Little brother avi bala
bitra AUG
2021 01 SUN
EIGHTEENTH SUNDAY
IN ORDINARY TIME
Exo 16:2-4, 12-15; Eph 4:17,
20-24; Jn 6:24-35
LORD,
GIVE US THIS BREAD ALWAYS
Welcome to a
short reflection on XVIII Sunday in
Ordinary Time.
We live as hungry
people in a hungry world. Everyone is looking for something that will sustain
and nourish
life, something that will feed and energize, something that
will fill and satisfy.
Everyone is
looking for bread. The problem is
not that we are hungry, but the kind of bread we eat. Think about the
varieties of bread being eaten in our lives and in the world today.
King David is
surely not the only one to have ever eaten the bread of betrayal, adultery,
or murder.
Many of us eat
the bread of having to be right and get our way. We eat the bread
of hurt feelings and resentment.
Sometimes we eat
the bread of loneliness, fear, and isolation. There are
times we eat the bread of sorrow or guilt. Other times we eat
the bread of power and control.
Sometimes we eat
the bread of revenge or one-upmanship. The world is
full of bread and yet far too many live hungry, empty, and searching.
That says
something about our appetites and the bread we have eaten.
It’s a sure sign
that the bread we have eaten cannot give real life. It is perishable bread that
nourishes only a perishable life. It leaves us wanting only more of the same.
Not all bread
sustains and grows life. Not all bread is nutritious. If you want to know the
nutritional value of the bread you have to look beyond the bread.
Where did it
come from?
What are its
ingredients?
That’s what
Jesus is teaching in today’s gospel. The people have shown up hungry.
“Very truly, I
tell you, you are looking for me, not because you saw signs, but because you
ate your fill of the loaves,” he says to them.
The people are
concerned for their bellies. Jesus is concerned for their lives.
The
people want to feed themselves with bread.
Jesus wants to feed them
with God.
“Do not work for
the food that perishes,” he tells them, “but for the food that endures
for eternal
life.”
The food that
endures is Jesus himself. He is the bread
that is broken and distributed for the life of the
world. He is the bread
that is broken and yet never divided. He is the bread that
is eaten
and yet never exhausted. He is the bread that consecrates those who believe
in and eat him.
When
we believe in Jesus, eating, ingesting, and taking
him into our lives, we live differently.
We see ourselves
and one another as persons created in the image and likeness of God,
rather than as obstacles or issues
to overcome. We trust the silence
of prayer rather than the words of argument. We choose love
and forgiveness
rather than anger and retribution. We relate with intimacy
and vulnerability
rather than superficiality and defensiveness. We listen for God’s
voice rather than our own. Ultimately, we seek life rather than death.
“I am the bread of life,”
Jesus tells the people. “Whoever comes
to me will never be hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.”
He is offering
the people himself. He is the imperishable
bread that nourishes and sustains imperishable life. Jesus makes us
the same offer. He offers
himself to us in every one of our relationships: family, friends,
strangers,
enemies,
those who agree with us, and those who disagree. In every
situation and each day of our life we choose the bread we will eat, perishable
or imperishable.
In so doing we
also choose the life we want. May we learn to
feed on Christ. May we be able
to realize
the pangs of hunger and thirst of our spirit,
and satisfy it in and through that holy and consecrated bread
which the Father gives to his children every day.
“Receive
Communion often, very often... there you have the sole remedy.”
- St Therese of
Lisieux
- Avinash Bitra OFM Cap.
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