This is a collection of talks, essays, and homilies on various aspects of the Holy Eucharist prior to becoming Pope Benedict XVI. Then-Cardinal Ratzinger draws upon the biblical, historical, and theological realities of the Holy Eucharist - the Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity of Jesus Christ - and provides deeper insight into this central Truth of the Catholic faith. As with most of his writings, this book can be challenging simply because of its intense scholarship. Yet at the same time, there is a profound simplicity that, when read in the light of faith, makes deeper truths easier to grasp.
The final chapter, "My Joy Is to Be in Thy Presence", is my favorite, and contains some of the most beautiful, radical, and amazing exposition on the truths and reality of eternal life. There is simply too much to quote to capture the entire essence of this chapter, but the following is a fair representation of Cardinal Ratzinger's insight:
"Each accepted pain, no matter how obscure, every silent suffering of evil, each act of inwardly overcoming oneself, every outreach of love, each renunciation, and every turning in silence to God - all of that now becomes effective as a whole: Nothing that is good goes for nothing. Against the power of evil, whose tentacles threaten to surround and lay hold of every part of our society, to choke it in their deadly embrace, this quiet cycle of true life appears as the liberating force by which the Kingdom of God, without any abolition of what is existing, is, as the Lord says, already in the midst of us (Lk 17:21). Within this cycle God's Kingdom comes, because God's will is done on earth as in heaven."
Eternal life doesn't begin at the end of our temporal life: it begins when we encounter God now, a true life welling up within us every time we encounter Christ - Christ who is The Life and The Resurrection, the living water of salvation. As Ratzinger wrote elsewhere in the last chapter: "If we live in this way, then the hope of eternal fellowship with God will become the expectation that characterizes our existence, because some conception of its reality develops for us, and the beauty of it transforms us from within."
There is so much more I could write about the entire book. This is one worth rereading.