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Friday, 9 August 2024

19th Sunday Year B, 2024

  

(1 Kings 19:4-8; Ephesians 4:30 – 5:2; John 6:41-51)

Obviously, it must not have been easy to hear a man say:

            I am the bread that came down from heaven;

today, we would think him mad and laugh him out of court!

And so, the first thing to notice about today’s Gospel reading is that the Jews did not do any such thing.  No!  They had had experience of Jesus: having frequently heard Him speak, closely observed His personal bearing, and at least heard reports of certain miraculous ‘works of His hands’; above all, however, they themselves had just witnessed Him feed 5,000 people from a child’s lunch provision.  Consequently, they were not drawn to laughter when He made a claim even so extraordinary as:

            I am the bread that came down from Heaven.

The truth was that they were deeply perplexed – yes, even felt a certain apprehension  -- in His presence. Having intended to make Him king a short while ago, they felt irritated with themselves and each other at the present situation, and began to complain and grumble among themselves:

Is not this Jesus, the son of Joseph, whose father and mother we know?  How does he now say, ‘I have come down from heaven?’

They knew only one thing for certain: this Jesus was not a man to be laughed at!  

Only the hypocritically self-righteous chief priests, scribes and elders would ever  laugh at Him, but their laughter was always superficial and  contrived: being meant to protect and serve their ever-increasing fear for their own security with regard to the Roman occupying authorities, and also to ensure their position as ‘revered’ leaders of the Jewish people. 

As regards the ordinary people, indifference to anything that was not directly pertinent to their own worldly concerns was their greatest fault, because it made them so very malleable -- so very ‘mob-able’ -- for those hypocritical and increasingly deadly enemies, of Jesus.

There were a few others, however, who made known their own reasons for believing most seriously that Jesus was not one to be laughed at.  He was one whom they -- as both widely experienced and secretly observant, individuals -- found to be far different from any other man they had ever come across: there was a mysterious Personal 'righteousness’ which signalled Jesus out as someone either awesome or very dangerous.  Such, indeed, were the feelings of the wife of Pilate who warned her husband:

            Have nothing to do with that righteous Man;

and of the centurion who, having watched Jesus intently in His suffering and death on the Cross, spontaneously acknowledged his own sinfulness in the face of such righteousness saying:

            This Man was innocent beyond doubt!

It was this Personal ‘something’ about Jesus that was secretly troubling the Jews speaking with Him in our Gospel reading; it was a suspicion, indeed, even a certain deeply-felt personal disquiet, that somehow, something, was being asked of them that they were not able or ready to answer; and so, being disturbed in their own hearts, they murmured and argued among  themselves, until Jesus found it necessary to  answer their disquiet:

Do not grumble among yourselves.  No one can come to Me unless the Father Who sent Me draws him.

Instead of complaints to bolster a prejudiced opinion, there had to be a desire to know God’s truth, together with a willingness to recognize that such spiritual truth about Jesus, His work and His teaching, might stretch or even transcend the limits of their earthly wits and appreciation.  The truth about Jesus could only be received, ultimately, as a gift – the supreme Gift -- from the Father.

And it was in order to afford them a motive that might induce them to welcome and embrace such a gift that Jesus finally added words of power:

            And I will raise him up on the last day.

The prophet Jeremiah had foretold that, in the days of the coming Messiah, all men would be taught by God; and here Jesus – having quoted the prophet -- added what were His very own mysterious and provocative words:

            Everyone who listens to My Father and learns from Him comes to Me.

And that, dear People of God, is the awaited cue for our own entry into the drama of today’s Gospel reading!

The Jews seeking Jesus were ‘murmuring’ among themselves about His words, and Jesus said, quite bluntly, ‘Stop that.  Try to listen to your God and My Father and learn from Him.’

Notice those words very, very carefully, People of God; Jesus advised that, for life’s more important decisions, we should try to listen to God and want to learn from Him, not argue among ourselves or with others.  Salvation is absolutely personal and relational, involving a truly humble awareness of God’s ‘availability’ for all situations of our life, and our absolute need of His presence – acknowledged and embraced -- for our ultimate fulfilment.   Note that Jesus did not even say,  ‘Pray to the Father’, because such prayer can, with too many people, so easily become a matter of ‘discussing’ or ‘praying’ with themselves firmly lodged in the driving seat.  Therefore, Jesus concentrated the Jews attention on one word, LISTEN, to their God and His Father: that is, that they should calm their heart, by humble acceptance of its need before Him, and still their fevered imagination and wayward thoughts, by unconditional trust in Him.  Jesus advised them, and He advises us, to patiently wait upon the Father’s mercy, and hope for His blessing; having only our gratitude and praise to offer in return for His goodness.

And now we come to a great truth about the world we live in, People of God:  

I am the bread of life.  Your ancestors ate manna in the desert, but they died.   I am the living bread that came down from heaven so that one may eat it and not die.

The Father was already teaching and preparing the Jews as they were being led from slavery in Egypt.  He was preparing them for Jesus’ future coming, by teaching them to look for life in ‘food from heaven’.  They knew that all food came ‘from heaven’ in so far as it was ultimately given them by God.  But all such food originated from, and only sustained life on, earth;  they had now to learn to understand, expect, and ultimately recognize their need for living bread originating from heaven, which alone could give them heavenly, eternal life.

For over more than a thousand years God had been guiding Israel towards that possibility of their being able to understand and appreciate something of truly living Bread coming from Heaven; and such, dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, is God’s guiding Providence for us today!

There is a spiritual purpose “attached to”, “involved in” our earthly existence and life’s experiences!   They are all, under God’s Providence, able to guide us -- if welcomed  prayerfully and humbly -- to an initial appreciation of the ultimate realities of heaven.   That is what can make our present every-day life and living, such a wonderful experience:  that is how we, with St. Paul, can manage to glimpse behind the veil  covering the beauty of God!

            Everyone who listens to My Father and learns from Him comes to Me.

Listening to God means not just listening with our ears, it involves the desire of our heart, it concerns the ‘background’ attention of our mind hovering around God, and our willingness and ability to drop earthly concerns when Jesus passes nearby, as witnessed blind Bartimaeus:

 As Jesus was leaving Jericho with His disciples and a sizable crowd, Bartimaeus, a blind man, sat by the roadside begging.   On hearing that it was Jesus of Nazareth, he began to cry out and say, “Jesus, son of David, have pity on me.”  And many rebuked him, telling him to be silent. But he kept calling out all the more, “Son of David, have pity on me.”  Jesus stopped and said, “Call him.” So, they called the blind man, saying to him, “Take courage; get up, He is calling you.”  He threw aside his cloak, sprang up, and came to Jesus.  Jesus said to him in reply, “What do you want Me to do for you?” The blind man replied to Him, “Master, I want to see.”  Jesus told him, “Go your way; your faith has saved you.” Immediately he received his sight and followed Him on the way.   (Mark 10:46-52)

Bartimaeus there gave a most beautiful master-class in the Christian art of listening, for and to God, though he himself -- in his life situation -- had to shout hard to make himself known to whoever might be able to help him to Jesus.

Such ‘listening’ can make life and our daily living-it-out a truly wonderful experience, offering personal pointers to heavenly realities.  And when we learn so to look at, question and taste, the joys and sorrows, bitter and sweet things of life, then everything becomes able to beckon us ever on and ever more engagingly.

Jesus has yet one more piece of life-enhancing advice for us though:

Whoever eats this bread will live forever; and the Bread that I will give is My Flesh for the life of the world.

Whoever eats this bread which is My Flesh … once again we have one supremely important word which is, this time, ‘eats’.

And notice, once again, that Jesus does not say ‘receives’, but ‘eats’.  We have not only to open our mouths or put forward our hands to receive such food, but we have to positively ‘eat’ it, as some might rightly say we have to ‘chew’ it.  The essential point of our ‘eating’ is that we, each of us, recognize the food as essential to, necessary for, my very life.

Moreover, it is not to be anonymously received, but eaten with heart-felt joy and gratitude for the One Who so generously gives it.  According to the book of Proverbs, having been generously given such food, we should give a thought to our returning like for like, in other words we should be stirred to want to give ourselves in return to the Lord Who gives us all.

My dear People of God, living such a life, full of intriguing invitations and loving calls, receiving such daily Personal Food, we are most certainly not alone on our journey through life, but are developing -- as the years pass by -- an ever-greater companionship and intimacy with One Who is of Himself, and wills to become for us,  the Love, Truth, and Life of our life.  May we participate fruitfully in this Holy Mass and hopefully receive Holy Communion with such faith and love as to experience that intimacy and companionship as never before.   Amen.         

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