Mark 6:30-44 · Jesus Feeds the Five Thousand
Missional Discontinuity
Mark 6:30-44, Mark 6:45-56
Sermon
by Dean Feldmeyer
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What is it with Americans and work?

We work, on average, 1,836 hours a year, more than just about anyone else in the industrialized world, and we take less vacation. 42% of working Americans don’t take any vacation at all and, of those who do, 61% report that they were working when they should have been playing!1

Paid time off makes up, on average, 7% of an American workers’ compensation package but most workers don’t collect all that they are entitled to. In fact, according to Fortune magazine, the average American worker leaves about five paid days off per year unclaimed. If the company isn’t buying back that unpaid leave, then workers who work on days when they should be off are, in fact, paying their employers for the privilege of working on those days.2

For all kinds of reasons, some of which we will talk about in a few minutes, many Americans don’t like to take time off.

I am not one of those.

I love vacation and I take every moment I can get. I like vacations on the beach and I like vacations in the mountains. I like adventure vacations that involve seeing new places and doing new things. I like going back to old, familiar, and comfortable places to do the same old things that we do every time we go there. Yeah, I even like those “stay-cations” where you do local things that you never get a chance to do, like go to the Underground Railroad Museum, the Art Museum, or the Aquarium. I don’t think I ever met a vacation I didn’t like.

And, according to the experts who measure and keep track of such things that makes me healthier, smarter, happier and more productive than those who martyr themselves on the altar of their job.3

Another minister I know who likes vacations nearly as much as I do calls her vacations “missional discontinuity.” We go away, she says, so we can come back. We discontinue so we can continue better.

I wonder if Jesus had something like that in mind when he bade his disciples, “Come away to a deserted place by yourselves and rest a while.”

           

News Fatigue

I’m something of a news junkie and, I have to tell you this was a pretty stressful week for people like me.

Greece was going bankrupt. United Airlines could not get its planes into the air due to a computer glitch. Another computer glitch had shut down the Wall Street Journal’s home page and a third had managed to close the New York Stock Exchange. People were actually wondering aloud if this could be that big cyber-attack that computer literate people had been warning us about.

These stock market problems were especially troubling because they came at a time when China’s market was teetering on the edge of a cataclysmic sell-off that could rock the economy of the entire planet. (“Could” being the operative word, here.)

The deadline for sealing a deal with Iran was creeping up and every time Secretary of State Kerry thought they were about to achieve an agreement, Iran wanted to change the rules — or something. I don’t really understand what’s going on over there.

Meanwhile, in Hollywood, Bill Cosby was back in the spotlight after a recently revealed admission that he had purchased drugs he planned to use to molest women. Down in South Carolina the state legislature was voting on whether or not to take down the Confederate flag, and ESPN announced that Caitlyn Jenner would be receiving the Arthur Ashe Courage Award at the ESPYS. Oh, and Donald Trump, apparently, won’t be happy until he’s offended every single person in the northern hemisphere.

My diet soft drinks are, allegedly, making me fat, and they just discovered that my ibuprofen is going to give me a stroke or a heart attack.

On the local front, the All Star Game was going to be played in Cincinnati and if you live within a thousand miles of the “Queen City,” you were expected to be all aquiver with anticipation as were all of our local news media.

And if all these things aren’t stressful enough, in and of themselves…

Every time I read a news story on my computer home page, when I get to the bottom of the story there’s a place for “Comments.” It’s not enough to just read the story or listen to the story. No, now we’re expected to have an opinion about what we just read or heard — right now — immediately.

It’s not enough to be informed. We’re also supposed to be outraged, indignant, excited, keyed up, worked up, fired up, overwrought, and generally all astir over everything we see.

What we really are is overwhelmed and, when we add that to the normal stresses of work, family and community life, we are also exhausted.

What we need is a vacation. We need a vacation from the constant barrage of news that assaults us when we turn on our computers, when we eat our lunch at McDonalds, when we get our hair cut, and even when we stand in line at the bank.

We need a vacation from the culture’s insistence that we have an opinion about everything.

But we are Americans and, as noted, we aren’t real comfortable taking time off. Some of us are afraid we won’t have a job when we get back. Some companies offer time off but then create a culture of overwork so people are afraid to take their time off because doing so may put them at the bottom of the promotion list. Others say that the amount of work they have to do before they can leave and after they get back just isn’t worth the time off for vacation.

And there’s the mixed messages that our culture is sending us.

Again, Fortune magazine’s article, which ran in May of 2016, insisted on the importance of vacations for the company as well as the workers, and how necessary it is that everyone take all of their allotted vacation time. They pointed out that people who do are generally more productive at and positive about their jobs. Companies who encourage people to take all of their allotted vacation time tend to be more profitable and successful.4 But, on the other hand, Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush, seemed to be saying just the opposite: “We have to be a lot more productive, workforce participation has to rise from its all-time modern lows. It means that people need to work longer hours.” (emphasis added)5

As Christians, however, our concern is not so much what Jeb Bush says or what Fortune magazine says as what Jesus says.

What Jesus Says

In this Sunday’s gospel lection, Mark told us of two stories where Jesus and his disciples were overwhelmed by the volume of work and the depth of need that had been set before them.

In the first story, the disciples returned from their missionary journey upon which Jesus dispatched them in verses 6-13. They were excited and eager to share with Jesus all that had happened to them but there were so many people with so many needs coming to them for help that they did not have time to even eat their lunch, much less talk about what happened last week.

So Jesus bid them “Come away to a deserted place all by yourselves and rest a while.” But their escape plan didn’t work. People saw them crossing the lake in their boat and ran around the shore to be there before the boat arrived.

When Jesus came ashore, he saw that these people were “like sheep without a shepherd” and he had pity on them and taught them many things.

The lectionary skips the story of the feeding of the 5,000 and the story of Jesus walking on water and calming the sea. That will come another week.

Instead, we jump to the end of that story and an event that was nearly identical to the one we have just seen. The disciples and Jesus escaped the crowd only to be confronted by them and even more when they reached their destination across the lake. This time Jesus responded by healing people.

Let’s be clear that the needs of the vast crowds of anonymous people are very real and very urgent. And there are lots of them. Quite specifically, Mark identifies two kinds of needs that are as real and urgent today as they were at that time.

In the first story Jesus sees that the people are like sheep without a shepherd. That is, they are leaderless, unfocused, unorganized, at odds as to what to do next and liable to get themselves into trouble if someone doesn’t help them pretty quickly. Jesus sees that need and decides to help them and the way he helps them is by teaching them.

He does not take them by the hand and say, “Oh, you poor, poor thing.” He does not empathize with their plight or enable them in their ignorance and lack of direction. He doesn’t invite them to tea or tell them to “turn it over to the Lord.” He teaches them.

The first need is for teaching, and it still is.

I truly believe that one of our greatest needs as a people and as the church is for education, and honest education at that. First, we need to teach and be taught an unsanitized, historical account of who we have been and from where we have come.

We need to know the truth about our past. We need to have our stories painted in vividly honest colors and we need to see our ancestors as they were, “warts and all.” We need to know about our mistakes as well as our triumphs, our moral lapses as well as our moral victories, our bad choices as well as our good ones, the things for which we can be proud and the things for which we need to apologize.

And we need to teach an unsanitized Jesus. We need to give ourselves the freedom to learn and to teach that what Jesus offers is a radical, counter-countercultural, alternative to what the world offers. We need to know and teach that when Jesus tells us to love our enemies, sell what we have and give it to the poor, and take up our cross and follow him, he is not speaking in meaningless metaphors and ambiguous aphorisms. He is serious. He is giving us the very essence of what it means to be one of his disciples.

Only then, when we are well supplied with honesty and a sense of calling, can we begin to take care of the second need that Mark identifies in those who sought out Jesus — the need for healing.

We tend to focus on the physical healings that are identified here but there are many kinds of blindness, many kinds of deafness, and many kinds of brokenness, my friends, and I am convinced that the cure for many if not most of these ills can be found in Jesus Christ.

Jesus Christ can cure our broken relationships if we will place them before him. Jesus Christ can heal the blindness of prejudice, bigotry, and enmity if we will but submit to his prescription. Jesus Christ can open our ears to love, joy, mercy, and peace if we will but listen to him with our whole being.

The need for teaching and the need for healing are as real and as urgent, as authentic and as pressing now as they were 2,000 years ago, brothers and sisters. Jesus is calling us to be the teachers and the healers, now just as he called his disciples to do then.

But we must be careful in this worthy and holy pursuit. These same passages that call us to service also provide that there are times when we must take leave of service, even important and urgent service, in order to meet another set of needs — our own.

           

Too Busy to Eat

I have spoken before of the theological significance of that warning they give in commercial airplanes as you are taxiing out to the runway. They tell you how to operate the oxygen mask should it be necessary to use it and then they say, “If you are traveling with a small child or a person with disabilities put your own mask on first, and then help those seated near you.” In other words, you are not going to be of any help to anyone if you are flopping around, gasping due to an oxygen deficiency of your own.

Jesus says the same thing but in a different way:

The opening sentence of this story is the first time where the disciples are referred to as “apostles.” This is appropriate, as an apostle is one who has been sent and they are just returning from the mission field into which Jesus sent them. But being sent out comes at a price, does it not? Yes, they are excited to share their experiences but that same excitement can, if they aren’t careful, lead to burnout.

It is exciting to be needed. It is flattering when people come to us and ask for our expertise, our knowledge, our abilities. And we genuinely want to help, if we can, for helping others in need is almost the very definition of what it means to be Christian.

But the disciples were so busy helping others that they could not find the opportunity or the leisure to even have a meal together. They were sacrificing their own nutrition and their own health in their service to others. They were setting themselves up to be classic cases of burnout.

They had either forgotten or never learned the lesson of the oil lamp: It is not the wick that burns but the oil. As long as there is fuel in the lamp the wick will last a very long time. But when the fuel runs out the wick begins to burn and the fire soon goes out.

We who are commissioned to teach and spread the good news of God in Jesus Christ and to heal the brokenness of the world, cannot afford the luxury of burning out.

The story speaks of food and eating but, again, we need more kinds of nourishment than that which is supplied by fishes and loaves alone.

We need mental nourishment, the kind that comes from taking the time to learn something new about ourselves, about our religious faith, about the world around us.

We need the emotional nourishment that we get from spending time, structured or unstructured, with our friends and our families, playing, talking, listening, laughing, and just basking in the warmth of their love.

We need the spiritual nourishment that comes from prayer, meditation, corporate worship, and the study of scripture.

An old friend of mine, an avid fisherman, had a bumper sticker on his truck that said, “If you’re too busy to fish, you’re too busy.” In the stories we heard the gospel writer, Mark, made the same case for eating. If you’re too busy to eat, you’re too busy. And, by extension, he made this point as well:

If, in our ministry to others, we find ourselves too busy to learn, too busy to love, too busy to worship, too busy to pray, well, then we’re just too busy. And it may just be time to go “away to a deserted place… and rest.”

Amen.


1. http://www.news-star.com/article/20150703/BUSINESS/307039981/-1/op        http://fortune.com/2015/05/01/paid-time-off-vacation/

2. Ibid.

3. Ibid.

4. http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Politics/Decoder/2015/0709/Did-Jeb-Bush-     really-say-Americans-need-to-work-more-hours

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Like a Phoenix: Cycle B sermons for Pentecost through Proper 14, by Dean Feldmeyer