| It's not wine yet! But with a little work, more time than you'd expect, and a lot of local genius, it will be very good wine. |
How tiny a thing, and simple. The bits of bread that fill the golden vessel to be offered upon our altar have precisely two ingredients, wheat flour and water.
There is one more essential element that one might call an ingredient: human genius. They do not grow on trees, these breads, nor fall from heaven in the night as did the manna flakes in the time of the Exodus. The grain grows of its nature from the ground and the ear ripens to bear its fruit only after the field is cultivated and the grain sown. Still then it is not ready to eat, for it must be prepared and ground into flour before it can be mixed with water and baked into bread. All this is the work of human hands and know-how. Simple, perhaps, but discerned and learned and perfected, not to be taken for granted.
Similarly, the wine in the chalice is pure grape wine with no additives. Yet wine does not flow of its own accord from the vines; rather, after cultivation and collection the grapes are pressed for their juice which is then subjected a process of very few steps of near infinite adjustability governing time and temperature, exposure and containment that produces a whole new and marvelous thing, astonishing, but still simple, with one ingredient.
Though both bread and wine are simple and universal, they do not occur of nature itself, but rather by man’s fruitful manipulation of the fruit of the earth: “the work of human hands” to which we refer as we offer them to the blessed Lord God of the universe. Natural, but not occurring of themselves in nature, and simple, but not elemental, once made they become the elements of the great thanksgiving by which we receive the Risen and Victorious Son of God in His flesh and blood.
All the great mysteries of our salvation, the sacraments, are rooted in goods found everywhere and at all times of human history. They appear and are applied to the comfort and consolation of human life only as the result of human effort and understanding. Water gushes from springs and flows in rivers, but to wash with it requires human effort and intention. Olives grow and ripen on trees, but only after hands have pressed them for oil and applied this salve to a wound can their fragrant ointment do its healing work. These found goods require human genius among their ingredients, so to speak, at that natural level, before our saving God both reveals and imputes the divine genius that provides for our good at the supernatural level.
The logic of the divine Word become flesh and dwelling among us is exclusive as well as expansive. The infant lying in the manger, son of the Virgin Mother, is the one Savior of all the fallen; the many infants lying in their beds, children of loving mothers, are not. This, not that; bread, not meat; wine, not milk.
Bread is everywhere and of wide variety, but it is one very specific thing, and nothing else will do. Wine is both unique and universal. Wheat bread and grape wine are indispensable definitions of the instruction and occurrence of the flesh of the divine Son of the heavenly Father and the Virgin Mother, the blood of the unique and universal Redeemer of the world.
Marvelous to contemplate, easy to recognize and receive, our Eucharistic Lord is both the source and the result of instructions that are not complicated, though by no means easy. Love one another as I have loved you is remarkably specific; and do this in memory of me leaves no room for improvisation. Expansive and exclusive. Nothing else will do the work for which He sent His Word, at which He will not fail.
Next weekend in our parish, the risen Lord Jesus will come to become one with, to commune with some of our children for the first time in their young lives. He will be adorable and admirable. Docile to the will of His Father, He will be the bread that came down from heaven. He will be food for them, entering their bodies and raising up their lives. From the golden vessel to the tip of their tongue, His flesh will make them glory. How enormous a thing, and simple.
Monsignor Smith