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mbrose: The good Lord indeed whilst He
requires diligence, gives strength; nor will He dismiss them fasting, “lest
they faint by the way,” that is, either in the course of this life, or before
they have reached the fountainhead of life, that is, the Father, and have
learnt that Christ is of the Father, lest haply, after receiving that He is
born of a virgin, they begin to esteem His virtue not that of God, but of a
man. Therefore the Lord Jesus divides the food, and His will indeed is to give
to all, to deny none; He is the Dispenser of all things, but if thou refusest
to stretch forth thy hand to receive the food, thou wilt faint by the way; nor
canst thou find fault with Him, who pities and divides. Bede: For our Lord’s
breaking the bread means the opening of mysteries; His giving of thanks shews
how great a joy He feels in the salvation of the human race; His giving the
loaves to His disciples that they might set them before the people, signifies
that He assigns the spiritual gifts of knowledge to the Apostles, and that it
was His will that by their ministry the food of life should be distributed to
the Church. –Catena Aurea
He is our peace; in his flesh he has has broken down the
dividing wall of hostility
Apart from the Resurrection the feeding of the
five thousand is the only miracle of Jesus recorded in all four gospels. I
seriously doubt that it was the menu which made the meal especially memorable. It
was a decisive moment in which Jesus revealed that he was the King that the
people were longing for. In St. John’s Gospel this point is made explicitly: “When
the people saw the sign which he had done, they said, "This is indeed the
prophet who is to come into the world!" Perceiving then that they were
about to come and take him by force to make him king, Jesus withdrew again to
the mountain by himself”. Because it is also true that this miracle reveals
that Jesus was not the King they were looking for.
The Gospels of St. Mark and St. Matthew make
this point in a different way: they record two different feedings of the
multitude: the five thousand and a subsequent one of four thousand. The feeding of the five thousand took place in
a Jewish region near Bethsaida close to the Red Sea; the feeding of the four
thousand happened in a Gentile region around the Decapolis.
The Venerable Bede says that ‘our Lord’s
breaking of the bread means the opening of mysteries’. Modern folk may think
that the ancient practice of associating numbers with spiritual truth is ridiculous.
My own view is that the real superstition is the modern idea that polls and
statistics convey important and reliable truths. In any case you will never
understand the Bible unless you take numbers seriously because the folks who
wrote the Bible certainly did.
In the miracle of the 5000 Jesus takes five loves and feeds five thousand, which is reminiscent
of the five books of
the Jewish Law. Not only that, but when everyone had finished eating, twelve baskets of left-overs
were collected, alluding to the twelve tribes of Israel.
In this second miracle, the feeding of the
4000, seven loaves
are used and seven baskets
are collected. The number seven
is symbolic of completeness (i.e. not just Jews but Gentiles too) and the
number seven is evocative
of the seven days
of creation when God created all
humanity.
The work of Christ the King is greater than the
5000 imagine, not just a King for them but a King for the 4000 as well, the
Savior of all men The folks who first heard and experienced Jesus consistently
underestimate him. So do we. But Jesus knows. That is why he wishes for a
moments rest: he said to the apostles, “Come away by yourselves to a lonely
place, and rest a while.” But the crowd with their own dreams and hopes pursues
him and make such claims on him that he does ‘not even have time to eat’.
Ultimately he will have to offer himself as food
for these hungry people. He is here not to rest but to be worn out in love, to
suffer and die for love of men.
It is in the second reading that we see the
extent and the cost of the work undertaken by this King. By giving his life
through death in order to unite the people who have been separated into two
parts.
‘Now’ St. Paul says to the Gentiles at Ephesus, ‘in
Christ Jesus you who once were far off have been brought near in the blood of
Christ’. This is indeed the explicit plan and task of his life, the secret of
the feeding the multitudes. ‘For he is our peace, who has made us both one’. It
is his torn body itself which is the source of unity for all. ‘in his flesh he
has made both into one and has broken down the dividing wall.’ In the Cross and
Eucharist he has made himself into the powerless yet all powerful reconciler of
all human conflict.
The traditional liturgy of the Church bears this
out: the peace was not exchanged before the Offertory, as we do it, but after
the Our Father, when the priest broke the Host and said ‘the peace of the Lord
be with you.’ Have no fear I will leave it to your next parish priest to move
it to the right place.
Why do we come to Mass? There is no better
answer that I know of than the hymn by William Harry Turton:
Thou,
Who at Thy first Eucharist didst pray,
That all Thy Church might be forever one,
That all Thy Church might be forever one,
Oh,
may we all one Bread, one Body be,
Through this blest Sacrament of Unity.
Through this blest Sacrament of Unity.
For
all Thy Church, O Lord, we intercede;
Make Thou our sad divisions soon to cease;
Make Thou our sad divisions soon to cease;
Draw
us the nearer each to each, we plead,
By drawing all to Thee, O Prince of Peace;
By drawing all to Thee, O Prince of Peace;
He is our peace; in his flesh he has broken down the
dividing wall of hostility
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