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The Multiplication Miracle of Sharing Our Daily Bread

October 5, 2025

From the Office for Social Ministry

Especially in this Jubilee Year, the Lord’s example is a yardstick that should guide our actions and our service: we are called to share our bread, to multiply hope and to proclaim the coming of God’s Kingdom.” — Pope Leo XIV, Feast of Corpus Christi Homily 2025

When we pray the inspired words, “Give us this day our daily bread,”  for many in Hawaiʻi — it is a hopeful prayer for survival. Lines at food distributions have grown longer, and more families are facing the painful choice between paying rent or buying groceries. Our local nonprofits are doing extraordinary work. Aloha Harvest, for example, “rescues” food — turning surplus meals from hotels and groceries into nourishment for individuals and families who would otherwise go without. The Hawaiʻi Foodbank stretches every donation across hundreds of community partners, while the Institute for Human Services-IHS offers 800 hot meals a day to houseless neighbors downtown. These are not just social services. They are everyday multiplications of the loaves — signs that God’s Kingdom is breaking bread in our midst.

And yet, the need keeps growing. Demand for food assistance in Hawaiʻi has jumped dramatically as federal support is being drastically reduced. Nonprofits are scrambling to do more with less, just when more individuals and families are falling through the cracks. Pope Leo XIV, recently speaking to the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization, named hunger not just a misfortune but an injustice.  “The continuing tragedy of widespread hunger and malnutrition … is sadder and more shameful when … so many of the world’s poor still lack their daily bread.” He reminded us that Christ himself showed the way in the miracle of the loaves and fishes: “The real miracle performed by Christ was to show that the key to overcoming hunger lies in sharing rather than in greedily hoarding.”

But Pope Leo also reminds us that hunger is not always accidental. In one of his most searing remarks, he said: “Starving people to death is a very cheap way of waging war.” Around the world, food is sometimes weaponized in conflict — fields destroyed, crops burned, aid blocked. While here in Hawai’i we may not face those battlefields, we too suffer when safety nets are weakened and systems fail, when SNAP benefits are threatened, when kupuna lose access to healthy food, when inflation drives families to impossible choices and parents skip meals so their children can eat. Hunger, whether by bullet or by budget, is always an assault on dignity.

So how can we as Christians, the Body of Christ, respond? The Holy Father, Pope Leo, urges us to put our faith in action. “It is imperative to move from words to deeds, putting at the center effective measures that will enable these people to look at their present and their future with confidence and serenity”    That means supporting local social ministries with our time, talent and treasure. It means opening our parish kitchens, halls, or even parking lots as places of welcome and nourishment. It means lending our voices to protect food security programs like SNAP, because public policy is not just paperwork — it is a moral statement about and commitment to whom we choose to care for.  

Pope Leo also insists that without stability and peace, there can be no sustainable food security: “Without peace and stability, it will not be possible to guarantee resilient agricultural and food systems, nor to ensure a healthy, accessible and sustainable food supply for all.” It begins with recognizing our vulnerability and sharing what we have with others in need. For example, on Oahu, parishes such as St. Augustine, St. Anne, St. Theresa the Co Cathedral and Sts. Peter and Paul (just to name a few) support nonprofits like Aloha Harvest, Hawaiʻi Foodbank, and Institute for Human Services-HIS to be compassionate and build resilience through collaboration, embodying the communion we celebrate at the altar.

As Pope Leo XIV preached at this year’s Eucharistic Feast of Corpus Christi, “Christ is God’s answer to humanity’s hunger.” At every Mass, Christ feeds us not so that we remain full alone, but so that we are sent out, strengthened to break bread with others. He multiples himself in us, that we might multiply hope in the world. Hawaiʻi’s nonprofits are already multiplying loaves, but they cannot do it alone. The challenge of food insecurity is immense, but so is the miracle that happens when all people choose to share. Many Hawaiʻi’s nonprofits are already multiplying loaves, but they cannot do it alone. Let us all participate with them in the multiplication miracle of sharing. So that when we pray, “Give us this day our daily bread,” we know we are helping God answer that prayer — not only for ourselves, but for our neighbors in need. Mahalo.