
It’s a standard networking question: “Who do you work for?” or probably more commonly “Where do you work?” Today’s Gospel makes me wonder what Jesus would say if I responded with a list of clients or former companies I’ve worked for. On the flip side, I wonder how a person would reply if I answered, “God,” or “anywhere God needs me.” I imagine the result might be a chuckle, with a casual, “Yeah, me too, but no really, who do you work for?” But today, I’m asking myself – am I working for myself or am I working for God?
Jesus is clear in today’s Gospel, when we work, it should be for the eternal, for food that endures, for eternal life. That work shouldn’t be about us, it should be about God. What does He need to accomplish through us? What do we need to be doing so that our relationship with Him deepens? What do we need to be doing so that more people might open their hearts to Him?
It’s a different perspective to be about eternal things rather than things of this world. When the people push Jesus for how to accomplish the works of God, He tells them, “This is the work of God, that you believe in the one he sent.” That is the eternal food: Believing in Jesus. If we TRULY believe in Jesus, we should live differently. It should impact how we live, how we love and how well we can let go of anything other than God.
Ambition may seem like a way to work for things of this world, but rightly ordered ambition with belief in Jesus can be for the eternal as well. Are you working for a promotion for the mere power of it or are you working to be in a position to help other people? Jesus understood how to be about the Father’s work in His position, not only by healing a physical ailment, but also by teaching people, by healing their hearts, by recognizing their dignity, by loving them and ultimately, by dying for them and us.
Jesus tells the people in today’s Gospel that they were searching for Him because they had eaten the loaves and were filled. Will we do the same, or will we seek the food that endures for eternal life? Will we allow Him to fill us through His Word and the Eucharist? If we do, we will find ourselves searching for and finding Him in our families, in others, in our work and in our homes. And the more we find Him, the more we will realize it is not about ourselves but about Him. Let us all spend our lives working for God.
Daily Reading
Tuesday of Fifth Week of Easter
Reading 1 Acts 14:19-28 In those days, some Jews from Antioch and Iconium arrived and won over the crowds. They stoned Paul and dragged him out of the city, supposing…
Saint of the Day
St. Bernardine of Siena
St. Bernardine of Siena
Feast date: May 20
The Catholic Church honors St. Bernardine of Siena on May 20. A Franciscan friar and preacher, St. Bernardine is known as “the Apostle of Italy” for his efforts to revive the country’s Catholic faith during the 15th century.Bernardine Albizeschi was born to upper-class parents in the Italian republic of Siena during 1380. Misfortune soon entered the boy’s life when he lost his mother at age three and his father four years later. His aunt Diana cared for him afterward, and taught him to seek consolation and security by trusting in God. Even at a young age, Bernardine demonstrated a remarkable concern for the poor as an outgrowth of his love for God. Having become accustomed to fasting, he preferred at times to go without any food in order to help someone in greater need. From the ages of 11 to 17 he focused on his studies, developing the eloquence and dedication that would serve his future work as an evangelist. Before becoming a preacher, however, Bernardine spent several years ministering to the sick and dying. He enrolled in a religious association that served at a hospital in the town of Scala, and applied himself to this work from 1397 to 1400. During that time, a severe plague broke out in Siena, causing a crisis that would eventually lead to the young man taking charge of the entire hospital. Inside its walls, up to 20 people were dying each day from an illness that also killed many of the hospital workers. The staff was decimated and new victims were coming in constantly.Bernardine persuaded 12 young men to help him continue the work of the hospital, which he took over for a period of four months. Although the plague did not infect him, the exhausting work left him weak and he contracted a different sickness that kept him in bed for four months. After recovering, he spent over a year caring for his aunt Bartholomaea before her death. Then the 22-year-old Bernardine moved to a small house outside the city, where he began to discern God’s will for his future through prayer and fasting. He eventually chose to join the Franciscans of the Strict Observance in 1403, embracing an austere life focused on poverty and humility. During this time, while praying before a crucifix, Bernardine heard Christ say to him: “My son, behold me hanging upon a cross. If you love me, or desire to imitate me, be also fastened naked to your cross and follow me. Thus you will assuredly find me.” After Bernardine was ordained a priest, his superiors commissioned him to preach as a missionary to the Italians who were falling away from their Catholic faith. The Dominican evangelist St. Vincent Ferrer, just before leaving Italy, preached a sermon in which he predicted that one of his listeners would continue his work among the Italians – a prophecy Bernardine heard in person, and went on to fulfill.Bernardine’s personal devotion to God, which amazed even the strict Franciscans, made his preaching extremely effective. He moved his hearers to abandon their vices, turn back to God, and make peace with one another. He promoted devotion to the name of Jesus as a simple and effective means of recalling God’s love at all times. When other priests consulted him for advice, Bernardine gave them a simple rule: “In all your actions, seek in the first place the kingdom of God and his glory. Direct all you do purely to his honor. Persevere in brotherly charity, and practice first all that you desire to teach others.”“By this means,” he said, “the Holy Spirit will be your master, and will give you such wisdom and such a tongue that no adversary will be able to stand against you.” Bernardine’s own life attested to this source of strength in the face of trials. He patiently suffered an accusation of heresy – which Pope Martin V judged to be false – and refused to abandon his bold preaching when a nobleman threatened him with death.But Bernardine was also widely admired throughout Italy, and he was offered the office of a bishop on three occasions. Each time, however, he turned down the position, choosing to fulfill the prediction of St. Vincent Ferrer through his missionary work. Bernardine preached throughout most of Italy several times over, and even managed to reconcile members of its warring political factions. Later in his life, Bernardine served for five years as the Vicar General for his Franciscan order, and revived the practice of its strict rule of life. Then in 1444, forty years after he first entered religious life, Bernardine became sick while traveling. He continued to preach, but soon lost his strength and his voice. St. Bernardine of Siena died on May 20, 1444. Only six years later, in 1450, Pope Nicholas V canonized him as a saint.