
Bread in Abundance
By Fr. Jerry Pokorsky
HERALD Columnist
(From the Issue of 8/1/02)
The thousands of people who were fed by the Lord
in the miraculous multiplication of loaves must have pondered the meaning of the miracle.
Who wouldn't be incredulous? A wonder-worker having the ability to provide for an
abundance of foodstuffs would be useful indeed. But how useful, and in what way?
A foodstuff wonder-worker is just the kind of Messiah many in Israel
were looking for. He would be useful in military campaigns. Supply lines could be
eliminated. Well-nourished troops could surprise an enemy with great strength and
versatility. Even the intimate friends of Christ, the Twelve Apostles, expected the
Messiah to establish his kingdom through force.
But Christ made it clear that the kingdom of God would not be
established by military conquest. When the Apostles James and John asked the Lord to call
down fire from heaven to destroy his enemies in Samaria, the Lord rebuked them and
(perhaps with amusement) gave them the surname, "sons of thunder." In the Garden
of Gethsemane, the Lord warned the sword-wielding Peter that he who "lives by the
sword, dies by the sword."
When tempted by the Devil in the desert, the foodstuff wonder-worker
Himself insisted that "Man does not live on bread alone." While the ministry of
Christ certainly includes a compassionate ministry to the poor and hungry, the
multiplication of the loaves must point to another kind of abundance. But the whole
picture can only come into focus by harmonizing the Gospels according to Catholic
tradition.
Immediately following the miraculous multiplication of the loaves, St.
Matthew reports the account of Jesus walking on the water and calming the sea as well as
the frayed nerves of the Apostles being tossed about in the boat. He gently chides them as
men of "little faith." But to the Jewish mind, Jesus' mastery of the violent
seas has great significance. The sea is a sign of chaos. The monsters of the sea represent
the powers of evil. Only God has the power to overcome the chaos and evil of the sea.
Christ is revealing his divinity to his disciples.
Immediately following the calming of the seas, according to Catholic
tradition, is the "Eucharistic Discourse" in the Gospel of St. John. If the
walking on the water reveals the divinity of Christ, the Eucharistic Discourse reveals
Christ as the true "Bread of Life" who has "come down from heaven." He
promises "he who comes to me shall not hunger, and he who believes in me shall never
thirst." And despite the objections of his disciples who abandon him, he holds fast
to this literal revelation: "For my flesh is food indeed, and my blood is drink
indeed. He who eats my flesh and drinks my blood abides in me, and I in him." This
revelation is completed at the Last Supper when Christ using words to be taken
literally says over simple bread and wine, "This is my body" and
"This is my blood." The Eucharist!
The superabundance of bread Christ offers us is his very self under the
appearances of mere bread and wine at Holy Mass. If the multiplication of the loaves
reveals the compassion of Christ, it ultimately directs our attention to an abundance that
will never fail. For "he who eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and
I will raise him up at the last day." Any abundance of bread cannot be more useful
than that.
Fr. Pokorsky is administrator of St. Peter Mission in Washington, Va.
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