Saturday, July 28, 2018

God's Economy - Adundance, scarcity, frugality

July 27, 2018 Year B John 6:1-21 Abundance, Scarcity, Frugality: The Economy of God Children’s Time Object: a bucket, a small pile of rocks, a small pile of candy Good morning, boys and girls. I need your help this morning. I brought this nice, new bucket with me, and I need to fill it up with something. That's what a bucket is for, to be filled with stuff. Now, I have to choose what I want to put into the bucket. For instance, I've got this pile of rocks here. I could put them into the bucket. They would fit in there just fine. They're big and dirty and not too pretty, but I could put them in the bucket. Or I could put some of this candy in the bucket. Do you like candy? I do too. This candy would fill up the bucket nicely. Which would you rather have a bucket full of rocks, or a bucket full of candy? I'd say a bucket full of candy. Did you know that our minds can be like an empty bucket? That's right, we can choose what to put into our minds. Some people fill their minds with fear and worry and anger. They are scared or unhappy all the time because they've filled their mind with scared and unhappy thoughts. But we don't have to do that. We can choose to fill our minds with good thoughts, like love, and joy, and peace, and having faith in God. Just as we can choose to fill our bucket with rocks or with candy, we can choose whether to fill our minds with bad thoughts or good thoughts. Let's ask Jesus to fill up our minds with love and faith in Him. Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan John 6:1-21 Common English Bible (CEB) Feeding of the five thousand 6 After this Jesus went across the Galilee Sea (that is, the Tiberias Sea).2 A large crowd followed him, because they had seen the miraculous signs he had done among the sick. 3 Jesus went up a mountain and sat there with his disciples. 4 It was nearly time for Passover, the Jewish festival. 5 Jesus looked up and saw the large crowd coming toward him. He asked Philip, “Where will we buy food to feed these people?” 6 Jesus said this to test him, for he already knew what he was going to do. 7 Philip replied, “More than a half year’s salary[a] worth of food wouldn’t be enough for each person to have even a little bit.” 8 One of his disciples, Andrew, Simon Peter’s brother, said, 9 “A youth here has five barley loaves and two fish. But what good is that for a crowd like this?” 10 Jesus said, “Have the people sit down.” There was plenty of grass there. They sat down, about five thousand of them. 11 Then Jesus took the bread. When he had given thanks, he distributed it to those who were sitting there. He did the same with the fish, each getting as much as they wanted. 12 When they had plenty to eat, he said to his disciples, “Gather up the leftover pieces, so that nothing will be wasted.” 13 So they gathered them and filled twelve baskets with the pieces of the five barley loaves that had been left over by those who had eaten. 14 When the people saw that he had done a miraculous sign, they said, “This is truly the prophet who is coming into the world.” 15 Jesus understood that they were about to come and force him to be their king, so he took refuge again, alone on a mountain. Jesus walks on water 16 When evening came, Jesus’ disciples went down to the lake. 17 They got into a boat and were crossing the lake to Capernaum. It was already getting dark and Jesus hadn’t come to them yet. 18 The water was getting rough because a strong wind was blowing. 19 When the wind had driven them out for about three or four miles, they saw Jesus walking on the water. He was approaching the boat and they were afraid. 20 He said to them, “I Am.[b] Don’t be afraid.” 21 Then they wanted to take him into the boat, and just then the boat reached the land where they had been heading. Footnotes: a. John 6:7 Or two hundred denaria b. John 6:20 Or It is I. Sermon Opener - Partners in the Impossible - John 6:1-21 "Where can we buy enough food to feed all these people?" (v. 5b) A minister was making a home visit to one of the younger families in his parish. A five-year-old boy answered the front door and told the minister his mother would be there shortly. To make some conversation, the minister asked the little guy what he would like to be when he grows up. The boy immediately answered, "I’d like to be possible." "What do you mean by that?" the puzzled minister asked. "Well, you see," the boy replied, "just about every day my mom tells me I’m impossible!" That is my message for today – to dwell in possibility. And to remember that all things are possible with Jesus Christ. We have all heard of the feeding of the 5000 story. This is one of the most popular stories in the bible. This is Jesus’ biggest miracle. This is the only miracle that is talked about in all 4 gospels in the bible. In every miracle story – Jesus is able to accomplish something that the people thought was impossible. Jesus is a prophet that was able to do things no on ever did before him. He is able to meet a need of the people in a way that cannot be explained. As a matter of fact, many people say that John is the gospel that crosses a line in talking about Jesus. Matthew, Mark, and Mark all talk about the miracles of Jesus. But John is the only one who will try and convince you that Jesus, the Christ , is the spirit of God in the flesh. The book of John is a series of Six I Am statements. When people ask Jesus who he is – he responds with six statements of who He is – all of these statements are attributes of God. The I am statement for John 6 is – I am the bread of life. That is a deep statement. As a matter of fact John chapter 6 is the complete story of who God is. There is so much to preach about here. But today – we are going to talk about what is possible when God is present. The lectionary will deal with John 6 for the next five weeks. I won’t be dealing with John 6 all of the time. I will be going back and forth between the lessons of John – and the bread of life and Ephesians – which will be talking about what it means to be the community that believes in God. In this week’s reading, Jesus does not even get to explaining the statements I am the bread of life. As a matter of fact, Jesus just says I am - He wants to prove what is possible when we trust in God. Jesus provides for the needs of the people, but he takes them further into understanding who God and is and what God is capable of . This scripture has three miracles of Jesus – the feeding of the 5000, Jesus walking on water, and Peter believing that Jesus is the messiah. I am only going to talk about the first miracle – the feeding of the 5000. This is the perfect example of God will provide and God’s abundance. Jesus takes 5 loaves of bread and five fish and he feeds 5000 people. It shows that in God’s economy there is always enough. It shows what Jesus means when he says I am the bread of life. All of these people have come to hear about God from Jesus. Jesus knows that they are hungry and in need. So as the bread of life, he literally gives them bread. But each time Jesus provides for a immediate need of people, he takes people even further. Jesus says that man cannot live on bread alone – but on the word of God. He feeds them, but he also speaks more about the bread of life. We know Jesus part in this story very well, but the most important lesson for us actually comes from the disciples response to Jesus. When Jesus wants to feed the people, he instructs the disciples to go and get food. Jesus first goes to Philip and asks how are we going to pay for all of this food to feed all of these people. Philip is a realist, and he knows that they could never buy enough food to feed all of these people. Philip represents most of us when we are doing the work of the church – we would love to help everyone – but we just don’t have the money. But another disciple gives another response. Instead of saying no- Andrew is from the neighborhood, he knows the people, instead of doing nothing, he looks for a solution – and he find a little boy who has something. One of these disciples believes in what is impossible, and another believes in what is possible. There is a saying that a pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity. And a optimist is one who sees opportunity in difficulty. Which one are you? How many times have the church wanted to do something, and there is always that person like Philip – who says we don’t have the money to do that. Now I am not saying that there is something wrong with those people who say that we cant afford to do everything. Those who say that the church does not have enough money. We don’t . That is not the point of this story. As I was preparing the this sermon – someone said that there are plenty of times in life when a Christian was desparately in need, and there was no miracle, no abundance, and that person died of starvation. That is not the point of this story. Jesus does not promise us that we will be rescued from every tough spot, or that miracles will save us. But what Jesus is trying to teach us, as he taught the disciples – that as people of faith – we should dwell in possibility. When we are faced with the impossible – to look for the possible. To use what we have, and depend on God for the increase. Instead of being stopped by the impossible, Andrew went and looked for what he had. The abundance of God always starts with what we have no matter how small it is. Small Saves – John 6:1-21 by Leonard Sweet A box came in the mail the other day. It was a surprise free gift from the local power company. Or I should say two free gifts. The power company sent every one of their customers a new “low flow” showerhead, designed to cut down on water usage, but still feel like a real shower. The second free gift was four of those new curly-q fluorescent light bulbs, the kind that last longer and use less electricity while putting out the same amount of light. This small act cost the power company a few thousand dollars. But according to their figuring, in the long run if everyone replaced their showerhead and a few light bulbs, the savings would be in the tens of thousands of dollars. It was a small act, but it was a start to a big savings. Small is big. From architectural trends like “The Not So Big House,” to backyard food sources (“Fresh Food from Small Spaces”), to down-size is the new up-grade. In fact, down-sizing has become a big business. Not too long ago only a few hippie-holdout co-op markets offered a small selection of scruffy-looking “organic” fare for the few “fresh-niks” among us. Now just about every big super-market offers about as much space to certified “organic” produce as they do for the other options. Did you know you can buy all sorts of other “organic” products — ketchup, frozen pizza, macaroni and cheese mixes? What started out looking like a small and stunted sideline has become a major force in the food industry. God has an MO: Modus Operandi. God’s MO is to start small. God loves starting small, and then from small beginnings grow something amazing. From cosmic dust to a Big Bang? The next time you consider taking a sip from a fresh, cold mountain stream, remember how much the divine delights in single-celled organisms. There are millions of them floating in one glass of water. Consider how there are more insects than any other class of critters and more beetles than any other kind of insect, each fitting neatly into its particular ecological niche. Jesus carried on the family tradition. Jesus had a fascination with all things small and humble. Mustard seeds. Sparrows. Grains of wheat. Yeast. Pennies. Sprouting seeds. Hebrews. Children. And in today’s text from John, the remnants of a little boy’s lunch box… Was enough to feed 5000 people. What seems to be impossible in your life these days, my friend? Some task you are facing in your personal life? Or maybe as you look out on our weary world and society today, you are prompted to ask, "Who is going to accomplish all the things that seem so impossible in our world today?" In such times Jesus Christ is asking you and me to join with him in being partners in the impossible. To his friend and follower, Philip, Jesus says, "Where can we buy enough food to feed all these people?" An impossible task, indeed! But as we look at this question of Jesus in the Bible this morning, let’s try and take hold of the encouraging truth that emerges, and it is this: Christ never asks us to do the impossible unless he himself provides the power and resources to get the job done. So today let us confidently answer his call, for he is our divine partner in doing the impossible. Closer to home, in our everyday lives the lesson for us to remember is that the only cure for hopelessness is to have hope. The only way to deal with the impossible, is to look for what is possible. The only way to overcome the scarcity of life, is to intentionally look for the abundance of God. And to have faith in the fact that God always provides. If God gives us a mission, God will provide the resources for us to complete that mission. God wants us to have enough. People come from miles around to come to church, to see if this story is really true. Can Jesus really provide. And if so, them how did he do it? What was the miracle in this story. Did he use some magical powers to multiply the five loaves into 5000? Or was this a precurser to the communion meal, where everyone got a small bite, but were filled spiritually, or was the miracle that once every saw that a little boy was willing to share his meal with others, they followed suit and gave until there was enough food to feed everyone. What is the real miracle of God’s abundance? The real miracle is our faith and how we live it out. What Are We To Do About This? The telephone rings, you answer, it’s someone from the church. After a bit of polite chit-chat, the caller gets to the point: "The reason I’m calling," she confesses, "is that we would really like it if you would consider teaching Sunday School next year, or serving as a Presbyterian Women’s Ministry leader, singing in the choir, chairing a particular committee, whatever." And you think: "Dear God, they must really be scraping the bottom of the barrel," or "I already have so much to do," and all of the good, logical reasons for not saying "yes" come immediately to mind. Someone asks you to lunch. You know each other, but then again, you really don’t. He says, "I’ll be honest with you. I’m about as lonely as I have ever been in my life. I need a friend, someone to talk with, and I was hoping you would be that person for me." And you think, "Oh, Lord, I’m not up to this." A friend gives every evidence of addiction; a neighbor’s child bears the marks of abuse. . . It would be easier, and probably smarter for you personally, just to stay out of it all, to mind your own business. You may feel sorry for the person trying to recruit volunteers in the life of the church; sorry for the person who needs a friend; sorry for the friend with the addiction, for the child with the bruises and burns, but when you add it all up all you have to offer are five little loaves of bread and two scrawny fish. There is nothing that you can do. The task is simply beyond the scope of your ability, the limits of your time and energy, and so what you do is nothing. Jesus, though, keeps asking "what are we do to about this?" Why can’t he leave well enough alone? Are you Philip or Andrew? Do you rely on what is impossible, or what is possible? Do you respond from a place of scarcity or abundance? There is so much wonderful stuff in this story – because after the 5000 were fed, the story says that there were 12 baskets of leftovers collected. In God’s economy, nothing goes to waste. Each disciples was given a basket of food to take home and feed his family. God is truly amazing! Let us pray….. Additional illustrations…. Be careful when you touch bread. Let it not be uncared for, unwanted. So often bread is taken for granted. There is so much beauty in bread; beauty of the sun and soil, beauty of patient toil. Winds and rrain have caressed it. Chrit often blessed it. Be gentle when you touch bread. Need Happens 24/7 A few years ago in the city of Chicago, a crowd of community residents did something unusual. They picketed the churches in their community to do something other than have church. They picketed them to be church. They seemed to say the Christ you claim and proclaim each Sunday seems more than enough in the sanctuary, but never seems to get out in our neighbor-hoods. Why are you open only on Sunday? Need happens 24/7. There are six other days in the week, but you're closed. Ozzie E. Smith, Jr., More Than Enough Countering the Myth of Limited Resources A few years ago I served as pastor of Lavington Church in Nairobi. One day three young men came to my office. Although they were cheerful, they looked tired and wore out. Their tennis shoes were dusty and their clothes needed a wash. The first thing they asked when they came into my office was whether they could sing a verse of "Amazing Grace" in their language. They sang acapella in parts. It was so beautiful. Sounded like angel music, the kind of singing that tugs at the soul and brings tears to your eyes out of the blue. And then they told me their story. They were university students from Rwanda, 23-year olds. Two of them had been medical students. When war broke out in their country, they had escaped with only the clothes on their back and the song in their heart. They had walked for weeks without a change of clothes with no place to sleep. They had often gone hungry, they said, and they had no clue where any of their family members and friends were. They said they had learned to be grateful for their life each day and they had begun singing "Amazing Grace" as a prayer as they walked. They had seen so much violence and death and cruelty that they could not find words to pray so instead they sang "Amazing Grace" as they walked and they said, "God knew and that was enough." On that afternoon in my office, these three young men had come to church asking for assistance. They said they had found a room to rent for eight U.S. dollars a month. They said they did not need beds; they would gladly sleep on the floor. They were asking our congregation to help them with a month's rent. Eight dollars and some money for food, a total of $12 a month. I asked the three students to come back in a few days so I could meet with the church leaders, and when I met my church leaders, they all agreed it was a great ministry. But someone talked about the budget. Someone said $8 was not a lot, but if you multiplied by 12 months, the next thing you know, it would be impossible. And someone else suggested a very Andrew-like idea. "Let's have a special project," they said. "Let's have a special offering. Let's tell the congregation about the situation, have these young men sing one Sunday morning, and whoever in the congregation is willing to help, could donate outside the usual tithing and offertory." The church leaders talked late into the night. Some were even concerned that so many refugees were in the city that the word would spread our church was involved in paying rent and buying groceries and we would be swamped with needs. Some wanted to keep church and revivals only a spiritual level. No picnics, no food, no dinner. As I listened to my church leaders, I learned so much about the myth of limited resources. We often think there's just enough for some of us. Some have to go without. We're worried we'll run out, but guess what? God's world has enough for all of us. Someone has put it well, saying, "There is enough for all our needs, but there is not enough for all our greed." Grace Imathiu, A Picnic on the Mountainside Stone Soup I love the story of a Christian missionary hiking the high Andean trails to a remote village in Peru. He found a rock along the road, a curious geode, and put it in his backpack as a souvenir. That evening he strode into the village to a very unfriendly welcome. No one offered him a bed. No one asked him to sit by their fire. He learned that a famine had plagued the Indians for over a month. And the people were starving. Each was simply afraid to share amidst so much deprivation. Praying to Jesus how to help them, he got an idea. Calling the Indians around a campfire he preached God's loving care in Christ. Then he said, "I'm going to feed you by making some stone soup. Yummm! It's tasty! I grew up on it! And you'll like it just fine!" Then he opened his backpack and produced the rock he'd found that morning. The Indians scoffed, "Stone soup! Why that's the stupidest thing I've ever heard!" "Trust me," the missionary assured them. "See! I've brought the stone. But I'm going to need a pot to put it in." An Indian woman quickly volunteered her pot. "And I'll need about two large buckets of water to boil the stone in." A man, shaking his head, brought the water. So, in went the stone, in went the water, and over the fire the pot was suspended. Curious now, the villagers began to gather around the pot, peering into its contents. The missionary began to stir the pot and drool. "You know, stone soup sure is good with carrots!" To which an Indian said, "I've got six carrots!" He quickly fetched them and they were cut up into the pot. Then the missionary smelled deeply of the bubbly broth and sighed, "Some potatoes sure would add to the flavor." From pockets and other hiding places came dozens of spuds. They were quickly added to the soup. Soon people were bringing onions, celery, and bits of meat to top off the pot of stone soup. And within the hour a community was formed around that stew pot. All ate. And all were filled and they heard the story of Jesus Christ. Believe John 6:1-14 as a miracle of Jesus in multiplying the bread and fish, if you will, or believe Jesus' miracle in the selfish human heart causing the multitudes to share. But above all, remember this: The next time you see a need or feel inadequate, don't look at the hillside, look in the basket. Don't count the difficulties presented. Look at the resources possessed. Don't measure your problems. Measure God's power! Stephen M. Crotts, Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost, CSS Publishing Company ____________________________ We Can't Afford It William Easum is a church leader who's dedicated his life work to helping churches thrive and engage in real mission. He thinks we ought to deal with things that get in the way of fullness of God and mission, he wrote a book called "Sacred Cows Make Gourmet Burgers". The title says a lot! He begins the book's first chapter with this statement, "Established churches worship at the feet of the sacred cow of CONTROL." Personally, one of the most often used controlling statements I've heard over the years in any church I've served is, "We can't afford it." That is merely the echo of Philip the disciple, who told Jesus there simply wasn't enough money to buy food for all those people. We don't have enough money. Or, there isn't leadership potential. Or, we just ordinary folks. Or, we can't do it. Or, we like things just the way they are. Leave us alone! I think that's what we really mean whenever we say, "We can't afford it". David G. Mullen, There is a Boy Here... A Story Told Over and Over Rollie and I are best of friends from seminary years. One night while at the seminary, he and his wife were over for dinner. As usual, Mart and I were locked in intensive conversation, this time about the fate of the Jews in Romans 9-11. As the words were flying heatedly across the table, the leg that held up one half of the Duncan Fife table was accidentally kicked out and all the food fell to the floor. Meat, potatoes, peas, salad. It all hit the floor. But the conversation about Romans 9-11 didn’t stop. Not a breath was taken;not a pause was made; not for a fraction of a moment did the conversation stop. There was no acknowledgment of the food on the floor as it was being picked up, and the dinner continued as if nothing happened. And we laughed and laughed. And that old favorite story gets told over and over again because it captures the essence of the personalities of the people involved. Well, the gospel story for today is an old favorite story about Jesus and his disciples that was told over and over again. There are some old favorite stories which are told only one time in the gospels.... such as the story of the Good Samaritan, told only once; the story of the Prodigal Son, told only once; the story of the Sheep and the Goats, told only once. These are favorite, great stories but they are told only once in our Gospel. But the story for today, about the five loaves and two fish, is not told merely once, not twice, not three times, but four times, with only slight variations. It is the only Gospel miracle which is told in its fullness in all four Gospels. Now, why is this story told over and over again? I believe it is because this story captures the truth, the essence of all the people involved; the essential truth about Jesus and the essential truth about the disciples and the essential truth about God. Edward F. Markquart, Five Loaves and Two Fish to Feed 5,000 ________________________________ John Stepped Over the Line Back when I was a seminarian at Yale Divinity School, I had a discussion with a rabbi who was studying for his Ph.D. in New Testament, an unusual combination! He mused that if Christians had just stuck with the gospel of Mark, Jews (who are willing to recognize Jesus as a great teacher) and Muslims (who recognize Jesus as a great prophet, perhaps second only to Mohammed) could probably get along with us Christians a lot better. My rabbi friend suggested that while Matthew and Luke pushed the line, John stepped across the line with impunity by equating Jesus with God. Stephen Butler Murray, A Ministry of Surprises The Meaning of All Religion What do we see in the image the gospel writer presents? We are told "they saw Jesus walking on the sea and coming near the boat". Certainly there is the man, Jesus, exercising a power no human has; there is the storm that presents such peril to those in the boat; there is the location distant from shore. But what is behind what is told? What truth is present in the relation of the events? Karl Barth expresses well what it is in "Der Romerbrief." We all "are encountered" by God. "That we have found the Christ in Jesus of Nazareth is confirmed because all the manifestations of God's faithfulness are indications or prophecies of what has encountered us in Jesus. The hidden power of the law and the prophets is the Christ who encounters us in Jesus. The meaning of all religion is the redemption, the turn of the age, the resurrection, the invisibility of God that constrains us to silence in Jesus. The substance of all human happenings is the forgiveness under which they stand as it is proclaimed and embodied precisely in Jesus. No one need object that this power, this meaning, this substance is to be found not only in Jesus but elsewhere. For we ourselves affirm this very thing; indeed, precisely we can affirm it. What is known and found in Jesus is that God is found everywhere, that before and after Jesus mankind has been found by God; in him we have the criterion by which all finding and being found by God may be known as such and by which we can conceive this finding and being found as a truth of the eternal order. Many walk in the light of redemption, forgiveness, Resurrection; but that we see them walk, that we have eyes for them, we owe to one. In his light we see light. And that it is the Christ we have found in Jesus is confirmed because Jesus is the final word, which clarifies all the others and brings them to sharpest expression, of the faithfulness of God to which the law and the prophets bear witness." Brent Porterfield, Sermons.com Someone once calculated that the words “fear not” appear in the Bible 365 times, and that means that there is one “Fear not” for every day of the year! That makes a good story, but I tried to find the exact words in the electronic Bible on my computer, and could not find them even once! But I found similar ones, and I am sure that the meaning is there. And I need no “proof text” for every day of the year. All I need to hear is the words of Jesus which keep coming back to me again and again, “It is I. Do not be afraid.” That is enough. But that is everything! In the words of Charles Wesley, Jesus! the Name that charms our fears, That bids our sorrows cease; Tis music in the sinner’s ears, Tis life, and health, and peace. Donald B. Strobe, Collected Words, www.Sermons.com Dudley Weaver, Facing the Impossible Something in Jesus recognized that he could not meet the needs of so many people who were clamoring after him without at the same time denying who was called by God to be. In the wilderness, Satan tried to transform Jesus into a wonder-worker. Jesus refused. Now, Jesus has given bread and when the grateful crowds attempt to crown him king, Jesus withdraws (John 6:15). When the crowds find him the next day, Jesus rebukes them for caring only about their bellies (6:26). They ask for a sign from Jesus, perhaps hoping for another free meal. But Jesus refuses, and launches instead into his famous "Bread of Life Discourse," where he identifies himself with what they truly need. Many of his disciples say, "This is a hard saying," and many of them no longer follow Jesus after he stops giving them bread but now says that he is their "bread from heaven" (6:60, 66). Jesus refused to do for the crowds what they wanted, as if to do so would be a forsaking of his vocation. Jesus, What will you do for us? must be subsequent to the prior question, Jesus, Who are you and what is your mission? The great theologian, Karl Barth, said people come to church asking, "Is it true?" Tom Long feels that today, most people in the pew are simply asking themselves, "Will it work for me?" That's why I think this story is told to us. When will we ever learn? Christianity, following Jesus, is not merely another helpful means of helping us get what we want. Rather, following Jesus is the means whereby God gets what God wants. Jesus cannot be enlisted as another helpful therapeutic device to enable us to get what we want before we met Jesus. The Gospel implies that we do not know what we want, what we need before we meet Jesus. William Willimon, What Are You Looking For? Modern Day Miracles A 19-year-old girl by the name of Khun Paot, escaped the Khmer Rouge rule in Cambodia after an arduous journey with 100 others through miles of jungle, canals, mountains, and rivers. Standing between them and freedom were communist soldiers, the elements, and a stretch of jungle ground covered with thorns. Most of the escapees were barefoot or wore flimsy thongs. A midnight-like darkness hampered the struggling group as it crossed a valley between two high mountain ranges. "We could see absolutely nothing," Paot later told a missionary, Maxine Stewart. "We didn't even know where to step." Suddenly hundreds of fireflies swarmed into view. Their glow made enough light for the people to see the path. The refugees reached the next mountain by "firefly light," said Mrs. Stewart. After Paot was transferred to Kham Put refugee camp, she was invited to a Christian meeting. "I know that old man," she exclaimed at a picture on the wall of the chapel. "He is the one who led us and showed us the way to Thailand and freedom." She was pointing to a picture of Jesus. The Recorder, September 1979, p. 25. Sermon Opener - John 6:1-21 One Saturday Ken Erickson’s wife cleaned out leftovers from the refrigerator. She gave the one remaining portion of tortellini to their 6-year-old son, Jeremy. Their 8-year-old son, Matthew, also wanted some, so bickering ensued. After several unsuccessful attempts to mediate the dispute, Ken decided on a theological approach. Hoping to convince Jeremy to share his portion with Matthew, he said, “Jeremy, what would Jesus do in this situation?” Jeremy immediately responded, “Oh, Dad, He would just make more!” Yes, that is exactly what Jesus would do. Jesus would just make more! Would you agree with me that the biggest problem facing the church today is lack of faith? It’s not lack of resources. We think it is, but it’s not. The first question someone will ask when a necessary expense is brought up here at the church, “Where’s the money coming from?” But that’s the wrong question. The only question we should ask is: Is this God’s will for our church? We may not realize it, but we are rich in terms of both financial strength and talent. We only scratch the surface in our giving of either. What we lack is faith. We could feed the world’s hungry. Not by ourselves, of course, but with the help of other caring people. Remember, there are two billion Christians on this earth. We could heal conflicts between the nations of the world. We could give comfort to the lonely, freedom to the captive, hope to the desperate. We have the resources. All we lack is faith. What is it that Christ said? “…if you have faith as small as a mustard seed, you can say to this mountain, ‘Move from here to there’ and it will move. Nothing will be impossible for you.” (Matthew 17:20-21) The problem, dear friends, is not our lack of resources, but our lack of faith. In today’s lesson from the Gospel, Jesus is on a mountainside with his disciples. The Jewish Passover Feast is near. He looks up and sees a great crowd coming up the mountain. A small army really. Five thousand men, and an untold number of women and children. That’s kind of scary. Suppose we were having a church supper and ten thousand people showed up? We would be scurrying around, probably in a panic. Jesus didn’t panic. He turns to his disciple Philip and asks, “Where shall we buy bread for these people to eat?” The writer of John says that he asked this only to test Philip, for he already had in mind what he was going to do. Philip answered, “Eight months’ wages would not buy enough bread for each one to have a bite!” Another of his disciples, Andrew, Simon Peter’s brother, spoke up, “Here is a boy with five small barley loaves and two small fish, but how far will they go among so many?” As far as the disciples were concerned, the problem was resources. They didn’t have enough. Jesus knew better. What they had was not a resource problem, but a faith problem. 1. It Is Not a Resource Problem. 2. Living by Faith, Not by Fear. There is a tale of an old German schoolmaster who, when he entered his class of boys in the morning, used to remove his cap and bow ceremoniously to them. One asked him why he did this. His answer was: “You never know what one of these boys may some day become.” He was right—because one of them was Martin Luther. Andrew did not know what he was doing when he brought that lad to Jesus that day, but he was providing material for a miracle. We never know what possibilities we are releasing when we bring someone to Jesus. Jesus needs what we can bring him. It may not be much but he needs it. It may well be that the world is denied miracle after miracle and triumph after triumph because we will not bring to Jesus what we have and what we are. If we would lay ourselves on the altar of his service, there is no saying what he could do with us and through us. We may be sorry and embarrassed that we have not more to bring—and rightly so; but that is no reason for failing to bring what we have. Little is always much in the hands of Christ.

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