JESUS THE BREAD OF LIFE
JOHN v-59.
In this chapter John follows the same
method as in the last. He first relates the sign,
and then gives our Lord’s interpretation of it.
As to the Samaritan woman, and to the inhabitants
of Jerusalem, so now to the Galileans, Jesus manifests
Himself as sent to communicate to man life eternal.
The sign by means of which He now manifests Himself
is, however, so new that many fresh aspects of His
own person and work are disclosed.
The occasion for the miracle arose,
as usual, quite simply. Jesus had retired to
the east side of the sea of Tiberias, probably to a
spot near Bethsaida Julias, that He might have some
rest. But the people, eager to see more miracles,
followed Him round the head of the lake, and, as they
went, their number was augmented by members of a Passover
caravan which was forming in the neighbourhood or
was already on the march. This inconsiderate
pursuit of Jesus, instead of offending Him, touched
Him; and as He marked them toiling up the hill in
groups, or one by one, some quite spent with a long
and rapid walk, mothers dragging hungry children after
them, His first thought was, What can these poor tired
people get to refresh them here? He turns therefore
to Philip with the question, “Whence are we
to buy bread that these may eat?” This he said,
John tells us, “to prove” or test Philip.
Apparently this disciple was a shrewd business man,
quick to calculate ways and means, and rather apt
to scorn the expectations of faith. Every man
must rid himself of the defects of his qualities.
And Jesus now gave Philip an opportunity to overcome
his weakness-in-strength by at last boldly confessing
his inability and the Lord’s ability, by
saying, We have neither meat nor money, but we have
Thee. But Philip, like many another, missed his
opportunity, and, wholly oblivious of the resources
of Jesus, casts His eye rapidly over the crowd and
estimates that “two hundred pennyworth"
of bread would scarcely suffice to give each enough
to stay immediate cravings. Philip’s friend
Andrew as little as himself divines the intention
of Jesus, and naively suggests that the whole provision
he can hear of in the crowd is a little boy’s
five loaves and two fishes. These helpless, meagrely
furnished and meagrely conceiving disciples, meagre
in food and meagre in faith, are set in contrast to
the calm faith and infinite resource of Jesus.
The moral ground being thus prepared
for the miracle in the confessed inability of the
disciples and of the crowd, Jesus takes the matter
in hand. With that air of authority and calm
purpose which must have impressed the onlookers at
all His miracles, He says, “Make the men sit
down.” And there where they happened to
be, and without further preparation, on a grassy spot
near the left bank of the Jordan, and just where the
river flows into the lake of Galilee, with the evening
sun sinking behind the hills on the western shore and
the shadows lying across the darkened lake, the multitude
break up into groups of hundreds and fifties, and
seat themselves in perfect confidence that somehow
food is to be furnished. They seat themselves
as those who expect a full meal, and not a mere snack
they could eat standing, though where the full meal
was to come from who could tell? This expectation
must have deepened into faith as the thousands listened
to their Host giving thanks over the scanty
provision. One would fain have heard the words
in which Jesus addressed the Father, and by which He
caused all to feel how near to each was infinite resource.
And then, as He proceeded to distribute the ever-multiplying
food, the first awe-struck silence of the multitude
gave way to exclamations of surprise and to excited
and delighted comments. The little lad, as he
watched with widening eyes his two fishes doing the
work of two thousand, would feel himself a person
of consequence, and that he had a story to tell when
he went back to his home on the beach. And ever
and anon, as our Lord stood with a smile on His face
enjoying the congenial scene, the children from the
nearest groups would steal to His side, to get their
supplies from His own hand.
1. Before touching upon the points
in this sign emphasised by our Lord Himself, it is
perhaps legitimate to indicate one or two others.
And among these it may first of all be remarked that
our Lord sometimes, as here, gives not medicine but
food. He not only heals, but prevents disease.
And however valuable the one blessing is the
blessing of being healed the other is even
greater. The weakness of starvation exposes men
to every form of disease; it is a lowered vitality
which gives disease its opportunity. In the spiritual
life it is the same. The preservative against
any definite form of sin is a strong spiritual life,
a healthy condition not easily fatigued in duty, and
not easily overcome by temptation. Perhaps the
gospel has come to be looked upon too exclusively
as a remedial scheme, and too little as the means of
maintaining spiritual health. So marked is its
efficacy in reclaiming the vicious, that its efficacy
as the sole condition of healthy human life is apt
to be overlooked. Christ is needful to us not
only as sinners; He is needful to us as men.
Without Him human life lacks the element which gives
reality, meaning, and zest to the whole. Even
to those who have little present sense of sin He has
much to offer. A sense of sin grows with the
general growth of the Christian life; and that at
first it should be small need not surprise us.
But the present absence of a profound sorrow for sin
is not to bar our approach to Christ. To the
impotent man, conscious of his living death, Christ
offered a life that healed and strengthened healed
by strengthening. But equally to those who now
conversed with Him, and who, conscious of life, asked
Him how they might work the work of God, He
gave the same direction, that they must believe in
Him as their life.
2. Our Lord here supplied the same plain food
to all.
In the crowd were men, women, and
children, old and young, hard-working peasants, shepherds
from the hillside, and fishermen from the lake; as
well as traders and scribes from the towns. No
doubt it elicited remark that fare so simple should
be acceptable to all. Had the feast been given
by a banqueting Pharisee, a variety of tastes would
have been provided for. Here the guests were
divided into groups merely for convenience of distribution,
not for distinction of tastes. There are few
things which are not more the necessity of one class
of men than of another, or that while devotedly pursued
by one nation are not despised across the frontier,
or that do not become antiquated and obsolete in this
century though considered essential in the last.
But among these few things is the provision Christ
makes for our spiritual well-being. It is like
the supply of our deep natural desires and common appetites,
in which men resemble one another from age to age,
and by which they recognise their common humanity.
All the world round, you may find wells whose water
you could not say was different from what you daily
use, at any rate they quench your thirst as well.
You could not tell what country you were in nor what
age by the taste of the water from a living well.
And so what God has provided for our spiritual life
bears in it no peculiarities of time or place; it
addresses itself with equal power to the European
of to-day as it did to the Asiatic during our Lord’s
own lifetime. Men have settled down by hundreds
and by fifties, they are grouped according to various
natures and tastes, but to all alike is this one food
presented. And this, because the want it supplies
is not fictitious, but as natural and veritable a
want as is indicated by hunger or thirst.
We must beware then of looking with
repugnance on what Christ calls us to, as if it were
a superfluity that may reasonably be postponed to more
urgent and essential demands; or as if He were introducing
our nature to some region for which it was not originally
intended, and exciting within us spurious and fanciful
desires which are really alien to us as human beings.
This is a common thought. It is a common thought
that religion is not an essential but a luxury.
But in point of fact all that Christ calls us to,
perfect reconcilement with God, devoted service of
His will, purity of character, these are
the essentials for us, so that until we attain them
we have not begun to live, but are merely nibbling
at the very gate of life. God, in inviting us
to these things, is not putting a strain on our nature
it can never bear. He is proposing to impart
new strength and joy to our nature. He is not
summoning us to a joy that is too high for us, and
that we can never rejoice in, but is recalling us
to that condition in which alone we can live with comfort
and health, and in which alone we can permanently delight.
If we cannot now desire what Christ offers, if we
have no appetite for it, if all that He speaks of
seems uninviting and dreary, then this is symptomatic
of a fatal loss of appetite on our part. But as
Jesus would have felt a deeper compassion for any
in that crowd who were too faint to eat, or as He
would quickly have laid His healing hand on any diseased
person who could not eat, so does He still more deeply
compassionate all of us who would fain eat and drink
with His people, and yet nauseate and turn from their
delights as the sickly from the strong food of the
healthy.
3. But what Jesus especially
emphasises in the conversation arising out of the
miracle is that the food He gives is Himself.
He is the Bread of Life, the Living Bread. What
is there in Christ which constitutes Him the Bread
of Life? There is, first of all, that which He
Himself constantly presses, that He is sent by the
Father, that He comes out of heaven, bringing from
the Father a new source of life into the world.
When our Lord pointed out to the Galileans
that the work of God was to believe in Him, they demanded
a further sign as evidence that He was God’s
Messenger: “What sign doest Thou that we
may see and believe Thee? What dost Thou work?
Our fathers did eat manna in the desert; they had
bread from heaven, not common barley loaves such as
we got from You yesterday. Have You any such
sign as this to give? If You are sent from God,
we may surely expect you to rival Moses." To which
Jesus replies: “The bread which your fathers
received did not prevent them dying; it was meant
to sustain physical life, and yet even in that respect
it was not perfect. God has a better bread to
give, a bread which will sustain you in spiritual
life, not for a few years but for ever” (v, 50). “I am the living bread which came
down out of heaven: if any man eat of this bread,
he shall live for ever.”
This they could not understand.
They believed that the manna came from heaven.
Not the richest field of Egypt had produced it.
It seemed to come direct from God’s hand.
The Israelites could neither raise it nor improve
upon it. But how Jesus, “whose father and
mother we know,” whom they could trace to a
definite human origin, could say that He came from
heaven they could not understand. And yet, even
while they stumbled at His claim to a superhuman origin,
they felt there might be something in it. Everyone
with whom He came in contact felt there was in Him
something unaccountable. The Pharisees feared
while they hated Him. Pilate could not classify
Him with any variety of offender he had met with.
Why do men still continually attempt afresh to account
for Him, and to give at last a perfectly satisfactory
explanation, on ordinary principles, of all that He
was and did? Why, but because it is seen that
as yet He has not been so accounted for? Men do
not thus strive to prove that Shakespeare was a mere
man, or that Socrates or Epictetus was a mere man.
Alas! that is only too obvious. But to Christ
men turn and turn again with the feeling that here
is something which human nature does not account for;
something different, and something more than what
results from human parentage and human environment,
something which He Himself accounts for by the plain
and unflinching statement that He is “from heaven.”
For my part, I do not see that this
can mean anything less than that Christ is Divine,
that in Him we have God, and in Him touch the actual
Source of all life. In Him we have the one thing
within our reach which is not earth-grown, the one
uncorrupted Source of life to which we can turn from
the inadequacy, impurity, and emptiness of a sin-sick
world. No pebble lies hid in this bread on which
we can break our teeth; no sweetness in the mouth
turning afterwards to bitterness, but a new, uncontaminated
food, prepared independently of all defiling influences,
and accessible to all. Christ is the Bread from
heaven, because in Christ God gives Himself to us,
that by His life we may live.
There is another sense in which Christ
probably used the word “living.”
In contrast to the dead bread He had given them He
was alive. The same law seems to hold good of
our physical and of our spiritual life. We cannot
sustain physical life except by using as food that
which has been alive. The nutritive properties
of the earth and the air must have been assimilated
for us by living plants and animals before we can use
them. The plant sucks sustenance out of the earth we
can live upon the plant but not on the earth.
The ox finds ample nourishment in grass; we can live
on the ox but not on the grass. And so with spiritual
nutriment. Abstract truth we can make little of
at first hand; it needs to be embodied in a living
form before we can live upon it. Even God is
remote and abstract, and non-Christian theism makes
thin-blooded and spectral worshippers; it is when
the Word becomes flesh; when the hidden reason of
all things takes human form and steps out on the earth
before us, that truth becomes nutritive, and God our
life.
4. Still more explicitly Christ
says: “The bread which I will give is My
flesh, which I will give for the life of the world.”
For it is in this great act of dying that He becomes
the Bread of Life. God sharing with us to the
uttermost; God proving that His will is our righteousness;
God bearing our sorrows and our sins; God coming into
our human race, and becoming a part of its history all
this is seen in the cross of Christ; but it is also
seen that absolute love for men, and absolute submission
to God, were the moving forces of Christ’s life.
He was obedient even unto death. This was His
life, and by the cross He made it ours. The cross
subdues our hearts to Him, and gives us to feel that
self-sacrifice is the true life of man.
A man in a sickly state of body
has sometimes to make it matter of consideration,
or even of consultation, what he shall eat. Were
anyone to take the same thought about his spiritual
condition, and seriously ponder what would bring health
to his spirit, what would rid it of distaste for what
is right, and give it strength and purity to delight
in God and in all good, he would probably conclude
that a clear and influential exhibition of God’s
goodness, and of the fatal effects of sin, a convincing
exhibition, an exhibition in real life, of the unutterable
hatefulness of sin, and inconceivable desirableness
of God; an exhibition also which should at the same
time open for us a way from sin to God this,
the inquirer would conclude, would bring life to the
spirit. It is such an exhibition of God and of
sin, and such a way out of sin to God, as we have
in Christ’s death.
5. How are we to avail ourselves
of the life that is in Christ? As the Jews asked,
How can this man give us His flesh to eat?
Our Lord Himself uses several terms to express the
act by which we make use of Him as the Bread of Life.
“He that believeth on Me,” “He that
cometh to Me,” “He that eateth My flesh
and drinketh My blood, hath eternal life.”
Each of these expressions has its own significance.
Belief must come first belief that Christ
is sent to give us life; belief that it depends upon
our connection with that one Person whether we shall
or shall not have life eternal. We must also
“come to Him.” The people He was
addressing had followed Him for miles, and had found
Him and were speaking to Him, but they had not come
to Him. To come to Him is to approach Him in
spirit and with submissive trust; it is to commit
ourselves to Him as our Lord; it is to rest in Him
as our all; it is to come to Him with open heart,
accepting Him as all He claims to be; it is to meet
the eye of a present, living Christ, who knows what
is in man, and to say to Him “I am Thine, Thine
most gladly, Thine for evermore.”
But most emphatically of all does
our Lord say that we must “eat His flesh and
drink His blood” if we are to partake of His
life. That is to say, the connection between
Christ and us must be of the closest possible kind;
so close that the assimilation of the food we eat is
not too strong a figure to express it. The food
we eat becomes our blood and flesh; it becomes our
life, our self. And it does so by our eating it,
not by our talking of it, not by our looking at it,
and admiring its nutritive properties, but only by
eating it. And whatever process can make Christ
entirely ours, and help us to assimilate all that is
in Him, this process we are to use. The flesh
of Christ was given for us; by the shedding of Christ’s
blood, by the pouring out of His life upon the cross,
spiritual life was prepared for us. Cleansing
from sin and restoration to God were provided by the
offering of His life in the flesh; and we eat His
flesh when we use in our own behalf the death of Christ,
and take the blessings it has made possible to us;
when we accept the forgiveness of sins, enter into
the love of God, and adopt as our own the spirit of
the cross. His flesh or human form was the manifestation
of God’s love for us, the visible material of
His sacrifice; and we eat His flesh when we make this
our own, when we accept God’s love and adopt
Christ’s sacrifice as our guiding principle
of life. We eat His flesh when we take out of
His life and death the spiritual nutriment that is
actually there; when we let our nature be penetrated
by the spirit of the cross, and actually make Christ
the Source and the Guide of our spiritual life.
This figure of eating has many
lessons for us. Above all, it reminds us of the
poor appetite we have for spiritual nourishment.
How thoroughly by this process of eating does the
healthy body extract from its food every particle
of real nutriment. By this process the food is
made to yield all that it contains of nourishing substance.
But how far is this from representing our treatment
of Christ. How much is there in Him that is fitted
to yield comfort and hope, and yet to us it yields
none. How much that should fill us with assurance
of God’s love, yet how fearfully we live.
How much to make us admire self-sacrifice and fill
us with earnest purpose to live for others, and yet
how little of this becomes in very deed our
life. God sees in Him all that can make us complete,
all that can fill and gladden and suffice the soul,
and yet how bare and troubled and defeated do we live.
6. The mode of distribution was
also significant. Christ gives life to the world
not directly, but through His disciples. The life
He gives is Himself, but He gives it through the instrumentality
of men. The bread is His. The disciples
may manipulate it as they will, but it remains five
loaves only. None but He can relieve the famishing
multitude. Still not with His own hands does
He feed them, but through the believing service of
the Twelve. And this He did not merely for the
sake of teaching us that only through the Church is
the world supplied with the life He furnishes, but
primarily because it was the natural and fit order
then, as it is the natural and fit order now, that
they who themselves believe in the power of the Lord
to feed the world should be the means of distributing
what He gives. Each of the disciples received
from the Lord no more than would satisfy himself, yet
held in his hand what would through the Lord’s
blessing satisfy a hundred besides. And it is
a grave truth we here meet, that every one of us who
has received life from Christ has thereby in possession
what may give life to many other human souls.
We may give it or we may withhold it; we may communicate
it to the famishing souls around us or we may hear
unconcerned the weary heart-faint sigh; but the Lord
knows to whom He has given the bread of life, and
He gives it not solely for our own consumption but
for distribution. It is not the privilege of the
more enlightened or more fervent disciple, but of
all. He who receives from the Lord what is enough
for himself holds the lives of some of his fellows
in his hand.
Doubtless the faith of the disciples
was severely tried when they were required to advance
each man to his separate hundred with his morsel of
bread. There would be no struggling for the first
place then. But encouraged in their faith by
the simple and confident words of prayer their Master
had addressed to the Father, they are emboldened to
do His bidding, and if they gave sparingly and cautiously
at first, their parsimony must soon have been rebuked
and their hearts enlarged.
Theirs is also our trial. We
know we should be more helpful to others; but in presence
of the sorrowful we seem to have no word of comfort;
seeing this man and that pursuing a way the end of
which is death, we have yet no wise word of remonstrance,
no loving entreaty; lives are trifled away at our
side, and we are conscious of no ability to elevate
and dignify; lives are worn out in crushing toil and
misery, and we feel helpless to aid. The habit
grows upon us of expecting rather to get good than
to do good. We have long recognised that we are
too little influenced by God’s grace, and only
at long intervals now are we ashamed of this; it has
become our acknowledged state. We have found that
we are not the kind of people who are to influence
others. Looking at our slim faith, our stunted
character, our slender knowledge, we say, “What
is this among so many?” These feelings are inevitable.
No man seems to have enough even for his own soul.
But giving of what he has to others he will find his
own store increased. “There is that scattereth
abroad and yet increaseth,” is the law of spiritual
growth.
But the thought which shines through
all others as we read this narrative is the genial
tenderness of Christ. He is here seen to be considerate
of our wants, mindful of our weaknesses, quick to calculate
our prospects and to provide for us, simple, practical,
earnest in His love. We see here how He withholds
no good thing from us, but considers and gives what
we actually need. We see how reasonable it is
that He should require us to trust Him. To every
fainting soul, to every one who has wandered far and
whose strength is gone, and round whom the shadows
and chills of night are gathering, He says through
this miracle: “Wherefore do ye spend money
for that which is not bread, and your labour for that
which satisfieth not? Hearken diligently unto
Me, and eat ye that which is good, and let your soul
delight itself in fatness."