19th Sunday of Ordinary Time
Cycle
B
August
9, 2015 7:30 and 9:00am
St. Margaret Parish,
Bel Air
Food
The
well known humorist Andy Rooney once said that the two biggest sellers in any
bookstore are the cookbooks and the diet books.
The
cookbooks tell you how to prepare food.
The diet books tell you how to avoid eating it.
A
California scientist has calculated that the average person eats 16 times his
or her own weight in a year. A horse
eats only 8 times its weight.
The
scientist concludes that if you want to lose weight, just eat like a horse. Orson Welles once said, “My doctor has advised me to give up those intimate little dinners for
four, unless, of course, there are three other people eating with me.”
Underneath
all of this humor, there is a real truth.
We all enjoy food, we need it, and it is central to our lives.
Jesus as Food – In 2 Ways
In today’s
gospel, Jesus talks of himself as food – as the bread of life. If we look closely at the passage, we hear
that Jesus responds to our two basic needs for food.
1. Food for Growing
We need food first
of all for growing.
An infant who
weights 7 ½ pounds at birth or a sixth grader who is four feet eight inches
tall – both of them need food to grow.
Of course, sometimes we older adults continue to grow because of food,
but in another way!
Today, Jesus says:
“Whoever believes has eternal life.” “Whoever believes has life.”
Here Jesus is
speaking of himself as the wisdom and word and revelation of God. He is food for us in this way.
So, he helps us to
grow in our understanding of God. He
helps us to grow in seeing God as He really is.
Jesus helps us to
grow in how we are to relate to one another.
Saint Paul lists some of these ways today – relating with kindness and
compassion, and not with bitterness and malice.
And Jesus with his
teaching and with the teaching of the Church down through the centuries helps
us to grow in figuring out what to do in life’s complex situations, like end-of-life
issues. So Jesus as food helps us to grow:
“Whoever believes will live.”
2.
Food for Living
And then, we all
know that we need food just for living.
For me, when it
gets to late afternoon or early evening, I’m really hungry. I’m low on energy and really need something
to eat to keep on going.
Well, today, Jesus
says: “I am the living bread and whoever
eats this bread will live forever.”
“Whoever eats will live.”
Here Jesus is speaking
of himself as sustenance and energy for living.
He is food for us in this way too.
So, maybe we are burned
out with our job, and this food keeps us going.
Maybe we feel worn out by the long-term care of a loved one whom we want
to care for, and this bread gives us the energy we need.
Maybe you are
grieving the loss of your husband or wife, and the Eucharist gives you the sense
of closeness – closeness with God. Maybe
we are sick and filled with anxiety about where this is leading, and this food
gives us comfort and strength.
Maybe we are
dealing with hurts from the past and an injured, very low self-esteem, and the
bread of life gives us God’s unconditional love and acceptance. So, Jesus, as food, helps us to live: “Whoever eats will live.”
Conclusion
I really like
looking at Jesus and today’s gospel in this way.
Jesus is food for
us. And we need spiritual food for the
same reasons we need physical food – for growing and for living.
“Whoever believes will live.” “Whoever eats will live.”