Homily for the Solemnity of Corpus Christi
June 2, 2024
Mark 14: 12-16, 22-26
Heb 9: 11-15
The Fountains, Tuckahoe, N.Y.
St. Francis Xavier, Bronx
Our Lady of the Assumption, Bronx
“On
the 1st day of the feast of Unleavened Bread, when they sacrificed the Passover
lamb…” (Mark 14: 12).
When
Israel was enslaved in Egypt and looking for redemption, Moses instructed them
to kill lambs, paint their doorposts with the lambs’ blood, and feast on the
lambs’ roasted flesh. Then the Angel of
Death passed thru the whole land of Egypt and struck dead the 1st-born sons of
all the Egyptians, “from the 1st-born of Pharaoh on the throne to the 1st-born
of the slave girl at the handmill” (Ex 11:5).
But the Angel passed over the houses of the Israelites marked by the
blood of the lambs.Death of the First Born (Alma Tadema)
We
read in John’s Gospel that John the Baptist recognized Jesus as “the Lamb of
God, who takes away the sin of the world” (1:29). The Letter to the Hebrews expands on
that: “With his own blood, Christ
obtained eternal redemption” (9:12).
This Lamb’s blood preserves us from the Angel of Death we call
Satan. This Lamb’s blood redeems us from
a more pernicious slavery than the “hard work in mortar and brick and all kinds
of field work” (Ex 1:14) and the lash of taskmasters that Israel suffered in
Egypt. This Lamb’s blood “cleanses our
consciences from dead works,” the works that produce death, and empowers us “to
worship the living God” (9:14). Our Lord
Jesus Christ is the true, eternal Passover lamb: true because the blood he shed really,
effectively paints our souls and delivers us; eternal because he lives forever
and touches the guilty conscience of every woman and man anywhere.
This
Lamb’s blood creates a new covenant between God and the new Israel, the new
people of God, the “many” for whom our Lord Jesus died on the cross. He forges this new covenant between his
Father and us thru his body offered for us, his blood shed for us, his Body and
Blood that we consume in his Eucharistic sacrifice, this “memorial of [his]
Passion” thru which redemption comes to us, salvation from our sins and from
the Angel of Death.by Anthuensis Clakissins
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