From How to Get the Most Out of the Eucharist by Michael Dubruiel
From chapter 2 - Serve. Part 9
F U R T H E R H E L P S
1. Keep Your Focus on Jesus
Whenever you desire to “control” what happens in the
Eucharist, or suffer because you sense someone else is hijacking the liturgy,
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Think of Jesus washing the feet of his disciples.
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Think of Jesus telling his followers to take up their
crossand follow him.
•
Think of Jesus saying that he did not come to be
servedbut to serve.
Keeping your focus on Christ will prevent
the devil in his attempts to distract you from the purpose of the Eucharist.
2. Learn from the Blessed Virgin Mary
Following the example of the Blessed
Virgin Mary we declare ourselves at God’s service. “Behold, I am the handmaid
of the Lord” (Luke 1:38) was Mary’s response to the Angel Gabriel’s
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announcement that God would become incarnate within her.
When we come to the Eucharist, God desires to continue the incarnation within
us, and Mary teaches us how we should approach so great a gift.
Mary’s reaction to the angel’s message
gives a supreme example of the sacrifice we can bring to every celebration of
the Eucharist. When confronted with anything that does not go according to our
plans,we need to open ourselves up to what God might be asking of us.
3. Foster an Attitude of Service
When Joshua realized that he was being confronted by a
messenger of God, someone who at first he was not sure was a friend, he asked,
“What does my Lord bid his servant” (Joshua 5:14)?
When we have the right stance toward God
in our worship this is the question we will ask when confronted by anything
that disturbs us: “What does my Lord bid his servant”?
4. Developing a Eucharistic Spirituality
Empowered by Christ, we should seek to serve God and anyone
God places in our path throughout the day. “How may I serve you?” should be the
question ever on our lips, whether at home, at work, or in recreation. We can
find concrete ways to serve Christ in the many guises in which he comes to us
in the poor and the weak.
5. A Prayer for Today
These beautiful words of St. Augustine, taken from his
Soliloquies, may help you to ask God for the grace to offer yourself, so to be
at his service:
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O God, at last
You alone do I love, You alone I follow, You alone I seek, You alone am I
prepared to serve, for You alone by right are Ruler, under your rule do I
desire to be. Direct, I pray, and command whatever You will, but heal and open
my ears, that I may hear Your utterances. Heal and open my eyes, that I may
behold Your signs. Drive delusion from me, that I may recognize You.Tell me
where I must go, to behold You, and I hope that I shall do all things that You
command. O Lord, most merciful Father, receive, I pray, Your fugitive; enough
already, surely, have I been punished, long enough have I served Your
enemies,whom You have under Your feet, long enough have I been a sport of
falsehood.Receive me fleeing from these, Your house-born servant, for did not
these receive me,though another Master’s,when I was fleeing from You? To You I
feel I must return: I knock; may Thy door be opened to me; teach me the way to
You. Nothing else have I than the will: nothing else do I know than that
fleeting and falling things are to be spurned, fixed and everlasting things to
be sought.This I do, Father, because this alone I know, but from what place to
approach You I do not know. Instruct me, show me, give me all that I need for
the journey. If it is by faith that those find You, who take refuge with You
then grant faith: if by virtue, virtue: if by knowledge, knowledge. Fill me
with faith, hope, and charity. O goodness, singular and most to be admired!8
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