The
Reign of the Eucharistic Heart:
The Triumph of Love
Mother Adela,
SCTJM
Foundress
For private use only
-©
The Eucharist is a Gift of
Love of the Sacred
Heart
The Eucharist is the outstanding gift of love of the Sacred Heart. We
can not understand the Eucharist unless we understand the love of the
Heart of Jesus. In the Gospel of St. John chapter 13, we read: "Having
loved his own who were in the world, he loved them to the extreme" (Jn
13:1). To the extreme means not sparing anything to manifest its love.
Jesus said to St. Margaret Mary: “Behold, this heart which has loved men
so much that it has spared nothing even to exhausting and consuming
itself in order to testify to them its love."
The Sacred Heart of Jesus has loved us to the extreme of giving himself
totally and freely for our salvation. He has spared nothing up to the
point of giving his body, his blood and his heart on the Cross, and
he continues to give them to us in the Eucharist. The Eucharist is a gift
of his self oblation and of his sacrificial love for men.
In the institution of the Eucharist in the Last Supper, Jesus said to
the apostles and to us until the end of time: “This is my body, this is
my blood of the new covenant given up for you” (Mt 26). The Eucharist is
a gift of the love and generosity of his Sacred Heart. He not only gave
up his life, but he gave it up freely because the sign of authentic love
is that the sacrifice is offered freely. “I
lay down my life, no one takes it from me, but I lay it down freely”
(John 10,18).
And not only freely but intensely, to the extreme. As Jesus said to St.
Margaret: “my divine heart is so inflamed with love for men that being
unable any longer to contain within itself the flames of its burning
charity, it must spread them abroad and manifest itself to them in order
to enrich them with the precious treasures of my Heart”.
When we contemplate the Eucharist, we contemplate the Heart that has
been pierced out of love, the Heart that constantly renews his
immolation, his self oblation, his sacrifice. We contemplate, therefore,
this ever oblative love of the Heart of Christ. We contemplate the Heart
of Christ that has loved us to the extreme of the Cross and of the
Eucharist.
Is not the Eucharist the constant reminder of the generosity and self
oblation of the Heart of Christ? Self oblation and generosity are the
fruit of his love to the extreme. The self oblation of His Heart reveals
to us that love is the victory over evil. He conquers the hardness of
the human heart, not by force, but by offering the testimony of the power
of his love. Is not the Eucharist the living sign of this sacrificial
love? He gives himself to us, to us who have rejected him and despised
him.
He taught us to live the way of love, the only way that conquers evil:
• He gave us the testament of love and instituted the sacrament of love
the night he was going to be betrayed, denied and imprisoned by us.
• He took upon himself our sins, bearing our infirmities; by his wounds
we were healed. His sufferings brought us eternal happiness.
• He gives us his blood to quench our thirst even when we go after the
puddles of sterile waters "My blood is drink of eternal life” (John 6:55).
• He gives us his body to fill our hunger even when we want to satisfy
ourselves with temporal food. "I am the bread of life whoever come to me
shall not hunger” (John 6:35).
• He stays with us until the end of times, to accompany us, even when we
abandon him. “Our loving Redeemer, on the last night of his life,
knowing that the time had arrived on which he should die for the love of
men, had not the heart to leave us alone in this valley of tears; but in
order that he might not be separated from us even by death, he would
leave us himself on the Sacrament of the Altar understanding that He
could give us nothing further to prove to us his love." St. Alphonsos de
Liguori.
• Out of rejection we pierced His Heart, and from it, gushed forth blood
and water, the great sacraments of baptism and the Eucharist.
• From his opened side, he gave life to the Church and left the
Eucharist to be the living heart of the Church, to sustain her, nurture
her and strengthen her in her mission of being a sign of love in the
world. The Blessed Sacrament is the living heart of each of our
churches. (Pope Paul VI)
• To actualize the power of his redemption to all generations he
commanded the apostles and their successors to perpetuate the Sacrifice
of the Cross, making it possible for all men in every generation to be
at the foot of the Cross receiving the power of salvation.
• He remains in all the tabernacles, like he said to St. Therese of Lesieux,
as “ the prisoner of love." A prisoner so we can receive his freedom. He
is there, he has chosen to stay vulnerable even to men, simply to be
able to offer his love to the human heart. To St. Faustina he said, from
the Blessed Sacrament: “Love has brought me here and love keeps me
here.”
That is love!! The Eucharistic Heart is the model of love described by
St. Paul in 1 Corinthians 13: “Love is patient, love is kind, it is not
jealous, not rude, it does not seek its own interest, it is not quick
tempered, it does not rejoice in wrong but rejoices in the truth. It
bears all things, hopes all things, endures all things, love never
fails.”
St. Francis de Sales tells us about the Eucharist: “There is no more
loving or tender aspect in which to gaze upon the Saviour than this act,
in which He, so to say, annihilates Himself, and gives Himself to us as
food, in order to fill our souls, and to unite Himself more closely to
the heart and flesh of His faithful ones.”
We can see how in the Cross and in the Eucharist, love has triumphed,
because love triumphs when evil is conquered with goodness, when self
giving is the response to hardness of heart, as St. Paul teaches us in
Romans 12:21. “Resist evil and conquer it with good." To the disciples,
Jesus did not promise immunity from evil, but he promised victory over
it: “ I have told you all this so that in me you may find peace. In the
world you will have trouble. But courage! The victory is mine, I have
conquered the world” (John 16:33). How did he conquer the world? By
loving to the extreme of the Cross and of the Eucharist. Loving to the
extreme of forgetting himself.
Pope Leo XIII told us: “Call to mind the supreme act of love by which
our Redeemer, pouring forth all the riches of His Heart, instituted the
adorable Sacrament of the Eucharist in order to remain with us until the
end of time. And certainly the Eucharist, which He has given us from the
great love of his Heart, it is His Heart, the love of his Heart."
The Eucharist Heart is the Living Sign of the Kingdom of Love
Jesus said that the Kingdom of God was in the heart. He came into the
world to establish his kingdom, as the angel said to the Blessed Mother
in the Annunciation: “His kingdom will have no end." What kind of
kingdom is that which never ceases? It must be a kingdom that takes
place in the soul of men, where nothing external can remove it. “What
will separate us from the love of Christ? Will anguish, or distress, or
persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or the sword ? No, in all these
things we conquer overwhelmingly through him who loved us” (Rom 8:34).
When we study the Gospels, it becomes clear that Jesus aimed at nothing
less than a deep transformation of the human heart because he came to
establish a new covenant. This new covenant was prophesied and explained
in Ezekiel 36: “I shall give you a new heart and put a new spirit in
you. I shall remove from you the heart of stone and give you a heart of
flesh instead." While men were expecting an earthly kingdom with worldly
powers, Jesus told us that his kingdom was not from this world. It is
not of this world because it is not produced by the actions of the world,
but instead it is established in the heart of men by the love of God
that has been poured into our hearts by the power of the Holy Spirit
(Rom 5). Therefore, the kingdom of God is a kingdom of love, love that
is capable of transforming the innermost actions of the human heart, to
the point of removing the hardness, the coldness, the selfishness, the
self preservation, the stones of our hearts and making them flesh.
This means being sensible, noble, generous, docile, sacrificial and
completely open to the love of God and of our neighbor. And this is why
this Kingdom can only be extended in time by the living presence of the
Heart of Christ in the Eucharist because it is His love that is present with
the power to transform the human heart and the world. “I am the life of
the world."
The Eucharistic Heart is the Furnace of Love in Which our Hearts are to
be Consumed for the Life of the World
“ I have come to bring fire upon the earth and how I wish it will be
already kindled” (Lk 12, 49). What is the fire that Jesus has come to
give to the world? The fire of his infinite love and mercy; the fire of
the holy Spirit that transforms our hearts into the image of his Heart.
That is why in the Old Testament he identified his loving presence
with fire as he did to Moses in Exodus 3:2: “the bush was set ablaze but
did not burn out.” It will never be extinguished because his love is
infinite and eternal.
To Saint Margaret Mary the Sacred Heart always appeared when she was
adoring the Blessed Sacrament and revealed himself in flames: “the
divine heart was revealed to me as in a throne of flames brighter than
the sun and transparent like crystal, and resembled an open furnace. His
open heart was the living source of these flames.”
Because fire consumes all that it touches, so it must consume our sins,
our coldness, indifference and selfishness, all those attitudes which
keep us from responding to the call to love as Jesus has loved us. We
must enter into the fire of the love of the Heart of Jesus and let ourselves
be purified of all that is contrary to love. This will cause pain,
because selfishness is so rooted in our hearts, but it is the only way
that we can become one with Christ. We must allow ourselves to be
purified, to become like the incense used in front of the alter that
does not give its sweet fragrance until it is burnt.
The fire of love of the Heart of Jesus will always be the remedy to our
coldness and selfishness. St. Mathew tells us in his Gospel, chapter 24,
that in the passing of time love in most men will grow cold. Jesus told
St. Margaret that the revelation of his heart was the last effort of his
love in these last times to warm a world that has grown cold. To St. Faustina, the Merciful Heart told her that he was offering to a cold
world a last refuge, the mercy of his heart. I believe that in our time
the hearts of men have grown cold, selfishness is ruling, and
violence is becoming a common way of life. Men have forgotten the
meaning of love. That is why the Lord is offering his sacred, merciful
and Eucharistic Heart to our generation. He wants to change our hearts
so a new civilization can begin, a civilization in which loves triumphs
over evil.
Our Lord gave the mystical grace of introducing into their
hearts the fire of His Sacred Heart to many saints. Saints such as St. Margaret
Mary, St. Faustina, St. Teresa of Avila, St. Catherine of Siena, and
many others received an exchange of hearts. These saints are a symbol of
what the Eucharistic Heart desires to do in each one of us when we
approach him. He wants to give us his heart, his sentiments, his
desires, his internal movements, his love.
To St. Margaret Mary, in the first apparition, the Sacred Heart asked
her to give him her heart. She gave it to him and he placed it in the
flames of his heart. She saw her heart as a little atom which was being
consumed in this great furnace. When it was returned to her, she felt an
intense of love that, since that day, was never exhausted and wanted to
give itself to others in abundance.
The Lord took the heart of St. Faustina and introduced it into
the flames of his merciful heart. Then he said to her, “my daughter, I
have taken you into the depth of my merciful heart to reflect in your
own heart my mercy; only then can you proclaim it to the world. May you
enkindle the world with it.”
Once when St. Catherine of Siena was in adoration of the Blessed
Sacrament,
Jesus appeared to her with his heart inflamed. At that moment he
took her heart and introduced it into his side. Then Jesus said to her,
“Look my daughter, I have taken your heart to give you a new one,
inflamed with my love, so that you may always experience my intense love
for souls."
For St. Maximilian Kolbe, receiving the Heart of Christ in the Eucharist
meant to have our hearts consumed by his love and be purified of all
that opposes love. “Love by essence must transform us. It must consume
us and through us enkindle the fire in the world. It must destroy and
make disappear the evil that is in it. This is the fire of which the
Lord has said I have come to bring fire upon the earth” (St.
Maximilian).
In the Eucharist we contemplate the act of self oblation of the Heart of
Christ; he is consumed out of love for us and that is the reason of his
offering. The Eucharist must form in us a heart that is capable of
offering oneself as a living sacrifice, offered for the life of the
world, just as He is offered. The living Heart of Jesus in the Eucharist
wants to form an army of Eucharistic hearts, living sacrifices, living
hosts where the love of the Heart of Jesus reigns.
Romans 12: “Think of God's mercy, my brothers, and worship him, I beg
you, by offering yourselves as living sacrifices holy and acceptable to
the Lord."
The Lord explained to Venerable Conchita Armida, a great Mexican mystic of
the 1920́s and foundress of several religious communities, “ I have need
of an army of holy souls transformed into myself, who, exhale virtues
and attract souls with the good aroma of the Eucharistic Christ.
Becoming living hosts which will offer themselves in complete union with
the oblation of Christ to the Father for the good of the world and the
Church."
Conchita, prophesied a second Pentecost so much needed in the world:
“This Pentecost will be an interior one bringing a powerful
transformation of the heart of men into the heart of the Eucharistic
Christ."
According to Mother Auxilia de la Cruz, also a Mexican foundress of the
Oblates of the BS, and friend of Conchita, the Holy Spirit was to bring
in our times the fire of divine love, the fire that transforms us into
living hosts, which means persons that are willing to be like Christ in
the Eucharist, consecrated to God, broken and given. Willing to embrace
sufferings and sacrifices for love of others.
I think these revelations explain to us the reason why in the last 150
years we have seen an increase of victim souls, with a clear Eucharistic
calling of offering themselves for the good of the Church and the world,
for sinners, for priests and consecrated souls, for families, for
peace. These victim souls have been called to be such living
sacrifices and living hosts that many of them lived only on the
Eucharist, manifesting with this miracle the perfect communion of their
lives with the Eucharistic sacrifice of Christ. We can bring to mind the
example of the stigmatist Theresa Newman, who offered herself primarily
for priests, who lived 40 years with no other food than the Eucharist. Venerable Alexandrina Da Costa, a young woman from Portugal who was called to
suffer as a victim soul for the consecration of the world to the
Immaculate Heart, lived on the Eucharist for the last 13 years of her
life. Venerable Ann Catherine Emmerick, great mystic and victim soul who
offered herself for the Church, lived the last 12 years of her life only
on the Eucharist.
Saint Faustina, a great apostle of the Mercy of the Heart of God,
considered a special aspect of her life to be transformed into a living
host. “Transform me in yourself, oh Jesus, that I may be a living
sacrifice. I desire to atone at each moment for poor sinners," she
prayed (908).
For her, this experience of being a living host could only come from her
communion with the Holy Eucharist. This communion with the Eucharistic
heart is what causes our hearts to become inflamed and transformed with
love. It is in this communion that our hearts become one with his and
produce in us the capacity to love to the extreme. “It is not possible
to have a union of love more profound and more total: he in me and I in
him. The one in the other, what more could we want?“ (St. Gemma Galgani).
The Blessed Eucharist is the Sacrament of Love: It signifies love, It
produces love" (St Thomas Aquinas).
Bishop Fulton Sheen, was once asked who inspired him the most in his
life?
Bishop Sheen responded that it was a little Chinese girl of eleven years
of age. He explained when the Communists took over China, they
imprisoned a priest in his own rectory near the Church. After they
locked him up in his own house, the priest saw the Communists entering
into the Church breaking the tabernacle. They took the ciborium and
threw it on the floor with all of the consecrated Hosts falling out. The
priest knew there were thirty-two hosts.
When the Communists left, they didn't notice a small girl praying in the
back of the Church who saw everything that had happened. That night the
little girl sneaked back in even though there was a guard. She went
inside the Church and made a holy hour of prayer and reparation, an act
of love to make up for the act of hatred. After her holy hour she went
toward the hosts on the floor, knelt down, bent over and with her
tongue, consumed one host. Since it was not permissible to touch the
Host with their hands,
the little girl continued to come back each night to make her holy hour
and consume the consecrated hosts that were on the floor with her
tongue. On the thirty-second night, after she had consumed the last and
thirty-second host, she accidentally made a noise and woke up the guard
who was sleeping. He ran after her, caught her, and beat her to death
with his rifle. This act of heroic martyrdom was witnessed by the priest
as he watched this great testimony of love for the sacrament of love.
The Eucharistic heart, sign of his sacrificial love for men, inspires
love in return. As the Holy Father tells us in his Apostolic Letter
Mystery and Worship of the Eucharist, “Together with this infinite and
free gift [of God’s sacrificial love],…of which the Eucharist is the
indelible sign, there also springs up within us a lively response of
love. We not only contemplate love; we ourselves begin to love. Thanks
to the Eucharist, the love that springs up within us from the Eucharist
develops in us, becomes deeper and grows stronger" (JPII, 1980).
The Eucharistic Heart Forms Great Witnesses of Love
“Try, then to imitate God, as children that he loves, and follow Christ
by loving as he loved you, giving himself up in our place as a fragrant
offering and a sacrifice to God” (Ephesians 5:1).
The Holy Father, JPII, in his apostolic letter at the conclusion of the
Jubilee year, Novo Millennio Ineunte,
told us that the greatest evangelization of the Church at the beginning
of this century will be realized if we become witnesses to love. He
asserts that the Church of the third millennium, needs to become a great
sign of love to the world. “Love is truly the 'heart' of the Church, as
was well understood by Saint Thérèse of Lisieux, whom I proclaimed a
Doctor of the Church precisely because she is an expert in the scientia
amoris: 'I understood that the Church had a Heart and that this Heart
was aflame with Love. I understood that Love alone stirred the members
of the Church to act... I understood that Love embraces all vocations,
that Love was everything.'"
I want to speak today of a great witness to love in our troubled times,
someone that never forgot to love even when his surroundings were of
hatred.
Saint Maximilian Kolbe
Very well known as the Saint of the Immaculate and totally consecrated to
Our Lady, St. Maximilian Kolbe had in the center of his spirituality what it is so central
to the love of the Immaculate herself - the love of the Eucharistic Heart
of Jesus. It is this love that should be central to the spirituality of
every disciple of Christ. Consecration to the Immaculate has no other
goal but to bring us to share the love of Jesus who died on the Cross
for love and out of love, a mystery that it is prolonged for us in the
Eucharist.
This love is essentially an identification with the intentions of the
Heart of Christ - loving, giving, sacrificing himself “for the
life of the world." “Greater love than this no one has, that one lay down his
life for his friends” (Jn 15:13).
It is the testimony of those who lived with St. Maximilian that it was a
moving experience to observe him while celebrating the Mass; He lived
the Mass! He was absorbed in the sacred character of the Mass, uniting
himself intimately with Christ in the mystery of our redemption! He
united all his personal sufferings to Christ. For him the celebration of
the Sacrifice of the Mass was the fulfillment of his vocation and of his
life. When he founded the City of the Immaculate, from which a great
Marian and evangelistic apostolate would flourish, he made the Mass and
the Adoration of the Eucharistic Heart the center and most important
activity of the City. “The Heart of Niepokalanow is the Eucharist,” he
would often say. Besides all the community times of
Eucharistic prayers, He would go to be with the Lord in the
Blessed Sacrament (probably 10 to 15 times at day) “to know more each
day the love and mercy of the Eucharistic Heart."
This Eucharistic formation in love and self oblation would be the force
behind this Marian priest in the Concentration Camp of Auschwitz. He
would follow the same advice he cried out to the brothers when all of
them were taken to the Camp: “Do not forget love." That is the same cry
of the Eucharistic Heart to all of us: Do not forget love! Do not forget
me who loves you and has given up my life for you!
Because he was a priest, he was constantly beaten and left to die. Prisoners
at Auschwitz were slowly and systematically starved, and when food was
brought, everyone struggled to get his place and be sure of a portion.
Father Maximilian, however, stood aside in spite of the ravages of
starvation, and frequently there would be none left for him. At other
times he shared his small portion of soup or bread with others. A
prisoner recalled that he and several others often crawled across the
floor at night to be near the bed of Father Kolbe, to make their
confessions and ask for consolation. Father Kolbe pleaded with his
fellow prisoners to forgive their persecutors and to overcome evil with
good, hatred with love.
A Protestant Doctor who treated the patients in Block Twelve testified
that Father Kolbe waited until all the others had been treated before
asking for help. He constantly sacrificed himself for the others.
“Pray that my love be without limits,” he wrote in a letter to his mother.
Yes, that is precisely the love that he contemplated on the Cross and in
the Eucharist. This is the prayer that the Lord always answers because
it is the desire of his Heart that we become like him, that we have the
same sentiments of His Heart. He offered his first Mass for the
conversion of hardened hearts. The second one for the grace of
martyrdom, and the third for the grace to love to the point of becoming
a victim. (All these prayers were answered, and all were inspired by the
lives of St. Theresa of Lisieux and St. Gemma Galgani.)
One day, and many of you may know the story, when 10 men had been
chosen to die in the starvation bunkers as a punishment for the escape
of some prisoners, one of them began to cry when his name was called
out: "please, I have a wife and children." St. Maximilian, accustomed to
contemplate and live the sacrificial love of the Eucharistic Heart, took
a step forward and said: "I want to take his place." The Nazi
commander asked, "Who are you?", and he replied, "I am a catholic priest." A priest,
another Christ, united in his suffering for the good of others. Yes, a
priest to give my life, my body, my blood, as Jesus gave it for us on
the Cross and gives it to us in the Eucharist.
He was the last one to
die in the bunker helping the other men to find the power
the love of Jesus and Mary.
This act of love manifested in a city of hatred, as was Auschwitz,
transformed it according to testimonies of those who survived the Camp.
They saw the reality of love: it is never overcome by hatred, light is
not overcome by darkness when the reign of the Eucharistic heart is in
the heart of men. Maximilian, when he was a child, had a vision of the
Blessed Mother. She was offering to him two crowns: one white and one
red. He chose both. Purity and self sacrifice. He lived them both until
the end. He lived in two cities: one of the Immaculate, where love and
purity reign and one of horror and hatred, Auschwitz. In both cities, he
lived the reign of the Sacred Heart because it was in his heart. In both
cities he wore the two crowns of the triumph of the Eucharistic Heart,
the triumph of love - of love over hate, good over evil, light over
darkness. That is the real triumph, when our hearts, moved by the power
of the Eucharistic heart, enter into its fire of purification and live by
supernatural love.
He lived the Mass said all who saw him celebrating it. In the last
period of his life, in the concentration camp when he no longer
celebrated Holy Mass in the sacramental sense, he celebrated to the very
end with his life and with his death, with his total identification
with the Eucharist, offering himself as a living sacrifice.
S. Maximilian was so full of love, which he learned and received by
contemplating the oblation and sacrificial love of the Eucharistic Heart,
that he became the first "martyr of love." With this title,
which had never been used before, he was canonized by Pope John Paul II.
The Holy Father also called him: “a prophet of the new civilization of
love." It
is impossible said the Pope, not to read in his life and sacrifice a
powerful testimony of the Church in the modern world, and at the same time,
a great sign for our times. St. Maximilian, a great Marian saint,
consecrated totally to the Immaculate, was lead by the Blessed Mother to
the consuming fire of love of the Eucharistic Heart to the point of
becoming a living sacrifice, a living host, a witness to love.
Consecration to the Immaculate Heart Fosters the Reign of Love of the
Eucharistic Heart in Our Hearts
St. Maximilian: "This truth must be inscribed in the hearts of all
mankind, those who are living now and in those who will live until the
end of all times. The Immaculate must be introduced to the hearts of
men, and so enable Her to raise the throne of her Son in them, and draw
all mankind to the knowledge of Him and inflame them with love for the
Most Sacred and Eucharistic Heart of Jesus."
Consecration to the Immaculate Heart is the sure way to communion with
the Eucharistic Heart, since her heart is the one who knows the secret
for the most intimate union with the Heart of Jesus. She will always
lead us to a greater love and communion with Her Son. She directs us to
adore him, contemplate him, and she has been entrusted with the mission to
reproduce in us the features of the Heart of Jesus. She will always
lead us to the Son. In Fatima, on October 13th 1917, humanity was
granted a great gift: the miracle of the sun. That day, announced by our
Lady, the Lord manifested a miracle for everyone to see.
Heavy rain covered the area, and the pilgrims had to walk through puddles of
mud and in a cloudy and foggy atmosphere. It had rained the whole night
and in that cold and dark day the Lord manifested his
presence and his power. Suddenly, after the Blessed Mother pointed
upward, the sun became visible to all and took the form of a host. It
began to spin and pulsate towards the crowd; it seem like if it was
coming down with its intense fire to burn the earth. It approached the
earth, and those assembled there were frightened and did not understand what
was happening. They feared the fire that was approaching, but as it came
towards them, everything became dry, and the day was transformed from
darkness into light, from coldness into warmth. This miracle of the sun
was a sign of what the Eucharistic Heart wants to do in our present
generation.
“We must conquer the world and win each individual soul, now, and in the
future, to the end of time for the Immaculate, and by her for the Sacred
Heart of Jesus.” Through the Immaculate Heart of the Blessed Mother, we
are being led to the Eucharistic Heart of Jesus, the burning furnace of
love, for our hearts to be transformed in living hosts, living witness
to love and of self oblation. Let us bring to our civilization the power
that conquers evil: Do not forget love!
Back to Main Page of Mother's
Teachings>>>