WHY DO CATHOLICS GENUFLECT ?
CATHOLICS GENUFLECT
Solomon was the most glorious and powerful king in the nation of Israel ever knew. Not only his subjects but foreign visitors as well would have knelt whenever they came into his presence. In the ancient world, that was the universally recognized posture of reverence and submission.
According to 2 Chronicles, however, when Solomon entered the temple he had built, this great king himself knelt down before God's altar (see 6:12-13). He recognized that he was in the presence of the king of kings, the all-powerful, all-glorious ruler of the universe.
Today our culture tends to scoff at the notion that anyone should ever kneel. To many, the gesture is a quaint leftover from medieval times, an act that is somehow beneath our modern dignity. But Catholics recognize that God is still God, and that "every knee should bend, / of those in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confesses that / Jesus Christ is Lord" (see Phil 2:10-11). So Catholics count it a privilege to kneel before him because he is worthy of our reverence and submission
Jesus is present in his body and blood, soul and dignity, in the Eucharist. So when Catholics come before the tabernacle in a church, where the Eucharist is reserved, they genuflect -that is, they bend the right knee to the floor and rise again. In this way, they imitate the faith of the holy women when they encountered Jesus at the empty tomb and "did him homage" by failing at his feet (Mt 28:9). Their gesture gives glory, not only to God the Son but to God the Father as well (see Phil 2:11)
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