One of his disciples, Andrew, Simon Peter's brother, said to him, "There is a boy here who has five barley loaves and two fish, but what are they for so many?" Jesus said, “Have the people sit down” . . . (John 6:8-9)
Consider this question and respond on a scale of 1-10: As you begin this day (or continue to move through it, depending on when you read this), how would you rate your level of expectancy?
Read the question one more time. Slowly. Note that you are not being asked about your level of excitement about your day. Excitement and expectancy are not the same thing.
Excitement
is a pleasure response to what the day holds for us. When we see good things
ahead, we’re excited about the day. When the calendar has us engaging with
people we really enjoy or doing things that bring us deep satisfaction, we
sense within ourselves an eagerness to engage what’s in front of us. The
pleasures we see and the energy we feel, we name excitement.
Some
of you are looking at your day, and the last thing you feel right now is
excitement. Boredom, possibly. Dread, hopefully not. But excitement? Hardly.
“Have the People
Sit Down”
Expectancy
is a cousin to excitement, but not an identical twin. They share a common sense
of ‘looking forward’ to something, but being expectant doesn’t require being
excited. Expectancy grows in mystery, in the unknown or unclear spaces of what
you’re dealing with. Being expectant means you know that something is about to
happen – you just don’t know exactly what it is.
This
week we’ve been thinking about how Jesus fed an enormous crowd of people with a
boy’s sack lunch – five barley loaves and two fish to be precise. Jesus had
presented his disciples with the problem of how these people would be fed,
where they would get enough bread to go around. John allows us an insider take
on the story. Jesus is asking a question, but he already knows what he will do
(Jn. 6:6).
Once
this meager meal has been placed in Jesus’ hands, he gives a word of
instruction to his disciples. “Have the people sit down.”
This
is the expectant moment. Philip and Andrew and the others have no idea what
Jesus is about to do. The problem they face has not gone away. The crowd in
front of them is still large. The only food they have on hand is still
worthless to make a difference. But in all of this there is Jesus.
More than We
Imagine
To
live our days with expectancy means this: our problems don’t go away, but Jesus
is with us. And while we don’t know exactly what Jesus will do, we know he will
do something.
As
the disciples urged people to sit down, spread a cloak or a blanket and get
comfortable, Jesus offered a prayer of thanksgiving and began passing the
bread. And he kept passing it. He kept on for a long while.
He
kept passing bread until everyone was fed – not only fed but full. They didn’t
get a quick snack. They received a meal and they had as much as they wanted (6:11-12).
When Philip and Andrew were seating the multitude, they had no idea that Jesus
would do what he did. To borrow words from Paul’s letter to the Ephesians,
Jesus did “more than they could ask or imagine” (Eph. 3:20).
That’s
what Jesus does. And that’s why you can live this day expectantly, whether
you’re excited about your day or not. Place your life in his hands and watch
for what he will do.
Prayer:
Just like the small
lunch that was entrusted to your hands, Lord Jesus, I give to you all that this
day holds and all that concerns me. You know what you will do, and that truth
alone is enough for me. I will wait and watch expectantly, knowing that you are
good and what you do is good. Amen.
1 comment:
wonderful....adding to my file of your prayers
Post a Comment