The term “devotion” encompasses two distinctive meanings. Devotion is first of all a posture, an approach, or an attitude toward an aspect of the divine mystery. Michele Colagiovanni, in one of his reflections on the meaning of devotion, aptly traces the meaning of devotion back to its etymology in the word “dedication”. To engage in devotion to someone or something is to have a special commitment to that reality, a commitment that is marked by a focusing or dedicating of one’s life to that reality. To engage in devotion is, therefore, to “be devoted”. Everything encompassed in that field of focus and dedication constitutes “devotion”. Devotion has also a second meaning. It refers to the set of spiritual practices one engages in to give expression to that object of dedication. These practices are the concrete embodiment of that devotedness. Sometimes this second meaning of devotion is expressed in the use of the term “devotion” in the plural, as “devotions”. Devotion, then, represents entering into the divine mystery with a special focus. Devotion also entails engaging in spiritual practices which give expression to these commitments. Blood of Christ in Christian theology refers to (a) the physical blood actually shed by Jesus Christ from the foreskin and later on the Cross by which salvation which Christianity teaches was accomplished and (b) the sacramental blood present in the Eucharist, which is considered by Catholic, Orthodox, Anglican, and Lutheran Christians to be the same blood of Christ shed on the Cross.
Origin and Development of Devotion to the Precious blood
Veneration of the Precious Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ is a devotion as old as our Holy Faith. This Precious Blood, by which mankind was to be redeemed, was alluded to immediately after the Fall of our first parents in the Garden of Paradise. The Precious Blood of our Redeemer was prefigured by the innocent blood of Abel, by the sacrifices of Isaac and Melchisedech, by the Paschal Lamb (the blood of which was sprinkled on the doorposts of the ancient Israelites on the night before they left Egypt), by the blood of innocent ani¬mals in the Old Covenant, and by many other customs practiced by the Israelite people. The prophecies—and the prophets to whom God showed in spirit when, where and in what manner it was to be shed—had reference to this Blood which Our Lord would shed in His Passion to redeem us.
This is the Blood of the New and Eternal Testament, from which all the Sacraments derive their efficacy, from which all graces proceed, and from which, like heavenly dew, all graces are ever descending upon the children of God. The Precious Blood is daily offered by priests in the Mass, and it is at all times venerated by the faith¬ful in the Most Blessed Sacrament of the Altar. In Holy Communion, all receive the Flesh and Blood of Jesus Christ as a pledge of life eternal. Every act of honour, love, and adora¬- tion paid to any part of Christ’s sacred humanity is paid to the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity in Whom the Body, Blood and Soul of Christ are in- ¬separably united. The Church invites and urges us to venerate the Sacred Heart of Christ because it is in a particular manner a symbol of the God-Man’s love for His human brothers. Just as we give honour to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, it is fitting that we should give special honour to the Most Precious Blood of Christ. St. Peter, the Prince of the Apostles, gives us the reason in his First Epistle, when he said, “You know that you were redeemed from the vain manner of life handed down from your fathers, not with perishable things, with silver or gold, but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot” (1 Pet. 1:18-19). Christ’s Precious Blood, shed during His Passion, is the price He paid to ransom us from the slavery of the devil. The devotion to the Precious Blood was an especial phenomenon of Flemish piety in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, that gave rise to the iconic image of Grace as the “Fountain of Life”, filled with blood, pouring from the wounded “Lamb of God” or the “Holy Wounds” of Christ. It took many centuries before devotion to the Precious Blood achieved a liturgical status with its own Feast, Mass and Divine Office.
There is little doubt that liturgical devotion to the Precious Blood began with feasts in honour of the various bloodsheddings of Our Lord. Documents of the Holy See in¬dicate that Pope Pius V restored the Office and Feast of the Precious Blood to the church of Valencia when he reformed the breviary and missal toward the end of the sixteenth century. Almost three centuries elapsed before this limit¬ed liturgical cult of the Precious Blood was to achieve universal standing with a Mass and Office for the Uni¬versal Church. In the providence of God much of the credit for this accomplishment must be given to a saint who has come to be known as the Herald of the Precious Blood, St. Gaspar del Bufalo, and to his devoted followers. On August 15, 1815, Father del Bufalo founded a Congregation of secular priests under the title of the Most Precious Blood. In 1822 he petitioned the Sacred Congregation of Rites to grant the new Community the privilege of a special Feast in honour of the Precious Blood to be celebrated on the first Sunday of July. Graciously the Holy Father granted the request. It remained for Venerable Don Giovanni Merlini, the second successor of St. Gaspar as leader of the Society, to promote the extension of the Feast to the Universal Church. In the mid-nineteenth century Italy was in the throes of bloody revolution, so much so that the Holy Father, Pius IX, was forced to flee Rome. While in Gaeta, he was visited by Don Giovanni Mer¬lini. During the course of their conversation, the Holy Father asked his visitor when he thought the disas¬trous days would come to an end. Merlini evaded a direct reply but countered by respectfully suggesting that His Holiness solemnly vow to extend the Feast of the Precious Blood to the whole world. The Pope would make no commitment. Undaunted, Merlini later wrote several times to the Holy Father reminding him of his proposed remedy for the sad state of political life in Italy. Then on June 30, 1849, Pius IX through his sec¬retary, Monsignor Stella, informed Merlini that he was going to follow out his suggestion to extend the Feast universally. As though this had been what Divine Providence was awaiting, the French army attacked Rome on the same day and liberated the city from the revolutionaries the next day, July 1. On August 10, 1849, the Holy Father issued the decree extending the Feast of the Precious Blood with Mass and Divine Office to the entire Church. Not only the day of the Feast itself, July 1, but the entire month is now commonly devoted to the adoration and glory of the Precious Blood of Christ.
How to Practice Devotion to the Precious Blood
There are a number of spiritual practices clearly identified with the Devotion to the Blood of Christ. Among them are the following: The offering of the Holy Sacri¬fice of the Mass is the most important means of honouring the Precious Blood of Jesus, for the Mass is in all reality the renewal of the bloody Sacrifice Christ offered the Eternal Father on Calvary. By actively participating in the Eucharistic Sacrifice and by offering it in union with the priest, one joins in the offering of the Pre¬cious Blood which Our Divine Lord inaugurated on Mount Calvary. Most intimately allied with the offering of the Mass is the reception of Holy Communion. To par¬ticipate in the offering of Mass to the fullest one must make his participation sacramental by receiving Com¬munion, the Sacrificial Banquet which consummates the Sacrifice, which indicates God’s approval of the Sacrifice, and which ratifies for each communicant the new and eternal covenant between God and His Children. A second practice flowing from the participation in the sacrament of the Eucharist is eucharistic adoration. Devotees of the Precious Blood should make frequent visits to the Blessed Sacrament to adore our Lord truly present Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity, in the Blessed Sacrament. A third manner of honouring the Precious Blood is through prayer, both vocal and mental.
There are many approved prayers in honour of the Precious Blood, among which are the Litany of the Precious Blood, approved for use in the universal Church by Pope John XXIII, the Chaplet of the Precious Blood which originated from Francesco Albertini and was propagated enthusiastically by St. Gaspar and his Missionaries, the “Seven Offerings of the Precious Blood” and a variety of other prayers to be found in manuals of prayers issued by the different provinces of the Congregation of the Most Precious Blood. More beneficial than vocal prayer is medi¬tation on the mysteries of the Precious Blood. This includes loving and thoughtful consideration of those mysteries of the Faith which are in any way associated with the Precious Blood of Christ. No doubt the most familiar are the Sorrowful Mysteries of the Rosary. They are a summary of the chief bloodsheddings in the life of Christ. From them one can learn many of the glories of the Precious Blood; for example, its proof of Christ’s tender mercy for sinners, of His infinite love for each of us, of His humility and obedience unto death. To quote again the Apostolic Letter of Pope St. John XXIII: “Would that they who are dis¬tinguished by the name of Christian would turn their thoughts more frequently to the paternal exhortations of the first Sovereign Pontiff, who wrote: ‘Conduct yourselves with fear in the time of your sojourning. You know that you were redeemed … not with per¬ishable things, with silver or gold, but with the pre¬cious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot’ (1 Pet. 17-19). If only they would turn a more attentive ear to the Apostle of the Gen¬tiles: ‘You have been bought at a great price. Glorify God and bear Him in your body’ (1 Cor. 6:20). Devotion to the Precious Blood of Christ is not a devotion fitted only for select members of the Church, nor is it a devotion whose appeal is limited to a cer¬tain group, nationality or race. Based as it is on the adoration which each member of Christ’s Mystical Body owes to its Head, it is for all. We have all been redeemed by it; we all continue to enjoy the graces which it has won for us; we all must apply its fruits to our own souls, if we wish to inherit the kingdom of Christ in heaven, where much of our happiness will consist in joining in the paean of praise of the angels and saints: “to Him who has loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own Blood, and made us to be a kingdom, and priests to God his Father — to Him belong glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen” (Apoc. 1:6).
• Prof. Michael Ogunu is the President and Coordinator of the World Apostolate of Fatima in Africa
(To be continued)