4 August 2024
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
Pentecost 11
Vienna, VA
“Spiritually Hangry”
Text:
John 6:22-35; Exodus 16:2-15; Ephesians 4:1-16
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
Are you familiar with the word “hangry?” I’m
guessing you are. That you’ve probably all heard it. You’ve probably all been
it. You probably know what it means. It is the combination of two words: hungry
and angry. And the official definition is to be bad-tempered or
irritable as a result of hunger. And it doesn’t matter how old you are,
whether you’re a one-year old or ninety years old. Everyone gets hangry.
And when you do, when you get hangry, how do you
act? Maybe you snap at a loved one, taking your hanger out on them, even though
they did nothing to cause it. Or maybe you grumble and complain, and find fault
with everything. Nothing is good, nothing is right. Grrr! You’re not yourself. That’s how important food is to
us.
Which God knew. That’s
why in the beginning, when He created Adam and Eve, He put them in a Garden
full of food. Everywhere they looked, everywhere they turned,
food. Food that was good and nourishing . . . especially that one special tree
in the middle, the Tree of Life. But of course, as you know, there was that
other tree as well, that God said not to eat from. The
tree that would not nourish, but kill. The tree that
would not satisfy their hunger, but make them hangry. And when they ate
it anyway, isn’t that what they became? Bad-tempered and
irritable. Blaming each other, blaming God, no longer
who God had created them to be.
And hangry is what the people of Israel became in
the wilderness. We heard about that in the Old Testament reading. They were only
two and a half months out of Egypt. Two and a half months after the ten
plagues and the dividing of the Red Sea. You think they would remember all that
and know that if their heavenly Father did that for them, took care of them and
rescued them like that, then He wasn’t going to let
them die of hunger in the wilderness! But they got hangry. They got irritable
and bad-tempered. They grumbled and complained.
But God didn’t snap back at them. When you hear
this account, from the Old Testament, as we did today, you get the impression -
or at least I get the impression! - that God tells Moses that He
is now going to do what He was going to do all along, even
before the people began to grumble and complain. Feed them. Yes, He heard
their grumbling, but would He have not fed them anyway? Surely, He
would have. He gave them meat to eat, and sent bread from heaven.
Now that’s a great story, and 40 years of manna
in the wilderness, God giving them their daily bread faithfully and reliably,
is remarkable. But Jesus raises the bar on that story today. The Holy
Gospel we heard today takes place after Jesus had fed the 5,000 men, plus women
and children, out in that desolate place - kind of like the people of Israel in
the wilderness. And the people want more. So they went looking for Jesus. But
Jesus tells them not to seek this kind of food. Do not labor for the food
that perishes, He said, but for the food that endures to eternal
life, which the Son of Man will give to you. Which the Son of Man has
come to give to you; the plan all along.
Now, they seem a little hangry . . . not
grumbling (yet!). But they do question Jesus about this a bit, maybe a little
impatient with Him since He’s not providing another free lunch! And here’s
where Jesus raises the bar. He didn’t come to provide that kind of food, He
says. There’s another kind of food, another kind of bread, He has come to give
them. Yesterday’s lunch was just a sign of that; a pointer to this greater
bread. The bread He has come to give them is bread which doesn’t just satisfy
hunger and take away the hangries, but is bread
of life. Bread which gives life. Life, like that one special tree in
the Garden gave so long ago. Bread that is physical, but
also spiritual. To feed them spiritually.
Because just as we can get hangry physically,
did you ever consider . . . we can also get hangry spiritually. Just as
we need nourishment in the body, so we need nourishment in the soul as well.
And when we don’t get it, we’re not ourselves; we’re not who God created us to
be. We get spiritually hangry.
Now, when do you get hangry? You get hangry in
the body when you don’t eat, or when you don’t eat right. Not all
food is created equal. Eating a green jellybean is not the same as eating a
green pea, even though both are little, green, and round! And even though
donuts are my hands-down, all-time favorite kind of bread, that doesn’t mean a
diet of donuts is as good for me as eating whole grain
breads. Eating poorly can be just as bad for you as not eating at all, and just
as easily cause you to be hangry.
So what is the spiritual diet of our world today?
Well, many do not eat at all. Never reading or hearing God’s Word, never going
to church. And then there are some who are just consuming spiritual junk food -
a spirituality that tastes good and feels good, but doesn’t satisfy our hunger;
it only makes us hangry. And there’s a lot of that out there. Books, videos,
podcasts, churches, music . . . and people think that if it talks about Jesus,
then it must be good. It’s all the same.
But it’s not. It’s
green jellybeans and donuts. And we can fall prey to it, too. And become
spiritually hangry, too. Think about it. What does spiritual hanger look
like in your life? And how did you get there? Not eating, or not eating enough,
spiritually. Or not eating the right spiritual food. And so you’re not really
being the Christian you ought to be, that you were baptized and born from above
to be? What does that look like in your life? Maybe you’re doing a lot
of grumbling against God, like the people of Israel. Maybe a lot of passing the
buck and blaming, like Adam and Eve. Maybe it’s you
holding a grudge and not being willing to forgive. Not repenting, but digging
your heels in on your sin. Not believing God’s Word, but following your own
desires and opinions, and maybe even what the world says is good and right. Not
willing to help and serve others. Not trusting God and His Word and His ways. Struggling with your prayers. And you know . . . things aren’t
right. Something’s off.
Now, when that happens, what do you do? You can
try to fix yourself - resolve to do better, try harder! But if you’re like me .
. . been there, done that. Maybe I can do better a little, and for a time, but
it doesn’t last; I fall back again, into bad habits, bad behaviours.
Sometimes worse than before. So that’s not the answer.
Better is to eat regularly and nutritiously and a well-balanced
diet, so your body has what it needs. So that you have what
you need spiritually.
God provided that for the people of Israel with
the Tabernacle, which He gave them just a few chapters after the story
of the manna we heard today. That was to be the place where they would eat
spiritually. The place of His words and promises, His
forgiveness and life. So He took care of them body and soul. And God
has provided for you, too. Not only giving you your daily bread, but also
giving you a new Tabernacle - His Son. The body of Jesus
being the new tent, or dwelling place, of God with us. So that
Jesus could say (and I’m paraphrasing here!): I am the bread of life;
whoever comes to me shall not [be hangry], and whoever believes in me shall
never thirst. Which is to say, that by feeding on
Jesus, a regular diet of His Word, His forgiveness, and His Body and Blood, we
have all we need. For a Christ-like life now, a life of
repenting, forgiving, serving, caring, praying, and loving; and a Christ-like
life for eternity, a life of rest and glory.
This is the life of which Paul was speaking to
the Ephesians today. An unhangry life worthy
of the calling to which you have been called, with all humility and gentleness,
with patience, bearing with one another in love, eager to maintain the unity of
the Spirit in the bond of peace. And to achieve that, he says, God not
only gave you the spiritual food you need, but men to give you that food as
well. And he gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the
pastors and teachers, to equip the saints (to feed you), for the
work of ministry (to serve you), for building up the body of
Christ (to nourish and strengthen you). So that we .
. . grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ.
That we grow into His likeness, into His image. The image of the one who even
laid down His life for us! Who went to the cross for us! To
provide us with good food. The food and forgiveness we need. And growing
into Christ can’t happen with jellybeans and donuts! Or with
the thoughts and opinions and advice of the world. Only
with the pure Word and Sacraments of God.
So the question for today is: how’s your diet
been? Your spiritual diet, that is. Maybe not as regular
and healthy as it should be? Maybe you’re seeing the spiritual hangries pop-up in your life? Things
not quite right? A little off? If so, come to
the feast! Come and eat! Repent and feast on Jesus’ forgiveness for all
of your sins. Read and hear and feast of His Word, His good and
healthful Word. Eat and drink and feast on the Body and Blood of Jesus.
And not just once in a while, and not just once a week, but regularly, daily. For
here’s the good news: what you do when you’re hangry Jesus died for, and
what Jesus died for is to take away your hangries.
Which is to say, Jesus died for your forgiveness, and His
forgiveness gives you new life. That’s what
you need, and what Jesus is here to give. Or as the crowd said to Jesus that
day, Sir, give us this bread always! This bread of life! Music
to Jesus’ ears! It’s the very thing Jesus wants to do. For them. And for you.
In the Name of the
Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.