By this devotional practice, which is of comparatively modern development, the presence of Jesus Christ in the Blessed Eucharist is regarded in the same light and honoured with the same ceremonial
observance as would be paid to a sovereign who favoured any place in
his dominions by taking up his abode there. The conception is that in
the tabernacle Jesus
Christ, as it were, holds His court, and is prepared to grant audience
to all who draw near to Him, though other prefer to regard Him as a
prisoner bound to this earth and to existence in a confined space, by
the fetters of His love for mankind. In this latter case the visits
paid to the Blessed Sacrament assumed the special character of a work of mercy intended to console the Sacred Heart of Jesus for the indifference and ingratitude shown Him by the majority
of Christians, for whose sake He remains in the sacramental
species. It must be plain that this devotional exercise of "visiting"
the Blessed Sacrament is essentially dependent upon the practice of ceremonial reservation .
As has already been pointed out in this latter article,
the attempts formerly made to demonstrate the existence of a custom
in the early Church of showing special and external veneration to
the Sacred Species when reserved for the sick break down upon closer investigation. To this day in the Greek Church
no practice of genuflecting to the Blessed Sacrament is known and
in fact it may be said that, though it is treated respectfully, as the
Book of the Gospels or the sacred vessels would be treated
respectfully, still no cultus is shown it outside of the Liturgy.
During the first ten or twelve centuries after Christ
the attitude of the Western Church seems to have been very similar.
We may conjecture that the faithful concentrated their attention upon
the two main purposes for which the Blessed Eucharist was instituted, viz. to be offered in sacrifice and to become the food of the soul in Holy Communion . It was only by degrees that men awoke to the lawfulness of honouring the abiding presence of Christ
outside of the sacred mysteries, much as we may conceive that if a
monarch chose to dress in mufti and to lay aside all marks of rank,
people might doubt
of showing him demonstrations of respect which he seemed purposely to
exclude. In any case the fact is certain that we meet with no clear
examples of a desire to honour the presence of Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament reserved upon the altar before the twelfth century.
Perhaps one of the earliest indications of a new
feeling in this regard is revealed in a direction given to the
anchoresses in the "Ancren Riwle" : "When ye are quite
dressed...think upon God's Flesh and on His Blood which is over the high altar
and fall on your knees towards it with this salutation "Hail thou
author of or Creation, etc.". So again, in one of his letters St. Thomas of Canterbury
writes: "If you do not harken to me who have been wont to pray for
you in an abundance of tears and with groanings not a few before the
Majesty of the Body of Christ" (Materials, Rolls Series, V, 27). This
example, perhaps, is not quite certain but we know from instances
in the Holy Grail romances, that the idea
of praying before the Blessed Sacrament was growing familiar
about this period, i.e. the end of the twelfth century. The English
mystic Richard
Rolle of Hampole, at the beginning of the fourteenth century,
explicitly exhorts Christians to visit the church in preference to
praying in their own houses, for he says "In the church is most
devotion to pray, for there is God
upon the altar to hear those that pray to Him and to grant them
what they ask and what is best for them" ("Works", ed. Horstman, I,
145). But in the course of the same century the practice of visiting
the Blessed Sacrament became fairly common, as we see particularly in
the case of Blessed Henry Suso and Blessed Mary
de Malliaco (A.D. 1331-1414), who, we are told, "on solemn feasts
kept vigil before the most holy Sacrament ". It was often at this
period joined with an intense desire of looking upon the Blessed
Sacrament exposed, a most striking example of which will be found in the "Septiliilium" of Blessed Dorothea, a holy recluse of Pomerania
who died in 1394. But the practice of compiling volumes of devotions
for visits to the Blessed Sacrament, one of the best known of which is
the "Visits" of St. Alphonsus Ligouri , was of still later date.
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