By David Martin
On June 23, the Feast of
Corpus Christi, Pope Francis in his Sunday Mass sermon made what appeared to be an explicitly
heretical statement. Speaking on the Holy Eucharist, he said:
"In the presence of the Eucharist, Jesus who becomes
bread, this simple bread that contains the entire reality of the Church [Christ], let us
learn to bless all that we have, to praise God, to bless and not curse all that
has led us to this moment, and to speak words of encouragement to others."
The theological fact is that Jesus
does not "become bread," but vice-versa. To say that Jesus becomes
bread implies that Jesus changes and becomes something else, i.e. bread, so that
only the substance of bread is present in the consecrated Host. This is what
Protestants believe.
The truth is that during the Sacrifice of the Mass, the "simple bread" ceases and becomes Christ, so that only the substance of Christ is present. As such, the bread cannot “contain” Christ because the bread is not there to contain Him. This is why the physical properties of the consecrated Host are called the accidents or sacred species, because cessation of the bread occurs during the consecration of the Mass.
By saying that the bread
"contains" Jesus, Francis is also promoting consubstantiation, the
coexistence of two substances together, i.e. Jesus and bread, which is what
Luther taught and which the Church condemns.
Francis
says that “in the presence of the Eucharist,” we should “learn to bless all
that we have.” Shall we
bless our adultery too as proposed in Amoris Laetitia? What about learning to renounce all and to bless
only God? Shouldn't the entire Church be on its knees before Christ?
Refuses to Kneel
As
always, Francis did not kneel before the Blessed Sacrament at this year’s
Corpus Christi procession, but stood between the kneeler and the altar,
ignoring the kneeler. He refuses to bend a knee to his God, yet he otherwise
loves kneeling, especially in front of migrants, prisoners, homosexuals or
politicians. https://gloria.tv/article/unpToENcSRiQ32Fkn42hLsEGW
Quake Jolts Rome
Not surprisingly, an earthquake shook the city of Rome a few hours after Francis’ address. Italy’s Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV) put the preliminary magnitude at 3.7. The European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre put the magnitude slightly higher, at 3.9.
Was this a sign from God? Was The
Lord expressing His indignation over Francis’ error?