The Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ – C
June 22, 2025
Our Lady of Grace Parish, Parkton
“Took, Blessed, Broke, and Gave”
In a few minutes, I will stand here at the altar and lead the Eucharistic Prayer.
I will repeat some words that we have heard many times. The prayer says that Jesus “took the bread, blessed it, broke it and gave it to his disciples.”
This morning, I want to focus on those four action words. Jesus “took, blessed, broke, and gave.”
And I want to do in a slightly different way. What I am thinking is that we have also been takenand blessed, broken and given.
We Are Taken and Blessed
First, we are taken and blessed.
I remember when I was growing up in the Northwood community of Baltimore City, we would often organize our own baseball games on a field in the neighborhood. Each time we did this, two of us would be the managers of the teams and we would take turns choosing players from among the guys who were there.
Well, it was a big deal to be taken or chosen first. It meant that you were a good player and it was a real ego-booster.
Thank God, almost always, everyone was taken. No one was left out.
Well, the first thing we have to realize in the spiritual life is that God has taken and blessedeach one of us. God has spoken over us the same words that the Father speaks over Jesus at his baptism: “You are my beloved son. You are my beloved daughter.”
In this, God transforms us. In and through Jesus, God makes us valued and worthy.
This is so important as our foundation for life. In our world, value and worth are often conditioned on being a good student or a good athlete or successful in our job and on it goes.
But Jesus assures us that God has already taken and blessed each one of us. Everyone is valued and made worthy by God.
What a wonderful sense of self and what a strong personal grounding this is for life! We are taken and blessed by God.
We Are Broken and Given
And then, we are broken and given.
Here we have to understand the word broken a bit differently. Jesus has not broken us.
Instead, he wants us to realize that we are broken. Each one of us is broken in at least some way.
This is true first of all because we are all human. We are incomplete in our own humanity and we are restless for the wholeness that only God can give.
We may also feel broken for any number of other reasons: because of some trauma that has happened to us, because of some physical or emotional disability, because of some sin we have committed and now regret, or because our family is split apart. We may feel broken for lots of reasons.
Jesus wants us to be aware of our brokenness. And then, with that awareness, we can be given.
We can be given or give of ourselves caringly to others who also have some brokenness. Maybe a family member or friend who just needs a listening ear, or someone who is sick or anxious or lonely or grieving, or those who come to Our Daily Bread in Baltimore for a hot meal.
The important thing is that we are to be given or to give of ourselves authentically. We will do this because we remain humbly aware that we too have some brokenness.
This is why at the Last Supper, Jesus coupled the giving of the Eucharist with the washing of the feet. He wanted us to know that the Eucharist empowers us to be given, to give of our ourselves for one another.
Conclusion
So, Jesus “took, blessed, broke, and gave.”
He gives us his own body and blood to nourish and strengthen us on our journey. And he wants us to be aware that we also are taken and blessed, broken and given.