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| Photo from Mary Phillips Quinn; if you have any pictures or videos of our procession, please share them with the rectory. |
He really isn’t heavy, if you will grant the allusion to a cliché from the 70’s. Our Lord in the Most Blessed Sacrament, and the monstrance that held Him, were not hard to bear last week as we took him to the streets and sidewalks of our Four Corners neighborhood.
I think the guys who carried the canopy dealt with a lot more actual weight, plus several gusts of wind that billowed the canopy like a sail and threatened to carry off course both the canopy and its bearers. I am not sure how they recovered from their efforts afterward; I think it involved much stretching.
Conversely, I hope the procession itself was an occasion of recovery for our neighbors. A glimpse of the sacred and the coming among us of the Divine awaken an awareness of human dignity in hearts dulled by the mundane and morose delectations of the day.
One of the best experiences for us in the procession was seeing the reactions from the people who were not expecting to see such a thing. Neighbors working in their yard or called to the window by the beautiful singing looked up at first with curiosity and maybe suspicion that then became relief and delight. People in the parking lot of Safeway knelt or made the Sign of the Cross. Occupants of cars stopped on the highways waved and deployed their phones to record what they were seeing. Nobody complained! One of the servers mentioned a driver who had the music blasting loudly from his open car windows, who then when he saw the procession turned it down.
It can be too easy for us who are familiar with the Body and Blood of Christ to focus on our opportunity and obligation to come to Him and forget the proactive reality that is before us. We focus on what we accomplish by our own freely chosen actions. We come to Mass. We prepare ourselves for Holy Communion. We give our time and attention to the Lord’s presence in the tabernacle, or in ourselves once we have received Him. We take time to pray afterwards before we move on to other things. All these actions of ours are real, and not negligible.
However, it is easy overlook what He is doing, our Eucharistic Lord. He comes first, before we come to Him. He calls us to Himself, reminds us where to find Him, and how to obtain what we need from Him. We take steps, but first, He is a light to our steps. And so while sweat, strain, and soreness may be evidence of what we did for the procession, it is more revealing and more reveling to look for the signs of what He was doing.
So shall my word be that goes forth from my mouth; It shall not return to me empty, but shall do what pleases me, achieving the end for which I sent it. (Isaiah 55:11) The Word become flesh dwells among us and goes on walkabout to find those lost sheep He talks about. What a thrill to be with Him as He goes! What a grace to be able to lend our flesh and blood to the work of His Body and Blood. Seeing the reactions from the people who were not expecting to see such a thing is but one of many clues to the sanctification that Our Lord Jesus worked during the procession last Sunday.
Whether you were singing or wrestling with an unruly canopy, walking, praying, or just trying to keep up, when you realize that you were participating in the sanctification and salvation of all the many souls in Four Corners, at home here or just passing through, it becomes clear that He was not heavy at all.
Monsignor Smith
