God is good ... all the time
Matthew 14:13-21 When Jesus
heard what had happened, he withdrew by boat privately to a solitary place.
Hearing of this, the crowds followed him on foot from the towns. 14
When Jesus landed and saw a large crowd, he had compassion on them and healed
their sick. 15 As evening approached, the disciples came to him and
said, "This is a remote place, and it's already getting late. Send the
crowds away, so they can go to the villages and buy themselves some food."
16 Jesus replied, "They do not need to go away. You give them
something to eat." 17 "We have here only five loaves of
bread and two fish," they answered. 18 "Bring them here to
me," he said. 19 And he directed the people to sit down on the
grass. Taking the five loaves and the two fish and looking up to heaven, he
gave thanks and broke the loaves. Then he gave them to the disciples, and the
disciples gave them to the people. 20 They all ate and were
satisfied, and the disciples picked up twelve basketfuls of broken pieces that were
left over. 21 The number of those who ate was about five thousand
men, besides women and children.
In the movie, “God’s Not
Dead,” two Christian pastors have a refrain that they repeat between themselves
a number of times during the movie. The first pastor says, “God is good ...”
The second pastor replies, “… all the time.” Then the second pastor starts,
“And all the time …” the first pastor finishes, “… God is good.”
Those words are significant
throughout the movie, whether the pastors’ cars keep breaking down so that they
can’t go to Disney World, or a college student is put on trial by his atheist
Philosophy professor, or an unbeliever is diagnosed with cancer, or a Muslim
student is kicked out of her home for being converted to Christianity. From beginning
to end, God is good all the time, and all the time God is good.
That refrain can certainly be
seen in our sermon text. Jesus has just learned that His cousin, John the
Baptist, had been beheaded at the behest of King Herod’s devious stepdaughter.
So, with a heavy heart, mourning the loss of the forerunner of the Christ and
wishing to be alone, Jesus withdraws by boat privately to a solitary place in
the desert.
Though Jesus goes out to the
wilderness to be by Himself, to a desolate place, the sheep cannot help but be
drawn to the Shepherd in their midst. For the sheep know the voice of the
Shepherd, and they follow Him. Giving no thought to preparations, they have to
follow Him. They don’t bring a lunchbox or pack a water bottle. No sippy cups
or fruit snacks or even baggies of Cheerios for the kids. They just went.
When Jesus lands and sees a large crowd, he has compassion on them and
heals their sick. Even though He desires to be by Himself, Jesus does
what the Son of God does. He doesn’t send them away. He doesn’t lecture them on
being unprepared. He has compassion on them. He heals their sick. He cares for
their hurting. He puts broken lives back together again.
As night falls along the Sea
of Galilee , the disciples ask Jesus to stop and send everyone home
to get a bite to eat. “This is a remote
place, and it’s already getting late. Send the crowds away, so they can go to
the villages and buy themselves some food.” The disciples were sensible,
and sending the people home was the sensible thing to do.
But Jesus answered, “You give them something to eat.” They said to him, “That
would take eight months of a man’s wages!” (Mark 6:37) “We have here only five
loaves of bread and two fish” (Matthew 14:16).
The disciples saw all of the
problems and none of the possibilities. They could estimate how many months’
wages it would cost; they could tally the measly resources on hand. Their math
didn’t fail them, but their faith did.
Can we blame them? They were
being reasonable; they were being practical. We do the same thing. We say, “How
am I going to survive? How am I going to pay all these bills? How can I
possibly take care of my children, or my parents — or both? How am I going to
find time to do everything I need to do?” In other words, we focus on our supposed
shortages.
Children are filled with
excitement and uncertainty at starting school. You are hesitant to completely
trust that God has a plan when you are behind on your mortgage payments and
credit card bills. You are cautious in believing that anything good could come
out of your child needing expensive braces or you being diagnosed with cancer
or your parent suffering from dementia.
We are very short-sighted
people. We only see what is in front of us. We have difficulty trusting the
unseen, being confident of the unknown, and having hope for the future.
That’s why the Bible teaches
us that faith encompasses all that trust, confidence and hope: “Now faith is
being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see” (Hebrews
11:1).
We and the disciples are
sensible people. We are realists, bottom-line type people. We like everything
nice and orderly. No pain. No fuss. No detours. We want a plan for everything
and everything fitting into our plan.
But God does not live within
the boundaries of the sensible.
Look at the example of Joseph.
God allowed Joseph to be sold into slavery by jealous older brothers when he
was 17 years old. Then he was thrown in prison by the lying, manipulative wife
of Potiphar. Then he was forgotten in prison by Pharaoh’s chief cupbearer. But
when he was 30 years old, God made Joseph second in command of all of Egypt .
This happened so that the sons of Jacob would move to Egypt
and become the nation of the children of Israel .
This happened so that the children of Israel
could be rescued from Egypt
and returned to their Promised Land 400 years later.
Or look at the example of the
apostle Paul. Throughout his ministry he was imprisoned, beaten, stoned, left
for dead, shipwrecked, put on trial and imprisoned again until he died in
prison. Yet God used all those events to cause Paul to move around from Philippi
to Thessalonica to Corinth to Ephesus ,
etc. God then used Paul’s imprisonment before his death as a time when he could
write epistles to all the congregations he had visited.
Jesus does not live within the
boundaries of the sensible. It was not sensible to tell fishermen who had been
fishing all night and caught nothing to go back out in the day when the fish
went deep and try again – but Jesus did, and provided a great catch. It was not
sensible to assert that a girl who had died was simply asleep – but Jesus did,
and then showed it by raising her from the dead. And in the same way it was not
sensible for Jesus to tell His disciples to feed a crowd of well over 5,000 hungry
people: “You give them something to eat.” But Jesus did. Perhaps the disciples
were getting used to that by now, as part of their continuing education, for
they don’t object – they simply take what they have and give it to Jesus. Five
loaves of bread and two fish. And it is enough. For anything in the hands of
the Lord is always enough. And more than enough.
Where did Jesus direct His
eyes? Not to a supposed shortage. Not to the small amount of food or the huge
crowd. No, He looked up to heaven, and — get this—He gave thanks! Instead of
complaining about a shortage, He thanked God for the blessing, and then in His
miraculous power as the Son of God, He handed it over and the disciples handed
it out to the people.
When there is a shortage, that
is a time for God to supply abundance. When there is illness, God can provide
the healing. When there is heartache, God provides the love. When there is a
need, God always has a way of providing for that need.
We see from the story of
Joseph and Paul and the feeding of the 5,000, that God is a big picture kind of
God. We focus on the here and now. Our eternal God is looking centuries into
the future. Then He works backwards to make sure that everything that is
happening right now will be of benefit to His eternal kingdom in the future.
Instead of seeing our supposed
shortages of blessings in this life, perhaps Jesus wants us to take a step back
and take in the big picture. As those redeemed by His own blood, won’t we take
the opportunity to follow the one who freed us from sin and death, and look up
to Him? Won’t we see that at any time, Jesus can take a little and turn it into
far more than we think is physically possible? Won’t we see the compassion of a
Lord who healed the sick and fed the hungry, and recognize that His direction
of our lives is filled with compassion? Won’t we give thanks for every
blessing? Can’t we give thanks even if God seems to be withholding His physical
blessings from us?
The bigger picture is that God
not only cares for our physical needs by providing us food and work and wealth
and healing, He more importantly cares for our spiritual needs. From the hands
of the Lord’s servants today, Jesus continues to feed multitudes – not with
bread and fish, or mere bread and wine, but with His own body and blood. He
does not leave us to discover our own “spirituality,” or send us away in search
of our own spiritual nourishment, but He comes to provide for our every need.
And not just a morsel – enough to get by. But He gives an abundance of His forgiveness,
life, and salvation. That we be filled with Him and His life.
Because the hands of Jesus
that held those five loaves of bread and two fish and fed so many people, were
the same hands that took the nails and wood of Calvary .
The hands of your Savior, who came to provide what you need the most – the
restoration of your life with God in the forgiveness of your sin. And to
provide this forgiveness and restoration for not just 5 thousand or 5 million
or 5 billion people – but each and every person. Every person, including you
and me. Jesus ascended the cross that the sins which separate us from God be on
Him and not on us. That He receive the condemnation for them and not us. That
He die and not us. That taking our sin and dying our death, we live His life.
Our old man dying and a new man rising. For now risen from the dead, Jesus
lives to give us that life and those gifts He won for us. To continue His work,
to feed and forgive and save.
That is the bigger picture.
That is the picture that God always had in mind from eternity. That He would
save you through His Son, Jesus. Not because it was sensible … or practical …
or rational. He did it because God does not dwell within the boundaries of the
sensible or practical or rational. He did it because God is good all the time
and all the time God is good.
Or think of it this way: have
you ever noticed that great mornings come from rough nights?
Great victories come from
persistence and struggles?
Great achievements come from
hard and tenacious work?
Whenever the people of God
were hungry, God provided a miraculous meal.
Whenever the people of God
shouted victory, it was because they had spent nights weeping before God.
If you are going through a
dark tunnel where you are weak or ill or hungry like the 5,000 people gathered
in that remote place, know that God is allowing this to happen not because He
likes to see you suffer, but to shape you in the form of Christ.
So when you hear of Joseph’s
struggles or Paul’s beatings or hungry followers or experience your own pains
and persecutions, make this refrain your own: “God is good all the time, and
all the time God is good.” Amen.
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