Matthew 14:13-21 · Jesus Feeds the Five Thousand
God Will Provide the Resources
Matthew 14:13-21
Sermon
by King Duncan
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There is a time-honored story about a pastor and his wife who decided to invite the church council and their spouses over for dinner. It was quite an undertaking, but this devoted couple wanted to be a good example for the leaders of their church.

When it came time for dinner, everyone was seated and the pastor’s wife asked their little four-year-old girl if she would say grace. The girl said, “I don’t know what to say.”

Her mother said, “Honey, just say what I say.”

Everyone bowed their heads and the little girl prayed, “Dear Lord, why did I have all these people over for dinner? Amen!”

That must be how Jesus felt when he looked out on those 5,000+ people who came to hear him teach. We call this story the feeding of the five thousand, but that’s misleading. Matthew tells us it was five thousand men plus women and children. If each of the men had a wife, and just one or two children the numbers could have been more like 10,000 . . . or even more. “Dear Lord, why am I having all these people over for dinner?”

This is one of the best known stories about Jesus. All four of the Gospel writers include it in their narrative of Jesus’ life. The story comes at an interesting time. Jesus’ cousin John the Baptist the man who baptized Jesus and who commanded Jesus’ love and respect had just been slain by King Herod. When Jesus heard what had happened, he withdrew by boat privately to a solitary place, probably to reflect on what had happened to John perhaps even to spend a little time grieving. Jesus understood grief. He understood what it was like to lose someone you love. Remember that the next time you lose somebody close to you.

He wanted some time apart, but the crowd wouldn’t leave him alone. They followed him on foot. When Jesus saw this mob of people following after him, he had compassion on them, Matthew tells us, and healed their sick. This was the kind of man Jesus was. His primary task was to train his disciples and to proclaim the kingdom of God, but he had enormous compassion for people’s needs. So, when people came to him for healing or for guidance, he couldn’t help but respond.

Evening was approaching, however. The disciples came to him and said, “This is a remote place, and it’s getting late. Send the crowds away, so they can go to the villages and buy themselves some food.”

“That is not necessary,” Jesus replied, “we can supply them with food.” Well, you can imagine the disciples’ surprise when he said that.

“That’s absurd,” they probably thought, “all we have are five loaves of bread and two tiny fish‑‑that’s not even enough for us. Send them away, Master, before we have a real problem on our hands.”

But five loaves and two fish are plenty in the Master’s hand. “Bring them here to me,” he said. And he directed the people to sit down on the grass. Taking the five loaves and the two fish and looking up to heaven, he gave thanks and broke the loaves. Then he gave them to the disciples, and the disciples gave them to the people. And an amazing thing happened. There was plenty to go around, and when they were finished distributing the food, twelve baskets full were left over.

It’s a wondrous story. Christ fed nearly 10,000 people out in the wilderness without a catering service . . . no carry out . . . not a pizza delivery service in sight. It is a remarkable story and it is a story that is important for our time.

First of all, this is a reminder of Christ’s compassion. “When Jesus landed and saw a large crowd,” Matthew tells us, “he had compassion on them and healed their sick.”

One of the most impressive things about Jesus was his compassion. Throughout the Gospels he calls to tired and hungry hearts, and says, “Come . . . and I will give you rest.” To parents of small children, he says, “Bring them to me.”  

He says the same thing concerning those who are afflicted: “Bring them to me.” “Bring blind Bartimaeus,” he says. Bring the leper, the physically challenged, the person struggling with the demons of emotional distress.  On one occasion his invitation was so compelling that four friends lowered a palsied man through the roof of a house.

Jesus came with one purpose and desire‑‑to seek and to save the lost . . . to heal those who were hurting. At the beginning of his ministry he announced his mission, “The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to set the oppressed free . . .” (Luke 4:18).

When he gazed out over Jerusalem, he wept. He knew the heartaches, the headaches, and the hungers that go with being human.

There is a school in England, I understand, that has a course in compassion. Over the course of a term every student has one blind day, one lame day, one day when he may not speak, and one deaf day. The night before he is to spend his “blind” day, his eyes are bandaged, and he awakens blind and seemingly helpless. He is completely dependent on others to guide him through the day.

The students do not need to ask, “What does it feel like to be blind . . . what does it feel like to be deaf, or lame, or unable to speak?” They know. They have been there. They have experienced it for themselves.

In the same way the Son of God learned what it is to be human. He entered our world and experienced what we experience. He has compassion because he has been where we are‑‑doubted, denied, betrayed and broken in body. So when we hurt, he understands; for he has been hurt too. Bring the masses from the ends of the earth. The compassionate Christ is their hope.

William Booth knew that when he took his Salvation Army out to the homeless people of his time. John Wesley knew that when he began preaching in open fields to those to whom the established church had closed its doors. Mother Teresa knew that as she ministered to the least and the lost on the streets of Calcutta. As one poet wrote a long time ago:

Who’ll go and help this Shepherd king, Help Him the wandering ones to find?

Who’ll bring the lost ones to the fold / Where they’ll be sheltered from the cold?

Bring them in, bring them in . . . Bring the wandering ones to Jesus.

But why should we “bring the wandering ones to Jesus?” Because he cares. He cares about their needs. My friends, He cares about your needs and my needs, too. Jesus had compassion for the crowd. And he still gazes upon us with that same compassion today.

What does that say to us today about our role as a church? The measure of our success as followers of Jesus will not be how full our pews or how high our steeple. The measure of our success will be how willing we are to minister to the least and the lowest in our community. That is the first lesson we as a church learn from this amazing story: Jesus had compassion for the crowd.

Here’s the second: it’s never a question of resources. It’s a question of commitment. When Jesus instructed the disciples to feed the crowd of thousands, they only had five loaves of bread and two tiny fish. And yet in the Master’s hands, that was enough.

Some of you may know the story of Dorothy Day. Day was a Roman Catholic lay person and a person of strong faith. Dorothy Day started a newspaper to take up the cause of the poor. She had very little in the way of finances. However, a friend of hers named Pete Maurin convinced Dorothy Day that God had sent him to help her in this work, and that whatever she had would be sufficient.

This was quite a remarkable promise because of Day’s extreme generosity. Her newspaper staff was often upset because Dorothy Day would take money set aside for rent or for paper and supplies and spend that money for food for the homeless. Several times, when it looked as if they would not have the funds to go on because Dorothy had spent the money on the poor, a person would turn up to offer them a gift. It was always just enough to meet the current crisis. (1)

Pete Maurin believed and Dorothy Day believed that when it comes to meeting people’s needs, it’s never a question of resources. Where there’s a will, there’s a way. When it’s God’s will, there is most certainly a way.

There have been many theories offered over the years about how Christ was able to feed all those thousands of people with only five loaves of bread and two fish. One of the most common explanations is found in a best-selling book of the 1940s titled The Robe. The Robe was written by Lloyd C. Douglas. In the 1950s it was made into a popular movie starring Richard Burton as a Roman tribune named Marcellus Gallio.

Marcellus, a fictional character, was among the soldiers who cast lots for Jesus’ robe at the foot of the cross. His troubled mind is soothed when he but touches Jesus’ robe. Later he finds favor with Emperor Tiberius and is commissioned to investigate, on behalf of the Emperor, the new emerging religion of “Christianity.” This brings him into contact with many of the people who knew Jesus.

One of those people he came into contact with was present at the feeding of the 5,000. In this disciple’s telling of what happened that day, it was not that there wasn’t enough food. There was plenty of food. Most of the people who had followed after Jesus that day had thought to make provision for their pilgrimage. However, they kept their private bounties of fish and bread hidden.

It was not until a young boy stepped forward with his two fish and five small loaves that people started offering to others what they had brought as well. Everybody began to break out their food and, like any good church fellowship supper, after the multitude was fed, there were twelve baskets worth left over!

This is the same explanation of this miracle advanced by renowned Bible scholar William Barclay. Barclay says, “The miracle was not the multiplication of the loaves and fishes; it was the transformation of selfish people into generous people at the touch of Christ . . . It was a miracle of the birth of love in grudging hearts, it was the miracle of changed men and women with something of Christ in them to banish the selfishness in their hearts.”       

Of course, we don’t really know how Jesus fed the multitude, and it really doesn’t matter. The miracle is that he did and he did it beginning with only five small loaves of bread and two tiny fish. It wasn’t a question of resources, but of resolve. So it is in our situation. If we as a people were sincere in seeking to meet our community’s needs, resources ultimately would not be the problem. Commitment is always the determining factor in God’s work. If we are pursuing God’s will, God will provide.

And that brings us to the final thing we need to see about this text: Christ provided what was needed and more besides. I’ve always been fascinated by the statement, “They all ate and were satisfied, and the disciples picked up twelve basketfuls of broken pieces that were left over.” This is a statement of God’s abundance. God always provides more than is necessary to meet our needs.

All of us are disturbed when we turn on our television and see images of children malnourished and even starving in many places in our world. Did you know that this is totally unnecessary?

In his book Outlive Your Life: You Were Made to Make a Difference, best-selling author Max Lucado shares with us some enlightening truths about the plight of needy people in this world. He begins by noting that we have ample resources to take care of the world’s needy. “A mere 2 percent of the world’s grain harvest would be enough, if shared,” writes Lucado, “to erase the problems of hunger and malnutrition around the world. There is enough food on the planet to offer every person twenty-five hundred calories of sustenance a day. We have enough food to feed the hungry.”

But he continues, “And we have enough bedrooms to house the orphans. Here’s the math. There are 145 million orphans worldwide. Nearly 236 million people in the United States call themselves Christians. From a purely statistical standpoint, American Christians by themselves have the wherewithal to house every orphan in the world. Of course, many people are not in a position to do so. They are elderly, infirm, unemployed, or simply feel no call to adopt. Yet what if a small percentage of them did? Hmmm, let’s say 6 percent. If so, we could provide loving homes for the more than 14.1 million children in sub-Saharan Africa who have been orphaned by the AIDS epidemic. Among the noble causes of the church,” asks writer Max Lucado, “how does that one sound?” (2)

It sounds to me like we should be doing more. We should be making a difference in the world. Could God be speaking to you this day? Could God be calling you to a ministry to the hungry, the homeless, the orphan, the lonely, the hurting? Is there someone in your community, perhaps even your extended family, who needs your compassion?

Looking out over the great multitude, the disciples probably prayed, “Dear Lord, why did we have all these people over for dinner?” But Jesus looked over the crowd with compassion. Christ calls his church to a ministry of compassion today, meeting the world’s needs in his name. It’s not a question of resources. God will provide the resources. Indeed God has already provided the resources. Ultimately, it is a question of how committed we are to Jesus Christ. All it takes is someone to step forward with their willingness to share their fish and loaves, no matter how tiny and inadequate they may seem. When we act to meet the world’s need, God will provide the resources.


1. Lectionaid, 7 (3): 51 June, July, August 1999.

2. (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, Inc., 2010).

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Sermons Third Quarter 2014, by King Duncan