Jesus says
in our Gospel blessed are those who have not seen, and believed.
One of the
things that this line from Christ implies is that even though He promises to be
present in every Sacrament of the Church, we should not expect to ever SEE Him,
rather He says that we are blessed if we still believe in Him without actually
seeing Him.
Saint Paul
puts it this way to the Romans in chapter 8 verses 24 and 25: “hope that sees
for itself is not hope. For who hopes for what one sees? But
if we hope for what we do not see, we wait with endurance”
It is also
Divine Mercy today and at the bottom of the Divine Mercy image is 5 words, “Jesus
I trust in you.” Trust and hope go hand
in hand. One can only trust if they have
not been let down by the other person.
The moment the person asking for trust lets us down, it is hard to
reestablish that Trust. But Jesus always
and everywhere keeps his promises, so when Jesus asks us to trust Him, it makes
sense for us to trust Him.
There are
over 100 Eucharistic Miracles that have been approved by the Catholic Church,
usually because of a doubt in the priest’s mind, where the bread at the
consecration did actually turn into physical flesh or the wine, at the
consecration, became physical blood. But
I have always thought that God, in His Mercy, does not reveal Himself that way
99.9999% of the time SO THAT WE CAN STILL EAT and receive him into our body and
souls. Sometimes we think it might be
nice to see a Eucharistic Miracle like that, but would anyone want to actually
eat Jesus’ skin?
So let us
put our trust in Christ when He says to us “Blessed are those who have not seen
and still believe”
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