Josh 24, 1-2, 15-18 / Eph 5, 2a,25-32 / John 6, 60-69

In
the gospel Jesus’ call for decision meets with strong resistance – from people
who think themselves his disciples. They
say: “What you say to us, Jesus, is hard to accept. But Jesus doesn’t relent. He pushes the question: “Does what I have
said shock you?” But why should they be
shocked? Why should we be shocked? What shocking thing is Jesus saying?
Many
take Jesus’ words about himself as the Bread of Life in a very physical
sense. So the shock comes in Jesus
telling us to actually eat his body.
“Take and eat!” Yet in the gospel
of John Jesus warns us about such an overly fleshy reading of his words. He says: “It is the spirit that gives life,
while flesh of itself is of no avail. The
words I have spoken to you are Spirit and life.”
Jesus
is telling us: what we are to take and eat is his own Spirit and life. When we take into ourselves Jesus’ Spirit and
life – feed on Jesus’ way and values – his vision and style of life – then
Jesus really is becoming our Bread of Life – the Bread for our Living.
We
cannot talk about Eucharist without talking about change and
transformation. We talk about bread and
wine being changed into Jesus’ real presence among us. That is deeply true. But we dare not put limits to God’s
work. God’s work of transformation has
not only to do with bread and wine. It
has everything to do with us. As we make
Jesus our real Bread of Life by taking on his Spirit and life, then we are
changed. We are transformed.
We
will experience our own transformation. We
will find ourselves living more self-forgetfully and loving more
generously. We will be shocked to
recognize Jesus in who we are becoming. We
will be shocked to recognize in ourselves the Living Lord, the Risen Lord.
Jesus’
words change things. “This is my body”
changes bread and wine – changes us into “Body of Christ”. And the words change the neighbor – fellow
parishioner, fellow citizen – into “Body of Christ”. But also the neighbor from afar – the
refugee, the immigrant, the illegal – “Body of Christ”. And the unacknowledged neighbor – the
un-allowed, unwelcome neighbor: the
people kept on the margins of our society and our church – “Body of
Christ”. And finally the always
unrecognized, unmentioned neighbor: the
enemy – whomever we fear or been told we should fear – “Body of Christ”.
Does
what Jesus says shock us? I think our
shock shows we have understood what he is saying to us.
We
have a phrase: “being a practicing Catholic”.
Jesus is telling us: being a
good, practicing Catholic requires we approach ourselves and the neighbor – the
neighbor of every kind and degree – with the same reverence with which we come
to the altar to receive Jesus’ Body and Blood.
Let
our communion here in church this morning ready us for our communion in the
streets tomorrow.
Fr. Pat Earl, SJ