Fr. Jo's Reflection for the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ, Year A, June 7, 2026
Hunger is a natural instinct which every creature fights hard to contain with food and drink. Humans have the added need of shelter and clothing. Birds, rabbits and a few other creatures seek shelter but have no interest in clothing. Many animals spend their entire life doing nothing but search for food and drink. For example, the migration of the Manx Shearwaters birds before winter from their north breeding grounds to the south, as far as Hawaii—a distance covering nearly 8,700 miles—is driven particularly by food. But it’s not only food and drink that creatures hunger for; we also hunger for peace, justice, safety, friendship, intimacy and love. Above all, we hunger for meaning, direction, and purposeful existence.
Maslow was nearly correct in identifying a hierarchy of needs on which his theory of human motivation is based. However, placing self-actualization at the top of the chain limited the theory to the touchy feely, willy, nilly. In his later years though, he self-critiqued his theory, elevating self-actualization to mean a search for some higher goal outside the self, in altruism and spirituality. By that, Maslow recognized a much greater hunger: the hunger for transcendence, the hunger for God. Whether one is a card-carrying atheist or a pious believer, we are simply hard-wired for transcendence. God put a hunger in us that only He can satisfy. And to assist in satisfying this hunger, God progressively gives His people bodily food, then food for the mind, and finally the spiritual food of His own life. Corpus Christi as Viaticum (food for the journey) manifests the various steps along this track.
1) Hunger drove the Israelites to Egypt; 2) After a prolonged stay, food no longer satisfied; they hungered for freedom; 3) No sooner had they found freedom than the hunger for food resurfaced; and in answer, God gave them the manna; 4) They still hungered for a homeland to dwell in peace, safety and security, especially from the desert serpents and scorpions and attacks from other nations; 5) Possessing this homeland, they found that they’ll continually fight to keep it from their foes; 6) An eternal homeland is sought.
Jesus draws our attention today to the fleeting nature of earthly solutions to this hunger by inviting us to partake of the food that will truly satisfy: “I am the living bread that came down from heaven, ...Whoever comes to me shall not hunger and whoever believes in me shall not thirst” (Jn 6: 51; 6:35). Not even the manna sufficed: “Your ancestors ate the manna in the desert, but they died...Whoever eats this bread will live forever” (Jn 6:49, 58). In the world, we are tormented by a plethora of deserts in the form of temptations, hunger and thirst, and opposition to God often as fierce and cunning as serpents and scorpions. By nourishing ourselves with the food of the Lord’s Body and Blood, we’ll escape the death, which the manna couldn’t solve for the Israelites.
Consider also that in this food—the Eucharist—we do not only eat the Body and Blood of the Lord, we literally become one body with Christ. St Paul alludes to this when he said: “The blessing cup we bless is a communion with the blood of Christ, and the bread that we break is a communion with the body of Christ. Because the loaf of bread is one, we, though many, are one body” (I Cor 10:17). In the Eucharist, we partake of the body of the Risen Lord, which unites us to an intimate and immortal life, love and friendship with Him. If you need a “bet” or pledge for the life of heaven, the Eucharist is your best bet.
The feast of Corpus Christi evokes memories, solidifies us with the here and now gift of the Lord’s presence, and is a “bet” for future life with Him. We remember the giving of His Body as food for us at the Last Supper; a giving that was effected prior to the tainting of this body by His foes. Thus, He fulfils His promise to remain with us as the Living Bread uncontaminated by even corporeal death and pointing to a future life with Him in eternity.
Fr. Chukwudi Jo Okonkwo

