READ: MATTHEW 6:11; JOHN 6:25-69
The other night as I sat down to another meal, I got to wondering. As I ate with my family, I wondered even more: What’s with all this eating? Why do we require so much food? Why do we have to eat every day—several times a day? Wouldn’t it have been more efficient if the good Lord had made our bodies in such a way that we could store our caloric needs just a little longer? I mean, He made camels that way, with humps for extra storage. How about eating every three days? We’d get so much more done without all this constant need for nourishment!
And yet, we know that God made all things good. He likes the way He made us, dependent upon our daily supply. He planned it this way. I’m sure God has many reasons for this plan. One might be to keep us humble. We can’t be too puffed up, we humans, if we grow weak and frail from just a few missed meals!
Maybe another reason is because God wants to give us a daily (sometimes hourly) illustration, right before our eyes—like the meals in front of us each day—that we are utterly and totally dependent, needy, starved without the presence of God. We see this in John 6, when Jesus explains He is “the true bread…that comes down from heaven and gives life to the world” (verses 32-33). Without Jesus, we’re all dead in our sins. But if we’ve put our trust in Jesus, we can know we have “crossed over from death to life” (John 5:24). He says, “Whoever comes to me will never go hungry” (John 6:35), which means that believers have eternal life with Him!
As we learn to follow Jesus in our everyday lives, we quickly discover we need the nourishment that time with Him brings. And often, the more we spend time with Him, the more we want to spend time with Him! How? He has provided us with His Word, the Bible. He provides His presence through the Holy Spirit (also called the Spirit of Christ), who lives inside every believer. And He provides the church, other believers who have the Holy Spirit too. He is that faithful. And He is that good. • Kristen Merrill
• Our hunger points us to God, and we find that He desires to provide for us. For example, in Exodus 16, God provided manna—bread from heaven—when the Israelites were in the wilderness for forty years. How can physical hunger point us to our need for Jesus?
• We’re all sometimes tempted to think that regular time in God’s Word, in prayer, and with His people isn’t that important. Why is this not true? (Psalm 119:105; Luke 5:16; Hebrews 10:25)
Taste and see that the LORD is good; blessed is the one who takes refuge in him. Psalm 34:8 (NIV)
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