August 6, 2017 Feeding the 5000
Our Gospel lesson this week tells us about the miraculous feeding of the 5,000, and this week, I know of another miraculous feeding story that I thought I would share with you.
Our Gospel lesson this week tells us about the miraculous feeding of the 5,000, and this week, I know of another miraculous feeding story that I thought I would share with you.
After months of
hard work and years of saving, the day came for Ron and Jenny to open their own
restaurant. All that was needed was the final health inspection and the issuing
of their business permit. That was scheduled for first thing that morning; then
their restaurant would be in business.
But that morning
the winds and rains of Hurricane Hugo hit, unexpectedly making its way 200
miles inland to their North Carolina town. Trees were uprooted, power lines
were down, homes and stores were destroyed. Ron and Jenny hurried to their
restaurant. Everything was intact.
A deputy sheriff
pulled up and told them that their restaurant, the fire station next door an a
service station down the road were the only ones that electricity. Ron and
Jenny called the health inspector to come immediately so they could open, but
because of the power outage, he couldn’t get into his office to issue the
permit. No permit, no business opening. With a refrigerator stocked with 300
pounds of bacon and beef and bushels of tomatoes, lettuce and bread, there was
only one thing to do:
give the food away.
They told the
deputy, "Tell your coworkers and other emergency people you see that we’ll
have free BLT’s and coffee for anybody who wants to drop by." Soon
firemen, policemen, linemen and other workers were filing into the restaurant.
When the couple heard that another restaurant was scalping people by charging
ten dollars for two eggs, toast and
bacon, they placed a sign in their window: FREE BLT’S--FREE COFFEE. Families,
travelers and street people were welcomed.
Then something
began to happen. People started to clean counters and sweep floors. Volunteers took
over the dish washing from Jenny and
helped Ron at the grill. Hearing about what was going on at the restaurant from
the local radio station, people from a neighboring town that had not been too
badly hit by the storm brought food from their freezers. Stores and dairies
sent
over chicken, milk and foodstuffs of all kinds.
And so the long
day went. Those first cups of coffee and BLT’s somehow stretched to 16,000
meals. The restaurant’s small stock increased by 500 loaves of bread, cases of
mayonnaise, 350 pots of coffee and bushels of produce.
Now some of you
might say, “Pastor Ted, that’s not really a miracle story, people respond like
this to hurricanes, floods, and tornado’s all the time, pitching in and
helping, sending donations, and caring for total strangers, dozens and even
hundreds of miles away.”
And I would agree
with you, in times of great suffering, some people, put aside the rules of selfishness
and self-centeredness, and act with a spirit of compassion for others. Not
everyone does this, remember the restaurant in the story that scalped people
for meals – this actually happens, and then no one gets fed, or cared for. But
Ron and Jenny had all of that food sitting in their fridge, they could have
waited till the next day and opened, but instead they decided it was more
important to feed these people in need.
And then it
happened, the more the news spread of their act of compassion, the more people
wanted to be a part of it, and the more food came rolling in, to feed not just
5000, but 16,000 meals That’s the
miracle! The miracle of what we can do when we suspend the rules of
self-interest that we live by every day, and work together in that same spirit
of compassion and love for one another – a spirit revealed to us in Jesus
Christ!
One final
thought, this past week I read a book called Rich Church, Poor Church – which I
plan to do an adult study on starting this fall. This book contrasts the difference in how
each church looks at not just stewardship, but also mission, ministry,
discipleship, and even advertising. The rich church acts in love towards
others, not to get more members, but because it is what Jesus tells them to do!
The members of the rich church know that Jesus tells them to proclaim the
gospel in acts of love and fellowship. The members of the rich church give of
themselves, not to make a budget, but to help make the kingdom of God present
in people’s lives. Finally, the members of the rich church, find that through
their discipleship, their faith makes a great difference in their lives.
This is the
miracle waiting for all of us, who are willing to do as Jesus commands us, and
share the gospel of Jesus Christ with all the world!
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