Homily
for the
17th
Sunday of Ordinary Time
July
28, 2024
John
6: 1-15
The
Fountains, Tuckahoe, N.Y.
St.
Francis Xavier, Bronx
Our
Lady of the Assumption, Bronx
This is an
adapted and condensed version of the homily I gave 3 years ago at 2 other
parishes.
Multiplication of the Loaves & Fish (Ambrosius Francken) |
“There’s a boy here who has 5 barley loaves and 2 fish; but what good are these for so many?” (John 6: 9).
Since November,
on most Sundays we’ve been reading from St. Mark’s Gospel. Now we come to a 5-week interruption in that
cycle, partly because Mark’s Gospel is considerably shorter than Matthew’s or
Luke’s for filling out our Sunday readings, and partly because the 6th chapter
of St. John’s Gospel is so fundamental. These 5 weeks are the only time in our
3-year cycle of readings when we hear that chapter.
The story of
how Jesus multiplied a few loaves and fish and fed thousands of people is
remarkable in itself. It’s also so
important to the Christian Gospel that it’s one of the very few stories from
Jesus’ public life reported in all 4 of the gospels. What Jesus did is also foreshadowed in the
story of the prophet Elisha recounted in our 1st reading (2 Kings 4:42-44).
Jesus’ miracle
is thus well attested. Similar accounts
appear in the lives of the saints, also well attested. God must enjoy such miracles. E.g., on one occasion St. John Bosco
multiplied breakfast rolls for his boys because the baker had cut off the bread
supply (as often happened, Don Bosco was seriously in arrears); another time he
multiplied chestnuts for the boys as a treat after a pilgrimage; and once he
multiplied hosts for Holy Communion because the sacristan hadn’t put out a
fresh ciborium. (I checked the
tabernacle; we’re good.)
We may be
struck by such stories, 1st, by how nature’s limits are surpassed. How could Jesus turn 5 loaves and 2 fish into
a banquet for 5,000 men, plus women and children? This is an example of what St. John calls the
“signs” of Jesus, a word he uses twice in today’s story (6:2,24). Other “signs” include his changing water into
wine at Cana and raising Lazarus from death.
2d, we’re struck that the signs indicate something much deeper going on,
deeper than what our eyes see and our ears hear.
If exceeding
the limits of nature to feed more than 5,000 people was a wondrous sign, the
Eucharist foreshadowed in this meal offered by Jesus is a far greater
surpassing of nature. That foreshadowing
is why the story appears in all 4 gospels.
The gospels
even use language that we recognize as eucharistic: “Jesus took the loaves, gave thanks
(eucharistesas in St. John’s Greek), and distributed them”
(6:11). Matthew, Mark, and Luke also
include the verb broke: Jesus
broke the loaves before distributing them.
At Mass the priest pronounces those same 4 verbs in the Last Supper
narrative: “On the night he was betrayed
he himself took bread, and, giving you thanks, he said the blessing, broke the
bread and gave it to his disciples…” (EP III).
When I was a
boy, a long, long time ago (tho not in a galaxy far away), we learned in the Baltimore
Catechism that a sacrament is “an outward sign instituted by Christ to give
grace.” (I’m sure that sounds familiar
to some of you!) The bread and fish that
Jesus multiplied and used to feed a hungry crowd are signs of a greater feeding
that he has provided for his people; signs of a greater miracle of nature than
multiplication.
In the Holy
Eucharist Jesus transforms nature. He
changes the bread that we bring to the altar, and the ordinary wine, into
something totally different, substantially altered. What looks like bread and wine, what tastes
like bread and wine, what smells like bread and wine is no longer bread and wine: “This is my body, which will be given up for
you. This is the chalice of my blood …
poured out for you.” On our altar are no
longer bread and wine but the body and blood of Jesus Christ, the same body
crucified on Mt. Calvary, the same blood spilled, the same body that rose from
the dead and now lives forever in heaven.
In the coming weeks Jesus will teach us in the rest of ch. 6 that he is
the living bread come down from heaven, giving eternal life to all who come to
him and eat his body and drink his blood.
The
transformation of ordinary bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ—not
symbols but really, truly, and actually his body and blood—is something beyond
nature, something supernatural, a miracle of grace. The Eucharist is one of those 7 outward signs
instituted by Christ to give us divine grace.
Another
miraculous transformation is indicated by this sacrament. Ordinary food—bread, meat, potatoes, and
veggies—our bodies transform into all the nutriments we need for life and
activity. The Eucharist, tho, is the
true “Wonder bread.” We don’t transform
the Eucharist, but the Eucharist transforms us; we become what we eat and
drink; we become the Body of Christ.
Consequently,
we must act like what we’ve become. We
must be who we are: the Body of Christ,
people who speak and act like Jesus—not only when we praise God on Sunday but
in our entire lives: at home, at work,
at play or relaxation. The Eucharist is
intended to transform us totally so that when God calls us into eternity, our
entire, transformed selves will be recognized as belonging to Jesus Christ, our
savior and redeemer, and we shall live alongside him forever.
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