John 6:1-15 · Jesus Feeds the Five Thousand
When the Impossible Becomes Imminently Possible!
John 6:1-21
Sermon
by Robert Leslie Holmes
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Apart from the resurrection, this miracle of the feeding of the multitude alone excites all the gospel writers so that none of them feels the gospel story is complete without it. An exciting missionary adventure is crushed by John the Baptist's death, and Jesus and his disciples retired across Galilee. It was the backdrop for an incredibly timeless human story. Of all the gospel writers, only John writes, "He [Jesus] himself knew what he was going to do" (John 6:6 NRSV). The New International Version translates it, Christ "already had in mind what he was going to do."

The Things We Have In Mind

The disciples, even though they had witnessed many miracles, were frustrated for they did not know what the sovereign Lord "had in mind to do." Life is full of farfetched demands for which our resources seem inadequate. According to Matthew, Mark, and Luke, the disciples would have sent the people away hungry. Jesus, however, lived his life by another principle: "Anyone who comes to me," he says, "I will never drive away" (John 6:37 NRSV). Still, just like the disciples, we often have that inclination to say, "Send them away. They're too much trouble." Or, "Send them away. They're not like us." Is this not sometimes our first response to a situation that we cannot deal with easily? Is that not sometimes how we think when we encounter someone we deem an undesirable? As a result, we miss opportunities to be a part of something new or something that has the potential to stretch us.

In 2 Kings, chapter 4, there is a telling story of a sickly prince who asks his father's help. His unfeeling father, the king, orders a servant, "Carry him to his mother" (2 Kings 4:19 NRSV). In short, that king was saying that he did not want to be bothered with his own son. "Send him away!" How far different that is from the King of kings who never tires of us and always has time for us!

Too many men in our generation echo the sentiments of that earthly king when it comes to providing spiritual leadership for their children: "Leave it to my wife," they say. In a similar way, thousands who call themselves friends of the church do a naked nothing to support Christ's work through the church. They forfeit opportunities to make a difference, leaving others to carry the load. Their cry: "Send them away! Let someone else be responsible. Let another person carry the load!" Without considering what Christ might do through willing hands and hearts, we "pass the buck!"

Or, as an old saying goes,

Everybody says, "Let Somebody do it."
Somebody says, "Let Anybody do it."
And, when Anybody doesn't do it,
Nobody does it!

So, Christ's kingdom work falters for lack of willing servants and "The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few" (Luke 10:2 NRSV). Why? Well, it is often because we are not willing to offer ourselves, so we send the multitudes away. In our attempt to escape reality, we miss the opportunity to be part of what God is doing in the world. Abortion, for example, is like that. It attempts to quickly escape reality at the cost of a child's life and misses everything wonderful Jesus "has in mind" for that child. Imagine how different the history of Europe would have been in the twentieth century had Winston Churchill's unmarried mother chosen to abort him.

When we complain, it often is a form of running from something we consider inconvenient because we have closed our mind and heart to the possibility that God through Jesus "already has in mind."

Suicide — the second highest cause of death among young people in the US — is the ultimate wishing away, but it is no escape. Others wish themselves away as did King David when forsaken by a fair-weather friend: "Oh, that I could fly away" he cried (cf. Psalm 55:6). Jeremiah's congregation nearly drove him crazy and he cried out, "I wish I could get away from them" (cf. Jeremiah 9:2). Jonah fled in the opposite direction to avoid God's call to proclaim his message to the great heathen city of Nineveh, whose citizens he regarded with disdain. In our reading, the disciples complained because the large crowd was an inconvenience by their estimation. Philip, according to the text, griped, "eight months wages" would not be enough to feed the crowd. Philip's was the stunted faith of the bottom line that will forever come up short.

We see it in various forms. People with undersized faith measure life by the horizons of their own limited capacity to think. In looking at their own thoughts, they miss the possibility of what Jesus "has in mind." How often has revival tarried because Christians wilt rather than stand for the faith we claim to hold so dear?

John Milton's Satan in Paradise Lost learns that you can run but you cannot hide, for you will always take yourself with you:

Infinite woe and infinite despair:
Which way I fly is hell; myself am hell!

In short, we are often our own biggest enemy. We tend to run from opportunities and blame it on others. If we are not careful, we become prisoners of our own finite imaginations but here is the eternal and unchangeable truth: "For my thoughts are not your thoughts, nor are your ways my ways, says the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts" (Isaiah 55:8-9 NRSV). We say, "Send them away." However, Christ says, "No! Feed them." Today he says to you and to me, "Feed them. Clothe them in my name. Take care of them in my name. Win them to me!"

David and Jeremiah stayed. Jonah went to Nineveh. Churchill was born, and the world has seen what God "already had in mind." So, let us turn our equation around and examine the things Christ had in mind.

The Things Christ Had In Mind!

Andrew is a bringer. He brought people to Christ. The most famous, of course, was Andrew's brother Peter. I doubt that Andrew had any idea the day he introduced Peter to Jesus what the Lord might do with Andrew's blustery big brother. But, Jesus knew what was to happen. Jesus "already had in mind" some things for Peter. Jesus knew everything there was about Peter. He could see past the denials near Calvary to the power of Pentecost when Peter would preach and thousands would be converted. It would not have been that way without Andrew.

While the other disciples complained about the high cost of groceries, Andrew brought a boy's lunch. It was not much, but it was what he had. Bringers do the best they can with what is at hand rather than complain. I would rather bring than complain any day, wouldn't you? When Andrew brought that boy's lunch, no doubt a typical boy's lunch for that time and place, composed of five barley loaves and two small fish — probably no more than two large dried minnows — Jesus went to work.

We never know what Jesus has in mind until we bring him something or someone.

Or, think about Calvary's cross. To the enemies of Christ, it looked as though the cross was the end of their problems with him. To Christ's friends, it seemed that their leader was gone for good and everything they had done over the last three years had come to nothing. However, for God the Father, that cross was merely a prelude to a glorious new era in which the whole world would learn that death is not the last thing but the first bright morning of the new eternal day in glory. None of them could see that Friday on Calvary that, beyond the veil which we in our ignorance call death, there is a glorious new life that will never pass away. God knew what he planned to do and he turned that rough Roman symbol of suffering and death into the world's ultimate plus sign.

When they looked at the hungry multitude the disciples concluded, "Impossible and too costly!" Had they looked first at the Savior, however, they would have discovered that what they thought impossible was imminently possible. Nothing is impossible to him. He says, if we have faith as small as a mustard seed, we will discover that nothing is impossible to us either (see Matthew 17:20). The disciples discovered there on a Galilean hillside that the Lord always has a positive, constructive plan in mind whether it is for the seemingly inconsequential or the eternally significant. By their reckoning, feeding thousands looked like a hopeless thing. Had their way of thinking prevailed, the crowd would have dissipated and the church's missionary march would have ended that day. We would not have heard the gospel. By Christ's plan, that crowd would be nourished both in body and in spirit. I believe that today, through this word, Jesus says to you and to me, "Work with me and your mountains will be moved and the bad things, even death itself, will always get better. Work with me and your needs will be met. Work with me and nothing shall be impossible to you."

It all begins when we bring Christ all we have. He will take our brokenness and insufficiency and turn it into something good. He will multiply what seems not enough. "I am the vine, you are the branches. Those who abide in me and I in them bear much fruit" (John 15:5 NRSV). Does something in your life seem to hold no hope? Do your resources seem too small? Have you considered "the things Christ has in mind"?

How We Can Discover The Things Christ Has In Mind?

There are three vital life principles behind the text. Philip and the others missed them when they allowed their own imaginations and abilities to set their limits of the possible. Andrew took a different approach. He brought the best he could find. It was not much — only a boy's lunch. However, a little is lots when God is in it. Zechariah says we're not to despise the day of small things (see Zechariah 4:10). John Bunyan describes a man who has a roll of cloth, which he unrolls to clothe the poor. And the more that man unrolls that cloth and the more poor people he clothes, the larger his cloth roll becomes. And Bunyan remarks, "There was a man and they called him mad. The more he gave the more he had." That's God! That's our Lord Jesus! Our reading teaches us three great life lessons.

First, believe in God and in his Son Jesus Christ. Every time you feel like running in denial of life's seemingly unconquerable circumstances, remember God is in all your life's circumstances. Look for Jesus in what scares you. See him in your impossible situations for "Jesus our Lord already knows what he is planning to do." What we see as impossible may, in his gracious providence, be imminently possible. He "already has in mind what he is going to do." Believe in him and consider the amazing ways that he can work beyond our ability to see just now.

Second, believe in the possibility that Jesus will work through you. Christ says, "All things can be done for the one who believes" (Mark 9:23 NRSV). By God's grace, in Christ's power we can do "all things." We were born to live with faith. Jesus says, "The one who believes in me will also do the works that I do and, in fact, will do greater works than these, because I am going to the Father" (John 14:12 NRSV). With Christ, there are no impossibilities! In his power through us, there are no insurmountable difficulties and no final defeats! Those mountains that block our view are often opportunities in disguise.

Third, believe in your future. "For surely I know the plans I have for you, says the Lord, plans for your welfare and not for harm, to give you a future with hope" (Jeremiah 29:11 NRSV). God, through Christ Jesus, "already has in mind what he is going to do" with you. Perhaps today you are in a testing place, for remember, "He said this to test [Philip], for he himself knew what he was going to do." When we believe in Christ's abilities to do more than we can imagine, in the possibility that he will use us, and that in working with him, we always discover the wonderful future he "already has in mind." Unbelievable things begin to happen when the impossible becomes imminently possible in the power of the Spirit of the risen Christ. Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (Middle Third): Bread and More! Forever! For Free!, by Robert Leslie Holmes