Photo by Monika Grabkowska on Unsplash
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Roger Lynn
July 19, 2020
(CLICK HERE for the audio for this sermon)
You are walking down the street, minding your own business, thinking whatever thoughts happen to be passing through your head in that moment. When suddenly you are dragged back to your senses by the smell of fresh baked bread, compelling you to locate the source. In that moment your understanding of the world is clearly in focus. You are very much aware that you are alive, and life is good.
And Jesus says, “I am the Bread of Life.” We know about bread. It nourishes. It satisfies. It entices. Even just the smell is enough to make our mouths water with desire. It draws us on until we find the source. In the letter to the Ephesians we find this interesting phrase. “Live in love, as Christ loved us...a fragrant offering...” (Ephesians 5:2) Imagine that the fragrant offering is the smell of fresh baked bread – enticing us and drawing us on to find the source of life, which is God. We are nourished when we connect our lives with the Sacred Source to which Jesus’ points us.
What I find particularly attractive about this image is the way in which it offers us the possibility of relating to God based on enticement rather than enforcement. The idea that faithful living can be a “want to” rather than a “have to.” “I am the Bread of Life that makes your mouth water and long for more.” “I am the smell of bread baking that draws you from the path you’re on and leads you to ultimate nourishment.” “I am the food that fills not just your stomach but your deepest longings.” Viewing God this way changes everything. It transforms the shape of faithful living from one of obligations to be endured into one of possibilities to be explored.
“I am the Bread of Life,” says Jesus in profoundly eucharistic language. The phrase invites us to think about the other time when Jesus took bread and said, “This is my body.” What might it mean if we began to allow our experience at the Communion Table to be shaped and colored by a deeper, fuller awareness of what happens at the table and where it might lead us? ...if instead of simply taking the bread, and perhaps thinking a few thoughts about Jesus or God, we recognized it as a powerful reminder of God’s ongoing and nourishing presence in our lives. ...if instead of simply letting it be a nice, quiet, personal time between us and God, we started to remember the quality of life with each other which God empowers us to live. The table might become more than just a moment in the midst of our worship once a month. It might become the foundation upon which genuine, loving community is built and sustained. By remembering what it means to be nourished by the true Bread of Life we might begin to nourish each other as well.
Nutritionists tell us that eating a balanced diet greatly enhances the possibility of living a balanced life. That truth carries over into the world of faith and spirit as well. In order to live in balanced, loving community with each other, where care and respect and kindness are the order of the day, it is essential that we are regularly nourished with a balanced diet of God’s Presence. Have you had your daily allowance of the Bread of Life?
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