In the real
world, the feast of Corpus Christi, honoring the
Blessed Sacrament, takes place this year on May
26, the Thursday after Trinity Sunday; in the
United States it is deferred until the following
Sunday. Dating from the 13th century, when a Belgian
mystic, Bl. Juliana de Cornillon had a series
of visions in which Christ called for a special
feast day in honor of His Eucharistic Body, its
most notable keynote has been, after the principal
Mass of the day, an outdoor procession.
Centering on a priest carrying an exposed host
in a monstrance, who in turn was shielded from
the elements by a rich canopy carried by four
men (each holding one of the canopy’s poles),
the procession always included a large number
of priests. Joining them, however would be soldiers,
members of the local civil authority (including,
if it took place in a capital, the local monarch:
the Austrian Emperor and the Kings of France,
Spain, Portugal, Naples, Sardinia, and Poland
all proudly took their places --- often carrying
one of the canopy poles themselves), civic associations,
and all sorts of other groups.
So popular did these processions become, that
within two centuries they were to be found in
almost every parish in Catholic Europe, from Sweden
to Sicily, and from Ireland to Poland. They became
ever more elaborate, and in addition to the cast
just notice, in many places acquired floats illustrating
biblical or doctrinal themes. It is not hard to
figure out why our ancestors so loved them. First
and foremost, the processions honored the Real
Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist. Then, of course,
bringing Him out of the church building and into
the streets or countryside signified His rule
over the outside world --- that He is not simply
confined to the church. The presence of all elements
of society, from the top to the bottom showed
both their common subjection to Him and their
essential unity that He brings about. Moreover,
publicly honoring the Blessed Sacrament was a
way of making reparation for all the many sins
of the community, both corporate and individual.
Just as unsurprisingly, the enemies of the Faith
have deeply loathed an observance that so completely
underlines doctrines they hate. At the Reformation,
from England to Germany and Scandinavia, the processions
were ruthlessly suppressed. In what remained of
Catholic Europe and in Latin America, anti-clerical
or revolutionary governments took similar actions
from time to time. Indeed, whether or not a government
suppressed Corpus Christi was a very good barometer
of where it stood as regards the Faith. Today,
in lands where the Corpus Christi processions
are still permitted, the secular governments often
try to limit official participation in them, such
as when the Irish government forbade their soldiers
to march in 2000. Such post-Catholic regimes pride
themselves on being “secular,” “modern,”
or “multi-cultural.”
But it is not simply ignorant or nasty politicians
who hate Corpus Christi. Since Vatican II, in
many countries, a falling off of belief among
Catholics themselves led to a decline in the number
of processions. In diocese after diocese, they
became a thing of the past, alongside Benediction,
Adoration, and the Forty Hours. Several generations
of Catholics in many areas grew up without any
knowledge of such things, and their faith suffered
as a result. It is no coincidence that, according
to Gallup, only 30% of American Catholics believe
that Jesus Christ is really and truly present
in the Blessed Sacrament.
This has not gone unnoticed in Rome. During the
Jubilee Year of 2000, John Paul II called for
the return of the Corpus Christ Procession, which
call was heeded in a number of places. He reiterated
this plea when opening the Year of the Eucharist
in 2004. Benedict XVI not only repeated this call,
but revived the Papal Corpus Christi procession
himself, leading it from his cathedral of St.
John Lateran to the Basilica of St. Mary Major.
I myself marched in the procession several times,
in the German city of Aachen, capital of Charlemagne.
In addition to the Bishop with the Host, and a
crowd of priests and religious, the marchers included
the mayor and city council, the local hunting
fraternities in their green costumes and plumed
hats, the local student fraternities in their
hussar-style uniforms, and several bands. It was
a wonderful affirmation of the Kingship and Real
Presence of Christ, the unity of the people, and
their connection with Catholics everywhere.
If you are fortunate to live near a place where
such an activity is conducted, by all means participate.
If not, ask your priest to organize it for next
year. In a society where the murder of the unborn
and the starvation of such as Terry Schiavo is
gleefully smiled on by the courts; where the so-called
conservative party in Congress has committed itself
to the destruction of embryos; where the sacrament
of marriage is routinely profaned by divorce,
artificial contraception, shacking up, and homosexual
“unions;” where the poor count for
nothing and wealth is all --- we need much more
than our share of reparation. The Corpus Christi
procession at once shows our belief in Christ’s
Real Presence and acts as a stern and tangible
rebuke to the powers that be --- something they
need a good deal of. |