Name something that you consume every day that you could not live without. Be honest! For me, it is coffee. Surely it is an addiction, as any abstinence from coffee gives me a terrific headache and I don’t feel well. I learned this during two pregnancies back in the dark ages when doctors (many of whom had never been pregnant) insisted that coffee was dangerous to the fetus. So each time, for nine months, I did not have a drop, which meant that in addition to morning sickness, I dealt with coffee withdrawn for the first two months. Modern thinking now allows for a cup of coffee in the morning for pregnant women, and for the sake of my coffee-loving daughters, I am grateful that they turned that thing around. It was brutal!
Your thing might be fruit, or cigarettes, or candy, or bread. I bet for a lot of us, bread is something we consume once a day. It would be missed if we were deprived of it. In ancient times, bread was essential to life, as grain was a main source of nutrition, and it was easily obtained. This was the case in Jesus’ time.
In our passage today, Jesus took advantage of the cultural norm of bread consumption to make a startling point about himself:
John 6:30 (Common English Bible)
30 They asked, “What miraculous sign will you do, that we can see and believe you? What will you do? 31 Our ancestors ate manna in the wilderness, just as it is written, ‘He gave them bread from heaven to eat.‘”
32 Jesus told them, “I assure you, it wasn’t Moses who gave the bread from heaven to you, but my Father gives you the true bread from heaven. 33 The bread of God is the one who comes down from heaven and gives life to the world.”
34 They said, “Sir, give us this bread all the time!”
35 Jesus replied, “I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never go hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty. 36 But I told you that you have seen me and still don’t believe. 37 Everyone whom the Father gives to me will come to me, and I won’t send away anyone who comes to me. 38 I have come down from heaven not to do my will, but the will of him who sent me. 39 This is the will of the one who sent me, that I won’t lose anything he has given me, but I will raise it up at the last day. 40 This is my Father’s will: that all who see the Son and believe in him will have eternal life, and I will raise them up at the last day.”
John used heavenly descent language to hammer home the point that while both manna and Jesus came down from heaven, Jesus is the true bread. Descent language is used to solidify the connection between the manna miracle and Jesus’ revelation of himself as the Bread of Life. The manna of Exodus 16 was bread that came down from heaven, but Jesus’ claims of his own heavenly descent, coupled with the “I am” statement of v.35, show him to be the true bread from heaven. Jesus, not the manna, is God’s life-giving gift to the world.
What does this mean to you today? Jesus’ revelation that he was the Bread of Life is a sign of God’s sustaining and providing presence in our lives. It means we will never go spiritually hungry if we fill ourselves with God’s Word. We are assured that if we drink of the Living Water we will never thirst for salvation and forgiveness again. This is the word of hope that this starving, parched world needs!
Yet sadly, the world seeks to fill itself with the empty calories of popularity, politics, social media, hours filled watching Netflix, YouTube, and streaming services, mindless pleasure-seeking, greed, celebrity, and a host of other things that may fill us for a moment but won’t last enough to help us thrive. Even the church can be guilty of taking the pleasant short cuts of performance-based worship and personality-cult preachers who, like candy, might satisfy you for an hour on Sunday, but won’t last until Monday morning. A steady diet of such fluff leaves your soul malnourished and your teeth rotten. But Jesus offers us the kind of soul-sustenance that helps us to thrive. When we feast on the bread that is Jesus, through daily in-depth Bible study, meditation, prayer, giving, serving others, and true worship, we fill ourselves with the kind of wholesome nutrition that enables us to find happiness, peace, and contentment.
We thrive.
This is why it is important to keep doing what we are doing every morning. When we grab that first cup of coffee and sit down to consume Scripture, we are filling ourselves with good stuff that will last through eternity. Thank you so much for reading! May we thrive in God’s Word together.
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Thrive by Becca Ziegler