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The graces of the Mass flow one and all from the sacrifice of Jesus Christ on
Calvary. By means of the Mass, the Sacrifice of the Cross is continued among
men. The Mass is not a mere symbolic representation of the past, but places
really and actually present in our midst that supreme action which our Lord
consummated on Calvary, and which redeemed the world. The cross was not worth
more than the Mass, because the two are but one and the selfsame Sacrifice, time
and space being pushed aside by the hand of omnipotence. The priest and the
victim are the same, the setting alone is different. The Mass contains
everything that Christ offered to God, and all that He acquired for men; and the
offerings of those who assist at Mass become one with the great offering of
Christ.
The Mass as we know is made up of two principal parts - the liturgy of the Word
and the liturgy of the Eucharist. It is important to bear in mind that these two
parts are so closely connected with each other that they constitute one single
act of worship. For this reason the faithful should participate in the whole of
the Mass where both the table of God's Word and the table of Christ's Body are
prepared, so that from them the faithful may be instructed and nourished.
"In the Sacrifice of the Mass we are not merely reminded of the sacrifice of
the Cross in a symbolical form. On the contrary, the sacrifice of Calvary, as a
great supra-temporal reality, enters into the immediate present. Space and time
are abolished. The same Jesus is here present who died on the Cross. The whole
congregation unites itself with His holy sacrificial will, and through Jesus
present before it, consecrates itself to the heavenly Father as a living
oblation. So holy Mass is a tremendously real experience, the experience of the
reality of Golgotha. And a stream of sorrow and repentance, of love and
devotion, of heroism and the spirit of sacrifice, flows out from the altar and
passes through the praying congregation." (Karl Adam: The Spirit of Catholicism)
THE LITURGY OF THE WORD
The
Mass is above all a celebration of faith, of that faith which is born in us and
nourished through the hearing of the Word of God. We recall here the words of
the General Instruction on the Missal (No. 9): "when the Scriptures are read in
church, God Himself is speaking to His people, and Christ, present in His word,
is proclaiming the Gospel. Hence the readings from God's word are among the most
important elements in the liturgy, and all who are present should listen to them
with reverence." Of great importance also is the homily. It is a necessary part
of the Mass on Sundays and Holydays, while on other days it is desirable that
there be a homily. By its means the homilist explains the sacred text in the
light of the Church's teaching for the building up of the faith of those
present.
As we participate in the celebration of the word, Our Lady is our model for she
is "the attentive Virgin who receives the word of God with faith, that faith
which in her case was the gateway and path to the divine motherhood".
THE LITURGY OF THE EUCHARIST IN UNION WITH MARY

Our Blessed Lord did not begin His work of redemption without the consent of
Mary, solemnly asked and freely given. Likewise He did not complete it on
Calvary without her presence and her consent. "From this union of sufferings and
of will between Mary and Christ, she merited to become most worthily the
restorer of the lost world and the dispenser of all the graces Jesus purchased
by His death and by His Blood." She stood by the cross of Jesus on Calvary,
representing all mankind there, and at each new Mass the offering of the Savior
is accomplished subject to the same conditions. Mary stands at the altar no less
than she stood by the cross. She is there, as ever, co-operating with Jesus -
the Woman, foretold from the beginning, crushing the serpent's head. A loving
attention to her ought, therefore, to form part of every Mass rightly heard.
"Her motherhood is particularly noted and experienced by the Christian people
at the Sacred Banquet - the liturgical celebration of the mystery of the
Redemption - at which Christ, His true body born of the Virgin Mary, becomes
present. The piety of the Christian people has always very rightly sensed a
profound link between devotion to the Blessed Virgin and worship of the
Eucharist: this is a fact that can be seen in the liturgy of both the West and
the East, in the traditions of the Religious Families, in the modern movements
of spirituality, including those for youth, and in the pastoral practice of the
Marian Shrines. Mary guides the faithful to the Eucharist."
THE EUCHARIST OUR TREASURE 
The Eucharist is the center and source of grace... The most ardent activity will
accomplish nothing of value if it forgets for a moment that its main object is
to establish the reign of the Eucharist in all hearts. For thereby is fulfilled
the purpose for which Jesus came into the world. That purpose was to communicate
Himself to souls so that He might make them one with him. The means of that
communication is chiefly the holy Eucharist. "I am the living bread that came
down from heaven. Whoever eats of this bread will live for ever; and the bread
that I will give for the life of the world is my flesh." (Jn 6:51-52)
The Eucharist is the infinite good. For in that sacrament is Jesus Himself , as
much present as He was in His home at Nazareth or in the Upper Room at
Jerusalem. The holy Eucharist is no mere symbol of him, or instrument of His power, but is Jesus Christ Himself substantially. So that she, who had blessed
fruit of her womb, and renewed in her life of union with His Sacramental
presence the "happy days of Bethlehem and Nazareth." (St. Peter Julian
Eymard)
Many who think Jesus little better than an inspired man are found to yield Him
reverence and imitation. If they thought Him to be more, they would render Him
more. What, therefore, should proceed from the household of the faith? How
inexcusable are those Catholics who believe, but do not practice that belief.
That Jesus whom others admire, Catholics possess - ever living in the Eucharist.
They have free access to Him and can, and should, receive Him even daily as the
food of their souls.
Considering these things, one sees how sad it is that such a splendid heritage
should be neglected; that persons having the faith of the Eucharist should
nevertheless permit sin and thoughtlessness to deprive them of this vital need
of their souls, which Our Lord had in mind for them from the first moment of His earthly existence. Even as a new- born babe in Bethlehem (which means the House
of Bread), He lay on that straw of which He was the Divine Wheat: destined to be
made into the heavenly bread which would make men one with Him and with each
other in His Mystical Body.
Mary is the mother of that Mystical Body. As she once anxiously
attended to the wants of her Christ-child, so now she yearns to feed that
Mystical Body, of which she is, no less, the Mother. How her heart is anguished
at seeing that her babe, in His Mystical Body, is hungry - even starving - by
reason of the fact that few are nourished as they should be with the Bread
Divine, while many do n ot
receive it at all. Let those, who aim to be associated to Mary in her maternal
care of souls, share her maternal anguish, and strive, in union with her, to
allay that hunger of the Body of Christ. Every avenue of legionary action must
be availed of to awaken knowledge and love of the Blessed Sacrament and to
dissipate the sin and indifference which keep men from it. Each Holy Communion
brought about is truly an immeasurable gain. Through the individual soul, it
nourishes the entire Mystical Body of Christ, and causes it to advance in wisdom
and growth and grace with God and men. (Lk 2:52)
"This union of the Mother and the Son in the work of
redemption reaches its climax on Calvary, where Christ "offered Himself as the
perfect sacrifice to God" (Heb 9:14) and where Mary stood by the cross. (Jn
19:25) "suffering grievously with her only-begotten Son. There she united
herself with a maternal heart to His sacrifice, and lovingly consented to the
immolation of this victim which she herself had brought forth" and also was
offering to the Eternal Father. To perpetuate down the centuries the Sacrifice
of the Cross, the divine Savior instituted the Eucharistic Sacrifice, the
memorial of His death and resurrection, and entrusted it to His spouse the
Church, which, especially on Sundays, calls the faithful together to celebrate
the Passover of the Lord until He comes again. This the Church does in union
with the saints in heaven and in particular with the Blessed Virgin, whose
burning charity and unshakeable faith she imitates."
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