"Then he took the seven loaves and the fish, and when he had given thanks, he broke them and gave them to the disciples, and they in turn to the people. They all ate and were satisfied. Afterward the disciples picked up seven basketfuls of broken pieces that were left over" (Mt 15:36-37a).
Bishop Barron's point in his Advent reflection of Jesus feeding the 5,000 is that if you give away what you have received, God will multiply what you give away for the satisfaction of others, and then you will still have plenty left over. He calls this the loop of grace. He says, "Jesus multiplies the loaves and the fishes. There is no better exemplification in the Scriptures of what I have called the loop of grace. God offers, as a sheer grace, the gift of being, but if we try to cling to that gift and make it our own, we lose it." The converse is also true. If you keep for yourself all that you have received, you will shrivel up without blessing anyone else--not even those you love.
I know that God has given me much, yet I have not given away much of what I have received but kept it for myself and my future. Yet the little that I did give away, God has blessed beyond my expectation. Lord, help me not hold on to my life and possessions, but enable me to give away whatever is left during the few remaining years of my life.
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