| For your convenience you can now listen to Fr. Bob’s reflection, click here. |
18th Sunday of Ordinary Time 8-2-20 |
| Matthew 14:13-21 |
| And
Jesus said, “Give them some food yourselves.” The disciples protested,
“Five loaves and two fish are all we have.” And Jesus said, “Bring them
to me.” As always with the gospels there is a lesson for us. The first
is found in Jesus’ directions to His disciples. When they are faced with
an overwhelming situation. He says, “Give them food yourselves.”
Somewhat embarrassed, they hold up a few loaves and fishes and shrug
their shoulders. |
| Jesus
takes the food and blesses the little they have to offer. But then
rather than hand out the loaves and fishes Himself, He returns them to
the disciples who are told to distribute them to the crowd. The first
lesson from the gospel. God depends on us to take part in the aid and
redemption of the world, you feed them. Three times a week at a bus stop
in New York City, a blind lady stands at the bus stop. She climbs
aboard the bus and is warmly greeted by the driver. She sits down right
behind him, in fact, he had saved the seat. |
| They
carry on an animated conversation as he drives. How is his family, his
kids, his wife. She tells him she is scared of losing meals-on-wheels.
When they reach the blind woman’s stop the driver helps her off the bus.
Then he helps her access the other side of the street in heavy traffic.
When he returns the woman is still standing where he has left her. She
won’t move till she knows I got back safely, he explains. He honks his
horn three times as she smiles and waves. A blind lady and a lowly bus
driver, two insignificant people on the world stage. |
| Hardly
five loaves and two fish between them. Yet, Christ blessed what they
had and handed it back to them. Each made a contribution from what
little they had. They could have cursed and complained that they had so
little and withheld their meager gifts. But instead, they fed each other
from their small store of compassion and caring. Jesus tells His
disciples, “Bring them, bring the insignificant loaves and fish to me
and do not back off, do not say it is too little, what can we do?” I
know the problems are great and your resources are tiny, but don’t give
up. |
| Bring
them to me to be blessed. A man wrote to Ann Landers, He had lived
through depression in the 1930s. His message was that kids today have an
easy time compared to teens of his day. A teen responded to his letter,
this is what she wrote. “Let me ask your generation a few questions:
Were your parents divorced? Almost every one of my friends came from a
broken home. Were you thinking of suicide when you were twelve? Did you
have an ulcer when you were sixteen? Did your classmate carry guns and
knives? |
| How
many of your class came to school high on drugs or drunk? Did your
school have armed security guards in the halls? What percentage of your
graduating class also graduated from a drug and alcohol rehab center?
She ends by saying, when I was your age, I won’t be looking back. I’ll
just thank God I survived. So many temptations to face, some parents
wonder. What are we to do? We have nothing but five loaves and two fish.
That might also be the response of someone trying to make an honest
living. |
| The
pressures to cut corners, the ‘everyone is doing it philosophy.’
Cutthroat competition and office politics they sap energy and spirit.
How can one be a Christian in the workplace? They have all the power, I
just have bread and fish. That might be the response of a spouse
desperately trying to make a go of a troubled marriage. A spouse who has
grown weary of being the only partner working on the relationship. The
other partner is never around and when they are home, their mind is
elsewhere. The spouse says sadly, there is nothing left in this marriage
but five loaves and two fish. |
| Many
people today have cares and anxieties and sorrows and they ask what are
we to do? That was the response of the disciples when five thousand
plus followed Jesus into the desert. Remember Jesus’ reply, “You give
them something to eat.” And, the disciples protested, “How? We have
nothing but five loaves and two fish.” And Jesus says, “Bring them to
me.” He looks up to heaven and blessed and broke the loaves. He gave
them to the disciples who gave them to the crowd and all were fed. What
is the lesson here? |
| For
those at their wits end, those stuck with just five loaves and two
fish. In the face of overwhelming hunger is to realize that they have a
friend. A friend who says bring them to me, bring me your skills and
weaknesses. Bring me your strengths and fears, your children and their
futures. What little you have, bring them to me. And I will make them
adequate for the task. Bring them to me your hopes, your dreams, your
convictions. Bring them to me your burdens, your challenges, your
responsibilities, your hurts. |
| You
see when life gets the best of us, perhaps it is often because we focus
too much on how little we can do. And too little on how much Christ can
do. In any case, know that He will have the last word. He says, “Don’t
try to avoid your cross, pick it up and carry it. Don’t carry it to
Calvary, just bring it, bring it to Me.” |
|
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