Readings:
1 Kgs 19:4-8
Ps 34:2-3, 4-5, 6-7, 8-9
Eph 4:30—5:2
Jn 6:41-51
Sometimes
things are so horrible, we say we just want to die. Most of the time we
intend that metaphorically. Elijah, in today’s first reading, seems to
mean it literally. He is fleeing for his life, as Jezebel is determined
to kill him because he vanquished the prophets of Baal and put them to
death. Parking himself under a broom tree a day’s journey into the
desert, he prays, “This is enough, O Lord! Take my life, for I am no
better than my fathers.” It is not clear whether Elijah is fed up with
the difficulty of his ministry or whether he is lamenting his own
actions, having just killed the prophets of Baal. Perhaps it is both.
In any case, the frailty of God’s fiery prophet is most visible. When
Elijah is at his lowest, God’s messenger comes with food and water,
urging him to continue onward. Obediently, he gets up and takes
nourishment, continuing his sojourn in the desert for forty more days,
a trek that is reminiscent of the Israelite desert wandering of forty
years. Elijah’s quest will culminate at Mount Horeb (also called Sinai
in the J and P strands of the Pentateuchal narrative). There, like
Moses, he encounters God.
The
But the Holy One is not in the fierce wind or the earthquake or the
fire but in the voice that emerges out of sheer silence. The divine
voice instructs him to anoint kings over Aram and Israel and to anoint
Elisha as prophet to take his place. This last part of the narrative is
not included in today’s reading. When read as a whole, however, the
story points us to the ways in which God can tame the fierceness in us,
when, like Elijah, our passion for justice can find us in bloody
battles with opponents. We emerge victorious, but at what cost?
In
the desert Elijah learns of God’s nonviolent ways. He does not find the
Holy One in the violent wind or the earthquake or the fire but in the.
silence that instructs him to anoint others: an act of consecration and
also of healing.
In
the gospel, there is murmuring in the desert by the people surrounding
Jesus, just as the Israelites did with Moses. In the latter instance,
the complaint was about not having food, to which God responded by
sending manna and quail. In the gospel, the problem is with the source
of the spiritual nourishment being offered. Jesus claims to be the
“bread that came down from heaven,” echoing God’s promise in Isaiah
55:10-11 of the nourishing and effective word that comes “down from
heaven.” In this first part of the Bread of Life discourse, the
emphasis is on bread as a nourishing word. In the second half, which we
will hear next Sunday, the emphasis is on eucharistic nourishment.
The
source of this nourishing word is a point of contention. The people
think they know Jesus’ origins and family; is he not one just like
them? Another stumbling block is his unusual manner of teaching. He
does not preach in Elijah’s fiery way, but he waits for God to draw
open hearts to himself, letting themselves be taught, through
listening, and learning, while not seeing entirely, and finally
responding with belief. This is “living bread,” a nourishing word that
leads one to cherish all life, to choose life, and ultimately, to
relinquish one’s own life for the life of the world, believing that
this is the way to life eternal.
Previously
published in Barbara E. Reid, O.P. Abiding Word. Sunday Reflections for
Year B. Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 2011. Pp. 94-95.
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