Seventeenth Sunday in
Ordinary Time
Mass Celebrated by Archbishop Denis Hart
at Saint Patrick’s Cathedral, Melbourne,
on Sunday, 27th July, 2003, at 11.00am
Introduction
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Today Jesus challenges us to understand
the value of his gift in the Eucharist.
Pope John Paul II has appointed Sir James Gobbo
and Mr. Bill White Knights of the Order of Saint Gregory in recognition
of their remarkable service to God and the community. At the end
of Mass they will be invested with their Order and we join with
them and their families in thanking God for the gifts placed at
our service.
As we thank God, let us call to mind our sins.
Homily
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
The multiplication of the loaves and fishes, whereby
the crowd was fed, and the careful gathering up of the scraps is
one of a number of signs given us by Saint John to recall the lordship
of Jesus Christ over matter, space, time, nature, suffering, life
and death.
Typical to the story is Jesus’ pity for
the hunger of the crowd. He is concerned to accommodate them after
the long day of listening to him. The language that Saint John uses
of Jesus taking, giving thanks and giving to others is a reminder
of the power of the Eucharist.
Pope John Paul II wrote to the whole Church on
Holy Thursday the Encyclical Letter, ‘Ecclesia Dei Eucharistia’,
to emphasise for us that in the Eucharist Jesus himself is the Bread
of Life and the Eucharist is our daily nourishment, so that we,
united with Christ, will undertake our responsibility of feeding
others. Pope John Paul reminds us that the Eucharist is a gift of
Christ himself in his humanity for saving work.
“The Eucharist is so decisive for the salvation
of people that Jesus offered it and returned to the Father only
after he had left us a means of sharing in it as if we had been
present there at the Last Supper. Each member of the faithful can
take part in it and gain its fruits. This is the faith from which
generations of Christians down the ages have lived.”
Twenty five years into his Pontificate, the Holy
Father has wanted us to see the Eucharist is central as a mystery
which leads us ever deeper into knowing him. He states the well
tried truth that the Eucharist is a true banquet in which he offers
himself as our nourishment (No. 17) and the Pope insists that it
is unworthy of a Christian community to share in the Lord’s
Supper amid division and indifference towards the poor.
Every time we see Jesus feeding the five thousand
we are challenged by the Eucharist towards the responsibilities
which it imposes upon us. In the words of Saint John Chrysostom,
“Do you wish to honour the Body of Christ? Do not ignore him
when he is naked. Do not pay him homage in the temple clad in silk,
only then to neglect him outside when he is cold and ill clad. He
who said, ‘This is my Body’, is the same who said, ‘You
saw me hungry and you gave me no food.’ And ‘Whatever
you did to the least of my brothers, you did also to me.’
What good is it if the Eucharistic table is overloaded
when your brother is dying of hunger? Start by satisfying his hunger
and then with what is left you may adorn the altar as well.”
(Saint John Chrysostom, Homily on Saint John’s Gospel)
The Holy Father says that the meaning of our proclaiming
the Lord until he comes entails that all of us who take part in
the Eucharist be committed to changing our lives and making them
in a certain way completely Eucharistic. It is this fruit of our
transfigured existence, which commits us to transforming the world
in accordance with the Gospel, which shows that the Eucharist in
the Christian life looks forward to the moment when our union with
Christ will be perfect.
In the Prayer after Communion we pray that this
gift bring us closer to our eternal salvation and the Refrain to
the Psalm, “The hand of the Lord feeds us. He answers all
our needs”, reminds us of the constant thanksgiving we need
to make for the wonderful inventive way in which the Lord has shown
that he is near in order that we might be his instruments in meeting
the cares and needs of others.
+ Denis J. Hart,
Archbishop of Melbourne.
|