Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Joe Hoover, S.J.July 18, 2024
Participant kneel during an adoration service on the opening night of the National Eucharistic Congress on July 17 in the Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis (OSV News Photo/Bob Roller)

My former students at Red Cloud Indian School would cut off the second half of certain duo-syllabic words. Money was pronounced “mun,” nothing was “nuth,” and emotional was “emoshe.” It was almost as if they were guarding themselves from the full existential implications of talking about money or nothingness or emotions. To distance themselves from being vulnerable before such fraught concepts.

In that spirit, I will just say that attending the National Eucharistic Congress in Indianapolis this week, I keep surprising myself by getting emoshe.

When I got off the plane at the Indianapolis airport yesterday and went down the escalator to ground transportation, there was a huge pink and red sign pasted to the floor below: “Heaven on Earth. No boarding pass needed. National Eucharistic Congress.”

Two women coming down the escalator next to mine said, quite earnestly, almost as if they weren’t sure they had landed in the correct city, something like, “Oh, we’re in the right place!”

There was just something so simple and nonaffected and happy and guileless and endearing about them saying that—“Oh, we’re in the right place!”—that I got a bit emoshe. I cannot tell you exactly why, except to say that maybe I am sorely in the mood for something simple and nonaffected and happy and endearing and guileless. (Maybe everyone is?)

Last night at Lucas Oil Stadium—a massive indoor and very cool-looking stadium of exposed girders and pipes and catwalks, a brilliant theater set of a stadium—thousands of people knelt in the half dark in adoration of the Eucharist as a simple song played quietly in the background (“Set a fire down in my soul, I want more of you God. No place I’d rather be than here in your love…”).

The next morning a woman in the buffet line at the hotel restaurant said to my colleague Ricardo da Silva, S.J.: “Wasn’t it beautiful, all those people at adoration kneeling? It’s just what we need, what the world needs.” Something about her saying that, her quiet joy, someone who is simply pleased with what is happening here, got me a touch emoshe.

At the press conference today, Bishop Andrew Cozzens reported that during the third “missioning” year of the Eucharistic Revival, “We are inviting every person to walk with one person who is away from the faith or not of the faith and help them to take one step back to the church.” It is a smart way forward, this manner of evangelization: simple, manageable, right-sized, humble. Just hearing it made me (O.K., I’ll say it) emotional.

In some ways, this Eucharistic Congress is not really an earth-shattering event. News is not breaking, candidates are not stumping, teams are not battling, records are not being shattered. It is people walking around wearing orange Congress swag bags happy to be here with other Catholics and to pray together. And it is moving.

America is at the 10th annual National Eucharistic Congress in Indianapolis. Find additional essays and reflections here

More: Eucharist

The latest from america

Pope Leo said that if the teen “had come all the way to Rome, then (the pope) could come all the way to the hospital to see him.”
A Reflection for Tuesday of the Eighteenth Week in Ordinary Time, by Molly Cahill
Molly CahillAugust 04, 2025
As emergency workers searched for survivors and tried to recuperate the bodies of the dead, Pope Leo XIV offered his prayers for people impacted by the latest shipwreck of a migrant boat off the coast of Yemen.
Catholic News ServiceAugust 04, 2025
The Archdiocese of Miami celebrated the first Mass for detainees at “Alligator Alcatraz,” the Trump administration’s controversial immigrant detention center in the Florida Everglades.