Tag: Stewardship

He Just Wants Your Lunch

I have a confession. I used to throw breadcrumbs at the altar.

Not metaphorically, literally. During my vicarage, I was assigned a stewardship sermon and I showed up with a baguette, broke off pieces representing every budget line in a family’s life. By the end I had a pile of crumbs. And I threw them at the altar table to make the point. The altar guild nearly staged a walkout.

The point I was trying to make, maybe in a questionable way, was the same point John 6 makes infinitely better. We give Jesus the crumbs and act surprised when he does something miraculous with them.

The Setup Nobody Talks About

To understand John 6, you have to read Mark 6 first. Because John doesn’t give you the backstory. He just drops you into the miracle. Mark tells you what came right before it.

Three things happened to Jesus immediately before he fed 10,000 people on a hillside:

He was rejected in his hometown. The people who watched him grow up couldn’t reconcile the carpenter’s son with the one doing miracles. A prophet without honor.

He sent his disciples out with nothing. No bag. No money. No food. Total dependence. They came back probably more confused than when they left.

His cousin and dear friend was beheaded. John the Baptist was murdered for standing up for what was right. And Jesus was grieving.

He was running on empty. And then approximately 10,000 hungry people showed up.

Why John Mentions the Passover

John inserts what looks like a throwaway line: “the Passover, the feast of the Jews, was at hand.” But that’s not a throwaway. John never wastes words.

He’s pointing us back to the original scarcity moment. Israel in Egypt, oppressed and underfed, never quite enough. And then the shift to the wilderness, where they asked out loud: can God set a table in the desert?

The answer then was manna. Bread from heaven. The answer on that hillside was 10,000 fed with a kid’s lunch. The answer for you today is similar.

John is threading the needle from Exodus to this hillside to right now. Every scarcity moment in the story of God’s people has the same resolution. He provides, and he provides in excess.

The Lunch Nobody Wanted to Give

Philip ran the math. A year’s wages couldn’t cover this crowd. The disciples went looking for food among 10,000 people and came back with a little boy’s lunch.

Barley loaves were the bread of the poor. Bait fish. Not the fish you eat, the fish you use to catch the fish you eat. The absolute bottom of the food chain.

And Jesus said: thank you, Father. This is so much.

I’ve been thinking about that response all week. He received the most insufficient offering imaginable and his first instinct was gratitude. Not calculation. Not problem-solving. Gratitude. Because he already knew what he was going to do with it.

The Widow’s Mite and the Boy’s Lunch

Jesus has a consistent pattern in Scripture. He watches what everyone else dismisses as insufficient and calls it more than enough.

The widow drops one small coin in the treasury. The crowd drops bags that clang. Jesus tells his disciples she gave more than all of them because she gave everything she had.

The little boy hands over five loaves and two fish. The disciples are embarrassed to even present it. But Jesus uses it and is able to feed a city.

Jesus can do immensely more with a faithfully given crumb than he can with a hoarded chunk of bread.

Why 12 Baskets?

When everyone had eaten their fill, Jesus said: gather up the fragments so nothing is lost. And they were able to fill 12 baskets.

John is precise with that number because details matter to him. Twelve tribes. Twelve apostles. Twelve foundations under the New Jerusalem. Twelve gates. The 144,000 – twelve times twelve times a thousand – representing all of God’s people across all time.

Twelve baskets isn’t a headcount. It’s a declaration. God provides for all his people, in every generation, beyond the moment that needed it, with enough left over to take home and give away.

What’s Your Lunch?

We all have one. Something we’re holding in our hands that we’ve already decided is not enough. Not enough talent, not enough money, not enough time, not enough faith, not enough whatever it is you feel most deficient in today.

The miracle of John 6 isn’t really about bread. It’s about what happens when you hand over the not-enough and let Jesus be the one who does the math.

Jesus doesn’t need your abundance. He just wants your lunch.

So what are you holding back?

What’s the lunch in your life right now. You know, that thing you’re holding back because you’ve already decided it’s not enough?

A Gift From My Children

Every year, as they were growing up, my children would give me something just from them for Christmas or my birthday. These gifts ranged from socks to ties to little things to put on my desk in my office or even a tool they wanted to learn how to use. Each of them were uniquely special gifts, but each of those gifts had something in common.

When I opened these gifts in front of them, my children smiled with anticipation as they eagerly awaited my reaction. To them it was the perfect gift. To them it was something special and reminded them of me and hopefully would remind me of them. I actually still have most of the things they’ve given me through the years.

But each of those gifts were purchased the same way. Until my children were old enough to have a job and earn their own money, those gifts were purchased with my money! I know that some of these gifts were my children’s idea, but many of them were actually something my wife told them I would like. She took them to the store. She told them that daddy would like this item. She put our bank card in the card reader. She purchased them with money that we made from our jobs.

My kids then took those gifts and gave them to me as if they bought them! The audacity. The guts. How could they possibly claim that these gifts are from them when it’s obvious they didn’t buy them or even really pick them out?

Ok so I’m not really upset about this. Just using it as an illustration. It’s kind of like C.S. Lewis in his work Mere Christianity where he describes our lives in Christ. We approach God often times giving him a gift of some sort and claiming it’s from us. I mean we do this with our time and talents and even our finances. We come into worship or volunteerism and think in our minds that somehow we’re giving him something great. We put our offering in the basket thing on a Sunday and act as if we just did God a favor.

It’s like my kids giving me a gift that was purchased with my own money! Everything we have in life is a gift from God. Our time is already His. Our possessions wouldn’t be in our possession if He didn’t give them to us in some fashion. Our abilities that we use to serve others aren’t really ours. He gave us those abilities when He knit us together in our mother’s womb.

You see I love each and every one of those gifts from my kids. Not because they bought it with their own money because they didn’t. I love those gifts because of the excitement I saw in their eyes when they gave. I love those gifts because they represent my children’s love for me. The same is true with our lives given back to God. The amount isn’t the point. The style or type of gift isn’t the point. It’s the joy in our hearts and the excitement over the giving that’s the meaningful part of giving.

So give the gifts. Do it with joy. Don’t hold back. Even if you’re giving with someone else’s money. It’s more about the heart and why you’re giving than how much you give (and this isn’t just about material things either, it’s also about your time and energy and even how you invest in relationships).

Be Rich: Margin

This Sunday we start a new series at Living Word Galena titled Be Rich. This series is all about looking at our lives with a different set of lenses. This series isn’t only about finances, although admittedly there is a financial aspect to our being rich. We’re also looking at time and energy and reflection. How do you spend your life? That’s the real question we’re addressing over the next several weeks.  Continue reading

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