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Pastor Chris Boyd

Ordained Minister of the NALC for Resurrection Lutheran Church since 2020; a MDiv graduate of the North American Lutheran Seminary and Trinity School for Ministry in Ambridge, PA. Pastor Chris is a prior soldier of the Army, but now serves full time as the RLC minister. His ministry extends to the Catawba Island Volunteer Fire Department as its chaplain and as a volunteer fireman, to the township for community events such as street dedications and Wreaths Across America, to the city of Port Clinton for events including their Memorial Day Ceremony and Passion Walk, and many other entities. He passionately encourages rigorous study of the Word of God, apologetics, and communal involvement.

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Sermons

2 Kings 4: 42-44                                                                                                          July 28, 2024

Psalm 145: 1-3, 10-18

Ephesians 3: 14-21

St. John 6: 1-21

 

“Beyond Limits”

 

Grace and peace to you my brothers and sisters in Christ, Amen.

 

In the recent past I gave several sermons about Christology, or the study of Christ, and in a sense this sermon too will be a Christological-centered sermon where I focus on the Divine nature of Christ. But let me first begin with a series of questions that will grant us a foundation to work with. First, is Christ fully human? Yes. Is Christ fully God? Yes. Post-incarnation, is Christ ever lacking in His humanity or divinity? No. Are there two distinct Christs or only one? One. And last, are the two natures of Christ distinct from each other, in that neither mix? Correct. So, with this as our foundation let us now address Christ’s divinity, communion, and His various miracles.

 

When we say that Christ is fully human, then we confess two things. The first is that wherever there is Christ there is also His humanity. For if it is possible for Christ to be present without His humanity then that would mean that Christ is not fully human as part of Him is devoid of such characteristics. The second is that Christ is the fullest or most complete human. To be human is to serve God, and thus because of sin we are all sub-human. When God made humanity, He deemed it good because it did what it was made to do, but sin broke us. Christ alone is truly the most human and the only good human as He alone perfectly serves God.

In like manner, we ought to apply the same to Christ’s divine nature, for when we say that Christ is fully God then we too confess two things. The first is that wherever there is Christ there too is His divinity. At no point is Christ present merely as a human for that would mean that Christ is not fully God. The second is that Christ is always, in His fullness, truly divine. At no point is human nature limiting His divine nature, for every divine capability of the Father is also shared by the Son. This is why we say, though Christ is subservient to the Father according to His humanity He is always also equal to the Father according to His divinity.

 

So, if Christ is at all times divine and human and never divides Himself into two distinct Christs, one divine and one human, then when we observe the Lord’s Supper and hear the sweet words, “This is my Body,” what natures of Christ are present? Is Christ present only spiritually? No! Is Christ present only humanly? No! Is Christ present both spiritually and humanly? Yes! Thus, we confess that because Christ is always fully human and fully divine then when Christ comes to us in the Lord’s Supper, we are indeed receiving the fullness of Christ, both His body and soul, both His divine nature and human nature, both physically and spiritually. How is this so? We do not know, but regardless we know this to be most certainly true because Christ said so.

 

Now it may appear that I am going off topic and providing a sermon that is far removed from the given Scripture and Gospel today, for how is the feeding of the 5000 connected with Christ’s divinity and the Eucharist? Far more than meets the eye.

 

In the entirety of John 6, which is not only today’s Gospel but also the Gospel for all of August, we have two primary events that St John focuses on. The first is the feeding of the 5000, the second is Jesus’ message regarding Communion. The coupling of these two events is no coincidence, for there is such a profound connection between the two on so many levels. It is as if God is intentionally telling us that the feeding of the 5000 is an antitype, or prefiguring, of the true message regarding the Eucharist. And in fact, that is indeed the case, for the miracle of bread and fish is supposed to help us understand the miracle of Communion.

 

We begin not with the feeding of the 5000, but with the feeding of the 100 in 2 Kings 4. John 6 is not the first time a miracle happened that expanded the limitations of God’s creation. In 2 Kings you have 20 loaves of bread to feed 100 men. The men who followed Elisha did not trust that with this amount of food that all 100 men would be sufficiently satisfied. These men understood mathematics and the simple Laws of Nature for any sane and reasonable man would comprehend the obvious, you can’t fill the bellies of 100 men with 20 loaves of bread. And yet Elisha was not troubled by this physical limitation because he trusted in God’s promise, “They shall eat and have some left.” And by the grace of God, a miracle happened. God through Elisha fed all the men, and they were so full of bread that they couldn’t finish the feast.

 

I ask, does God serve under mathematics or is God the lord over mathematics? God does not serve math, but rather math serves God. God created the laws of mathematics and measured everything as it ought to be. God fashioned the Laws of Nature for our good, and the Laws of Nature were deemed good because it did exactly what God wanted it to do. Thus, if God was to command nature to do that which is outside the original laws governed by God, then it will obey because nature is good. The laws made by God do not control God but are themselves controlled by God. Thus, God can do whatever He wants. He can break the Laws of Nature and make the finite capable of the infinite simply because He commanded it so. Hear now the words of Ephesians regarding Christ who is God, “Now to Him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think, according to the power at work within us.”

 

Now I ask, is it within the power of man to perform such a miracle that the Laws of Nature are ripped asunder and suddenly 20 loaves of bread can feed 100? Far from it, for only God can disobey the natural laws. So, when we see Jesus feeding the 5000 on the Passover (remember that) is Jesus conducting the miracle or the Father? If you say the Father, that is because you doubt the divinity of Jesus. But we say that Jesus did the miracle Himself because Jesus is fully God and is equal to the Father in His divinity. Jesus, in accordance with His divine nature, grabbed a finite and severely limited portion of food, 5 loaves and 2 fish, and with that multiplied the food to satisfy 5000 men and fill 12 baskets with excess food. Jesus made the finite capable of the infinite by breaking the bonds of physics in this miracle. He did this not according to His humanity, but according to His divinity. And in the same way Jesus could break the limits of bread to feed far more than it is capable, so too can Jesus do that to Himself who is the Bread of Life.

 

An argument I hear from Sacramentarians is that Jesus’ body can’t possibly be present in the Eucharist because Jesus’ body is in heaven and the flesh according to human nature can’t be in two places at the same time. Alongside this argument you may hear people saying the catchphrase, “the finite is not capable of the infinite,” or even support the Calvinist theology known as Consubstantiation (which is the belief that Christ is present spiritually and that the bread is present physically; that communion is physically bread and spiritually Christ). Both we reject for in communion Christ isn’t “with” the bread but IS the bread, and it isn’t merely Christ’s spirit that is present but both His spirit and body. And as for the finite is not capable of the infinite, let me present… miracles!

 

But when we say finite, we mean human and infinite to mean divine, thus humans are not capable of the divine. True, humans can’t become God, but God can become human, and in fact He did for our sake as Jesus Christ who as a human died for our sake so that by his singular finite death, He, according to His divine nature, infinitely forgave all sin. And just because God the Son took on humanity into Himself that does not mean that He lost His divinity, such is a disservice to the grace and majesty of God when you claim that Jesus can’t possibly be bodily and humanly present in the Lord’s Supper because He is a human. Last time I checked, God is more powerful than humanity. So if Jesus, according to His divine nature, wants to be present humanly everywhere there is communion, then so be it. Who are we to judge God and say He can’t do such?

But this is a most blessed good news for us, that Jesus for our sake loves us so much that He will even break the Laws of Nature to save us. He is willing to tear down the things He built to reclaim us as His own and grant us a seat in His holy kingdom. God cannot die, and yet Jesus died for us. Humans cannot rise from the grave, and yet Jesus rose for us. Humans can’t be present in two places at once, and yet in communion Jesus is for us. If it is for our sake, God will rewrite the Laws of Nature and make the impossible possible. He spoke through a burning bush. He split the sea in half to save His people from slavery. He made bread rain down from heaven to feed His people. He crushed the walls of Jericho. And He took on your sins and paid the debt in your place.

 

Now I said I would mention the timing of this miracle, the feeding of the 5000. With God there are no coincidences. Everything God does He does for a reason. There is a reason why Jesus fed the 5000 on the Passover, and on the next day in Capernaum, said that He is the Bread of Life and if you wish to receive eternal life you must eat of His flesh. Then one year later, also on the Passover, Jesus said these words according to St Luke, “This is my body, which is given for you.” It is no coincidence that the Last Supper and the feeding of the 5000 both happened on the Passover.

 

Let us pray,

 

Dear Heaven Father, grant us miracles and help us see the miracle of Communion each time we receive our Lord and Savior. In Your name we pray: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.

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