Intro
Feeding the crowd of 5,000 with five loaves of bread and two fish was an 
enormous crowd-pleaser.  Getting free food had so enthralled the crowd that 
they wanted to make Jesus their bread king--by force, if needed!  

So, Jesus withdrew to a mountain to slip away from their plots and schemes.  
His disciples left by boat and headed across the sea of Galilee.  That normally 
would’ve been the easiest way to cross.  But because of the winds, it wasn’t.  

The disciples are delayed, so when Jesus later leaves, He catches up with His 
disciples by walking on the water.  Of course, Jesus walking on the water in 
the middle of the night scares His disciples senseless.  They think they see a 
ghost.  But once they hear His voice, they realize who it is and welcome Jesus 
on board.  

But when they get to the shore, the crowd is puzzled, for much of the crowd is 
now on the other side of the Sea of Galilee.  They saw the boat leave without 
Jesus.  So, they ask their questions: “Rabbi, when did you get here?  How did 
you get here?”

Main Body
But instead of satisfying their curiosity, Jesus stretches them on what it 
means to believe, to have faith.  Where was their trust?  Why were they 
following Him?  What did they want?  So, Jesus says: “I assure you: You seek 
me, not because you saw the signs I performed but because you ate the loaves 
and had your fill.”  In other words, “You want me to fill your bellies, satisfy 
your wants, and bandage your bruises.  But I have more to give than bread and 
fish, than your earthly needs.”  

Jesus then said: “Don’t work for the food that perishes, but for the food that 
endures to eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you.  For on him God 
the Father has placed his seal of approval.”

There are two kinds of food: The food for which you work, and the food you are 
given; the food that perishes, and food that endures to eternal life.  You know 
about the food you buy from the wages you earn.  That’s one reason you go to 
work, to put bread on the table.  That food goes back to our Fall into sin at 
the dawn of time: “By the sweat of your brow, you will eat your bread until you 
return to the ground” (Genesis 3:19).  

But that wasn’t how it was in the beginning.  In the beginning, God gave to all 
the food they needed.  For it was all a gift of creation from the Creator.  And 
even more, there was the tree of life, from which one could eat and live 
forever.  In the beginning, it was all gift and no work. 

But sin, disobedience, and death changed the way the world ran, even your diet. 
 It was no longer fruits and nuts that freely came from the trees.  It was now 
food by the sweat of your brow.  It was now farming uncooperative ground.  It 
was fighting weeds, foul weather, and insects.  It was grinding grain and 
kneading dough.  It was work, work, and then some more work.  

That’s how life is in this fallen world.  It’s production schedules, meeting 
budget, dishonest business partners, lawsuits, cranky customers, mean bosses, 
and lazy workers.  Ecclesiastes calls it “futility,” an endless chasing after 
the wind. 

God rigged it that way.  He made work a sweaty, frustrating business, to teach 
us that work is not the way to life, especially eternal life.  Work is simply 
work.  We can’t work our way to heaven; we can only work our way to the grave.  
That’s what this fallen creation is to teach us.  Even creation is to turn our 
eyes toward God. 

The food for which we work perishes.  It spoils; it gets moldy and smelly.  
That’s why we have refrigerators and freezers.  For our food is dead and slowly 
decaying.  We’re just trying to slow it down by freezing, canning, and using 
preservatives.  Even the manna, which God gave to the Old Testament Israelites, 
was like that.  If you tried to store more for the next day, it rotted and 
began to stink. 

The world is decaying.  It’s as the Apostle Paul says, “For the creation was 
subjected to frustration” (Romans 8:20).  All that doom and gloom you hear in 
the news--that’s all a part of death, which is the wages of sin.  We can’t turn 
the clock back.  We can’t undo the Fall into sin.  

Our food is dead and, in the end, we die with it.  The bread Moses gave, the 
manna, couldn’t save them--or us--from death.  All who ate of it still died.  
Neither could the Law that Moses gave save them--or us.  That’s our lot as 
sinners.  That’s what Paul means when he says, “The wages of sin is death.”  

“But the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus, our Lord.”  It’s all 
gift, not works.  And for a gift to be a gift, it must be free.  And it is.  
Even more, it’s also undeserved and unmerited, and God places such life into 
dead and empty hands.  Jesus says: “Don’t work for the food that perishes, but 
for the food that endures to eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you.”

Jesus promises food, food that needs no preservatives or refrigeration.  It 
doesn’t spoil and endures to eternal life.  And guess what?  It also preserves 
the eater to eternal life.  Imagine that--food that never spoils!  But even 
more, this food prevents you from decaying eternally, as well.  Wow, if Jesus 
is giving that, where do I line up to get some?

And yet the world, even you and I here this morning, pay more attention to 
belly food than eternal food.  We lavish more devotion on our daily bread than 
on the Bread of Life.  We’re more concerned about Sunday brunch than we are 
about the Supper of our Lord, that our Lord’s Supper makes the service last 20 
minutes longer.  Do we think this?  Do we act this way?  Jesus is here to give 
eternal life, but we’re more concerned about filling our bellies?

Like the Israelites of old, we need to repent.  They were fed by God’s hand in 
the wilderness, but what did they want?  They wanted the menu of Egypt: Leeks, 
garlic, meat, and wine--even though that was the food of their slavery.  

The food that endures to eternity is not the food of our labor.  It’s food that 
Jesus gives to you.  And He earned the wages to bring you this food.  It’s from 
the Son of Man, from Jesus, the Source of your salvation.  It’s from Jesus and 
no one else. 

But the crowds, like us, when we’re not consumed by our bellies, are still 
thinking about works.  “What must we do to do the works that God demands?”  
Surely, we have to do something?  “There is no free lunch,” which even in this 
day of Government handouts, life is still teaching us.  “What must we do to do 
the works that God demands?”

Listen carefully to Jesus’ answer: “This is the work of God--that you believe 
in the One he has sent.”  Did you notice that Jesus didn’t say, “works”?  He 
said “work” in the singular.  That’s because it’s not our works but the work of 
God, the singular work that God does. 

That’s because even the faith we have is a work of God, not ours.  It’s the 
work of God that we believe and trust in Jesus, whom He has sent.  St. Paul 
fleshes this out in Ephesians, Chapter 2: “For it is by grace you have been 
saved through faith.  And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, 
not from works, so no one can boast” (Ephesians 2:8-9). 

Any works that we may do grow out of the work of that God has already done 
through His Son, Jesus, in the Holy Spirit.  Our virtuous and moral life 
doesn’t save us.  No, it’s Jesus’ life, death, and His victory over the grave 
that saves.  And it’s all given to us freely, as a gift, and received through 
trusting God, which He works in us.  

Our work can’t save us.  Our bread can’t save us.  Only Jesus has a work and a 
bread that gives life to the world.  He is the Baker and the eternal loaf of 
bread.  He is the food of eternal life.  He is not like the food that Moses 
gave, the manna in the wilderness.  When you get Jesus, you get food for 
eternal life. 

The people asked, “What sign then will you give that we may see it and believe 
you?”  And with that question, Jesus has them--and us--right where we should 
be.  For we are now at the place where Jesus gives Himself, for the bread that 
Jesus gives is Himself.  Jesus says, “I am the Bread of Life.  Whoever comes to 
me will not hunger, and whoever believes in me will never thirst.”

Jesus is our bread; He is our drink.  If you’re thinking the Lord’s Supper, 
you’re on the right track.  And what is the sign that He gives that we should 
take Him at His word and trust Him?  It’s nothing short of His death and 
resurrection.  That’s how this Bread of Life is baked.  He’s put in the furnace 
of God’s wrath against sin.  He chooses to be baked in the burning heat of His 
passion to save His fallen creation.  Like wheat ground up by the mill and put 
into the fire, Jesus endured the cross, bearing our sin, to be our Food and 
Source of eternal life. 

Conclusion
Jesus says, “I am the Bread of Life.”  He’s not a delicacy we are to indulge in 
only once in a while.  Bread is everyday food.  And Jesus is our everyday food 
for eternal life.  Jesus is food for those who hunger and thirst after 
righteousness.  Bread is a staple of life.  And like a staple of life, Jesus is 
here for you every time you come to worship, which is how it should be.  For 
Jesus does not call Himself a rare delicacy, but the bread of life.  Receive 
Him as the everyday staple of Life that He is. 

So, come to eat and drink that you may have your fill to eternal 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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