John 6:1-15 · Jesus Feeds the Five Thousand
With Jesus No Mission Is Impossible
John 6:1-14
Sermon
by James Merritt
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I heard about a young preacher who was going to preach his very first sermon, and he was going to preach from the text that I will be preaching on this morning. As he introduced it he said, "I want to talk to you about how Jesus fed five men with five thousand loaves of bread and two thousand fish."

Well, there was a man in the church that loved to intimidate preachers and he jumped up and said, "Great day, that's no miracle, I could do that!"

This young preacher was just shattered and couldn't even preach the sermon. Well, the next Sunday, out of spite, he started over with the same sermon and announced this time correctly: "I want to talk to you today about how Jesus fed five thousand men with five loaves and two fish." He looked down at the critical church member and said, "I guess you could do that too?"

The man said, "Great day, I could do that easy!" The preacher said, "How?" He said, "With what was left over from last Sunday."

Every miracle that Jesus performed was a mighty marvelous and meaningful miracle. But there are several things about the miracle we are going to study today that makes it unique and especially significant. First, it is the only miracle mentioned in all four gospels. Of all the miracles Jesus performed, this is the only one that Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John all felt should be included in their particular gospel.

Second, it is the only account in which Jesus asked the advice of another person before He proceeded to perform the miracle. Third, it is the only time that Jesus ever performed a miracle before such a huge crowd. If there's any miracle that Jesus performed that would appear most like magic, and therefore could be called indeed a magical miracle, it was this one.

Jesus had traveled all the way across the Sea of Galilee to get some rest and relief. A mighty multitude had followed Him and had settled in for the evening. The sun was setting; evening was coming, stomachs were growling, because it was suppertime!

Twelve disciples were faced with the unenviable task, you might call it "mission impossible", of trying to feed five thousand men (this does not include the women and children) with absolutely nothing.

The disciples were convinced this was indeed "mission impossible" and it would have been except for Jesus. But Jesus performed this miracle to prove that with Him no mission is impossible.

I. How Jesus Perceived the Multitude

There were actually two things that were missing that day. One shortage was obvious and one shortage was not. The first problem was the crowd lacked food.

There was a huge crowd gathered there on that grassy knoll facing that shiny shimmering sea. John notes in verse ten that the men alone numbered five thousand. Matthew tells us that there were also women and children. (Mt. 4:21)

Bible scholars conservatively estimate that at a minimum the crowd numbered at least twenty thousand people. Nobody wanted to fast, every-body wanted to feast.

Now the amazing thing about this situation is this: First of all, Jesus knew their need before they did. No one had complained about being hungry, but Jesus knew that they were hungry.

The second thing that is so incredible is that Jesus knew how He was going to meet their need before they even knew they had one. My Dad had that kind of a gift. I can remember several times my Dad telling me, "Son, you need a whipping." Well, I didn't realize I needed a whipping, and Dad already knew how he was going to meet that need before I realized I had the need.

But there was a bigger problem than this. The major problem was not that the crowd lacked food, but that the disciples lacked faith. "Then Jesus lifted up His eyes, and seeing a great multitude coming toward Him, He said to Philip, ‘Where shall we buy bread, that these may eat?' But this He said to test him, for He Himself knew what He would do." (vv.5-6)

Jesus asked Philip a rhetorical question. He wasn't really asking Philip where to buy food, because He already knew what He was going to do. He was actually testing Philip, and Philip flunked the test royally.

"Philip answered Him, ‘Two hundred denarii worth of bread is not sufficient for them, that every one of them may have a little.'" (v.7) Philip gets out his calculator and begins to figure out how much food would be needed and how much money it would cost to feed this large crowd.

Now a denarion was a silver coin commonly used in the time of Jesus. It was usually equivalent to a full day's work in the vineyard. So Philip calculated that it would take two hundred days wages of an average working man to feed this crowd. In today's money that would be roughly equivalent to $20,000.

Well, Philip looked at his person, and then he looked in his purse and he quickly figured out several things: First of all, there was no place to buy that much food; secondly, even if there was a place to buy it, he didn't have the money to pay for it; thirdly, even if there was a place and he had the money, there wasn't enough time; fourthly, even if there was enough time everybody would only get a little bit of food. So Philip looks at the size of the multitude and the sum of the money, and he shrugs his shoulders and says, "Impossible!"

Well, Andrew did a little better. While Philip was running his fingers over his calculator, Andrew went off looking for food. He finds a little boy who brought a lunch of five loaves of barley and two small fish. But he wasn't too proud of his catch. "One of His disciples, Andrew, Simon Peter's brother, said to Him, ‘There is a lad here who has five barley loaves and two small fish, but what are they among so many?'" (vv.8-9)

Andrew looked at the size of the multitude, and then he looked at the source of the meal, and he says, "Illogical!" Now the reason why there was a failure in Philip's faith, and a flaw in Andrew's faith, was because both of them had made the tragic mistake of calculating without Christ.

We do the same thing all the time. When an unexpected bill comes in that can break our bank account, do you pray and lift it to Jesus, or do you say, "How am I going to pay?"

When you are witnessing to someone, do you pray and listen to Jesus, or do you say, what am I going to say?"

If your home were to burn down, would you pray and leave it to Jesus, or would you immediately think, "Well, where am I going to stay?"

I am convinced that Jesus was far more grieved over the lack of faith than He was the lack of food. A lack of food never stops God, but a lack of faith can stop him dead in his tracks. I believe Jesus was especially grieved because He had given them every reason to have faith, and no reason to have doubt.

They had seen Jesus turn water into wine; they had seen Jesus heal the nobleman's son; they had seen Jesus heal a paralytic man, and yet they still needed the faith of a mountain to move a mustard seed. They still didn't get it.

It is so frustrating to perfectly illustrate a point time after time after time, and yet people be so slow to understand. I heard about a Sunday School teacher who was trying to illustrate to her boys and girls the dangers of drinking alcohol. So she filled two glasses up—one with water and one with alcohol.

Then she pulled out some earthworms she had dug up and dropped some of them into the water. The worms just swam around in that water and had a wonderful time. Then she dropped some more earthworms into that glass of alcohol and those earthworms just curled up and died. Then she said, "Now boys and girls, what does this teach us?" One little boy spoke up and said, "I know what it teaches us. If you have worms drink a lot of alcohol!"

I want you to remember this. Whenever you doubt God, you are saying one of two things: You are either saying that something is impossible, or you are saying something is illogical. Now the next time you think something is impossible, remember Luke 18:27, "The things which are impossible with men are possible with God."

The next time you say something is illogical, remember Isaiah 55:9, "For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are My ways higher than your ways, and My thoughts than your thoughts." The ridiculous with man is the reasonable with God.

Every problem that you face is an opportunity for you to believe God, and for God to bless you.

II. How Jesus Performed a Miracle

Now even though all four gospels include this miracle, only John records the little boy who gave his lunch. I believe this little boy must have been very special to John.

You see, that little boy had brought barely enough to feed himself. Now you say, wait a minute, he had five loaves and two fishes, that would feed a lot of people. Well, when you think about a loaf of bread, you think about the kind of loaf you see at a grocery store.

But these were actually wafers, flat, hard, and brittle, about the size of a small pancake because barley was the bread of poor people. Furthermore, the word for fish refers to a little pickled fish much like a sardine. This was not a great sea bass or a big salmon. This was just a small little minnow.

But this little boy was willing to share what little he had. Do you notice that what was transferred to Christ was transformed by Christ? Christ can only transform what is first transferred. What that little boy had was valuable because it was available.

But something else is even more incredible to me about this little boy. Here was twelve full-grown disciples who had seen Jesus do miracle after miracle after miracle. Here was one little boy who had never met Jesus in his life; still had peach fuzz on his face, and yet he was the only one that dared to believe Jesus could perform a miracle when nobody else did.

There is one area in which every one of us ought to remain just like a little child, and that is the area of faith. You know what is wrong with many of us Christians? When it comes to faith we have gotten too big for our britches.

I heard about a little boy who got into a heated argument with his sister about who was going to get the last brownie. His mother overheard the loud discussion in the kitchen and came in to try to resolve the fuss.

Her two children were both extremely upset, and both of them wanted that final treat. So sensing the opportunity to teach a deeper truth, the mother looked at her children and asked that ever-relevant question…"What would Jesus do?" Well, the little boy immediately answered, "That's easy, Jesus would just break that brownie and make five thousand more!"

You know that's the kind of faith that little boy had. He had that childlike faith to give his lunch without equivocation, reservation, or hesitation. You know the Lord Jesus had a sense of humor. That's why you read in v.13 that twelve baskets filled with the fragments were left over, one for each disciple! That little boy had given Jesus a measly lunch that you could have folded into a napkin, and he got to take home twelve baskets.

Now what is the lesson at this point? We need to learn two things: First of all, never doubt what God can do. He is in the miracle business. Secondly, never deny whatever God asks you to give him. He is in the multiplication business.

So far we have had a wonderful story of a hungry crowd, hopeless disciples, and a helpful boy, followed by a hearty feast. But that really isn't enough. There is more to this story than meets the eye.

III. How Jesus Personified a Message

Understand plainly Jesus did not perform this miracle to show He could go into the bakery business. No, the lesson of the loaves runs much deeper than feeding twenty thousand people and having twelve baskets of leftovers.

Now there is a clue to the deeper meaning in this story, and it is found in v.11. "And Jesus took the loaves, and when He had given thanks He distributed them to the disciples, and the disciples to those sitting down; and likewise of the fish, as much as they wanted." Now the Greek word for giving thanks is the word we get our word "eucharist" from which is a term for the Lord's Supper. Interestingly enough it is the same word Jesus used when He blessed the bread at the Lord's Supper.

Furthermore, v.14 says, "Then those men, when they had seen the sign that Jesus did, said, ‘This is truly the Prophet who is to come into the world.'" Now what does all of this mean? That bread that Jesus blessed at the feeding of the five thousand was a picture of Jesus Christ Himself. That's why He goes on to tell these disciples in v.35, "I am the bread of life." That is the meaning and the message of this miracle.

You see this miracle is not about material bread baked in an earthly mother's oven to meet physical needs. It is more about spiritual bread baked by a heavenly father to meet spiritual needs. There is so much to learn about Jesus as the Bread of Life to prove that with Jesus no mission is impossible.

First of all, Jesus we now know is the source of life. Jesus did not perform this miracle just to satisfy physical hunger and to slake physical thirst. He did it indeed to make the people spiritually hungry and spiritually thirsty to show that He alone was the source of their need.

This was more than just a Passover picnic. Notice what He says to the crowd later on.

"And when they found Him on the other side of the sea, they said to Him, ‘Rabbi, when did You come here?'

Jesus answered them and said, ‘Most assuredly, I say to you, you seek Me, not because you saw the signs, but because you ate of the loaves and were filled.

Do not labor for the food which perishes, but for the food which endures to everlasting life, which the Son of Man will give you, because God the Father has set His seal on Him.'" (vv.25-27)

They didn't understand that Jesus had not come primarily to keep their stomachs from growling, but to keep their souls from perishing. If you go back to v. 35 and read it all, here's what He said, "I am the bread of life. He who comes to Me shall never hunger, and he who believes in Me shall never thirst."

But Jesus is also the supply of life. Understand that it wasn't the lad that fed the crowd, nor the disciples, it was Jesus that fed the crowd. The lad gave the loaves, the disciples passed them out, but it was Jesus that provided the food. The disciples had to keep coming back to Jesus to get more loaves and more fish because He was not only the source, He was also the supply of that food.

Likewise the Lord Jesus Christ is the source and supply of true life. That's why He said, "I have come that you might have life and have it more abundantly." (Jn. 10:10) Jesus did not come just to add years to your life, He came to add life to your years.

Furthermore, He is the sufficiency of life. It is estimated that it would have taken fifteen tons of food to have fed that crowd. In light of that, look at a phrase at the end of v.11, "as much as they wanted." Do you see that? Nobody went away hungry. They got "all they wanted."

Do you know what that tells me? Jesus is not only sufficient for all that I want, but also for all that I need. Now they got all they wanted that day, and I want to tell you likewise, that's exactly how much of God you have right now—all you want.

Furthermore, Jesus is the satisfaction of life. V.12 says, "they were filled." That is, they were satisfied. They didn't want anything else to eat. Their stomachs were full. They didn't want anything else to drink. They were totally satisfied. But they would not have been filled without Jesus Christ.

Now remember, nobody can eat another bite, and yet there were still twelve baskets left over. Why? Jesus is not only all that you need, He is more than you need. There is not a problem Jesus cannot solve. There is not a hunger Jesus cannot satisfy. There is not a thirst Jesus cannot slake. There is not a hurt Jesus cannot heal. There is not a question Jesus cannot answer. With Jesus no mission is impossible.

Howard Hendricks in a book called Say It With Love, tells one of the most marvelous true stories about a lovely young couple who lived in Dallas, Texas. The husband sold his business at a loss, went into vocational Christian work, and things got very very rough financially. There were four kids in the family, and one night at family worship the youngest boy, Timmy, said, "Daddy, do you think Jesus would mind if I ask Him for a shirt?"

The Dad said, "Well, no, of course not. Let's write that down in our prayer request book Mother," So she wrote down "shirt for Timmy" and she even added "size 7." Well, every day Timmy saw to it that they prayed for that shirt.

After several weeks one Saturday the mother received a telephone call from a clothier in downtown Dallas, a Christian businessman. He said, "I have finished my July clearance sale, and knowing that you have four boys it occurred to me that you might could use something that we have left. Could you use some boys shirts?"

She said, "What size?" He said, "Size 7."

With great hesitancy she asked, "How many do you have?" He said, "Twelve."

Well, she picked up those shirts and where most of us would have just stuffed them in the drawer and made some casual comment to the children, this wise mother and dad did something different. That night, as expected, Timmy said, "Don't forget Mommy, let's pray for the shirt."

His Mommy said, "We don't have to pray for the shirt Timmy." He said, "How come?"

She said, "The Lord has answered your prayer." He said, "He has?"

She said, "He surely has." She nodded to his older brother, Tommy, who went out and got one shirt, brought it back in and put it down on the table. Well little Timmy's eyes got big as saucers. But then Tommy went out and got another shirt and brought it in, went out and got another shirt and brought it in, until he piled twelve shirts on the table. There are so many shirts there that Timmy thinks God has gone into the shirt business!

Today there is now an older kid in Dallas by the name of Timothy who believes there is a God in heaven interested enough in His needs, and powerful enough in His greatness, to provide a little boy with a size seven shirt, and in fact, provide enough for twelve disciples!

So I don't know what you're going through. I don't know where you are in your life. I don't know what you're facing, but there is one thing I do know, with Jesus no mission is impossible.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by James Merritt