Manila Bulletin

We need spiritual food, too

- By FR. BEL SAN LUIS, SVD

ONCE there was a widow who lived alone. She was terribly lonely. She went to a big pet shop and bought a prize talking parrot worth “This will cheer me up,” she muttered as she excitedly brought it home.

** * But days passed and the parrot hadn’t uttered a sound. She went back to pet shop owner and complained.

“What it needs are a ladder for the cage, a swing, and a mirror to make it active.” the man said. So the lady bought all those. But still the parrot didn’t utter a word.

** * After three days, she went to the pet store, this time mournful. She reported that the parrot had died. The owner was embarrasse­d. “Didn’t it say anything at all?”

“Yes,” said the widow. “It said feebly, ‘Don’t they have bird food in the store?’” The owner was so preoccupie­d with the bird’s various needs that he forgot the one most basic—food!

** * “I am the bread of life,” Jesus tells us in this 18th Sunday gospel. As the story of the bird illustrate­s, we need food to live. But Jesus teaches that we humans need food for our souls, too.

No doubt, the Lord was concerned for our basic needs. He showed this when he multiplied the meager bread and fishes for the hungry crowd.

But he also prescribed a spiritual food. Thus, Jesus decided to dwell inside the bread of the Eucharist with all his power to become the nourishmen­t of our souls.

* * * Psychologi­sts speak about two kinds of hunger. There’s a physical hunger, which worldly food can satisfy, but there’s also a spiritual hunger, which no worldly food can satisfy.

In other words, we can be famous, successful, and have everything that money can buy but deep down inside, there’s the gnawing feeling of emptiness and hunger for something more. It’s because we are not merely physical or material beings but also spiritual.

* * * I have a friend, Nanding Balingit, who was making good in his career as a company executive of a giant food conglomera­te in Makati. But everybody was surprised when, after many years, he quit his highpaying job and is working fulltime in the Spirit of Love Charismati­c Community.

* * * In charge of the outreach charismati­c seminars, he travels to the provinces, many times coming home in the wee hours of the morning.

Concerning his material resources, he said: “I may not be making as much money as I used to, but I can’t exchange the happiness and satisfacti­on I now experience.”

* * *

There are other people like Nanding who discovered a greater fulfillmen­t in doing the work of the Lord than in the 8-to-5 daily work routine.

Have you ever hungered or thirsted for something deep down and didn’t know what? If the answer is yes, then the Scripture passage of today applies to you.

* * *

Christ says: “I am the bread of life…He who comes to me will never be hungry; he who believes in Me will never be thirsty.”

As the great St. Augustine wrote in his book Confession­s: “Our hearts are made for You, O God, and they are restless until they rest in You.”

* * * FAMILY TV MASS — aired on IBC 13 (channel 15 cable) at 7-8 a.m. every Sunday; also on internatio­nal GMA Pinoy TV. Sponsor: NATIONAL SHRINE OF THE DIVINE MERCY, Marilao Bulacan. Mass celebrant: Fr. Joseph Cruz, parochial vicar.

PRAY WITH US ON TV.

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