Ordinary People - The Lad With The Lunch: Offering What We Have To God
Ordinary People - The Lad With The Lunch: Offering What We Have To God
Ordinary People - The Lad With The Lunch: Offering What We Have To God
John 6:1-14
God loves ordinary people. Often the Lord has used people
of great talent and ability, but He delights in using the
common person whose talents and abilities are
unremarkable. Frequently He has chosen the weakest
individuals and made them the strongest. He chooses the
insignificant person and makes him significant (I Cor1:25-
29).
All four of the Gospels tell of the miracle of the feeding of the
5,000, but only John recorded the fact that there was a little
boy who gave up his lunch to Jesus. There is only one verse
that even makes reference to the youngster (John 6:9). That
single reference, however, adds a beautiful and significant
touch to the story. It speaks loudly of the ways of God. It
encourages us all to offer whatever we can, as little as that
may seem, to the Master.
There was not much that the little boy with the lunch could
do. One might reason that the practical thing for him to have
done would have been to have kept his food for himself.
Perhaps that would have been reasonable and pragmatic,
but something must have touched his young heart. You
could hardly blame a child for eating his own lunch, but
somehow the boy forgot his own needs and offered what
little he had to Jesus.
In the presence of Jesus Christ the boy had caught the spirit
of giving. Giving is infectious. Giving is selfless. When a
person opens his heart to God he also opens his hand to
others. The boy was acting on the principles that Jesus had
taught all along. He was a “doer” and not just a “hearer.” His
giving was an expression of his genuine faith in Jesus Christ.
How did Jesus know what He would do? (See John 6:6.) His
question of the disciples was rhetorical in nature to test
them. Apparently He knew what was in the young lad’s
heart and He knew what He could do with a willing offering—
no matter how small it might be. Surely the boy’s offering
was a pebble in importance to the disciples. But God can
take the smallest stone of faith and start an avalanche of
blessing. He can take a grain of faith and move a mountain
(Matthew 17:20).
Andrew was sure that five barley loaves and two small fish
were negligible. Christ, however, knew differently. He knew
the value of a small child’s faith and He knew what He would
do. He would take that child’s lunch and provide for the
needs of thousands.
There was a large need and a little offering, but there was
also a limitless God!
Jesus took the loaves and gave thanks (John 6:11). What a
remarkable statement! Here was the Lord of glory, the Son
of the Almighty, giving thanks for a little boy’s lunch. There
was no grumbling about what others had not supplied, but
sincere appreciation for what had been given.
Since there were only five loaves, each disciple must have
received no more than a piece of bread. But then something
wonderful happened. As each disciple passed out what he
received, the bread increased. It grew and multiplied. Every
handful became part of a miracle. Every person was being
fed, and still there was more than enough.
SUMMARY