Scarcity is all but unimaginable in our modern world of plenty. Younger generations often wonder how their ancestors lived with limited resources and yet can recollect the old days with tenderness. For one thing, they lived by faith, or at least did not blatantly offend God. It would be wrong to repay the Eternal Provider of our pain quotidien (daily bread) with pain. Whereas He cheers those who believe in Him, those who believe in themselves and revel in the sunshine eventually see no light at the end of the tunnel.

Today’s Readings invite us to trust in Divine Providence very especially, regardless of the circumstances. The First Reading (2 Kings 4: 42-44) shows us how Elisha, with just twenty loaves of barley, fed a hundred hungry men. It was the Lord’s promise, fulfilled after the Prophet had manifested his total devotion to Him. And the miracle is symbolic of how nothing is impossible with God: He knows and satisfies our every need and, above all, the spiritual needs of those who hunger for His Word.

While every Sunday, the Old Testament reading is coordinated thematically with the Gospel text, the connection this time around is more than obvious. Both readings are about multiplication of loaves. In the Old Testament there are examples of God providing the Israelites with bread as they starved in the wilderness (Ex 16: 4) and Elijah creating an unending supply of flour and oil so as to survive a famine (Kings 17: 15-16), but neither parallels today’s Gospel story as strongly.

Four Gospel accounts

There are six Gospel accounts of the multiplication of loaves.[i] Jesus twice fed the people — once, 5,000 were fed with just five loaves and two fish, and twelve baskets of bread were left over; and on another occasion, 4,000, with seven loaves and some fish, and they had five baskets remaining. The former miracle is the only one (other than the Resurrection) that is recorded in the four Gospels; only Matthew and Mark, even if repetitiously, made a note of the second instance as well.

The miracle highlights the wisdom of having a supernatural approach even in what concerns our material needs. Trusting in the Lord is of the essence, for He has said, ‘Do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. But seek first His kingdom and His righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. Therefore, do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.’ (Mt 6: 31-34)

Of course, all of our troubles end when we partake of the ultimate meal that Jesus has provided us with: the Holy Eucharist. This happens at every Sacrifice of the Mass. The multiplication of loaves foreshadowed Our Divine Lord and Master’s supreme example of love instituted at the Last Supper. It was therefore very painful to see it all parodied at the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games in Paris on Friday.

That the tableau was hardly contextual is beside the point; that it was in bad taste is an understatement. The vanity on display was but a betrayal of the memory of Charlemagne and a direct affront to the religion that has shaped France. The king of the Franks, by his efforts to ensure the unity of Christendom, was regarded as ‘Father of Europe’, while his country was called the ‘eldest daughter of the Catholic Church’. So, what happened in France on the weekday of Christ’s death is nothing short of a national sin crying out to heaven for vengeance.

Paris or perish?

Charlemagne’s much-desired unity of Christian Europe was a faithful reproduction of what St Paul, centuries earlier, had strived for with respect to the Church. In the Second Reading (Eph 4: 1-6), the Apostle to the Gentiles begged of his people to lead a life worthy of their calling: ‘You were called to the one hope that belongs to your call, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of us all, who is above all and through all and in all.’ We are; France is. But alas, our response has been pathetic, tragic, so the consequences may not be any different; it is a matter of supernatural justice…

Yet, whatever the problems facing us, individually, as a nation or as a civilisation, they are never too large for God. For example, when we multiply problems, God multiplies solutions; when we multiply curses, He multiplies judgements; and yet, when we multiply prayers, God multiplies blessings. It is equally apt to note Charlemagne’s motto: In Scelus Exsurgo Sceleris Discrimina Purgo (‘I fight against aggression and punish the aggressor’).

The ongoing Parisian mockery is French Revolution in loop mode. The revolution is still on, and it is against the Catholic Church. Alas, all but the Catholics seem to recognise it! We are perhaps the only ones who freely mock our own Mother, the Church. None would dare try these antics against any other religion… Are we to forgive even when our Mother is under attack? Is nothing sacred anymore?

Will Rome, then, and the Church in France and the world over, come out with a formal condemnation? And what about you and me? Are we going to foolishly accept, yet again, that the enemy is right, so all that is left to do is say Touché?

[i] Mt 14: 15-21 and 15:32-39; Mk 6: 35-44 and 8: 1-9; Lk 9: 12-17; Jn 6: 1-13

https://www.foxnews.com/media/olympics-opening-ceremony-sparks-outrage-drag-queens-parodying-last-supper-gone-completely-woke

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