for
Trinity Sunday.  H, IJ Cor. v, 14.

to all that is willed from on high, above all, if it contains what is pain­ful and vexatious for our nature. When we do this, we offer God the most acceptable homage He can receive from us.
We herein have also the most certain means of being transformed into Jesus, especially if we unite ourselves to Him in Communion, which is the most fruitful partaking of the Sacrifice of the Altar; for, if we are united to Christ He immolates us with Him, renders us pleasing to His Father and makes us, by His grace, more and more  like to Himself.

This truth is signified by that mysterious prayer the priest recites after the consecration: "We humbly beseech Thee, almighty God, command these things to be carried by the hands of Thy holy Angel to Thy altar on high, in the sight of Thy Divine Majesty, that as many of us as, by participation at this altar, shall receive the most sacred Body and Blood of Thy Son may be filled with all heavenly benediction and grace."

It is then a most excellent manner of assisting at the Holy Sacrifice to follow with the eyes, the mind, and the heart, what is passing at the altar, and to associate ourselves with the prayers the Church places at this sacred moment on the lips of her ministers. When, the deep reverence, lively faith, ardent love, and true contrition for our sins, 6~ we thus unite ourselves to Christ, Priest and Victim, in His sacrifice, Christ, Who dwells in us, takes all our intentions into His Heart and offers perfect adoration and full satisfaction for us to His Father, He renders Him worthy thanksgiving, and His prayer is all-powerful. All these acts of the eternal High Priest, by which He renews upon the altar His immolation of Calvary, becomes ours.

At the same time that we give to God, through Christ, all honour and all glory: Omnis honor et gloria, abundant graces of light and life are poured down upon us and on all the Church: Fructus uberrima percipiuntur.65 Each Mass truly contains all the fruits of the Sacrifice of the Cross. But, if we wish to avail ourselves of them, we must enter into the dispositions and sentiments of the Heart of Jesus when He went to offer Himself on Calvary: Hoc enim sentite ... quod et in Christo [esu.": Then the Eternal High Priest takes us with Him into the Holy of holies unto the throne of the Divine Majesty, to the very source of all grace, of all life and all beatitude.
If you knew the Gift of God! . . .
________________________________________________________________________
 64 Docet sancta synodus :  . per istad sacrificium fieri ut si cum uero corde et recta
fide, cum metu et re ucrentia, contriu ac poenisentes, ad Deum accedamus , misericordiam ('onsequamllr et ([retia", ;11['Pl1;am", i n mtxil:o opoormno . Concil. Trid. Scss. xxii, cap. 2.
 •• Concil. TriJ. Sess. xxii, cap. 2.           66 Philipp. ii, 5.