“When I broke the seven loaves for the four thousand, how many full baskets of fragments did you pick up?” What can we safely assume when we think of leftovers? Let us begin with our own collective experiences growing up in a family. Leftovers meant that while there was still food from another previous meal, good money-saving etiquette dictated that we eat what we have first before buying something more. It meant that we were not a wasteful family. It meant that there was more than the distinct possibility that some dishes actually tasted better after a day or two of marinating and bathing in sauces and gravies, which made for the repeat even better than the premiere. It also powerfully suggested that somehow, someway, we were all going to eat because the Lord Jesus was truly the head and constant guest of the family.
“Rather, each person is tempted when lured and enticed by his desire. Then desire conceives and brings forth sin, and when sin reaches maturity it gives birth to death.” Even with the perennial presence of such an overabundance of love and joy, our response to such memories was and is clear. We are to treat each other as members of the much larger family we know as Church and practice the same over-generous spirit with which the Lord God shows us. That means first and foremost to obey God and all that He has given us to live, not just the food on the table, but also the tablets of the Ten Commandments. Such negligent behavior has always had disastrous effects. This mega-generous reveal can not be lost on any of us today. On that day in the Gospel, the leftovers barely filled vast bread baskets and overflowing storage because there would literally be billions coming after that miracle to be fed, and then finally to a place where there will be no more hunger or pain, just Jesus, who re-opened the gates of Paradise with His own life so that we could have life to the fullest.
“…true love is an irrevocable act – you can only give your heart away once – after that, you give as much as you have left …” John Geddes