The Rev. Thomas Nibbe
Sunday, July 25, 2021 @ 11:00 a.m.
You were marked in Him with a seal—the promised Holy Spirit (Eph. 1:13b)
THE SCRIPTURES
“…’How can I set twenty loaves of barley bread beforeone hundred men?…’, Elisha’s servant asked. Elishaanswered, ‘Give it to the people to eat, for this is whatthe Lord says, ‘They will eat and have some left over…’Then he set it before them, and they ate and had someleft over, according to the word of the Lord.”(2 Kings 4:42-44)
“…the eyes of all look to you…and you give them theirfood at the proper time…you open your hand andsatisfy the desires of every living thing…”(Psalm 145:15,16)
“…and I pray that you may, being rooted and establishedin faith, may have power , together with all the saints, tograsp how wide and long and high and deep is the loveof Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullnessof God…” (Ephesians 3:14-21)
“…another of His disciples, Andrew, Simon Peter’s brother,spoke up, ‘Here is a boy with five small barley loaves and two small fish, but how far will they go among so many?’…”(John 6:8,9)
Gracious Lord and Savior,
We are your grateful people. As the Hebrew Bible declares, “…you open your hand and satisfy the desires of every living thing…” You are gracious to us, you are generous with us, you are forgiving, and insightful in dealing with each of us individually.
You put up with our complaints, our doubts, our procrastinations, and our moods. You are familiar with all our ways. And you love us and remain faithful in the midst of our inconsistencies and waywardness. We are so glad you have introduced us to a life of faith. You, Lord, in the midst of uncertainty, provide assurance in our need for order, peacefulness, and meaning. We are grateful for insight into us…
We commend our lives into your tender care. We askthat you forgive us for our shortcomings…our fallingshort of your target for our lives. Lord, we praise you.
In Jesus’ name,Amen.
the message
This is the Sunday in which we consider “the feedingof the five thousand” in the sixth chapter of John’sGospel. Jesus was on the far side of the Sea ofGalilee, evidently, near Tiberias. [In our time, neardowntown, shops serve some of the most delicious
“Shwarma” one can get anywhere in the world.]
Jesus stepped out of the boat with a huge crowdfollowing Him and headed up to a mountainsidenearby and sat down with His disciples. He asked Philip how they could feed so many hungry people. He wanted to test Philip. Andrew, Simon Peter’s brother spoke up for him by suggesting that a boy had five small barley loaves and two small fish, but practically speaking, that would never feed so many.
We read (John 6:11):
“Jesus then took the loaves, gave thanks, and distributed to those who were seated as much as they wanted. He did the same with the fish.”
Eventually, five thousand people (plus) were fed and satisfied with plenty left over, twelve basketsworth. The people were amazed.
This narrative for me is the proof text for the notion that when we take on a task with faith, no matter our circumstances, it is multiplied when the Lord Jesus is involved. As the Lord satisfied the hungry five thousand (plus) with limited means, He will also satisfy us, though our resources are also limited. We need to proceed in faith.
Presently, we are preparing for a “discipleship retreat” in Pacifica in October. We are proceeding in faith, initially, without all the resources to do so. Through prayer and honest effort we are making progress and the Lord is providing along the way. It is at the very least an interesting process, and at best, an amazingone. In Christ, we can proceed in faith to do the improbable and the impossible. The Lord will provide…”He satisfies the desire of every living thing…” as the Scripture says. Sense God’s call for service and He will provide. Proceed in faith and He will “feed the five thousand” in your service project.
I wanted at this point to transition over to the Epistlelesson for this Sunday. It is found in Paul’s letter to the Ephesians 3:14-21…
This is an amazing passage as far as I’m concerned and I wanted to tell you why. Paul, inspired by the Holy Spirit, speaks about the personal spiritual qualities we’d all like to have, in fact, qualities we would “die for”…heart knowledge of the Christ’s nature and purpose, the clearing away of unimportant priorities that sometimessaturate our lives…escaping the meaninglessness of just seemingly existing without significant purpose…
The notion of surrendering our life, and making it a very intentional thing, is what makes us theperson we’ve always wanted to be anyway. Itjust seems to be a scary, irrational move to make.
Allowing the Holy Spirit to take over makes us theperson we really always wanted to be. We neverwould normally have thought of that by ourselves.
In fact, taking that step in life is the really the truebiblical foundation of genuine Christianity. All else is really nothing more than false uninformed religion.To let Jesus take over in our lives doesn’t mean our identity no longer exists. In Jesus, Saint Paultalks about having extraordinary strength to deal with the issues of everyday living, but the Apostle does so within the context of uprooting the externals in orderto discover and realize our inmost being…that is……substantially who we are in Christ through the Spiritand who we actually are in the deepest sense also…
He shares his prayer that the Ephesian followers may have the experience of divine strength through the Holy Spirit to have Christ dwell in their hearts. They’renot comprehending the deeper things of faith. Theirfaith lives are too close to the surface. They need toavoid being doubleminded, proceeding to think theycan to go on being the person we were before, and,not sensing the profound nature of embracing Christ.
I get the idea the Ephesians were living their faith lives too close to the surface. Paul was addressing the lack of spiritual depth. Their approach to churchwas superficial, lacking depth, lacking true spiritualdepth. They just weren’t digging down into the roots of their spiritual lives and fellowship. The Apostle seems to encourage his readers to seek a deeper expression in their faith lives. It would be helpful sometime soonto take an indepth study into the power of this epistle. There seems to be a follow up that applies to 21st century folks in the church. Am I wrong?Many folks I have known and shared this life within the church seem to struggle a bit with genuine faith. They’re mixed up between the ethical teachings of the Bible, as opposed to the theologicalteaching. In short, real, genuine Christianity is not a “Do Right-Do Wrong” religion. It goes way beyond that.Church folks don’t always understand some of the deepspiritual concepts of the Bible and so they proceed as best they can. Thanks to the text for today we know we can have a faith that is genuine, based on the Bible.The text of the third chapter in Paul’s letter is encouraging. The entire letter by Paul is a call to arms in terms in securing a genuine, personal faith in Jesus. I’m inclinedto believe that the issues first-century Christians facedare much the same as ours.
Thanks to Paul’s letter to the Ephesians, we can not only know about Jesus, but can know Him, especially as the Holy Spirit takes charge in our lives, and we allow the Spirit to have free flowwithin us. It is such a beautiful feeling of peace,joy, and assurance.
Walking fully in the Spirit, other things that seemed so essential before, now simply become incidental, either important along the way, or necessary, but not the heart of things. This is the wideness, the length,the height and the depth of Christ’s love filling us.
NO NEED FOR FILLERS
There isn’t any need to collect things as a substitute, as so many Americans do, or to seek after riches, orto coddle ourselves rather than stretch past the limitsof our imagination to serve God and His purpose through us, as well as, going on one endless pursuit after the next feeling the frustration of not knowing that God’s timing in our lives is always perfect.
Paul writes in Ephesians 3:8—
“…although I am less than the least of all God’s peoplethis grace was given me to preach the the Gentiles theUNSEARCHABLE RICHES IN CHRIST and to makeplain to everyone the administration of this mystery…
Let’s break the passage down and put it into helpfulsections for us to grow into the fullness that is Christ:
Again Paul writes in Ephesians 3:16—
I pray that out of his glorious riches He may…
STRENGHTHEN YOU WITH POWER (able to do and complete whatever you set out to do)
THROUGH HIS SPIRIT (we don’t do it on our own…we do it with the Lord)
IN YOUR INNER BEING (this is not about superficial religion without insight)
…so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith…
And I pray that you…
BEING ROOTED
and
ESTABLISHED IN LOVE
may have power, together with all the saints to grasp
HOW WIDEwe will not be like a horse wearing blinders
HOW LONG(no limitation to the breadth of insight)
HOW HIGH(our comprehension is greatly heightened)
HOW DEEP
(our recognition of God’s love is profound)
is the love of Christ
and to know
the love that surpasses knowledge
that you may be filled to the
THE MEASURE OF ALL THE FULLNESS OF GOD
This is profound Spiritual writing on Saint Paul’s part, inspired, of course, by the Holy Spirit, has been passed on to the followers of Jesus for thousands of years. For this and so much more in the Bible, we are grateful to God…
May the eyes of your heart be enlightened.
Cordially,
Tom
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