The Most Holy Body & Blood of Christ, June 22, 2025
Dear friends,
The culmination of a secession of the foundational mysteries of our Catholic faith is the Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ, known to us in the West as Corpus Christi Sunday. It is the day when we recognize, celebrate, venerate, and worship the Lord Jesus in the Holy Eucharist.
This solemnity encourages us to profess, adore, and grow in love of our Eucharistic Lord, thereby deepening Eucharistic devotion throughout the Church. As you know, celebrating the Lord’s Body and Blood began at the Last Supper and continues to be celebrated at every Holy Mass. However, the formal feast of Corpus Christi (Body of Christ) began in 1246 in the Diocese of Liege in Belgium. It was extended to the wider Church by Pope Urban IV in 1264.
The feast incorporates texts composed by Saint Thomas Aquinas, a Dominican priest who lived from 1225 to 1274. St. Thomas was commissioned by Pope Urban to compose a special Office of Readings and hymns for this feast. It is from these that we have the two most well-known Eucharistic songs: Pange Lingua, which contains the beautiful Tantum Ergo,) and O Salutaris Hostia, which we regularly use at our Masses and Benedictions here at St. John’s.
The Solemnity of Corpus Christi occurs on the Sunday following Trinity Sunday, two weeks after Pentecost Sunday. It is designed to honor and celebrate the second person of the Trinity, our risen Lord, Jesus Christ, by affirming him as really, truly, and substantially present in the consecrated bread and wine at Mass.
Christ’s Real Presence comes to us at every Mass through the act which the Church calls “transubstantiation” (change of substance). This occurs when, at the consecration, the priest says the words that Christ himself pronounced over bread and wine, “This is My Body,” “This is the chalice of My Blood,” “Do this in remembrance of Me.”
Corpus Christi Sunday calls us to focus on two manifestations of the Body of Christ— in the Holy Eucharist and in the Church. At every Mass, our attention is called to the Eucharist and the Real Presence of Christ in it. But the Body of Christ is also present in the Church. The Church is called the Body of Christ because of the intimate communion that Jesus shares with his disciples. This is foreshadowed in the gospels through the image of Christ as the vine and his believers as the branches. It is made explicit in the letters of St. Paul who says, “Now you are Christ’s body, and individually parts of it” (1 Corinthians 12:17), and “[the Father] put all things beneath his feet and gave him as head over all things to the church, which is his body, the fullness of the one who fills all things in every way” (Ephesians 1:22-23). This image helps keep in focus both the unity and the diversity of the Church.
In most places, the Feast of Corpus Christi is an opportunity for public Eucharistic processions which serve as a sign of common faith and adoration. It is a public act of worship. I have been hesitant to do it at our parish because of the heat here in June. However, I really would like to have a Eucharistic procession next year during our Silver Jubilee celebration. I invite those who are interested to become part of a team to organize the procession. Please let me know if you would like to do this. It is a great way for you to bless our community here at St. John’s. Coming together to publicly declare our worship of Jesus in His Real Presence is a way of offering God our Father a pledge of undivided love. It also is an offering of ourselves in service to others.
The 300 tickets for REBOOT! that were set aside at a discounted price have been sold! We are now opening registration to other parishes and cities in the area. I truly hope many more of our parishioners will register for this life-changing event with Christ Stefanick on Wednesday, 1 October 2025. Chris is undeniably one of the most gifted, powerful, and passionate Catholic speakers of the day. The REBOOT! experience has proven to change lives by reenergizing and renewing the faith life of those who attend.
May your coming week be glorious!
With Love,
Fr. John









