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17th Sunday of Year B – 2024

The gospel texts teach us in all kinds of ways.
As we meet Jesus there, we can discover much about God and… much about ourselves.

In today’s celebration, the text of the multiplication of the loaves and fishes is given to our reflection (John 6:1-15).

I am tempted to give it the title: “The human logic and the astuteness of God”!
Some of you reading this may smile, others are puzzled.

 

What prompts me to think in these terms are the two verses saying something rather intriguing:

“Looking up at the crowds approaching, Jesus said to Philip,
‘Where can we buy some bread for these people to eat”.
He only said this to test Philip;
he himself knew exactly what he was going to do”.

Philip replies with the human logic that knows the practical impossibility of buying food for such crowds in a deserted area –
how can Jesus even think of it!
John, the gospel writer, who might have overheard the conversation gives his own interpretation:
Jesus is testing Philip.

Why? What was Jesus’ purpose in testing Philip?
What did he want his apostle to understand?
We can only surmise that Jesus wanted to teach him something.
We may suppose that seeing what Jesus eventually did – multiply the loaves and fishes – Philip realized a bit more who Jesus was.
But this is a guess, an approximation of the truth, perhaps.

Catherine of Siena was a 14th century Dominican who became a saint and was eventually recognized as a doctor of the Church.
We are told that “her spirituality was one of radical trust in the providence of God”. *
In her writings, she speaks of “the holy tricks” of the Providence of God!

She goes on to explain that, somehow, God uses such loving ‘tactics’ to draw us to himself.
Clever and astute, the way someone who loves would act!

This is where this gospel text brought me… to meeting a loving astute God whose love goes far beyond our human logic!

 

Note: Another text is available on a different theme, in French, at: https://image-i-nations.com/17e-dimanche-de-lannee-b-2024/

 

* Mary Ann Fatula, o.p., Review for Religious, Jan.-Feb. 1985
Source: Images: Ebenezer Baptist Church            https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/           https://mycatholic.life/saints/saints-of-the-liturgical-year/april-29-saint-catherine-of-siena

17th Sunday of Year B

Let us say that you go to borrow from your neighbour some cooking oil to cook a dish. Does it happen often that instead of giving you the small amount you ask for, the neighbour gives you a much larger quantity? Or, if a man goes to a colleague to borrow some special glue to repair something, does he expect to be given an extra tube on top of the one already started? This is rare among us people. We hope for help but not often do we meet with outstanding generosity.

I said it is like this “among us people”, but with God things are different. Today the 1st reading and the gospel are similar in giving us a good example of how generous God is with us. Through Elisha God says: “They will eat and have some left over.” And the same thing happened at the time of Jesus. We see Jesus concerned about people having nothing to eat.

He asks one of the apostles where to buy bread but he is testing Philip who replies: “Five loaves and two fishes, what is that between so many?” Jesus took them, said the blessing and “gave them out to all who were sitting ready, giving out as much as was wanted.” With this huge crowd, we would think it enough if each got a piece of bread. But God’s way is the generous way. They all ate as much as they wanted!

Look at God’s generosity in nature: we sow a few seeds and get bags of cereals. Look at the fruit trees heavily-laden with juicy and sweet fruits. God does not know how to count! God does not know how to measure. Or rather, he counts and he measures according to his love which is without measure. God gives and gives, always beyond our hopes and above our expectations. He gives us more health, more healing, more strength and more help. He blesses us with more joy and happiness, more success and good fortune. He grants us more peace and more security. All those good things we long for, he gives them “as much as is wanted.” 

As you read this, you may have doubts thinking of the prayers you made in the past and you say: ‘I asked God for that and he did not give me more of it, in fact he did not give it to me at all!’ This is possible, God does not give us always what we ask for. But have you found out what other gift – perhaps much greater – he gave you instead? A gift more precious than you could have dared to ask for. Think about it…

We heard in the gospel: “Jesus knew exactly what he was going to do.”He could have worked the miracle without asking for anything but he wanted to use the loaves and fishes from the small boy. God wants us to do our share, he wants us to work with him. At times, we ask God for this and that but we, ourselves, do nothing to make our desires come about. He is still ready to work miracles but he wants our efforts at pleasing him and turning to him in prayer. He needs that little something that comes from us.

Source: Image: Free Bible Images