| Come and have breakfast! |
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"Come and have breakfast" are homely words that engage us easily. Brendan Clifford OP uses them to set the scene for this "lectio divina".
Come and have breakfast! As soon as they came ashore they saw that there was some bread there, and a charcoal fire with fish cooking on it. Jesus said, "Bring some of the fish you have just caught." Simon Peter went aboard and dragged the net to the shore, full of big fish, one hundred and fifty-three of them; and in spite of there being so many the net was not broken. Jesus said to them, "Come and have breakfast. " None of the disciples was bold enough to ask, 'Who are you?' They knew quite well it was the Lord. Jesus then stepped forward, took the bread and gave it to them, and the same with the fish. (John 21:4-13) “Come and have breakfast!" I invite you to think over these words and see what place they have in your life. We had a version of them in my house when I was a child: "The breakfast is ready." If you are a parent, these words may be part of your morning struggle to get your children or teenagers out of bed. Or they may remind you of other meals, dinners and suppers, and the good people who prepared them for you at different times in your life. And you yourself may have prepared a lot of meals for others. "Come and have breakfast" are words from ordinary everyday life, not the kind of words we would expect to find in the Bible. It is surprising then to hear Jesus using them. In every corner of the world We may be bold enough to say that he is present in the simple things that people do for one another. We may look with reverence at the person who prepares our food and serves it with good will, and say what the disciple said, "It is the Lord". We recognise Jesus too in those who work to create a just world where there is adequate food for every person. A word to guide us In this story the apostles needed guidance and they needed nourishment, and it is the Lord who met those needs. The same is true for ourselves each day, and it is especially true when we come to Mass on Sunday. There we look for guidanlce and inspiration as we listen to the word of God in the readings and in the homily; we look for nourishment for our whole being as we receive Holy Communion. As we hear his word and as we receive him, body and blood, soul and divinity, we can say in truth, "It is the Lord". Prayer: Psalm 23
This article first appeared in St Martin Magazine (April 2007). |







