Eucharist means Thanksgiving This week our entire nation will celebrate the holiday of Thanksgiving, and as American Catholics we not only give thanks for the founding of our nation, but we are also reminded that the word Eucharist means “Thanksgiving.” Jesus instituted the Eucharist the night before he died at the Last Supper. He took bread and gave thanks to God saying, “Do this in memory of me.” We are commanded to remember the supreme love of Christ for us that holds nothing back, that gives everything for our freedom. So naturally the sacrificial banquet of remembrance is called the Eucharist, or “thanksgiving.” The priest introduces the great central prayer of the celebration with these words: “let us give thanks to the Lord our God.” And we respond “it is right to give him thanks and praise.”
But true thanksgiving is not just a matter of words and warm sentiments. Gratitude for a gift means offering a gift in return. He gave his whole, entire self to us–his body, blood, soul, divinity. The only adequate response would be to offer ourselves. Note what Paul says in his letter to the Romans: “I appeal to you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship” (Rom 12:1). In the Mass we are asked to give ourselves to Christ… our hopes, fears, sorrows and joys. We are asked to come to his table just as we are, receive his sacrifice of love and give our lives to him as a sacrifice of love in return. So thanksgiving cannot be separated from sacrifice.
The Mass is a celebration of his love and the freedom it won for us through his sacrifice. Through it, the love of God is poured into our hearts and enables us to love with his love. In the power of that love, we offer ourselves back to him and enter into that sacrifice which we celebrate. True thanksgiving means self-giving. This is the meaning of Eucharist.
A Thanksgiving Prayer: Jesus Christ, on this Thanksgiving Day, we offer you thanks and praise for the sacrifice you made for the salvation of humanity. Help us to be truly thankful for the gift of your sacrifice and to offer our lives in return as a living sacrifice to you in all we do. Penetrate our hearts through the sacrament of the Holy Eucharist and transform us into your holy people. Teach us to be saints and be thankful for all the precious gifts you have given us. Amen.
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