By Ken Jones
Jesus said, “I am the bread of
life: whoever comes to me shall not hunger, and whoever
believes in me shall never thirst” (John 6:35).
You’re sitting at a table in your
favorite restaurant, looking over the menu, thinking, “Im
hungry, but I don’t know what I want.” If it’s an
unfamiliar place, you may even ask the server, “What’s
especially good here?” You look to the next table to see
what they have. Then you order a large platter of rich
fried food, and when you get done you are stuffed and
wonder, “Why in the world did I order that?” You know
there’s a big difference between being stuffed and being
satisfied.
I think this is a picture of
life. We’re handed a menu filled with options that
promise satisfaction. And we look at others’ lives and
what they’ve ordered and we think, “Well, if I just had what
they have, I think I’d be satisfied…if I had their marriage,
their kids, their job, car or house I’d really be
satisfied.” For many of us, our souls are starving and
we don’t even realize it because we’ve stuffed ourselves
with cheap substitutes. And we are
undernourished. We have tried to satisfy our deepest
needs with the things of this world and don’t even know that
it is a spiritual hunger that is really crying out for food.
And the reason we don’t feel hungry
for God and the things of God is that we are so stuffed with
all this other stuff that we don’t even think we’re even
hungry. Perhaps you’re reading this and you aren’t
very hungry for the Bread of life. Maybe you went to a
church as a child and you weren’t really into it. You
fled as soon as you could and haven’t had a taste of the
Bread of life or a sip of the Water of life in a long, long
time. It’s been so long that you don’t even feel
hungry for it anymore.
I learned recently about starving
children in third world countries. With no food to
eat, they literally use up all their body fat and muscles
until all that’s left is just skin and bones. Their
stomachs have bloated and their black hair turns a shade of
reddish blonde. The skin dries out. They’re
malnourished and starving to death. And I learned that
there’s another thing that happens to these children that I
didn’t know, and it is that they lose their appetite.
They’re starving, but not hungry. When you offer them
a piece of bread they will push it away and turn their head
in another direction. They don’t want it.
And I think this is a good picture
of what happens to people at the spiritual level.
They’re starving but not hungry. Their soul is
completely undernourished but they don’t want a bite to
eat. Then I kept reading about those little
kids. And what the missionaries do is they’ll take a
piece of bread, or some food, and force the kids to open
their mouths and force them to swallow. And if they
can just get them to swallow a few bites their appetite is
rekindled, and they get hungry again. They eat and
live.
I don’t know how you take someone
who isn’t spiritually hungry and make them eat. I wish
I did know. Because there are some people dear to me
that I would do just about anything to see them eat just a
few bites again. I think they’d find that that is what
they wanted and longed for and needed all along.
- via THE SOWER, a
weekly publication of the Arthur Church of Christ, Arthur,
IL. Ron Bartanen, who serves as minister and editor, may be
contacted through the congregation's website:
http://www.arthurchurchofchrist.com
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