Tenth Sunday after Pentecost
John 6:24-35
• Why are you here? (worship, fellowship, study,
experience/encounter God)
After Jesus fed
5K… y’all are here for the wrong reasons (stomachs). You don’t get it.
Be here to encounter. To be fed. In him is life, and the light of all people.
• Easy and comfortable. Possible to sit and not commit,
and become that crowd.
In western
culture we have forgotten about hunger.
Mealtimes are a time to refuel.
For most of us, our bodies are satisfied so continuously that we easily
forget that hunger exists at all. That’s
kind of sad. In a small way, the
spiritual discipline of fasting can be a reminder that humans are hungry. We are thirsty. In fact, hunger is a painful experience. Thirst is debilitating.
They are both experiences of urgent
need.
Food, feasts, banquets, bread, manna, living waters,
vines, figs, and weddings are constantly referenced in Biblical stories of the
Old and New Testaments. Why? Our scriptures are stories of God and stories
of us and how God and humans relate to one another. Time and time again, the men and women and
children in these Biblical stories are hungry and thirsty and time and time
again, God provides. The scriptures
refer to our physical hunger but perhaps more importantly… our spiritual hunger. Why did God create us with this insatiable
appetite? What is the purpose of our
being created to be hungry and thirsty?
Wouldn’t the world be a much more pleasant place of hunger and thirst
were not part of the human experience?
There is a story of a young student who went to his
spiritual teacher and asked the question, "Master, how can I truly find
God?" The teacher asked the student to accompany him to the river which
ran by the village and invited him to go into the water. When they got to the
middle of the stream, the teacher said, "Please immerse yourself in the
water." The student did as he was instructed, whereupon the teacher put
his hands on the young man's head and held him under the water. Presently the
student began to struggle. The master held him under still. A moment passed and
the student was thrashing and beating the water and air with his arms. Still,
the master held him under the water. Finally, the student was released and shot
up from the water, lungs aching and gasping for air. The teacher waited for a
few moments and then said, "When you desire God as truly as you desired to
breathe the air you just breathed -- then you shall find God."
Ahhh, perhaps just like our need for air, our hunger and thirst are meant to draw us
closer to God.
C.S. Lewis’ one of my favorite all time theologians,
the same author who wrote “The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe” talks about
this desire, this innate hunger we all have,
in his book Mere Christianity. In it he notes: Creatures are not born with desires unless
satisfaction for those desires exists. A baby feels hunger; well, there is such
a thing as food. A duckling wants to swim; well, there is such a thing as
water. . . . If I find in myself a
desire that no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable
explanation is that I was made for another world. If none of my earthly
pleasures satisfy it, then probably, earthly pleasures were never meant to
satisfy it, but only to arouse it, to suggest the real thing.
• Ann Conf storyteller Ray Buckley, NA from Alaska, who
lived in village without pastor… no sacrament.
Early church
would have it weekly or more. Members accountable to one another – if one not
fit slash prepared, they wouldn’t participate that week.
• Communion next week. Assignment: go hungry this week.
Skip a meal or two. And before you break your fast, when you’re good and
hungry, read John 6. Pray for God to bless your reading first. Pray, read, pray again, give thanks, and eat.
Come back to encounter Christ.
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