Tag Archives: Food

Jesus makes a way where there is no way (10th after Pentecost, 7/28/24)

Readings (Track 2)

Over in Paris, the world’s foodie capital, the Olympics have just started. By happy coincidence today’s readings focus on… food.

Our first reading: Elisha’s multiplication of the loaves. Recall the context: the Lord had delivered Israel from Egypt, but when Israel arrived in Canaan the advice from the locals was to turn to Baal, the god of rain and fertility, for their daily needs. When in Rome… Elijah and Elisha’s task: to convince the people that it’s either Yahweh or Baal, and that if they want rain and fertility, Yahweh’s the better bet.

Today’s psalm picks up on that theme:

16 The eyes of all wait upon you, O Lord, *
and you give them their food in due season.
17 You open wide your hand *
and satisfy the needs of every living creature.

Yahweh or Baal: that’s still the choice. There’s enough food for everyone. But under Baal food is a commodity to be bought and sold, so that the World Food Programme estimates that some 309 million people face chronic hunger in 72 countries. In this country in 2022 about 44 million experienced food insecurity. Dives and Lazarus (the two protagonists in Jesus’ parable) on a global scale!

Today’s Gospel: two weeks ago we heard about Herod’s birthday party. Herodias dances and the last course turns out to be John the Baptist’s head on a platter. Mark juxtaposes that banquet with Jesus’ banquet at which five thousand are fed. Mark thinks we all end up at one of these banquets, so wants us to pay attention to the choices that lead us to one or the other.

Our Lectionary, meanwhile, has swapped out Mark’s account for John’s, in which the conversation about the feeding morphs into a conversation about the Holy Eucharist. But I’m jumping ahead.

When John the Evangelist takes up the feeding story he notes “Now the Passover, the festival of the Jews, was near.” That’s more than a chronological note: Passover: the deliverance from Egypt, and with it the crossing of the Red Sea and the miraculous manna in the wilderness. Is all that stuck in the past, with us—along with John the Baptist—stuck in Baal’s world? And in response to this question John the Evangelist shows us Jesus, the one who makes a way where there is no way.

Five thousand hungry people, five barley loaves, two fish. No way that math’s going to work. With Jesus, way.

That night, the disciples in a small boat in the middle of a large storm. No way we’d sell them life insurance. But here comes Jesus, and there’s a way to their destination.

A couple details in that account are worth noticing.

First, Jesus walking on the sea in the middle of the storm. The thing about that is that within the Old Testament God is the one pictured treading on the sea:

With your horses you trampled through the sea, through the surging abyss! (Habakkuk 3:15 NJB)

Your way led over the sea, your path over the countless waters, and none could trace your footsteps. (Psalm 77:19 NJB)

He and no other has stretched out the heavens and trampled on the back of the Sea. (Job 9:8 NJB)

In light of this tradition, Jesus’ walking across the sea is, like the Transfiguration, an unveiling. And in case we’ve missed the point, notice Jesus’ response to the disciples. It’s a lovely double entendre. The NRSV translates “It is I,” which is certainly a possible translation. It would be equally possible to translate it “I AM” (all caps); a repetition of God’s self-identification to Moses.

I’ve spent some time on this because in popular culture the idea circulates that Jesus was a just a great teacher whom the imperial church centuries later gussied up into some sort of god. We can believe that only if we first toss the New Testament. Our creeds are the product of simply trying to understand the stories the apostles left us.

Which banquet do we end up at? Better Jesus’ than Herod’s. Jesus is the one at whose banquets the poor are fed. Jesus is the one who by nature deserves our worship.

Our reading from John: the good news that Moses’ God isn’t AWOL. Quite the opposite. But… what about that gap between Jesus’ earthly ministry and us? That’s one of the core questions our readings from Ephesians have been addressing.

Recall what we heard last week, Paul addressing us non-Jewish believers:

So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are citizens with the saints and also members of the household of God, built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus himself as the cornerstone. In him the whole structure is joined together and grows into a holy temple in the Lord; in whom you also are built together spiritually into a dwelling place for God. (Eph. 2:19-22)

It’s an outrageously mixed metaphor: a temple that’s growing—and Jesus is at the center: with us, among us. That’s the corporate dimension.

This week, the individual: “that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith, as you are being rooted and grounded in love. I pray that you may have the power to comprehend, with all the saints, what is the breadth and length and height and depth, and to know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge, so that you may be filled with all the fullness of God.”

Earlier, writing to the Galatians and indulging in a little hyperbole: “it is no longer I who live, but it is Christ who lives in me” (2:20). Through the Spirit, Jesus takes up residence in each one of us. This isn’t something any of our senses are set up to process; it is something whose effects—Paul argues—are clear. Recall Paul, again in Galatians: “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control” (5:22-23).

For Paul, as for the rest of the New Testament, talking to Jesus now is not a long distance call. No question of roaming charges or being out of network.

That’s good news, for Baal still claims our world. But the One who fed the multitude and who trod on the sea remains among us and within each one of us, always able to make a way where there is no way. Returning to the food theme, that’s one of the things we celebrate at every Eucharist. There’s room for everyone, there’s enough for everyone, everyone is welcome. We’re remembering what Jesus did. We’re celebrating that this is the future Jesus secured. There’s room for everyone, there’s enough for everyone, everyone is welcome.