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Corpus Christi Catholic Church, Maiden Lane

Corpus Christi Catholic Church, Maiden Lane

The Shrine of the Blessed Sacrament

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Posted on 29 June 2018 by blessedsacramentsodality

Newsletter – 13th Sunday in Ordinary Time 2018

Newsletter – 13th Sunday in Ordinary Time 2018

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Our Location

1-5 Maiden Lane
Covent Garden
London
WC2E 7NB
020 7836 4700
Registered Charity No. 233699

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Sodality of the Blessed Sacrament

Corpus Christi is the home of the Sodality of the Blessed Sacrament - a Catholic Confraternity devoted to the worship of Jesus Christ, truly present in the Most Blessed Sacrament. Find out more and sign up today!

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Through the sacrament of the Eucharist Jesus draws the faithful into his "hour;" he shows us the bond that he willed to establish between himself and us, between his own person and the Church. Indeed, in the sacrifice of the Cross, Christ gave birth to the Church as his Bride and his body.
It is fundamental for our faith and for our Christian witness to proclaim the Resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth as a real, historical event, attested by many authoritative witnesses. We assert this forcefully because, in our day too, there are plenty of people who seek to deny its historicity, reducing the Gospel narrative to a myth, to a "vision" of the Apostles, taking up and presenting old and already worn-out theories as new and scientific.
We are living in a context in which Christianity is presented as the faith which has accompanied the journey of many peoples down the ages even through persecutions and harsh trials. The many testimonies that have spread everywhere are an eloquent expression of this faith: churches, works of art, hospitals, libraries and schools; the actual environment of our cities, of the countryside and the mountains, is everywhere spangled with references to Christ.
Today, the Third Sunday of Easter, in the Gospel according to Luke we meet the Risen Jesus who presents himself to the disciples who, startled and incredulous, think they are seeing a ghost. Romano Guardini wrote: “the Lord has changed. He does not live as he lived previously. His existence cannot be understood. And yet it is corporeal, it encompasses... the whole of the life he lived, the destiny he passed through, his Passion and his death. Everything is reality. It may have changed but it is still tangible reality”.
Last Sunday’s tribute to HRH Prince Philip at the end of Mass: Nimrod by Edward Elgar. Requiescat in pace.
Today as in the past, the hope of eternal life is what being baptized, becoming Christians, is all about: it is not just an act of socialization within the community, not simply a welcome into the Church. The parents expect more for the one to be baptized: they expect that faith, which includes the corporeal nature of the Church and her sacraments, will give life to their child—eternal life. Faith is the substance of hope.
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