Eucharistic Adoration is offered every First Friday from 9:30 -10:30 am at Our Lady of the Assumption Church. Eucharistic Adoration and Holy Rosary focused on the messages of Our Lady of Medjugorje offered every Wednesday from 6:30 pm-8:00 pm at St. Maria Goretti Church.
For those times when you are not able to make it to a church or chapel to adore the Blessed Sacrament in person, there are several options for virtual Adoration: https://www.bostoncatholic.org/virtual-adoration. If you would like a short, simple guide, print out Blessed Is She's How to Make a Holy Hour.
"The time you spend with Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament is the best time you will spend on earth. Each moment that you spend with Jesus will deepen your union with Him and make your soul everlastingly more glorious and beautiful in Heaven, and will help bring about everlasting peace on earth," - Saint Mother Teresa of Calcutta
Eucharistic Adoration is the respect and worship we give to Jesus, who is truly present to us under the appearance of bread and wine. It refers to personal, intimate time spent with Jesus in the Eucharist. Usually, the Blessed Sacrament is exposed, with the white host visible within a golden or silver display case called a monstrance. Even when the Blessed Sacrament is not exposed, however, you can pray before Jesus’ presence in the tabernacle.
Adoration calls us to take a break from our busy lives to quiet our minds and open our hearts to Jesus Christ. Like spending quality time with any loved one -- deepening that relationship -- the blessings are abundant. But, Adoration isn’t necessarily about what we will get out of it. True, the graces dispensed by God help us grow in holiness, but the primary purpose of Adoration is right there in the name of the act: to adore the One present to us in the Eucharist. Remember, the Lord is spending this hour with you.
Click here to watch a short video of Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament.
We hit "pause" on all the important and pressing matters we busy ourselves with to learn how to sit at the feet of Jesus, to chose the better portion, and to help attune our ears to God’s words and our eyes to God’s gaze so we can do what we pray in the Our Father: “thy will be done on earth as it is in Heaven.” Sitting before the Eucharist is being granted an audience with the King of Heaven. Why would we keep away?
Remember that you don’t actually have to do anything. The Catholic faith recognizes that the greatest gift God gives us is himself, and Adoration is another way for us to recognize that gift outside of receiving the Eucharist at Mass. So, don’t overthink it. Just receive the gift.
There are many ways to pray. We may meditate silently by gazing on the sacred host. We may silently speak to Jesus from our mind and heart. We may also rely on devotions and prayers from Catholic tradition, such as the reading of Scripture, recitation of the rosary, or the litanies.
If you have no idea where to start, here are some suggestions:
You don’t have to sit still during your Holy Hour in order to make it count. It’s okay for it to be a natural extension of the rest of your prayer life. So, if there’s something that really helps you focus your prayer, bring it to Adoration. Most of all, remember to receive the gift of Christ in the Eucharist and just be present to God.
My Lord Jesus Christ, I adore you in all the tabernacles of the world. I offer you my life in reparation for the sins against the Blessed Sacrament, the unworthy communions, disrespect, lack of reverence in your churches, and countless other sins against your most Holy Body and Blood. Please, my Lord, increase my faith in your Eucharistic presence so that my devotion may be fanned into a flame of love of you and that I may go into the world to proclaim your kingdom. I ask this of your mercy in your Holy Name. Amen.
Mary, Mother of the Eucharist, pray for us!