Tuesday, January 7, 2020

Holy Hunger

I’m sure we have each encountered the quintessential character of the doting Grandma that feels the need to feed everyone that comes across her threshold with copious amounts of homemade food because her heart is pierced by people’s hunger. This captures Jesus in today’s gospel. He is moved by the hunger of His people, and guess what? He is still moved by our hunger. He saw the crowd as sheep without a shepherd indicating something called Holy Hunger. Holy Hunger is a longing for more, a desire to go deeper, dissatisfaction with this world, a journeying toward beauty, a search for treasure, a deep stirring for meaning, a reaching toward the light, and a trying to make sense of it all. He saw the vast crowd and he saw their vast hunger and the vastness moved His heart. Another word for vastness is immensity and I believe that Jesus honed in on the immensity of people’s need to know, to see, and to believe that God loves them. This is the main thing and Jesus could not not feed them because He loves them so much. Today He sees you, He sees me, and He sees our vast hunger for more, and He cannot not feed us. So let your Holy Hunger burn for more and Jesus’ heart will be moved to give you more. It is our part to receive and to be consumed by this Bread of Life. It is well with my soul. 

Reading 1 1 JN 4:7-10

Beloved, let us love one another,
because love is of God;
everyone who loves is begotten by God and knows God.
Whoever is without love does not know God, for God is love.
In this way the love of God was revealed to us:
God sent his only-begotten Son into the world
so that we might have life through him.
In this is love:
not that we have loved God, but that he loved us
and sent his Son as expiation for our sins.

Responsorial Psalm PS 72:1-2, 3-4, 7-8

R. (see 11)  Lord, every nation on earth will adore you.
O God, with your judgment endow the king,
and with your justice, the king’s son;
He shall govern your people with justice
and your afflicted ones with judgment.
R. Lord, every nation on earth will adore you.
The mountains shall yield peace for the people,
and the hills justice.
He shall defend the afflicted among the people,
save the children of the poor.
R. Lord, every nation on earth will adore you.
Justice shall flower in his days,
and profound peace, till the moon be no more.
May he rule from sea to sea,
and from the River to the ends of the earth.
R. Lord, every nation on earth will adore you.

Alleluia LK 4:18 

R. Alleluia, alleluia.
The Lord has sent me to bring glad tidings to the poor
and to proclaim liberty to captives.
R. Alleluia, alleluia.

Gospel MK 6:34-44 

When Jesus saw the vast crowd, his heart was moved with pity for them,
for they were like sheep without a shepherd;
and he began to teach them many things.
By now it was already late and his disciples approached him and said,
“This is a deserted place and it is already very late.
Dismiss them so that they can go
to the surrounding farms and villages
and buy themselves something to eat.”
He said to them in reply,
“Give them some food yourselves.”
But they said to him,
“Are we to buy two hundred days’ wages worth of food
and give it to them to eat?”
He asked them, “How many loaves do you have?  Go and see.”
And when they had found out they said,
“Five loaves and two fish.”
So he gave orders to have them sit down in groups on the green grass.
The people took their places in rows by hundreds and by fifties.
Then, taking the five loaves and the two fish and looking up to heaven,
he said the blessing, broke the loaves, and gave them to his disciples
to set before the people;
he also divided the two fish among them all.
They all ate and were satisfied.
And they picked up twelve wicker baskets full of fragments
and what was left of the fish.
Those who ate of the loaves were five thousand men.

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