When the
Spirit descended in tongues of fire, it was to make the waiting group into the
mystical Body of Christ in a way analogous to that in which the descent of the
Spirit upon Mary at her Annunciation had formed the natural body of Christ in
her womb. Nevertheless, although the Mystical Body came into being by this new
descent of the Spirit, there was not a new incarnation, Christ was not becoming
man a second time, he was not assuming a new nature; the human nature which he
had taken from his mother, in which he had died for our sins and risen again
for our justification, was being made present under a new mode. There are not,
strictly speaking, two bodies of Christ, a natural and a mystical, but one body
of Christ which is manifested in two forms.
Nor does the
story end here, for that part of the Mystical Body which is on earth needs to
be continually nourished and sustained, as Christ’s natural body did before its
glorification. It is through the Eucharistic Body of the Blessed Sacrament that
this takes place. Here again, there is not a new incarnation, but in the
Eucharist the human nature which Christ took from his mother is made present in
yet another form, a form through which that part of the Mystical Body which is
still in via on earth is repeatedly sustained and renewed.
In all these
modes of manifestation, the human nature of Christ is the human nature which he
took from Mary. The descent of the Holy Spirit on Mary at the Annunciation
first formed it, the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles at Pentecost
released it, so to speak, in the world as the Mystical Body of the Church, and
the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Eucharistic elements brings it to us as
the Sacramental Body.
But in all
these manifestations and expressions, it is one and the same Body, the Body
which was formed in Mary’s womb, and so when we return from the Altar, having
received the sacramental Body of Christ and having thereby been received more
firmly into his Mystical Body, we can say with a new emphasis the words that,
in the Genesis story, Adam said after he had tasted the food given him by the
first Eve: ‘The woman gave me, and I did eat’ (Gen 3:12).
For it is
the very body, the human nature, which Christ took from his mother, on which we
are fed in the Holy Eucharist.
And Jesus
and his members are one Body, the Whole Christ, and Mary is his mother and
theirs.
E. L Mascall, qtd in Zachary Guiliano, For the Visitation, Covenant, 31 May, 2016.
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