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Eucharistic Adoration: Reviving An Ancient Tradition
Valerie Schmalz
October 3, 2005
"The Church draws her life from the Eucharist." - Opening sentence of
Ecclesia de Eucharistia, Pope John Paul II’s encyclical on the Eucharist
FLORRISANT, Missouri | For ten years, at about 3 a.m. twice a week, Delphie
Russell would close down BJ’s Tavern, her family’s restaurant and bar in this
suburb of St. Louis, and pop into St. Ferdinand Catholic Church for an hour or
two of Eucharistic adoration.
"It really was perfect for me," Mrs. Russell said. "If I had to work, I was out
of the bar by 2:30 and I could always do the 3 a.m. I did Mondays and Thursdays.
Because we owned a saloon, I never went to bed until the saloon closed, whether
I went to work or not."
St. Ferdinand’s has had perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrament in the
convent
chapel next door for 23 years, with thousands of people through the years
committing to spend an hour or more a week keeping Our Lord company, said Ann
Linkul, St. Ferdinand’s coordinator of adoration. It all began when two
parishioners, Ed and Blanche Rowles attended a Eucharistic Congress in
Philadelphia more than 25 years ago, Mrs. Rowles recalled.
"Archbishop Fulton Sheen was there and he gave this powerful homily on the
benefits of making a Holy Hour. He sold my husband so much that on his own he
got permission from our pastor," got a key to the church, and began spending an
hour in adoration before the 6 a.m. Mass each day, she said. Sheen, who made a
promise at his ordination to spend an hour a day in a Holy Hour, was a strong
advocate of Eucharistic adoration.
In 1982, when the Rowles’ pastor gave them permission to see if they could
muster interest for perpetual adoration at St. Ferdinand’s, 650 people signed
up, Mrs. Rowles said.
St. Ferdinand is part of the
Archdiocese of St. Louis, which is remarkable
for experiencing a surge in Eucharistic Adoration that now includes almost every
church in the diocese, according to George Knollmeyer, a member of the
archdiocesan committee on Eucharistic adoration.
Eucharistic adoration is a long-standing Catholic tradition that fell into
disuse in most quarters after Vatican II despite the council’s emphasis on the
Eucharist as the "source and summit of life" (Lumen Gentium 11; cf.
Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1324) in its discussions and writings.
During the first part of the twentieth century, it was common for Catholics,
young and old, on their way home from work or school, en route to the grocery
store or a sports practice, to "stop in for a visit" to the Blessed Sacrament in
their local church. Most times the Eucharist was not exposed, but a red
candle–then, as now–showed the Presence in the tabernacle.
With a rise in crime, more closed churches, an increasingly hurried and harried
society, and a different approach to Mass and the Eucharist, the practice
drifted away.
However, Eucharistic adoration is returning around the country, says a priest
who for the past sixteen years has helped parishes set it up. Father Robert
Goedert, O.P. works with Chicago-based
The Real Presence Association, an organization
devoted to spreading the practice of quiet time before the exposed Eucharist on
the altar. "I’m booked now through December" in places from Texas to California
and Colorado, Father Goedert told IgnatiusInsight.com.
Father Rob Panke, who works with young adults in Washington, D.C., agrees that
adoration is showing up in niches around the country, including in his hometown
of Scarsdale, N.Y. where his mother has successfully established Perpetual
adoration.
"Adoration is making a comeback. I think it is just the desire of the Lord,"
said Father Panke, founder of a monthly young adults adoration group Christ in
the City [http://www.usccb.org/generationchrist/maniatis.shtml] at St. Patrick’s
Church in Washington, D.C, and director of priest vocations for the D.C.
archdiocese.
Father Panke said his group, founded about two years ago, now has 300 people on
its list, with 125 attending at the most recent second Thursday. The group has
branched out, helping others, going on hikes and even pilgrimages.
"It’s really popular. People really come," Father Panke said. "I do believe
special graces are given to those who have a devotion to Our Lord in the Blessed
Sacrament. It makes all our hearts a little softer and many graces are won."
"The basis for all Eucharistic devotion is the fact that Christ in the Blessed
Sacrament is the Son of God in human form," wrote the late
Father John Hardon, S.J.,
founder of The Real Presence Association. Visiting with Jesus in the Blessed
Sacrament, exposed or within the Tabernacle, is an opportunity for grace, Fr.
Hardon writes: "Provided we approach the Real Presence with believing love,
Christ will perform wonders of His grace in our lives."
Eucharistic adoration
began in some form early in Church history but it was clearly promoted by a
succession of popes beginning in the Middle Ages, including Pope Urban IV who
established the Feast of Corpus Christi in the 13th century and Pope
Pope Clement VIII who in 1592 instituted 40 Hours Devotion. In present times,
Pope Paul VI issued a doctrinal analysis of the Eucharist in his 1965 encyclical
Mysterium Fidei in
1965 and in 2003 Pope John Paul II published
Ecclesia De Eucharistia,
which will be the basis of much of the discussion at the October 2-23, 2005
Bishops’ Synod in Rome.
The 11th Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops will have
as its topic "The Eucharist: Source and Summit of the Life and Mission of the
Church." Among the topics included in Instrumentum Laboris, issued in
preparation for the Synod, is that of Eucharist Adoration, which it states
belongs both within the Mass and also outside of Mass.
John L. Allen, Jr., reporter for the National Catholic Reporter, notes
that a 1993 Gallup poll found only thirty percent of Catholics believe they are
receiving the body and blood of Christ in communion.
"Many Vatican officials, bishops and liturgical activists believe that in the
reforms that followed the Second Vatican Council (1962-65), which tended to
emphasize the role of the worshipping community and the dimension of the Mass as
a meal, this core teaching has been to some extent eclipsed," wrote Allen in a
recent edition of his popular
The Word from Rome column
(September 30, 2005).
Going to Mass comes first, says Father Panke, "Adoration flows from the
sacrifice of the Mass, that’s where we get the Eucharist–through the sacrifice
of the Mass."
Real Presence’s Father Goedert says many parishes can manage a certain number of
hours of adoration rather than Perpetual adoration. The key is having accessible
times, Father Goedert said. For instance, many parishes will try to have it only
during the day–a time that doesn’t work for most working people or parents with
small children.
"Any pastor will tell you, once they get adoration going, it definitely
increases attendance, weekdays and Sundays," Father Goedert said. "Some people
who have a problem with adoration say it will take people away from Mass. That’s
nonsense. All the facts show that people who start going to adoration start
going to Mass more and. There’s no competition. It’s the same Lord."
Father Panke agrees: "I think what can intimidate pastors is Perpetual
adoration. I am a firm believer in starting small; start with one hour a week."
Many say vocations and Mass attendance can increase with adoration.
"All of those fellows who have entered the seminaries in the last five years–I
would be willing to say a huge number have told me they found their vocation
through Eucharistic adoration," Father Goedert said. "Because they are there
alone with the Lord, there are no distractions. It’s a very personal visit with
the Lord: somehow the Lord speaks to them."
A devotion to the Blessed Sacrament underlies some cloistered religious orders,
including the
Order of Poor Clare Nuns of Perpetual Adoration,
the
Maronite Monks of Adoration,
and the
Holy Adoration Sisters.
Since 1995, a concerted push has been underway in the St. Louis Archdiocese,
begun by then-Archbishop Justin Rigali (now
Cardinal of Philadelphia
and an elected representative to the Synod underway in Rome) and continued by
Archbishop Raymond Burke,
said Knollmeyer.
When it started in 1995, there were about nine parishes with Perpetual adoration
and "twenty or so with an organized approach to Eucharistic adoration,"
Knollmeyer said. Now there are 23 Perpetual adoration parishes and most of the
archdiocese’s 200 parishes have organized Adoration at some point during the
week, he said.
St. Louis-based Covenant Network radio stations are dedicated to evangelizing
the Catholic faith "through the grace we receive from Our Lord in the Blessed
Sacrament," said Tony Holman, president of
Covenant Network. The network is dedicated to
the Real Presence and includes sevens stations and five translators from the
Dakotas to Indiana, Missouri, and Illinois.
In the
Instrumentum Laboris
issued in advance of the Synod, the topic of Eucharistic adoration is addressed
as one of the ways to restore a sense of Christ’s presence in the Eucharist to
the faithful. Coming on the heels of Pope John Paul II’s encyclical on the
Eucharist, it emphasizes the Eucharist’s centrality to the Church. The document
focuses particularly on how the faithful understand the Eucharist and proper
action in regard to it.
"The Eucharist is a priceless treasure: by not only celebrating it but also by
praying before it outside of Mass, we are enabled to make contact with the very
wellspring of grace," wrote Pope John Paul II in Ecclesia de Eucharistia.
In that document, Pope John Paul II also noted that the liturgical reform
inaugurated by Vatican II "has greatly contributed to a more conscious, active
and fruitful participation in the Holy Sacrifice of the Altar on the part of the
faithful."
He added, "In many places, adoration of the Blessed Sacrament is also an
important daily practice and becomes an inexhaustible source of holiness….
Unfortunately, alongside these lights, there are also shadows. In some
places the practice of Eucharistic adoration has been almost completely
abandoned."
John Paul II wrote that it was the responsibility of pastors to encourage the
practice of Eucharistic adoration "and exposition of the Blessed Sacrament in
particular."
In his writings as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger,
Pope Benedict XVI also
emphasizes the significance of Eucharistic adoration as part of the life of the
Church. In his book God Is Near Us: The Eucharist, the Heart of Life, for
instance, Pope Benedict XVI says: "Only within the breathing space of adoration
can the Eucharistic celebration indeed be alive …Communion and adoration do not
stand side by side, or even in opposition, but are indivisibly one."
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