18th Sunday of the Year A
Readings: Isaiah 55:1‑3 Romans 8:35, 37‑39 Matthew 14:13‑21
In our culture
we tend not value those things which are offered free of charge. Yet
in today's readings God invites us to receive lasting nourishment
“without paying and without cost.” As we listen
to the proclamation of God's blessings through Jesus, let us sing in
gratitude the refrain of our responsorial psalm: "The hand of the Lord
feeds us;/ he answers all our needs" (Ps 145).
In the Isaiah
reading the prophet speaks for God in inviting the thirsting and
impoverished Babylonian exiles to come to God and receive the gifts that
will sustain their lives: water, grain, wine, and
milk. In a very practical way, the prophet reasons with them: "Why
spend your money for what is not bread;/ your wages for what fails to
satisfy?". The gift that God offers the exiles goes beyond mere
material sustenance; our reading concludes with an invitation
for the exiles to receive the fullness of life once promised to the
dynasty of David.
Come to me heedfully,
listen, that you may have life.
I will renew with you the everlasting covenant,
the benefits assured to David.
We have been
reading Romans 8 for the past five Sundays; today's selection is the
lyrical conclusion of that chapter in which Paul praises God for his all
powerful love manifested in Christ's death and
resurrection. This act has so united us with Christ that no power can
separate us from him: neither sufferings for the sake of the gospel
(trial, distress, persecution, hunger, nakedness, danger or the sword)
nor the heavenly and astrological powers of the
universe who were gods in the paganism of the first century A.D.
Christ has triumphed over all of these, and therefore, Paul concludes
that nothing "will be able to separate us from the love of God that
comes to us in Christ Jesus, our Lord."
In the
episodes preceding Matthew's account of the multiplication of the loaves
and fishes, Jesus is continuing to experience rejection and hostility.
His native town of Nazareth could not accept his
wisdom and mighty deeds because they knew him as "the carpenter's son" (13:54‑58).
Also, Jesus has just been informed of the death of John the Baptist at
the hands of Herod (14:1‑12) which leads him to withdraw "to a deserted
place by himself." Despite his
own precarious situation, Jesus' heart is "moved with pity" when he
sees the vast throng that has followed him on foot from the towns.
The miracle of
the loaves and fishes looks beyond a one-time feeding of a crowd in
Galilee to the sustenance that Jesus will offer to the Church throughout
the ages. This is evident in both the disciples'
role and in Jesus' actions. The disciples are aware of the crowds'
need for food and so they suggest to Jesus, “This is a deserted place
and it is already late. Dismiss the crowds so that they may go to the
villages and buy some food for themselves.” But
Jesus does not want to disperse the crowd and therefore he tells the
disciples, “There is no need for them to disperse. Give them something
to eat yourselves.” Aware of their own paltry resources, the disciples
reply, “We have nothing here but five loaves
and a couple of fish.” This is all Jesus needs to feed the crowd.
Through his life giving power, the five loaves and two fish are
transformed into superabundant sustenance for the crowd so that "The
fragments which remained, when gathered up, filled twelve
baskets." The verbs used by Matthew in describing Jesus' actions would
have Eucharistic connotations for Matthew's church and they still do
for us.
He took the five loaves and two fish,
looked up to heaven,
blessed and broke them
and gave the loaves to the disciples,
who in turn gave them to the people.
Only in and through Jesus'
power are the disciples able to satisfy the hunger of the crowd. When
the Church attempts to fulfill its mission on its own resources, it is
powerless, like the disciples in today's Gospel.
Are you *currently* being sent into Hell forever ... automatically excommunicated (outside) of God’s Catholic Church ?
ReplyDeleteAnswer: Yes you are ... you can reverse it ... please continue.
Council of Florence, Session 8, 22 Nov 1439 -- infallible Source of Dogma >
"Whoever wills to be saved, before all things it is necessary that he holds the Catholic faith. Unless a person keeps this faith whole and undefiled, without doubt he shall perish eternally."
You must believe the Catholic Dogma to be in the Church ... Dogma you have *never* seen.
Site > Immaculata-one.com ... infallible Dogma throughout.
The Catholic Faith *is not* Bible interpretation ... it is the Catholic infallible Sources of Dogma. The Catholic Church didn’t even define the Bible’s New Testament Canon until 397 A.D. at the Council of Carthage.
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Can a group which enforces the opposite, the opposite, and the opposite of the Catholic unchangeable Dogma be the Catholic Church?
No, it cannot possibly be the Catholic Church ... and promotion of the opposite of the Catholic Dogma is exactly what the vatican-2 heretic cult does ... and has been doing since it’s founding on 8 December 1965 at the Vatican.
The vatican-2 heresy does not have the Office of the Papacy ... only the Catholic Church has the Papacy.
The Dogma cannot “change” or be “reversed” ... God does not “change”.
The founding documents of the vatican-2 heretic cult … the “vatican-2 council” documents … have well over 200 heresies *against* prior defined unchangeable Dogma. Every (apparent) bishop at the “council” approved the mountain of heresy, which caused their automatic excommunication, see Section 13.2 of the below site.
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Section 12 > Anti-Christ vatican-2 heresies (50 listed) ... followed by many Catholic corrections.
Sections 13 and 13.1 > Photographic *proof* of heresy at the Vatican.
Because of … the Catholic Dogma on automatic excommunication for heresy or for physical participation in a heretic cult (such as the v-2 cult) …
… we were all placed, body and soul, *outside* of Christianity (the Catholic Church) on 8 December 1965 … the close date of the “council”.
Section 13.2 > Catholic Dogma on automatic excommunication for heresy or participating in a heretic cult such as ... vatican-2, lutheran, methodist, evangelical, etc.
Section 107 > St. Athanasius (died 373 A.D.) ... “Even if the Church were reduced to a handful ...” - - during the “arian” heresy ... we are there again, but worse.
Section 13.3 > Matt 16:18, Gates of Hell scripture ... is *not* about the Office of the Papacy ... four Dogmatic Councils defined it ... that heresy will not cause the Dogma to disappear.
Section 13.4 > The vatican-2 heretic cult does not have the Office of the Papacy only the Catholic Church has the Papacy.
Section 13.6 > The Catholic Dogma on Jurisdiction and Automatic Excommunication for heresy define that ... God has allowed Catholic Jurisdiction ... for Mass and Confession to disappear from the world. There is no such thing as Catholic Mass outside of the Catholic Church.
Non-Catholic heresies such as “vatican-2”, “sspx”, “sspv”, “cmri”, etc. ... do not have Catholic Mass.
Section 19.1 > Dogma on Abjuration for *re-entering* Christianity (the Catholic Church) … after being automatically excommunicated. A Formal Abjuration is provided here also.
Section 10.2 > Returning to a state of grace, in places and times when Confession is not available, like now.
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Second Council of Constantinople, 553 A.D. -- infallible Source of Dogma >
"The heretic, even though he has not been condemned formally by any individual, in reality brings anathema on himself, having cut himself off from the way of truth by his heresy."
Blessed John Eudes, died 1680 >
“The greatest evil existing today is heresy, an infernal rage which hurls countless souls into eternal damnation.”
Everything you must know, believe, and do to get to Heaven is on > > Immaculata-one.com.
Victoria
Our Lady of Conquest
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