Eucharistic Reflection - Our Lady of the Most Blessed Sacrament
(Source: Missionaries of the Blessed Sacrament) |
"Mary
devoted herself exclusively to the Eucharistic Glory of Jesus. She knew that it
was the desire of the Eternal Father to make the Eucharist known, loved and
served by all men; that need of Jesus’ Heart was to communicate to all men His
gifts of grace and glory. She knew, too, that it was the mission of the Holy
Spirit to extend and perfect in the hearts of men, the reign of Jesus Christ,
and that the Church had been founded only to give Jesus to the world.
All Mary’s
desire, then, was to make Him known in His Sacrament. Her intense love for
Jesus felt the need of expanding in this way, of consecrating itself - as a
kind of relief, as it were - because of her own inability to glorify Him as
much as she desired.
Ever since Calvary , all men were her children. She loved them with a
Mother’s tenderness and longed for their supreme good as for her own;
therefore, she was consumed with the desire to make Jesus in the Blessed
Sacrament known to all, to inflame all hearts with His love, to see them
enchained to His loving service.
To obtain
this favor, Mary passed her time at the foot of the Most Adorable Sacrament, in
prayer and penance. There she treated the world’s salvation. In her boundless
zeal, she embraced the needs of the faithful everywhere, for all time to come,
who would inherit the Holy Eucharist and be Its adorers... Her prayers
converted countless souls, and as every conversion is the fruit of prayer, and
since Mary’s prayer could meet no refusal, the Apostles had in this Mother of
Mercy their most powerful helper. 'Blessed is he for whom Mary
prays!'
Eucharistic
adorers share Mary’s life and mission of prayer at the foot of the Most Blessed
Sacrament. It is the most beautiful of all missions, and it holds no perils. It
is the most holy, for in it all the virtues are practiced. It is, moreover, the
most necessary to the Church, which has even more need of prayerful souls than
of powerful preachers; of men of penance rather than men of eloquence. Today more
than ever have we need of men who, by their self-immolation, disarm the anger
of God inflamed by the ever increasing crimes of nations. We must have souls
who by their importunity re- open the treasures of grace which the indifference
of the multitude has closed. We must have true adorers; that is to say, men of
fervor and of sacrifice. When there are many such souls around their Divine
Chief, God will be glorified, Jesus will be loved, and society will once more
become Christian, conquered for Jesus Christ by the apostolate of Eucharistic
prayer.
(From With Mary Let us Adore Him! by St. Peter
Julian Eymard)