Here are a few thoughts inspired by the readings for the Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time: a call for us to recognize Jesus' invitation to enter into relationship with the Father and with Him.
Food for the soul
These are the days of summer: days for visiting with
family and friends, days for leisure activities like sports, reading and
strolls along the waterfront. This
weekend, North Bay’s waterfront is home to the annual Summer in the Park
celebration. The midway is here, there
are a variety of rides and attractions and of course there are food
vendors. At the heart of all human
relationships, there is a special place reserved for sharing a meal together,
whether with colleagues, friends or loved ones.
Just as the presence of food creates an atmosphere of
celebration, the absence of food creates a situation of great stress. How many of our brothers and sisters, exiled
from their homelands in various parts of the world, are crying out even today
in words not unlike the cries of the Israelites spoken of in today’s first
reading: you have brought us out into
this wilderness to kill us with hunger (Ex 16:3)?
God has always heard the cry of his people, especially
when they are in trouble, and he is always quick to answer us, not always in
ways that we might expect, but in ways that will truly respond to our
needs. When they complained about their
hunger, the Israelites were remembering a time when they had food in abundance,
but God always responds by considering the present situation and looking
forward: at twilight you shall eat meat,
and in the morning you shall have your fill of bread (Ex 6:12). Why did he do this? Because he has always wanted to enter into
relationship with us, and good food paves the way to the human heart.
The gospel passage we heard today takes place in John’s
account immediately after the multiplication of the loaves and fishes. Having eaten their fill, the people set out
in search of Jesus. At some level, all
human beings set out on such a journey: in search of that which we believe will
satisfy our hunger, but Jesus is quick to caution them not to be content with food that perishes (Jn 6:27); rather, we
should seek the food that endures for
eternal life.
On more than one occasion, during his encounters with
youth, Pope Saint John Paul II used to caution them not to seek happiness by
striving to gain the approval of their peers, or in the empty promises of
realities that could never be fulfilled.
Jesus Christ alone is able to respond to every human
need. He who is the bread of life (Jn 6:35) invites each of his beloved disciples
to enter into a personal relationship with him.
This relationship promises to fulfill our search for every need, to satiate
our deepest hunger, to renew us in the
spirit of our minds and to clothe us with the New Man, created in the true
likeness of God, in true righteousness and holiness (Eph 4:23-24).
The invitation has been issued. It’s up to us to respond.
The invitation has been issued. It’s up to us to respond.
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