Matthew 14:13-21 All of us know the
words of Jesus, “What does it profit a
man to gain the whole world but lose his soul?” This warning of Jesus is also familiar, “Life does not consist in the abundance of
possessions.”
We
understand the point that Jesus is making:
that our earthly lives and the material goods necessary to maintain those
lives ought not be our first priority-- but that our life of faith and our
relationship with God ought to come first.
We understand that and of course it’s true!
And
yet, this bodily, earthly life is the only one we know and the truth of the
matter is that this life is a gift of the Creator—this life had been redeemed
by the blood of Jesus—this life has been sanctified by the Holy Spirit in the
waters of Holy Baptism. In other words,
this earthly, bodily life that we are living right now matters to God and he
cares for it.
To
those who were fussing and fretting about their lives, Jesus said that God
clothes the flowers of the field and he feeds the birds of the air and he is
more than willing and more than able to feed and clothe and provide for his
children.
That’s
what we are going to see in God’s Word today:
the compassion that Jesus has for us when we lack the material gifts of
life-- and the power he has to meet those needs. The Bible says that:
When
Jesus heard about the death of John, he withdrew from there in a boat to a
desolate place by himself. But when the crowds heard it, they followed
him on foot from the towns.
We
know that many of those who followed Jesus never really understood the fullness
of his mission—that what he had come to do was so much more than to merely heal
the sick and raise the dead and defeat the Romans and establish a messianic
kingdom.
We know that many
of those who followed him would have been more than happy for his work to end there,
with health and wealth. Jesus tried to
correct that mistaken view again and again.
But for everything
that they got wrong when it came to Jesus’ mission, the people who followed him
at least understood and believed that Jesus had the power to help them meet
their physical needs and that he wanted to do that very thing.
They had seen
Jesus give sight to the blind and voice to the mute. They had seen him cleanse a leper and drive
out demons. They knew and believed that
Jesus was the Great Provider who could meet their needs and so they came to him
with those needs, trusting that he cared about them and would help them.
We need that
reminder. Often times we go through life
believing that our life depends upon us.
We focus on our efforts and our wisdom and our decisions and then we
fuss and fret when we suffer a need because we know how frail all that really
is and we never think to come to Jesus for help.
In his epistle,
James says that “we have not because we
ask not”. In other words, we are so
focused on meeting our own needs on our own that we never think to ask God for
help. But we can do that with confidence
because Jesus sees our need and wants to provide for us. The Bible says that:
When
Jesus went ashore he saw a great crowd, and he had compassion on them
and healed their sick.
What
a comfort there is for us in this scene!
Jesus is not blind to our needs.
He is not disinterested. He is
not focused on doing something more important.
He sees our needs and has compassion on us. That word compassion means that he is moved with mercy and pity in his inmost
being when he sees that we are in need.
And not only does
his heart go out to us—his hands go out to us as well to meet our needs. His care and concern moves him to help us
just like it did that day as he the sick.
For people in that
day and time, their medical options were few.
Maybe some herbs or ointments and that was about it. All of the medicines and treatments and
procedures that we take for granted—they had none of them. They were completely dependent upon Jesus to
provide for their medical needs and he met those needs and healed them.
We need to
re-learn this lesson that all healing is God’s healing. He may accomplish that through science and
medicine—and he does. He may accomplish
that directly like Jesus did that day—and he can. But all healing is God’s healing and we can
be confident that Jesus’ heart is still moved with pity by our physical
ailments and still powerful enough to grant us relief. The Bible says that:
When
it was evening, the disciples came to him and said, “This is a desolate place,
and the day is now over; send the crowds away to go into the villages
and buy food for themselves.” But Jesus
said, “They
need not go away; you give them something to eat.” They said to him, “We
have only five loaves here and two fish.”
We
can understand the reaction of the disciples.
We know that there are desperate, desolate places in the world where
multitudes of people do not even know where their next meal is coming
from. All of us know and understand the
human feeling of helplessness in the face of that great need.
It wasn’t that the
disciples were unsympathetic or uncaring—they knew that the people needed to
eat—but they also knew that their resources were insufficient to meet that
need.
What they had
forgotten about was the one who was with them.
They were not alone in the face of a great need that they could not
meet. Jesus was with them and his presence
and his power would make all the difference.
You see dear
friends in Christ, what the disciples really lacked, was not the food to feed
so many or the money to buy what was needed.
What they lacked was the faith to look to Jesus in their need and to
trust that he had the power to help.
We struggle with
the same thing! We forget that Jesus is
with us. We don’t look to him in our
need. All we can see is a dwindling
checking account or a retirement fund that shrinks with inflation. What has a hold on our heart-- is what we can
hold in our hand.
But Jesus wants us
to lift up our eyes of faith to him!
Jesus wants us to open our hearts and trust him in our need. Jesus is with us no less than he was with the
disciples and the crowd that day. He
looks upon us in our need with the same eyes of compassion as gazed upon that
crowd. He has the same power to provide
right now as he did then. The Bible says
that
Jesus
ordered the crowds to sit down on the grass, and taking the five loaves and the
two fish, he looked up to heaven and said a blessing. Then he broke the
loaves and gave them to the disciples, and the disciples gave them to the
crowds. And they all ate and were satisfied.
Please picture this scene in your mind’s
eye—how it must have been. The
incredulous, disbelieving look on the disciples faces as Jesus took a bit of
bread and a few fish—as if that could ever feed a crowd this size. I can see them shaking their heads: no! The
unspoken thoughts and words in their minds, wondering to themselves if Jesus
had lost his mind.
The
initial unwillingness to take just a twelfth of the little they had handed
them—not even enough to fill their hands-- with the command to give it to the
crowd.
And
then, and then—the amazement and the wonder and the smiles and the joy as that
little bit that Jesus had entrusted into their hands began to multiply again
and again, thousands of times over so that everyone there that day had their
fill and were satisfied.
It’s not an accident that Jesus fed
the multitudes the way he did—by giving the food into the hands of his
disciples so that they could feed them. You
see, he cared for the crowd. He had
compassion for their situation. He
wanted to provide for their needs.
But
he wanted to give his disciples something more—something better than bread,
more important than a meal—he wanted to give them faith that he was the Great
Provider who would always care for his people.
The Bible says that the disciples
…took
up twelve baskets full of the broken pieces left over. And
those who ate were about five thousand men, besides women and children.
Jesus
took five barley loaves and two fish and divided it into twelve portions—one
for each disciple. After thousands and
thousands had eaten their fill and lay groaning with satisfaction on the grassy
shore, the leftovers were gathered up.
Twelve
baskets full—one for each disciple to hold in the same hands that had held the
scraps--so that they could know and believe that Jesus was indeed the Great
Provider who could be trusted to abundantly care for his people.
Dear
friends in Christ let’s take a moment right now to, as it were, look at what
fills our hands. We came into this world
naked but where are we now? We are fed
and clothed and sheltered. We have money
in our pocket. We have luxuries that
were unimaginable even a few years ago. Look
at the abundance of God’s provision to us!
Our
lives at this moment are a testimony—just like the twelve baskets full of
leftovers—that Jesus is our Great Provider who can be trusted to meet our
needs.
But
Jesus does not want to leave us there—with our hands full but our hearts
empty—he wants these words of our text and the lessons of our own life to
inspire in us a life of faith that trusts in him no matter how big the
challenge.
He
wants us to have the confidence and the courage to entrust our material means
into his hands first and believe that he will give them back in a more
wonderful and satisfying way than what we started with.
And
he wants us to have the same eyes of compassion and willing hands to reach out
to others in their need, knowing that the Great Provider is more than able to
meet their needs too! Amen.
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