1Kgs 19:4-8 Resp. Ps 34 Ephesians 4:30—5:2 John 6:41-51
The Old Testament reading for Mass today explores the theme of viaticum; food for the journey. In the First Book of Kings we hear of the prophet Elijah’s journey through the wilderness; a journey which leaves him exhausted and famished, so hungry he longs for the release of death.
Like the gift of Manna to the Israelites wandering in the desert on their journey to the promised land, this mysterious food provided Our Lord with a familiar image based on which to teach the apostles and the crowds the Bread of Life.
In the Gospel, Our Lord says to us, ‘ The bread that I shall give is my flesh for the life of the world. “ The sacrifice He made, His Death on Calvary and His Resurrection, is our salvation. This salvation, so great as to save the whole world, is offered to us in the Mass and given to us in Holy Communion, The Body and Blood of Christ, received in the Sacrament, are the same Body given for us and Blood shed for us. Our spiritual food is our salvation. Viaticum and the Sacrifice are one, offered by Christ our Lord. The Greek Fathers of the Early Church called Holy Communion “the medicine of immortality.”
They saw how the sanctifying effect of receiving the Body and Blood of Christ infused our souls and healed us all of all that turns us from God. In the same way, the regular practice of confession and reception of absolution should make sin more and more anathema to us.
We sometimes pray for those who have died unprepared. Today let us pray that we may not be numbered among them, but rather that our whole spiritual life may have made us ready for the moment. And we can still pray for the grace of a holy death, fortified by the rites of the Holy Church, asking our Mother to pray for us to her Son, who died to save us, and who gives us living bread.