"The more Eucharist we receive, the more we will become like Jesus, so that on earth, we will have a foretaste of heaven." St. Carlo Acutis
When
you go to the Holy Land, the Gospel becomes alive because one visits
the actual places Jesus walked, talked, worked miracles, suffered,
died, rose from the dead etc...
Today's
Gospel is about the Samaritan woman, who went to get water from
Jacob's well and there encountered Jesus, who changes her life. It's
believed her name was St. Photina. One day, like many others, she
went to draw water from the well, and found Jesus there, seated by
it, "tired from the trip," in the noonday heat.
"Give me something to drink," He said to her,
surprising her: It was, in fact, unusual for a Jew to speak to a
Samaritan woman, especially a woman who was a stranger. And this
woman would be considered a great sinner, after all, she had five
husbands.
But
the woman's faith and love was destined to grow: Jesus spoke of a
"living water" able to quench thirst completely and
become "a spring of water welling up to eternal life"
in her. He showed her He knew about her personal life; He revealed
that the hour had come to worship the one true God in spirit and in
truth; and confided to her--He is the Messiah.
All
of this happened, beginning from the real and sensible experience of
thirst. The thirst of Jesus is an entrance way into the mystery of
God, who made himself thirsty to refresh us, as he made himself poor
to enrich us. But Jesus had thirst for the woman's faith, and faith
of all of us. God the Father sent His Son Jesus, to quench our thirst
for eternal life, giving us His love, but asks our faith for
bestowing this gift. Yes, God thirsts for our faith and our love.
Like a good and merciful father He desires for us every good and this
good is God himself.
For
her part, the Samaritan woman represents the unhappiness of those who
have not found what they are looking for: She had "five
husbands" and is now living with a man. Deep in her heart
was a thirst to do things right, to follow the good path of happiness
and peace, to live a life of hope and joy. Everything changes for her
that day, on account of her conversation with the Lord Jesus, who
shakes her up so much, she leaves the water jar and runs to tell the
people of the village: "Come and see a man who told me all
that I ever did. Can this be the Christ”?
This
personal encounter with Jesus changes her life and brings to fruition
her deepest longings. Only Jesus can quench her thirst for a life of
love, happiness and peace. And yet, Jesus also was thirsting for her
love, her faith and her one on one personal relationship with Him.
From the Cross, Jesus even sighs from the depths of His Heart, “I
thirst.” He was thirsting for souls, thirsting to be loved,
thirsting for faith, thirsting for a personal friendship with Him.
Through
baptism, we encounter the living water, which washes away our sins
and makes us a temple of the Holy Spirit and we begin to share that
divine life of God and become one with God inside us.
St.
Photina, the Samaritan woman at the well,
became an early Christian evangelizer. She converted the emperor
Nero's daughter and a hundred of her servants. While
in prison she also
converted many. She
was tortured
and put to death. A relic of the skull of Photina resides in the
Church of Jacob’s well in Nablus in the Holy Land.
The
prophet Ezekiel sees a vision of water flowing from under the
temple's threshold, specifically passing the south side of the altar,
flowing eastward toward the Dead Sea.
This stream, originating from the temple (God's presence), grows into
a deep river that heals the Dead Sea, bringing life and abundant
vegetation to the desert.
Today,
we can
say the
temple is every Catholic church and is symbolic
of the Eucharist and altar at Holy Mass. The Eucharist is Jesus
Himself and we encounter Him
every time we come to Mass and receive Him in Holy Communion.
The
Holy Mass is the most powerful action on earth. It is the most
important and most glorious event that happens every day in every
Catholic Church.
Young
people get up at 5am to go the gym to work out throughout the week.
They are willing to sacrifice themselves for a sport. Are you willing
to sacrifice yourself, getting up early to attend Holy Mass? It's a
terrific
way to grow spiritually closer to Jesus
by
receiving Him often in Holy Communion, listening to readings and
homily.
The more often we are in the presence of the Holy Sacrifice, the more
often we receive Holy Communion, the quicker we grow in holiness and
virtue and the greater will our glory be in heaven. The Holy Mass
helps to prevent us from sin and temptations. Our soul is united the
Jesus and the whole world receives grace upon grace,
which is living water that gives drink to the thirsty soul. Every
soul thirsts for Jesus and the graces that
flow from His Heart at Holy Mass and Holy Communion.
St.
Madeleine Sophie Barat defined Holy Communion as "Paradise
on earth." Pope
Paul VI
said "The
Mass is the most perfect form of prayer!" St.
Gertrude the Great,
"For
each Mass we hear with devotion, Our Lord sends a saint to comfort us
at death."
St. Padre
Pio "Every
holy Mass, heard with devotion, produces in our souls marvelous
effects, abundant spiritual and material graces which we, ourselves,
do not know. It is easier for the earth to exist without the sun than
without the holy Sacrifice of the Mass."
St.
John Vianney said that if we knew the value of the Mass, we would die
of joy. Our
prayers are the strongest at the Consecration in Holy Mass"
(raising of Host and Chalice).
Pope
Benedict XV
"The Holy Mass would be
of greater profit if people had it offered in their lifetime, rather
than having it celebrated for the relief of their souls after death."
The
Blessed Virgin Mary once told Blessed Alan
de la Roche, "My
Son so loves those who assist at the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass that,
if it were necessary, He would die for them as many times as they've
heard Masses."
During
Lent we
enter
in the desert
with Jesus,
where He fasted never
eating
or drinking
anything
for 40 days.
When
we observe our Lenten practices, we hunger and thirst for food and
the things we give up, but this hunger can be converted into a hunger
for Jesus, a thirst for Jesus, who hungers and thirsts for us.
Our
sanctification with this hunger and thirst climaxes in the Holy Mass,
during our encounter with Jesus in Holy Communion. The Holy Mass is
infinity greater and much more important than Eucharistic Adoration.
If we have a choice of going to Adoration or going to Mass, we should
go to Mass. That's why we don't have Adoration during Mass.
We
receive infinite and untold graces at every Mass because at Mass
Calvary is re-presented on the altar. At Mass, we give our self, our
sacrifices and our works to God with the bread and wine and in return
God gives Himself to us in Holy Communion.
There
is no greater encounter we can have on earth, than Jesus in Holy
Communion. We become one with Him and He becomes one with us. He
quenches our thirst and we quench His thirst for us. For the Mass
life giving water flows from the altar, into the Host to us within
our heart during Communion.
At
seven years old Saint Carlo Acutis received his First Communion and
told his parents that he wanted to attend daily Mass. “Holy
Mass, Holy Me” Carlo
would say, treasuring Mass and his relationship with Jesus in a truly
amazing way. On one occasion, his father invited Carlo on a business
trip to Israel. Instead of jumping at the chance to travel to the
Holy Land, Carlo wanted to give the money to the poor, telling his
father that Israel is present at the altar of every Mass that he
attends. He said,
"If
Jesus stays with us wherever there is a consecrated Host, what need
is there to go on pilgrimage to Jerusalem to visit places he lived
two thousand years ago?"
The
17-year-old high school student said, "The more Eucharist we
receive, the more we will become like Jesus, so that on earth, we
will have a foretaste of heaven."