Recently, I encountered a woman named Joanna. She was wondering what to do about a spate of messages that were written and posted about her, in big bold letters, calling her mean and nasty. Her eyes were wide; she was hurt and scared. Understandable reactions, given that slander is both hurtful and dangerous. Joanna, seeing such messages with her name on them, could have become what she received: nasty, mean and cowardly. Here are symptoms of a virus that has far more variants than alpha and delta; a virus contagious and deadly, that’s been around since Adam and Eve bit into the fruit they were warned not to taste. How could Joanna avoid becoming what she received, and passing it on to others?
St. Augustine of Hippo observed that humans become what we receive. He had great respect for the power of habit to influence and change us, for the worse or for the better. He saw the goodness and beauty at the core of every person, and the ugliness we are capable of and are frequently marred by. The fundamental antidote, for him, was always the same: receive the sacraments. Receive the Eucharist. Become what you receive. He saw that communion is not something we do, make or are capable of; it’s something we receive and become. And that “something” is not ugly or nasty, but godly.
So what changes when we receive communion? We do. We are changed in the twinkling of an eye (1 Corinthians 15:52) and we are changed little by little, as waterdrops on rock carved out Niagara Falls. We are changed, not into something else, but to our true selves. “Be what you see; receive what you are” (Sermon 272 of Augustine).
This is communion. This is what we are made for: communion with God and each other. Nevertheless, we have trouble getting there — even when we try — and more trouble still when we stop trying or head the other way.
This is our real work: communion. The secret is, it is not a work but a gift. We can work against it, of course, like the writer of the false messages about Joanna. We will not be able to destroy it, but we can harm ourselves. Fortunately, even when we inflict self-harm, God remains imbued in it all, urging us from within. “From your presence, where can I flee?” (Psalm 139:7). As Augustine observed, we have hope because God is not changeable, but we are. “We shall all be changed” (1 Corinthians 15:51).
Someone told me recently that, while alone in her room praying for a friend who is dying, she had a sudden sense of being not alone at all, but surrounded by others who have died and live. She realized, joyfully, that she was in a crowded room: the communion of saints.
If Eve, when offered the fruit, had dug deep and found her anger towards the serpent for urging it on her, she might have had the energy to say “No thank you,” or “Get behind me, Adversary (Satan).” Perhaps she and Adam would have got along better, and the whole human race after them. If we are able to focus our anger on the real Adversary, we might learn to find instead of harm each other.
But how? Another secret: we can’t, but Christ can. And because Christ can, therefore we can. In receiving eucharist, we receive all Christ is, completely given, nothing held back. We become what we long to be, though we might be only dimly aware of our longing.
Joanna too had a secret, which I happened to know by fortuitous accident. Just the week before the mean messages were posted, I heard a homily reminding us participants how good it is to be together at eucharist, taking in the beauty and joy and gift of God. But that means we don’t go home and leave it all “at church”; we must bring it with us, into the world. That is “Mass,” being “sent.”
Hearing this homily, I recalled that as I’d arrived at church that morning, Joanna was arriving too. She stopped and told me her concern about a man down the street who asked her for food. “I see him often, but he doesn’t usually ask for breakfast on Sunday morning,” she explained. She immediately went, got him breakfast, and came back into church just as liturgy was beginning. Yes, the same Joanna who later had the nasty messages posted about her.
Who are we becoming? Let us receive the gift of God Himself. Let us become what we receive.
Many voices, now more than ever, are trying to distract and fool us and keep us apart. As my spiritual father liked to say: Keep the focus.
(Marrocco can be reached at marrocco7@sympatico.ca)