Homily for April 22nd, 2021: John 6:44-51.
“I am the
bread of life,” Jesus says. “Your ancestors ate the manna in the desert, but
they died. This is the bread that comes down from heaven so that one may eat
and not die.” Jesus is speaking to his fellow Jews. So, to understand what he
is saying, we must start with the Jewish Scriptures, which we call the Old
Testament.
The rabbis
often spoke of the manna which nourished God’s people during their desert
wanderings under Moses as God’s word or instruction. Amos, the first of
Israel’s prophets to write down his message (earlier prophets spoke orally
only) writes about a famine coming on the land, because of the people’s
unfaithfulness: “Not a famine of bread or a thirst for water, but for hearing
the word of the Lord” (8:11f). The theme of bread as God’s word is frequent in
the so-called Wisdom books of the Old Testament. In the book Sirach, for
instance, we read: “He who fears the Lord … will come to wisdom … She will
nourish him with the bread of understanding . . .” (15:1 & 3).
This is the
background for Jesus’ astonishing claim: “I am the bread of life … the living
bread that came down from heaven; whoever eats this bread will live forever.”
Jesus is telling us that his words are real nourishment. That is why the two
disciples who encountered the risen Lord on the road to Emmaus could say, after
Jesus had made himself known in “the breaking of the bread” (the oldest term
for the Eucharist): “Were not our hearts burning within us while he spoke to us
on the way and opened the Scriptures to us?” (Luke 24:32).
All
Catholics know that Jesus comes to us in Holy Communion. Many still do not realize
that he comes to us equally in what the second Vatican Council called “the
table of the word.” The rediscovery of that term, which had lain, largely
forgotten, in the Church’s attic for centuries, was one of the Council’s great
gifts to us. “The Church has always venerated the divine Scriptures as she
venerates the body of the Lord,” the Council said, “insofar as she never
ceases, particularly in the sacred liturgy, to partake of the bread of life and
to offer it to the faithful from the table of the Word of God and the Body of
Christ” (Verbum Dei, 21). For a
balanced spiritual diet, we must be nourished by both.
I'm so glad these are still being published. Who's managing this blog now?
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