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Liturgical day
: Wednesday 1st of Advent |
Today's Gospel (Mt 15:29-37): Jesus went to the shore of Lake
Galilee, and then went up into the hills where he sat down. Great
crowds came to him, bringing the dumb, the blind, the lame, the
crippled, and many with other infirmities. The people carried them to
the feet of Jesus, and he healed them. All were astonished when they
saw the dumb speaking, the lame walking, the crippled healed and the
blind able to see; so they glorified the God of Israel.
Jesus
called his disciples and said to them, «I am filled with
compassion for these people; they have already followed me for three
days and now have nothing to eat. I do not want to send them away
fasting, or they may faint on the way». His disciples said to
him, «And where shall we find enough bread in this wilderness
to feed such a crowd?». Jesus said to them, «How many
loaves do you have?». They answered, «Seven, and a few
small fish». So Jesus ordered the people to sit on the ground.
Then he took the seven loaves and the small fish and gave thanks to
God. He broke them and gave them to his disciples, who distributed
them to the people.
They
all ate and were satisfied, and the leftover broken pieces filled
seven wicker baskets.
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Commentary: Fr. Joan Costa i Bou (Barcelona, Catalonia)
«‘How
many loaves do you have?’. They answered, ‘Seven, and a
few small fish’»
Today
we
reflect on the multiplication of the bread and fish in the Gospel.
Many people —Matthew states— «came to him»
(Mt 15:30). Men and women who were in need of Christ: blind
people, cripples and sick people of every kind, together with those
who accompanied them. We are all in need of Christ. Of his
tenderness, his forgiveness, his light, his mercy... In him, the
fullness of all that is human can be found.
Today's Gospel makes us
aware of the need for men who will lead others to Christ. Those who
bring Jesus the sick so that he can cure them are the image of all
those who know that the greatest act of charity towards their fellow
man is to get them close to Christ, the source of our life. A life of
faith demands holiness and apostolate.
Saint
Paul urges us (Phil 2:5) to have the same feelings as Christ.
This story shows what Jesus' heart is like: «I am filled with
compassion for these people». He cannot leave them, because
they are hungry and tired. Christ searches man out in his necessity
and manages to be there for us to find. How good he is to us!; and
how important we people are for him! Our hearts swell with gratitude,
admiration and a sincere wish for conversion.
This
God made man, all-powerful, who loves us passionately, and whom we
need in everything and for everything —«apart from me you
can do nothing» (Jn 15:5)— paradoxically requires
something from us as well: this is the meaning of the seven loaves of
bread and the few fish that he will use to feed a crowd. If we really
realized how much Jesus counts on us, and of the value of all we do
for him, as small as it is, we would try all the harder to correspond
to him with all our being.
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