Mark 6:30-44 · Jesus Feeds the Five Thousand
Being Open to the Impossible
Mark 6:30-44
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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There is an old story about Albert Einstein. He was going around the country from university to university on the lecture circuit, giving lectures on his theory of relativity. He traveled by chauffer-driven limousine.

One day, after they had been on the road for awhile, Einstein’s chauffeur said to him, “Dr. Einstein, I’ve heard you deliver that lecture on relativity so many times that I’ll bet that I could deliver it myself.”

“Very well,” the good Doctor responded, “I’ll give you that opportunity tonight.” The people at the university, where I am to lecture, have never seen me. Before we get there, I’ll put on your cap and uniform and you will introduce me as your chauffeur, and yourself as me. Then you can give the lecture.

For awhile that evening, everything went according to plan. The chauffeur delivered the lecture flawlessly. But as the lecture concluded, a professor in the audience rose and asked a complex question involving mathematical equations and formulas. The quick—thinking chauffeur replied, “Sir, the solution to that problem is so simple, I’m really surprised you’ve asked me to give it to you. Indeed, to prove to you just how simple it is, I’m going to ask my chauffeur to step forward and answer your question.”

I’m not going to talk today about anything as simple as the theory of relativity. Do you think I said that wrong? I repeat. I’m not going to talk today about anything as simple as the theory of relativity.

Now I don’t know much about the theory of relativity really, but I know it’s something we can learn. We can learn it with our minds. Most of us could if we determined to do so.

I’m talking about something far more difficult, something we can’t learn with our minds. It’s a matter of faith. We come to know it in the places of our heart. I’m talking about being open to the impossible. We all know the story – the story of the feeding of the multitude with 5 loaves and 2 fishes. At least we’ve heard it if we’ve been to church very much. It’s the only miracle Jesus performed that is recorded in all gospels. Every Gospel felt this particular story needed to be told.

Mark records two miracles of feeding the multitude — this one which we read for our scripture lesson this morning from the 6th chapter where 5,000 were fed with 5 loaves and 2 fishes — those 5,000 ate and were satisfied, and then 12 baskets full of broken pieces of bread and of the fish were taken up.

In the 8th Chapter, it’s the miracle of feeding 4,000 with 7 loaves, and after all had been fed and were satisfied, 7 baskets full remained.

The interesting thing about the story of the 8th Chapter of Mark is that not long after He had fed the 4,000, Jesus and his disciples got into the boat and started to the other side of the Sea of Galilee. Then it happened. Everyone became hungry again - it had been awhile since they had eaten. But, they had forgotten to bring bread, and they had only one loaf with them in the boat. Now this is hard to believe, but it’s in the Book — it’s right here in the 8th chapter of Mark. The disciples began to talk about the fact that they had only one loaf of bread and that was not enough for them all to lunch on. Already they had forgotten, and Jesus confronted them with it.

“Why do you discuss the fact that you have no bread? Don’t you yet understand? Are your hearts hardened? What are you doing with your eyes? - can’t you see? What are you doing with your ears? - can’t you hear. And then He asked the question that must have caused their faces to grow red with embarrassment. “And do you not remember when I broke the loaves for the 5,000, how many baskets of broken pieces did you take up? They remember - though that had taken place days before - 12 basket full they said; and then, just yesterday, or just a few hours ago - whichever it was, the 7th loaves that fed the 4,000 - and how many basketsful of broken pieces did we take up after that; and they said to him – seven. And his understated response was: “Do you not yet understand?”

So, it’s a well-known story that we’re looking at today but it’s not a simple truth to appropriate. The question that Jesus is constantly asking us is that one — “Do you not yet understand? After all that you’ve experienced, after everything that’s gone on in your life, after everything that I’ve done for you — can you remember? Don’t you see? Don’t you hear? So, we’re talking about it today — being open to the impossible.

Let’s begin by noting the obvious. In so many of life’s situations, what we have is not enough. We don’t have to spell that out at length, do we? It happens at every level of life. I remember once when Jerry and I were just out of Seminary. Our appointment was organizing a new congregation in Gulf Port, Mississippi. Our salary was $3,600 a year. One day, we had to go to New Orleans to visit a parishioner in the famed Oschner Clinic. I remember, as we left the house, picking up 4 rolls of coins. I collected coins in those days and would get rolls of coins from the bank and go through them to fill out my collection. We had little money and I thought we might need those coins on our trip that day. When we finished our pastoral work in mid-afternoon, we decided to go to the French Quarter before driving back to Gulfport that evening.

I remember it, as though it were yesterday. It is one of those times that has a permanent place in our store of pleasant memory: the quaint French Quarter, New Orleans jazz, Preservation Hall, Jackson Square, Bourbon street, artists displaying their paintings on the street — but what I remember most was Jerry and I deciding to eat, and seeking a place to eat on the resources we had – those four rolls of coins: 2 rolls of nickels, 1 roll each of dimes and pennies — a total of $9.50. We walked from restaurant to restaurant looking at the menus posted outside, trying to find a place to eat — two of us for $9.50. It was made clear to me that what we had was not enough.

It happens at every level of life. In many of life’s situations, what we have is not enough. I preached in another city a few months ago. A woman picked me up at the airport at 7 p.m. — I was to preach at 7:30. It was a 30 minute drive to the church, and that’s exactly how much time we had to make it. We didn’t make it. It took us 45 minutes and the service was underway when she directed me into the Chancel. During that 45 minutes, a miracle happened that happens over and over again with me. Strangers share the deepest problems and yearnings of their life. I think it’s because they feel they know me, especially if they’ve read my books, because I share myself with the reader. By the time I walked, almost out of breath, into that service, I knew my hostess driver at a rather deep level. I knew her anguish over a 19 year old son who had just left home, estranged from the family — and her desperate fear over her almost certainty that he was a homosexual.

In my relation to her, I knew my resources to help and heal were not enough. I stood in that pulpit that night, looked at on those strange faces, thought about the woman I had just met, and said to myself: “How presumptuous! Here I am, 800 miles from Memphis — what have I to offer these yearning, hurting, weary, frustrated souls?

Not just that our cupboards are bare, and company has come in unexpected, but our resources are not enough to share with a friend who’s just dropped the bombshell on us – she’s leaving her husband; another friend – lost job he’s been with for 20 years. We don’t have the resources to cope with the veiled suggestion of suicide that we’ve picked up from a family member or a friend. The sudden death of a loved one, or a child’s turning from us, sends us desperately looking for help. Our resources are not enough.

And young people experience it too. Peer pressure — breaking up with a girlfriend or boyfriend; not making the team, not getting the choice sorority or fraternity bid; a class that goes to pieces and you’d be happy to get a “D”, but you’re likely to end up with an “F”. The catalogue is endless. True in so many of life’s situations – and what we have is not enough.

II

Now a second truth from our scripture lesson. Jesus multiplies our resources when we offer them to Him, believing he can do the impossible. Note the two responses to people’s need in our story. Let’s read verses 35-37:

And when it grew late, his disciples came to him and said, “This is a lonely place, and the hour is now late; send them away, to go into the country and villages round about and buy themselves something to eat.” But he answered them, “You give them something to eat.”

In effect, the disciples were saying: “These people are tired and hungry. Get rid of them, and let someone else worry about them. But Jesus said, “You give them something to eat.”

“There are always the people who are quite aware that others are in difficulty and trouble, but who wish to push off the responsibility for doing something about it onto someone else; and there are always the people who when they see someone up against it, feel compelled to do something about it themselves. There are those who say, “What I have, I am willing to share.” (William Barclay, The Gospel of Mark, The Daily Bible Study, p. 160)

I want you to know my faith at this point has been confirmed over and over again. We can raise this $6 million. It was confirmed dramatically recently. Dr. Grant, the “grand old man of this congregation”, our beloved Minister Emeritus, who was the founding pastor of this church, is due our ongoing gratitude and appreciation. I asked his permission to share this. He graciously said I could, though you know well know how reticent his is in sharing personally. In fact, we talked about that. He said he had to live life again. One thing he would do was express his love more openly. He would verbalize it. He said he would probably share more personally from the pulpit.

Then he got to what he’d come to talk about. He began by sharing that he and Mary Anna, his precious wife, tithed “their share” that’s the way he put it — “their share” in the building of this church during the time that he was a minister. His feeling has been that at this point in his life he would use his tithe primarily for special causes such as feeding the hungry, and making special events possible, having felt that he had done his share on the building of this church. No one has talked to him. He made that clear. No one had even discussed the finances of this building program with him. But in prayer, he had decided that he was going to give a $1,000 a year $3, 000 to this building program.

Now, I don’t know anything about Dr. Grant’s financial situation. I do know that Methodist preachers didn’t make very much; and I know his Social Security isn’t great, so I know that to give $1,000 a year above his tithe to this building program is some doing on his part. But, Dr. Grant said, and he made it clear — “Maxie, I want you to know that no one has asked me for a cent. No one has discussed this with me, but I’ve changed my mind. I’m not going to give $1,000 a year to this program I’m going to give $2,000 a year — I’m going to give $6,000 total to this enterprise. And I want you to know that I’ve decided to do this because of the nudging of the Lord — I’ve come to this decision in prayer.” Then with a grin on his face, he said, “Now that’s where it stand — $2,000 a year — but I’m going to keep on praying, and my pledge may change, but I want you to know if it changes, it won’t go down.”

Dr. Grant knows – how well he knows – that in many of life situations what we have is not enough, but he also knows that Jesus multiplies our resources when we offer them to Him, believing He will do the impossible.

When Jesus asked, “How many loaves do you have?” He knew that the people had not brought food with them. They had been so excited - they didn’t know that the day was going on that long – they didn’t plan ahead. Jesus was underscoring their inadequacies because he wanted them to get the lesson clearly — when He will offer them to Him, believing He can do the impossible.

III

And that leads to the last thing I want to say: To be open to the impossible, we must stay in close communion with the Lord. Look at verse 31: “And he said to them, “Come away by your selves to a lonely place, and rest a while.”

Have you ever noted how often this appears in the Gospel? Jesus was always slipping away to some quiet place to stay in communion with the Father. He even spent six weeks in the silence of the Judean desert before He launched his public ministry. Daily quietness and arid prayer were at the heart of his ministry style.

If it was essential for Jesus, how essential for us — to stay in close communion with the Lord.

No man can work without rest; and no man can live the Christian life unless he gives himself times with God, It may well be that the whole trouble in our lives is that we give God no opportunity to speak to us, because we do not know how to be still and to listen. We give God no time to recharge us with spiritual energy and strength, because there is no time when we wait upon Him. How can we shoulder life’s burdens if we have no contact with Him who is the Lord of all good life? How can we do God’s work unless we have God’s strength? And how can we receive that strength unless we seek in quietness and in loneliness the presence of God? (Barclay, The Gospel of Mark pp. 156—157).

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Maxie Dunnam