Feast of Corpus Christi

40 HOUR DEVOTION

In honor of the Feast of Corpus Christ our parish will be hosting the forty hour devotion to the Most Blessed Sacrament. Starting on Friday June 4th with our regular monthly First Friday devotions the Blessed Sacrament will remain exposed for prayer from 8am on Friday until midnight on the Morning of the Feast of Corpus Christi, Sunday June 6th. Two people are needed to stay with, praise and guard the Blessed Sacrament at all times, sign up lists are available at the exits to the Church or you can call or email Fr. Ron to volunteer for a time slot. Information is available on our website http://StPatricksWareham.org/Corpus-Christi/

Corpus Christi Procession

The annual Corpus Christi procession will be held on June 6th starting at 2pm. The procession throughout the streets is a great and fun way to express our love for the gift of Christ’s Body and Blood. Each year Catholics young and old walk the colorfully decorated streets of New Bedford carrying with them the Blessed Sacrament. Making visits at seven of the oldest and most beautiful churches around they return to the Chapel of our Lady downtown for refreshments and a celebration. Children who received first Holy Communion this year are invited to walk in the procession dressed in their Communion outfits and servers are welcome to process vested for Mass. For more information contact Fr. Ron< at the Rectory 508-295-2411 or by email or check out http://StPatricksWareham.org/Corpus-Christi/

Fr. Ron Floyd (deacon) assists the Bishop of Orvieto at the Annual Corpus Christi
procession in Balsano, sight of the Eucharistic Miracle, note the thurifer, Mr. Riley Williams
of the Diocese of Fall River, who will himself be ordained a deacon this fall.


The Feast of Corpus Christi, or the Feast of the Body and Blood of Christ (as it is often called today), goes back to the 13th century, but it celebrates something far older: the institution of the Sacrament of Holy Communion at the Last Supper. While Holy Thursday is also a celebration of this mystery, the solemn nature of Holy Week, and the focus on Christ’s Passion on Good Friday, overshadows that aspect of Holy Thursday.

Thus, in 1246, Bishop Robert de Thorete of the Belgina diocese of Liège, at the suggestion of St. Juliana of Mont Cornillon (also in Belgium), convened a synod and instituted the celebration of the feast. From Liège, the celebration began to spread, and, on September 8, 1264, Pope Urban IV issued the papal bull “Transiturus,” which established the Feast of Corpus Christi as a universal feast of the Church, to be celebrated on the Thursday following Trinity Sunday.

At the request of Pope Urban IV, St. Thomas Aquinas composed the office (the official prayers of the Church) for the feast. This office is widely considered one of the most beautiful in the traditional Roman Breviary (the official prayer book of the Divine Office or Liturgy of the Hours), and it is the source of the famous Eucharistic hymns “Pange Lingua Gloriosi” and “Tantum Ergo Sacramentum.”

For centuries after the celebration was extended to the universal Church, the feast was also celebrated with a eucharistic procession, in which the Sacred Host was carried throughout the town, accompanied by hymns and litanies. The faithful would venerate the Body of Christ as the procession passed by. In recent years, this practice has almost disappeared, though some parishes still hold a brief procession around the outside of the parish church.

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