Friday, June 5, 2026

The Feast of Corpus Christi, June 4, 2026


The Rev. Matthew Wright

The Feast of Corpus Christi

Holy Cross Monastery, June 4, 2026


When you stare at the sun—which I don’t recommend doing, it’s bad for your eyes—or when you look at any bright light for a period of time, and then look away at something else, you see for a little while what’s called an “afterimage” now overlayed on whatever else you’re now looking at—which is caused by overloaded photoreceptors in your eyes.

I think this is a good metaphor for what happens to our spiritual eye as we gaze at the Eucharist in worship week after week—or, here in the Monastery, day after day—as the host and chalice are raised at the Great Elevation—or, perhaps, when we sit in the presence of the Eucharist within the tabernacle or placed in a monstrance during Benediction or Adoration.

We gaze at the Eucharist so that we may then see its afterimage wherever we look—not simply as an overlay, but as the Real Presence of Our Lord as the true inner reality of each person and each moment.  And while gazing at the sun can damage our sight, gazing at our Lord’s presence in the Eucharist perfects our sight—it shows us things as they really are.  The Holy Eucharist is a sacramental mirror reflecting back to us the true nature of reality, the true nature of ourselves, the true nature of creation.

As most of you will have noticed, in parish worship, the “Eucharistic elements,” the gifts of bread and wine, are typically brought up to the altar from the back of the church, from within the congregation, at the time of the offertory.  And this is because they are the gifts of the people, symbolizing our life and our labor.  Once upon a time, they would have actually been the gifts of the people—bread baked and wine fermented by members of the community.  The grapes would have been tread in the wine press by the feet of someone in those pews, the wheat gathered and milled by one of us, the dough prepared and baked by hands that were present.  And within the bread and wine are of course the grapes and wheat, and in them the sunshine and earth, wind and rain—really, all of creation.  

The Vietnamese Zen Buddhist monk, of blessed memory, Thich Nhat Hanh once wrote, “When I hold a piece of bread, [and look] deeply into [it], I see the sunshine, the clouds, the great earth. Without the sunshine, no wheat can grow.  Without the clouds, there is no rain for the wheat to grow. Without the great earth, nothing can grow.”  Inside one piece of bread, the whole universe is present.

The Eucharistic elements are the stuff of creation, transformed by human labor and love, and then given to be alchemized further still—to be transformed into a sacramental mirror revealing to us who we really are.  We, the Body of Christ, gaze at and then receive into ourselves, the Body of Christ.  In the words of St. Augustine, in the Eucharist we behold what we are.  In every Eucharist we offer, in miniature, in microcosm, in our gifts of bread and wine, our whole community, and really the whole of creation, to be consecrated as the Body of Christ.

We’re taking the whole universe and placing it on that altar in every Eucharist.  And we’re taking our whole selves and placing them on that altar.  We give it all to God, and at the epiclesis and the elevation the alchemy is completed and revealed—and we are shown what we have, in fact, given; we are shown who we, in fact, are.  And it is a staggering revelation.  Behold what you are.  Christ incarnate, in the stuff of our lives, in the stuff of creation.  We look in the mirror, we see the truth.  And then it is broken and given back to us.  We receive that truth into ourselves—into our cells.  And then we are sent out into the world to see the world as it truly is.

But we don’t simply see an afterimage superimposed on reality.  No, the Eucharist trains the eye of our heart to see things from the inside out, to see the actual Eucharistic nature of creation and of every being.  About ten years ago this was brought home to me in a powerful way.  I was in British Colombia to lead a retreat and on the way to the retreat center my host asked, “Would you like to see the salmon spawning?”  As it turned out, we would be driving by a river where the salmon run was active, and the spawning season was now almost over.

Well, I had pictures of fish jumping upstream before.  And, honestly, I wasn’t that interested in seeing it in person—I was tired from a long plane flight and wanted to be done—but ever accommodating, out of my mouth came, “Sure.  Why not?”  So we parked the car, walked through a trail in the woods, and as we rounded a bend in the trees, the river emerged, and there they were—the few remaining salmon still making the journey—throwing themselves against the current as they worked their way back to the place of their birth—and they looked utterly exhausted, like it was taking every tired fiber of their being to continue onward.  And a few were finally settling into a spot to lay their eggs.  And others were clearly dying.  And as I looked I saw scattered all along the riverbanks—corpses.  Hundreds and hundreds of salmon corpses.

And then I realized that the air, in fact, reeked of dead salmon, and all around us were wings flapping as gulls came down and tore flesh from these dead salmon and plucked out their eyes.  And as I stood there taking in this whole scene, to my utter surprise, and with a fierceness and a tenderness that pierced me to the bone, I heard the voice of Christ speaking through this whole gestalt, “This is my Body, given for you.”  The few remaining, living salmon, throwing themselves against the current, saying to their future young—“This is my body, given for you.”  Those who had finished the journey and were now dying—“This is my body, given for you.”  Those now days dead, as their flesh was torn by the gulls—“This is my body, given for you.”

I realized I was standing smack-dab in the middle of a living icon of the Eucharistic universe; that this is what Christ, exhausted and inexhaustible, is saying through every facet of creation: “This is my body, given for you.”  But mostly we do not have eyes to see.  And so we gaze at the Eucharist, and we receive the Eucharist, day after day, and week after week, to train our spiritual eye, to show us things as they really are.  So that we might meet each being and each moment as an encounter with the Real Presence of Christ.  Too often we have understood the mystery of Christ’s Body as merely ecclesial or institutional.  But the true proportions of the Mystical Body of Christ are the unfathomable dimensions of the universe itself.

“I am the bread of life,” Jesus says in our Gospel reading.  The bread… that is life… is Jesus.  “…unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you.”  Do we hide from life, or do we let it in?  Paula D’Arcy says that “God comes to you disguised as your life.”  Your life is the bread that is Jesus.  Do you allow it to be broken open?  Do you receive it and say Amen to it?  To see our life, and the life of the world, as the Eucharist that it is, as bearing the Real and Living Presence of Christ, we have to train our eye.  And that is why we need to gaze into the mirror that is lifted up daily at this altar.

Now I have mentioned gazing upon the Eucharist a few times, and it is, of course, common practice in many communities on the Feast of Corpus Christi to gaze upon a Eucharistic host in a monstrance and even to process with it around a church or through the streets.  Well, those of you who know your 39 Articles will know that in Article 25 we are told that “The Sacraments were not ordained of Christ to be gazed upon, or to be carried about, but that we should duly use them.”

I typically don’t worry much about this.  I tend to say, “Well, you know, the 39 Articles were relegated to the historical documents section of the Prayer Book for a reason.”  But it’s true that the sacrament was not ordained by Christ merely to be gazed upon.  Similarly, my marriage to Yanick was not ordained simply for me to gaze upon her.  And yet, it can be profitable at times to simply gaze upon our Beloved.  To rest in their presence.  To receive their beauty.  To adore them, without agenda.

John MacQuarrie writes of the Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament: “It is in terms of this focusing of our Lord’s presence that the service of Benediction is to be understood — and also justified, if anyone thinks it needs justifying. Psychologically speaking, we need some concrete, visible manifestation toward which to direct our devotion; theologically speaking, this is already provided for us by our Lord’s gracious focusing of his presence in the Blessed Sacrament.

“When this is understood, complaints about ‘idolatry’ or ‘fetichism’ are seen to be beside the point. Let us assure any who may be perturbed over such matters that we are not being so stupid as to worship a wafer, nor do we have such an archaic and myth-laden mentality that we believe the object before us to be charged with magical power.  Rather, it is in and through the Sacrament that we adore Christ, because we, being men and not angels, have need of an earthly manifestation of the divine presence, and because he, in his grace and mercy, has promised to grant us his presence in this particular manifestation.”

Similarly, Fr. Robert Hendrickson writes: “We do not simply gaze—though that is part of the act for we do look intently with admiration, thought, or surprise. Benediction is not the act of gazing alone though—it is the community’s adoration—the body comes together in love to give our attention, if but for a moment, to the One who calls us and who comes to be with us.  For some, that space may feel like a quiet time with Jesus as a friend.  Others may find themselves thrown down in awe at the throne of grace.  Others may be walking alongside Jesus on the road.  Others may simply relish the absolute mystery of it all and watch the beauty of holiness unfold.”

Beloveds, a sun rises daily at this altar.  Gaze into it without fear and have your vision transformed.  Adore the one you see in the uplifted host—and look closely and see in that host the entire universe.  Behold what you are, and know that you yourself are daily placed on this altar, and consecrated as Christ’s Body.  Know that God comes to you disguised as your life—as all of life.  And hear Jesus speaking through all of creation, “This is my Body, given for you.”

Amen.


Sunday, May 31, 2026

The First Sunday after Pentecost: Trinity Sunday, May 31, 2026

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY
Br. Randy Greve

The First Sunday after Pentecost: Trinity Sunday, May 31, 2026



The first rule of preaching on Trinity Sunday is no analogies.  The Holy Trinity is not to be compared to a three-leaf clover, water, or, alas, an egg.  This is not a problem-solving occasion.  The Trinity is not a math equation on how God can be three and one at the same time.  The Trinitarian formula of the early church, summarized in the Nicene Creed, emerged after a long struggle that perplexed the first theologians as much as it might perplex us.  It required pushing language to the edge of what language can do - naming the reality, yet not going too far in seeking to explain the how of the reality.  They sought to faithfully apprehend the nature of God as revealed in Jesus Christ - a revelation in the world which changed reality.  Yes, we speak of one Being in three Persons, not separate, subordinate, or hidden, but language, as necessary as it is, can at best create a rhetorical guard against outright heresy, not define the essence of the mystery.
In The Roots of Christian Mysticism, Olivier Clement writes,
“In their expositions of the Trinity, St Basil and St Maximus the Confessor emphasize that the Three is not a number (St Basil spoke in this respect of ‘meta-mathematics’).  The divine Persons are not added to one another, they exist in one another: the Father is in the Son and the Son is in the Father, the Spirit is united to the Father together with the Son and ‘completes the blessed Trinity’ as if he were ensuring the circulation of love within it.”  
The scripture readings for today all speak of the human community participating in the communion of God whose life is relational and sharing.  The divine image mentioned in Genesis chapter one is relationality and identity in and through connection and union with God and one another.
We are not observers of a narrative today.  We are on the inside of the mystery.  This is the one feast (with the possible addition of All Saints Day) of the year not referenced to a historical event.  As a highly sense-oriented person who loves the concrete symbols of liturgy, today is notable for the absence of a visual.  Today there is no manger or mountain or cross or empty tomb.   Some aspects of reality are just simply beyond the categories of the physical world.  The Holy Trinity points us beyond history, beyond time and space to celebrate an eternal and cosmic reality revealed to us as mystery.  
Christian formation too often prioritizes the intellect at the expense of other modes of perception.  Most of us have grown up with the expectation that assenting and conforming to doctrine took priority over the inner experience of the presence of God.   In our enlightened and scientific age when learning is reduced to data and information exists more to be possessed than appreciated, we are in danger of flattening the human experience into heads on sticks, mere data processing centers who evaluate right and wrong, good and bad, in and out, with no larger vision of a story, a mystery beyond what can be grasped, that is not meant to be understood with the brain but delighted in with the spirit.  Jesus is less dogmatic in that way than we tend to be.  He more often walked around and observed and asked questions than insisted on a set theology or yet more rules.  In our tendency to explain and possess, we descend into a mechanization of faith and disenchant the universe.  Trinity Sunday is the call to re-enchant the world with the practices of wonder, adoration, exultation, and sheer delight.  Those are as important to our growth as information and theology.
It is good and right to believe in the Trinity as the truth about God, but that belief must be more than “it is true”  - check the box and move on.  The mystery of the Trinity calls forth questions about how we relate to Christian truths and whether our intellect is the best or only way of relating.  Our imagination is a better tool than our intellect.  
While visual analogies are inadequate, perhaps there is a sensory way to enter into the mystery.  Jeremy Begbie, a priest and musician who has dedicated his vocation to the theology of music, has been a helpful voice in approaching and appreciating the mystery of threeness in oneness.  Our eyes cannot perceive three colors in one as separate.  Mix colors together and they mush into something that loses their individual differences.  But we can hear three in one. Perhaps, says Begbie, part of the spiritual power of music is that more than one sound can be fully distinct in our ears at a time and the very relationships of sounds create something new.  The Trinity, he says, is musical sympathetic resonance, the closest thing our senses can experience to three in one.  Music is a beautiful expression of how theology transcends the limiting categories of control, certainty, and protection and ushers us into the joyful freedom of uniqueness within difference, structure and spontaneity that unfold mystery, wonder, and trust.  Liturgy is musical, whether we are singing or not, because it is participatory - it is the incarnation of being creatures made in the image and likeness of God.  And because the Christian life is liturgy, perhaps we can discover ways to play our way into God’s delight with the instruments of our lives as a reflection of the Trinity.
Blessing and honor, thanksgiving and praise, more than we can utter be to you, O glorious Trinity, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, by all angels, all mortals, the whole creation, for ever and ever. Amen.

Sunday, May 24, 2026

The Day of Pentecost, May 24, 2026

 Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Robert Leo Sevensky, OHC

The Day of Pentecost, May 24, 2026

The spirit of the Lord has filled the whole world, alleluia, alleluia, alleluia.


The Book of Common Prayer tells us that there are seven principal feasts observed in our church. Traditionally and by common consensus Easter, the feast of the Resurrection of our Lord, is the principal festival of the church year—the feast of feasts, if you will—but next in dignity is today's feast, that of Pentecost. It is the day that closes out the long Easter cycle that we began more than ninety days ago on Ash Wednesday. And it's a great feast…isn't it? Well, let’s be honest: for most of us, it's not.


A recent article in the [UK] Church Times was titled: “In the Parish: why is Pentecost undervalued?”  The author, Sally Welch, begins by saying that Pentecost as a festival made very little impact on her as a child. Then fast forwarding to young parenthood, she notes: 

…I was startled one Sunday by the appearance of jumpers and scarves of vivid scarlet making a strange contrast to the duns and heathers of the rest of the church going outfits. “It’s Pentecost!” crowed an over-enthusiastic curate. “We celebrate by wearing red!”  This was my first introduction—a congregation-wide wardrobe malfunction—to one of the major feast days of the Christian Church. 

I think we've all had such experiences, some rather more unfortunate than the wardrobe malfunction that Ms. Welch refers to. I've seen red streamers, felt banners with multicolored butterflies or silver doves, sheet cakes celebrating the birthday of the church, very large puppets, birds—preferably white—set free though usually not venturing very far, the gospel proclaimed in assorted languages, and various other liturgical actions, all well-intentioned perhaps but faintly embarrassing, at least to me.  My favorite story is from my parish in Harrisburg PA where one year the children were all given helium-filled red balloons. Inevitably several escaped and got tangled in the overhead fans where they remained dangling throughout the hot summer and into autumn, limp and spent and altogether a rather sad memorial of a distant feast.


Why is it so hard to celebrate Pentecost in a way that engages us at a deep level? Partly of course it has to do with the very subject matter, which in this case is the very figure of the Holy Spirit. What do we make of this Holy Spirit? Who is this Spirit and what is its nature and its job description and how does it fit into the Christian doctrine of the Holy Trinity? Happily, next Sunday is Trinity Sunday, and I'm confident that our preacher will unfold this mystery for us once and for all. But today we are asked or invited or forced to reflect on this a bit...perhaps in anticipation of next Sunday’s great reveal. 


One of the reasons it is so hard for us to wrap our hearts and minds around this feast is that there is not just one Scriptural story pointing to the outpouring of the Spirit, however we might understand her, but several. We are all familiar of course with the account from the Book of Acts which takes pride of place. And what a story it is. Ten days ago, we celebrated the Ascension where, as Jesus departs from his friends he tells them to wait for the promised gift of the Spirit. And they wait for ten days praying together and likely getting a little antsy. And suddenly the Spirit is poured out upon them--tongues of fire resting on their heads, people speaking in languages that were understood by others without benefit of Google Translate, new energy, new direction, renewed purpose and a novel way of being in the world, a way that would become known as Christian. It's all very exciting, even if it doesn't make you want to wave a red streamer.


But there is another story, one of several, which also speaks of the outpouring of this mysterious Spirit.  We heard this morning the Evangelist John offer us a rather different account. In his version, there's no waiting fifty days.  It's Easter day in the early evening and the disciples are gathered in Jerusalem in fear and confusion, with locked doors and locked hearts when suddenly Jesus is there with them. In a model of succinctness but with marvelous energy, Jesus twice greets his disciples with the word “Peace.”  He shows them his wounded hands and side as if to confirm his identity. And he breathes on them.  (I think most of you are aware that in both Hebrew and Greek, the word for breath is the same as the word for spirit, so there’s a lot at play here.) And then Jesus doesn’t simply invite them, but commands them: “Receive the Holy Spirit.”  And he sends them out to be agents of forgiveness and reconciliation in an unforgiving and alienated and alienating world.


These two stories are quite different, but they are not contradictory. In some ways they complement each other deeply. And which are we celebrating today…God breathing God’s spirit again into the clay that is Adam and you and me?  God overthrowing the linguistic confusion and pride of the Tower of Babel? I hope both, and perhaps many others as well.  We can have it both ways. Yet the question remains: who is this Spirit of which both stories speak?


Consider for a minute the possibility of looking at the wind or at breath. In a sense we can never do that except perhaps with very sophisticated scientific instruments or under certain unusual circumstances. In everyday life we don't look directly at wind or breath. At best what we look at are the effects of the wind and breath. We notice the fluttering of leaves on a tree or waves moving over grasslands or clouds scudding across the skies.  Perhaps we feel a cooling caress on our cheeks or hear a fierce howling.  Sometimes it’s the destructive effect of forceful winds uprooting trees or driving wildfires.  Or the mysterious scent of distant flowers or a decaying carcass or whatever. It's the wind, the air, the breath that brings us these. But it is not given for us to see the wind. We know it by its effects. I believe it is the same with the Holy Spirit.  As Jesus says in another context: “You will know them by their fruits.”


The spirit of God, the spirit of Jesus, that which/whom we call the Holy Spirit can't be apprehended directly, but we can see it and experience its effects. We see it in creative work around us. We see it in surprising reconciliation between and within people. We come to know it in a thousand little acts of love which punctuate world and our lives. And we celebrate it in the experience of human solidarity. St. Paul in that wonderful passage from his Letter to the Galatians offers a list of the fruits of the Spirit, extensive but by no means exhaustive:  love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control.  Paul adds: “Against such things there is no law.”  No indeed.  See these and while we are not directly seeing the Spirit, we are seeing the Spirit’s footprints. Become these, and we become Spirit bearers whatever our faith or family or lack thereof. 


We can’t, I’m afraid, define the Spirit or reduce Spirit to a concept or a category.  But we can rest assured that whenever and wherever God’s spirit is loosed upon the world, if these signs are present, there is God.  And we can be equally certain that God’s spirit does not act by anger, hatred, ignorance, rudeness, envy, exploitation, indignity or a multitude of other sad and destructive attitudes, habits or works which oppose and frustrate the Spirit of the living God.


On Pentecost, I often think of my experience as a child growing up in a Polish religious tradition. And among Poles, as among almost all the Slavic peoples, Pentecost is not much about red vestments. In fact, in Polish the name of the feast is Nieziela Zielone, that is to say, Green Sunday. And on that morning—terribly ecologically unsound but what did we know back then? —whole birch trees were cut down and set up at the doors of the church and around the altar and the pulpit. There was no mistaking it:  Pentecost was and is above all else a feast of life, a feast of new creation, a festival of new birth. Yes, this Slavic custom likely points back to a pre-Christian agricultural festival.  So, I might add, do the Jewish festivals of Passover and Shavous, the latter otherwise known as Pentecost among Greek-speaking Jews. It is a folk custom that speaks with an insight that begs to be emphasized. And that is that the Spirit of God, however we understand Spirit, is all about life, abundant life, fullness of life. And that God is on the side of life always: yesterday, today and forever.


Some of you may remember our late brother Roy Parker whose calligraphy was so beautifully done and so popular, and none more so than his simple work that quotes Irenaeus of Lyon, a second-century Bishop. It says simply: “The glory of God is the human person fully alive.” That, my friends, is Pentecost today and tomorrow. 


But remember there is a second line to this epigram from Bishop Irenaeus which is equally important: “…and that life consists in beholding God.”


May we each today catch some glimpse of God or God’s footprints, in the power and agency of the life-giving Spirit.  


And now, friends, perhaps it is time to pick up those red streamers and party.  Amen.