Corpus Christi 2022
We normally
have a public procession this weekend, but the Archdiocese is having a massive
Corpus Christi procession on Sunday, June 19th that starts at 4:15
at the Cathedral in Indianapolis https://eucharisticrevivalindy.org/procession
Today’s procession is the start of a 3 year process called
for by the USCCB. This Eucharistic
revival starts with today’s Eucharistic procession downtown and the events that
follow at Saint John’s and ends 3 years from now with a Eucharistic congress
that should see about 100,000 visitors to Indianapolis.
But what can we do in our small parishes day in and day
out over these next three years and beyond?
I have an idea that I could think be really powerful.
A Holy Hour
is an hour spent in prayer in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament, either
exposed in a monstrance, or simply in the tabernacle. The Holy Hour comes out of Jesus’ question to
his apostles the night before he died as he was praying in the garden of
Gethsemane “could you not watch one hour with me?”
I believe
that 99.9% of people, whether they are Catholic or not, appreciate knowing that
they have been prayed for. And so what
our parishes will start doing is having holy hour cards that you can fill out
and send to a person who you offer up your holy hour for, whether that holy
hour is done at one of our parishes, or any other Catholic Church that has the
Blessed Sacrament reserved.
It doesn’t
take much to offer up your holy hour for a person. You can just start that hour with a quick
prayer “I offer this holy hour up for ____ and their intentions” and then you
can just move on with some silent Scripture reading, a silent rosary, some other
spiritual reading and perhaps some contemplative silence at the end.
We have
pre-printed cards and envelopes that you can use which will be set out on a
table in the front of our Church, but you can also just create your own card or
letter.
Certainly you
can also send people cards and notes that you prayed for them in nature or in
your house, and those notes also, I am sure, would be very well received. However, the Catechism, in paragraph 1374,
says “Christ's presence [in the Eucharist] is unique. It raises the Eucharist
above all the sacraments…"This presence is called 'real' because it
is presence in the fullest sense
And so I
know that this effort of offering up our holy hours for people and their
intentions will have a deep impact on both us who pray these holy hours, and
also on those whom we let know were the intention of our holy hours. May this effort have some small part to play
in leading to a reawakening of an awareness of Christ’s true presence in the
Eucharist.
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