Intro
When we think about Jesus feeding the multitude, in this case, a crowd of 
4,000, we normally pay little attention to the setting.  We stand amazed by 
what Jesus did.  He multiplied a minute amount of bread and fish to feed an 
enormous crowd.  But that’s just the obvious part.  If you look at the setting, 
you find there’s much more taking place!

This crowd of 4,000 had been following Jesus for three days.  His words and 
teaching had so captivated their hearts and minds that they forgot about their 
stomachs.  They followed Jesus deeper and deeper into the wilderness, hanging 
on His every word that He spoke.  Finally, famished and weak, in such a 
far-removed and desolate place, they had no place to go and get food to stay 
alive.

Main Body
Yet, the conditions were even more precarious than that.  They no longer had 
the strength within them to walk a couple of days to get the food they needed.  
It’s not that they were just hungry; they were in danger of starving to death!  
So, Jesus’ miracle of feeding them wasn’t simply to show His power.  Jesus 
showed, through His miracle, how He would put a stop to death by feeding His 
flock what they would need to live.

Now, at one time or another, we’ve all been so caught up in what we were doing 
that we forgot to eat lunch.  But how long did it take until your stomach 
reminded you?  A few hours are the most we ever make it.  If we even go a day 
without any food, we feel as if we are starving to death, even though we are 
not.

How did these people stay so distracted for three days?  How did 4,000 people 
all fail to realize they were going so far into the wilderness that they 
wouldn’t have enough food to support life?  This happened because the Lord was 
at work on them.  Like the Pied Piper, our Lord led them there--on purpose.  He 
brought them along by the joy and peace that only His Word can give.  He 
seduced them with theology, the teachings of God.

Jesus had arranged these events to happen.  Jesus didn’t have to do this.  He 
could have sent the crowd home before they became famished.  He could have sent 
some of them to get supplies along the way.  But that’s not what Jesus did.

Instead, Jesus preached eternal truths that transcended the moment.  The people 
left this world for the kingdom of God.  They forgot themselves and their 
circumstances.  The vision of angels and archangels and all the company of 
heaven had captured their hearts.  They were unaware of the drums of death, 
beating louder all around them.  For they were captured and pulled in by the 
words of Christ.

So there was the crowd of 4,000, famished in the wilderness, lacking the food 
they needed.  They suddenly became aware of their dire need.  But it was too 
late.  There was nowhere to buy food.  It was then the disciples asked Jesus, 
“Where in this desolate place can anyone get enough bread to feed these 
people?”  It was a rhetorical question.  They didn’t expect an answer.  It was 
like asking, “How can we end world hunger?”  It’s impossible.  These people 
can’t all be fed.

Jesus doesn’t even answer the question.  He doesn’t explain.  He quietly 
performs His miracle.  He simply gathers the meager supplies they have--seven 
loaves!  Our Lord Jesus Christ, on the same night in which He was preaching in 
the wilderness, took bread.  And when He had given thanks, He broke it and gave 
it to the disciples and said, “Give this to them.  This bread feeds those in 
the wilderness.”  In the same way also, He took a few small fish, and when He 
had given thanks, He gave it to them saying, “Give this to them.”  So they did.

The disciples took the seven loaves and the few small fish, which the Lord had 
blessed.  The fish and bread looked no different.  There was no outward change. 
 Their reason and senses saw nothing remarkable.  But the disciples distributed 
the food anyway, because that’s what Jesus said to do.

Every time the disciples reached to get the food that Jesus had blessed, 
another piece was there.  By Jesus’ own word, bread and fish abounded for 4,000 
to eat and have their fill.  He fed the crowd in the desolate wilderness, the 
same wilderness that had them all collapsing on the doorstep of death.  Jesus 
had put a stop to death.

When the crowd all had their fill, the disciples then collected the fragments 
and filled seven large baskets.  For we cannot contain the bounty of the Lord.  
His mercy and generosity are far greater than our needs, as is His love--far 
greater than our sins!  Then our Lord lifted His hands over them and said, 
“Depart in peace.”  He sent them on their way, back into the world, to home and 
neighbor.

But Jesus didn’t stop there.  He continued to travel the road prepared for Him 
by His wild-looking, locust-eating cousin, John the Baptizer.  Jesus went from 
wilderness to wilderness, with no place to lay His head, until He put it down 
outside the city of Jerusalem, on the stony slope of death.

Unlike the crowd whom Jesus fed, no one will provide for Him.  Instead, He will 
give Himself as Bread to satisfy the souls of men.  He will be skewered on the 
cross, baked over the coals of hell, until the fire burns itself out and death 
meets its downfall.  And then, death will be no more.  Now, no more needs to be 
done.  For sin, death, and Hell, accusation and guilt, are finally defeated, 
finished, and gone.

Order finally comes to the desolate wilderness.  Like the wilderness, which had 
become the place of death for the crowd except for Jesus’ intervention, the 
place of the crucifixion death now becomes the place of God’s enduring mercy.  
This hill of death, Calvary, now orders our days and directs our attention.  
For on this hill, death finally met its match and died its own death.

Jesus Christ, our Lord, has died, once for all.  Never again will He die.  The 
enemy is done.  Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews, is risen from the 
dead.  The devil’s dominion over us is no more.  Never again will we face our 
accuser.  Never again will the chains of hell shackle us.

Yet, even if we find ourselves in the desolate wilderness, subject to evil, 
weak and fainting, we will be safe, free, and loved by God in Christ Jesus.  
Death lies dead in the wilderness place outside Jerusalem, a victim of its own 
hungering greed.  The accuser’s mouth is stopped, emptied of all its power and 
might.

That’s the point of Jesus’ miraculous feeding in the wilderness.  The Lord led 
the multitude into the wilderness to pull back a corner of the curtain and 
reveal the coming death of death.

Yes, it’s true, on this side of heaven, none of us is ever more than a 
missed-heartbeat away from death.  Our bodies can fail for thousands of 
reasons, without warning, because of genetics, a slip on the stairs, or 
something in our food or water.  We can be undone in seconds, dead before we 
hit the floor.  Yet, we survive, and even prosper, by our Lord’s providence and 
grace.  This, Jesus taught the crowd that day when He fed them, as death loomed 
large before them.

For us also wandering in the desolate wilderness of this world, how can receive 
life when eternal death looms large around us?  How can we have any joy when 
our bodies are broken, when we are struggling with cancer, when physical 
exhaustion has had its way with us?  To strengthen us, our Lord gives us more 
than daily bread.  He gives us His body, the body He gave to the cross for the 
sins of the world.  He gives it to you, your food and salvation.

Like feeding the crowd of 4,000, our Lord simply takes bread, breaks it, and 
gives thanks.  He says, “Take eat, this is My Body, which is given for you.  Do 
this in remembrance of me.”  Then, when you have eaten and taken in Jesus, when 
He has transformed you anew into His holy temple, He sends you away, back into 
the world.  Jesus then says to you, “Depart in peace.”

Jesus feeds you with Himself to captivate and keep you in His kingdom.  He 
brings you into a different reality, an eternal reality.  For when Jesus feeds 
you with Himself, you have no need to be afraid.  Jesus is now coursing in your 
veins, nourishing you for eternity.  In His body and blood, He is reminding you 
that He has defeated eternal death.  You take in the true substance that 
destroyed death for you: Jesus Himself in His body and blood.

So don’t be afraid.  Jesus will not leave you or abandon you.  So what if you 
become weak and weary on the way to eternity, or find yourself in a desolate 
place.  Jesus’ name is on you.  He is in you.  You not only have His Word.  You 
have Jesus Himself in His body and blood, so you can continue to walk by faith.

Now, you live and wait in this grace, like our Lord Himself waited in the tomb 
for Easter morning.  You wait in eager expectation of the eternity that awaits 
you.  For you will soon taste once again, the foretaste of the Feast to 
come--Jesus’ body and blood in His holy Supper.

Conclusion
So, come to the table, O child of God.  Like He fed the crowd of 4,000, Jesus 
now feeds and nourishes you with His life, even as you journey in the 
death-filled, desolate wilderness of the world.  So come now to receive Him 
where He comes to feed you in His Supper, where He takes you from the doorstep 
of death to the doorstep of life.  Amen.


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and spirit.

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