(Audio)
John 6:1-15; Galatians 4:21-31; Exodus 16:2-21
In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.
“The Lord is my Shepherd; I shall not want.” We recite Psalm 23 often, sometimes so routinely that the words lose their wonder. But pause and really consider what they promise: to lack nothing. To be fully satisfied, fulfilled, and complete in body and soul. No nagging emptiness. No restless craving. No aching void that nothing in this world can fill. Most of us can scarcely imagine such a life. We live on the other side of that promise, in a world, and in hearts, marked by deep, persistent hunger.
We are a hungry people. Physically, yes, we grow anxious when the pantry runs low or the paycheck is delayed. But our hunger runs far deeper. We are hungry for meaning and purpose when days feel aimless. Hungry for love when relationships fracture or loneliness creeps in. Hungry for justice when evil seems to triumph unchecked. Hungry for forgiveness when guilt weighs heavy and our failures replay in the quiet hours. We chase these things relentlessly: new jobs, new relationships, new causes, new distractions. Sometimes we find temporary relief, but often in the wrong places, the wrong people, the wrong pursuits. As Bruce Springsteen sang, “Everybody’s got a hungry heart.” Like Bono, we “still haven’t found what [we’re] looking for.” And like Mick Jagger, we confess we “can’t get no satisfaction.”
Jesus knows this hunger intimately. He sees the crowds trailing Him across the Galilean hillside, weary and wanting, and His heart is moved with compassion. He does not scold them for their need. He does not turn away. Instead, He says to you today, “You shall not want.” He provides all that you need, and far more, for this life and the life to come. His grace is sufficient for you. Yet how often we resist that sufficiency. We think we need excess to feel secure. We convince ourselves that God’s provision is never quite enough, that we must grasp for more to be truly content. But in Christ, sufficiency is abundance. What He gives is not merely adequate; it overflows.
Jesus gives daily bread. Luther reminds us in the Small Catechism that daily bread is far more than a loaf on the table. It encompasses everything belonging to the support and needs of the body: food and drink, clothing and shoes, house and home, fields and livestock, money and goods, a devout husband or wife, pious children, faithful employees and employers, honest and godly rulers, good government, temperate weather, peace and health, self-control, a good name, trustworthy friends, faithful neighbors, and the like. God bestows all these gifts out of pure, fatherly, divine goodness and mercy, without any merit or worthiness in us, even to the ungrateful, even to those who hate Him. In the Fourth Petition of the Lord’s Prayer, we ask that He would lead us to recognize these gifts and receive them with thanksgiving.
And yet, how often we grumble! Like the Israelites fresh from Egypt’s bondage, we look God’s gift horse in the mouth. In Exodus 16, the whole congregation quarreled with Moses and Aaron: “Would that we had died by the hand of the Lord in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the meat pots and ate bread to the full!” They romanticized their slavery, grumbled that the wilderness bread from heaven was not the bread they craved. We do the same. We complain that our daily bread lacks flavor, that our home is not grand enough, our family not perfect enough, our circumstances not ideal. We labor and strive as though life depended on our own hands, as though we must earn God’s favor before He will feed us. What poor, pitiable creatures we are. What a poor, pitiable Church we become when we forget that, apart from Christ, we are nothing but beggars standing empty-handed before a gracious King.
On our own, our offerings are laughably small: five barley loaves and two small fish, barely enough for a single family, let alone five thousand men plus women and children. Not even a crumb apiece if divided evenly. By our own strength and ingenuity, we are hopeless and lost.
But praise God, we are never on our own. Jesus takes our meager provisions, gives thanks, and distributes them through His disciples. All eat and are satisfied. Twelve baskets of leftovers remain, twelve full baskets, one for each tribe of Israel, one for each apostle, proof that the Bread of Life always gives more than we need or could ask. There is no want in His presence. No need to hoard out of fear. No reason to eye our neighbor with envy. “I am the bread of life,” He declares. “Whoever comes to Me shall not hunger, and whoever believes in Me shall never thirst.” He is our daily bread, our Bread of Life, our true bread king. He provides for every need of body and soul. His mercies are new every morning, fresh as the manna that fell each dawn.
That is the first great lesson from today’s readings: Jesus satisfies our deepest hungers with Himself.
The second lesson concerns those leftovers: give them away. Even when you feel pinched, even when you worry there won’t be enough for tomorrow, give. You deceive yourself if you believe scarcity has the final word. In giving, you lighten your load and make room to receive more. Jesus Himself said, “Give, and it will be given to you. Good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap. For with the measure you use it will be measured back to you.” When the Israelites hoarded the manna, it bred worms and stank. But consider the widow of Zarephath: her jar of flour and jug of oil never ran dry all the days Elijah stayed with her. Use what God gives you today, for your household, for your daily needs, as a gift of His grace in Christ. It is sufficient for this day. Give the rest away generously. Do not be anxious about tomorrow; God will provide tomorrow’s bread tomorrow.
And the third lesson brings us to the very heart of the matter: The Bread of Life is present here and now to feed you. In that Galilean field, Jesus took far less than five loaves and two fish and satisfied thousands. Each Lord’s Day in this congregation, He does something greater still. With simple bread and wine, His true body and true blood given and shed for you, He feeds His people with forgiveness of sins, everlasting life, and salvation. These gifts are immeasurable, far beyond what our weak faith could ever demand or deserve. Take and eat: you shall not want. Take and drink: your cup runs over.
In the Epistle from Galatians, Paul draws a sharp contrast between two mothers: Hagar, who represents the old covenant of slavery under the law, and Sarah, the free woman, who represents the promise fulfilled in Christ. We are not children of the slave woman, bound to earn God’s favor through our works. We are children of the promise, born according to the Spirit, heirs with Christ. Our hunger is satisfied not by our striving but by His lavish giving.
So come, you hungry ones, hungry in body, hungry in soul. The Good Shepherd has spread His table before you in the wilderness of this world. In Him alone, you shall not want.
In the + Name of Jesus. Amen.
