Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Week 6 : Matt. 13:8 - 14:36

After His rejection by the Jewish religious leaders (Matt. 12:22-37), His own Galilean countrymen (vv13.53-58), and by the Gentile politicians (vv14.1-13), the Lord Jesus withdrew to a deserted place privately.This indicates that from then on, He would hide Himself in a deserted place, a place without culture, away from the religious, cultured and political circles. He did this by means of a boat (v14:13), implying that He would do this through the church.

In spite of His threefold rejection, there were still many who sought and followed the heavenly King. They did this by leaving their cities; the Lord did not come to them in their cities, but they left them to come to Him in the deserted place. Throughout the centuries, the true followers of Christ have left cultured spheres to follow their heavenly King outside the cultured world.

These followers spent much time in the Lord's presence, with their sick being healed. However as evening fell,

the disciples came to Him, saying, This place is deserted and the hour is already late. Send the crowds away that they may go into the villages and buy food for themselves. But Jesus said to them, They do not need to go away. You give them something to eat. (Matt. 14:15-16)

The disciples' concept was that the followers should do something; this is wholly according to the principle of the law. However, the Lord's concept is to give people something to enjoy; this is the principle of grace. Actually, grace is just the Lord Himself coming to us to be our life supply, our enjoyment, and our everything. When we have the Lord, we lack nothing (Psalm 23:1). The Lord intended to show that what His followers need is the proper food to satisfy their hunger. All that they needed was Hs resurrection life, which would satisfy their spiritual hunger, as signified in this miracle. This corresponds with Matt. 6:31-33, where we are told that the kingdom people should not be anxious about what they will eat.

The disciples only had five loaves and two fish between them. John 6:9 tells us that the loaves were barley loaves. Barley, a crop which ripens before the wheat crop, signifies the resurrected Christ (Lev. 23:10); thus barley loaves signify Christ in resurrection as food to us. Both the loaves and the fish are small items, which indicates that Christ came to His followers not as a King to reign over them (which is what the Jews were expecting), but as small pieces of food to feed them.

The Lord took the food, and looking to the heavens, blessed it and broke it. This signifies firstly that the Lord took His Father in the heavenlies as His source, while the breaking of the food shows us that whatever we bring to the Lord must be broken, that it may become a blessing to others. Having broken the food, the Lord gave it to the disciples to distribute to the crowds, indicating that they were not the source of the blessing; they were only the channels by which the Lord's blessing reached the people for their satisfaction.

When everyone had fully satisfied themselves by enjoying the Lord's grace, there were twelve handbaskets full of broken pieces, indicating that not only is the resurrected Christ unlimited and inexhaustible, but that His provision is abundant, more than sufficient to meet all our need.

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