Holy Thursday Homily
Readings: Exodus
12:1–8, 11–14; 1 Corinthians 11:23–26; John 13:1–15
We celebrate
three great anniversaries today—three sacred memories that define who we are as
disciples of Christ. On Holy Thursday, we commemorate:
The
anniversary of the first Holy Mass,
The
anniversary of the institution of the ministerial priesthood, and
The
anniversary of Christ’s new commandment of love: “Love one another as I
have loved you” (Jn 13:34).
Each of
these events reveals God’s profound desire to be with His people, to forgive
them, and to unite them in a covenant of love that will never end.
The Passover
Transformed
Holy
Thursday brings us back to the roots of our faith—to the night when Jesus transformed
the Jewish Passover into the Christian Eucharist. The Jewish Passover itself
was already a deep expression of thanksgiving and liberation. Historically, it
united two ancient feasts: the shepherds’ Pass over, when they offered a
lamb before migrating their flocks, and the farmers’ Massoth, a feast of
unleavened bread offered in gratitude for the harvest. God wove these
traditions together into a single meal of salvation: the annual remembrance of
Israel’s liberation from slavery in Egypt and their journey toward the Promised
Land.
In our first
reading from Exodus, God gives His people two instructions: first, to prepare
for liberation through a ritual meal—the sacrifice of a perfect lamb eaten
in haste and faith; and second, to make a symbolic mark—to paint their
doorposts with the blood of that lamb. This blood became their salvation, a
sign that death would “pass over” them.
Centuries
later, in an upper room in Jerusalem, Jesus fulfilled and transformed this
sacred ritual. John’s Gospel tells us that, during the Passover meal, Jesus
rose from the table to wash His disciples’ feet. Then, taking bread and wine,
He offered something that no human priest before Him had ever dared to offer:
His own Body and Blood. “This is my Body… This is my Blood… Do this in
memory of me.”
At that
moment, the blood of the lamb painted on the doorposts found its ultimate
fulfillment. The old covenant sign of deliverance now became a new covenant in
Christ’s blood—offered not to save from Egypt, but from sin and death itself.
One
Sacrifice, One Event
The Last
Supper and the Cross are not two separate events, but two inseparable moments
of one saving mystery. What began at the table found its completion on Calvary.
In both places, Jesus gave His Body; in both places, He poured out His Blood.
The altar of the upper room becomes the altar of the Cross.
Scholars
long puzzled over the apparent differences in the Gospel accounts. John’s
Gospel presents Jesus dying at the very hour when the Passover lambs were being
sacrificed in the Temple. Matthew, Mark, and Luke, on the other hand, describe
the Last Supper as a Passover meal. How could both be true?
Modern
biblical study, aided by the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, offers a
compelling explanation. It suggests that Jesus celebrated the Passover in
accordance with the Qumran calendar—one day earlier than the temple
authorities. The Qumran community, awaiting a new and purified Temple, offered
the Passover without lambs. In this light, Jesus, too, celebrated His Passover without
a lamb—because He Himself was the Lamb. He freely offered His own
Body and Blood as the new sacrifice.
Thus, when
He said, “No one takes my life from me, but I lay it down of my own
accord” (Jn 10:18), He was not speaking symbolically. He truly offered His
life—first under the forms of bread and wine, then in visible sacrifice upon
the Cross.
Only in
Christ do the ancient rites of the first Passover reach their true meaning. His
blood marks not a doorpost, but the hearts of the redeemed. His flesh, once
broken, becomes our food for eternal life.
The Gift of
the Priesthood
From this
Passover meal flowed the sacred gift of the priesthood. In our second reading,
St. Paul recounts what he himself received and handed down: “The Lord
Jesus, on the night he was handed over, took bread…” (1 Cor 11:23). From
the beginning, the Church has faithfully celebrated the Lord’s Supper as the
heart of her life.
To ensure
that this sacrifice would never cease, Christ instituted the sacrament of Holy
Orders. He commanded His apostles, “Do this in memory of me.” Every
priest, therefore, is ordained to act in persona Christi, “in the person
of Christ.” Through their ministry, the Eternal High Priest continues to feed
His people, forgive their sins, and proclaim His Word.
Tonight’s
liturgy, then, unites the three great sacraments of Holy Thursday: the Eucharist,
the priesthood, and the commandment of love that gives meaning
to both.
The Stole
and the Towel
An Italian
bishop, Tonino Bello, beautifully captured this meaning in the title of his
final pastoral letter, written from his deathbed on Holy Thursday in
1993: “The Stole and the Towel.” The stole represents communion with
Christ the Priest—union with the Lord in the Eucharist. The towel represents
communion with humanity—union with those we are called to serve.
To wear the
stole without the towel is to forget that love expressed at the altar must flow
into humble service. To wield the towel without the stole is to forget that
true service springs from God’s presence in the Eucharist. The priest—and
indeed every Christian—must hold both together.
The Towel,
Not the Sword
Christianity
spread not by the sword like Islam but by the towel. Jesus Himself rejected
violence as a means of spreading His kingdom: “Put your sword back into
its place, for all who take the sword will perish by the sword” (Mt
26:52). The early Church conquered hearts—through charity, mercy, and service
to the poor and forgotten. Even today, if the Church ceases to serve, she
ceases to be the Church. The towel must always remain in her hands.
Washing the
Disciples’ Feet
Before
sharing His Body and Blood, Jesus kneels at His disciples’ feet. This gesture
shocked them then and should still shock us now. Not even slaves were required
to perform so demeaning a task. Yet the Son of God does so with tenderness and
humility. The washing of feet was both prophetic and symbolic—prophetic
because it pointed to the greater self-emptying He would soon show on the
Cross; symbolic because it revealed the model of discipleship: “What I have
done for you, you also must do.”
Every act of
humble service becomes a participation in this mystery. Parents who rise in the
night to care for a sick child, caregivers who tend to the elderly, teachers
who guide neglected students, health care workers who attend to the most menial
tasks—all perform modern acts of foot-washing. Each reflects the love of Christ
made visible in the Eucharist. In every act of self-giving, we make the
Eucharist real beyond the walls of the church.
Living as a
Eucharistic People
The
Eucharist is not complete until it transforms our lives. To receive the Lord is
to be sent forth by Him. Every Mass ends with a mission: “Go in peace to
love and serve the Lord.” [Today we do not announce that, signifying that
the sacramental Mass does not end with the last supper but with Jesus’ death on
the cross and finally with his resurrection]
Our mission
is to bring His love, mercy, forgiveness, and humility wherever we go.
Leonardo da
Vinci’s Last Supper offers a touching visual meditation on this
truth. In his famous painting, every disciple is seated on the same side of the
table. When someone once asked why, Leonardo gave a simple but profound
answer: “So that there may be plenty of room for us to join them.”
There is
always room for us at the table of the Lord—room to sit beside Peter and John, Matthew
and James, to allow Jesus to wash our feet, and to let him renew us with His
Body and Blood. When Peter refused to have his feet washed, Jesus replied,
"If I do not wash you, you have no part with me" (John 13:8). So, if
you are willing, pull up your chair, get your feet washed and go out with a
towel and wash the feet of others.