
The
1932 International Eucharistic Congress in
Dublin, from the Congress' ''Pictorial Record''
'Eucharistic Congresses' are gatherings of
clergy and
laymen for adoring and evangelising the
Holy Eucharist. The
Real Presence of Jesus Christ in the Eucharist is one of the principal dogmas of the
Catholic Faith and is therefore of paramount importance as the most precious treasure that Christ has left to His Church as the centre of Catholic worship and as the source of Christian piety. The main advantages of these congresses have been in the concentration of the thoughts of the faithful upon the mystery of the altar, and in making known to them the means by which devotion towards the Holy Eucharist may be promoted and implanted in the hearts of the people. The promoters of Eucharistic congresses believe that increase in the adoration of the
Blessed Sacrament can be accredited to these congresses.
Early Eucharistic Congresses
The first International Eucharistic Congress owed its inspiration to Bishop Gaston de Ségur, and was held at
Lille,
France,
21 June,
1881. The idea at first was merely local and met with few adherents, but it grew from year to year with an ever-increasing importance. The sixth congress met in Paris, 2-6 July, 1888, and the great memorial church of the Sacred Heart on Monmartre was the centre of the proceedings.
Antwerp entertained the next congress,
15-
21 August,
1890; an immense
altar of repose was erected in the Place de Meir, and an estimated 150,000 persons were gathered about it when
Cardinal Goossens,
Archbishop of Mechlin, gave the solemn
Benediction.
Bishop Doutreloux of Liège was then president of the
Permanent Committee for the Organization of Eucharistic Congresses, the body which has charge of the details of these meetings. Of special importance also was the eighth congress, held in
Jerusalem in
1893.
International Eucharistic Congresses
In
1907, the congress was held in
Metz,
Lorraine, and the German Government suspended the law of
1870 (which forbade
processions), in order that the usual solemn procession of the Blessed Sacrament might be held. Each year the congress had become more and more definitely international, and at the invitation of Archbishop Bourne of Westminster it was decided to hold the nineteenth congress in
London, the first among
English-speaking members of the Church.
The presidents of the
Permanent Committee of the International Eucharistic Congresses, under whose direction all this progress was made, were: Bishop Gaston de Ségur, of Lille; Archbishop de La Bouillerie, titular of Perga and coadjutor of Bordeaux; Archbishop Duquesnay of Cambrai; Cardinal Mermillod, Bishop of Lausanne and Geneva; Bishop Doutreloux of Liège, and Bishop Thomas Heylen of Namur, Belgium. After each congress this committee prepared and published a volume giving a report of all the papers read and the discussions on them in the various sections of the meeting, the sermons preached, the addresses made at the public meetings, and the details of all that transpired.
In
1932 the International Eucharistic Congress was held in Dublin. The ''Dundalk Democrat'' describes the event:
The 47th International Eucharistic Congress was held in Rome from
18-
25 June 2000. It was the third to be celebrated in
Rome, and the first of its kind to be celebrated in a
Jubilee Year. The 48th International Eucharistic Congress was held in
Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico from
10 to
17 October 2004. Pope John Paul II, being too ill to attend, named
Cardinal Josef Tomko as
Papal Legate. The Congress ended with a celebration of the Mass in the
Jalisco Stadium in Guadalajara, with a live link up between that Mass, and a simultaneous Mass celebrated in
St Peter's Basilica in
Rome in the presence of Pope John Paul II. These simultaneous Masses marked the beginning of the
Year of the Eucharist which ran from the International Eucharistic Congress to the
Synod of Bishops in
October 2005. At the end of the Mass, the Pope announced that the next International Eucharistic Congress - the 49th - will be held in
Quebec City in June, 2008. In May 2007 there was a Youth Summit held at the
University of Laval, Quebec City as well, in preparation for this event.
External links
★
Catholic Encyclopedia
★
List on the Vatican`s WebSite of the International Eucharistic Congresses
★
Official Website for the 2008 Eucharistic Conference