31-Mar-2015
Dear Friend,
>From ancient times the Church set apart Holy Thursday as the day to consider 
>what Jesus did and taught during his last meal on earth. Holy Thursday has 
>been called 'Maundy' Thursday, to remind us of the mandate of the Lord, the 
>new commandment of the Lord: "Love one another as I have loved you." Today the 
>church commemorates a triple celebration: the institution of the Eucharist, 
>the institution of the sacramental priesthood and the New Commandment of love 
>as seen in Jesus' own example of washing the feet of the disciples. Has the 
>Eucharist brought any newness into our lives? What is new about the 
>love-commandment of the Lord? May we have a love-filled Holy Thursday 
>celebration! -Fr. Jude
Reflections for Holy Thursday "If I your Lord have washed your feet! You should 
do the same!" 2-Apr-2015 
Exod.12: 1-8, 11-14;          Corinth. 11: 23-26;          John 13: 1-15; 
The Book of Exodus tells us how the Lord ordered the Israelites to keep the 
Paschal meal. Each family had to kill a lamb and smear the doorposts with the 
blood of the lamb. The lamb should be roasted and eaten standing to signify 
their readiness to pass from the land of slavery to the land of promise. It 
would also signify the passing of the angel of the Lord over the houses of the 
Israelites marked by the blood of the lamb. To remember this Passover, God 
ordered the Israelites to keep the Feast of the Passover. The lamb sacrificed 
was eaten with unleavened bread and bitter herbs and the father of the family 
would explain to the children, year after year, what the meal and the feast 
meant. Our Eucharistic celebration is a commemoration of the same Paschal meal, 
reminding us that we are called to pass from the land of slavery to sin to the 
land of freedom; we are called to pass over from wherever we are to where the 
Lord wants us to be. It calls to mind the fact that God has passed over our 
sins thanks to the blood of the Lamb, Jesus Christ through whose death we are 
given life.
Depiction of the EucharistAn old Church in Cologne had a telling illustration 
of the Bread of life on the door of the church. The door had four panels, each 
portraying a biblical scene relating to the Eucharist. The first panel had six 
stone jars, depicting the miracle of Cana; the second showed five loaves and 
two fishes, referring to the feeding of the five thousand; the third panel 
portrayed Jesus and the twelve seated at the table in the Upper Room; and the 
last panel had three figures -Jesus breaking bread with two of his disciples in 
the Inn at Emmaus. The common interpretation of the first miracle depicted is 
that the Lord came to the rescue of the young couple who were embarrassed 
having run out of wine. The artist's message was that just as Jesus had turned 
the water into wine so one day he would change wine into his blood, thus 
prefiguring the Eucharist. The second panel shows the feeding of the five 
thousand. In Capernaum he gave ordinary bread; at the Last Supper he would give 
the bread of Life. The third panel reveals the institution of the Eucharist. In 
the Upper Room Jesus does more than change water into wine, he changes wine 
into his blood. He does more than multiply loaves; he changes bread into his 
body. In the last panel we see in the meal at Emmaus the first 
post-resurrection Eucharist. First in the scriptures and then in the breaking 
of bread they learn to recognize the Lord in their midst and their hearts are 
warmed at his presence. The four panels thus progressively reveal the true 
meaning of the Eucharist.Mark Link 
John, who wrote his gospel more than fifty years after the last supper had 
taken place, does not narrate the Institution of the Holy Eucharist, since 
Matthew, Mark and Luke had already done it. But John wanted to remind the 
Christians of what Jesus had done on the night of the Last Supper. The central 
point of his teaching that night was his new commandment. To drive home this 
message he tells us how Jesus washed the feet of his disciples during the Last 
Supper. No other Gospel narrates this event. John was well aware that the 
Eucharist was the greatest gift of the Lord to the Church. Yet he preferred to 
describe a ritual that Jesus performed that night, which would highlight the 
true meaning of "Do this in memory of me!" The celebration of the Eucharist 
becomes relevant and meaningful only when we have washed one another's feet. 
After years of participating in the Eucharist, have we understood what the Lord 
is asking of us? Unfortunately, we have made the Eucharist a ritual to be 
observed but with no bearing on our daily lives. We can participate in the 
Eucharist daily and yet not let it affect our lives in any way. Similarly we 
can on this day participate in the ritual of the washing of the feet and yet 
not see the implications of this new commandment. To celebrate the Eucharist we 
have to live it. To live as a follower of Jesus Christ we have to wash one 
another's feet, we have to be servants; we have to live lives of humble service.
Body of Christ!Once I was giving out Holy Communion in a crowded church. Just 
as I was about to place the host on a lady's tongue, another person jostled her 
by wedging into a narrow space besides her. She immediately closed her mouth 
before receiving, turned to the intruder and called her a bitch, then turned 
back to me, opened her mouth and said "Amen" to the body of Christ! So often we 
receive the body of Christ in the Eucharist and fail to recognize it in the 
pew. So often the tongue that receives the Lord in Holy Communion is only too 
ready to lacerate the body of Christ over a cup of coffee after Mass.
James Feeban
Film: 'Entertaining Angels': The Dorothy Day StoryTwenty-year-old Dorothy Day 
was a reporter and a part of an elite socialist group in New York. Dorothy 
encounters a homeless man and a friendly nun and follows them to a Church that 
has opened a soup kitchen for the poor. She often goes to the kitchen to help. 
She begins to read Catholic books and gets converted. She is urged to start 
feeding the poor and caring for the sick. During the 1930's Dorothy becomes 
even more socially active. She opens hospitality houses and tries to improve 
the lives of the poor. -Dorothy led a very unconventional life by Catholic 
standards. Her pre-conversion past and abortion, her decision not to marry and 
remain a single parent are interesting because she used these unusual 
circumstances to follow Christ by helping the poor and homeless. She is a 
twentieth century model of lay holiness. Dorothy Day, like the apostles, was 
someone who did not have faith at first. She gradually accepted the gift of 
faith and grew in it by serving others. She spent most of her adult life living 
Jesus' commandment of love. She personally cared for the indigent and homeless 
people in many ways, from preparing and serving meals to washing their feet. 
This was the life of Dorothy Day. An exasperated volunteer agreed to go on 
working when she wanted to quit because Dorothy had said, "You never know, you 
might be entertaining angels." - On this Holy Thursday we are reminded to blend 
our beliefs and actions into one life lived for God.Peter Malone in 'Lights 
Camera.Faith!'
The Ultimate AcceptanceAn orthodox Jewish father came to my university office 
to discuss a serious problem. His son was becoming romantically involved with a 
young Catholic woman. The old patriarch was well-disposed to Christianity, very 
tolerant of its beliefs and practices. But it was 'crossing the line' to think 
of his son marrying a gentile outside the synagogue and perhaps even becoming a 
Catholic. He was disappointed in the young woman because of the present turn of 
events. He had readily accepted her as his son's friend but felt that she 
should have been more sensitive to the limits of the relationship, to its 
future implications, especially since he and his wife had so graciously 
received her into their home and family circle. As he concluded, he made a 
statement that wonderfully summarized a whole set of Old Testament feelings. He 
leaned over the desk and said dramatically: "And we even invited her to our 
table." What more could he have done? That said it all. His hospitality was 
complete. In the best of his Jewish tradition, he had included her as fully as 
he could. -On Holy Thursday, Jesus invites us all to His table. To invite us to 
his banquet table was the ultimate way that the Jewish carpenter could tell us 
that he accepted us, no matter how weak and sinful we may be. Jesus invited 
everyone to dinner to share in all of those rich human experiences which, at 
that moment, became divine experiences. Eugene Lauer in 'Sunday Morning 
Insights'
RememberingA man made a dramatic turnaround in his life. When asked how he did 
it, he pulled out a snapshot from his wallet. It was a picture of a caseworker 
who had helped him years ago. "Whenever I am tempted to fall back into my old 
ways," the man said, "I remember what this caseworker did for me, and I draw 
strength from his memory." That story illustrates an important biblical truth. 
For ancient Jews remembering a religious event meant far more than calling to 
mind something that had happened centuries before. On the contrary, remembering 
the event meant bringing it into the present and reliving it by faith. Thus 
when the Jews remembered the Passover each year, they did far more than recall 
to mind the event that freed their ancestors from Egypt. Rather, by 
remembering, they brought that event into the present and relived it again. In 
this way they received the same blessing from it that their ancestors did.Mark 
Link in 'Journey'
Eucharistic MealIn most cultures a meal is a special ceremony, time and 
occasion. We divide our day by mealtimes. A meal implies being together as a 
family -perhaps the only time of the day. It implies being one. Divorce is 
called "separation of bed and board." Tearing up a table cloth is a sign of 
disunity in a family. Soldiers unstrap their bayonet belt before entering a 
mess hall -no fighting in a dining room. At the dining table enemies, 
especially chiefs of clans, seal their agreements by eating one another's food. 
All eating is meant to be sharing. You cannot have a feast without a meal. 
Every big occasion has one farewell as well as welcome. When a businessman 
wants to discuss something important, or a friend wants to tell you something 
unpleasant, or a man has a special message for a woman -they get together over 
a meal. All this is implied in the Eucharist.Fred Michalic in '1000 stories you 
can use'
The Tragedy and TriumphAn old African folk tale speaks of a land which was 
suffering from a famine. Men and beasts starved to death. Everyone was worried 
just about staying alive. In this country lived a pelican which did not worry 
about keeping herself alive as much as preserving the life of her young ones. 
Day after day she scrounged for food. Finally there was no food she could find, 
the pelican could find no other way out, so in her great need she made a hole 
in her own breast with her beak and gave her young ones her own blood to drink. 
When the famine was over her young ones were strong and able to fly away and 
look after themselves. She had given them her lifeblood to make them live.Willi 
Hoffsuemmer in '1000 stories you can use'
Live for othersIn the Russian Orthodox Church, there were people called 
Poustinikki who devoted themselves to lives of prayer. They withdrew to the 
desert (poustinia) and lived in solitude, but not isolation. The Russian word 
for solitude means "being with everybody." By custom, the latch was always off 
the door as a sign of availability. The poustinikki's priority was always a 
neighbour's need. We too are to live with the latch off the door to our hearts 
for the service of others.John Pichappilly in 'The Table of the Word'
To live with others, may we live for others!
Fr. Jude [email protected]
PS. The stories, incidents and anecdotes used in the reflections have been 
collected over the years from books as well as from sources over the net and 
from e-mails received. Every effort is made to acknowledge authors whenever 
possible. If you send in stories or illustrations I would be grateful if you 
could quote the source as well so that they can be acknowledged if used in 
these reflections. These reflections are also available on my Web site 
www.NetForLife.net Thank you.

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