First Holy Communion 2023
Children in year 3 or above prepare to receive the greatest gift: the Body and Blood of Jesus in Holy Communion.
Our Parents Meeting takes place on Weds 16th November when full details shall be supplied regarding the programme that begins in January 2023.
Receiving Holy Communion
May I receive Holy Communion more than once on the same day?
Yes. We may go to Holy Communion twice on the same day, as long as the second time is within Mass.
How often should I receive?
The Church now encourages us to receive as often as we can; daily if possible (Catechism 1389). At the very least, we are obliged to receive Holy Communion once a year, preferably around the time of Easter.
Do I still need to fast before receiving Holy Communion?
Yes. In the past Catholics had to fast from midnight. Now we need to abstain from all food and drink for only one hour beforehand, although we can still drink water and take medicine. This one hour fast does not apply to the sick in their homes or hospital, or those who must care for them.
What happens if I miss Sunday Mass or Mass on a Holyday of Obligation? Do I still need to go to Mass every Sunday? Isn’t once or twice a month enough?
Occasionally we miss Mass because we are ill, or we have to care for someone else who is ill, or we have another serious reason for not participating in Sunday Mass, or Mass on a Holy Day of Obligation. Of course on these occasions we would not be sinning and so the next time we come to Mass we will be able to receive Holy Communion.
The Eucharist is not merely an instrument for the giving of grace — here is the actual Giver of grace Himself, Jesus Christ our Lord truly and personally present
A Giving of Thanks
The sacrament of Christ's Body and Blood has had many names in the course of Christian history.
Such names as Bread of Angels, Lord's Supper, and Sacrament of the Altar are familiar to us. (The Catechism's section on the Eucharist explains several of these common names.)
But the name which has endured from the very beginning, the name which the Church officially gives to this sacrament, is that of Holy Eucharist.
This name is taken from the Bible's accounts of the institution of the Holy Eucharist. They tell us that at the Last Supper, Jesus "gave thanks" as He took the bread and wine into His hands. And so from the Greek word eucharistia which means "a giving of thanks" we have the name of our sacrament: the Holy Eucharist.
Sacrifice and Sacrament
The catechism points out that the Holy Eucharist is both a sacrifice and a sacrament.
As a sacrifice the Holy Eucharist is the Mass. The Mass is that divine action in which Jesus, through the agency of the human priest, changes the bread and wine into His own Body and Blood and continues through time the offering which He made to God on Calvary-the offering of Himself for mankind.
It is at the consecration of the Mass that the sacrament of the Holy Eucharist comes into being (or is "confected" as the theologians say). It is then that Jesus becomes present under the appearance of bread and wine. As long as the appearances of bread and wine remain, Jesus remains present and the sacrament of the Holy Eucharist continues to there exist. The act by which we receive the Holy Eucharist is called Holy Communion.
We might say that the Mass is the "making" of the Holy Eucharist and Holy Communion is the receiving of the Holy Eucharist. In between the two, the sacrament of the Holy Eucharist continues to exist (as in the tabernacle) whether we receive it or not.
Body and Blood of Christ
St. John's Gospel (chapter 6) tells us of that day in the town of Capernaum when Jesus made the almost unbelievable promise that He would give His own Flesh and Blood to be the food of our souls. On the night before he died, Jesus at the Last Supper (and the priest at Mass) said, "This is My Body," over the bread, and "This is My Blood," over the wine.
We believe that the substance of the bread completely and totally ceased to exist, and that the substance of Christ's own Body replaced the annihilated substance of the bread. We believe that the wine entirely ceased to exist as wine, and that the substance of Christ's own Blood replaced the wine. This change is called Transubstantiation.
We also believe that Jesus, by His almighty power as God, preserved the appearances of bread and wine, in spite of the fact that their substances were gone.
Appearance and Substance
By "the appearances" of bread and wine we mean all those outward forms and accidentals which can be perceived in any way by our bodily senses of sight, touch, taste, hearing and smelling.
The Holy Eucharist still looks like bread and wine, feels like bread and wine, tastes like bread and wine, smells like bread and wine, and if broken or splashed would sound like bread and wine. Even under a microscope or under electronic or radiological examination, it still would be only the qualities of bread and wine that we could perceive.
It is a miracle, of course; a continuing miracle wrought a hundred thousand times a day in the Mass by God's infinite power.
This miracle requires the right material things to work through, as do all of the sacraments. The valid matter for the Eucharist is wheat bread and grape wine. This is the same matter that Jesus himself used at the Last Supper; therefore it is the matter which the priest must use to make Christ's sacramental action present to us in the Mass.
Jesus Whole and Entire
The Eucharist contains the Real Presence of Jesus: it's the real Jesus-he is truly present, Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity.
He is simultaneously present in every single Sacred Host on every altar throughout the world, and under the appearance of wine in every single Consecrated Chalice wherever Mass is being offered. Moreover Jesus is present, whole and entire, in every part of every Sacred Host, and in every drop contained in the Consecrated Chalice.
This is why such care is taken at Mass in handling not only the consecrated Body and Blood, but also the empty chalice, the sacred linens used at the altar, and anything else that comes in contact with the consecrated Eucharistic species.
The Eucharist Requires the Priesthood
At the Last Supper Jesus changed bread and wine into his own Body and Blood.
At the same time He commanded His apostles to repeat this same sacred action in time to come. "Do this in remembrance of Me," was the solemn charge which Jesus gave to the Apostles.
Obviously Jesus does not command the impossible; consequently with this command went also the necessary power, the power to change bread and wine into His Body and Blood. With the words, "Do this in remembrance of Me," Jesus made His Apostles priests.
A separate article will discuss the Mass as a sacrifice. Here we merely wish to indicate that it is at Mass that the change of bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ takes place.
It takes place when the priest, making himself the free and willing instrument in the hands of Christ, pronounces over the bread and wine Christ's own words, "This is My Body," and "This is the Chalice of My Blood." Standing at the altar as the visible representative of Jesus and pronouncing Jesus' own words, the human priest "triggers" as it were the infinite power of Jesus, Who at that instant becomes present under the appearances of the bread and wine.
It is in these words-"the words of Consecration" as they are called-that the essence of the Mass resides.
The Real Residence Remains
Once the bread and wine have been changed into the Body and Blood of the Lord Jesus, our Savior remains present as long as the appearances of bread and wine remain intact.
When, after Holy Communion, our digestive processes have destroyed the appearance of bread within us, Jesus no longer is bodily present; only His grace remains.
In other words Jesus is present in the Holy Eucharist, not just during Mass, but as long as the Sacred Hosts consecrated at Mass continue to retain the appearance of bread. This means that we owe to the Holy Eucharist the adoration which is due to God, since the Holy Eucharist contains the Son of God Himself.
We adore the Holy Eucharist with the type of worship which may be given only to God. Every Catholic church has a tabernacle upon the altar. The tabernacle (from the Latin word tabernaculum, meaning "tent") is a cupboard-like safe. It is marked by a burning light called the tabernacle lamp. Following an ancient tradition, it is often covered with a veil as an indication of the holiness of the place.
Inside the tabernacle Jesus Christ is present-really and substantially present in the Eucharist.
Christ's presence truly makes our churches the "house of the living God" (1 Tim 3:15). That is why we maintain a respectful silence while in the church building: to show our respect and reverence of Christ himself.
The presence of Jesus in the tabernacle also makes the tabernacle an excellent place of private prayer. Even spending just a few minutes sitting quietly in church, contemplating the presence of Christ in the tabernacle or reading from the Gospels, is a commendable practice that greatly aids in spiritual growth.