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.
There is a saying, “The devil will
find work for idle hands to do”. That’s because the devil is always busy;
he never rests, and he wants you to be always busy and never resting too. In
contrast to the devil is your LORD and heavenly Father who wills for you to
have regular and consistent times of rest. He Himself worked for six days in
creation and then He rested on the seventh day and sanctified that day to be a
day of rest for all generations. Rest is a necessary and important part of our
lives. We need our eight hours of sleep each night to keep our bodies healthy
and our minds sharp. Most of us get much less than that. But, even during our
waking and working hours we need to take a break and sit down, or lay down, and
rest a bit.
Your God and Creator knows this about
you, and so He designed your bodies to take rest, even if you try to resist it
and continue working. But, what about rest for your soul, rest for your spirit?
Yes, you need spiritual rest as well, but that doesn’t happen autonomically,
you have to make that time, you have to take that time, you have to set that
time apart and keep it sacred and holy. Perhaps this is because your spirit
doesn’t count hours, days, months, and years, for the life of your spirit has
no end. Thus, it is in conflict with your flesh which is dying, which is all
too aware of the passing of time. But still, your spirit needs rest, and that
rest is not found in sleep or in taking a break, but it is found in the Lord,
in His Word and in His presence, and in prayer, meditation, and contemplation
upon these.
Ultimately, rest is about faith and
trust in God, that God will provide, that you will have enough of whatever it
is that you need, that you will persevere, no matter what may happen, that
eternal life with God cannot be taken from you, even if your physical life
perishes. Satan wants to keep you so busy living this life, which is really
death and leads only to death, that you lose sight of the promise of true and
lasting life with your heavenly Father.
It was this lesson about rest that the
Lord wanted the children of Israel to learn in the Exodus, to put their fear,
love, and trust in God to provide and protect and to keep His promise of
deliverance from their enemies and the hope of a promised land of milk and
honey in which to dwell. But, not long after the Lord delivered them from harsh
slavery under the hand of Pharaoh and the Egyptians, the Israelites began to
grumble that they had no food and they longed to be slaves again in Egypt where
at least there was meat and bread. In response to their grumbling, the Lord
literally caused bread to rain down from heaven upon His people. Each morning a
flake-like substance appeared on the ground as the dew dried. The Israelites
did not know what it was and so they called it manna, which means, “What is
it?” They were commanded to gather as much as each of them could eat for
the day. And, when the amount gathered was measured against an omer, both those
who gathered less and those who gathered more found that they had the amount
that they needed. No one had lack or need, but all had as much as they could
eat for the day. The Lord provided them their daily bread just as Jesus taught
His disciples and you to pray for – literally, bread for the day. Still,
the people did not trust in the Lord. They tried to leave some of the manna
till morning, but it bred worms and stank. And, later, the children of Israel
began to grumble again saying, “there is no food and water, and we loathe
this worthless food.”
All this fretting and worrying about
food for the body – Your Lord would have you find rest from these. He says to
you, “Man does not live by bread alone, but by every Word that proceeds from
the mouth of God.” “Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread,
and your labor for that which does not satisfy? Listen diligently to me, and
eat what is good, and delight yourselves in rich food.” “Come to Me, all who
labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”
In our Gospel lesson today, Jesus, the
New Moses, had lead a large crowd of people into the wilderness after
performing wondrous signs in the towns and cities in the region of Galilee. It
was near the end of the day and the Passover was about to begin when the people
could do no work. To test His disciples, Jesus asked the question they all were
thinking, “Where are we to buy bread, so that these people may eat?” The
disciples answered according to the ways of the flesh, exclaiming the
hopelessness and despair of unbelief – “Two hundred denarii would not buy
enough bread for each of them to get a little.” “There is a boy here who has
five barley loaves and two fish, but what are they for so many?” Jesus said
to them, “Have the people sit down.” In the midst of their despair and
hopelessness, when their minds and hearts were overwhelmed with impossible
concerns about feeding the flesh, Jesus tells the people to rest. The Lord will
provide what is needed; as it was in the beginning, so it is now, and ever
shall be.
When you take rest in the Lord, in His
Word, and in His gifts, you will find that you have all that you need and more.
You receive plenteous forgiveness, plenteous mercy, plenteous grace, and
plenteous love. You have food for your bellies, clothing for your body, and a
roof over your head. As David sang, “My cup overflows”. And, as Jesus taught,
“Give, and it will be given to you, a good measure, shaken together, pressed
down, filled to overflowing will be put into your lap. For, with the measure
you give will it be measured back to you.” For, taking rest in the Lord and
in His gifts means trusting in Him to know your needs and to provide for them
because He is your God and Creator and He is good. Taking rest in the Lord
means living freely and not in bondage and slavery to the desires and passions
of your flesh and the values and virtues of this world. Do not sell yourself
into slavery once again as the children of Israel were ready to do in order to
fill their bellies with Egyptian meat and bread. Satan is always tempting you
to feed your flesh and to live not by the Word of God just as He tempted Jesus
to turn stones into bread as He tempted Him in the wilderness. Jesus resisted
that temptation and defeated the devil, and He obeyed His Father’s will and
trusted in His Word for you. Thus He did for the five thousand what He would
not do for Himself, He took man’s meager offering of bread and fish and He
miraculously fed them till they were satisfied, trusting that the Lord knew
their need and that He would provide.
In the beginning, the Lord created the
world and all things in it in six days. On the seventh day He rested and He
sanctified the seventh day to be a Sabbath, a day of rest. Our First Parents
were tempted by the devil to forsake that rest and to strive and desire food
for their bellies in defiance and unbelief of God’s Word. The result of their
rebellion and disobedience was that the providing of bread for their bellies
would become difficult and grueling work and that the end result of our
striving for food would be death. Thus, in His mercy and compassion, God set
Himself to work again, to recreate the world that man, His creation, cast into
ruin. He sent His Word, His Son, to be conceived and born as a man, under the
Law, to be obedient to the Law and to suffer and die for the sins of men. Jesus
fulfilled all that God’s Law required. He did it in perfect faith, love, and
trust, without grumbling, out of love for God and out of love for you. He
suffered and died on Good Friday. He rested in the tomb on the Sabbath. And he
rose again on the Eighth Day, having fulfilled the Law, having destroyed the
power of death and the grave, and having fulfilled the Sabbath rest of God’s
command. Now, there is no need to observe the Sabbath on any particular day,
for it has been fulfilled, but Jesus has become for you God’s Sabbath rest.
Through faith in Jesus, you have rest from your labors. Through faith in Jesus,
you have the forgiveness of sins. Through faith in Jesus, through Holy Baptism,
you have died and have been raised in Jesus, a new creation. Through faith in
Jesus, you live, now, and forevermore. His mercies are new every morning. To
receive them in faith is to worship Him in the highest way possible. Let us be
glad to come to the House of the Lord. Let us be glad to remember His Sabbath
Day and to keep it holy.
In the + Name of Jesus. Amen.
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