Friday, November 7, 2025

Seven Meals a Day

 



Seeing how to get things done supernaturally

10/28/2025

Luke 6:12-16 Jesus went up to the mountain to pray, and he spent the night in prayer to God. When day came, he called his disciples to himself, and from them he chose Twelve, whom he also named Apostles: Simon, whom he named Peter, and his brother Andrew, James, John, Philip, Bartholomew, Matthew, Thomas, James the son of Alphaeus, Simon who was called a Zealot, and Judas the son of James, and Judas Iscariot, who became a traitor.

Conventional wisdom says: If you want to get something done, give it to someone who’s busy. Why? Well, the reason they are busy is because they are getting things done. So give them some more. By contrast, Christian wisdom says: If you want to get something done, give it to someone humble. Why? Well, because the devil won’t see humility coming, and further, he won't be able to stop someone humble. If the devil has a kind of kryptonite, an Achilles’ heel, a fatal flaw, it is a humble Christian.

Are you familiar with J.R.R. Tolkien’s fictional masterpiece called The Lord of the Rings? Our Tuesday 12 noon Bible study group has been studying the genius of Tolkien’s writings: how he translated the faith into fiction. Gandalf, a good and wise wizard, needs to destroy an evil ring of power. And who does he find to carry out this extraordinary task: someone busy? No, someone humble, a small and seemingly inconsequential hobbit.

All the other members of the small expedition to Mt. Doom to destroy the ring have remarkable powers: Stryder with his sword, the Elf and the Dwarf. But Bilbo and Frodo, the humble hobbits' only claim to fame is they like to eat 7 meals a day: breakfast, second breakfast, elevensies, luncheon, afternoon tea, dinner, and supper. But it is precisely because the hobbits fly below the Dark Lord’s radar of power and prestige that they can complete their clandestine mission to destroy the ring. The hubris of Evil can only be vanquished by the humility of a Christian.

Today we celebrate the feast of two rather small and inconsequential apostles: Sts. Simon and Jude. If the 12 apostles were compared to the small band in the Lord of the Rings, Simon and Jude would be the two humble hobbits. Obviously, Peter, James, John, and Matthew, have great gifts and talents, and are indispensable for Jesus’ mission to create his Church and spread his gospel of peace.

But after spending an entire night in prayer, Jesus becomes acutely aware that some of the most critical tasks of evangelization and conversion can only be completed by the most humble, which is the very heart of holiness. Maybe Simon and Jude’s only claim to fame was they loved their 7 meals a day, too.

Does it come as any surprise, then, that the greatest human achievement in all history was accomplished by an unknown adolescent girl in an obscure Galillean town called Nazareth, who answered an angel humbly: “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord, be it done to me according to your word” (Lk 1:38). In other words, the hubris of Evil can only be vanquished by the humility of a Christian. If you want to get something supernatural done, give it to someone humble.

My friends, one of the chief benefits of sustained prayer – like Jesus spent the entire night absorbed in contemplation – is to open our eyes to see how things operate on the supernatural plane. On that invisible level you get things done not necessarily by giving the job to the best and the brightest and the most beautiful. But rather by employing the humble, the holy, the poor, the small and insignificant.

Therefore, it should not shock or surprise us that vocations to the priesthood and religious life are thriving in third world countries while they falter in first world countries. Last week I talked to a parishioner about the shortage of priests and getting more priests from other countries. He asked me why we don’t have more U.S. priests, and I answered, because priesthood involves life-long sacrifice and we Americans don’t like to sacrifice.

But sacrifice and suffering are normal in poor countries and so the priesthood seems normal to them. But then I asked him what he thought would be a good solution to the problem, and he said the Church needed to modernize the priesthood, and allow priests to marry and ordain women as priests. That solution, of course, has been tried in other Christian denominations and it didn’t solve the shortage.

But did you catch how our conversation was happening on two different levels? One person was on the natural level and suggested natural solutions, like you would address a problem at work. Fewer priests? Let them marry and allow women to become priests. The other person was on the supernatural level and seeking supernatural solutions: suffering, humility and poverty. What’s the difference?

The natural level does not recognize the enemy is the devil and cannot see how humility is the only way to defeat him. Whereas on the supernatural level – which we only can perceive thanks to prayer – we discover how God operates. Divine wisdom teaches: If you want to get something done supernaturally, give it to someone humble, holy, and poor. That is, after they have their seven meals a day.

Praised be Jesus Christ!

No comments:

Post a Comment