Matthew 14:17 ” We have here only five loaves of bread and two fish, they answered.”

Next to the Resurrection, the feeding of the 5,000, is the only story found in all four Gospels.  Even though they all come from a little different perspective, the miracle was the same, and important enough to be recorded numerous times.  On the disciples part, they’ve been traveling with Jesus and witnessing countless miracles, but when Jesus challenged them to feed the throng of people milling around, they froze.  With a total lack of faith and vision they told Him, “We have only five loaves and two fish. We can’t start to feed this many people!”  But Jesus then takes matters into His own hands, gives thanks for what they already have, and multiplies it.  So what important lesson did the disciples learn that was significant enough to be recorded in all four Gospels?  Jesus took what they already had and increased it a 1000 times over.  He didn’t focus on their lack,  but rather on how it could be multiplied and used for His glory.  When God calls you to something, He’ll use what you already have…and as you move forward in faith and trust in Him, it will be multiplied.

John 13:18 ” I am not referring to all of you; I know those I have chosen. But this is to fulfill the scriptures: ‘He who shares My bread has lifted up his heel against Me.’ “

Jesus is predicting His betrayal by Judas in quoting  Psalm 41:9.  In the span of three short years, Jesus fulfilled each prophecy that had been written about the coming Messiah.  From His selection of the apostles…to knowing full well the impending treachery of Judas…Jesus carried out His plan and purpose wholly .

John 13:14 ” Now that I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also should wash one another’s feet.”

Jesus always lead by example.  After He had washed the disciples feet, He instructed them to model what they had just witnessed.  For Jesus had demonstrated to them in simple terms what it was like to be a servant. I can imagine after three years of traveling with Jesus and witnessing countless miracles,  the disciples were feeling pretty full of themselves…so having Jesus wash their feet was probably not only confusing, but embarrassing to all of them.  But by modeling true servant hood in its unassuming and unpretentious way, Jesus illustrated humility to all mankind.

John 15:12 ” My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you.”

Jesus loves us with an unconditional love…it has no bounds…no restrictions.  But can we love each other in the same way?  Maybe it can be in what we don’t do  that can show the love of Christ more effectively to those around us.  Instead of yelling in anger and frustration at the kids…we don’t.  Instead of becoming upset and disappointed with a co-worker…we don’t.  Instead of allowing discouragement and despair to break apart our marriage…we don’t.  For sometimes the greatest way to demonstrate God’s love to others… is in what we don’t do.

John 2:11 ” This, the first of His miraculous signs, Jesus performed at Cana in Galilee. He thus revealed His glory, and His Disciples put their faith in Him.”

It was done mostly in obscurity…off in the background at a wedding in progress.  Only a few people were even aware that the wine was gone.  They included a few servants and the disciples of Jesus that witnessed this miracle of changing something as basic as water into something  extraordinary as fine wine. Now the wedding party did benefit and were wonderfully blessed by His first miracle…but it was the people who actually saw it with their own eyes that were powerful and eternally changed by it.

Romans 9:16 “It does not, therefore, depend on man’s desire or effort, but on God’s mercy.”

No matter how we work and strive to live a perfect life…we’ll never come close.  For in Titus 3:5 it says, “He saved us not because of the righteous things we have done, but because of His mercy.”  God’s wonderful and unexplainable mercy is gifted to us before we are even aware of our need.  Malachi 1:2-3 states, “I will have mercy on whom I have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I have compassion.”  To further illustrate this profound concept, Jesus tells us in John 15:16, “You did not choose Me, but I chose you…”  The Lord’s compassion and kindness towards us  is beyond our  mental capacity…His desire to save us, beyond our comprehension.

John 5:39 ” You diligently study the Scriptures because you think that by them you possess eternal life. These are the Scriptures that testify about Me, yet you refuse to come to Me to have life.”

Jesus Christ can be found on each page of the Bible.  So as we read, we need to be continually asking…”How does this Scripture point me to You Lord?”  By personalizing the Scriptures like this…reading the Bible will never become a dry and boring ordeal we just tolerate, but rather an ever new and exciting adventure of discovery.

John 3:30 ” He must become greater; I must become less.”

Can you echo these same words that John the Baptist declared about Jesus and himself?  What then is it that hinders us from making such a sweeping statement?  In a single word – pride.  Our selfish agenda pushes us to plunge ahead without God’s direction first.  Our willful pride orchestrates our own plans,  devoid of the Lord’s guidance.  We want to remain on the throne of our life, rather than yielding  to God.  So what are we so afraid of?  Are we fearful that as God increases in our life,  our own personal identity will diminish to the point we’ll disappear?  In a single word -Yes!  But isn’t that what becoming a Christ Follower is all about?   Our goal is to become less,  as God becomes more.  So how can we do this?  It takes a conscious act of our Will and a yielding of our pride to allow the Lord to increase within us.  And it also takes these words…”Yes, Lord. I ask for more of You and less of me.”

John 4:13-14 ” Jesus answered, ‘Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks the water I give him will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life.’ “

We’ve all been very thirsty. An interesting note about the human body…hunger pangs will eventually subside, but thirst will never go away, for our bodies need water to operation and maintain homeostasis, (a stable and normal condition of all systems within the body.)  In this Scripture, Jesus is offering the Samaritan woman the kind of water that will not only satisfy immediately, but will become  an Artesian well within her.  Like a spring rising up with a new and constant supply of fresh water, this living water fills and quenches our thirst unlike anything the world can offer.

John 4:4 ” Now He had to go through Samaria.”

Jews didn’t associate with Samaritans,  and any self-respecting Jewish man surely wouldn’t make a point of traveling through Samaria…but Jesus did.  He didn’t have to plan the trip that way…most would have gone around Samaria…but Jesus didn’t.  You see, Jesus had a divine appointment arranged for a woman at Jacob’s well…a meeting that would not only change her,  but many of her fellow towns-people. The Lord  is ever reaching His saving hand  into places we’d probably never go…into prisons, crack houses, seedy motels, or dark alleyways…places where the forgotten, shunned, and hopeless live.  But no soul is beyond His reach…no life is beyond His grace and mercy.