A Small Offering—A Great Grace
Friday of the Second Week of Easter John 6:1–15 The feeding of the five thousand is one of those Gospel moments that feels both grand and wonderfully ordinary. A huge crowd gathers, people are hungry, and the disciples are overwhelmed. It’s a scene we know well—needs that feel too big, resources that feel too small, and a quiet hope that maybe God can do something with what we have. Then comes the boy with five loaves and two fish. It’s not much. It’s barely enough for a family meal, let alone a hillside full of people. Yet Jesus receives this small offering with gratitude, blesses it, and multiplies it beyond anything anyone could have imagined. This is the heart of the story: God delights in using what we offer, even when it feels insufficient. Jesus doesn’t ask the boy for more. He doesn’t criticize the disciples for their lack of planning. He simply takes what is given and transforms it into abundance. So often we hold back because we think what we have isn’t en...