Advent

"Bread from Heaven and Something to Chew On" – John 6:25-35

John 6:25-35

25 When they found him on the other side of the sea, they said to him, "Rabbi, when did you come here?" 26 Jesus answered them, "Very truly, I tell you, you are looking for me, not because you saw signs, but because you ate your fill of the loaves. 27 Do not work for the food that perishes, but for the food that endures for eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you. For it is on him that God the Father has set his seal." 28 Then they said to him, "What must we do to perform the works of God?" 29 Jesus answered them, "This is the work of God, that you believe in him whom he has sent." 30 So they said to him, "What sign are you going to give us then, so that we may see it and believe you? What work are you performing? 31 Our ancestors ate the manna in the wilderness; as it is written, "He gave them bread from heaven to eat.' " 32 Then Jesus said to them, "Very truly, I tell you, it was not Moses who gave you the bread from heaven, but it is my Father who gives you the true bread from heaven. 33 For the bread of God is that which comes down from heaven and gives life to the world." 34 They said to him, "Sir, give us this bread always." 35 Jesus said to them, "I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never be hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.


I feel like I’m supposed to wax theological about all of this “bread from heaven” stuff in today’s Gospel – about the difference between the worldly bread that perishes and spiritual bread that endures for eternal life. And I plan to. And I hope it comes together when I do.

But first, instead, I want to talk about these sad saps – these people who we’ve heard were like sheep without a shepherd – who keep chasing Jesus around Galilee. I feel bad for them because I think they really may have been hungry people – for food of the worldly sort, I mean. Manna. Bread. Cheese and crackers. Whatever. Something they could chew on and swallow and from which they could gain some serious physical satisfaction and nourishment.

See, last week we heard about the feeding of the 5,000, where Jesus fed all those people with just five loaves of bread and two fish, which he got from some boy’s lunch. And I don’t think it’s a coincidence that no one else had a lunch with them that day. Jesus wasn’t preaching and teaching and healing the rich and the powerful, after all.

And I get that today’s story follows all of that, and that that mass feeding is sort of Jesus’ point: that these people had just seen him work that miracle; that they had had their fill, but were hungry again; that that’s really why they were looking for Jesus – so that they could get their hands on more of that grub.

So, these poor people come off like a pack of lost puppies, really. You know, the ones you’re never supposed to feed because they’ll just keep coming back for more? Well, I’ve always been a sucker for a lost puppy.

And that’s because they really are hungry. They really are in need. They may be pathetic, pitiable, and persistent – and annoying because of it, even – but who can blame them? The reason they keep coming back for more – even when they’re bellies have just been filled – is because they’re never sure where or when or if they’ll ever find food again.

And I can’t help but wonder if this isn’t what was up with the people who followed Jesus around back in the day. And, frankly, I can’t help but wonder if Jesus’ words about “bread from heaven” and “the bread of life” and “working for the food that endures for eternal life vs. working for food that perishes” sounded like a bunch of nonsense to those people, if their bellies really were growling – for real food… from the kitchen… not for this baloney that comes down from heaven.

And so, maybe it’s because I worked on today’s message while eating lunch at Q’doba  and then breakfast at the new McDonald’s in town, but I couldn’t help wondering again about the privileged position most of us hold as people on the planet. From what I know and can tell about most of us here, our needs get met regularly enough. We have enough. We have our fill, most of us – of food and water and shelter and other basic needs. And we are able to hear Jesus’ words about ‘bread from heaven,’ and ‘food that endures for eternal life,’ and ‘the bread of God that comes down to give life to the world’ – from a spiritual perspective that gives us hope in the face of our struggles and suffering, doubts and despair, whatever.

But I think we forget, too much of the time, that it’s a unique privilege and luxury to hear these messages and metaphors about food and bread and then make our intuitive leaps to the spiritual things of God, as Jesus intends.

We are in a position to eat the bread and drink the wine of Holy Communion and let it fill us in a faithful, spiritual sense, because our bodily, physical needs are met in so many other ways. But that simply isn’t the case for too many people in the world. And that’s a fact we so easily ignore; dismiss; avoid hearing; neglect to address, whatever.

This is Psychology 101 stuff, after all. When someone is hungry – unable to consume enough of the right kinds of calories – their brains and bodies simply can’t function in order to work; or look for a job; or go to school; or do their homework; or take care of their children; or stay out of the hospital; or make it to church; or ask for help.

So this Gospel seems like an invitation, this time around, to be – or to find and share – real bread for the sake of the world. What if all we’re supposed to hear and do in response to this story is more find ways to feed hungry people? What if all we’re called to today is to love one another the way God has first loved us – by feeding us enough… plenty… more than we need, in too many instances – so that once their physical needs have been fed, their spirits might be nourished, just the same?

868 million people in the world are hungry – that’s 1 out of every 8 people.

50 million people, in the United States alone, are food insecure. (They’re not sure when, or where, or if they’ll eat again.)

Every 3.6 seconds someone dies of hunger in the world. And 75% of them are children.

I read an article last week that said France wastes something like 55 pounds of food per person, every year, to the tune of 20 billion Euros. In the UK, 12 million tons of food are wasted every year. And, not to be undone of course, 30% of food in the U.S. is wasted, too, which totals something like $165 billion dollars in unused food, right in our own backyard.

And again, 1 in 8 people are hungry in the world. And I’ve gained 10 pounds since my trip to Haiti in June, and I take medicine to control my cholesterol, which has a lot to do with the kind of food I put into my body, and so on and so forth… It’s shameful – sinful, even – plain and simple.

We are in a unique, blessed, gracious, privileged position as God’s people on the planet. And I can’t help but think – and give thanks because – our privilege is meant to put us to work. We can use our abundance to share money and meals with ministries like the Agape Alliance, which we’ll hear more about today. We can use our abundance to give away food and gift cards to people in our community through the food pantry. We can use the luxury of our abundance to make choices that are better for ourselves and that will share bread – real bread and water; real food and drink; real fuel and sustenance and nourishment – with God’s children whose lives really will be transformed because of it.

And once there is food in someone’s belly…once a worldly, physical need for nourishment is met…hope might be born; new life may take root; second chances may surface. And then what God promises, in Jesus, will be realized. And all of God’s children can stop working for food that perishes…stop struggling for life…can begin working for food that promises eternity, and unending joy, and amazing grace in this life and the next.

Amen

"Give More. Worship Fully." - Matthew 2:1-3, 8-11

Matthew 2:1-3, 8-11

In the time of King Herod, after Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea, wise men from the East came to Jerusalem, asking,'Where is the child who was been born king of the Jews? For we observed his star at its rising, and have come to pay him homage.' When King Herod heard this, he was frightened and all Jerusalem with him. Then he sent them to Bethlehem, saying, 'God and search diligently for the child; and when you have found him, bring me word sot hat I may also go and pay him homage.' When they had heard the king, they set out; and there, ahead of them, went the star that they had seen at its rising, until it stopped over the place where the child was. When they saw that the star had stopped, they were overwhelmed with joy. On entering the house, they saw the child with Mary his mother; and they knelt down and paid him homage. Then, opening their treasure chests, they offered him gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh.


Well, Pastor Aaron and I decided before we got into this Advent Conspiracy series that, since we only have three mid-week services, we’d focus on three of the four themes – “Spend Less,” “Give More,” and “Love All”. We thought we’d forego the other theme, “Worship Fully,” by virtue of the fact that we live that out by gathering for so much worship these days – on Sundays and midweek Wednesdays and for special services, like Blue Christmas and Christmas Eve. We worship pretty fully around here from one year to the next, during Advent.

But Pastor Aaron did such a good job last Wednesday encouraging us to “Spend Less,” and he also gave us some good ideas about ways to “Give More,” which was to be my topic for tonight. So I wondered what else there was left to say about that that would be new or different or better for tonight. So as I stewed about all of this over the course of the past week, I noticed something that changed my plan.

Because I was spinning these themes around in my head – “Give More.” And “Worship Fully.”  “Give More.” “Worship Fully.”  What if we “Give more worshipfully?” Get it? What would happen if we approached the whole gift-giving enterprise and exercise of Christmas, from a place of worship – whether we’re preparing gifts for our first-born child or for our great Aunt Betsy; whether buying for our best friend or for our children’s school bus driver; whether we’re shopping for our spouse or for that silly secret-Santa gift we have to get for the office Christmas party?

What if, in all of it, we could “give more worshipfully,” like the wise men, those magi, who came looking for Jesus; following a star; bearing gifts; longing to pay the king homage in a holy, humble, worship-filled way, so many years ago? What if our Christmas – and all of its gift-giving – looked more like that?

See, those wise men came presenting gifts, not as a birthday surprise for the baby Jesus. Not as a baby shower. Not as uncles-so-and-so trying to out-do one another with the latest, greatest thing from the Toys-R-Us catalog. They came bearing gifts because they were looking to find a King. And back in the day, when you entered into the presence of a King, you were expected to bring a gift – out of respect; out of reverence; perhaps with some measure of gratitude and humility.

So, if we think about what Christmas morning looks like in most of our homes, it may look like a birthday party. We may even acknowledge that it’s Jesus’ big day somehow. But when was the last child’s birthday party you went to where everyone got a gift except for the birthday boy? And isn’t that what most of our living rooms look like on Christmas morning? The gifts get piled up and passed around, but how many of us have a pile of presents for Jesus?

Okay, maybe there’s a way to wrap some gifts up for Jesus – and that would be a really great lesson and tradition to begin, perhaps – but that’s not exactly what I’m getting at. I think we can still give gifts AND I think we can give wisely and faithfully and with Jesus at the center of what we offer. I mean there are ways to do good and to share grace in our giving. There really are ways to “give more worshipfully” – to include Jesus in the mix – and I think some of this can be as practical and as holy as we’re willing to let it be.

There are companies like TOMS with what they call their “One for One” business model.  Buy a pair of shoes from TOMS and someone in need, somewhere else in the world, gets a pair of shoes themselves. They do it with eyeware, too. Buy a pair of sunglasses from TOMS and they’ll help restore the sight of someone in need, somewhere on the planet. You get cool shades and someone else gets to see? How great and holy is that? And they’ve just gotten into the coffee business, too, so every bag of coffee you by from TOMS Roasting Company, provides a week’s worth of clean drinking water for someone in need. That’s GIVING WORSHIPFULLY, if you ask me, and it’s a way to include Jesus on your shopping list. (Shop at TOMS here.)

Of course, there are ways to do that closer to home, too. Give the Fair Trade coffee, tea and chocolate we sell here because it helps farmers and families make a living they wouldn’t otherwise be able to sustain.  (Learn more about Lutheran World Relief and their Fair Trade project.) Take a tag from the tree in the entry and get it back here by next week so someone who might not otherwise be able to, will have a better kind of Christmas this time around. Whatever offering you leave on these Wednesday nights we’ll use to throw the party we’re planning for foster families from Hancock County next Friday.

There are lots of ways to do this – to keep Jesus on, or to add Jesus to our Christmas shopping list, I mean – so that we’re not celebrating his birthday without including him in the fun.

Here’s one more.  What if we did some math and tithed our Christmas gift-giving and meal-preparing budgets in order to do something for Jesus?

Statistics are all over the map about this, of course, but I saw that, a couple of years ago, the average parent spent $271 per child on Christmas gifts. That same year, 1 in 10 families spent $500 per child on Christmas gifts. That may or may not surprise you. That may or may not be a reality in your house. I’m not judging it either way, necessarily. But it did make me wonder, if those are the numbers for parents, what in the world must the numbers look like for all of you offspring-spoiling grandparents out there?! (You know who you are!) And what difference could a tithe of that kind of money do for the sake of Jesus in the world?

What if we totaled up all the money we will spend this Christmas and gave 10% of it back to God somehow? It sounds so practical, but it’s holy, too, don’t you think? Hard, perhaps. A whole new way of doing Christmas for many of us. But holy, for sure. A mere 10% for the guest of honor? It sort of seems like a no-brainer.

And I don’t mind suggesting you could check out the new, updated “Wish List” I put together just for the occasion. (It’s full of things we could use around here for the sake of our ministry.) Or know that we could use your “Christmas tithe” for the ministry of our General Fund. Or you could sponsor a kid in Fondwa, Haiti. (You can do that through Family Health Ministries or by talking to Pastor Mark.) Or help to re-stock our food pantry, after a busy holiday season.

And what if we really did wrap those gifts and put them under the tree? And what if we really did open them before or after we open up all the other loot and booty that's ours on Christmas morning – just for a little perspective?

The bottom line here is that if we “Give More Worshipfully,” we might do Christmas differently. We may spend more. It may mean we’ll spend less. I don’t know what it might mean for you or your family. But I believe it will help us to spend what is right. I have to believe we’ll spend less on things that don’t matter all that much in the long run. I think we’ll buy more wisely. I imagine we’ll invest in things and in people and in places that make our giving more meaningful – for us and for those we love.

And I believe that if worship is at the heart of how and what we give at Christmas, we’ll honor God, like those wise men did so long ago. And, ultimately then, God’s grace will be revealed to us and through us and for the world in ways that really are what Christmas – and the coming of Jesus – are supposed to be all about.

Amen