Friday, February 27, 2026

John 6:22-34

John 6:22–34:

The day after the feeding of the five thousand, the crowds cross the sea and find Jesus in Capernaum. 

He immediately confronts their hearts: they are seeking Him not because they recognized the divine sign He performed, but because their stomachs were filled with physical bread. 

Jesus calls them to a higher pursuit—“Do 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” (v. 27). 

When they ask what works God requires, Jesus gives the gospel in one sentence: “This is the work of God, that you believe in him whom he has sent” (v. 29). 

They demand a sign like the manna their fathers ate in the wilderness. Jesus corrects them: Moses did not give the true bread from heaven; His Father is now giving the real bread—the One who comes down from heaven and gives life to the world. The crowd replies, “Sir, give us this bread always” (v. 34), setting the stage for Jesus’ great “I Am the Bread of Life” declaration that follows.


Reflection:

The crowd’s motivation—seeking Jesus for temporal benefits rather than for Himself—mirrors the natural human heart that treats God as a means to an end. 

Jesus exposes this and redirects everything to faith: the one “work” God accepts is not moral striving or religious performance, but believing in the Son He has sent. 

This is precious, because it underscores that salvation is by grace alone through faith alone. 

Even that believing is ultimately the Father’s gift and work in us (as the rest of John 6 will make explicit), not a human achievement.

For daily Christian living, these verses call us to examine our own motives. 

Do we follow Christ primarily for the “loaves”—comfort, provision, answered prayer—or because He is the Bread of Life who satisfies the soul forever? 

The Christian life is one of continual dependence: every morning we come again to Jesus, not with our hands full of works, but empty, asking Him to feed us with Himself. 

He alone sustains us through trials, sanctifies us by His Spirit, and guarantees that we will never hunger or thirst spiritually. 

0ur security and growth rest not in our grip on Christ, but in His grip on us, as the true Bread given by the Father who never casts out those who come to Him (John 6:37).

May the Lord deepen our hunger for Christ Himself today, so that we seek first the food that endures to eternal life. Soli Deo gloria.https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1PhyXRwalIZNBiBCKgW9WPBd_QevRnQrb

No comments:

Post a Comment

John 6:22-34

John 6:22–34 : The day after the feeding of the five thousand, the crowds cross the sea and find Jesus in Capernaum.  He immediatel...