Intro
“In the beginning, God” (Genesis 1:1).  “The Lord God formed the man from the 
soil of the ground.”  The Lord God “breathed into his nostrils the breath of 
life.”  “The Lord God planted a garden in Eden.”  There, the Lord God “put the 
man he had formed.”  “The Lord God caused to grow out of the ground every tree 
pleasing in appearance and good for food” (Genesis 2:7-9).  “The Lord God 
commanded the man… [concerning] the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil” 
(Genesis 2:16-17).  

The Lord God, the Lord God, the Lord God—He was doing the doing.  God is the 
subject of the verbs; the man and the world are the objects, the receivers of 
what God did.  The Lord God runs the verbs; the Lord God does the action. 

Main Body
And what did God do?  Part of what He did was to create the Tree of the 
Knowledge of Good and Evil and put it in the garden.  But why would God do 
that?  Doesn’t that seem odd?  God put such a tree there that we might learn 
how much good will come from following the Word of God.  

God forms and man becomes.  God makes and man is made.  God breathes out, and 
man breathes in; God breathes, and man lives.  God gives, and man receives.  
The Lord God makes food and man eats.  The Lord God makes water and man drinks. 
 And so we were to learn to look to God for every good.  And in receiving the 
good from God, we were to learn who God is and what He is like—that He wants to 
give what is good.  That is His joy and delight.

But man soon forgot.  Instead of receiving from God, he decided to take what 
God had not given him.  He believed the lie that God was holding something 
back—that God was keeping him down.  So, the man decided to be the doer, 
instead of the receiver.  Now, he would be in control, now he would be like 
God, knowing good and evil!  And so instead of eating from the Tree of Life, 
the man ate from the Tree of Death, the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil.

And that man is you.  Oh, the story of creation is about Adam, but you are no 
different.  You, too, have chosen the path of sin.  Yes, you’ve inherited a 
corrupt seed from Adam.  But you’ve also colluded in his in sin by continuing 
in it.  And so, you, too, have metaphorically eaten from the Tree of Death, the 
Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil.  And, since then, chaos and madness 
have never been far away, with death and sadness in our lives, without respite, 
without end.

And so Jesus comes to be born, to live, and become a man.  And, today, we see a 
crowd following that man, Jesus.  They have been with Him, in the wilderness, 
for three days!  What are they doing?  They are listening to Jesus preach.  And 
they are so attentive to His words that they take little notice that they are 
running out of food. 

What did Jesus preach—for three days?  Mark doesn’t tell us.  Did Jesus say 
that death had come to all people since all sinned in Adam?  Did He preach that 
the wages of sin is death?  Did Jesus proclaim that God was now fulfilling His 
ancient promise to send a Redeemer, someone who would remove the stain of sin, 
to give life in place of death? 

Did Jesus preach that they were sheep who have lost their way?  Did He say that 
He was their Good Shepherd who would lay down His life for them?  In Matthew 6, 
Jesus told another large crowd: “Stop worrying about your life—what you will 
eat, drink, or wear.  Isn’t life more than food and the body more than 
clothes?” (Matthew 6:25).  Instead, “seek first the kingdom of God and his 
righteousness, and all these things will be given to you, as well” (Matthew 
6:33).

It makes sense that in those three days of preaching, Jesus must’ve said 
something like that to the crowd.  And how do we know?  Look at how they acted! 
 They had been following Jesus for three days.  And Mark doesn’t imply, in the 
least, that they were anxious about what they would eat or drink!  They knew 
the area; they knew that they were too far into the wilderness to make it to 
town before collapsing from hunger.  

So, what will Jesus do?  Will He let their bodies die from starvation?  No!  He 
will feed this crowd of 4,000.  But the disciples doubt, for although they had 
seen Jesus earlier feed a crowd of 5,000, they didn’t believe that would happen 
a second time.  

But the people have more faith than Jesus’ disciples.  They sit down and wait; 
they are even passive.  That’s the Gospel.  We do nothing, nothing but receive. 
 Jesus does the work—always, for us, even when it seems impossible.

Did you follow the flow of what took place in our Gospel reading?  The people 
faithfully listened to Jesus’ Word.  Then, He fed them so they would not 
starve.  Jesus did this by taking bread, giving thanks, breaking the bread, and 
then giving it to His disciples.  

Hmmm, are you starting to see some parallels?  This miraculous feeding 
foreshadows an even more miraculous feeding that Jesus gives to His Church 
throughout time and space, where He feeds us, not with loaves and fish, but 
with His holy body and sanctifying blood.

And the remembrance part of Jesus’ body and blood (that’s the “do this in 
remembrance of Me” part of the Lord Supper) is that it becomes that for us in 
His death on the tree of the cross.  There, Jesus took all our worry, anger, 
restlessness, greed, lust, impatience, unkindness, and more.  There, it all 
died with Jesus as He hung on the Tree of Death.  But that tree, for us, has 
become our tree of life.  For of that “fruit so pure and sweet the Lord invites 
the world to eat” (LSB 561: 4).  For us, here is the bounty of the Tree of 
Life.  Here, God shows us His compassion.

But doesn’t it seem excessive that Jesus had to die?  Yes!  But it had to be 
so, for our enslavement to sin was so complete that nothing else would do.  
That’s what we heard in today’s Epistle reading.  God’s Word describes people 
as “slaves of sin”—slaves!  

Sin holds a person in bondage, leaving him powerless to free himself.  And this 
slavery to sin reveals itself in many ways.  It can be a baby angrily tossing 
the food he doesn’t want to eat.  It could be wanting to control others, to 
have your way.  It could be obsessions with personal pleasure and indulgence.  
Maybe, it’s a spirit of pride, assuming you know better.  Maybe, it’s anxieties 
and worries.  In all of these acts, we fail in fully trusting that God is our 
God, and we fail in loving our neighbor as ourselves.

What makes it even worse is that we can’t fix our brokenness.  Oh, we can patch 
and mend; we can put together some temporary workaround.  But we can’t restore 
what we lost when we fell into sin.  No amount of medicine can restore your 
fallen body to a pristine, sinless, eternal state.  No amount of effort can 
heal your brokenness with God.  

But Christ, our Savior, sees that you, like those people in the wilderness, are 
helpless.  And so He comes—not to teach you how to be better but, in 
compassion, to give you what you need.  Jesus comes to give you, as someone 
trapped in the wilderness of sin, the fruits of the Tree of Life.

And so a greater miracle than feeding 4,000 takes place among us today.  After 
all, the One, who can make seven loaves feed thousands, can be, and is, present 
with His body in the bread.  And He gives to us this great Sacrament for the 
same reason He fed the crowd: He knows that we are dying, and without His help 
we will perish.

And so Jesus comes to us that we may receive Him, not only for our bodies to 
eat, but for our souls to cling to God and receive His righteousness.  He gives 
us what we could never get for ourselves.  The wages of sin is death, but His 
gift in His body and blood is eternal life.  Jesus said, “Whoever eats my flesh 
and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up on the Last Day” 
(John 6:54).

But what is to come of it, after Jesus feeds us with such life?  Early in our 
Gospel reading, Jesus said, “If I send them home hungry, they will collapse on 
the way” (Mark 8:3).  So, what did Jesus do after He fed them?  He sent them 
back home.  And He does the same with us.  

But what are we to do when we get home, fed with the eternal life of Christ?  
Is it to live the same way as before?  Is it to continue as a slave of sin?  
No!  Our reading from Romans said, “You were slaves of sin” (Romans 6:17).  
“Were,” that’s past tense.  “And having been freed from sin, you have become 
slaves of righteousness” (Romans 6:18).  After receiving the fruits of His 
compassion, Jesus sends you on your way from here to live out the compassion 
that He has shown to you.  

Colossians, chapter 3, tells us: “As God’s chosen ones, holy and dearly loved, 
clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, and 
patience…  Just as the Lord has forgiven you, so also are you to forgive” 
(Colossians 3:12-13).  

Conclusion
You are a Christian.  That means that you are Christ’s and that you belong to 
Him.  That also means that you are to be Christ to your neighbor.  That is who 
you are.  You serve God by serving those whom God has brought into your life.  
You serve those closest to you; first, your husband or wife, and then move 
outwardly from there.  

All that comes, not from yourself, but from being with Jesus, from receiving 
His gifts.  Apart from Him, you can do nothing (John 15:5).  But you are never 
apart from Him.  For you are baptized into His death and resurrection (Romans 
6:3-5)!  And so the way of Christ has become your way, in life, in death, and 
even in the resurrection to come.  May it ever be so.  Amen.

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