We begin this Holy Week with the reading of the Lord’s Passion from the Gospel of Matthew. It is fitting that during this week we intensely focus our minds and hearts on the steps of our Savior as He laid down His very life for us. But let us also examine the seemingly small acts of stewardship by some who encountered Jesus during this most eventful week.
One occurred when Jesus gave instructions about the room where He would celebrate the Passover. Jesus said, “Go into the city to a certain man and tell him…” ‘In your house I shall celebrate the Passover with my disciples.’” While we do not know this man’s name, we do know he agreed to this request — he shared the material gift of his home and the gift of hospitality. Because of his good stewardship, his own home became the site of the institution of the Eucharist!
There was also Simon the Cyrenian, who offered the gift of his physical strength, helping the Lord to carry His Cross. Consider, too, the actions of Joseph of Arimathea — he generously shared a material gift of the tomb that was his, and he gave the gift of service to our Lord by giving Him a proper burial. Then there were the "two Marys” who gave Jesus the gift of their time. Keeping watch in tender vigil after His death, they “remained sitting there, facing the tomb.”
Each of these were simple acts of good stewardship, yet God used them in mighty ways. God invites each of us, too, to cooperate with Him in small ways through the sharing of our time, talent, and material gifts. Small gifts can become mighty deeds when placed in God’s service.
© Catholic Stewardship Conference, 2023
Pastoral Pondering
As most of you know, the United States Bishops have called for a Eucharistic renewal for the church in this country. As we begin Holy Week, it is an appropriate time to recall the importance and centrality of the Eucharist in the life of the Church, and, most especially, in the life of St. Mark Parish.
Bishop Joseph Strickland of Tyler, Texas recently issued a pastoral letter on this very topic. It is quite timely and helpful. In the document, Bishop Strickland notes the following:
Let us focus first on the reality that we are truly receiving His Body and Blood when we regularly receive the consecrated host with love and reverence either on the tongue or in the hand. We must receive the Lord in profound reverence. Profound reverence toward the Blessed Sacrament is essential because the One who is present in the consecrated host and in the precious blood is truly Jesus Christ. The consecrated host is not an “it” but a “WHO.” Being in His presence, passing before His presence, and praying in His presence, all should be done with the awareness that the person of Jesus Christ is there. Profound reverence is required.
Receiving the Real Presence of Jesus Christ gives the people of God the grace to go out and live His presence in the world, nurtured, strengthened, and empowered with His Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity. The word eucharist is derived from a Greek word which means thanksgiving. At every Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, we give thanks for the entirety of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, the kerygmatic event that is Good News for humanity for all time. And we receive the true Body and Blood of Jesus Christ.
Holy Week is a wonderful opportunity to renew our commitment to and reverence for the Most Blessed Sacrament. This Thursday we celebrate the Mass of the Lord’s Supper and the institution of the Most Holy Eucharist. Let it be an opportunity for all of us to thank God for this precious gift and beseech Him to instill within us a deep and abiding love for the Lord in His Eucharistic presence.