The Eucharist is no mere symbol. It is the key to life. More specifically, it is the key to your very identity.When we look carefully at the Blessed Sacrament, under the signs of bread and wine, we discover that we were made not simply to receive God, to be nourished by his gifts, or to draw close to him. In fact, “we were made to become Him.” In Your Eucharistic Identity, Father Gregory Pine shows that Christ, through the Sacrament, divinizes us in our whole being.But the Eucharist is not magic. We have to receive the gift of his Eucharistic presence, and preparing for such a great banquet requires time, work, and attention. To become like Christ, we must be ready to be given to others, in a free, radical gift of love.Father Pine’s sacramental guide to the fullness of life—at once thought-provoking and practical, ancient and new—offers Christians a simple, clear guide for their path.
It’s a really good book. It’s quick and very approachable. It also seems self aware for what it’s for. Fr. Gregory is also not doing self-help-y, platitudinal garbage as much as the title “a sacramental guide” seems to suggest.
For someone like me who finds themself frequently in way over my head by trying to get to the cutting edge of complex and nuanced things, it’s really nice to get back to the basics. And there were many segments of the book where I found it profound and simply and clearly Fr. Gregory would present an idea—making it easier to sit with and appreciate. Only reason I’m not giving it 5 stars is that (1) I’m trying to reserve 5 stars for the really amazing books; and (2) there is a lull somewhere between 75 and 90% of the way through the book that feels a bit repetitious. Fwiw, that’s probably user error on my part.
The book is excellent and it clearly teaches the important the truth our identity is best understood in the Eucharist identity where we are closest and truly united with Jesus.
In the Eucharist we receive the greatest gift from God His Son.
Father Pine uses the parable of the Prodigal Son as a great of God’s love for us and both brothers rejection of said Love and the Father God continues to love them.
Father stresses the importance of the liturgy and the Sacraments. Baptism is necessary. Penance is vital. The Eucharist is the source and summit of our life. As Saint Pope John Paul II said we are the sum of God’s love for us.
Finally, teaches the greatness of Eucharistic Adoration. A tremendous book!
Wow this book is phenomenal! I bought it since I saw Father Gregory Pine was doing a Godsplaining book club discussion with it and wanted to hear more of his thoughts since he is sensational at conveying theological topics in simple terms. The book was a fantastic read, very engaging, and really practical and applicable to my life. I had the intent when I read the book to be in Adoration or Holy Hour and that really helped the book’s message feel tangible. Highly recommend to everyone to learn more about how their Eucharistic identity is rooted in Christ becoming more like Him everytime we go to mass. Took me exactly a month to read and right in time as Ash Wednesday is tomorrow with the beginning of Lent. I’ll have to find a new book for my Lenten reading.
I love reading about the Eucharist! This one was cool cus it was more personal. Our identity truly lies in Him. He is our beginning, present, and end. There is no confusion once we lie in Him.
I feel like reading about the Eucharist will also help pay attention in mass and in adoration, which is always a help.
Knowing our Eucharistic Lord is always there, our consent is such a comfort. Should we ever need anything, He is always there. Every time.
Rounding up from 3.5 stars I loved Fr Gregory Pine's first book so I had high expectations going into this one. There's nothing wrong with it, but most of it was pretty familiar to me. Some good thoughts and the last 20 pages or so were where it shined.
Much food for thought here (pun intended). A reminder of what and who the Eucharist is, who we are as members of Christ’s body, and what this sacrifice both asks of us and returns to us. Another accessibly and thoughtfully written book from Fr. Gregory Pine.
This was wonderful. Each chapter, while it has threads tying it to the last, could easily stand on its own. The book gets better as you go too, finishing off with the best chapter.
Father Pine is an intelligent young Priest within the Dominican Order. He cogently instructs on the substance of Catholic belief in the “Real Presence” of the Eucharist.