Reading I: 2 Kings 4:42-44
This little story from the
Elisha cycle is not widely known, but it has become quite important in recent
New Testament scholarship because it provides the literary prototype of the miraculous
feedings in the Gospels.
The pattern of the feeding narratives is largely the
same: (1) food is brought to the man of God; (2) the amount of the food is specified;
(3) it is objected that the quantity is inadequate; (4) behaving as master of
the situation, the man of God ignores the objection and commands that the food
be distributed; (5) the crowd not only have enough to eat but there is some left
over.
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Responsorial Psalm: 145:10-11, 15-16, 17-18
Psalm 145 is used
quite frequently as a responsorial psalm, but this is the
only time this particular selection of verses is used on
a Sunday. The second stanza obviously connects with the Old
Testament reading and the Gospel, and the common theme of
both is further underlined in the refrain.
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Reading II: Ephesians 4:1-6
In accordance with common critical opinion, we take Ephesians
to be the work of a second-generation Paulinist thoroughly
steeped in the Apostle’s teaching.
Ephesians follows a very clear division,
chapters 1-3 being doctrinal and chapters 4-6 parenetical (that
is, containing ethical exhortation), so that our reading is
the beginning of the parenesis.
There is a close connection, however, between the two parts of the document.
The first part sets forth the unity of Jew and Gentile in the one body, providing
a look back at the achievement of the Apostle himself, while the parenesis begins
with an exhortation to unity.
But the exhortation to unity leads back into a
further reminder of the theological grounds for the appeal. The “ought” is
based on an “is.”
There is one body, one Spirit, one hope, one Lord,
one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all Christians, and therefore the
writer, speaking in the Apostle’s name, can exhort his readers to be what they
are. As in Paul himself, the imperative rests upon an indicative.
Unity is both
a gift and a task (German: Gabe and Aufgabe). The imperative to
unity is therefore like the imperative to individual sanctification: “Become
what you are.”
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Gospel: John 6:1-15
As we have seen, part of the
background for this familiar story is provided in the less familiar story about
Elisha. The same points that we enumerated in the Elisha story reappear in the
Johannine feeding and provide the basic framework for the narrative.
But there
are other motifs in John, such as the Eucharist and the eschatological or messianic
banquet. Note the acts of Jesus: took, gave thanks (the Hellenistic
equivalent
of “blessed,” which Mark still preserves in one place), distributed.
And
when the text says that the people were filled, we have a word that
is used elsewhere
for the repletion of the messianic banquet.
In the ensuing discourse
in the synagogue at Capernaum (see next Sunday’s reading), the evangelist develops
yet another aspect of the symbolism of this story, namely, the Moses/manna typology.
But this typology is scarcely evident in the story itself as John received it
from his tradition.
The concluding verse appears to enshrine a genuine historical reminiscence not
recorded in the Synoptists. It is impossible to ascertain precisely what happened
in the feeding, but it is clear from all the Gospel accounts that it represented
a crisis in the Lord’s ministry.
We know that at some stage Jesus broke off his
Galilean ministry and went to Jerusalem, and in all the Gospels the feeding is
a pivotal point in the narrative. This shows that its central position is due
not merely to Mark’s arrangement but goes back to earlier tradition.
In Mark’s
first version of the feeding, we are told that Jesus packed the disciples off
in a boat while he dismissed the crowd. The reason for this becomes clear in
John’s note here: it was to prevent the disciples from being infected by the
dangerous nationalistic messianic enthusiasm of the crowd.
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Reginald H. Fuller
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Copyright © 1984
by The Order of St. Benedict, Inc., Collegeville, Minnesota.
All
rights reserved. Used by permission from The Liturgical
Press, Collegeville, Minnesota 56321 |
Preaching the Lectionary:
The Word of God for the Church Today
Reginald H. Fuller. The Liturgical Press. 1984 (Revised Edition),
pp.
330-331. |
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Thank
you to Liturgical Press who makes this page possible
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Art by Martin Erspamer, O.S.B.
from Religious
Clip Art for the Liturgical Year (A, B, and C).
Used by permission of Liturgy Training Publications. This art may be reproduced only by parishes who purchase the collection
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