John 6:22-29
After Jesus had
fed the five thousand, his disciples saw him walking on the water. Next day,
the crowd that had stayed on the other side saw that only one boat had been there,
and that Jesus had not got into the boat with his disciples, but that the
disciples had set off by themselves. Other boats, however, had put in from
Tiberias, near the place where the bread had been eaten. When the people saw
that neither Jesus nor his disciples were there, they got into those boats and
crossed to Capernaum to look for Jesus. When they found him on the other side,
they said to him, ‘Rabbi, when did you come here?’
Jesus answered:
‘I tell you most solemnly, you are not looking for me because you have seen the
signs but because you had all the bread you wanted to eat. Do not work for food
that cannot last, but work for food that endures to eternal life, the kind of
food the Son of Man is offering you, for on him the Father, God himself, has
set his seal.’ Then they said to him, ‘What must we do if we are to do the
works that God wants?’ Jesus gave them this answer, ‘This is working for God:
you must believe in the one he has sent.’
Food for
thought!
Since last week,
and much of this week, we are in Chapter 6 of the Gospel of St. John. The
events in this chapter took place in Cafarnaum. At Cafarnaum Jesus multiplied
bread and walked on water. These two miracles of Jesus served as a preparation
for a sermon that Jesus was about to preach, which begins today and goes
throughout the week.
With 5 small
loaves, and 2 small fishes Jesus fed a multitude at Cafarnaum that probably
neared 15,000 people. No wonder the people liked Jesus because he provided them
with food. Staying in a company of someone like Jesus was having life made
easy, with one problem solved; the problem of food. This is why the people
looked for Jesus the next day.
In the time of
Jesus people did not need to keep office-hours. They had time to wait until he
came back to them. They waited because having seen that there was only one boat
and that the disciples had gone off in it without Jesus, they deduced that he
must still be somewhere near at hand. After they had waited for some time, they
began to realize that he was not coming back to them. So they decided to search
for him.
When they found
Jesus, they asked him, "Rabbi, when did you come here?" To that
question Jesus simply did not reply; he knew their real question. You see sometimes
we beat around the bush when we go to the Lord in prayer; he knows what we
know. So we do well to be straight with Jesus. Tell him what you want, you
feel, you like.
Jesus went
straight to the heart of the matter. "You have seen," he said,
"wonderful things. You have seen how God's grace enabled a crowd to be
fed. Your thoughts ought to have been turned to the God who did such miracle;
but instead all that you are thinking about is bread." It is as if Jesus
said: "You cannot think about the Jesus of bread for thinking solely of
the bread of Jesus." This is true today. Many people are interested in the
miracles of Jesus and not in the Jesus of miracles; interested in what Jesus
gives and not in He who gives; interested only in the gift and not in the
giver.
Jesus is talking
about those people who seek him only when they're afflicted, when they run into
problems. Yes, sometimes we go to Jesus only when we have problems; when things
are going on well with us, when life is ok, we don't need Jesus. So we think.
It is like some people who come to us only when they need our help. Whenever
they show up, it is because they seek something from us. These are the people
Jesus is condemning. And they're many.
Jesus' point is
that all that these Jews were interested in was physical satisfaction. They had
received an unexpectedly free and lavish meal; and they wanted more. But there
are other hungers which bread cannot satisfy; hungers that money cannot
satisfy; hungers that material things don't and can't satisfy. There is a
hunger that only Jesus satisfies. This is what he means by saying, "Do not
work for food that cannot last, but work for food that endures to eternal life,
the kind of food the Son of Man is offering you, for on him the Father, God himself,
has set his seal." (Tomorrow Jesus will elaborate more on this).
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