John 6:1-15 · Jesus Feeds the Five Thousand
Faith-based Living
John 6:1-15
Sermon
by King Duncan
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One of these days, at the end of a message, I am going to give you a pop quiz--just to see how many of you were really listening. That would be cruel, wouldn't it? Don't worry. I'm afraid of the results myself.

Few people enjoy taking pop quizzes--or any kind of test for that matter. Some of our young people would give an "Amen" to that. Tests elevate our anxiety level, so people will do some crazy things to prepare themselves for tests.

For the benefit of our high school and college students, I want to share with you a list of old superstitions that are guaranteed to help you the next time you take a test. These are from a book by Alvin Schwarz titled Cross Your Fingers, Spit In Your Hat.

When you have to take a test, he says, take these steps to help you pass:

1. Don't shave.

2. Wear your socks and underwear inside out and your shirt or blouse backward.

3. Carry with you a lucky rock or dogtooth or some other charm you depend on.

4. Step on every crack in the sidewalk on your way to school, or don't step on any.

5. Use the same pen or pencil you used the last time you passed a test, or use a new one that has never made a mistake.

6. Sit at the same desk you sat at last time.

7. Cross your legs.

8. If you still think you will have trouble, swallow a live goldfish. It will make you even more intelligent. (1)

I am not sure that any of these suggestions are a sign of intelligence, but I guess some people need every edge they can get. It's never fun to take a test.

How would you like to take one of Jesus' tests? Jesus was first of all a rabbi--a teacher. And from time to time he gave his disciples tests.

In our Bible passage for today, Jesus had gone away with his closest friends, the disciples. He was looking for some peace and quiet, a time to rest and re-fuel spiritually. But the people of Jerusalem didn't want to let this miracle-worker out of their sight. They followed him up the mountainside. This presented a challenge to the apostles' compassion. An eager crowd of people, all clamoring for more miracles, surrounded them. How could this tiny crew of 13 men minister to the needs of thousands of people? The simplest thing they could do is feed them. So Jesus turned to Philip and asked him, "Where can we buy bread for these people to eat?" The gospel writer tells us, "He asked this only to test him, for he already had in mind what he was going to do."

Isn't that interesting? Jesus already had in mind what he was going to do, but he needed to test his followers. He wanted to know whether they were fact-based thinkers or faith-based thinkers. There's a powerful concept for you. That would be a good focus for a seminar. Are you a faith-based thinker or a fact-based thinker?

Jesus wanted to test his disciples. How would they react to the challenge of feeding these thousands of people? Could they see beyond human limits and focus on God's infinite power?

Inventor Henry Ford once said, "I am looking for a lot of men who have an infinite capacity to not know what can't be done." That seemed to be Jesus' aim too. Lots of people are experts in what can't be done. The important question is, what can be done?

When Jesus asked Philip, "Where can we buy bread for these people to eat?" Philip responded as any practical man might--"Eight months' wages would not buy enough bread for each one to have a bite!" You see? Philip knew immediately what couldn't be done. He was right, of course, but sometimes the right answer is not the same as a solution.

A young man once told Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, the great minister and motivational speaker, that he wanted to start his own business but did not have any money.

"Empty pockets never held anyone back," was Dr. Peale's response, "only empty heads and empty hearts can do that!"

Philip focused on their "empty pockets," so to speak, and decided that the goal was unreachable. They could never feed all those people. But Philip's real problem wasn't empty pockets; it was an empty heart. He hadn't yet let Jesus' message or his miracles penetrate his heart.

Andrew was the second person to speak up. Will he pass the test? Andrew steered a young boy over to Jesus and said, "Here is a boy with five small barley loaves and two small fish, but how far will they go among so many?" Andrew was on the right track, but still he hadn't completely switched from fact-based to faith-based thinking. Remember how the apostle Paul defined faith in Hebrews 12:1-- "Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see." (NIV) Philip saw a problem and gave up. Andrew saw a problem and offered a limited solution based on his own resources. Andrew's answer was better than Philip's, but it still had not leaped the chasm of faith. Now it was Jesus' turn to set the apostles straight.

Faith-based thinkers start by taking their problems to Jesus. As I said, Andrew was on the right track in his thinking. He brought the boy to Jesus and offered his meager resources. That's the first step in finding a solution. Dr. Robert Schuller refers to this as "shifting our focus from the problem to the Power."

On October 14, 1947, pilot Chuck Yeager became the first person to break the sound barrier, a feat that many scientists and pilots had judged to be impossible. Yeager wrote about that history-making moment in his autobiography:

"The faster I got, the smoother the ride. . . . We were flying supersonic, and it was as smooth as a baby's bottom: Grandma could be sitting up there sipping lemonade. I was thunderstruck. After all the anxiety, after all the anticipation, breaking the sound barrier was really a letdown. The sonic barrier, the unknown, was just a poke through Jell-O, a perfectly paved speedway. Later I realized that this mission had to end in a let-down because the real barrier wasn't in the sky, but in our knowledge and experience of supersonic flight." (2)

In that very moment when Chuck Yeager went supersonic, he laid to rest years of fears and questions in the scientific community. This one act demolished limits of thinking as well as physical limits that had been in place since the beginning of time.

In the same way, we serve a God without limits. Psalm 50:10 tells us that God "owns the cattle on a thousand hills." Second Corinthians 9:10-11 reads, "Now he who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food will also supply and increase your store of seed and will enlarge the harvest of your righteousness. You will be made rich in every way so that you can be generous on every occasion . . ." On another occasion, Jesus taught his followers not to worry about what they eat or drink or wear, because their heavenly Father knows that we need all these things. When he turned water into the best wine, when he caused the disciples to catch a net full of fish, when he healed everyone he touched, and when he fed thousands of people with a small serving of fish and bread, Jesus was demonstrating the abundance of God's kingdom. And that abundance is still available to believers today. God is without limits, and there is no problem we can bring to God that cannot be covered by His abundant grace and mercy. But the first step for faith-based thinkers is to take their problems to Jesus.

The next step in faith-based thinking is to follow Jesus' lead. This is harder than the first step. Imagine Philip and Andrew swallowing their pride and directing this crowd of people to sit down and be patient. What was Jesus going to do? Did they want to be a part of it? We have no evidence that they hesitated. They did as Jesus directed.

The Reverend W. John White was visiting his friend, Reverend Juan Rivera, who was suffering from kidney failure. As he sat in Rivera's hospital room, Reverend White heard God telling him, "I want you to do whatever it takes to save Juan."

When Reverend Rivera woke up that afternoon, the doctors informed him that he was receiving a kidney donation from his friend, Reverend White. He was getting a second chance at life. (3) Reverend White heard God speak--and obeyed.

Someone once said, "Delayed obedience is disobedience."

As a great Christian once wrote: "Christianity is not a voice in the wilderness, but a life in the world. It is not an idea in the air but feet on the ground going God's way. It is not an exotic to be kept under glass, but a hardy plant to bear twelve months of fruits in all kinds of weather. Fidelity to duty is its root and branch. Nothing we can say to the Lord, no calling Him by great or dear names, can take the place of doing His will. We may cry out about the beauty of eating bread with Him in His kingdom, but it is wasted breath and a rootless hope unless we plow and plant in His kingdom here and now. To remember Him at His table and to forget Him at ours, is to have invested in bad securities. There is no substitute for plain, every-day goodness." (4)

Faith-based thinkers know that God moves in mysterious ways, that God's ways are not our ways, and that costly obedience is always rewarded beyond our wildest imagination.

Finally, faith-based thinkers get the awesome privilege of seeing the power of God made manifest in their lives. If you had been on the hillside that day, would you have ever recovered from the shock of seeing Jesus multiply those loaves and fishes? Would you ever stop talking about it? "Now children, I want to tell you the most fantastic story. I wouldn't believe it myself if I hadn't seen it with my own eyes. I saw the Master feed five thousand men, and an unknown number of women and children with just five small barley loaves and two small fish."

God is working in our lives at all times, in big and small ways. But much of God's work can only be seen in hindsight. As we look back over our lives, we see our every need supplied right on time. We see prayers answered years after they were prayed.

In other circumstances, we thank God for prayers that God, in His great wisdom, chose not to answer according to our desires. But faith-based thinkers don't have to rely on hindsight. The great thing about faith-based thinking is that it allows you to rejoice ahead of time in the knowledge that God is loving, just, and powerful, and that He will meet every need according to His glorious riches in Christ Jesus. (Philippians 4: 19)

So did Philip and Andrew learn their lesson? Not right away. But in the book of Acts, Philip is recognized by the early Church as being "full of the Spirit and wisdom." And in Acts 8, Philip becomes an evangelist to the Samaritans. In their city, he does great signs and miracles that convert many to Christ and bring great joy to the people. He is now a man of faith, a true follower of Jesus, and a worker of miracles. His story has come full circle. He has moved from being a fact-based thinker to being a faith-based thinker.

Ten-year-old Ashley Danielle Oubre gave a speech at Washington, D.C.'s Mayoral Prayer Breakfast in 1995. In the speech, she reminded the listeners of Jesus' words in Matthew 18 that they must become like little children in order to enter the kingdom of God. And she encouraged the adults in the audience to learn from their children how to get along together, how to trust one another, and how to trust God. She ended by saying, "You teach us that when we have a problem, we should talk it out with others and with Jesus. You say that Jesus can solve all our problems, both big and small. But we notice when people get older and have problems, they are embarrassed to talk like that among themselves. We wonder if you really mean it, or is Jesus only for kids? I am still young enough to believe that Jesus knows how to solve my problems, the problems of the city, and of the world." (5)

Way to go, Ashley! You're right. Jesus does know how to solve our problems, our city's problems, and our world's problems. And all he asks of us is the faith to bring our problems to him and faithfully obey his lead, and then we will see him work in ways far beyond what we can ask or imagine.


1. Cross Your Fingers, Spit In Your Hat, Superstitions and Other Beliefs, collected by Alvin Schwartz, (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Co., 1974), p. 59-60.

2. Stephen R. Covey, Principle-Centered Leadership (New York, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1990).

3. Harold S. Kushner, Living a Life That Matters (New York: Anchor Books, 2001), p. 98.

4. Maltbie D. Babcock

5. By Ashley Danielle Oubré, cited by Ravi Zacharias in Deliver Us From Evil (Nashville: Word Publishing, 1997), pp. 197-198.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan