The Kingdom Ministry Model (2)
Journey Through Matthew • Sermon • Submitted • Presented
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Welcome
Welcome
Intro
Intro
As we began last week with our study of the Feeding of the 5,000 I want to remind you of a few things from last week.
The feeding of the 5,000 is the only miracle that is recorded in all four gospels.
The Disciples thought they were getting away for a little Rest and Relaxation after completing the mission they had just been sent on. This is following being sent out two by two. Mark 6:30-31
30 The apostles gathered around Jesus and reported to him all that they had done and taught.
31 He said to them, “Come away by yourselves to a remote place and rest for a while.” For many people were coming and going, and they did not even have time to eat.
This moment was going to be one of the most important moments of their time with Jesus because I believe it is one of the biggest lessons of the Bible
Body
Body
13 When Jesus heard about it, he withdrew from there by boat to a remote place to be alone. When the crowds heard this, they followed him on foot from the towns.
14 When he went ashore, he saw a large crowd, had compassion on them, and healed their sick.
15 When evening came, the disciples approached him and said, “This place is deserted, and it is already late. Send the crowds away so that they can go into the villages and buy food for themselves.
it is important to understand that the territory around the Sea of Galilee was divided into Jewish and Gentile regions
The Jews occupied the western side of the lake while the Gentles occupied the eastern side
We last saw Jesus in this region when He visited Gergesa and freed the man in the tombs from the demons
Jesus ventured periodically into the Gentile region primarily to escape the Jewish crowds that pressed on Him 24/7
Jews rarely if ever ventured into the Gentile territory, so when Jesus went there by boat, the crowds wouldn’t follow
But this time Jesus chose to journey to a spot located on the border between the two regions
Luke tells us that the secluded place Jesus went was located near a small fishing village called Bethsaida
Assuming Jesus departed from Capernaum, He sailed about 3-4 miles
Which means the crowds walked about 5 miles, which took about 2 hours, meaning they probably arrived shortly after Jesus
Bethsaida was the dividing point between Jew and Gentile communities on the northeastern corner of the lake
It is also the home of Philip,Peter and Andrew. Which helps us to understand the interaction Between Philip and Jesus in John’s Gospel.
5 So when Jesus looked up and noticed a huge crowd coming toward him, he asked Philip, “Where will we buy bread so that these people can eat?”
6 He asked this to test him, for he himself knew what he was going to do.
7 Philip answered him, “Two hundred denarii worth of bread wouldn’t be enough for each of them to have a little.”
One Denarius is equal to a days wages. So What Philip is saying is 200 days wages is not enough to feed all these people.
There is so much that we don’t unpack when we read scripture. So many little nuggets that help us to understand What God was doing in the midst of these people.
There is so much we can learn from what Jesus is teaching his Disciples.
We get confirmation from John’s Gospel because John tells us this happens at Passover which is our final clue to explain why Jesus took this journey
Passover is a memorial of the Exodus, when Moses led a group of Jews through the Red Sea and into desolate territory without food or water
When they arrive, Moses ascends a mountain, leaving the people down below
Eventually the people required food, so Moses called down manna from Heaven and the people were fed miraculously
So now Jesus takes this journey so He can use these circumstances to establish a picture showing Himself as the fulfillment of the Passover
Like Moses, Jesus will cross a body of water to reach a desolate Gentile territory with a large crowd of Jews following behind
Jesus also retreats up a mountainside leaving the crowd gathered below
And when they seek for food, He will feed them miraculously with bread from Heaven
So Jesus made this journey to invite comparisons to the Exodus
Jesus orchestrates this experience like a living parable to show the people He is the bread of life come down from Heaven
And Jesus sets this scene to teach His disciples that they must come to Him for their supply in ministry
Lets pick back up in v. 14
14 When he went ashore, he saw a large crowd, had compassion on them, and healed their sick.
Why did Jesus have compassion on them?
Here is another crowd just looking for a Miracle………..
34 When he went ashore, he saw a large crowd and had compassion on them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd. Then he began to teach them many things.
Here we are again with that phrase.
“Like Sheep without a Shepherd”
……….
It’s hard to be mad at someone when they are lost and no one has taken the time to show them the the way……………
15 When evening came, the disciples approached him and said, “This place is deserted, and it is already late. Send the crowds away so that they can go into the villages and buy food for themselves.”
We covered this attitude last week
But I want to remind you of where we are going as a Church Community based on Being a Church Community that Follows Jesus.
If we are going to Become like Jesus and Do What Jesus Did
We must cultivate inside ourselves the Heart of a Shepherd
A shepherd’s heart doesn’t hold a flock’s weaknesses or needs – or even their mistakes – against them
Shepherds recognize those weaknesses as the very reason we have opportunity to minister
The Bible teaches that the more needs exist in our body, the better it is for us?
The Lesson Jesus is about to teach brings this into focus.
16 “They don’t need to go away,” Jesus told them. “You give them something to eat.”
17 “But we only have five loaves and two fish here,” they said to him.
18 “Bring them here to me,” he said.
19 Then he commanded the crowds to sit down on the grass. He took the five loaves and the two fish, and looking up to heaven, he blessed them. He broke the loaves and gave them to the disciples, and the disciples gave them to the crowds.
20 Everyone ate and was satisfied. They picked up twelve baskets full of leftover pieces.
21 Now those who ate were about five thousand men, besides women and children.
Jesus opens with an astonishing rebuke telling the disciples the people do not need to go away…you give them something to eat
A more literal translation of the original Greek would read, “They have no need to go away – you feed them!
Jesus puts the burden right back where it belongs: on the shepherds of this flock
Now in fairness to the disciples, how could they have expected to feed so many people?
As we heard in v.21, there were thousands of people present that day
In fact, the disciples tell Jesus there were only five loaves and two fish available
In John’s Gospel we learn that Peter’s brother, Andrew, was the first to notice a young boy selling the loaves and fish
But just as quickly Andrew says they could not possibly satisfy the demand with so little
Jesus wasn’t expecting them to come up with the solution by themselves…He was asking them to set their minds on ministry
If our first response to a ministry need or opportunity is to ask “how?”, then we are doing ministry completely wrong.
Our first question when considering any ministry opportunity should be “Does the Lord desire for us to minister in this way?”
If the answer to that question is yes, then we move ahead in confidence that the Lord will direct us in the “how” over time
If we begin every ministry effort with the question “how?”,
We will never do anything worthwhile for the Lord.
Ministry is fundamentally about doing things that are impossible, humanly-speaking!
So when we try to answer the question “how” before accepting the challenge, we inevitably substitute our own plans for God’s plan
Just as Andrew searched for a supply of food in a vain effort to find a human solution to the problem
When he couldn’t find enough he threw his hands up and declared, I guess we can’t minister to these people.
Jesus didn’t save us and call us into serving Him so that we could solve problems for Him.
Jesus gives us ministry opportunities so He can solve problems through us…and in us.
Because as we obey Him and allow Him to do the heavy lifting, not only does the work get done but He also grows us
And then the Lord rightly receives glory for both accomplishments
The disciples were so focused on solving the problem in their own power that they forgot Jesus was standing next to them
So Jesus sets to work reminding them of how shepherds are supposed to work…shepherds feed sheep
The sheep aren’t supposed to locate their own supply of food
If sheep were capable of feeding themselves, there would be little need for shepherds
So shepherds are supposed to feed sheep, but at the same time, shepherds aren’t required to produce food for sheep
Shepherds don’t cause the grass to grow on the hillside
Shepherds lead sheep to the places where the Lord has already prepared fields with grass
Likewise, we are not the source of another person’s spiritual supply
We shepherd people by feeding them, yes, but our source comes from the Lord
We are conduits bringing the Lord’s supply to the people
And the Lord orchestrates this well-known miracle to make that point clearly
And notice, once Jesus set the disciples’ minds on feeding the crowd, Jesus begins to show His disciples “how” to do it
First, Jesus instructs the people to sit in the grass
In Mark’s Gospel we’re told they sit in groups of hundreds and fifties, which simply means into small, manageable groups
We can easily imagine practical purposes in why Jesus asked them to sit down
If hungry people see food coming their way, they tend to rush toward it to make sure they get a share
Making them sit ensures orderliness and also imparts confidence that there is a plan to ensure everyone is fed
But those practical reasons are not the main reason Jesus seats them down in grass
What if Jesus is showing the disciples and this crowd that He is the fulfillment of Scripture.
1 The Lord is my shepherd; I have what I need.
2 He lets me lie down in green pastures; he leads me beside quiet waters.
3 He renews my life; he leads me along the right paths for his name’s sake.
4 Even when I go through the darkest valley, I fear no danger, for you are with me; your rod and your staff—they comfort me.
5 You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies; you anoint my head with oil; my cup overflows.
6 Only goodness and faithful love will pursue me all the days of my life, and I will dwell in the house of the Lord as long as I live.
The main purpose relates back to Psalm 23
The Shepherd is the One Who causes His sheep to lie down in green pastures
The Shepherd cares for His sheep and makes sure they receive their rations
So Jesus’ instructions were part of testifying that He is the Shepherd of Psalm 23, the One who cares for us
Let’s make sure we have this picture correct. Jesus is up above the crowds on a mountain side. He tells the crowds to sit in groups.
I want to pull a few things to help us from Lukes Gospel
13 “You give them something to eat,” he told them. “We have no more than five loaves and two fish,” they said, “unless we go and buy food for all these people.”
14 (For about five thousand men were there.) Then he told his disciples, “Have them sit down in groups of about fifty each.”
15 They did what he said, and had them all sit down.
16 Then he took the five loaves and the two fish, and looking up to heaven, he blessed and broke them. He kept giving them to the disciples to set before the crowd.
17 Everyone ate and was filled. They picked up twelve baskets of leftover pieces.
Jesus gives thanks for the food and the miracle that’s about to follow, then He begins to break the bread and divide the fish out
Jesus then begins to distribute the food through the hands of the disciples
Jesus handed the food to each disciple who then carried it down the mountainside to the people in a basket
And as this process continued, the groups of people ate their fill, no one was left wanting
You have to wonder what was going through the minds of the disciples as they moved up and down the mountain filling their baskets
They knew Jesus started with only a little food, but because they are acting as waiters, they aren’t present to see the miracle
They can’t see the food miraculously reappearing
They just return each time to Jesus, to have their baskets filled and go back down
Jesus was teaching His disciples what serving Him as Kingdom Representative will be like every day!
First, Jesus taught that He supplies miracles to His people through the hands of His servants
According to Luke: This why Jesus required each disciple returned to Jesus many times to refill their baskets
If Jesus’ priority had been efficiency, He would have walked down the mountainside and miraculously produced a buffet line
He is intentionally distributing the food in an inefficient way, through the hands of His disciples, to make His point
Secondly, each disciple’s personal success in ministry depended on continually returning to the Lord so He could fill the basket
If the disciple returned, he had came back with something to offer the people
If he didn’t return to Jesus, he would soon run out and have nothing and be useless to the people
So not only were the disciples unable to find a solution on their own in the beginning, neither could they sustain the ministry once it began
We go to Him to receive that which is valuable, and then we bring it back to the people one nugget at a time
Thirdly, in the course of our service, the work we do in serving Christ won’t seem like a miracle in the moment
Each time the disciple’s basket was filled by Jesus, it didn’t appear miraculous to that disciple
The sense we get from all four Gospels is that Jesus multiplied the food out of the sight of the disciples
They just saw Jesus putting food in their basket…a very ordinary moment
The miracle was that it happened over and over again
Likewise, when we serve someone in a moment with a prayer or a teaching or an encouraging word, it won’t seem like a miracle took place
But when we step back and see the cumulative effect of all those moments of service, we will see a miracle
We will see a multitude the Lord fed through our hands, and Jesus will rightly receive the glory for it
Fourthly, Jesus was teaching the disciples that ministry is hard work
How many times did they have to walk up and down that hillside that day?
Do you supposed that some of them might have been complaining under their breath?
Can you hear Peter suggesting to Jesus, “Why don’t You come down here so we don’t have to make this climb so much?”
Ministry is hard work…and there are a lot of days when you wonder to yourself why am I doing this? There has to be an easier way to live
Serving Jesus in ministry is a great privilege, and generally speaking, it’s a joy
But there are times when it’s very lonely and difficult and gut wrenching just plain hard work
And if you aren’t prepared to give Christ your best effort and to endure the challenges, then don’t put your hand to the plow and look back
Finally, there was one more lesson for the disciples and the people
After the crowd had been fed (which must have taken several hours), Jesus ordered the disciples to collect the excess food from the people
The Lord could have simply multiplied more food for each disciple
Instead, He insisted that the disciples’ food come from what had already been handed out to the people below
The Lord had literally given away the disciples’ food, and then He required disciples to go back to the people and ask for it back
I imagine some in the crowd probably wanted to keep those extras for themselves
Which means the disciples probably had to do a little petitioning, a little begging, and a little fund raising so to speak
The disciples’ provision came in the form of excess given to the people, so they could be blessed by blessing those who served them
Notice that the amount collected was exactly twelve baskets, reflecting the 12 apostles who had served the people
Everyone is being blessed through the hands of someone else yet the supply is all from the Lord
Matthew ends his account with a punchline: there were five thousand men in the crowd plus women and children beyond that
That number puts Jesus’ miracle into perspective
Who among those disciples would have supposed in advance that they could find a way to feed so many people?
The number 5 in the Bible is the number of Grace
The fundamental difference between how the self righteous minister and how Jesus wants us to minister.
Our service to Christ begins and ends with Grace
It begins by the grace of God in our salvation and our equipping and call into ministry
And then it continues in the way we minister to others, not holding their faults against them, not viewing their needs as unnecessary burdens
Rather we seek out the weak because they give us the blessed opportunity to serve in our spiritual gift
And we serve in grace that Jesus supplies to us, knowing we only have something valuable to offer someone else if we obtained it from Jesus
And we ourselves depend on the grace of God through your hands for our own supply
Think about the power and reach of a Christian community that truly lived out that style of grace-oriented ministry?
It would truly be a miracle
That is why we Must:
Practice the Ways of Jesus
By Spending Time with Jesus
Becoming Like Jesus
Doing What Jesus Did
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Invitation
Offering
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