Exodus
16:2-4, 12-15
Ephesians 4:17, 20-24
John 6:24-35
In today’s Gospel of John, the people of God
are requesting a sign that Jesus is ALL he says he is. They want proof.
Don’t we all at times want proof of God’s
existence in our lives?
In today’s first reading from Exodus, the
people of God want a sign, too.
They’re grumbling in the desert, thinking, “Hey, we were much more comfortable in
captivity in Egypt.”
In last week’s Gospel of John, we got the most wondrous sign of all that
Christ is what he says he is when he took a boy’s five barley loaves and two
fishes and fed a multitude of people.
It was a miracle sign that Jesus is consubstantial
with the Father. And He was offering more than mere material food, but
spiritual food that lasts forever as he reminds followers this week.
That word “consubstantial” caused quite a
stir in 2011 when the New Roman Missal was introduced, but the meaning of this
big word from the Nicene Creed is quite accurate.
Consubstantial simply means: “of the same substance or essence.”
Jesus is trying to get THIS
into the heads of the people He encounters today.
They want material proof THAT he’s
the Son of living God. More miracles.
He’s trying to tell them that
everything he is and everything he is doing is a reflection of the one who sent
him.
This is
called the “Bread of Life Discourse” and is found only in John’s Gospel.
Wait,
aren’t we in the Year of Mark with our Gospel readings?
We are. But the Church wants
us to take a break from Mark and reflect on Jesus as the Bread of Life from
John’s Gospel for the next few weeks. Remember,
when the Church gets serious, it breaks out the Gospel of John.
One of the keys to understanding this
weekend’s readings is this passage from John’s Gospel spoken by the people of
God:
“What can we do to accomplish the works of
God?”
In other words, “What
shall we do? What are the works that God wants us to do?”
Before we can answer this question we have to first learn
to avoid the things that disconnect us from God? To do this, we must deepen our relationship
with the Lord in prayer.
This is what each of us must ask God in our
prayers daily. What is it that You,
Lord, want me to do? And what do You
want me to change about myself?
“Faith is entering into
a relationship with God. Faith is becoming aware of the gift of our existence
as a gift from God; nothing we've ever earned. God has loved us into being and
sustains us in being, and we need to recognize that, and then to develop a
relationship with this living God.”
For our parish mission team, we are doing the
will of God for the next 10-days as we leave for Guatemala tonight.
If you want to keep track of our journey, I
encourage you to find ICOLPH on Facebook and “LIKE” it. This way you can see
pictures and watch videos from our parish mission trip to Guatemala.
There, we will use the 15-thousand dollars
raised in the parish to do the will of the Father.
We will build relationships between our
parish community and our sisters and brothers in Christ in a Mayan Catholic
parish community in one of the poorest areas of the world.
We will build stoves in homes so families can
cook their meals without poisoning their families with harmful smoke. We’ll
build houses to help those without homes have a home of their own. We’ll build
classrooms for the parish school. We
will build new roofs on houses that leak when it rains.
By giving up our attachments to the material
things that disconnect us from God and plugging directly into the Kingdom, God
will draw us all closer to Him.
It all starts when we eat this Bread
of Life, and become filled with ALL we need to do the will of God. This helps us to turn away from things that
separate us from Him.
Paul reminds the baptized in Christ what we
must do in today’s reading from Ephesians:
“You should put away the
old self of your former way of life, corrupted through deceitful desires, and
be renewed in the spirit of your minds, and put on the new self, created in
God’s way in righteousness and holiness."
Paul is urging us to undergo
a revolution within ourselves by putting on this new self. These are strong
words. In many ways, he’s calling for “something
that would almost turn us inside-out, upside-down, just change everything in
our lives, a revolution, so that we really live in God and renew ourselves from
inside, according to God's ways.”
This is my hope and my
prayer for our parish mission team.
In the Gospel, Jesus is telling us clearly
how to do this: by partaking in the Bread
of Life that comes in the Eucharist, and in the Word of God we share at Mass
every week.
This spiritual nourishment is designed to
turn us from old sinful ways and renew us in the joy and hope of Christ. This
Bread of Life sustains us and helps us to better hear the voice of God
whispering in our prayer life, guiding us as we do the will of the Father.
For each of us, we hear different
things. But we are all called to action.
Some feel called to give of their time,
talent and treasure to our St. Vincent de Paul food banks. Some feel called to
work to ensure our parish commits itself to our Catholic Social Teaching
through events like Operation Stocking Stuffer every Christmas benefiting our
homeless sisters and brothers and the Days of Caring in partnership with Catholic
Community Services. Some feel called to help individuals they meet on the
streets to find housing or food or health care or a sympathetic ear to listen.
Some feel called to bring communion to those in hospitals, hospices, nursing
homes or prisons. These are all corporal works of Mercy. This is what Pope Francis is calling us all
to do as we enter the upcoming Year of Mercy.
Add caption |
There is no one right way to do the
will of God. Only that we deepen our
relationship with Christ, hear God’s call and then respond.
And Jesus is reminding us today that
the source of this Bread of Life is found in the Word and Eucharist.
I’d like to share a final thought
for reflection from popular Catholic writer Henri Nouwen. It’s entitled Becoming the Living Christ:
“Whenever we
come together around the table, take bread, bless it, break it, and give it to
one another saying: "The Body of Christ," we know that Jesus is among
us. He is among us NOT as a vague memory of a person who lived long ago but as
a real, life-giving presence that transforms us. By eating the Body of Christ,
we become the living Christ and we are enabled to discover our own chosenness
and blessedness, acknowledge our brokenness, and trust that all we live
we live for others. Thus WE, like Jesus himself, become food for the world.”
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