Wednesday, March 5, 2008

If I Am LIfted Up

The discussion in the comments on this post: The Pew Survey and Evangelical Mission in Catholic Quebec, has raised the subject of Christ's presence in the Eucharist and its role in pre-evangelization and initial proclamation of the gospel (which are the Church's terms for these pre-catechetical stages of spiritual development).

We've posted a number of times about this in the past so I thought I'd just quote and link to a few of these past posts for our readers today:

"If I Am LIfted Up":

One very interesting thing I have see in my own experience and heard from others as I travel is the mysterious power of the presence of the Blessed Sacrament to affect even those who are not believers and have no idea Who is present.

There are a number of stories I could tell:

There is my own story since it was the recognition of a presence of God that I had not experienced elsewhere that originally lured me into praying in Catholic churches as an undergraduate.

And the story of a friend of mine, who was a unbelieving, practicing homosexual and yet was also seeking and would spend hours at a time simply sitting in my parish, soaking up the Real Presence.

I could tell you of an unbaptized college student who went to a friend of mine, a Catholic chaplain and said she wanted to become Catholic. The priest asked "Why? Do you have Catholic family members or friends, do you attend Mass, have you been reading books? What has made you want to become Catholic? "No", she replied and then dragged him with trembling hands into the sanctuary and pointed to the tabernacle. "I want that", she said. She didn't know what That was but she could feel the goodness eminating from the tabernacle.

I could tell you of a large, urban diocese rejuvenated by a lay person who championed Eucharistic Adoration and collaborated with her bishop to establish it in the cathedral and then throughout the diocese.
My question:

What if we stop thinking of Adoration as only a devotion for the already devout and consider it also as a form of evangelization particularly suited to the post-modern mindset which responds to mystery and presence?

The presence of Christ in the Blessed Sacrament is accessible to the non-baptized, the non-Catholic, the unchurched, the lapsed, the badly catechized, the wounded, the skeptical, the seeking, and the prodigal.

I know that there are movements for youth and young adults that combine adoration and praise and worship in various creative ways. I know of evangelization retreats that incorporate Adoration into the retreat. But this is the sort of thing that could be easily done in the local parish - Adoration regularly presented in a context that would be accessible to and sensitive to the unbelieving, the marginal, the seeking.

So it would have to be simply explained and simply presented and not simply dripping with the uber Catholic insider visuals that could distract or alarm. Reverent, haunting, and intentionally accessible on a regular basis to those with no Catholic background.

"If I am lifted up, I will draw everyone to me" said Christ in John 12:32.


It is also happening in Louisiana , in Britain , (and also here) in Denver, in Mississippi, in New York, in Malta, in Ghana, in evangelizing lay movements in Europe like the Emmanuel Community

and probably in your neck of the woods.

Please feel free share your stories of Eucharistic evangelization - especially in regard the non-Catholics, lapsed Catholics, or the completely unchurched.

4 Comments:

At March 6, 2008 9:08:00 AM MST , Blogger Sherry W said...

Anne:

You raise a good point. There is a reason why Christ is present to us in many ways in the Church - through the Eucharist, through the Scriptures, through the community (including the communion of saints), personal prayer, the charisms, etc..

And I suspect that many of us feel guilty or like bad Catholics because although we believe in all the Church teaches, we don't experience relationship with God the way we think we should or are supposed to.

Some will find it hard to encounter Christ through the Scriptures but find Adoration intensely meaningful and nourishing and for others, it is the opposite.

We are disciples together but there is lots of room for a wide variety of spiritual experiences and paths within the one faith. We need to stop judging ourselves because we are not like our friends or people we admire and stop judging others because their relationship with Christ is nourished in a different way.

 
At October 31, 2009 8:44:00 AM MDT , Anonymous Anonymous said...

That's a good idea and I agree.
I can't get enough of adoration stories.

But in my own life I bring my very young kids into adoration and they won't stay but a minute. I don't think they discern His presence in adoration or mass and I wonder why.

Hannah
hana10134@yahoo.com

 
At October 31, 2009 8:44:00 AM MDT , Anonymous Anne said...

I'm glad you addressed the issue of certain people not feeling anything in the presence of the Eucharist, even though they believe. I've wondered if there is something wrong with me because I was never able to relate to Christ in the Host as I prayed in the adoration chapel at my church, but could only relate to the Christ of the Bible as I prayed and read Scriptures. Nor did I ever sense that it changed my life in any way.
This was my experience over many months. And I am a middle aged adult, not a child. Those who do have a moving experience are very blessed indeed!

 
At October 31, 2009 8:44:00 AM MDT , Anonymous Sherry W said...

Hanna:

Not everyone "feels" the presence in a direct, tangible way so that it bowls them over when they cross the threshold as it did me even though I had no mental categories for what I was experiencing, no believing Catholic to ask about it, and didn't actually grasp Catholic teaching on the subject until years later.

In fact, I would say that kind of experience is very much a minority experience - and a small minority at that. Although there are other stories I could tell you

Many others need to have someone explain it to them and would find the simple explanation of their Catholic friends or Catholic parishes intriguing. Or are touched by the silence and peace or the music, or seeing lots of other people pray or hearing from a friend about how Adoration has changed their life. Or the experience of praying themselves before the Eucharistic Christ and perhaps having their life changed by the answer.

Whatever happens, it is a direct, accessible encounter with Christ in the midst of his Church.

I don't think there is anything wrong or mysterious with your children's response. Very young children have very short attention spans anyway. They will pick up their faith in the Real Presence in good time from you and others around them.

 

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