The Eucharist: Nourishment for the Soul
Homily for Eighteenth Sunday - Year B
There are three golden threads running through the lives of the great saints
- Love for Jesus in the Eucharist; Love for Mary; and Love for the Poor. We
see it again today in the life of Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati. His very
wealthy parents were not religious. His father was agnostic and his mother
was nominally Catholic. They misunderstood and disapproved of his piety
and intense interest in Catholicism. They were worried that he would go
overboard and become a priest. His regular mingling with the poor troubled
them and they verbally abused him.
On the surface, he seems like any other young person. He was a young
mechanical engineering student, juggling the spiritual life with intense study.
He was an outdoorsman and loved hiking, riding horses, skiing, and
mountain climbing. There are photos of him on the mountain, rosary in
hand and pipe in his mouth. He advocated for political causes. Photos show
him laughing and drinking and joking with friends.
He had a special love for the poor. Frequently he arrived home late for
supper because he would spend the afternoons serving the hungry and
usually ran home after giving away his bus money. Once he arrived home
without his coat because he had given it to someone who needed it.
The two pillars of his spiritual programme were the Eucharist and Mary. He
spent regular times in adoration of Jesus in the Eucharist and received
Communion daily (in those one had to get special permission for this); and
he prayed the rosary. His vocation was to serve the poor and although he
considered priesthood, he chose a lay vocation which he felt would bring
the most contact with the poor. At the time of his death at age 24, he was
personally supporting around 120 families with food, medicine and clothes.
And all this was hidden from his parents.
When Pier Giorgio contracted polio which resulted in his swift death, even
from his sick bed his last concern was for the poor. On the eve of his death,
with a paralyzed hand, he scribbled a message to a friend, reminding the
friend not to forget the medicine for a poor man who he had been assisting.
When news of Pier Giorgio's death reached the neighbourhood and city of
Turin on 4th July 1925, his parents, who had no idea that their young son
had been serving the poor, were astonished by the sight of thousands of
people crowded outside their mansion on the day of their son’s funeral Mass
and burial. The poor, the lonely, and those who had been touched by Pier
Giorgio's love and faithful example had come to pay homage.
Pier Giorgio’s motto was that living without faith, without battling
constantly for truth, is not to live, but to ‘get along’; but we must never
just ‘get along’. When he was beatified by Pope St John Paul in 1990, he
was referred to as a man of the Beatitudes. His friends described him as an
explosion of joy. Apart from Pier Giorgio’s love of the Eucharist, I think his
life answers profoundly the question the crowd asked in the Gospel for this
Sunday: ‘What must we do to be doing the works of God?’
Many people would say that they have experienced hunger to some extent,
but most of us have the luxury of thinking of hunger in very domesticated
terms, like, “I’m so hungry, I didn’t have any lunch today”. On the other
hand, isn’t it true that the reality of our polarised South African society is
that while most of us can say we have never known real hunger, there
people not far from us, people who come to our doors, who are often really
hungry. Perhaps the image that really epitomises real hunger is the one in
which people are seen going through dustbins to find discarded food.
Whatever our sense of hunger and however serious it is, this need for food,
can help us identify with the people of Israel in the wilderness or the crowd
that followed Jesus because he gave them bread.
The readings for today speak of a bread that really satisfies, a bread to our
heart's content, a bread that gives life, a bread that speaks to our hunger.
This is something deeply relevant to each one of us. We have a
responsibility to ourselves to understand and seek what will really nourish
us, at the heart of our being.
And in the readings, both the first reading and the Gospel, we see human
nature. We see ourselves as in a mirror. In the book of Exodus, we have a
frightened, angry, grumbling, disheartened people who are hungry in the
wilderness. In the Gospel we find a people longing for more to life, looking
for meaning; a people attracted to Jesus, even if only because they see in
him someone who can satisfy their physical hunger.
The questions we find in Scripture are often helpful in terms of knowing
ourselves and knowing God, and reflecting on what it is that God wants us
to say to us. Today’s question in the reading from the Book of Exodus is
one of those questions: The Israelites ask, “What is it?”, referring to the
manna. From the Gospel, we understand this manna in the wilderness as a
promise and a symbol of the Eucharist, which is Jesus, the Bread of Life.
What is it for us? What does the Eucharist mean to us personally? How does
the Eucharist nourish us? How do we connect with Jesus in the Eucharist?
In what sense can it be said that we hunger for the Eucharist? Over the
next few weeks, we will meditate on Jesus, the Bread of Life.
The question that the crowd put to Jesus in the Gospel is also relevant to
our lives. What must we do to be doing the works of God? What are our
lives about? What is it that we hope and dream for? What do we long for?
We have a responsibility to ourselves to seek the answers to these
fundamental questions. The philosophers of Ancient Greece spoke of the
human search for beatitude, which is contentedness, inner peace, or
happiness. Behind all our immediate wants and desires is a deep longing
for happiness. Once we are able to acknowledge this, then the most obvious
question becomes how we attain this happiness. It would be the greatest
tragedy for this longing which is fundamental to our being, to be frustrated.
The old Penny Catechism with its question-and-answer format, sums this
up. The first question is: Who made me? The answer is, “God made me.”
Then, the second, “Why did God make me?” The answer is a simple
statement of the reason for our existence. It goes: “God made me to know
him, to love him and serve him in this life, and be happy with him forever
in the next.” It stands to reason that by fulfilling our purpose we can attain
the happiness for which our heart longs. God would not allow this longing
in us to be frustrated. God would obviously have made it possible for us to
come to the meaning that we long for.
St Augustine’s beautiful prayer in his autobiography is one we constantly
return to before God: “You have made us for yourself, O God, and our
hearts are restless until they find their rest in you.” Augustine taught that
we human beings have an essential and necessary capacity for God. There
is a God-shaped emptiness in each one of us, that only God can fill. Only
when our hearts are filled with God, do we find the satisfaction of our
deepest longings. God is the purpose of our existence and the key to our
longing and hopes and dreams.
The people who went after Jesus in boats, finding him at Capernaum, were
in search for more than just food. Something about Jesus spoke to their
hearts, even though they seemed to have been confused about what it was
they really wanted. We see this in that when Jesus started to teach them,
they asked for a sign. It was as if they hadn’t already been given a
significant sign in the multiplication of the loaves and the fish. These people
are an image of us. We share the same human condition. As they were
looking for more to life, even if they expressed it poorly, we also long for
meaning and purpose. The answer to our deepest human longings is Jesus
himself, of whom the Eucharist is the most perfect sacrament. Our hunger
and thirst at the deepest levels are satisfied by the presence of Jesus, given
to us in the sacrament.
We were created to love and be loved. Love is our destiny and our highest
good. In Jesus and the Eucharist, we fulfil our calling and our destiny. So,
let’s be who we were created to be. Let’s fill the God-shaped vacuum in our
lives with God alone. Blessed Pier Giorgio, the happy man, the man of the
Beatitudes, the explosion of joy, shows us the way. Let’s live out the
purpose for which we were made. Let’s allow the Eucharist, well-received,
intentionally received, gratefully received, to be the nourishment you long
for. Let’s be in communion with Jesus, that we may not hunger or thirst
again.