This selection below comprises lessons 4,5, and 6 of the Divine Office of Matins for the Solemnity of Corpus Christi.
From the Sermons of
St Thomas of Aquinas
17th or
57th of his Opuscula, or Lesser Works.
The immeasurable
benefits, which the goodness of God hath bestowed on Christian people, have
conferred on them also a dignity beyond all price. "For what nation is
there so great, who hath gods so nigh unto them, as the Lord, our God, is"
unto us?”(Deut. iv. 7) The Only-begotten Son of God, being pleased to make
us “partakers of the Divine nature” (2
Pet. i. 4), took our nature upon Him, being Himself made Man that He might make
men gods. And all, as much of ours as He took, He applied to our salvation. On
the Altar of the Cross He offered up His Body to God the Father as a sacrifice
for our reconciliation. He shed His Blood as the price whereby He redeemeth us
from wretchedness and bondage, and the washing whereby He cleanseth us from all
sin. And for a noble and abiding memorial of that so great work of His
goodness, He hath left unto His faithful ones the Same His very Body for Meat,
and the Same His very Blood for Drink, to be fed upon under the appearance of
bread and wine.
How precious a thing
then, how marvelous, how health-giving, how furnished with all dainties, is the
Supper [of the Lord]! Than His Supper can anything be more precious? Therein
there is put before us for meat, not, as of old time, the flesh of bulls and of
goats, but Christ Himself, our very God. Than this Sacrament can anything be
more marvelous? Therein it cometh to pass that bread and wine are bread and
wine no more, but in the stead thereof there is the Body and there is the Blood
of Christ; that is to say, Christ Himself, Perfect God and Perfect Man, Christ
Himself is there, under the appearance of a little bread and wine. His faithful
ones eat Him, but He is not mangled; nay, when [the veil which shroudeth Him
in] this Sacrament is broken, in each broken piece thereof remaineth whole
Christ Himself, Perfect God and Perfect Man. All that the senses can reach in
this Sacrament [look, taste, feel, smell, and the like, all these] abide of
bread and wine, but the Thing is not bread and wine. And thus room is left for
faith; Christ Who hath a Form That can be seen, is here taken and received not
only unseen, but seeming to be bread and wine, and the senses, which judge by
the wonted look, are warranted against error.
Than this Sacrament
can anything be more health-giving? Thereby are sins purged away, strength
renewed, and the soul fed upon the fatness of spiritual gifts. This Supper is
offered up in the Church both for the quick and dead it was ordained to the
health of all, all get the good of it. Than this Sacrament can anything be more
furnished with dainties? The glorious sweetness thereof is of a truth such that
no man can fully tell it. Therein ghostly comfort is sucked from its very well-head.
Therein a memorial is made of that exceeding great love which Christ showed in
time of His sufferings. It was in order that the boundless goodness of His
great love might be driven home into the hearts of His faithful ones, that when
He had celebrated the Passover with His disciples, and the last Supper was
ended, the Lord "Jesus, knowing that His hour was come that He should
depart out of this world unto the Father, having loved His own which were in
the world, He loved them unto the end" (John xiii. 1), and instituted this
Sacrament; this Sacrament, the everlasting forth-"showing of His death
until He come "(again, 1 Cor. xi. 26); this Sacrament, the embodied fulfillment
of all the ancient types and figures; this Sacrament, the greatest miracle
which He ever wrought, and the one mighty joy of them that now have sorrow,
till He shall come again, and their heart shall rejoice, and their joy no man
take from them.
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