Sunday, August 11, 2024

The Angel's Touch


19th Sunday in Ordinary Time


Readings: 1 Kings 19: 4-8; Psalm 33 (34): 2-9; Ephesians 4: 30-5:2; John 6: 41-51

Picture: By Jose Gasparian on Unsplash


My dear friends, what is it like be exhausted and hungry at the same time? To feel an urgent need to sleep and to eat? Of course, we can’t do both simultaneously. So which do we do first? I’m not sure, but aren’t we more likely to sleep first? After all, it’s possible to feel so tired that we can’t even stay awake long enough to finish a meal. And yet, once we fall asleep, isn’t it easy to forget to eat? Which is why we need someone to wake us up. Someone to remind us to nourish ourselves. Isn’t this what we find in each of our readings?


At the start of the first reading, Elijah is so exhausted that he prays for death, and then promptly falls asleep. But God doesn’t let the prophet die. For God has a new mission for him, which Elijah will have to travel all the way to Horeb, the mountain of God, to receive. And to help Elijah get there, God provides not only nourishing food to sustain him on the journey, but also the touch of an angel to rouse him from sleep. Get up and eat, or the journey will be too long for you. The touch of God’s messenger, rousing someone from sleep, so as to nourish him with food for the journey. Touch, sleep, and food. Seems like a simple enough story, except that the story also has a deeper meaning. One that becomes clearer when we consider that what God does for Elijah in the first reading actually mirrors what God had earlier sent the prophet to do for the people of Israel.


As we may recall, Ahab, the king of Israel at the time, had taken a pagan wife, Jezebel. After which, the king and all his subjects turned to worship Baal, the queen’s pagan god. And though they may not realise it, their idolatry leads the Israelites into deep spiritual exhaustion and starvation, symbolised by a terrible drought and famine that ravage the land. To save the people, God sends Elijah to call them back to true worship. So that not only does Elijah receive the touch of an angel, he himself is sent to be an angel for others. To awaken the people of Israel from their idolatry, and to remind them to nourish themselves by worshipping the one true God. To taste and see that the Lord is good. But queen Jezebel resists the prophet’s touch. Refusing to be awakened by God’s messenger, she actually seeks to kill him. Which is why Elijah is forced to flee for his life, becoming depressed and burnt out. The prophet’s afflictions in the first reading are the result of the sins of those he was sent to help.


So more than just a story about a lone prophet being rescued from physical tiredness, the first reading is also about how God seeks to save a whole people from false worship. For just as the sleep of idolatry leads to spiritual burnout and starvation, despair and death, the food of right worship brings true rest and sustenance, renewal of purpose and fullness of life. And the good news is that God never tires of sending messengers to touch those who fall asleep, to rouse them to wakefulness, and to remind them to eat. Isn’t this also what Jesus is doing in the gospel?


As we may recall from last Sunday’s reading, in the sixth chapter of John’s gospel, the Lord uncovers the subtle signs of the people’s idolatry. By seeking to make Jesus king, simply because he is able to provide them with free food (6:15), the people show that the god they worship is their own stomachs. Which is why Jesus tells them not to work for food that cannot last (6:27), but to feed instead on Jesus himself, the bread of life sent by God to nourish the world. And in today’s reading, we see that it’s not just the people who need to be awakened from idolatry, their religious leaders do too. By complaining to each other about Jesus, aren’t they showing signs of false worship? Not that there’s anything wrong with complaining in itself, provided it is done for a just cause. But their grumbling is born of jealousy and the need for control. It’s also a sign of their resistance to being roused from sleep. As queen Jezebel tried to do to Elijah, the religious leaders will soon seek to have Jesus killed.


And not only does Jesus himself touch others into wakefulness, he also sends disciples to do the same. Isn’t this what the author of the second reading seeks to do? More than just imposing burdensome obligations that individuals find hard to fulfil, the reading helps a community to recognise signs of its own exhaustion born of idolatry. Including the ways its members use words to tear others down, instead of building them up. And isn’t this what we too are called to do as Christians? Not just to feed ourselves at the Eucharistic table, but also to be sent out to touch others into wakefulness. Isn’t this a particularly urgent need today, living as we do in a society where so many feel burdened to the point of burnout? Like sheep without a shepherd (Mk 6:34)?


Sisters and brothers, what can we do both to better receive, as well as to become for others, the touch of an angel today?

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