HE GAVE THEM BREAD FROM HEAVEN TO EAT
by Cliff York
Do you find it intriguing that so many people know about the miracle of Christ feeding the 5000? I do. Even among those who have no particular love for the Bible many have heard of this Bible story. The amazing details that accompany our Lord during this period of His life are often referred to in daily life. And this calling to mind is very similar to the recollection that many people also have for the well loved 23rd Psalm. "The Lord is my Shepherd I shall not want." But it is the recollection of a mere story with little regard usually for the depth of spiritual significance that it contains.
What can we learn from this phenomenal miracle performed so long ago by the One who is the Great Shepherd of Psalm 23? In every gospel account there appears a faithful record giving details of how our Lord and Master exercised His remarkable compassion upon so many people at one time. The miracle of feeding five thousand contains many powerful lessons that are applicable to the people of God in every age. And these lessons are very applicable to the true Disciples of the Lord Jesus Christ who gather together on a regular basis to share a highly symbolic and appropriate memorial fellowship meal. In fact what God's children share together regularly by the Grace of our God is a Divine Feast which was prefigured in all its greatness in the 6th chapter of Mark.
What do we find then when we closely examine the 6th chapter of Mark? Firstly we notice that the record in Mark actually describes two feasts for us. Obviously Mark has recorded details which are intended to stand in contrast to each other. For example:-
The first was a feast of hatred and death cp v19; whilst the second was a feast of love and life cp v42.
In the first feast all that was pure and lovely and wholesome and true was abandoned in drunken stupor as Herod sported himself with a strange woman the "goddess of pleasure" cp v24. And in contrast the second feast was a sweet fellowship meal where the prospective 'bride' sat down and partook a meal of grace with the 'bridegroom'. This pointed forward to the time when all that is pure and lovely and wholesome and true will be established in righteousness as it is prefigured in v 34.
Herod's feast was a sumptuous birthday party designed to entertain the Judges the Heads of State and the Business Tycoons of Galilee in v21. And in contrast Christ's provision in v42 was a frugal meal calculated to feed "the poor of this world who have no strength no might nor power yet they are rich in faith."
The first feast was presided over by a 'lily livered' man weak at the knees and described later by Christ as "That Fox." He was cunning wily and cowardly cp v21. In contrast the second feast was presided over by Christ the "altogether lovely one " whom the Father had made "strong for Himself " cp v41.
In the first feast Herod having unlawfully married his half niece (who was in fact his brother Phillip's wife) made his new bride's daughter the offer of up to "half the Kingdom " cp v23. What an ego! These words were actually an echo from the past. They were borrowed from the Great Persian King Ahasuerus when he begged Esther to divulge her request relating to fate of her people. In the second feast mentioned in Mark 6 Christ caused a symbolic portion of his "bride to be" to sit down in green pastures. And on a hillside overlooking the still Galilean waters our Lord shared the glories of a time to come when "all the kingdoms of this world" will be given to those of "His little flock those who do not fear; to all those who rejoice in the Father's good pleasure " cp v34.
And we can find even more contrasts along these same lines. For example the first feast was held on the east of the Jordan in a palace fortress on a mountain not far from the shores of the Dead Sea wherein is no life at all. The second feast was held in the midst of God's glorious creation on a mountain side not far from the western shores of the Sea of Galilee which was teeming with fish and life. Following are just a few relevant contrasts in a table format.
| CONTRASTS 
          IN MARK CHAPTER SIX | |||
| HEROD'S BIRTHDAY PARTY | CHRIST FEEDS 5 000 | ||
| Herod - An Unfaithful Adulterer | Christ - A Faithful Eunuch | ||
| v17 | Married an Unlawful Wife | v39 | Glorious Bride in Prospect | 
| v17 | Palace 
          of Macchaerus Eastern Shore of Dead Sea | v39 | Green 
          Mountain Slope Western Shore of Galilee Sea | 
| v19 | Feast of Hatred | v34 | Feast of Love | 
| v21 | Immoral Party | v41 | Frugal Meal | 
| v21 | Rich & Influential invited | v36 | Poor & Insignificant gathered | 
| v21 | Herod "The Fox" | v41 | Christ "The Harmless" | 
| v23 | Egotistical 
          Offer ("Unto half the Kingdom") | v34 | Divine 
          Principles ("The Meek Inherit all the Earth - Psa 37 Gal 3") | 
| v24 | Drunken Stupor | v34 | Sweet Fellowship | 
| v27 | Feast of Death | v42 | Feast of Life | 
| v28 | Head on a Plate at the end of the Party. | v43 | 12 Baskets of Bread left at the end of the Meal. | 
Having briefly observed just a few of the comparisons in this record it is now time to focus on the principles which will help us enter into that Kingdom of Glory which is shortly to dawn on this benighted sphere. Let us sit down with that privileged Divine family of Grace from 2 000 years ago and meditate on the lessons contained in that meal.
"Despised 
  and Rejected of Men"
  We pick up the record in Mark 
  6:30. "And the 
  apostles gathered themselves together unto Jesus." Can we see ourselves 
  in that company? Remember in v7 
  Christ had sent His Disciples out in pairs to get a taste for Gospel Proclamation. 
  They were to try their hand at preaching the message that John had then been 
  preaching for a number of years. "And so they went out and preached that 
  men should repent."
  What follows in the next few verses is a glimpse of what often happens in the 
  real world where ever God's servants fearlessly proclaim His Truth. We find 
  a record of no less than John the Baptiser confronting Herod's immorality and 
  Herodias' hatred with forthright speech and powerful words. John was ultimately 
  rejected by them both losing his life whilst serving his Lord.
  Some have wondered how and why it was that John a Jew a son of Abraham should 
  so publicly rebuke King Herod for his immorality. History records that Herod 
  was an Edomite a non-Jew. Was the King really subject to the Law of Moses? Was 
  he subject to any Divine Law? John apparently considered it his duty to take 
  the ruler to task. Not only did John publicly denounce the tetrarch's behaviour 
  in the presence of the crowds who had assembled to hear his preaching. Somehow 
  John had been able to gain direct access to Herod's presence. John then rebuked 
  the King to his face. Had John ignored such blatant evil coolly practised by 
  the nation's ruler his call to the nation for repentance would have carried 
  far less weight. Truly John was no spineless "reed to be shaken by the 
  wind."
  As a result of John's uncompromising verbal intercourse with Herod "Herod 
  did many things (except of course confess his sins and improve his ways before 
  God) and he heard John gladly." Herod "feared John" but he would 
  not "fear God". He was "a double minded man and unstable in all 
  his ways". Herod could never keep his word. Why he could not even keep 
  his original marriage vows. He was spineless capricious and opportunistic.
  The true character of the king is revealed when the door opens on John's dark 
  prison cell. Herod would "not reject his step daughter and the mother." 
  No he would keep his oath to them because of the company in which he had uttered 
  it. And in doing so he chose instead to reject John and everything that John 
  (and his younger cousin) stood for. Any man of character in Herod's position 
  should have rejected Salome's request on the grounds that she was actually asking 
  more than 'half the kingdom' by forwarding her mother's grisly request. But 
  the trap had sprung and Herod felt bound by his drunken promise to order John 
  released from the dungeon to face the grim executioner's axe.
  Not long before John had sent word to Christ seeking confirmation of His mission. 
  Christ had sent His reply hidden in a quotation from Isaiah the prophet. "The 
  Spirit of the Lord Yahweh is upon me.....to proclaim liberty to the captives 
  and the opening of the prison to them that are bound." Imagine how John 
  would have felt as he recalled His gracious cousin's words as he was led out 
  of his dungeon cell to face his execution. The prison door had certainly been 
  opened and John was about to obtain his freedom. 
How could this be so you might ask? John was about to be lose his head.
All John's life he had 
  struggled as we all do to separate Godly thinking from fleshly impulses. And 
  now in one swift stroke of the executioner's sword John's constant struggle 
  with his flesh nature would be over. His very next conscious moment (though 
  nearly 2 000 years later) will be to look into the wonderful eyes of his cousin. 
  Then he will know indeed that "the blind now see the lame now walk the 
  lepers are now cleansed the dead are now raised the captives have been liberated 
  and the prisoners have been released from out of the pit wherein is no water." 
  Though rejected by Herod and his murderess mistress John would have closed his 
  eyes in death confidant that for him "the acceptable year of Yahweh" 
  had arrived at last.
  And in varying degrees the 12 apostles had all experienced the same pain of 
  rejection. It would appear that none who are called of God can escape rejection 
  in some form or another. So let us just pause and explore this matter of rejection 
  as an aside for a moment. 
Every man and woman of faith recorded for us in the Scriptures has faced rejection in some form or another. The rejection can come from many quarters including family or peers and it appears to be an inevitable part of the probation process which we must all undergo on our way to the Kingdom. "It is only through much tribulation that any of us will enter into the Kingdom of God". Look at men like Noah and David Job Samuel Uriah Stephen and Elisha. We observe women such as Hannah and Mary Rahab and Leah. In fact when we dwell on these examples we realise that it is largely how we personally handle this issue of rejection in our own lives that seems to determine our destiny. Look at Saul Israel's first king. He chose to reject the Lord's anointed but could not accept being rejected himself. Then look at the fate of the "angels that sinned". Korah Dathan and Abiram were men of prominence in Israel who did not correctly handle rejection. And they have lost the Kingdom forever as a result!
Every week our community 
  assembles in spirit with these apostles and in the company of The One "who 
  was despised and rejected of men." Christ was the One "who looked 
  for comforters and there was none." And in the end He became "a stranger 
  to His brethren - and an alien to His mother's children". 
  So dear Brother or dear Sister whoever you are and where-ever you are you may 
  feel that no-one knows or that no-one cares about the problems you face day 
  by day. But lift up your head and rejoice from the heart for by the grace of 
  God you too have been "gathered unto Jesus " and with that little 
  band of faithful disciples so long ago you can share their experiences and their 
  frustrations with all the ups and downs of pilgrim life.
  That is what is now seen in the next part of Mark 
  6:30. "And they 
  told Him all things both what they had done and what they had taught." 
  One of the greatest benefits of the Truth is to share together the love and 
  the joy and the hope and the fellowship that all true believers have in common. 
  All the Master's friends share a burning desire to be in the Master's presence. 
  There are momentous events every day on the world scene. Prophecy steadily unfolds 
  and the Eastern Sky lights up brighter and brighter as it were. The approaching 
  advent of the "Sun of Righteousness" who will appear with "Healing 
  in His beams " should stir us up to grasp at every opportunity to assemble 
  with all others of like mind. This is so necessary that we might mentally stimulate 
  one another and that we might weave the principles of the Divine Name into our 
  characters. 
  Returning to Mark 
  6:31 Jesus invites all 
  his disciples to "Come ye yourselves apart into a desert place." We 
  need to remember that our Lord had just received the dreadful news of the death 
  of his beloved cousin. John truly the forerunner of Christ cruelly beheaded 
  at the hands of a capricious ruler and his lecherous wife. John the Baptist 
  was just six months older than Jesus and Christ knew that in just twelve months 
  He would Himself be "laying down his life for his friends." We can 
  feel in this record that Christ was most assuredly a man of like passions as 
  we are. How keenly He experienced our griefs and our sorrows. He displayed the 
  same compassion at the tomb of His friend Lazarus. And here is recorded how 
  He sought solitude to reflect upon the cruel death that had been most unjustly 
  brought upon His forerunner this close and upright member of His own kith and 
  kin. 
"John 
  the Baptist and Moses the Prophet"
  It is interesting to note here that John's death was particularly significant 
  to our Lord for another reason. John had died an unnatural and premature death 
  on the other side of the Jordan in Herod's own Palace. Herod's fortress Palace 
  of Machaerus was on the other side of the Jordan River on the north eastern 
  corner of the Dead Sea. This was the very same region where Moses some 1500 
  years before had also died an unnatural premature death. Remember that it was 
  said of Moses when he went with the angel to view the land from Mount Nebo and 
  then to be buried that his "eye was not dim nor his natural force abated". 
  
  Where is the link between Moses and John the Baptist you might ask? Here it 
  is. John and Moses had both commenced a work which was to be carried on by a 
  "Yah-Hoshua". In the Hebrew that's "Joshua " and in the 
  Greek of course it is "Jesus."
  Our Lord desperately wanted a period of time to find peace and comfort and solitude 
  to reflect on the following climactic twelve months. The task of getting John's 
  head reconnected to John's body now rested entirely on Christ's shoulders and 
  on the success of His mission amongst the sons of Adam. To focus on this task 
  He sought to draw aside from lifes activities for a little while. To achieve 
  His objective He sought out a "desert place". Christ with His disciples 
  headed out into the very environment that was 'home' for John the Baptist the 
  "Son of the Desert".
  You might ask why a desert place? Throughout scripture you will find that men 
  of God have often sought solace in a desert place. For example Moses fled to 
  a desert place and there he encountered God in a "fiery Thorn Bush". 
  Elijah fled from before that wicked woman Jezebel to a desert place and there 
  he encountered God in a "still small voice". Again Paul sought refuge 
  in the same environment in the deserts of Arabia or Sinai after his conversion. 
  There he was instructed more fully in his work to the Gentiles. 
  A desert place is bereft of things material. Open the wardrobe door and take 
  a look at what John the Baptist hung up each night. One leather girdle and one 
  camel hair coat! And that was exactly the same as Elijah's wardrobe! These were 
  simple men with a profound faith in God. If you have ever been out into a desert 
  you will know that the silence is deafening. There are no distractions. It is 
  a place where the mind can be cleared of all the thoughts that clutter and hinder. 
  A place where one can better focus on the majesty and the might and the power 
  of the great Creator who made all things. Of the One who has a grand purpose 
  for all His creatures especially creatures like John and Elijah.
  And of course the desert is the one place where you can feel the great message 
  that John came to deliver. "All flesh is grass and all the goodliness thereof 
  is as the flower of the field the grass withereth the flower fadeth because 
  the spirit of the Lord bloweth upon it surely the people are as grass." 
  
  
So it is good to respond regularly to Christ's invitation to "come aside into a (figurative) desert place and to rest awhile for there are many coming and going " cp Mark 6:31.
Nothing changes does it? 
  The essential character of the world today is just as it was 2 000 years ago. 
  "There were many coming and going". Perhaps all that has really changed 
  is the speed! In our Lord's day it was donkey and camel. Today it is motorcar 
  and aeroplane. And we are still "coming and going"! And it is so easy 
  to miss the Master's gracious feast when we are "coming and going " 
  isn't it? (Perhaps there is just a hint in these words of the Adversary's problem 
  in Job 
  1:7 2:2.)
  Just imagine that one has said to us "Did you hear that the Master has 
  invited us to go with Him to a great feast in a desert place?" And we say 
  "Well I'm sorry but I cannot come. You see I must go and check out my new 
  piece of ground or my new oxen or my next business deal". Imagine saying 
  those words to Christ as we stand before Him at the Judgement Seat shortly. 
  Just run that imaginary (though tragically too real) conversation through your 
  mind now and it just helps to put things into their right perspective doesn't 
  it? 
  So we must all learn to distance ourselves from last week's problems and next 
  week's worries and to come aside with our Lord "into a desert place awhile". 
  And it is a remarkable thing that we find a little later in the record that 
  though it was a wilderness Christ was able to sit the company down on "much 
  green grass". Travelling with Christ into the wilderness will ultimately 
  see the reversal of the effects of the curse pronounced in the Garden of Eden 
  so long ago.
  
"He 
  That Cometh Unto Me Shall Never Hunger"
  Then Mark 
  6:31 makes this telling 
  comment. "They had no leisure so much as to eat". When did you last 
  have a good meal? I mean a really good meal? A feast of fat things? A meal of 
  eternal nourishment? A meal made up of an ample supply of the "bread from 
  heaven?"
  The experience of the disciples then is so often ours also. But it is probably 
  truer for us today because we are not a generation given to labouring hard in 
  God's Word. Few indeed (the present writer included) spend sufficient hours 
  extracting the goodness from their gleanings and then sharing that goodness 
  with their fellows. It is so hard because this age of "instant push buttons" 
  has really affected the Spirit man within all of us so that we often do not 
  even give ourselves the "leisure so much as to eat".
  But there is an answer to that problem in v32. 
  "They departed into a desert place by ship privately" and we will 
  see shortly that this "ship" is a symbol or a type of the Ecclesia 
  of God. So Christ now made a conscious effort to seek seclusion and quietude 
  with the company of those who had been called out so as to focus their minds 
  together on John's grand message and the purpose in his death.
  What does the Ecclesia mean to each one of us? Is it a place of refuge from 
  the pressures of life? A place where the fellowship is sweet and God centred 
  and Christ-like? And the benefits of the Truth are shared freely with all whom 
  Christ has called whether they be great or small rich or poor amiable or difficult 
  young or old? Whether it is or not largely depends upon ourselves as individuals 
  making the necessary effort to be a comfort and a strength to each other. 
Our Lord with His disciples made a deliberate choice at this point to "depart into that wilderness by means of a ship". The record conveys a sense of activity and urgency that is seen in Christ's desire to consolidate the faith of the disciples at this time. Though John had just been beheaded for daring to speak the Truth the disciples had to learn 'not to be fearful but to be faithful.' And our Lord needed to strengthen them to that end. And twenty centuries on His modern disciples need the same encouragement.
How often do we make that same conscious effort to consolidate our selves and our families in the everlasting principles of the Truth? I would venture to say that we don't do it often enough. That lack of commitment is itself the subject of Bible Prophecy being fulfilled in our days. Christ warns us in Matt 25 that "while the Bridegroom tarried all the virgins slumbered and slept". Very shortly a cry is going to be made! "Behold the Bridegroom cometh; go ye out to meet Him". And what then will our reaction be? Overwhelming joy? Unspeakable relief? Or remorseful panic? Will we be of that number described in the parable as those virgins who frantically make last minute efforts to secure a supply of oil?
If so "I do not know you " will be the Lord's reply as those virgins pound on the door demanding an entrance! How foolish to allow ourselves to be among that number when we have the time the opportunity and the means to be otherwise! Even for the wise virgins in the end the only thing that will count in that Day will be a quiet humble faithful confidence in the abundant Gracious Mercy of our Heavenly Father. As it is written "To this man will I look even to him that is poor and of a contrite spirit and who trembles at my Word". It is hard to tremble at the Word if it is not our habit to be reading it and discussing it isn't it? So let's make the most of every God given opportunity to put a bit more oil in our leaky vessels. We must keep topping them up regularly because the way we relate to our Heavenly Father today is surely going to determine our destiny tomorrow!
"He 
  Shall Feed His Flock Like a Shepherd"
  Returning to Mark 6 notice that though Christ desired peace and quiet to reflect 
  on the things that would lay before Him in the next 12 months "the people 
  saw Him departing and many knew Him and ran afoot thither out of all cities 
  and outwent them and came together unto Him " cp 
  v33. And here was foreshadowed 
  part of the great work ahead of Him when "He would gather together in one 
  the children of God that were scattered abroad " cp 
  John 11:52. In v34 
  we learn that "Jesus when He came out saw much people and was moved with 
  compassion toward them because He saw them as sheep not having a shepherd". 
  What a Great and Gracious Shepherd.
  It has been suggested that this was a Sabbath year hence here there is a possible 
  hint as to the reason for the shortage of food among the 5 000. If indeed it 
  was a sabbatical year the resultant lack of employment would also have allowed 
  such great crowds to gather to Jesus. Add to this the evangelising work of the 
  twelve where many people had heard of this authoritative new Teacher. And now 
  that John was dead many of his disciples would have been seeking Jesus to hear 
  Him for themselves. Further add to this group the Jewish pilgrims who were making 
  their way through Galilee at this time heading for the Passover in Jerusalem 
  and the roads and pathways through the hillsides of Israel were truly covered 
  with people "as sheep that had been scattered" by the hypocritical 
  religious leaders of the day.
  What a great High Priest we have! Here was one who was prepared to put to one 
  side His own personal needs and desires when He saw these "sheep " 
  or "little ones " as Luke was wont to refer to them in his record. 
  Now that John was dead the people had no shepherd in Israel no leader no direction 
  and no protection. There was no-one to feed them and to water them and to lead 
  them beside the still waters of peace and consolation in the scriptures of hope. 
  The leaders in Israel were mostly wolves masquerading in sheeps clothing seeking 
  to promote their own home-grown brand of righteousness. A righteousness which 
  was in fact full blown hypocrisy and self deception and conceit. A righteousness 
  which had no regard at all for those whom Christ came to save cp 
  Matt 23; Matt 
  25:34-46. A righteousness 
  which was based entirely upon national pedigree and pride in human achievement.
  Christ now took up the mantle of John's great work as it is recorded in Isaiah 
  40:10-11. "His 
  work is before Him He shall feed His flock like a shepherd: He shall gather 
  the lambs with His arm and carry them is His bosom and He shall gently lead 
  those who are with young". Did you notice the word "lead" in 
  that verse? Christ does not drive us or force us to His kingdom. Paul explains 
  this in Romans 
  2:4. "It is the 
  goodness of God that leadeth us to repentance " cp 
  Psa 100. 
  This reminds us of that most notable of incidents at Mt Sinai which is recorded 
  for us in Exod 
  33:18-23. Here you will 
  recall Moses was placed in a cleft of the Rock. The Name Bearing Angel "passed 
  before him " and His hand covered Moses whilst He passed by. He removed 
  His hand after He had passed by so that Moses could only see His back parts 
  as He retreated. In other words to see the glory of God Moses had to follow 
  after it. And what did the Angel declare as He passed by Moses Israel's great 
  Law Giver? "Yahweh He Who Will Be Manifest In Power is Merciful Gracious 
  Longsuffering and Abundant in Goodness and Truth". The God whose righteousness 
  we so often claim to be upholding with our often harsh and sometimes unjust 
  demands upon others is first Merciful with a capital "M " then Gracious 
  with a capital "G " then Longsuffering with a capital "L " 
  and so on. Truth is certainly important but imagine where we would all be if 
  our God was to insist on absolute TRUTH from each of us before He could save 
  us.
  We ought to thank God then that He has chosen to place MERCY and not TRUTH as 
  the principle or foremost part of His Character. Let each of us then be like 
  the great meek man Moses Israel's first shepherd leader. May we follow after 
  our Heavenly Father's righteousness in the way that He would have us display 
  His character in our actions to all men cp Jer 
  9:23-24.
  But I digress. Back in Mark 6 we have followed Christ out into the desert place. 
  He has gone in front as the Good Shepherd and searched out beautiful green pastures. 
  He has brought us to still clear waters unfouled by vain human philosophies 
  cp 
  Ezek 34:18-19. And as 
  the prophet wrote in Isaiah 
  40:11 "He will 
  feed His flock like a shepherd". So we find right at the end of Mark 
  6:34 that "He began 
  to teach them many things". Christ would have shared with these "little 
  ones " the glories and the wonders of the Kingdom age. The people gladly 
  spent all day listening to Him with rapt attention as He fed them like a True 
  Shepherd. Time just flew and the day got away on them as it always does whenever 
  one sits at the feet of the Master Himself as it were. 
  And this is what the record indicates in v35. 
  "When the day was far spent". The record in Matthew 
  14:15 says "and 
  when it was evening". This is the first evening mentioned in the record 
  the other is in Mark 
  6:47. In a Jewish day 
  it appears that they had two 'evenings.' The first was at 3pm and the second 
  was at 6pm. For example we read in Ex 
  12:6 "And the whole 
  congregation of Israel shall kill the Passover lamb between the two evenings 
  (mg)". This was between 3pm and 6pm in the afternoon. And we need to bear 
  in mind that the events recorded here in Mark 6 are taking place at the exact 
  time of Passover in Israel. This Passover is exactly 12 months before Christ 
  the great Passover Lamb was to be crucified. 
  But around 3 o'clock in the afternoon the disciples pointed out a problem to 
  Christ. They assumed that He was so engrossed with His teaching that He had 
  overlooked the practicalities of the situation. They come to Christ and suggest 
  that He dismiss the people in order that the crowd might secure some food in 
  the nearby villages and towns before nightfall.
  But Christ as always was in full control of the situation. We learn this in 
  Matt 
  14:16. He said to His 
  disciples "they need not depart: give ye them to eat " cp Mark 
  6:37. In other words 
  Christ invited the disciples to apply themselves to working out this problem. 
  He was seeking their suggestion as to how they would solve this difficulty?"
  And in doing so Christ posed a test for His disciples. We gather this from John 
  6:5-6. There our Lord 
  says to Phillip "Whence shall we buy bread that these may eat? And this 
  He said to prove him (Phillip) for Christ Himself knew what He (Christ) would 
  do."
  Christ intended to use this situation to teach some profound principles. In 
  fact this record of feeding 5 000 is one of the few incidents recorded in all 
  four Gospel records and it forms the basis of one of the eight signs of John.
  Not surprisingly we learn that Phillip approaches the situation before him from 
  a human point of view. We find this is so when we to go to John 
  6:7. Phillip does a 
  quick head count and he estimates that 200 pennyworth of bread would be barely 
  sufficient to give everyone just a little feed. Now let's work this out. A labourers 
  wage in those days was "a penny a day " cp 
  Matt 20:2. So 200 pennyworth 
  was equal to 200 days wages in our language. In todays terms that would be approximately 
  a years wages there being about 200 working days in every year. In other words 
  Phillip estimated that the equivalent of $35 000 (1997 $Aus.) worth of food 
  was barely sufficient to feed the multitude that were gathered there. Obviously 
  there are far more than 5 000 people gathered at Christ's feet. Matthew's record 
  tells us that there was "about 5 000 men beside women and children " 
  cp 
  14:21. It is quite probable 
  that our Lord fed in excess of 20 000 people on this occasion. If there were 
  5 000 families with an average of 2 or more children per family unit 20 000 
  people is not an unlikely figure. In support of this fact an amount of A$1.50 
  per head (1997 figures) would indeed be barely sufficient to give everyone just 
  a little feed.
  So Phillip rightly estimated that to feed this vast multitude a great price 
  had to paid. And remember that this is at the time of Passover cp John 
  6:4. Just twelve months 
  from hence Christ was going to pay the ultimate price for the redemption of 
  His people. All of His people. A great price was paid that we might feed on 
  the "Bread of Heaven." As Paul informs us in Acts 20:28 the price 
  paid was the very life blood of God's Only Begotton Son. Not as a ransom sacrifice 
  of course. But as a representative sacrifice on behalf of all those who choose 
  to be covered by that gracious act of Divine love. 
How appropriate that the children of God gather regularly then to feed on the "bread of heaven " as Christ Himself taught in Capernaum straight after this incident in John 6:50. It was He who could say of Himself "This is the Bread which cometh down from heaven that a man may eat thereof and not die."
"Five 
  Barley Loaves and Two Small Fishes"
  According to 
  Mark 6:38 Christ addressed 
  His disciples and He asked them "how many loaves have ye?" John records 
  that they found "a lad who had five loaves and two fishes." Now five 
  loaves and two fishes constitute far more than a cut lunch for a little lad. 
  All the other records indicate in fact that this food belonged to the disciples. 
  Compare Matt 
  14:17 and Luke 
  9:13 where the disciples 
  report that "we have no more but five loaves and two fishes." It appears 
  then that the lad was probably the son of one of the disciples. Maybe this was 
  Andrew's son cp 
  John 6:8. And maybe 
  he had the job of carrying the picnic basket for the twelve. But as Andrew said 
  "what is this among so many?" Five loaves and two fishes was a truly 
  insignificant amount to feed such a vast multitude. In fact John fills out a 
  few more details in his record. He tells us that they were "five barley 
  loaves and two small fishes." 
  Now barley loaves were considered to be the bread of the poor. The Barley harvest 
  took place in March about the time of Passover and before the general wheat 
  harvest. Barley is always ready to harvest before the wheat. So here we have 
  the first ripe grains gathered and sorted and crushed and baked to produce the 
  bread of the firstfruits.
  But this barley was probably already twelve months old taken from the previous 
  years harvest. Surely this too would identify these loaves as belonging to the 
  poor of the land. And these "five barley loaves" were about to be 
  miraculously multiplied to feed a multitude of the poor of this world. And this 
  multitude had the potential to grow rich in faith. They had been gathered by 
  grace out of the nations as represented by the two fish. Jew and Gentile caught 
  in the great Gospel net and brought to the Son of God Himself through the work 
  of His followers. 
  In your leisure compare John 21 which records the eighth sign of John with the 
  record in John 6 which records the fourth sign of John and you will find the 
  similarities are amazing. For example:- 
1) John 21:1 tells us that the disciples were gathered at the Sea of Tiberias - the only other reference in Scripture to this Sea of Tiberias is in John 6.
2) John 
  21:2 gives us the names 
  of 5 Disciples - 
  1. Simon Peter
  2. Thomas 
  3. Nathanael
  4. James
  5. John..... and 2 other disciples.... whom John does not name. 
Remember John 6 records that there were 5 loaves and 2 fishes. In other words the work of the Disciples after Christ's resurrection was an extension of the lessons they had learned twelve months previously when Christ fed a multitude in the wilderness. Their commission was to fish men both Jew and Gentile out of the sea of Nations and to feed them by Grace with the True Bread of Heaven cp John 21:15-17. That is our work also!
3) In John 21:5 Christ asks "Children have ye any meat?" And in John 6:5 He had asked Phillip "Whence shall we buy bread?" Reading between the lines the question appears to be "can you (the disciples) provide the food by which a man can eat and live forever?"
4) In John 21:6 "a great multitude of fishes" was drawn to Christ out of the sea of Galilee by the disciples. And in John 6:5 "a great company of people" were drawn to Christ out of the region of Galilee more than likely by the evangelising of the Apostles cp Mark 6:7-13; Luke 9:1-6.
5) In John 21:8 we learn that Peter leapt into the water whilst the ship was about 200 cubits from the land. Here we see Peter a long way from his Lord just as Phillip had been a long way from His Lord spiritually when he calculated that 200 pennyworth of bread could not properly feed all that multitude cp John 6:7.
6) John 21:9 mentions Fish on the coals and Bread. A meal miraculously prepared by Christ just as it had been in John 6:11.
7) In John 21:17 Jesus says "Feed my Lambs and Feed my sheep." The work of the apostles after Christ's death was an extension of the things which He had done when He fed a multitude whom He perceived as "sheep not having a shepherd" in the wilderness of life cp John 6:5.
"John's 
  Great Message Continues On"
  And so returning to Mark 
  6:39 we find that the 
  Captain of our Salvation takes control of the situation. "He commanded 
  them to all sit down." If we wish to be fed by this One then we must be 
  ready to obey His Word. As He said in another place "Why do you call me 
  Lord Lord and do not those things that I say?" cp Luke 
  6:46. And we can only 
  do the things He says if we hear Him if we are prepared to listen to Him speak 
  to us. And having listened to Him we must then try to live our lives as if He 
  were right there with us all the time.
  Why did He "make them all sit down?" Again Jesus is extending the 
  work of His cousin John. John had faithfully delivered the great message of 
  Divine equalisation. "Every valley shall be exalted and every mountain 
  and hill shall be made low and the glory of Yahweh shall be revealed and all 
  flesh shall see it together" cp Isaiah 
  40:3-11. In other words 
  all flesh is as grass. We all have a common level in the presence of One so 
  Great as our Lord. It is the great work of Christ to raise us up out of the 
  depressing valleys of life. At the same time Christ will bring down the high 
  mountains of pride and self sufficiency. And all the while He will make straight 
  the things that were made crooked back in the Garden of Eden. And in performing 
  these great works He will smooth out the rough patches in our characters. In 
  the end we shall see not just the "glory of Yahweh " but as Luke tells 
  us when he quotes this Isaiah passage we shall see "the salvation of God" 
  cp Luke 
  3:4-6. (Incidentally 
  the name Isaiah means "The Salvation of Yah").
  Why does the record then tell us in Mark 
  6:44 that there were 
  5 000 men when Matthew tells us that there were women and children also? As 
  we have seen already this was probably a concourse numbering in the vicinity 
  of 20 000 or more people. It would appear that the number "5 000" 
  is chosen to highlight a specific aspect of the Lord's work. 
Five is the number which is commonly associated with Divine Grace. And a thousand is often used in scripture to indicate a family cp Micah 5:2. What we have typified here in the Divine record is the family of Divine Grace. This Divine Family of Grace is about to re-enact in miniature the experiences of another multitude. A multitude 100 times greater in number. Our minds go back to the time when a multitude numbering around 2 000 000 souls fled Egypt and were fed Manna by the Grace of God in the wilderness for forty years. Look at what Christ informed the crowd the next day in Capernaum. "Our fathers did eat manna in the desert; as it is written He gave them bread from heaven to eat." This provision of Grace is described in Psalm 78:25 as "the food of angels." But then Christ added "Your fathers who ate that manna in the wilderness are dead!" A generation cursed forever because they had despised the Grace of the God who had called them out of Egypt and who lead them to the Land of Promise.
Christ commanded the disciples 
  to make the multitude before Him to sit down "by companies." The Greek 
  word is 'Sumposia.' From this we get our English word "Symphony." 
  It conveys the idea of harmony and peace and working together. Literally it 
  means to be "as guests around a meal table facing each other." And 
  they sat down "upon the green grass." In John 
  6:10 we are told "now 
  there was much grass in that place." Though it was a wilderness place they 
  were in obviously it was a place where there was sufficient moisture to produce 
  an abundance of grass.
  It was springtime in Israel at this time the time of Passover when the hills 
  were covered in verdure. Within a few short months the scorching summer sun 
  would cause that grass to wither and the flowers to fade. So it was to be 40 
  years later that the Roman Armies would go through the land and bring on Israel's 
  terrible summer of judgment. A judgment which would see the vitality of the 
  nation of Israel wither away for 1900 years. And the only thing that would endure 
  that terrible judgement would be the Word of God itself. This is exactly what 
  Isaiah 40 had declared. "The Word of our God shall stand forever." 
  And where would it stand? Obviously it would stand or endure in the lives and 
  hearts of individuals who are prepared to have the Word as a motivating power 
  in their lives. Individuals like John the Baptist and Elijah and the Lord Himself 
  cp Luke 
  21:36.
  Not only did Jesus require that the multitude sit down in companies He commanded 
  that "they sit down in ranks." Here again is another allusion to their 
  father's flight from Egypt. Exodus 
  13:18 records that the 
  children of Israel left Egypt "harnessed by five in a rank." The word 
  "ranks" in the Greek literally means "garden plots." It 
  reminds us of the beautiful theme found in Song 
  of Solomon 4:12
. "A garden inclosed is my sister spouse." The 
  Divine Family of Grace sitting at Christ's feet and feeding of His Bread was 
  as a garden plot. Everyone of them can be pictured as "trees of righteousness 
  the planting of Yahweh " cp 
  Isaiah 61:3. The ranks 
  were in number "by hundreds and by fifties." So in groups of one hundred 
  with two ranks of fifty they sat down facing each other as guests at a 
  large table. In their bright Oriental dress each harmonious setting would look 
  just like a beautiful garden plot on that grassy Galilean hillside.
  Two ranks incorporating Jew and Gentile made a company of hundred. This represents 
  the complete family of God. Many in the crowd would have become excited with 
  the idea of 'groups of fifty.' Fifty appears to be the normal size for an army 
  unit in Old Testament times cp 
  2 Sam 15:1; 2 
  Kings 1:9-14. There 
  was probably much discussion among the people at this time in favour of openly 
  overthrowing Herod by means of military force. But Christ was preparing the 
  minds of the people for another Kingdom. A Kingdom which will be set up with 
  Divine Weapons with a Divine Purpose to establish a Divine Kingdom in the Divine 
  Timetable cp 
  John 18:36. Amongst 
  some of the candidates for His future Divine Army Christ divided the two fish 
  that had been hauled out of the sea of nations. And He also divided the five 
  loaves by grace amongst the poor who had nothing in this world cp 
  Isaiah 58:7-11. 
"They 
  Did All Eat And Were Filled"
  In Mark 
  6:41 Jesus "when 
  He had taken the five loaves and the two fishes looked up to heaven and blessed 
  and brake the loaves and gave them to His disciples to set before them; and 
  the two fishes divided He among them all." Where have we read those words 
  before? They are very similar to the words spoken just twelve months later by 
  Christ. In Mark 
  14:22 similar words 
  are recorded when He instituted the great memorial feast we gather together 
  to remember so regularly. And in v42 
  we learn that "they did all eat and were filled." By the grace of 
  God there is always sufficient for every person who seeks to sit at the feet 
  of the Master. "They who seek Yahweh shall not lack any good thing " 
  cp 
  Psa 34:7-10.
  Then we learn of an amazing principle in v43. 
  After the multitude had finished eating and were all filled "the disciples 
  took up twelve baskets full of fragments." Not only was there sufficient 
  on this occasion to feed the immediate Family of Divine Grace sitting at the 
  feet of the Master. There was enough left over to feed all the Israel of God 
  down through the passage of time. And the disciples would have learnt a great 
  lesson. When a disciple of Christ stretches out his hand to feed God's ecclesia 
  he receives far more than he originally had. 
And one does not have to stand up on a platform to feed the ecclesia of God! Every Bible class and every meeting is a golden opportunity to share what we have gleaned from the scriptures with our fellow disciples. What we have gathered may seem to be a meagre contribution in our own eyes but it has been proved time and again that we will go home with far more than we originally brought if we would only share the gems of the Scriptures with each other.
"Twelve 
  Disciples Adrift On the Sea of Life"
  The next section in Mark 
  6:45-51 also contains 
  some very important lessons for us. In John's record we learn that Christ circumvented 
  an attempt by the people to make Him King. (Can you imagine the pressure that 
  Jesus would have been under at this time as in excess of 20 000 people clamoured 
  to make Him King?) What a temptation for any man! He knew that He was born to 
  be "King of the Jews!" cp 
  John 18:37. That position 
  is His by Divine decree! But only in the Divine time! Here are His second and 
  third temptations all over again cp 
  Luke 4:4-12. Now was 
  not the time. So Jesus sent the people away. We know that He was alone because 
  he had first "constrained (or compelled) His disciples to get into the 
  ship and to go over the other side of the Sea before unto Bethsaida." Mark 
  6:45(mg) suggests they 
  were going "over against Bethsaida." This appears correct for John 
  tells us in his record that the disciples set sail "toward Capernaum " 
  cp 
  John 6:17.
  Here are all the disciples out in the Ecclesial ship on the Sea of Nations in 
  the midst of the Gentile night heading towards "Capernaum." The name 
  "Capernaum" means literally 'the city of comfort or consolation.' 
  Jesus having dispersed the multitude fled from the temptation that was before 
  Him. He ascended up into a mountain alone to find true comfort in prayer with 
  His Father. During the night a great storm arose out on the waters of the lake. 
  The sea and the waves began to roar. The winds became contrary. Sailing became 
  nigh on impossible.
  What a beautiful cameo of life as it is for us today. A small band of disciples 
  in a frail vessel named "The Ecclesia." A frail craft adrift on the 
  Sea of Nations heading in the general direction of the "City of comfort 
  and consolation." As Paul comments in Heb 
  11:10 today we are looking 
  in faith "for a city which hath foundations whose builder and maker is 
  God." But the night is dark. The winds of vain human imaginings are strong. 
  The sea and the waves are crashing and foaming all around. And Christ has ascended 
  into Heaven alone.
  Then in Mark 
  6:47 we come to the 
  second "evening" that was mentioned earlier. Obviously the time is 
  now past 6pm. Darkness had well and truly arrived. As we read "when even 
  was (fully) come the ship was in the midst of the sea and Christ alone on the 
  land." In the previous verse Mark had told us that "He had departed 
  into a mountain to pray." And from His lofty vantage point "He saw 
  them toiling in rowing." Being the time of Passover a full moon cast some 
  light upon that furious sea. As the moon shone down through broken clouds Christ 
  observed His disciples labouring together as they headed toward Capernaum. As 
  our Lord watches His latter day Disciples from His vantage point in Heaven at 
  this time can it be said that He can see us 'toiling in rowing?' Is the small 
  frail vessel that we are in heading towards the City of Consolation? Is it sinking? 
  What is happening to this great little "ship"?
  Now is time to examine our lives. We look out into the black Gentile night about 
  us. The storms of life are raging. The "sea and the waves are roaring" 
  all around us cp 
  Luke 21:25. Are we just 
  a passenger in this good ship? Are we content to just go along for the ride? 
  Do we sit back at home and take it easy? Do we expect that the labours of our 
  Brethren will be sufficient to carry us into the Kingdom? Are we "asleep 
  " kidding ourselves that mere attendance at Ecclesial Meetings is all that 
  is required to "live the Truth?" 
  This good ship "The Ecclesia " needs all hands on deck today. The 
  "winds of life are contrary" to us. We can never make it to the far 
  side on our own. It is too late to bail out now. It would be spiritual suicide 
  to do that. God has given us "a great company" of Brothers and Sisters. 
  At this late hour we need to pull together toward the great goal of "consolation" 
  that He has set before us. Christ has chosen all the occupants that are in the 
  "Ecclesial ship" along with us. There is great strength of character 
  to be gained by remaining in "the boat " and weathering out whatever 
  storms might be raging wherever we are at this time. No matter where we are 
  we are not alone - God knows! 
  [To change the metaphor] we can only grow where the Father has planted us - 
  but we must grow and bear fruit to His Glory  
  cp John 15:2-13. Remember 
  Christ has ascended up on high into Heaven itself and He can see all our efforts. 
  He can see whether we are "toiling in rowing" the Ecclesial ship. 
  He can see whether we are helping all our Brothers and Sisters to arrive safely 
  at the great "City of Consolation." He can also see if we are busy 
  "smiting our fellow servants" in His absence causing some to become 
  disillusioned with "the way " cp Matt 
  24:44-51.
  But returning to the narrative. John informs us in chapter 6:18 
  that a "great wind" had arisen on the sea. The disciples had spent 
  all night rowing. It was not a great distance across the Sea. It was only about 
  6 miles. Now the long night was about to end. And the ship had only travelled 
  between 3.5 to 4 miles cp John 
  6:19. This is so true 
  to life even at the end of the 20th Century. It is terribly hard work fighting 
  against the popular tide of humanity. The general drift of the contrary winds 
  of false doctrine often hamper any progress that might be made. And without 
  Christ in the vessel with us we will find the task of reaching the far side 
  impossible.
  "And about the fourth watch of the night He cometh unto them " cp 
  Mark 6:48. It was now 
  very late in the night. In fact there is here in this record an incidental little 
  clue as to the importance of this information. This "fourth watch" 
  is a Roman (or Gentile) reckoning of time and it relates to the time between 
  3am and sunrise. 
  And furthermore John tells us that the disciples were expecting Christ to come 
  unto them cp 
  John 6:17. And now He 
  appears as Mark 
  6:48 continues "walking 
  upon the Sea." In other words He is in control of the nations at a time 
  when "the sea and the waves are roaring." What a marvellous comfort 
  to us then that we can discern Christ in the signs of the times drawing ever 
  nearer to us through the dawn mists of the Gentile night.
  And then Mark tells us "that He would have passed by them!" Has it 
  ever felt like that to you? Time is moving on. The night has been long. The 
  troubles that surround us seem to have no answer. How much longer will He be? 
  Could it be that He has "passed us by"? And we sometimes have doubts 
  and fears and sometimes we may even wonder if we really are the people. Sometimes 
  we wonder whether or not we have followed cunningly devised fables? 
  And Christ is testing us is He not? In the same way that He tested His disciples 
  on that mountain side nearly 2 000 years ago "to prove us." To see 
  what we will do when we are left to our devices and to see just how we co-operate 
  together in rowing the Ecclesial Boat. To see how we will weather the storms 
  of life and also to see how we will feed His lambs and to prove us whether we 
  will care for His sheep.
  But as Peter says our God has given us "a more sure word of prophecy " 
  and when we examine the prophetic scriptures and see the prophecies fulfilling 
  one after the other exactly as Bro Thomas and our other pioneering Brethren 
  anticipated they would why would He not crown off His work with the grand climax 
  of the ages? And so as Christ approaches us now how do we perceive Him? In v49 
  the Disciples saw Him as "a Spirit " something that lacked substance 
  "for they all saw Him and were troubled." What about ourselves? The 
  day is fast approaching "when we shall see Him as He is " and what 
  is more He shall see us as we are Brethren! The question for ourselves today 
  is does that prospect trouble us? Are we acting like Christ and His Father toward 
  our Brethren? Or are we dead from the neck up? It does appear that most people 
  today are "fast asleep " and self-satisfied within their own "Comfort-Zone 
  " though they valiantly fight anyone who dares to do anything that might 
  wake them up and make them think about the "real issues" of "Living 
  Life by the Grace of the Father?"
  What is our Lord to us? Is He a reality? Or is he a "Phantasma?" We 
  must be able to make Christ a reality in our lives if we are going to make it 
  safely to the other side of the Sea of Nations. 
And don't we long to hear those next words spoken to us? "Be of good cheer it is I be not afraid." This is the same message that the angel Gabriel spoke to Daniel in chapter 10:12 when Daniel was symbolically resurrected. What words of great comfort and assurance and consolation. And it will not be long before they are spoken to us God willing.
"With 
  Christ in the Vessel We Smile at the Storm"
  Mark 
  6:51 then records that 
  "He went up unto them into the ship " and John records that "immediately 
  the ship was at the land whither they went." A distance of between 2 and 
  3 miles covered in an instant and "immediately the wind ceased " and 
  the ship was safely moored in the harbour at Capernaum. The disciples could 
  not make the distance on their own and neither shall we. All we can do is head 
  roughly in the right direction and when Christ appears in the vessel "in 
  a moment in the twinkling of eye " that is in no time at all we shall have 
  arrived safely at the "City of Consolation." 
So in summary let us reflect on the lessons that are contained in this beautiful and gracious Bible narrative.
Call to mind the work of 
  John the Baptist at home in the Desert bereft of all that can clutter and hinder 
  faithfully introducing his greater cousin to a Godless and a Lawless Nation. 
  And remember how he lost his life because he dared to speak the Truth without 
  compromise. His next waking moment will be to hear those wonderful comforting 
  words "be of good cheer it is I be not afraid." And for John it will 
  seem that in "a moment and in the twinkling of an eye " he will have 
  passed from the prison house of Herod to the "City of the Great King " 
  with his work about to begin again this time to fearlessly introduce his Cousin 
  to our generation cp 
  Isaiah 40; Isaiah 
  61; Rev 
  14:1-7.
  And of course there is the work of Christ the "True Shepherd " who 
  selflessly ministered to the needs of the poor of this world to those sheep 
  who being scattered by the false shepherds were lost on all the high mountains 
  of Israel cp 
  Ezek 34:6; Luke 
  15:1-7. And let us reflect 
  that He sacrificed His solitude and His energy and His comfort and ultimately 
  His life to provide that true "Bread from Heaven " whereby we might 
  eat and live forever with Him.
  Consider the Disciples as they grappled to comprehend the Lord's way of solving 
  seemingly insurmountable difficulties. And how they laboured to distribute the 
  Bread of Life amongst the Family called by Grace to the feet of Jesus and how 
  they gathered in the end enough of that "Living Bread" to feed all 
  the Israel of God down through time.
  Let us remember how that Christ is now departed into "a high mountain " 
  and how we are in the Ecclesial Ship with all His disciples everyone of them 
  called by Him out in the midst of the Sea of Nations working together to row 
  towards the "City of Consolation " with a tremendous wind representing 
  all that opposes God whipping up the sea all around us. And Christ allows these 
  storms of life. He had the power to calm the storm. But He knows that a smooth 
  sea never made a good mariner. He is testing our comfort zone and our real commitment 
  to the Truth. And we can be just like Peter and step out of the "comfort-zone 
  " as he did on this occasion when he left the boat and walked across water 
  toward his Master cp 
  Matt 14:29-30. 
  But like Peter the moment we take our eyes of Christ and allow "fear" 
  to motivate us we will sink like the stone that Peter was named after. There 
  is only one way to stay on top of whatever problem is besetting us at the moment 
  and that is to gaze steadfastly into the face of Jesus Christ and be motivated 
  by Faith and not by Fear cp 
  Luke 12:32; 2 
  Cor 3:18; 1 
  John 4:18-21. 
  And can we see His face now? In this last watch of the Gentile night? Coming 
  to us through the morning mist! He is near the Sun of Righteousness is about 
  to appear! Or do we feel that He has passed us by? Will we be troubled when 
  we see Him? And when He sees us will He say to us "Be of good cheer it 
  is I be not afraid " or will He say "O ye of little faith wherefore 
  didst thou doubt?" Let us then be not fearful. Let us rather be faithful 
  until the end.
  
  
Does this teach us something about the ideal maximum size of our Meetings today? Fifty members gives everyone something to do. When an Meeting grows to one hundred members perhaps it is time to start a new light stand and spread the word and the work around a little further. Maybe this would contribute to a greater Ecclesial harmony as there is nothing like a little work to keep idle hands and idle tongues gainfully and profitably employed.