Greeting (see the Gospel)
We have been looking for food that lasts, the true bread
from heaven, Jesus himself. Those who believe in him will never grow thirsty. May
Jesus our Lord be always our food and drink for life, and may he always stay
with you. R/ And also with you.
1. Jesus, the Food of our Life
Jesus confronts us today with the question: “Why are you
looking for me?” Why are we looking for God, for Jesus? Is it merely for the
things he gives us? We receive much from God, that is true, but do we look for
Jesus for himself, for what he means in our lives? It is he who makes our life
meaningful and tells us how we can keep growing as his brothers and sisters.
And he also asks to learn from him to give ourselves to others, to become each
other’s food and drink. Let us ask him to teach us how.
2. Bread Broken for a New World
Many people are hungry today. But is it only for bread or
rice or whatever is their staple food? As Christians we have to be concerned
about the problem of hunger in the world, but we should not forget the great
hunger for human dignity, justice, peace. There is Someone who came among
people to satisfy the deepest human hungers and made himself bread for the life
of the world. It is Jesus the Lord, here among us. If we believe in him and
follow him on his way of self-giving we can work through him and with him to
bring to a hungry world the full food that satisfies all hungers.
Penitential Act
We now ask the Lord to forgive our sins, that this Eucharist
may bring us closer to him and give us his mentality. (pause)
Lord Jesus, bread of life, you nourish us with your living
words: Lord, have mercy. R/ Lord, have mercy.
Jesus Christ, bread of life, you give us yourself to eat and
drink: Christ, have mercy. R/ Christ, have mercy.
Lord Jesus, bread of life, you ask us to become each other’s
food and drink: Lord, have mercy. R/ Lord, have mercy.
Lord, in your kindness forgive us our sins and sustain us with your body and blood on the journey to everlasting life. R/ Amen.
Opening Prayer
Let us pray to the Father that Jesus may be our bread of
life (pause)
Our living God, we hunger for lasting life and happiness and the fulfillment of all our hopes. Satisfy all our hungers through your Son Jesus Christ, our bread of life. And when he has filled us with himself, may he lead and strengthen us to bring to a waiting world the food of reconciliation and joy which you alone can give to the full. We ask this through Christ our Lord. R/ Amen.
First Reading: Exodus 16:2-4, 12-15: God Gives Food to
His People
On their journey to the promised land, God’s people of Israel have to learn to rely on God. He cares for them and gives them the manna as the sign of his care everyday.
Second Reading: Ephesians 4:17, 20-24: Become New in
Christ
Christians should no longer be led by their whims and
desires for immediate gratification, for they have become new in Christ.
Reading 2 EPH 4:17, 20-24
Gospel: John 6:24-35: I Myself Am the Bread of Life
The Jews hunger for bread. Jesus tells them to seek him, Jesus, the true bread from heaven. He will give them himself.
Intercessions
1. Hunger for Jesus
As we are gathered here in the name of Jesus our Lord, we
bring before him the needs of his people and the hungers of the whole world.
Let us say to him:
R/ Lord, be the life of the world.
– For the Church, that its leaders and ministers may nourish
the People of God with the solid food of the gospel, let us pray:
R/ Lord, be the life of the
world.
– For the many all over the world today who do not have
enough to eat and who are too poor to lead a really human life, that those who
can afford may show compassion and work for a decent living for all, let us
pray:
R/ Lord, be the life of the
world.
– For divided Christians, that soon we may break together
the one bread of the one Lord, let us pray to the Lord:
R/ Lord, be the life of the
world.
– For all Christian communities, that we may learn to
appreciate the tremendous value of the Eucharist and draw from it the strength
to commit ourselves to our neighbor far and near, let us pray:
R/ Lord, be the life of the
world.
– For all of us here, that every Eucharist may become a real
encounter with the living Christ; that he may appease our hunger for the things
that last, and help us to love one another more, let us pray:
R/ Lord, be the life of the
world.
Lord Jesus Christ, be our bread of life in the Eucharist,
but also be the light and the life of all who seek you, and the fulfillment and
joy of all who have found you. Stay with us now and forever. R/ Amen.
2. Bread Broken for a New World
In memory of your Servant Jesus, who broke for us the bread
of his love and poured for us the blood of his life, who has made mutual
service, sharing and solidarity the signs of a new world, we pray you, God our
Father, to send the breath of your Spirit on us, as we say:
R/ Let your new world come among us.
– Let the new world come, let the day come when the poor
will no longer be in need and rejected by society; let the new world come when
all have enough to eat. Let the days come when all will have the heart of the
poor, we pray:
R/ Let your new world come
among us.
– Let the new world come when people will no longer live on
bread alone but on the word of their God. Let the days come when people will no
longer shut themselves up but open their hearts to praise their God, we pray:
R/ Let your new world come
among us.
– Let the new world come when all will be called children of
God. Let the days come when mercy will be shown to all because there will be
peace, we pray:
R/ Let your new world come among
us.
– Let the days come when there will be no more hatred or
wars, when the little ones and the weak will no longer be despised but can be
brothers and sisters, at peace and makers of peace, we pray:
R/ Let your new world come
among us.
Father, let the Spirit of Jesus live in us, that your new
world can take shape in us and keep growing. This is our prayer today through
Jesus Christ our Lord. R/ Amen.
Prayer over the Gifts
God our Father, for this meal of thanksgiving we bring
before you bread and wine, the gifts you yourself have given us. They express
our life and its struggles. Let them become the living signs of the presence
among us of your Son, so that he may sustain us on our journey to lasting life
and joy and dispose us to give ourselves with him for the life and happiness of
all your people. We ask this through Christ our Lord. R/ Amen.
Introduction to the Eucharistic Prayer
Let us with one heart and one voice give praise and thanks
to the Father, for through Jesus he has given meaning to our lives and the
promise of unending life and joy.
Invitation to the Lord’s Prayer
In the words of Jesus, our bread of life, let us ask our
Father in heaven to give us that bread always: R/ Our Father...
Deliver Us
Deliver us, Lord, from every evil and grant us peace in our
day. Make us new in mind and spirit, create us anew in your image and nourish
us with the bread of life as we wait in joyful hope for the coming of him who
will lead us into your lasting happiness, our Lord and Savior Jesus
Christ. R/ For the kingdom...
The Breaking of Bread
The bread that we now break is the bread of life destined to
be shared by all. Strengthened by this food, let us work keep anyone from
remaining hungry and thirsty.
Invitation to Communion
This is Jesus our Lord, the true bread from heaven that
appeases all hungers. He tells us now: I am the bread of life. Anyone who comes
to me will never be hungry; whoever believes in me will never thirst. Happy are
we to be invited to eat his body. R/ Lord, I am not worthy...
Prayer after Communion
Our loving Father, in the bread broken for us here we
recognize him who is the light of life, your Son Jesus Christ. Give us this
bread always, let him be our daily bread, which tastes better when it is shared
with those who hunger in any way. Grant this through Christ our Lord. R/
Amen.
Blessing
The Lord himself has told us today: “Do not work for food
that perishes but for the kind of food that gives life.” May we seek, then, in
life the Lord and his things of lasting value, integrity and justice and love. May
this be our way to God and to our brothers and sisters, with the blessing of
almighty God, the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. R/ Amen.
Let us go as people renewed by Christ, in justice and
holiness.
R/ Thanks be to God.
****
Commentary
“Imagine all the people...” sang John Lennon. He imagined a perfect world: “Nothing to live or die for, and no religion too.” But Viktor Frankl, recounting his experiences in a concentration camp during the second world war, wrote, “One can endure almost any kind of how if one has a why.” He had seen people die, he said, from loss of meaning. In affluent countries the suicide rate is climbing drastically. When you have everything except meaning, you have nothing to live or die for; and that, far from being a perfect world, is an unendurable one. See how a person’s face brightens when he or she sees the meaning of something, even if it’s only the meaning of a joke, or a puzzle. Imagine what it must be like to know the meaning of life itself! (We all say we do, but we don’t really.) We would be transfigured.