O.T. XVII
[B]: 2Kgs 4:42-44, Eph 4:1-6, John 6:1-15
Today’s
readings invite us to become humble instruments in God’s hands by sharing our
blessings with our needy brothers and sisters.
The miracle
of the feeding of the 5,000 is found in all four Gospels, although the context
and emphasis vary. This is the only miracle, other than the resurrection,
that is told in all the Gospels, a fact that speaks of its importance to
the early Church.
No Bible
scholar doubts that all six bread miracles in the Gospels are about the
Eucharist. John uses this story in his Gospel to introduce Jesus’ profound and
extended reflection on the Eucharist and the Bread of Life. John makes a
special mention here that the Jewish feast of Passover was near, drawing a connection
of this miracle with ancient Passover.
This
miraculous feeding in the deserted place had precedents: Moses, Elijah, and
Elisha had each fed people without resources. The present miracle
resembles particularly the one performed by Elisha (2 Kgs 4:42-44). In
both cases, unlike the manna in the desert, there were leftovers, for everyone
there ate, and had enough and more than enough to be filled. The apostles were
told to collect the left over-s. That itself has a Eucharistic overtone.
Otherwise, broken crumbs of bread which could not be decently used again may
not be ordered to be collected. It also can mean we shall not waste any food
that we have. Because everyone needs bread to live and no one can survive
without food. And if there are people not able to get sleep because their stomach
is hurting due to hunger while we waste food, is certainly a sin.
At the sight
of the crowd who had been listening to Jesus for long his sympathy was kindled.
They were hungry and tired, and they must be fed. No one asked Jesus to
provide the crowd with food. It was Jesus who first expressed
his concern about the people's need for food.
One of the
greatest tragedies of our times is the fact that millions of
people are reduced to starvation throughout the world. In the Asian,
African and Latin American countries, well over 500 million people are living
in what the World Bank has called "absolute poverty". Every year 15
million children die of hunger. For the price of one missile, a school full of
hungry children could eat lunch every day for 5 years. 100 million deaths could
be prevented for the price of ten Stealth bombers, or what the world spends on
its military in two days! The Indian subcontinent has nearly half the world's
hungry people. Africa and the rest of Asia together have approximately 40%, and
the remaining hungry people are found in Latin America and other parts of the
world. Nearly one in four people, 1.8 billion - live
on less than $1 per day, while the world's 358 billionaires have assets
exceeding the combined annual incomes of countries with 45 percent of the
world's people. When you get on the internet these days you see the ad asking
help for hungry children in Yemen. Children are dying there from hunger. It is a country with 100% Muslim population. But the rich Islamic countries won’t help them because
that is not their concern. Saudi Arabia offered to help Canada build 100
mosques for the Muslim immigrants, but not to help the poor, even the poor in Islamic countries. (That is another
issue altogether).
God has
arranged the world in such a way, that every person may have the food he
or she needs. Food in the world should suffice to feed God's children but it
will never suffice to fill the greed of men. One of the reasons for
world hunger is priorities. Those of us who live in an industrialized society
place a high priority on comfort and convenience. Our standard of living places
a significant strain on the world economy. Certainly this is something
Christians must consider in terms of their own economic lifestyle. At a time
when people are not getting enough to eat, we are living a lifestyle far beyond
what many could even imagine. We have a great challenge before us. We must not
only consider what we can do to feed the hungry, but we must also consider what
we should do to limit our indulgent lifestyle.
Hunger and
poverty are the consequences of the selfishness of people. So the solution to
this devastating problem lies with man alone. One doesn’t have to be rich to
help others. Pointing to the poor widow who put two coins in the temple
treasury Jesus said, others gave from their abundance but this poor widow gave from
her shortage. The boy that shared his bread with Jesus had a similar attitude
too.
He had not
much to offer but in what he had Jesus found the materials for a
miracle. Jesus needs what we can bring him. It may not be much but he
needs it. It may well be that the world is denied miracle after miracle and
triumph after triumph because we will not bring to Jesus what we have. He
wants us to make good use of all his gifts. And the generosity of the boy
contains a lesson for us. And Jesus reminds us as he did the Apostles: “Gather
the fragments left over,
so that nothing will be wasted.”
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