August 12th 2018. Nineteenth
Sunday of Ordinary Time
GOSPEL John 6:41-51
Translated from a
homily by Don Fabio Rosini, broadcast on Vatican Radio
Don Fabio’s
reflection follows the Gospel reading . . .
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Reflection)
The Jews were complaining to each other about Jesus, because he had said,
‘I am the bread that came down from heaven.’ ‘Surely this is Jesus son of
Joseph’ they said. ‘We know his father and mother. How can he now say, “I have
come down from heaven” ?’
Jesus said in
reply, ‘Stop complaining to each other. No one can come to me unless he is drawn by the
Father who sent me, and I will raise him up at the last day.
It is written in the prophets: They will all be taught by God, and to hear the teaching of the Father, and learn from it, is to come to me. Not that anybody has seen the Father, except the one who comes from God: he has seen the Father. I tell you most solemnly, everybody who believes has eternal life. I am the bread of life. Your fathers ate the manna in the desert and they are dead, but this is the bread that comes down from heaven, so that a man may eat it and not die. I am the living bread which has come down from heaven.
Anyone who eats this bread will live for ever; and the bread that I shall give
is my flesh, for the life of the world.’
It is written in the prophets: They will all be taught by God, and to hear the teaching of the Father, and learn from it, is to come to me. Not that anybody has seen the Father, except the one who comes from God: he has seen the Father. I tell you most solemnly, everybody who believes has eternal life. I am the bread of life. Your fathers ate the manna in the desert and they are dead, but this is the bread that comes down from heaven, so that a man may eat it and not die. I am the living bread which has come down from heaven.
Anyone who eats this bread will live for ever; and the bread that I shall give
is my flesh, for the life of the world.’
The Gospel of the Lord: Praise to you Lord
Jesus Christ
Kieran’s summary . . . In the first
reading Elijah is despondent because he cannot see beyond his own pessimistic
perspective. In the Gospel, the Jews grumble because they cannot see beyond
what they think they know of Jesus: “This is the son of Joseph. We know
everything about him! How dare he claim to be bread that has come down from
heaven!” In reply, Jesus asks us to look beyond
what we think we know or understand. The Father is drawing us to himself. He is
speaking to us in the depths of our hearts, in our everyday experiences, in our
intuitions, through our consciences. By means of this internal compass, the
Lord attracts us towards the divine, towards authentic life. Let us turn to him
in silence. Let us open ourselves to the voice of the Holy Spirit who is moving
within us, but we fail to hear him because of the distractions we pursue
constantly, because of our preoccupation with satisfying our appetites. The Lord is closer
to us than we realise! The Holy Spirit illuminates us, caresses us, invites us
to love, opens us to the risen Christ, speaks to us of the Father and of
eternity.
Elijah gives in to despair because he cannot move
beyond his own perspective on things. He does not allow that God might be
acting in this dire situation
On this nineteenth Sunday of the
year, we continue reading the discourse of Jesus in the synagogue of Capernaum,
as recounted in the sixth chapter of the Gospel of St John. The first reading
introduces our theme with the story of Elijah, who is fleeing from the death
threat issued by Jezebel. Elijah had just defeated 400 idolatrous priests of
Canaan and was forced to escape for his life. But now he can take the
persecution no more and wishes he were dead. He sits under a furze bush and
says, ‘Lord, I have had enough. Take my life; 1 am no
better than my ancestors.’ Even though Elijah is a powerful prophet he too goes
through this moment of discouragement – moments of despair which happen to us
all. There are times when we all say, “Enough, I can’t go on. I wish everything
were finished”. When these things happen, we are making an absolute out of a
particular perspective on a situation. Elijah sees only that he is tired and
that he is being pursued. He does not see the future nor the powerful action of
God. All he sees are his own tired muscles and the enemy gaining ground behind.
Elijah’s only method of measuring is whether or not he is better than his
ancestors. Then the angel gives him food and encourages him to go on his way.
He tells the prophet that he still has a journey to undertake and that there is
a road he must follow. All too often we feel anguish because we think we are at
a dead end. Elijah is not at a dead end, and, in fact, he will make it all the
way to the mountain of the Lord.
Things have a reality
that goes beyond their exterior appearance. We ought not to judge things from
their superficial characteristics but seek to discover the significance they
have in God’s plan
This
text is a splendid introduction to the Gospel. Jesus has just announced that he
is the bread come down from heaven. The people begin to grumble: “What is he
saying! This man is the son of Joseph! We know everything about him! Come down
from heaven indeed!” Jesus asks them not to murmur, for the things of God do
not fit in with human schemes. Divine things are not limited to the things that
we already know. Jesus has a reality that is hidden from the men and women who
stand before him. And this is true not only for the humanity and divinity of
Jesus, but for all of reality and life. All things have a reality that goes
beyond what we know of it and which takes its significance from what God has
given it, according to the plan that God has ordained for it. In the Gospel,
the people think they know everything and this leads them to grumble. This presumption
blocks them from placing themselves in harmony with the action of God.
The Father is drawing
him to himself through his action in the depths of our Spirit. This action
permits us to glimpse the authentic life of God in our everyday experiences. We
feel a natural attraction to the divine. God is drawing us to himself if we
would only open ourselves to his action within us
The
solution to this is another kind of attitude altogether. Jesus says, “No-one
can come to me unless the Father draws him”. We can choose to remain entrapped
inside the prisons of our own making, or we can allow ourselves to be drawn
outwards by the Father. The Father is working in the depths of our heart and is
drawing us to himself. In a marvellous text which reflects on this passage, St
Augustine tells us that God places a desire deep in our hearts and sets us on
the journey to salvation. Augustine says that if you show a sheep a handful of
grass, he will follow you. If you show a child a tasty treat, he will become
curious and draw closer. God does the same with us. He wishes to liberate us
from the absolutism of our own mentality and our own reason, in order to begin
to listen much more profoundly to the way he is moving our spirit. God is
drawing us! It might seem curious to say that in this world which is so
agnostic regarding profound things, a world that is fixated with practical
things, with the satisfaction of our appetites, with the pursuit of
entertainment. But artists in general demonstrate the attraction they feel for
Jesus Christ. Soon or later they paint or sculpt a crucifix or the blessed
Virgin. There is something attractive about Jesus if we would only say yes to
this attraction. There is something that the Father places inside each of us
which draws us to the truth and authenticity of Christ. It cannot be erased
from our hearts. The nostalgia we feel for God remains in the depth of our
beings. And St Augustine is not the only one of the fathers that makes this
assertion. This profound knowledge of God is not simply intellectual but is an experience
of a life that is hidden in everyday reality, an authentic life, a life that we
glimpse through our search for what is beautiful.
The Lord is drawing
us and speaking to us in our hearts. Let us turn to him in silence so that we can
perceive his call, so that we can tune in to the internal compass that is
leading us to God.
In
this passage, Jesus says: “No-one can come to me unless he is drawn by the
Father, and I will raise him up on the last day”. Later he says that all will
be taught by God. We must allow ourselves to receive instruction from him,
allow the good to speak in the depths of our hearts. This voice points out
Christ to us. This good that speaks within us is the Holy Spirit who visits us
and works through our intuitions. He illuminates us, caresses us, invites us to
love, opens us to the risen Christ, speaks to us of the Father and of eternity.
We are now in summertime (those of us who live in the northern hemisphere!).
There is more time for prayer in the summer, generally speaking. Let us listen
to God’s call in moments we give to silence. Let us tune in to the call of acts
that are good because they are simple and clear, gestures of reconciliation,
gestures of reciprocal care, There is something that draws us in the depths of
our souls and leads us to the Father, that internal compass that every human
being (thanks to the grace of God) possesses inside of himself.
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