Question: "What can we learn from Jesus’ feeding of the 5,000?"
Answer:
Aside from the resurrection,
the story of Jesus feeding the 5,000 is the only miracle recorded in
all four Gospels. Obviously, the Gospel writers considered this a
significant miracle. When Christ fed the masses that day, He began with
only “five barley loaves and two fish,” borrowed from a boy’s lunch (John 6:9). To feed 5,000 people with five loaves and two fish is indeed miraculous, but the Greek term used in Matthew 14:21
specifies males, and Matthew further emphasizes the point by adding,
“Besides women and children.” Many Bible scholars believe the actual
number fed that day could have been 15,000—20,000 people.
Jesus’ disciples had wanted to send the people away because evening was approaching and they were in a remote place (Matthew 14:15).
They knew the people needed to reach surrounding villages soon to buy
food, find lodging, etc., or they would likely go hungry (Mark 6:36). But Christ had a better idea: “You give them something to eat” (Matthew 14:16).
At this point, the disciples should have recalled the many miracles
they had seen Jesus do. Perhaps some of them did, but Andrew asked,
“What are [five loaves and two fish] for so many?” (John 6:9).
And Philip exclaimed, ““It would take more than half a year’s wages to
buy enough bread for each one to have a bite!” (verse 7).
Jesus called for the bread and fish to be brought to Him (Matthew 14:18).
He then gave thanks for the meal, broke the bread, and gave it to His
disciples to give to the crowd. Amazingly, the entire multitude was fed
with that small meal. Jesus provided “as much as they wanted” (John 6:11), and “they all ate and were satisfied” (Matthew 14:20).
Christ did not just meet the need; He lavished them with so much food
that there were “twelve baskets full of broken pieces and of the fish”
left over (Mark 6:43).
God will shatter the pint-sized expectations of what His followers can
do if they would learn to bring Him what they have already been given.
“Little is much when God is in it.” When Christians are willing to offer
their lives sacrificially, relinquishing their hold on whatever God has
given them in terms of time, money, talents, etc., God will use these
ordinary things to create extraordinary things. Christians must never
believe their resources are too little to serve God. God delights in
taking a humble, seemingly insignificant person and using him or her for
His glory (see 1 Corinthians 1:27).
Philip’s mind immediately ran to the cost of the project. He quickly
calculated how many man-hours of work it would take to feed all those
people; he saw the task as impossible because he approached it as if
everything depended on his own work. Jesus’ approach was
different. Jesus bypassed all human effort and did the impossible. It’s
“‘not by might nor by power, but by my Spirit,’ says the LORD Almighty” (Zechariah 4:6).
It is noteworthy that Jesus fed the people through the agency of His disciples.
He could have simply snapped His fingers and caused everyone present to
have a meal, but He didn’t. Instead, He “gave . . . to his disciples to
distribute to the people” (Mark 6:41).
In this way, the disciples had to trust the Lord for everything they
distributed. They could only give as they received. Philip, Andrew, and
the rest were put in a position of total dependence upon the Lord for
the supply. God still uses people the same way today.
Christians should also be reminded that their problems are never too large (the “many” of John 6:9)
for God to handle. Surely, Andrew was wondering, “What good are we
going to do with only five loaves and two fish?” Of course,
theoretically, believers know God can easily multiply whatever He wants,
to feed as many people as He wants—He is God. The problem comes when we
are faced with a practical outworking of the theory; we tend to doubt
that God will want to meet our need.
There is a foreshadowing of Christ’s miracle in the life of Elisha in 2
Kings. Elisha told his servant to feed the people gathered there,
although there was not enough food for the hundred men. One of the men
said, “How can I set this before a hundred men?”(2 Kings 4:42–43) In the end, however, the men not only had enough to eat, but “they ate and had some left” (2 Kings 4:44). Isn’t that just like God? He says He will do more than provide for His people; He will give an abundance (Psalm 132:15).
Christians must bring their lives to God in a spirit of obedience and
sacrifice, no matter how insignificant they may think their gifts or
talents are (Romans 12:1). When doing so, expect God to do far beyond what can be imagined (Ephesians 3:20).
Also, Christians should trust that God not only wants to meet the needs
of His children, but He wants to lavish His children with spiritual
blessings, even to overflowing (Psalm 23:5).
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