
Bread of Life
For the bread of God is he which cometh down from heaven, and giveth
life unto the world. Then said they unto him, Lord, evermore give
us this bread. And Jesus said unto them, I am the bread of life: he that
cometh to me shall never hunger; and he that believeth on me shall never
thirst.
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John 6:33-35
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Earthly Bread and Heavenly Bread
"The two biggest sellers in any bookstore are the cookbooks and the
diet books. The cookbooks tell you how to prepare the food and the diet
books tell you how not to eat any of it." So observed Sixty Minutes commentator
Andy Rooney (quoted by Fred Lyon in "The Savior Life Diet," Lectionary
Homiletics, August,
1997, p. 21). I made a trip to the discount bookstore this past week
to see if Andy Rooney was right. I discovered he was at least partly right.
There were lots and lots of cookbooks there. I stopped counting at 250
different titles -- because at 250 I was only half-way through the cookbook
section! And, that didn't count the bargain bins!
There was an astonishing array of topics and titles. I found cookbooks
for Christmas. And, it's only August! I found Visible Vegetables, The Terrific
Pacific Cookbook, Glorious Garlic, 50 Ways with Fish, 365 More Receipts
for Chicken, Cooking for Dummies, Dad's Own Cookbook: Everything Your Mother
Never Taught You, to name only a few. (It was interesting to me that Cooking
for Dummies and Dad's Own Cookbook were really near each other on the bookshelves!)
The bookstore didn't have quite as many diet books. But, there was a
fair number of titles, including The Weigh Down Diet, Controlling Your
Fat Tooth, The Suzanne Sommers Eat Great Lose Weight diet book, and The
Ten Habits of Naturally Slim People. (Not being among the "naturally slim"
myself, I thought I'd have a look in this one to see what I might learn.
I discovered habit number eight was: only eat when you're hungry. Why didn't
I think of that?)
And, whether or not the bookstore had them in stock, we all know there
are lots and lots of other diet books and diet plans. It reminds me of
the refrigerator magnet I once saw. It read, "A waist is a terrible thing
to mind!"
Now, there's nothing wrong with having a healthy concern for our bodies.
It's admirable, really. The "body is a temple of the Holy Spirit" (1 Corinthians
6:19, RSV). But I wonder if this obsession with getting food into us, and
then getting those unwanted pounds off of us, isn't perhaps symptomatic
of something else.
We may pursue the material when what we really need is spiritual. The
hunger that drives us to cookbooks and restaurants (and then, to diet clubs
or health clubs), the emptiness we try to pack with possessions, the way
we may try to fill ourselves up with more recognition, more titles, more
awards, more experiences; could these not be our spiritual emptiness crying
out for God?
Alex Gondola, Jr, "Come As You Are"
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It is the spirit that quickeneth; the flesh profiteth nothing: the words
that I [Jesus] speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life.
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John 6:63
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