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Eucharist and Absence

People speaking to each other at a table
2020-03-26
by Dr Scott Kirkland

Caravaggio (1571-1610), The Incredulity of Saint Thomas, 1601-1602

Dr Scott Kirkland (Thursday 26 March)

COVID-19 has brought the frailty and vulnerability of the body into sharp relief. Some have suggested that in the wake of COVID-19 we should consider practices such as virtual Eucharists. I would like to suggest we resist that, and think a bit more about what bodily absence might symbolise.

COVID-19 provides occasion to think about the bodily absence of Christ in productive ways. There's something about the absence of the Eucharist which gives way to a realisation that it is always an act of hope, of anticipation. The Eucharist, however, can be something we take for granted, something we don鈥檛 miss until it is gone. The absence of the Eucharist is also indicative of the absence of an ability to meet together in, as, and through the body of Christ. That which binds us together as one body is taken away for a time.

S酶ren Kierkegaard tells a story of a lover watching the beloved disappear on a ship over the horizon. It is in that moment of absence that love is somehow brought to attention. This is more than not knowing what you have until it鈥檚 gone, it is a matter of not knowing what we don鈥檛 have in the first place. We don鈥檛 have Christ, his body has ascended and we await his coming. The Eucharist is an enactment of this hope. 

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