Pastor Mark

The Other Miracle of the 5,000 Fed

John 6:1-21

After this Jesus went to the other side of the Sea of Galilee, also called the Sea of Tiberias. A large crowd kept following him, because they saw the signs that he was doing for the sick. Jesus went up the mountain and sat down there with his disciples.

Now the Passover, the festival of the Jews, was near. When he looked up and saw a large crowd coming towards him, Jesus said to Philip, ‘Where are we to buy bread for these people to eat?’ He said this to test him, for he himself knew what he was going to do. Philip answered him, ‘Six months’ wages would not buy enough bread for each of them to get a little.’ One of his disciples, Andrew, Simon Peter’s brother, said to him, ‘There is a boy here who has five barley loaves and two fish. But what are they among so many people?’ Jesus said, ‘Make the people sit down.’ Now there was a great deal of grass in the place; so they sat down, about five thousand in all.

Then Jesus took the loaves, and when he had given thanks, he distributed them to those who were seated; so also the fish, as much as they wanted. When they were satisfied, he told his disciples, ‘Gather up the fragments left over, so that nothing may be lost.’ So they gathered them up, and from the fragments of the five barley loaves, left by those who had eaten, they filled twelve baskets. When the people saw the sign that he had done, they began to say, ‘This is indeed the prophet who is to come into the world.’

When Jesus realized that they were about to come and take him by force to make him king, he withdrew again to the mountain by himself. When evening came, his disciples went down to the sea, got into a boat, and started across the sea to Capernaum. It was now dark, and Jesus had not yet come to them. The sea became rough because a strong wind was blowing. When they had rowed about three or four miles, they saw Jesus walking on the sea and coming near the boat, and they were terrified. But he said to them, “It is I; do not be afraid.” Then they wanted to take him into the boat, and immediately the boat reached the land toward which they were going.


I have Haiti on the brain and in my prayers these days because of all the unrest and uncertainty there, following the assassination of their President a few weeks ago. Many of you have asked me what I know, which isn’t much, other than that things are as unsettled and uncertain as ever, but on-edge in a heightened way because of it all. Our friends in Fondwa are safe and stable at the moment, though the unrest and instability in the cities, like Port-au-Prince and Leogane, where our project managers from Zanmi Fondwa get their supplies, will likely make the work of building houses difficult for some time into the future.

And this reading about Jesus’ miracle makes me think about Haiti, too, because poverty and hunger are such a thing for our friends there – something most of us can’t imagine, don’t understand, and haven’t had to struggle with in such systemic, long-standing ways. (I got angrier than I should have when I had to wait in line for 15 minutes at Qdoba, on Thursday, before finding out they didn’t have any fajita veggies for my burrito. So when sat down moments later with this Gospel reading before me, I was reminded that the universe and the Holy Spirit have a funny way of reminding us about our First World problems.) All that to say, when I picture Jesus on that mountain in Galilee, in my mind’s eye, he might as well be on a hillside in Fondwa, surrounded by hungry people. But I’ll come back to Haiti in a minute.

This story of Jesus feeding the 5,000 might be his most popular moment, his greatest hit, if you will. It’s such a popular miracle it appears in all four Gospels. And, Matthew and Mark tell of another event altogether, where Jesus fed 4,000 in one sitting. So hungry people and food and making more of it were a big deal for Jesus and people who wanted us to know about God’s love and grace and abundance in the world.

But, I wondered this week if we like to marvel at the miracle of what Jesus does in today’s story precisely because it takes us out of the equation and gives God and that miracle all the credit. I can’t create something from nothing. You can’t turn crumbs into a banquet. None of us can give away what isn’t there in the first place.

In other words, I wonder if we marvel at the miracle of Jesus feeding the five thousand because then we can pretend all those people – the likes of you and me, the average Joes and Janes – had nothing to do with it. When really, all of that feeding and feasting might possibly have stopped before it ever started had those first followers kept eating, refused to be satisfied, or packed up and headed for home without care or concern for those who were still looking to eat.

Because, notice what happens. Jesus doesn’t ration that bread or those fish when he doles it out to those first in line. He simply gives thanks and delivers the goods. He gives them “as much as they wanted,” we are told, “and when they were satisfied,” …after they ate their fill …when they decided that they had had enough, THEN the disciples are told to gather up the leftovers, the crumbs, the scraps, and start to share it with the rest of the crowd.

Now, maybe all of that is meant to point to the size and scope of Jesus’ miracle – that even after they at their fill … even after they were satisfied and stuffed, there was still plenty to go around. But what if today’s miracle has as much to do with their willingness and ability to share that abundance, as it does with whatever stunt Jesus may have pulled.

 I wonder this because, again, all of it makes me think about our friends in Haiti. Some of you might remember Jamalyn Williamson, the CEO of Zanmi Fondwa, telling the story of her friend Jesula, caring for a gaggle of kids, which Jesula always seems to be doing. She has a houseful of her own (4-6 children, maybe more, I honestly can’t keep track) along with whatever handful of neighbor kids and cousins happen to be around at any given moment. Well, Jamalyn tells a beautiful story about Jesula cleverly, expertly, generously, lovingly slicing a single, solitary hard-boiled egg into slices thin, but substantial enough for a gathering of hungry children each to have something to eat. There might as well have been 5,000 of them. It was kind of a miracle.

Jesula isn’t Jesus, of course. So she could – and she would have been justified in the minds of most to – have gathered her own children into her own home and shared that single, solitary egg with her own, fewer mouths to feed, instead of sharing it with the neighborhood. But that doesn’t feel like a miracle, does it?

Now, I’m not saying Jesus didn’t do something magical, mysterious, or miraculous with that bread and those fish. I’m saying, it seems to me that those hungry people, the first in line, don’t seem to have filled their pockets or stuffed their satchels, which they could have done. They didn’t claim they deserved what was theirs because they got there first or were at the front of the line or earned their place at the table because they had pulled themselves up by their sandal straps. And Jesus doesn’t ask or require any of that, either, of course.

So, I’m inclined to believe that, like Jesula, something about their experience with Jesus made them aware of and mindful about and filled with compassion for those who hadn’t eaten, yet.

I’m inclined to believe that because it’s something else I see for myself in other beautiful ways – over and over again – whenever I’m in Haiti. Yes, when we share toys or food or, especially candy, with the kids at the orphanage, they act just like the kids behave when I pass out popsicles on a “Wild, Wacky, Wonderful Wednesday” evening at Cross of Grace. That is to say, they gather around and press in and act like animals – pushing, shoving, reaching, grabbing, begging – kids are kids are kids, after all.

But they share, beautifully, too, in Haiti, the poorest kids I’ve ever met. The older ones in that orphanage always make sure the younger ones get some of the goods. And, even when we show up with gifts and goodies for particular children from their sponsors here in the states, I see them, without fail, share some of whatever has their name on it with a sibling or a friend or a classmate or a neighbor in some way. That’s a miracle of love and generosity and grace that blows me away every time.

And that’s the opportunity and our challenge in this morning’s Gospel, if you ask me.

Let’s stop minimizing Jesus’ miracle until it becomes nothing more than a magic trick or some sleight of hand that only God can manage. Let’s acknowledge and be challenged by and let’s move in the direction of something much more faithful in all of this. Let’s see that Jesus is showing his disciples – and everyone on the hillside that day – and each of us, too – that we all have a hand in making this kind of miracle run its course.

Because what if the miracle isn’t in the multiplying, at all… in God’s knack for turning scraps into a smorgasbord… in stretching the leftovers… in creating something from nothing, even? What if the miracle of what happened on that hillside lies in the hands of the people who recognized that abundance in the first place, and then decided to share it?

It’s a miracle because that’s not the way the world works. That’s not our inclination enough of the time. It’s not capitalism, it’s the Kingdom of God. And it’s a miracle when it happens.

And it’s our calling as followers of Jesus and as people on the planet – to acknowledge the abundance we enjoy; to recognize that it all comes from God’s grace; to prayerfully, faithfully, humbly, gratefully discern when we are satisfied … when we have eaten our fill… what “enough” really is and when we’ve had it… “enough” food, “enough” money, “enough” resources, “enough” whatever… and then to share the abundance that will be left, the abundance that already is, if we’re honest, with our neighbor and with a wider world that is out there watching us eat our proverbial fill at the front of the line.

Wouldn’t that be a miracle?

Amen

Sabbath Stillness and Solitude

Mark 6:30-34, 53-56

The apostles gathered around Jesus, and told him all that they had done and taught. He said to them, ‘Come away to a deserted place all by yourselves and rest a while.’ For many were coming and going, and they had no leisure even to eat. And they went away in the boat to a deserted place by themselves. Now many saw them going and recognized them, and they hurried there on foot from all the towns and arrived ahead of them. As he went ashore, he saw a great crowd; and he had compassion for them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd; and he began to teach them many things.

When they had crossed over, they came to land at Genessaret and moored the boat. When they got out of the boat, people at once recognized Jesus and rushed about that region and began to bring the sick on mats to wherever they heard that he was. And wherever he went, into villages or cities or farms, they laid the sick in the marketplaces and begged him that they might touch even the fringe of his cloak; and all who touched it were healed.


It didn’t used to be this way, but when I read this bit of Scripture nowadays, I’m not so impressed by the crowds. I’m not drawn to the way they recognized Jesus or how they chased him around Galilee, like a rock star. I’m not even moved by his compassion for those crowds or for the sick people he healed or even for the great faith it takes to believe touching his cloak would work a miracle, let alone that those sorts of miracles apparently happened. For good or ill, we’ve come to expect that from Jesus, right?

So, what gets my attention these days is how it seems like, maybe, Jesus was trying to avoid all of that some of the time.

See, the disciples show up – sometime after he’s sent them out to share the good news and heal diseases and cast out demons and whatnot – and they start to tell Jesus all about their exploits. And I imagine they’re more than a little proud and excited about all they’ve been up to. I wouldn’t be surprised if these former fishermen had traded one sort of “big fish” story for another, if you know what I mean. Like, what used to be a competition about who caught and sold more or bigger fish out on the lake, now had likely become a chance to one-up each other about who’d converted the greatest number of new believers; or who had cast out the most demons; or who had forgiven the most sinful sinner; or who had healed the grossest case of leprosy, or whatever.

Now, I’m sure Jesus was proud of his protégés. I imagine he was pleased with their progress, if their reports were true. I suspect he was impressed with their enthusiasm and their faith and all of their hard work. But – again – what gets my attention these days is that Jesus tells the disciples to stop; to step away from all of that; to go to a deserted place, by themselves, and rest for awhile. And I think maybe Jesus does this because he has as much compassion for his closest friends and followers, as he does for all of those crowds, who were like sheep without a shepherd, looking to be healed.

And the truth is, Jesus’ disciples weren’t any different, or better, or worse, than the crowds who followed them around. They needed healing, too. And the same is true for you and me. We are no different, or better, or worse, than those with whom we live our lives of faith out there in the world.

And sometimes we need to step away from all we’re up to in order to remember and to recognize and to receive the rest we need and that God longs for us to experience. Sometimes we need to stop looking outside of ourselves at the needs surrounding us and start looking in the mirror for the needs that are ours. Sometimes we need to be quiet and still long enough to hear something other than our own voices or the noise of the world. Sometimes we need to listen for what God has to say about what we need most, rather than what the world out there is trying to convince us is so important.

And that’s hard, right – the stillness and the solitude and the listening, I mean? I was reminded about it at our last “Wild, Wacky, Wonderful Wednesday,” with the kids. I did my best to talk with them about prayer and meditation. And we talked about the difference between praying – where we do all the talking and ask God for all the things we’d like God’s help with – and meditation – where we sit still and be quiet and listen for what God might be trying to tell us. Some of the kids got it and played along – or at least pretended to. But several others hated it. I know because they told me so … out loud … in front of the group! They couldn’t do it. They couldn’t stand it. Wouldn’t do it. And it made them want to go home.

Which is as funny as it is frustrating. And it’s not unique to kids. I’ve had adults tell me the same thing – that it’s hard, frustrating, impossible, even, to be still and quiet in prayer and meditation for too long. And I struggle to make time for it, too, to be honest.

So, I think this Gospel is a perfectly-timed message for us – not just because it’s still summer and those of us governed by the school calendar have a couple of weeks left before another school year – and all that that means. But this is good timing for all of us as we continue to wonder about what Fall will look like post-pandemic – out there in the world and in our lives together at Cross of Grace.

I thought of something I’ve seen Social Worker and Professor, Brene Brown, get credit for saying – that we shouldn’t long so much for a return to whatever “normal” was just for the sake of it. She says, “Normal never was. Our pre-corona existence was not normal other than [that] we normalized greed, inequality, exhaustion, depletion, extraction, disconnection, confusion, rage, hoarding, hate, and lack. We should not long to return, my friends. We are being given the opportunity to stitch a new garment. One that fits all of humanity and nature.”

Now all of that doesn’t apply to all of us. But it begs the question for me. “What will ‘normal’ be for us?”

Will we fill our schedules, calendars, and agendas with all of the things that were there before – just because? Have we already started to do that – and why? Or will we be thoughtful and deliberate and faithful about engaging what matters? Will we say “yes” to what does matter? And might we practice saying “no” to what doesn’t? Might we schedule more time away – to stop – in deserted places, by ourselves to pray and listen and plan to live more deliberately? And will we be kind and gracious, forgiving and compassionate toward those who have the courage and faith to say no – or to do differently – in the days to come?

I hope so. Because I think this is what Jesus is calling his disciples to this morning. And by extension, of course, this is our call as followers of Jesus, just the same.

What time apart and time away, in deserted places, means to do for us is to give us rest and refreshment, yes. It allows us to stop and relax. It replenishes our energy and restores our enthusiasm and builds our strength and increases our stamina. Personally, it has a knack for getting my creative juices flowing in new ways. All of this is called Sabbath, remember, and it’s one of God’s Top Ten commandments. And when we get it right, it forces us to stop relying on ourselves and on our own accomplishments, and reminds us to rely on God more often, instead.

And this takes faith, because we have to let God be God in those moments when we dare to stop doing, producing, accomplishing, proving and distracting ourselves with all we have on our respective agendas. And it takes humility because it reminds us that our value, as far as God is concerned, comes from simply being, merely existing – nothing more and nothing less – and that is a lesson in grace, for sure.

And when we practice that kind of Sabbath well… when we put away our busy schedules and our big fish stories (unless they actually involve some fishing, I suppose) and the pride that goes along with them… when we stop filling our calendars and our schedules and our lists of things to do… we will start to see that value and that worth and that kind of grace in the mirror, for ourselves, apart from our ability to “do” anything about it.

And when we learn to see it in the mirror, we’ll begin to see it in the world – in friends, family, neighbors and more. And then we might normalize – and prioritize – things like grace and patience, humility and each other, instead of what was “normal” before. And when that happens, our compassion will be stirred, like Jesus’ was way back when. And we will begin to live and move and breathe and serve in the world, with joy, more meaningfully, beside still waters, perhaps, and mindful of our place in the midst of what all belongs to God, and resting assured in God’s grace to care for every bit of it – and even for us, in the end.

Amen