Sunday, September 23, 2018

Food For The Soul.4

"Since childhood, you have heard the story of how your ancestors ate manna in the desert; but that was long ago, and now they are ancient memories.

In spite of those miracles, Moses was not able to provide the true bread of heaven, that which my Father is offering to you now.

For the bread of God is embodied in the one who is speaking to you, who has come down from heaven, and offered his own life for the world."
--Jesus

The metaphor of the Bread shows us how utterly good God is in giving Himself to us via the agency of His son. George MacDonald had much to say about this giving of himself. This post is dedicated to seeing Jesus' devotion to the lovely will of His father for the redemption of his brethren through the eyes of George! Enjoy. Be stimulated. Be surprised. Be encouraged.

"You would be astonished to discover what I don't know. But the thing is that I know what is worth knowing. Yet I get not a crumb more than my daily bread by it -- I mean the bread by which the inner man lives. The man who gives himself to making money, will seldom fail of becoming a rich man; and it would be hard if a man who gave himself to find wherewithal to still the deepest cravings of his best self, should not be able to find that bread of life." Thomas Wingfold

"Next, came the perception that my fellow-beings, my brothers and sisters of the same father, must be, next to the father himself, the very atmosphere of life; and that perfect misery must be to care only for one's self. With that there woke in me such a love and pity for my people, my own race, my human beings, my brothers and sisters, whoever could hear the word of the father of me, that I felt the only thing worth giving the energy of life to, was the work that Christ gave himself to -- the delivery of men out of their lonely and mean devotion to themselves, into the glorious liberty of the sons of God, whose joy and rejoicing is the rest of the family." Weighed and Wanting.

"Hearing Donal talk about the shepherd of human sheep, Davie felt not only that there once was, but that there is now a man altogether lovely -- the heart of beauty everywhere -- a man who gave himself up to his perfect father and his father's most imperfect children, that he might bring his brothers and sisters home to their father; for all his delight is in his father and his father's children. He showed him how the heart of Jesus was, all through, the heart of a son that adored his perfect father; and how if he had not his perfect son to help him, God could not have made any of us, could never have got us to be his little sons and daughters, loving him with all our might." Donal Grant

"You know, Davie dear, every sin, whatever it is, deserves God's wrath and curse, both in this life and that which is to come; and if it had not been that Jesus Christ gave himself to turn away his anger and satisfy his justice by bearing the punishment for us, God would send us all to the place of misery for ever and ever. It is for his sake, not for ours, that he pardons us. She had not ceased when Donal rose in the wrath of love, and came out into the room. 'Lady Arctura,' he said, 'I dare not sit still and hear such false things uttered against the blessed God! Lady Arctura started in dire dismay, but in virtue of her breed and her pride recovered herself immediately, drew herself up, and said--'Mr. Grant, you forget yourself.' 'I'm very willing to do that, my lady,' answered Donal, 'but I must not forget the honor of my God. If you were a heathen woman I might think whether the hour was come for enlightening you further, but to hear one who has had the Bible in her hands from her childhood say such things about the God who made her and sent his Son to save her, without answering a word for him, would be cowardly!...I don't say you don't love Him,' Donal went on;' but how you can love Him and believe such things of Him, I don't understand. Whoever taught them first was a terrible liar against God, who is lovelier than all the imaginations of all his creatures can think.'" Donal Grant

"In the wine and the bread of the Eucharist, He reminds us how utterly He has given, is giving, Himself for the gladness and the strength of the Father's children. Yea, more; for in that he is the radiation of the Father's glory, this bread and wine is the symbol of how utterly the Father gave Himself to His children, how earnestly He would have them partakers of His own being. It was not the power, however, but the glory that Jesus showed forth in the miracle.' MacDonald's Biography

"Like God, of himself he chose righteousness, and so merited to sit on the throne of God. In the same spirit he gave himself afterward to his father's children, and merited the power to transfuse the life-redeeming energy of his Spirit into theirs: made perfect, he became the author of eternal salvation unto all them that obey Him." The Hope of the Gospel.

Jesus loved His father even to the death of the cross, and eternally beyond it. When we give ourselves up to the Father as the Son gave himself, we shall not only find our yoke easy and our burden light, but that they communicate ease and lightness; not only will they not make us weary, but they will give us rest from all other weariness. Let us not waste a moment in asking how this can be; the only way to know that, is to take the yoke on us." The Hope of the Gospel









Sunday, September 16, 2018

Food For The Soul.3


"Do not work for the food that perishes, 
but for the food that endures to eternal life, 
which the Son of Man will give to you. 

For on him God the Father has set his seal."

--Jesus

Tuesdays and Thursdays are "kill days" at the farm where I work.  Usually on Wednesday afternoon we go out to the "kill cow" herd to select one or two steers for their fate. 
Sometimes we spend an enormous amount of "work" pursuing and capturing the targeted food source.  Because our plant is "USDA Certified" an inspector is on site (he even has his own office in the plant) to ensure that proper procedures are followed that earn the coveted "seal of approval" from the federal government.

Our onsite inspector can be a real pain to work with but
trusting in the USDA seal saves the average consumer a lot of work!  I can hardly imagine the logistical nightmare of having customers coming through the "kill floor" to ensure that their meat purchases are safe!


Nor would the average consumer, without some knowledge of safe meat handling techniques, know what mistakes can cause contamination, sickness and death.

Do you find it as breathtaking as I do how Jesus takes simple concepts we live with daily, even things we take for
granted, like the effort it takes to get our daily sustenance, and uses them to teach us eternal truth?  Think of the enormous freedom we have in trusting Jesus, whom God the Father placed His "seal of approval" on in eliminating the toilsome, even futile, effort to do enough good "work" to earn a spot in His Kingdom.

Since Jesus made it clear that His "food" was to do God's will, it makes perfect sense that the food we ought to work for is learning and doing God's will, following His faithful footsteps to the heart of His father!

Think of what Jesus' seal of approval means for His followers:

  • A man's business is to do the will of God
  • God takes upon Himself the care of the man
  • The God-cared for man must never be afraid of anything
  • The God-cared for man is left free to love God with all his heart and his neighbor as himself.
"What work,' I ask, 'can that be which will be better done by the greedy or anxious than by the free, fearless soul? Can care be a better inspirer of labor than knowing you are sent by God? If the work is not His work, then indeed, care may well help it, for its success is loss. But is he worthy the name of man who, for the fear of starvation, will do better work than for the joy that his labor is not in vain in the Lord?"  MacDonald, The Complete Works of George MacDonald.
Be free and fearless follower of Jesus to do your work with joy!



Sunday, September 9, 2018

Food For The Soul.2

"I am the bread of life: if you come to me, you will never again hunger spiritually; and if you believe in me, you will never again know spiritual thirst. 

Rise up! 

Take hold of the living bread, the spiritual bread that has come down from heaven: if you eat of this bread, you will live forever. 

The bread that I offer you is my life, which I give for the life of the world. 

I am the bread of life come down from heaven, that you may feast on spiritual food, and because of this receive spiritual life and not die.

Truly, truly, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. 

Whoever feeds on my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up on the last day. 

For my flesh is true food, and my blood is true drink."
 --Jesus



These words from Jesus were met with a natural repulsion. One translation states: 
"From this time many of His disciples went away backward, and were no more walking with Him."

From a human standpoint, eating human flesh and drinking human blood entails something abominable to the human experience and actually forbidden in Old Testament law. The penalty was death.

Even without the law, what rational person wouldn't reject such an abhorrent suggestion?

The most wretched of conditions some humans have indeed found themselves in (aside from any form of cannibalism which is an entirely different, vulgar, depraved state of mind) is to be so desperate to survive that eating a fellow is the only alternative to death.

As gruesome as that sounds, especially for anyone who lives comfortably situated near a pantry full of food, there is a deep truth to Christ's metaphor: desperation for the Life-Giving Truths of God is a universal theme throughout scripture carried to completion in the Perfect Representative of our Creator God!


  • "As a deer pants for flowing streams, so pants my soul for you, O God." Psalm 42:1
  • "O God, You are my God; I shall seek You earnestly; My soul thirsts for You, my flesh yearns for You, In a dry and weary land where there is no water." Psalm 63:1
  •  Seek [trample out a path to] the LORD and His strength; Seek [yearn to touch] His face continually." 1 Chronicles 16:11
  • "But I would speak to the Almighty, And I desire to argue with God..."Please hear my argument And listen to the contentions of my lips..."Though He slay me, I will hope in Him. Nevertheless I will argue my ways before Him." Job 13:3,6,15

Why would Jesus use such a radical idea to convey a deep spiritual truth? Hyperbole? Or the Divine progression of moving Infinite Ideas from simple concept (miraculously turning a few loaves and fish into a feast fit for life-seekers) to active fundamental transformation into Truth and Righteousness--the heart of redemption?

Those who turned away, the bread-only mob, like any human being who miserably fails to ponder God's inconceivable and loving bounty that has "glorified our being with rights so deep, so high, so delicate, that their satisfaction cannot be given until we desire it--yea long for it with our deepest desire" (MacDonald), were not yet fit to understand. Fit like Peter who demonstrated in declaring: "Where shall we go? YOU HAVE THE WORDS OF ETERNAL LIFE!" 


Christ will be found of those that seek him, first or last; and it is worth while to cross a sea, nay, to go from sea to sea, and from the river to the ends of the earth, to seek Christ, if we may but find him at last. These people [the crowd who partook of he bread and fish miracle meal] appeared afterwards to be unsound, and not actuated by any good principle, and yet were thus zealous. Note, Hypocrites may be very forward in their attendance on God's ordinances. If men have no more to show for their love to Christ than their running after sermons and prayers, and their pangs of affection to good preaching, they have reason to suspect themselves no better than this eager crowd. But though these people were no better principled, and Christ knew it, yet he was willing to be found of them, and admitted them into fellowship with him.

Christ came to put life into the minds of men, principles productive of acceptable performance Matthew Henry's   Commentary on the Whole Bible, John 6



God is offering the one thing we cannot live without:
His own self! 
we must make room for Him; 
we must cleanse our hearts that He may come in; 
we must do as the Master tells us, 
who knew all about the Father 
and the way to him! 
-MacDonald