The Miracles of Jesus - Week 2

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Over the next few Sundays in church, we will be looking at a number of Jesus’ many miracles. Exploring what they mean and what they tell us about who Jesus is and how they reveal his character to us.

Each week we will be putting up a devotional linked to our Sunday service for you and your family to enjoy and discuss at your leisure. After all, church isn’t just for Sundays


Feeding the 5000


This week we look at how Jesus manages to feed a hungry crowd of 5000 with just a handful of fish and some loaves of bread from a little boy’s lunch. You can read this passage in the bible in a variety of different books: Matt 13:14-21, Mark 6:30-44, Luke 9:10, John 6:1 and you can watch this video below.


Family Devotional


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Can God use kids?

According to John’s record of this same story, the five small barley loaves and two small fish that Jesus multiplied belonged to a young boy (see John 6:9). Perhaps it was his lunch. Regardless, we’re sure that boy never forgot the day when his few loaves and fish fed five thousand people.

This story shows us that God can take what little we have to give and make it into something that can bless a lot of people. We may think, like that little boy, that we don’t have very much to offer. But God can multiply what we have. When He does this, it is He, not us, who is rightfully made to look better in other people’s eyes. This miracle glorifies God.

I’ve always wondered what it would have been like to see this miracle.Specifically, I’ve wondered when the food actually multiplied. Did it multiply only in Jesus’ hands, or did it also multiply in His disciples’ hands? It seems reasonable to conclude that it was both, due to the fact that so many thousands of people were fed.

It is also very likely that the bread and fish continued to multiply in the hands of the people sitting in the groups. If so, that could be how they all knew that a great miracle had just taken place (see John 6:14). Wouldn’t that be something to see—food multiplying in your own hands?

Regardless, this story is one more piece of proof that Jesus was God and as powerful as God. At least five thousand people witnessed what happened and there is no record in history that anyone at that time even attempted to claim that it didn’t happen.

This story also shows us how much God loves people. Jesus and His disciples were trying to get away from the crowds just to rest for a while and eat a meal without interruption. So they journeyed by boat across the Sea of Galilee to a peaceful spot. But when they arrived at their destination, a vast crowd was waiting for them. Amazingly, Jesus displayed no aggravation, but rather, He felt compassion for them and ministered to them by teaching and healing (see Luke 9:11). Then, late in the afternoon, He was concerned that the people needed food to eat, so He provided a meal for them. Our God cares about us. He wants to meet our needs. We shouldn’t ever feel that we’re bothering Him. He wants us to come to Him because He loves us so dearly!

Have a go at discussing these questions together.

Q. Once, a modern Pharisee who didn’t believe in the miracles of the Bible, attempted to disprove Jesus’ miracle of the feeding of the five thousand. He claimed that back in Jesus’ time, the loaves of bread were very large. How do we know that wasn’t true?

A. Because the loaves belonged to a young boy. There is no way he could have carried five loaves that were large enough to feed five thousand men. Keep in mind that the women and children who were fed that day weren’t even counted, so it’s possible Jesus fed more than twenty thousand people. Also, the boy’s two fish fed everyone as well. Unless those fish were multiplied byJesus, they must have been extremely large fish to feed so many people! Whales even! Finally, the disciples picked up twelve baskets of what was left over. One young boy couldn’t have carried even a fraction of the leftovers.

Q. Why do you suppose Jesus instructed the disciples to collect all the leftovers?

A. Perhaps so everyone would see that food had been multiplied. Also, Jesus said that He didn’t want any of the food to be wasted. God wants us to be good stewards of what He gives us as well, not wasting things unnecessarily. (Also, God wouldn’t want us to be litterbugs!)

Q. What do you think Jesus did with the leftovers?

A. I would guess that He gave some to the little boy whose loaves and fish He multiplied. He may also have given some to designated people in the crowd to distribute to the poor. And He may have kept some for His disciples and Himself to eat later.

Has God given you a gift? Offer it to Him to be used as He sees fit and He’ll use you to bless other people no matter how young you are.


Worship


It’s good to praise and worship God on any day of the year but on Easter Sunday we have so much to be thankful for, it’s right that we worship at the tops of our voices with everything we’ve got. So crank up the volume and sing and dance on the day of Christ’s resurrection!


Let’s pray


Let’s take some time now to be still with God before we pray. I find it helps if I bow my head and close my eyes so I don’t get distracted.

Lord Jesus, Son of God, Miracle-worker,

Thank you that you have the power to turn something small into something huge, something ordinary into something extraordinary.

Please help us to be extraordinary and use whatever gifts you give us to glorify your name.

Help us to be compassionate, just as you are - to help those in need.

In your name, we pray,

Amen.




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The Miracles of Jesus - Week 3

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The Miracles of Jesus - Week 1