“And she gave birth to her
firstborn son. She wrapped him in swaddling clothes and laid him in a manger,
because there was no room for them in the inn.” –Luke 2:7
As I contemplated the
scene of the nativity, I realized that the Eucharist was a continuation of the nativity. It is
the continuation of Christmas.
The manger is a simple
feeding trough, where the animals of the nativity scene fed. Yet it held the
same body of Jesus, the bread of life, that we feed on in the sacrament
of the Eucharist.
The next morning I received
communion at daily mass. I held the Blessed Sacrament in my cupped
hand. It was then that I realized that I held Jesus, body and blood, soul
and divinity. It was the same Jesus born in a manger that first Christmas
day. My hands represented the manger. For a moment, as I held Jesus
in my hand, my mind returned to the manger scene where I had prayed the night
before.
The stable where Jesus was
born became the tabernacle and the manger became the ciborium. And, it became
clear that we owe the Blessed Sacrament to Bethlehem. No nativity, no Eucharist!
Jesus said to them, “I am the bread of life; whoever comes to me will
never hunger, and whoever believes in me will never thirst. –John 6:35
Bethlehem, the city of
Christ’s birth, Beit Lehem (בית לחם) is Hebrew for “House of Bread.” How
appropriate that Jesus Christ, the Bread of Life, would be born in a city known
as the “house of bread.”
The presence of Jesus, made
incarnate that Christmas morning in Bethlehem. It is the same presence,
body, blood, soul and divinity that we share in the Eucharist.
Every time we receive the
Eucharist, we have the opportunity to “lay him in a manger.”
Volumes have been written
about keeping Christ in Christmas. We talk about continuing the Christmas
spirit not just on December 25th, but every day of the year. We pray that we
can somehow make every day Christmas day.
Help us Lord, to realize
that we can do just that. We can do it in the reception of the Eucharist!
Jesus is the Bread of Life. And the Eucharist we receive, is too!
It is the body, blood, soul
and divinity, born that first Christmas morning. Born in the tabernacle of a
stable and the ciborium of the manger.
Join with me, my friend, as
we celebrate
Christmas. And, not just on Christmas day, but all year long in the frequent
reception of the Eucharist.
God bless you and Merry Christmas!

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