Exodus 16:1-36 · Manna and Quail
Fresh Every Morning - A Token and a Truth
Exodus 16:1-36
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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Leo Buscaglia is a popular professor at the University of Southern California and a best-selling author. He teaches courses in love, and his classes are packed every semester. He writes books that are very helpful in the hope and the guidance they offer. I’m told that at the start of a semester professor Buscaglia always assigns a paper where the students are asked to answer one question: “What would you do if you had only five days to live?” They say that the answers are very interesting, and you can imagine what some of them would be. “I’d say I’m sorry.” “I’d say I love you.” “I’d say thank you to my parents.”

The students turn those papers in but when they get them back, they’re not graded. Instead, Dr. Buscaglia writes in bold letters across the top of the paper. “Why don’t you do it now? What are you waiting for?”

The story is rich in meaning. It pierces our complacency and shouts at us to get on with what we need to do today. It kicks us in the pants and gets our attention to remind us that if we’ve convinced ourselves that there’s nothing left to do, then the ballgame is over for us. But for our purpose today, the story opens the theme of our sermon: “Fresh Every Morning.”

We began our consideration of this theme last Sunday, and it is dramatically set forth in our scripture lesson. God came again to the rescue of Israel. Despite their shallow faith their superficial trust, their murmuring against him, he saved them by providing Israel from heaven, miraculous manna. He provided it daily, so they had to gather it fresh every morning.

We’re looking at this manna from three perspectives: as a test, as a token, and as a truth. Last week we looked at this miracle of the manna from the perspective of a test, and we noted two great lessons: One, the manna which had to be gathered fresh every morning teaches us that we need to be habitually dependent upon God. And, two it teaches us that yesterday’s manna cannot be used as food for today. There are some things that we cannot store up for tomorrow.

We come today to continue looking at this miracle - and to look at it from the perspective of it being: one, a token; and two a truth.

I

A TOKEN

THE MANNA WAS A TOKEN OF THE LOVING PATIENCE AND THE LONG-SUFFERING GRACE OF GOD.

If you want a picture of the Israelites, a picture of them when they didn’t have on their Sunday-go-to-meetin’ clothes, you find it in the scriptures’ continuous reference to their murmurings. They were constantly complaining. Their faith was shallow, their trust was superficial. They were selfish - their stomachs prevailed over their minds and hearts.

What a picture, what a token of loving patience and long suffering grace. No doubt the hearts of the Hebrews would quake when they were summoned to hear the voice of God, and His voice would ring out, “I have heard your moaning; I know your affliction, and I hear your murmuring and how they must have trembled in their souls how wide-eyed must have been their amazement when the glory of God flashed above them in the cloud by day and a burning fire by night, guiding them on their journey. But hear the massage in different. Hear the heart of God is clearly revealed.

I can’t help but see in this picture a mother soothing her crying infant by feeding it from her own breast.

You see, it would have been easy for God to take the rod to his crying children, but rather He seeks to win them by His loving patience, and his long suffering grace. He answers their whimpering unbelief, their snide sneering complaints, with an expression of love.

Here it is in a story. Joy Davidman is a brilliant writer. She was raised by parents who were militant non-believers. She graduated with top honors from Hunter College, and began her adult life with a kind of cynical sophistication and skepticism which expects the worst and believes the least. In her arrogant, intellectual pride she conceived of religion and morality havens for the neurotic upon which only the untutored would depend.

Then one day her husband, who had been growing more and more depressed, called from another city and told her that he was losing his mind, that life no longer mattered to him, and he sent her into shocking despair by abruptly hanging up and saying no more. Joy Davidman was in the country with her children. She didn’t know where her husband was in the city, so she was desperate. She felt helpless and hopeless. All she could do was telephone some friends in the city to help, and then wait in quiet desperation and despair.

Then something happened. And she shares what happened:

“There was another person with me in the room - a presence so real that all my previous life was by comparison mere shadow play…I think I must have been the world’s most astonished atheist. My awareness of Christ’s presence was not conjured up to bolster me about my husband. No, it was terror, terror, and ecstasy, repentance and rebirth.” (James Lichtelier, Inside the Outside quoted by Don Shelby, “Cross Examined: Does Easter Really Happen, Or Is Our God Too Small”, Easter Sunday, April 22, 1984)

Even into the life of a supposed atheist, as into the life of whimpering unbelievers who had been chosen by God to be in covenant with him, God works with loving patience and long suffering grace to reveal himself as the one who cares for each on of us, who is conceived about our coming out and going in, who numbers the hairs on our heads, and notes the fall or the sparrow. See that in this miracle of the manna: a token of God’s loving patience and long suffering grace, I ask you – think seriously about it – where would you be today were it not for God’s loving patience and long suffering grace.

That leads to the other perspective from which we want to look at our scripture.

The manna is given by God for a truth. In miraculous and transient form, the manna speaks God’s eternal word. The God who sent manna sends our daily bread and we are dependent upon Him. That daily bread cannot be stored up and hoarded - it is fresh every morning. But equally deep in the meaning of this truth is the explanation Jesus gave in his wilderness hunger: “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of the father.” God humbled the Israelites, suffered them to be hungry and fed them manna, that He might make them know that man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God. (FOR COMMENTARY: See pages 69 ff. Maclaren)

The truth is deeper and greater yet. The manna in the wilderness is a type of Christ. Remember how we have talked from time to time in this sermon series that throughout the Old Testament, but especially in the book of Exodus, types are used to express eternal truth. The whole Exodus journey is a type of the Christian’s pilgrimage. Here we come to a magnificent expression of truth in a type - the manna being a type of Christ.

This is a type that was claimed by Jesus himself. Let’s go to the sixth chapter of John. Do you remember the story of the feeding of the 5,000? Of course you do. But do you remember what followed that? Crowds of people followed Jesus across the Red Sea. Jesus confronted them with the shallowness of their curiosity. Listen to him in vss. 26-27.”You seek me, not because you saw signs, but because you ate the fill of the loaves,” Then he challenged them, “Do not labor for the food which perishes, but for the food which endears to eternal life.” (vs. 26-27)

Still, the truth had not come through clearly to them, and they asked, (vs.30-31)”What sign do you do that we may see, and believe you? What work do you perform? Our fathers ate the manna in the wilderness; as it is written in scripture, “He gave them bread from heaven to eat.”

But listen to Jesus - listen to his revealing word: “Truly, truly, I say to you, it was not Moses who gave you the bread from heaven; my father gives you the true bread from heaven. (verses 22-23)

Their spiritual appetites had been whetted, and they said, “Lord, give us this bread always.” And then came Jesus’ remarkable and revealing claim, “I am the bread of life; he who comes to me shall not hunger, and he who believes in me shall never thirst.” (verse 35)

The Jews couldn’t take that - they couldn’t appropriate that truth - it was too much for them. They couldn’t make the transition between the bread that they had eaten on the mountain-top that had fed their gnawing hunger, and Jesus claim to be the Bread of Life. So, what did they do? It’s interesting. Verse 41 of the sixth chapter says this: “The Jews then murmured at him - (does that take you back to the wilderness - the murmuring of the unfaith - the murmuring of those who can see only as their stomachs fill? - “The Jews then murmured at them because he said, “I am the Bread which came down from heaven.” Let’s read the scripture from that point.

“They said, “Is not this Jesus, the Son of Joseph, whose father and mother we know? How does he now say, ‘I have come down from heaven?” Jesus answered them, ‘Do not murmur among yourselves. No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him...

And let’s skip on down to the 47th verse: “Truly, truly, I say to you, he who believes has eternal life. I am the bread of life. Your fathers ate the manna in the wilderness, and they died. This is the bread which comes down from heaven that a man may eat of it and not die. I am the living bread which came down from heaven; if anyone eats this bread, he will live forever; and the bread which I shall give for the life of the world is my flesh.” (Verses 42, 43, 44, 47-51)

The deepest truth of the manna in the wilderness for Christians is to see it as a type of Christ. God provides through Christ our deepest needs - and he provides those needs fresh every morning. So let’s look briefly at Christ, the eternal manna or God, this bread from heaven as God’s provision for us - fresh every morning.

This provision of God in Jesus Christ is a sufficient provision It is the only thing that can give us the salvation we desperately need. “I AM the bread of life,” said Jesus. “He who comes to me shall not hunger, and he who believes in me shall never thirst.” Does that sound radical, extravagant, and unbelievable? That’s who Jesus is - God’s revelation of him self, God’s gift of himself for the salvation of the world. Look at his life and listen to his words. Persons argued about God and God’s nature. Jesus met them with a declaration, “I and the Father are one, he who hath seen me hath seen the Father.” (John 10:30; 14:9). There’s no room for further argument: One either believes Jesus or does not believe.

They argued about freedom. He met them with a declaration “So if the Son makes you free, you will be free indeed.” (John 8:36). At this point, the argument stops and the decision is forced as to whether one will accept freedom at the hands of he Son or refuse Him. They argued about the meaning of life: Jesus met them with a declaration, “The words that I have spoken to you are spirit and life” (John 6:63). No more debate is necessary; one is compelled to listen and obey, or to refuse to listen and reject. (D. T. Niles, That They May Have Life pp. 18- 1 9)

No wonder the New Testament writer said: “There’s no other name given under heaven whereby men must be saved, save that of Jesus Christ.” He is our sufficient provision.

Note also that He is a sustaining provision. Not only today and everyday, but sustaining for eternity. Not only saving us from our sins, but growing us up into the image and likeness of God -His own image - the stature of the fullness of Jesus Christ.

Jesus said, “He who eats this bread will live forever.” He is a sustaining provision. Not only for today, and everyday, but for eternity.

Let me illustrate it and I’ll close.

A man in prison wrote to Robert A. Rains. He described his setting. “There’s a high chain-link fence below my second story window, and on the top of the fence, there are huge coils of barbed wire. A dozen or so little sparrows were flitting about the barbed wire, and they reminded me of that scriptural verse about God caring even for the sparrow that falls.” So, this man wrote about the satisfying, sufficient, sustaining provision of God. It’s not great poetry, but it expresses deep faith and great hope.

My prison house is cold and gray
And made of rock and steel
It’s filled with tears both night and day,
There’s little love to feel.

The sick and sad and broken men
Who suffer here with me
Cannot recall the joys of when
They last were gay and free.

Yet I am happy, and I’m free
Though tombed within this hell
For mighty acts of God I see
Through the cold bars of my cell

For sparrows play outside my wall
And flit from fence to tree
I know He grieves their every fall,
And He is here with me.

(Robert Rains, To Kiss the Joy, Word Books, 1973, p. 88-89)

If a prisoner can feel it in a cold, stone, tomb-cell, behind barbed wire, can we find it and feel it where we are today?

The truth is that Jesus is the Bread of Life, and that Bread is sufficient for our salvation, satisfying our every need and sustaining us to the end and beyond the end for eternity.

But remember, you must appropriate it “fresh every morning.”

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