CAREFUL WHAT YOU WISH FOR!
SERMON PREACHED BY FR. TONY NOBLE ON SUNDAY AUGUST
2nd 2009
John 6: 33 "The
Bread of God is that which comes down from heaven, and gives life to the world".
"Careful what
you wish for" is an old and
well-known saying. It is illustrated very well in our first reading from Exodus
16: 2-15. During their 40 years in the
wilderness, the Jews complained that they were hungry and reminded Moses they
had plenty of bread to eat when they were slaves in Egypt. "Why did you bring us out to this
place?" they said!
Now God has a sense
of humor - so every evening the whole sky was covered with quails. I bet they
were sick of those little birds after 40 years! And to answer them about all that bread they
had in Egypt - each morning for breakfast he sent flakes of bread settling on the
ground like frost. Everyday for 40 years!
Not quite the sort of
bread they were expecting. In fact they called it "Manna" - which
translates as "What is it?" It wasn't exactly a loaf of bread. But they
got what they wanted and wished for, didn't they!
It's a similar story
in John chapter 6. Jesus had fed the crowd of 5,000 with bread by a
miracle. But they were not
satisified! Completely forgetting how
boring and endless that Bread from Heaven was, that Manna in the wilderness,
they said to Jesus: "Our fathers ate the Manna in the wilderness",
and quoted from Psalm 78: "He gave them Bread from Heaven to eat".
This incident in John
6 is a continuation of Mark chapter 6.
Jesus fed the 5,000; the crowd responds enthusiastically; Jesus retreats
to a mountain; the disciples decide to take a boat over the lake to get away;
Jesus joins them later by walking on the water.
Saint Mark then
concludes by challenging the twelve - and us - to understand who Jesus is. To
make us understand that he is the Divine Son of God, who is Lord of
creation. Saint John doesn't stop there.
He continues from that whole series of incidents with what seems to be a debate
between Jesus and the crowd.
Firstly, Jesus tells
them bluntly they're only interested in him because he fed them. Secondly, he challenges them to see the
meaning of what he did. It wasn't just to nourish them because the shops were
closed.
He says: "Do
not labor for food which perishes, but for the food which endures to eternal
life". That, of course, is what he will give them - the food that
endures to eternal life.
But their minds are
still stuck on being fed. Remembering the Exodus experience of the Bread from
Heaven, they ask him to do the same. "Our fathers ate Manna in the
desert, will you do the same for us now?". But without them realising it, Jesus has
brought them from the practical reality of being fed, to a spiritual
discernment. Already they are looking at Jesus in terms of what God did in the
great Exodus through the wilderness.
But do they
understand that Jesus had brought them to a spiritual experience when he fed
them? It doesn't seem so.
Jesus says: "The
Bread of God is that which comes down from heaven, and gives life to the
world".
It is not just to
nourish people as they wander through the desert. The bread of God is really
for the whole world. It comes down from heaven. Of course he is referring to
himself.
I wonder if they
recalled words he said on another occasion: "The Son of Man who came
down from heaven"? For that is exactly what he is saying again. The
bread of God is he who comes down from heaven and gives life to the world.
But they still think
in terms of bread. They plead: "Lord gives us this bread always".
They think it's another gift, another miracle. So Jesus responds clearly and
bluntly: "I am the Bread of Life".
Where is this
conversation and debate going? He now introduces the theme of Holy Communion: "He
who comes to me shall not hunger, and he who believes in me shall never
thirst". You notice the shift here?
Until this moment we've been talking about bread and being fed; now
Jesus talks about eating and drinking.
Christ is now
establishing the relationship of himself come down from heaven - the Bread of
Life - with the bread and wine of Holy Communion. Now in John 6 comes his
wonderful teaching about Holy Communion, including:
+ "The Bread
which I shall give for the life of the world is my flesh"
+ "He who
eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life"
These can only be
understood in the context of what we are doing today – the Holy Eucharist.
When we look at the
whole of John 6, we see the spiritual reality of what we do here Sunday by
Sunday. The Church understood the
feeding of the 5,000 as a symbol and image of Holy Communion. Holy Communion is not itself a symbol, like
the feeding of the 5,000 - but a reality which conveys to us what Jesus
promises - his very life.
Just as we are fed
with the sacramental bread and wine, so we are really fed with the life of
Christ - what he mysteriously says is his flesh and blood.
Just like the 5,000
who were fed, we participate in a spiritual experience and reality through this
simple act. Sometimes, like the crowd, perhaps the spiritual dimension can be
lost on us. Maybe this story from John 6 is for us as well as the crowd?
When the crowd
recalled the Manna in the desert, it wasn't just that God gave them bread from
heaven. There was a deeper meaning to that experience. The Manna from heaven
was connected with the Passover, which preceded it. There would have been no
escape through the Red Sea into the wilderness without first the Passover - by
which they escaped from slavery.
The Passover was that
sacrifice which saved them from slavery by the shedding of blood from the
Sacrificial Lamb. That Passover was an image of the sacrifice of Jesus on the
Cross - the Lamb of God who has saved us from slavery to sin, by the shedding
of his blood.
The Passover was an
image and prophecy of Calvary. The Manna that followed to sustain the people is
an image and prophecy of the Eucharist, which follows Calvary.
That is why at the consecration
in the Eucharistic Prayer, the priest does not use the words of Jesus like "I
am the Bread of Life" or "Unless you eat the flesh of the Son
of Man, and drink his blood…".
No, the priest repeats word for word what Jesus said at the Last Supper
in the context of the Passover Meal: "This is my Body, which is given
for you" and "This is my Blood of the New Covenant, which will
be shed for you".
Because the Manna in
the desert was a symbol of the Eucharist, the Eucharist is bound up with the
Passover which preceded it.
First of all the
celebrant identifies the bread and wine with the Body which was given for us
and the Blood which was shed for us.
Only after this does he distribute the bread and wine to the
congregation. This first action at the altar distinguishes the Eucharist from
any other meal we participate in.
However, the
Eucharist is not a sacramental act directed to the elements of bread and wine on
the altar.
The Eucharist is
actually a personal act of Christ directed towards us as individuals, So that
when we receive this token of Christ's life, this sacramental Body and Blood of
Christ, it is the act of Christ himself to us personally - the one who meets at
the altar rail.
In doing so, thus is
fulfilled what Jesus says in Saint John 6: 35 - "I am the Bread of
Life; he who comes to me shall not hunger, and he who believes in me shall
never thirst" .
That is who we
receive. Christ comes to us in this Sacrament.
This presence in Holy
Communion depends on what precedes it - that is the priest taking and blessing,
so that the bread is identified with the Body of Christ offered for us on the
Cross. The act of Communion therefore presumes
a change in the status of the elements.
Through the Eucharist
Jesus makes himself known personally to his people, week by week, and day by
day, as their personal Lord, Saviour, and Friend.
He who, through the
Eucharist, "comes down from heaven, and gives life to the world".