Tag: Bread of Life

  • OUR DEEPEST HUNGER IN LIFE

    OUR DEEPEST HUNGER IN LIFE

    August 1, 20210 – 18th Sunday in Ordinary Time

    Click here for the readings (https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/080121.cfm)

    To feel hungry is a basic human experience. Thus, I am sure each of us has experienced that feeling of being hungry since we were babies. Babies especially would always cry when they are hungry. A parent’s automatic response to a crying baby is to feed the baby with milk. When the baby starts sucking, the baby also stops from crying. When we become adults, we continue such behavior though we do not cry anymore but feed ourselves with food that can satisfy our hunger.

    This human behavior in us is what we have heard in our readings this Sunday. The Book of Exodus told us the story of the Israelites. Since they fled from Egypt, their life was always uncertain. They were in the middle of the desert where there was no place to plant and cultivate something for their food nor a place to buy their supplies. The people became weary because of their difficult situation until they grew hungry. Moses who led and brought them out of Egypt had almost became a father to them. To him, the people cried out their needs. They cried and grumbled to Moses to provide them food because they were hungry. The Lord, in his goodness, sent food to the desert so that they will be satisfied.

    Our Gospel tells us of the same behavior. The people were in search of Jesus because they wanted Jesus to satisfy their hunger. They followed him after he did a miracle in feeding the five thousand people. The people recognized that Jesus will satisfy their needs. This became an opportunity for Jesus to teach them an important lesson.

    Jesus knew that the people were after him because of their hunger. However, the people were only concerned of an immediate satisfaction. They were limited in that satisfaction of a physical hunger. Thus, they were looking for Jesus to satisfy them immediately. In a way, they have become obsessed or fixated to what Jesus can provide to them. They were after the miracles of Jesus but not in the person of Jesus.

    Jesus understood them. Thus, he reminded them to seek the bread that gives eternal life and not the bread that perishes. This means that the people were invited to seek not those things that only provide instant and immediate satisfaction but the person of Jesus himself.

    This reminds me that we are not different from those people in the Bible. How many times have we sought to satisfy immediately our different forms of hunger? Jesus is not just talking about our physical hunger. Jesus points to us today to recognize our human hungers for acceptance, for recognition, for friendship, for love and intimacy, for justice, for peace and reconciliation.

    We cry out these many forms of hungers just like the Israelites in the Book of Exodus and in the Gospel. We tend to satisfy those longings and hungers immediately. Hence, instead of looking for what is essential and lasting, we resort to the promises of “instant satisfaction” and to an “immediate result.”

    Their consequences will surely be destructive, unhelpful and the corruption of life. Addictions such as in alcohol, drugs, sex or food are ways to satisfy our deepest hunger. Yet, because they only promise an instant gratification and so we hold on to those addictions to numb our hunger for love, for attention and intimacy. Our obsessive fixations in spending too much time in social media, or online games or with gadgets, remove us from the true and personal encounter with people. Because of the lack of human connection, we divert our need into what is temporary, virtual and not real. Our compulsive behaviors in gossiping, in defaming people and in finding the faults and weaknesses of others seemingly give us the image of a good person, righteous than others. However, these behaviors only blind us of our true longing to be recognized and be appreciated.

    Our obsession to be powerful, to exercise dominance and control over the weak and to resort to violent and aggressive actions apparently make us confident, independent and strong. However, they too blind us from that hunger to find our true self and our true potentials.

    Jesus invites us today to recognize our deepest hungers. Just like the Jews in the Gospel, Jesus reminds us today also not to seek to what is only perishable, and to what is only instant and temporary. Because these things will only lead us to addictions, unhealthy fixations and compulsive behaviors that do not give us life but rather death and hopelessness.

    Jesus invites us to recognize him, that is, to recognize God, His love and friendship with us as our food that will satisfy our hunger. He is the bread that gives us life. This Eucharist is the gift and our food that should satisfy our deepest human hunger. That is why, this Eucharist is more than what we think. This is not simply prayers and readings, standing and kneeling, singing and saying amen. This Eucharist is our very relationship with God and with one another. This is all about us and God, you and me and Jesus.

    I would like to invite you then, so that we will be able to make this Eucharist truly life-giving; ask the Lord to help us recognize our different hungers. Be mindful of our compulsive actions, fixations and some forms of addictions because those behaviors in us will tell us of our own hungers and needs. When we become conscious of those, hopefully, it will lead us to seek to what will last, to what is more essential in our relationships and to what will truly satisfy us. And above all, may we find Jesus and his love. Hinaut pa.

  • Body and Blood of Christ

    Body and Blood of Christ

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    June 14, 2020 – Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ

    Click here for the readings (http://www.usccb.org/bible/readings/061420.cfm)

    If you wish to experience and appreciate the unique culture of other people, try their local cuisine. Aside from their usual cultural sights and sounds, literatures, routine & rituals, exploring the local common & exotic food offers us a taste of the local people’s culture. Local food industry & food tourism have been thriving businesses nowadays because we would like to have a taste and sense of local culture. We do know that there is more to food than just as a source and nourishment. Food mirrors the peculiar resources, quality, and meanings of the culture and lifestyle of the local families and community. For instance, the famous Korean Kimchi “pickled cabbage” has been a common substitute food in Korea to augment during scarce, difficult, icy-cold winter season. We only need to hear the stories behind those local exotic food and delicacies to understand the meaning behind the special taste those food can offer. In the same manner, we get to know people by the food they eat and the people they eat with. We might even say nowadays: “You are what you eat, and who you eat with” or “The food you eat reflects who you are and the company you keep.” Like, a vegetarian eats vegetables with vegetarians. Meat-eater parties with meat-eaters. Drinkers hangs-out with drunkards. We somehow tend to identify ourselves with our intakes and diet, and with those who share with our health lifestyle.

    Food has also been a unique faith expression and extension of our Catholic faith and culture. By our celebration of Eucharist, we come to articulate and others come to experience the value and meaning of the Consecrated Host we worship, share and partake. Since for us Catholic, the bread we partake in the Eucharist provides us not only spiritual sustenance and nourishment, but also the reason, meaning & mission to live, and the promise and hope for a better life with God.

    Our first reading today reminds us how God has taken care of us His people in our life-journey by providing and feeding us bread from heaven. This manna, the bread from heaven, is not our usual cuisine, but God’s special exotic food for us – “which neither you and your ancestors are acquainted”.  This food is not only for sustenance and nourishment but also as medicine “to humble you, to test you – to know what is in your heart & in the end to do you good.” God’s manna then is God’s health intervention and medication for our spiritual healing and well-being. It is God’s dietary food supplement to detoxify us and to boost our spiritual immune system that “let you afflicted with hunger, fed you with food unknown, in order to know that not by bread alone does on live, but in every word that comes forth from the mouth of the Lord”. And in our gospel today, Jesus proclaims that He is the manna, the bread of life from heaven. He is God’s food given to us to live our live now purposely and to the fullness. Our daily bread, food-consumptions is not enough and cannot sustain us in life apart from Jesus who is God’s word, God’s bread/food of life from heaven.

    This is how significant the Body and Blood of Christ in the Eucharist for our Catholic culture and lifestyle. Jesus is God’s way of forming, nourishing, protecting, making us grow and healthy in our faith and life with God in the world. As Jesus wants us to “do this in memory of me”, following, celebrating, taking on God’s diet and Jesus’ lifestyle are somehow the way forward we can opt to live and we can share with others in life. We are Christians because we take on Christ. He is our food in our life journey. People come to see and “taste” our Catholic Christian faith by and in our communion of the Body and Blood in the Eucharistic celebration.

    The past few months of CoVID-19 pandemic has been particularly difficult for us Catholic. As our life has been abruptly interrupted and our world has ben partly changed (and still changing unpredictably), our physical, mental and spiritual health have been in distress and crisis. For quite sometime now, we are deprived of public celebration of Holy Eucharist due to social distancing, quarantine and lockdown. It has infected and affected also our spiritual nourishment. As we worry for our daily food and consumption, we do need also to take care of and nourish our spiritual hygiene, immune system and well-being.

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    As we celebrate today Corpus Christi Sunday, the Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ, let our present spiritual malnourishment and deprivation to commune with Jesus our bread of life from heaven during the every Eucharistic celebration, make us hunger and long more for Him, and properly dispose us to receive Him once again & taste God’s food for our life, soon enough as allowed.

    Deprived of, set apart from and hungry now for the Body of Christ, with St. Aphonsus de Liguori, let this be our prayer of Spiritual Communion:

    “My, Jesus, I believe you are really present in the Blessed Sacrament. I love you more than anything in the world, and I hunger to feed on your flesh. But since I cannot receive Communion now, feed my soul at least spiritually. I unite myself to you now as I do when I actually receive you. Never let me be drift away and separated from you. Amen.”

    (By: Fr. Aphelie Mario Masangcay CSsR, a Filipino Redemptorist  Missionary stationed in Gwangju South Korea, though now still stranded in Cebu until further notice for available flights.)

  • What kind of bread are you?

    What kind of bread are you?

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    April 30, 2020 – Thursday of the Third Week of Easter

    Click here for the readings (http://www.usccb.org/bible/readings/043020.cfm)

    by Reverend Deacon Joey Valross Trillo, CSsR

    Yesterday, my co-Reverend Deacon, Lemuel, shared a story with me. Once there was a monk who asked their cook, “What do you call a bread with salt? It’s Pan de sal. How about bread with coconut meat inside? It’s Pan de coco. How about a bread with COVID-19? It’s Pan de mic. One more, how about a bread that is full of air? It’s Pan-nuhot.[1]

    Nevertheless, the point is that bread has a lot of varieties. So, if you are bread, what kind of bread are you? 

    Our gospel today talks about Jesus, who identified himself as no other than the Bread of Life. He said that he is the living bread from heaven. He added that whoever eats this bread will live forever. And, the bread He shall give is His flesh, and He will give it for the life of the world. 

    Indeed, Jesus is the Bread of Life, the Eucharist. Whoever comes to Jesus shall never be hungry. This is the case of Philip in the First Reading from the Acts of the Apostles. He consumed the Word who made flesh, Jesus, and lived the life as His disciple. 

    In fact, Philip became one of the seven Proto-deacons. He preached the life of Jesus, catechized several communities, and baptized a lot of converts similar to what we have heard in the First Reading. Philip helped the Ethiopian eunuch in understanding the scripture. Then, he told him the Good News of Jesus, which led the Ethiopian to become a follower of Christ. Hence, we can say that Philip is a kind of bread which nourishes other people.

    At this time of health crisis, What kind of bread are you? Are you the kind of bread who energizes people, the one who empowers the medical front liners and the afflicted through appreciation or good vibes? 

    Or are you a distasteful bread who posts fake news and rants about poor people whom you claimed as stubborn, undisciplined and not worthy for monetary help?

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    Or are you the type of bread that is flavorful, the ones who enjoy your family bondings such as doing TikTok as a family?

    Or perhaps a spoiled bread who discriminates people from the hospitals?

    What kind of bread are you, then?

    Brothers and sisters in Christ, let us ask for the grace to become a bread that nourishes, energizes, and satisfies the needs of others, especially the most abandoned. 

    We pray that like Philip, we may help others to understand the will of God in this trying times; that you and I will give the same joy experienced by the Ethiopian eunuch. In other words, we pray that we may become a bread-like Jesus, the Bread of life. Amen.


    [1] Panuhot has no English medial term. It is a belief among Cebuano-speaking Filipinos that Panuhot is caused by air trapped in the body particularly in the muscles which causes the formation of nodules. Nodules, then, creates pain and weakness in the body.

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  • Come and be filled today

    Come and be filled today

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    April 29, 2020 – Wednesday Third week of Easter

    Click here for the readings (http://www.usccb.org/bible/readings/042920.cfm)

    Jesus talked about the human conditions of hunger and thirst. However, Jesus was not just talking about the physical hunger and thirst but more than that. These include our emotional and spiritual hunger and thirst which could be for love and affection, for attention and recognition from others, for relationship and intimacy. These can also be our own desire to have power over others, to be in total control of our lives, or to have influence to people around us. 

    These difficult days brought by COVID-19 Pandemic, we might hunger for company because he have been separated from our loved ones. We might hunger for healing because we are sick. We might hunger for comfort because we are distressed, anxious, afraid and depressed. Thus, our human hunger and thirst could sometimes be unquenchable.

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    When we become not aware of our desires, of these hungers and thirsts we have within us, the danger is to submit to these greedy desires that we have. In fact, these desires can be reason why we become possessive of material things and even of people, not wanting to share what we have because we feel insecure. Our heart will also become corrupt because we will tend to gather things and people for our own enrichment. These attitudes will surely blind us from seeing and recognizing other people and their needs because we tend to only see ourselves while trying to satisfy our own hunger and thirst.

    Today, we are called by the Lord to humbly recognize our own hunger and thirst that keep us away for others and from God. What are those that keep me selfish and self-serving? When we are able to recognize them, Jesus invites us “to come to him.” 

    What Jesus said to the Jews, he is also saying to us today, “come to me and you will never be hungry, believe in me and you will never be thirsty.”

    Jesus promises us that when we come and believe in him in faith and humility, he will be with us. Jesus assures us of his presence and his company. He said this to us, I will never reject anyone who comes to me.” The friendship that we shall develop with Jesus will surely bring us into the security of being with God, trusting in his providence and generosity. 

    Thus, despite whatever hunger and thirst we have now never allow those to prevent us from coming to Jesus, or to hinder us from letting Jesus to fill and satisfy our hearts with his presence. And so with Mary, let us come with confidence to Jesus, who shall never reject, but will even gladly, welcome us. Hinaut pa. 

    Jom Baring, CSsR