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How is Your Spiritual Food Diet?


In our daily meditations, we focus on some of Jesus' teachings, and today, we look at what Jesus taught after He fed the five thousand. The next day, the people went in search of Christ, and when they found Him, the Lord said to them:  

 

27Do 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.” 28Then they said to him, “What must we do, to be doing the works of God?” 29Jesus answered them, “This is the work of God, that you believe in him whom he has sent” (John 6:27-29).

 

The Lord’s heart went out to His people for their pursuit of Him for daily food like He had multiplied the day before. He said, “Do not work for food that perishes [or spoils], but for food that endures to eternal life” (v. 27). The Lord was contrasting natural food, i.e., that for which we work, with spiritual food, which is given to us by the grace of God, not by our works. Spiritual food will benefit us for eternity. Eternal things require no work from us but to trust in the Son of God. Just as eating a large meal gives one a sense of feeling satisfied within, in the same way, we are to spend energy and labor pursuing the person of Christ and His Word, which are the only things that satisfy our inner nature, the soul. This is the 'food' that gives us eternal life; without Christ, we feel empty and dissatisfied within.

 

We tend to spend more time on our commercial labor to gain large houses and brand-new cars, but living life chasing after material riches results in spiritual poverty. What a tragedy it would be to find at the end of our lives that we are weak in the things of God because we value spending our time on our daily business, many of us going far beyond putting bread on the table rather than seeking to prosper in the things of God. In my early years as a commercial fisherman on the North Sea off the East coast of England, I questioned why I worked sixteen-hour days, six days a week, for more money than I needed or could spend. I felt like I was living to work rather than working to live, and even the things I bought did not bring me what I was seeking. I became aware of the barrenness of my soul, my inner life. I began to take months off from work, searching for something to satisfy the emptiness in my soul. There was something within me, i.e., a missing piece of the jigsaw puzzle of life, a vacuum on which I could not get a handle.

 

The symptoms of my inner disharmony and emptiness were that I could not rest until I found whatever it was for which I was looking. This internal dissatisfaction was a gift of God and a good thing for my soul, and I will eternally be grateful to God for the emptiness I felt inside. These thoughts drove me to travel the world in search of something I was missing. When I was fifteen, I thought I would find fulfillment by being part of the "in" crowd, and then I'd feel like I'd made it. That didn't satisfy my inner emptiness. Then, it was to have a beautiful girlfriend and an expensive motorbike to carry her on the back. Then, it was a car, a house, and a commercial fishing boat with my brother. When those things didn't satisfy me, I turned to illegal drugs and traveled to different countries, but nothing satiated my inner thirst and hunger.

 

In his younger years, King Charles of England once spoke of his belief that “For all the advances of science, there remains deep in the soul, if I dare use that word, a persistent and unconscious anxiety that something is missing, some ingredient that makes life worth living.” Perhaps this generation's most celebrated English columnist, Bernard Levin, once wrote about the void in his life. He said:

 

"Countries like ours are full of people who have all the material comforts they desire, together with such non-material blessings as a happy family, and yet lead lives of quiet, and at times noisy desperation, understanding nothing but the fact that there is a hole inside them and that however much food and drink they pour into it, however many motor cars and television sets they stuff it with, however many well-balanced children and loyal friends they parade around the edges of it…it aches."[1]

 

As you read this, I urge you to take a moment to look within. Are you spiritually full or empty? If you find the same emptiness of soul I experienced when I was young; I implore you to turn your heart toward home where your estranged Father is waiting. Don't wait. The time to seek spiritual fulfillment is now. Keith Thomas

 

This meditation is a shortened version of the in-depth study: Jesus, the Bread of Heaven.

 

[1]As quoted by Nicky Gumbel, Questions of Life, Published by Cook Ministry Publications. Page 13.

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