April 27, 2020
by Barbara Dilly
Creighton University's Department of Sociology and Anthropology
click here for photo and information about the writer

Monday of the Third Week of Easter
Lectionary: 273

Acts 6:8-15
Psalms 199:23-24, 26-27, 29-30
John 6:22-29

Celebrating Easter

Do Not Let Your Hearts Be Troubled


Weekly Guide for Daily Prayer

The Servant Girl at Emmaus

Feeling Our Hearts Burning with Hope

Now, more than ever, in these troubling times, we should be asking, “what can we do to accomplish the works of God?”  Instead, most of us are calling on God to help us.  That is a good first step, but God then expects us to act appropriately on our faith.  The Gospel story for today intrigues me.  We read that people came after Jesus because he performed a miracle when he fed the five thousand.  That is not surprising.  We would do the same thing.  But I was impressed that they didn’t ask him for still more miracles.  Instead, they asked of him, “what can we do to accomplish the works of God?”  In my experience, hardly anyone ever asks that.  And hardly anyone is ready to do whatever Jesus asks of us.  It appears, however, that this group was open to hearing what Jesus had to say.  Based on all they had seen and heard from Jesus, by asking this question, I am convinced that they believed he was sent by God.  But again, I am amazed that they expressed such a deep desire to follow him.  We can learn something from them.

If we think of ourselves as members of this group, as people who believe in him, what would we look for as an answer to this question?  Do we as believers express in our prayers a deep desire to follow Jesus.  Or do we continue to look for more miracles in our lives to convince us that Jesus is present?  To me, this story got put on record because it is one of the few times that Jesus answered a question so directly to believers.  In fact, Jesus took advantage of this “teaching moment” to give us an answer to most of our questions.   He knew that eventually everyone is tempted to call on God for their material needs.  He invites us to do that in the Lord’s prayer when we pray “give us this day our daily bread.”  But God has so much more to offer us in Jesus the Christ.  Jesus teaches us here to “not work for food that perishes but for the food that endures for eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you.” 

To me that means, while I am invited to pray daily for my basic needs,  I should also pray for the strength of faith to believe in the one he sent to the extent that I can ask, “what can I do to accomplish the works of God?”  As a believer, I know my life has more purpose in Christ than to just survive from daily bread to daily bread.  Jesus doesn’t spell out that purpose in much detail because it is up to each of us in our own times and places to ask what we can do.  Now, in this time of incredible human need, it is even more urgent that we each seek more than to meet our own needs.  What can I do?  That really challenges me.  For now, it seems staying connected to others, listening to them, and staying cheerful around them is the best I can do.  I call my 93-year-old father, who lives nearby but alone, several times a day.  I also deliver his favorite coffee and bacon cheeseburger from McDonalds once in the middle of the week and plan a special Sunday dinner for him at my house where we sit at far ends of the dining room table.  He loves that the most.  I also plan to visit the post office to pick up my mail when other people in my small community are there, taking turns going in, but standing six feet away in the parking lot to hold conversations.  They wait for each other, just to get a friendly smile and to hear a cheerful voice. 

If we can do nothing but maintain long-distance contact with cheerfulness and hope, we can brighten someone’s day.  But when we can come together again, I pray we will be more intentional than ever to make a significant difference in the ways we care for others.  Just going back to the way things were is not good enough.  We can accomplish more than that. 

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