Our Daily Bread

                                                             By Orlando Hernández


     The Gospel for the 18th Sunday in Ordinary Time (Mt 14: 13-21) recounts the story of how our Lord miraculously fed thousands of hungry people. Here are some thoughts on how this Gospel has FED me over the last few days. A friend pointed out that this Gospel illustrates how great God is and how little we are. We come to Him with almost nothing to offer and the Loving One does wonders with it, like He did with the mere five loaves and two fish that the disciples had.      

We pray, we intercede for so many others. We express our concern, like the disciples did for all those hungry people. Often the answer to our prayer is similar to what our Lord says:“Give them some food yourselves.” We think we have so little to give, especially during this pandemic. The little bit of love, attention, or support that we can give to alleviate the spiritual hunger of others, even in a phone call, can be amplified a thousand-fold if we just give it with love and acknowledge that this Love is God Himself.     An explosion of grace can suddenly take place.

This week we took a risk again, and we visited our 98 year old friend Alicia in her home. She has lost so many faculties, and grows weaker every week. She asks on the phone, “ I miss you; when can I see you, my beloved friends?” So we go and sit next to her and just listen to her thoughts and memories, some happy, some bitter. We play old romantic Latin songs that we bring in our iPod.  And then we pray.

She usually initiates our God talk and praise. This week she was especially animated and happy to see us and just thanked God again and again, for this moment, for this extra day of life, for her family, for her faith, and most of all, for the love God has shown her.    

 Our luminous moment was interrupted by the social worker, who came in for his monthly interview. Alicia can hardly see or hear but she was very attentive to the questions that he gave her: “ How are you feeling?” Her answer: “ I feel only joy in the presence of my loving God,” ( no complaints about her physical problems). The second question was, “ How are you eating?” She just said, “fine”, so the social worker tried a different tack : “ What is the food that you enjoy the most?”

She struck us with the light of her answer: “ My favorite food is the constant heavenly Manna that my loving Father let’s fall upon me. I am so blessed!”      

Wow! My wife and I, even the caretaker and the interviewer, felt something extremely special, and for a few seconds there was this bright silence in the room! Tears came to my eyes. I knew it was the power of the Holy Spirit, alive in the heart of this Godly woman. We had actually gone to her house reluctantly and afraid because of the virus, and here God multiplies our meager offering into a heavenly moment!

 “ Give us this day our daily bread,” Jesus teaches us to pray, and to make this prayer come alive through service. That day we got a powerful dose of that Daily Bread of Life that our Lord loves to give us.    

 Yes, He provides us with food for our bodies and our souls. I wrote last time that I would share with you some of my favorite prayer-meditations. This year we are celebrating the 300th Anniversary of the founding of the Passionist Order by our patron, St. Paul of the Cross. Here is some of his advice on how to pray. It goes very well with the message of the Gospel we were reflecting upon. He writes:        

  “Let the immense Good rest in your soul. God in you and you in God. A divine work. I don’t know how to say it, but God feeds on your spirit and your spirit feeds on the Spirit of God. My food is Christ and I am His.” (Letter 752- 5/25/1751)      

   This prayer is short and simple, but sometimes I can spend over a half-hour in this delightful state. It is a wonderful “ spiritual communion prayer.” I am fascinated at the thought that God cares to actually taste me as my spirit dissolves into that vast, “immense Good”.  

   Even before I pray, I pray! I pray that I might feel just a little of what Psalm 131 expresses so beautifully:       

 “Lord, My heart is not proud; nor are my eyes haughty. I do 

3 thoughts on “Our Daily Bread

  1. Susan Leach's avatarSusan Leach

    Orlando, Father Victor shared this story with me yesterday as I was telling him about my mother’s death in a nursing home in late June following her illness with Covid-19. What a beautiful experience you had with your friend Alicia, and the Holy Spirit.

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