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Walk with Christ doco hits screens

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Students process through the streets under their school banners during the Walk for Christ on the feast of Corpus Christi in 2022. A new documentary will help Catholics prepare for the feast on 11 June this year. Photo: Giovanni Portelli
Students process through the streets under their school banners during the Walk for Christ on the feast of Corpus Christi in 2022. A new documentary will help Catholics prepare for the feast on 11 June this year. Photo: Giovanni Portelli

Students across Sydney Catholic Schools will gain fresh insights into the significance of the Feast of Corpus Christi, its history and ongoing importance through a new documentary produced by the Sydney Centre for Evangelisation.

The short documentary features insights from Auxiliary Bishop Richard Umbers and Australian Catholic University Deputy Vice Chancellor, Professor Hayden Ramsay, and has been released in the lead up to the feast day on Sunday 11 June when thousands of Catholics are expected to participate in the annual Walk With Christ procession through Sydney’s central business district.

While we are accustomed as Catholics to marking the great Christian celebrations of Christmas and Easter with the fanfare they deserve, the new documentary specifically celebrates the Feast of Corpus Christi, as the day when Christ reminds us as Catholics that He will be with us till the end of time through His real presence in the Holy Eucharist.

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Professor Ramsay has told The Catholic Weekly, the Feast of Corpus Christi is celebrated more publicly in many European countries, but he believes there is a real need to raise greater awareness about the feast amongst Australian Catholics.

“In some European countries, the feast of Corpus Christi is still marked by a public holiday and a very public procession with an outdoors Benediction and certainly in some Mediterranean countries, there’s no embarrassment and indeed there’s a certain familiarity almost around the Eucharistic host being exposed in the streets on this great feast day,” Professor Ramsay said.

The short documentary, which is less than 15 minutes long, traces the remarkable story behind the Feast of Corpus Christi, dating back to 13th century Italy when a German priest, Peter of Prague, discovered blood seeping from the consecrated Host whilst celebrating Mass.

The documentary is available for viewing on the Archdiocese of Sydney’s YouTube channel and The Catholic Weekly website.

At a time when Australian society is becoming increasingly secular, as reflected in recent Census data, Professor Ramsay said large-scale public religious processions like the Walk With Christ play a key role in lifting the spirit of believers around their shared faith.

“It gives a bit of heart to people that you can take the Christian faith and you can take Christ Himself out into the public world, as Lord of the Streets, in the streets he belongs in, to the streets he came to redeem”, he said.

“In doing so, we try to say for us as Catholics, he is really here. This is not just a symbol of him, this is not just a hope that he will come. He has actually come and he is actually here amongst us”.

Last year’s Walk With Christ brought together over 13,000 people and Auxiliary Bishop Richard Umbers said similar large numbers are anticipated again this year.

“It is always a great joy to be united in Christ. We’re here for Jesus and that always resonates,” he said.

“The Eucharist is what makes the Church and to spend that time with Jesus who is really present here is a real privilege that lifts people in their hearts and does a lot for showing our faith in the streets of Sydney”.

This year’s Walk With Christ will be held on Sunday 11 June, with an outdoor festival commencing in Martin Place at 1pm and the procession beginning at 2:30pm sharp from the corner of Martin Place and Pitt Street.

Find more information about the event here: https://www.sydneycatholic.org/about-us/archdiocesan-events/walk-with-christ/

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