Following my signature is the manuscript for the sermon that will be
preached in today's Divine Service at Trinity Lutheran Church of
Layton, Utah. If you would like to hear this preaching, I hope to have
the mp3 audio posted later this afternoon at
http://lcmssermons.com/images/aut52/CY2011/Trinity7.2011.TheMiracleofDailyBread.mp3.
--
Pax in Christo, non te pox;
Rev. Kurt Hering, Pastor
Trinity Lutheran Church
Layton, Utah
www.trinitylayton.org

TEXT: 1In those days, when again a great crowd had gathered, and they
had nothing to eat, [Jesus] called his disciples to him and said to
them, 2“I have compassion on the crowd, because they have been with me
now three days and have nothing to eat. 3And if I send them away
hungry to their homes, they will faint on the way. And some of them
have come from far away.” 4And his disciples answered him, “How can
one feed these people with bread here in this desolate place?” 5And he
asked them,  “How many loaves do you have?” They said, “Seven.” 6And
he directed the crowd to sit down on the ground. And he took the seven
loaves, and having given thanks, he broke them and gave them to his
disciples to set before the people; and they set them before the
crowd. 7And they had a few small fish. And having blessed them, he
said that these also should be set before them. 8And they ate and were
satisfied. And they took up the broken pieces left over, seven baskets
full. 9And there were about four thousand people. And he sent them
away. Mark 8:1–9


Dear Creatures of God,

When is the last time you paused to consider The Miracle of Daily
Bread? Have you ever?

I would suggest that in order to impress this upon your own sinful
hardened heart, clouded reason, and misdirected desires pray this
prayer of David before your family meal as we find presented to us by
Dr. Martin Luther in the Small Catechism [Read LSB p. 327 with the
Explanation to the 4th Petition in place of the entire Lord’s Prayer].

As you have just confessed together here, in THE FOURTH PETITION of
the Lord’s Prayer we beseech our Lord: Give us this day our daily
bread.

LARGE CATECHISM EXPLANATION
72 Here, now, we consider the poor breadbasket, the necessities of our
body and of the temporal life. It is a brief and simple word, but it
has a very wide scope. For when you mention and pray for daily bread,
you pray for everything that is necessary in order to have and enjoy
daily bread. On the other hand, you also pray against everything that
interferes with it. Therefore, you must open wide and extend your
thoughts not only to the oven or the flour bin, but also to the
distant field and the entire land, which bears and brings to us daily
bread and every sort of nourishment. For if God did not cause food to
grow and He did not bless and preserve it in the field, we could never
take bread from the oven or have any to set upon the table.

Furthermore, do you think God the Father created you, delivered you
into this world, had His only begotten Son suffer and die for you, and
has born you into the kingdom of heaven by Holy Baptism would then be
negligent in seeing to your ongoing needs of body and soul?

"The earth would have to run out of bread or the heavens would have to
run out of rain before a Christian would die of starvation.; indeed,
God Himself would have to starve to death first." Luther's Works, Vol.
21, p. 207 on Matthew 6:33

Scripture is full of examples of how the Lord takes care of the bodily
needs of those who look to and abide with Him as they hear His Word.
Today we have two such examples set before us—Adam and Eve in the
Garden of Eden, and a great crowd of 4000+ who had followed Jesus on a
three day journey and had virtually run out of food as they were
gathered in that “desolate place.”

And so we pray and sing with David: The eyes of all look to You, [O
Lord,] and you give them their food at the proper time. You open your
hand and satisfy the desires of every living thing. If only every
living thing would let Him! That is His desire—to satisfy your
desires.

Eden was a garden of food—with only one tree off limits. 8And the LORD
God planted a garden in Eden, in the east, and there he put the man
whom he had formed. 9And out of the ground the LORD God made to spring
up every tree that is pleasant to the sight and good for food. The
tree of life was in the midst of the garden, and the tree of the
knowledge of good and evil. . . . 15The LORD God took the man and put
him in the garden of Eden to work it and keep it. 16And the LORD God
commanded the man, saying, “You may surely eat of every tree of the
garden, 17but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall
not eat, for in the day that you eat of it you shall surely die.”

Of course that was the one that the devil used to attract Adam and Eve
and lead them into sin.

Surrounded by luscious life giving food—not to mention having 24-7
in-the-flesh access to the One who created that food and them—our
first father and mother listened to a deceiver and decided they just
had to have something else. And ever since Adam and Eve and their
children down through the ages and still in these Latter Days have
been making bad, that is to say evil and deadly decisions based upon
the fact that they get caught up in lies and are never satisfied.

It is into this very world of dissatisfied children that our Lord
steps once again in our Gospel lesson.

The LORD is righteous in all his ways and kind in all his works. The
LORD is near to all who call on him, to all who call on him in truth.
He fulfills the desire of those who fear him; he also hears their cry
and saves them. Psalm 145:15-19

So, the same God who walked and talked with Adam and Eve in the Garden
of Eden has been walking and talking amongst the crowd gathered around
Him for three days.

He has been feeding them the Bread of Life—the very words that proceed
from the mouth of God to identify the lies that they have been
following, call them to repent of their sinful dissatisfaction,
forgive them their sin, and deliver them from the lies to the truth
that gives real satisfaction and everlasting life in the kingdom of
heaven.

The same Lord from whom Adam and Eve fled, thus bringing a curse upon
the earth that causes us to this day to labor for our daily bread and
suffer and die from the very things we eat and put into our bodies,
this same Lord once rejected in the Garden of Eden and who will once
again be rejected in the Garden of Gethsemane and put to death on a
cross has compassion on those who have been listening to His preaching
the kingdom of heaven and feeds them earthly food as well.

He takes from the meager supply left among the thousands—seven loaves
of bread and a few fish—and feeds them all so that would not feint
from hunger on their long journeys home.

Now certainly this a great and wondrous miracle that our Lord performs
and a great display of His compassion for the children of God. But how
He does it is also important and instructive for us today. “He
directed the crowd to sit down on the ground. And he took the seven
loaves, and having given thanks, he broke them and gave them to his
disciples to set before the people; and they set them before the
crowd. And they had a few small fish. And having blessed them, he said
that these also should be set before them.”

The Lord gathers the people and has them rest. He takes of the
dwindling supply the people have brought with them and multiplies that
supply because He is the one from whom those loaves and fish came in
the first place and with the Son of God comes an endless supply of all
that is truly needful for both body and soul.

But Jesus doesn’t just take the fish and loaves and cause them to fall
out of the sky into the people’s mouths, or to appear out of nowhere
before the people, or transport them telekinetically through the air
into their laps. No, he takes the loaves and fishes and breaks them
into pieces and gives them to “to his disciples to set before the
people; and they set them before the crowd. And they ate and were
satisfied.“

Dear children of God, that is still how our Lord works today. It is
why you are here, why our Lord has gathered you in this “desolate
place” today. It is why He continues to gather people around His Word
and Sacraments in otherwise “desolate places” all over the world--to
feed you with His Bread of Life that sustains you for eternal life.
And He does it through servants into whose hands He has placed the
pieces He Himself breaks off to feed to you.

In the hands of our Lord is an endless supply of all that you need—and
more! And they took up the broken pieces left over, seven baskets
full. And there were about four thousand people. And he sent them
away.

He sent them away to go back to their homes and their families and
their neighbors and their daily work to tell others of the wonderful
things He had done--to establish churches where God’s ministers preach
the Word among them for eternal life, and to serve their neighbors
(that begins with the closest of neighbors, aka family members) that
they also might have the food and other necessities of life here in
this world and for the world to come.

Deer creatures of God, as often as you come to the table of the Lord
in His house, He has more than enough to feed you and send you away
back to your daily life to serve your neighbor--just as He has for
thousands of years and billions of people. So come often to eat and be
satisfied. Our Lord always has enough grace and mercy to forgive the
sins of those He has brought to repentance. He always has enough water
to pour over another sinner’s head to baptize them into the kingdom of
God. He always has enough bread and wine to feed you His very own body
and blood for the forgiveness of sins. For this is The Miracle of
Daily Bread that gives you life with Him, now and forever— in the name
of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
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