“You Give Them Something To Eat”
…but the crowds learned about it and
followed him. He welcomed them and spoke to them about the kingdom of God,and healed those who needed
healing.
Late in the afternoon the Twelve came to him and
said, “Send the crowd away so they can go to the surrounding villages and
countryside and find food and lodging, because we are in a remote place here.”
He replied, “You give them something to eat.”
They
answered, “We have only five loaves of bread and two fish—unless we go and buy
food for all this crowd.” (About five
thousand men were there.)
But
he said to his disciples, “Have them sit down in groups of about
fifty each.” The disciples
did so, and everyone sat down. Taking the five loaves and the
two fish and looking up to heaven, he gave thanks and broke them. Then he gave
them to the disciples to distribute to the people. They all ate
and were satisfied, and the disciples picked up twelve basketfuls of broken
pieces that were left over.
Luke
9:11-17
We met every Thursday after he lost
his wife in a car accident. Sometimes he came with questions to which no
answers exist; sometimes he came with memories he wanted to relive. Over time,
he accepted that even though the accident was a result of the brokenness in our
world, God could work in the midst of it. A few years
later, he taught a class at our church about grief and how to lament well.
Soon, he became our go-to guide for people experiencing loss. Sometimes it’s
when we don’t feel like we have anything to offer that God takes our “not
enough” and makes it “more than enough.”
Jesus told His disciples to give the
people something to eat. They’d protested that there was nothing to give; Jesus
multiplied their meager supplies and then turned back to the disciples and gave
them the bread, as if to say, “I meant it: You give them something to eat!” (Luke 9:13–16). Christ will do the
miraculous, but He often chooses to involve us.
Jesus says to us, “Place who you are
and what you have in My hands. Your broken life. Your story. Your frailty and
your failure, your pain and your suffering. Put it in My hands. You’ll be
surprised what I can do with it.” Jesus knows that out of our emptiness, He can
bring fullness. Out of our weakness, He can reveal His strength.
What brokenness have you
experienced? What would it look like to offer that experience to Jesus and ask
Him to bring life to others from it?
Dear Jesus,
take my “not enough” and make it “more than enough.” Take my pain, my failure,
and my frailty, and make it something more.
Our
Daily Bread – March 10, 2020