Recently the account of Jesus feeding the 5000 has come across my screen several times, from all different directions. Today as I looked at it again, I finally dared to allow it to look back at me.
Here's what jumped out at me:
When Jesus looked up and saw a great crowd coming toward him, he said to Philip, "Where shall we buy bread for these people to eat?" He asked this only to test him, for he already had in mind what he was going to do.
Philip answered him, "Eight months' wages would not buy enough bread for each one to have a bite!"
Jesus made sure, before the miracle he already planned to perform, that his disciples recognized just exactly how far they were from having enough.
I am the woman who can scarcely face making a to-do list, because it signifies everything for which, at this moment, I am not enough, don't have enough, can't do enough.
Do you see what Jesus did when he asked his disciples where they were going to get enough food? He asked them to bring their "not enough" to him. In this case, it was the little boy's lunch. Much has been made of the little boy who gave everything he had. But let me tell you--when that little boy left home that day, he thought he had enough. No one told him it would feed a multitude. No, it was the disciples who pointed to it as exactly how little "not enough" was. And rather than laugh at the shortcomings of the meager offering, Jesus took that very offering and said, in effect, "It's perfect." It was exactly what would display his glory. Why didn't he cast it aside and pull food out of thin air so it would be all him? Because it delights him to work in partnership with us and turn our "not enough" into "more than enough". That, my friends, is a bigger miracle than doing it on his own.
So today, I dared to take out my pen and quantify my "not enough". Included on my list were courage, time, organization, wisdom, self-discipline and love, and also the tasks and endeavors giving me cause to need those things. It looks a lot like the to-do list that I was afraid to make. But also? A confession. And a prayer. And an invitation for God to turn my "not enough" into His "more than enough".
He is always enough. So our "not enough" is perfect for the job. He wants more than anything to do it with us.
Come. Believe.
4 comments:
Today our preacher talked about the things we should give up for Lent - guilt, fear, worry, insecurity, gossip, self-condemnation....he listed 20! I kept thinking he would run out but he went on and on and to my horror I was guilty of most, if not all. There I go....I felt guilty. :) Not being enough would probably have topped my list although I'm sure guilty would have fought a might battle. blessings, marlene
Hi!!! I also enjoyed your post!!!
I am here on the advice of Marlene. She was right, your post is spot on and quite convicting. Thank you for putting into words so eloquently the message this heart needed to hear. A situation that I see as hopeless is definitely my not enough. I pray that I can lay my not enough at the feet of the King and leave it there to allow him the chance to turn it into my "more. than enough".
Your 'not enough' post is certainly enough for me...to give me the courage to make my own 'not-enough' list
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