Eighteenth Sunday of Year A
There are times in all of our lives when we need to be left alone – not necessarily out of selfishness or escapism, but to recharge, solitude is necessary to absorb the impact of a traumatic event. To be left with family alone in a time of bereavement, to have the space to be away, to shed a tear when no-one is looking. We often hide our grief from public view, we are too self-conscious and it is nobody’s business to see our tears and our momentary vulnerability. We in turn all value the need for friends and colleagues to grieve.
This is the mood as the news of John the Baptist’s awful
death must have shaken the disciples who now turn their loyalties and hopes in
Jesus. John had predicted his own death saying of Jesus that ‘He must increase,
I must decrease’. The disciples’ time with John is over. Now, with Jesus they
seek to be alone to cope with their grief. Jesus knows, and perhaps the
disciples suspect, that a similar fate awaits Jesus too.
But even at the time
of bereavement and a funeral we know there is a time to withdraw and leave the
family by themselves. At a removal we often depart the mortuary chapel to allow
the family to close the coffin on their loved one for the last time.
In the Gospel Jesus
and His disciples are given no time for any of the above. As they try to get away, the crowds press
even closer and make demands on Jesus to heal their sick. How mercifully
selfless Jesus is in forgetting His own cares and putting others first!
But interestingly, after some time the place of solitude is
experienced as ‘a lonely place’ and hunger rears its head as appetites return.
Jesus is concerned for their material bodily needs as well.
The feeding of the crowds of the loaves and fish is an
anticipation of Jesus feeding us in the Eucharist, and the Eucharist is the
foretaste, promise and pledge of heaven.
St Paul, in the Second Reading, beautifully describes how
nothing in the visible or invisible world can form a barrier to Jesus’ love for
us. People may pledge: ‘Nothing will ever come between us.’ Many human
friendships, relationships, marriages often begin on this hopeful note, but
these can fail as people drift in and out of ours and others’ lives. If we are
lucky we have been able to sustain certain relationships with others through
thick and thin. St Paul experienced much hardship in his own life, but there
was one constant in His life, one person who would and could not ever let him
down – Our Lord Himself.
For us this loving relationship with Jesus Christ is
sustained by the vital communication we call the life of prayer and by reunion
which we call Reconciliation and Communion. When we receive Jesus in the
Eucharist we are strengthened in the midst of the sorrows, trials and
sicknesses of life. We encounter Jesus the Healer who nourishes us with His
Body and Blood. Only Jesus has the answers we seek, as the crowds knew who
followed Jesus. He healed them and fed them. Each time we approach Jesus and
receive Him in Holy Communion we too are healed and nourished at the deepest
level of our being. This is what we know from the experience of faith, and
perhaps a reason to explain to others who have lapsed form their faith why we
continue to go to Mass on Sunday.
Happy are those who are called to
His supper!
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home