Friday, January 09, 2026

Michael Dubruiel: How to Get the Most out of the Eucharist, part 2b

       

From How to Get the Most Out of the Eucharist by Michael Dubruiel


Michael Dubruiel



THE EUCHARIST AS A SACRIFICE



As we participate in the Eucharist, not only do we participate in Christ’s sacrifice on Calvary but we are called to share in that sacrifice.Just knowing this should change how we view everything that irks us at Mass. Are you:

    Suffering mental anguish — like a crown of thorns is upon your head?
    Weighed down by worldly concerns — like the weight of the cross is on you?
    Feeling powerless — like you are nailed to a cross?

If we take away a sacrificial attitude toward the Eucharist, we are likely to fail to see the connection between our lives and what we do at Mass.We are apt to sit in judgment, waiting to be entertained (whether we are conservative or liberal, what we want to see differs but the attitude is the same). When we fail to bring a sacrificial attitude to the Eucharist, our participation seems at times to be modeled more after Herod’s banquet, where Simone’s dance cost the Baptist his head, than after the Last Supper of Our Lord, where there was every indication that partaking in this banquet was likely to cost the disciples their own lives. (Indeed, ten of the twelve were martyred,Judas took his own life,and John survived being boiled alive in a cauldron of oil.)