Man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes forth from the mouth of God. Every word that comes forth come the mouth of God is God speaking love to us. Every word is filled with his life, with his love, and Jesus is that Word. Remember that John’s Gospel begins with, In the beginning, there was the Word. Jesus pre-exists. God’s love already pre-exists creation. And the Word was made flesh: Incarnation.
Why would God, divine, eternal, take on limitation and human flesh? Why, except that he loves us that much. Eat my flesh: recognize Incarnation within you. Recognize that he is born in you. Mary didn’t just give birth to a baby, but to salvation, to redemption, to all life, that God might dwell among us. Eat my flesh: take me into your life, allow the Incarnation to touch you, to change you, to move you. Drink my blood, the blood of my Passion the blood of my sacrifice.
Jesus didn’t just give us a passing gift; he gave us himself, all that he was. He gave us everything. God so loved the world that he gave us his only Son, not just as a gift in name, but a gift in truth. The bread and wine is not just bread and wine in the Eucharist – it is gift from God, the Incarnation, God among us, and we take him into ourselves, that he might heal our wounds, and lift us up from our falling, and fill us with a life that has no end.
The change in bread and wine is not in its physical properties, but in what it is essentially, what it is in spirit, what it is at work in us. It is truly Jesus present in our midst. It is God whose love is so profound that he found it necessary to join us in this life, so that we might know him, so that we might recognize him in ourselves and in each other.
We are a Church whose foundation is the Eucharist, his real presence in our midst, in our bodies, joining us, uniting us, and sending us. It was meant to transform not our bodies, but our hearts.
Homily, June 11, 2023
Image source: https://www.ekklesiaproject.org/lectionary/blog/2021/07/the-work-of-god-the-bread-of-life







