Issued by the Catholic Center for Studies and Media - Jordan. Editor-in-chief Fr. Rif'at Bader - موقع أبونا abouna.org

Published on Tuesday, 4 June 2024
The film “Jesus Thirsts” seeks to guide viewers to rediscover the Mass and the Eucharist
The hour-and-a-half movie tells the story of the Mass and offers stories of the power of the Eucharist, “the source and summit of the Christian life.

romereports.com and catholicworldreport.com :

Only one-third of American Catholics believe in the true presence of Jesus in the Eucharist, according to a 2019 Pew Research study. But the Church in the United States is taking action to change this—one way is through the big screen.

The new film, “Jesus Thirsts” seeks to guide viewers to rediscover the Mass and the Eucharist. And the executive producer believes this has both the power to change minds and change lives.

 

Deacon Steve Greco, Executive Producer, jesusthirstsfilm.com, says: “After you see this film, this documentary, this love letter to you, you're going to feel like it is necessary for me to go as often as possible and now I want to go to reconciliation, now I want to go to adoration. I've heard this over and over again with people who have seen it in our previews and in our premieres, it is absolutely amazing how it changes your life.”


The film highlights the Biblical origin of the Eucharist. But it also takes viewers on a journey around the modern world—from downtown Chicago to the countryside of Slovakia and the villages of Uganda to show Eucharistic miracles and the power the Mass holds for people of all walks of life.


Featuring global Catholic leaders like Dr. Scott Hahn and Eduardo Verástegui, the filmmakers are confident that viewers will be compelled to share their rediscovered faith.

 

He adds,What this film absolutely, positively, guaranteed—it will create evangelists. Because once you really receive the real presence, the reality of the real presence, the reality of how much Jesus loves us, you have to share it with other people, you feel compelled to do that.”

“Jesus Thirsts” can be found in theaters across the United States only on June 4, 5 and 6—just about one month before tens of thousands of people will gather in Indianapolis for the National Eucharistic Congress.

 

“Jesus Thirst” film is “an encounter with Jesus”

Christ Cathedral in Garden Grove, the chancery office for the Diocese of Orange in California, recently hosted the premiere of a new movie on the Holy Eucharist: “Jesus Thirsts: The Miracle of the Eucharist.” The film is the result of a collaboration between the diocese and Spirit Filled Hearts Ministry, whose founder and president, Deacon Steve Greco, is diocesan director of evangelization and formation.

 

The hour-and-a-half movie tells the story of the Mass and offers stories of the power of the Eucharist, “the source and summit of the Christian life”. (Catechism of the Catholic Church 1324) It opens in theaters nationwide June 4, 5 and 6. The film’s release coincides with the U.S. bishops’ National Eucharistic Congress occurring in July in Indianapolis, the culmination of a three-year Eucharistic revival campaign. Bishop Andrew Cozzens, chairman of the National Eucharistic Revival, is featured in the film.

 

Present at the premiere were the “Jesus Thirsts” filmmakers and many of those interviewed for the film, including Deacon Greco, who said, “This movie can be a point of grace for every Catholic believer—those who are curious—and those who may have strayed from the sacraments. The Catholic Church is in crisis with a reported only one in four Catholics attending weekly Mass. If the Eucharist is truly Jesus, then we must create an opportunity for education, invitation and inspiration for the lost to turn back to God truly present in every tabernacle around the world.”

 

The film begins with a welcome by Bishop of Orange Kevin Vann and Bishop Cozzens, who point to surveys indicating that a mere 30% of Catholics believe in the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. The film then features interviews with a variety of prominent Catholics including Franciscan University professor Scott Hahn, Curtis Martin of FOCUS, author Noelle Mering, Marian Fathers Donald Calloway and Chris Alar, and Chris Stefanick of Real Life Catholic .

 

Stefanick, who attended the premiere, said, “I am excited to be interviewed for this movie, and I think it will be an important tool helping us share the Gospel of Jesus Christ. We live in a time of general apathy to all things spiritual and of weak catechesis, and I’m confident that this film will be an important tool in turning things around.”

 

Featured in “Jesus Thirsts” was a visit to a prison in Beaumont, Texas, where Bishop of Beaumont David Toups offered Mass for the inmates, who also had time for adoration. Inmates interviewed detailed how their devotion to the Eucharist helped them cope with lengthy prison sentences; former inmate turned Catholic evangelist, Jim Wahlberg (brother to actors Donnie and Mark Wahlberg), also visited to tell the story of the faith he found in Christ.

 

Wahlberg, who attended the premiere, related, “I went to share my testimony about the emptiness and loneliness you can feel in prison and the hope you can find in Christ. But I went away amazed at the love and devotion that so many of these men already had in Jesus. It is only He who can satisfy their hearts and give them the strength to go on.”

 

As he relates in his 2020 book The Big Hustle, Wahlberg grew up in Boston, and was twice sentenced to prison, the second time for a home invasion. Raised nominally Catholic, he returned to the Catholic Faith through his experiences in prison ministry and became a Catholic filmmaker when he was released.

 

Central to change in his life, Wahlberg noted, was reception of the Eucharist. He explained, “So many people today are seeking false forms of power, and the greatest source of power and love exists under the guise of bread in the Holy Eucharist. As a filmmaker, I have seen the power of storytelling that can change lives, and here we have the greatest love story of all time … This film] is an encounter with Jesus, who is seeking every human heart and is waiting for us on every altar around the world.”

 

“Jesus Thirsts” also includes reenacted images from both the Old and New Testament relating to the Eucharist, as well as conversations with young people about what they know of the Eucharist. Most believed the Eucharist was merely a symbol and otherwise had a dearth of knowledge about the sacrament and priesthood.

 

“We wanted to include these interviews,” said director Tim Moriarty, “because it shows us where we are in terms of belief and devotion to the Eucharist, and the work we need to do.”

 

Citing a 2019 Pew Research study that revealed that just 31 per cent of Catholics believe “during Catholic Mass, the bread and wine actually become the body and blood of Jesus,” Moriarty continued, “It’s not just a symbol; it is Jesus Himself. This film is crafted to ignite that realization in the hearts of those who see it.”

 

Moriarty added, “As our team at Castletown Media worked on the film, we knew we needed to show the universality of our faith and how the Eucharist unites us as one body in Christ. We hope that it will spur a movement that leads people back to mass, Eucharistic adoration, and ultimately, a belief in the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist.”

 

Another vignette was the story of Vietnamese Cardinal Nguyen Van Thuan (1928-2002) who spent 13 years in captivity—nine in solitary confinement—at the hands of the Communist government after the 1975 fall of Saigon. Friends were able to smuggle wine and hosts into Thuan—the wine was disguised as a bottle of medicine—which he used to say Mass using his own hands as the paten and chalice. The Eucharist not only gave him the strength to thrive spiritually in prison, he related, but he was able to forgive and even convert a few of his captors.