In a discussion we got hung up on a question about a little unknown boy. His 
unknown mother had baked him five little barley loaves, and cooked two small 
fishes, all to be his lunch. Whatever fun outing he had planned for himself 
that day, he changed his plans and went instead to hear Jesus preach. (That 
showed some faith, didn’t it?) At the meeting, his interest was such that he 
came down near the front and apparently mingled with the Twelve. Hungry late in 
the day, he wanted to eat his lunch as much as anybody else, but he heard Jesus 
tell the Twelve to feed the people, 5000. He heard the apostles bewail their 
lack of food, and childlike in his gladsome enthusiasm told Andrew that he 
would give his lunch to Jesus. (That showed a commendable denial of self for a 
hungry boy, didn’t it? Was he motivated by the love of Christ? Was he helping 
Jesus, or only as a 2-year old “helps” you sweep the floor?) See John 6:1-11.

 

Jesus accepted the little boy’s sacrifice, thanked His Father for the pitifully 
little gift in His hands, prayed for His blessing upon it, and forthwith fed 
the 5000 with its multiplied bounty.

 

Now for the question: did He NEED that little boy’s sacrificial lunch? If the 
child had refused to give it, could Jesus have fed that multitude?

 

Thereupon in our discussion, we split. Most said, “Yes, He could have brought 
manna down from heaven!” I asked, “Suppose we individually refuse to do our 
duty in telling the world the gospel message, can the Lord use someone else?” 
“Yes,” was the immediate response; “He’ll use the angels; they’ll finish the 
work!”

 

To me that sounded like a dangerous cop-out. Why bother to answer the Holy 
Spirit’s convictions of duty? Reach for your remote and flip on your TV. The 
angels will finish the work!

 

I maintained that the Lord Jesus needed that little boy’s gift of his lunch. 
Yes, He COULD have brought down manna from heaven, but He WOULD NOT any more 
than He could change those stones in the wilderness into bread (Matt. 4). I 
believe that little boy was tremendously important that day. Jesus really did 
need Him. (The conclusion of course is, He really needs you, too; if you cop 
out, someone will be lost.) Am I wrong??



--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Deaf-Blind Inspirational Life Group" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/DBILG?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to