Over
the next month the gospel readings in Church come from the 6th
Chapter of St John’s gospel. It an important chapter in the account of Jesus
live and teaching according to St John.
The
chapter begins with the miracle of the feeding of the 5000, which we looked at
together last week, it begins with a miracle of God’s ability to provide for
those who place their faith in him, as powerful as when 4,000 years earlier
those who placed in their faith in God and his servant Moses were led from
Slavery in Egypt, through the red sea and the desert beyond towards to the
promise land. The chapter however ends with these words in Verse 66 “Because of
this many of his disciples turned back and no longer went about with him”
And
what was “this” thing that caused many of the disciples to loose faith in the
person of Jesus – the teaching of Jesus in the synagogue at Capernaum. Teaching
about the Eucharist, the bread from heaven, his own flesh and blood.
No
wonder that there has in the history and life of the church and in the
experiences of the church been so much dissent and argument over our
understanding of the Eucharist, the Mass, the Holy communion, so much argument
over what Jesus and his church mean when they declare “This is the body of
Christ”
The
parable of the feeding of the 5000, that opens this chapter, makes a bold claim
that Jesus is here for both the crowd and the disciples He shows this by
seeing to it that the crowd is satisfied and twelve basketfuls are left
over—one for each apostle. So the miracle has a message for the world, and a
personal lesson for the apostles.
To the multitude, he was saying: I am the bread of heaven. Just like God
sent your ancestors manna in the wilderness to sustain their life, he has sent
me into the world to give life—eternal life. What Jesus gives is something more
than has ever been given before for the life of this world and everyone of us
created in God’s image in this world. And personally, he was saying to the
apostles: Serve me faithfully, and you will never lack what you need, indeed
you will find that you have more than when you first started. I will be for you
everything you need, even in the hour of suffering and death.
However it is clear that both the crowd and the disciples run the risk
of missing the true significance of this miracle. John’s gospel is sometimes
referred to the book of signs. The first miracle that Jesus performs is the
transformation of water into wine at a wedding in Cana of Galilee, it is
recorded as such. Here in miracle of the feeding of the 5000 is another sign. A
sign pointing beyond the miracle itself to an eternal truth.
The danger is that we get caught up in the sign and forget to look where
it is pointing. If set out on a walk in a place I have never been before and
get lost without a map, the sight of a signpost indicating the direction of
travel will be most welcome. Anxiety about the right direction of travel will
be replaced with the glowing relief that the direction is now clear, the danger
of becoming lost is replaced with certainty that my destination can now be
reached.
However the sign in of itself will not ensure that our journey will end
well – we cannot simply sit down by the sign and be thankful, we still must
continue on the path. But having seen the sign, that path will not be as hard
as it was without the sign and with only our doubts and fear to guide us.
Then the disciples in verse 34 say “give us this bread always” what
exactly do you think they were asking for?
Was it for the physical bread that could sate their hunger and sustain
their lives without them having to labour for the money with which to purchase
a life time supply of the bread? Was it that with this bread, always there for
them, they could sit down and never again worry about where their next mouthful
would come from?
If the answer is yes to these questions then they have missed the point,
they have focused on the bread, and ignored the sign and to whom the sign is
pointing. What has satisfied them is the product of this miracle, rather than
the person, Jesus Christ. Jesus warns in verse 26 “You are looking for me, not
because you saw signs, but because you ate your fill of the loaves.”
They have labored for that which will perish.
What does the sign point to – to Jesus who will provide us with what we
need if we bring what we have to him. It points to Jesus who is the food that
endures for eternal life.
When we see the feeding of the 5000 as a sign of eternal life how does
this affect the way in which we get up tomorrow on Monday morning and go about
our daily living?
The key to the answer is found in verses 28–29: “Then they said to him,
‘What must we do, to be doing the works of God?’” Now that question follows
from what Jesus just said. He said, “Labour, or work, for the food that endures
to eternal life.” And they ask, How? What are those works? How do you work for
the bread that gives eternal life?
The answer is simple – to believe in Jesus. Jesus answers in verse 29,
“This is the work of God”—this is the kind of work you do - to please God and
get the bread that gives life, this is the work that you do—namely, “that you
believe in him whom God has sent.”
So what does it mean to “labour for the food that endures to eternal
life”? Jesus says in verse 29 that it means believe in Jesus as the bread that
God has sent from heaven for the life of the world. “Believe in him whom he has
sent.”
And belief in Him whom God has sent will mean that we will not become
either distracted or obsessed with the bread (the product of the miracle) that
we have in our laps but in the one who makes it possible (the person)
'"Bread for myself," wrote a great
Russian thinker, "is a physical question; bread for my neighbour is a
spiritual question."
The basic needs of those around me, my neighbours
struggle for life and their lack of bread, is not just a political or economic
question but a spiritual one as well.
Archbishop Rowan has said “The hunger or need of
some is the problem of all, I am not being fed if my neighbour is struggling, nor
is my neighbour fed when I am hungry.”
The
injunction upon us by our Lord when he teaches his disciples to pray
“Give
us to day our daily bread” is one that means we cannot be content only with our
own needs but the needs of all God’s children. Praying for daily bread is a way
of countering the forces of our modern age that seeks to compartmentalise life
so that the over all picture becomes obscure until it is finally lost all
together and at this point the evil of which we pray to be delivered -swallows
us all.
The
hunger or need of some is the problem of all - which is exactly what St Paul
says about living in the Body of Christ in his first letter to Corinth:
"If one part of the Body suffers, all suffer."