Jesus Feeds 4000 With 7 Baskets Leftover
February 25, 2022
Commentary
Jesus and His disciples again move back to the eastside of the Sea of Galilee and are surrounded by a large crowd with nothing to eat (vv. 1-5). As usual the Lord saw a need and He wanted to supply the need. From the wording here it would seem that the disciples had soon forgotten how the Lord had fed the five thousand before. Perhaps they were just suggesting that it was impossible unless He provides another miracle.
Again we see how He gets all the people all seated on the ground (vv. 6-7). He took seven small loaves of biscuit like bread and a few small fish (probably like sardines) and blessed it and had the disciples serve the people. After everyone had eaten all they wanted they took up seven baskets of leftovers (v. 8). It seems the word used for baskets here is different than the word used in (Mark 6:44). In the former passage it was a basket in which the Jew carried his food and similar in shape to a water pot. Here the type of basket was much larger like a clothes hamper and similar to the one the Apostle Paul was let down in over the wall of Damascus (Acts 9:25). This time the crowd numbered four thousand (v. 9). The two main thoughts are that Jesus was moved by compassion for the need of men and the disciples saw the practical difficulty of finding enough food in this desert place.
Over and over again we see Jesus moved with compassion for men. All too often the first instinct of too many people is not to help. Once I talked with a man about the dangers of a certain stretch of road on the way to the town where we were. “Yes,” he said. “It’s a bad road. I saw a crash on it as I drove here today.” “Did you stop and help?” I asked. “Not me,” he said, “I wasn’t going to be held up by getting mixed up in a thing like that.” It is human to want to avoid the trouble of giving help; it is divine to be moved with such compassion and pity that we are compelled to help.
Application
It is human to not want to take the time and go the extra trouble to help people in need. It is divine to be moved with compassion and pity to where I am compelled to help. I want to feel compelled to help someone in need, and then to share with them from my own experience.
Mark 8:1– 9 (NET)
1 In those days there was another large crowd with nothing to eat. So Jesus called his disciples and said to them, 2 “I have compassion on the crowd, because they have already been here with me three days, and they have nothing to eat. 3 If I send them home hungry, they will faint on the way, and some of them have come from a great distance.” 4 His disciples answered him, “Where can someone get enough bread in this desolate place to satisfy these people?” 5 He asked them, “How many loaves do you have?” They replied, “Seven.” 6 Then he directed the crowd to sit down on the ground. After he took the seven loaves and gave thanks, he broke them and began giving them to the disciples to serve. So they served the crowd. 7 They also had a few small fish. After giving thanks for these, he told them to serve these as well. 8 Everyone ate and was satisfied, and they picked up the broken pieces left over, seven baskets full. 9 There were about 4,000 who ate. Then he dismissed them.