(Homily 17th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Yr. B)
The
readings of this Sunday are beaming with several themes and points for our reflection;
however, adequate attention has to be taken in order not to be carried away by
the miraculous multiplication in the first reading and in the Gospel. Indeed,
one of the major themes emanating from the readings is the bread that points
symbolically to the Eucharist. More than that, we cannot remain only on the aspect of a miraculous and theological consideration
of the “Bread” without adequate consideration of its anthropological
implication. And as such, it is this anthropological implication of the
Eucharist that opens the door to the second reading, for the miraculous
multiplication and the sharing in the first reading and the Gospel both point
to the value of unity. Even though, the importance of the Eucharist cannot be
undermined, but the Word of God of this Sunday is inviting us to pay adequate attention
to the sharing of our bread, and this revitalizes the age long Christian call
to unity. In all, the theme of unity as emergent in the second reading
dovetails into that of the first reading and the Gospel: Bread-Eucharist. In a nutshell, the bread of one has to
become the bread of all, and as such, the little boy of the Gospel becomes
for us, an exemplary figure.
The first
reading (2 Kgs. 4:42-44) from the
second book of Kings is a prototype of the miraculous feeding in the Gospels,
especially in today’s narrative. It describes the generosity of one man from Baal-Shalishah, who gave Elisha 20
barley loaves. The prophet shared it among the hundred peoples. And upon a
proper perusal, one notices a number of similarities between the passage of the
first reading and that of the Gospel thus: ●The provision of food to God’s
people (man of God and the crowd), ●a specified amount of food, ●the objection
of the food’s inadequacy, ●the man of God disregards the objection and
commanded for the food to be distributed, ●the crowd ate to their fill and there
was some left over. The responsorial psalm, especially in the second stanza
connects the Old Testament reading and the Gospel, and once again the refrain
further buttressed the common theme: “The Lord feeds us; he answers all our
needs.”
From this
Sunday onward, for five Sundays in a row, we are going to listen to the Gospel
of John, the liturgy of the Church will abandon momentarily the Gospel of Mark,
which is the Gospel of this liturgical year. We will be offered the opportunity
to reflect precisely on the renowned sixth chapter, that presents Jesus as the
“Bread of life”, through his words, immolation and the sacrament of the Holy
Eucharist. The chapter begins with the
miracle of the multiplication of bread and fish, which is not narrated with the
same historical weight as in Mark (cf.
6:30-44). Rather St. John presents it as a sign that reveals the mystery of
Christ. As we opined earlier the first reading serves as a background to the
Gospel passage, we have seen a number of similarities in them. But however, in John there are further
Christological and eschatological motifs, for instance the Eucharist and
the messianic banquet. From the Eucharistic dimension, the gestures of Jesus
are important: “took, gave thanks and distributed.” And from the Eschatological
stand point, when the passage states that the multitudes were filled, it is
used elsewhere for messianic banquet. In
the Johannine account, the feeding of the 5, 000 acquires several theological
interpretations, therein Jesus is considered as the new Elijah, the feeding as
a type of Eucharist and as a messianic banquet.
Today in
the Gospel (Jn. 6:1-15) we see
another crowd, different from the crowd of the Gospel of last Sunday, even
though this seems to be the continuation of last Sunday’s Gospel. St. John
tells us that this crowd followed Jesus because they have seen Jesus’ miracles
of healing of the sick. Jesus went up to the hill, and he also discovered the
crowd coming after Him. It was a solitary place and as such, it was obvious
that there is no place to get food for that great number. But Jesus in His
sensibility was the first to put the question to Philip “where can we buy
enough food to feed all these people”? But that was to test Philip, because
Jesus knew already what to do. Philip expressed that two hundred silver coins
will not be sufficient to feed the crowd.
At this point Andrew cuts in “there is a boy with five loaves and two
fish, but they will not be enough for this crowd”. This evangelical sensibility of Andrew is to be appreciated, this means to have a heart that sees.
But in the reactions and responses of these two apostles it becomes glaring
that in that circumstance it was humanly impossible to resolve the problem of
feeding the crowd. At this point, Jesus
entered into action, he came into play, where human effort cannot arrive,
Divine Providence does. Jesus commanded to make them sit down. Then, he
made them to sit down, they were about 5,000 (without counting children and
women), he collected the five loaves and two fish from the boy, gave thanks to
God and distributed them to the people.
Behold, one
of the lessons emanating from this passage is the fact that this miracle reveals
Jesus’ identity. Probably, the crowd remembered a similar miracle in the Old Testament
and said “This is indeed the prophet who is to come into the world”, the
promised Messiah. After the miracle the people recognized Jesus as the Messiah
who is to come, not from a spiritual point of view, instead from a political
point of view. But Jesus is not a political Saviour or one who has come to
solve all their economic and physiological needs and problems. Little wonder, they
wanted to make Him King by force. On seeing the miracle, they wanted to crown
him King, they thought immediately of taking advantage of the whole situation,
they desired for an immediate material gain, but Jesus didn’t allow himself to be conditioned by the desires,
expectations and the apparent acclamation of the crowd. His major mission rather is to liberate
humanity from the slavery of sin and from the power of darkness. This
indeed, should serve as an example to our modern day prophets and preachers.
This miracle is a prelude or an anticipation of
the great miracle that Jesus will accomplish at the last Supper. The actions
that he accomplishes here are the same he will accomplish in the cenacle during
the institution of the Eucharist: “took the bread, gave thanks and distributed
them”. The multiplication of bread and fish here is the anticipation of the
Eucharistic bread. This miracle
manifests God’s providence to his people, where man cannot arrive, God’s providence
and omnipotence can, as it is revealed in Christ. Many a times we are
troubled because of the many problems and hardships that torment us, sometimes
we wonder if we can come out of them, rather we need to have trust in God and to
wait for His help patiently. The two episodes in the two readings confirm an
age long biblical truth that what is impossible to man, is possible to God (cf.
Gen. 18:14; Jer. 32:17; Mt. 19:26; Lk.
1:37; Mk. 10:27).
Be that as
it may, the presence and reference to the boy with five loaves and two fish is
revelative of the fact that in our journey of faith, in our encounter with God
and in the reception of God’s blessings and favour, God does not substitute man, rather he uses him as an instrument (for
instance, the boy with the five loaves and two fish). God needs our collaboration to help us. For this St. Augustine
opined: “God who made us without our help will not save us without our help”. On
the other hand, the willingness and
promptness of the boy in putting into action the words of Jesus he just heard
with immediacy, cannot but propel us to become more generous and willing to
share what we have, no matter how little. This episode calls our attention to the rediscovery of the value and task of
solidarity with our brothers in need, for Jesus used the bread and fish of
the little boy. Jesus wants us to offer the little that we have for the good of
others. He could have performed the miracle single-handedly, but he wants our
cooperation, he wants a brother to help a brother. Do not just count your
blessings but share them!
The second reading
(Eph. 4:1-6) is taken from the
second part of St. Paul’s letter to the Ephesians. The letter to the Ephesians
could be divided into two parts, the first part: chapter 1-3 deal with
doctrinal issues, chapter 4-6 are parenetical and they contain ethical
exhortations. As such, the passage of today’s reading is the beginning of the parenesis (advice or instruction). While
the first part sets forth the theme of the unity of the Jews and Gentiles in
the one body, the parenesis begins
with an exhortation to unity. However, the exhortation to unity points back to
the theological foundation of that appeal. In that bid, the “ought” is based on
the present reality, on the “is”. The Apostle affirms that there is one body,
one spirit, one hope, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of
all. Therein, the imperative to unity
rests on the indicative, and as such, unity is both a gift and a task.
St. Paul
delineated some comportments “worthy” of the Christian vocation by listing a
number of virtues that every disciple of Christ and every community of faith
have to practice, and they are: lowliness and meekness, patience, forbearing
one another in love and the task “to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the
bond of peace” (v.3). As a matter of
fact, St. Paul derives the exhortation of the conduct of life worthy of the
Christian vocation from his doctrine on the Church, as a mystical body of
Christ. The Church according to St. Paul is “one body” of which Christ is the
Head, and the believers in Him are the members, and it is animated and vivified
by one vital principle: The Holy Spirit. He
gives it a theological undertone thus: “one God and Father of us all, who is
above all and through all and in all” (v.6).
Indeed from the foregoing, we see the reasons why Christians have to live in
the unity of the Spirit, and in peace (cf.
Eph. 2:14-17), for by means of his blood, Christ has “broken down the
barrier which used to keep them apart” (Eph.
2:14) and “through Him, then, we both in the one Spirit have free access to
the Father” (Eph. 2:18).
Drawing the
issue further, since the first reading and the Gospel talked about the
Eucharist in a latent and symbolic manner, and upon reflection on the second
reading revolving around the theme of unity, we cannot but recognize the
Eucharist as the sacrament of unity. Thus Eucharist and unity are the thread
that runs through all the readings of today. Truly, we can show adequate understanding of the meaning of the Eucharist when
we do away with our selfishness (like the little boy of the Gospel) and embrace unity and solidarity, for
it is by sharing our own bread that we can become authentic sharers in the
“bread of life” and in that eternal banquet. May God help us to become more
generous and sensitive to the needs of others! May the Eucharistic Bread we
share enliven the values of love and unity amongst us!! Amen!!!
(Fr. Vitus Chigozie,
SC)
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