John 6:5
The Gospel Feast
I. From the beginning the greatest rite of religion has been a feast;
the partaking of God's bounties, in the way of nature, has been
consecrated to a more immediate communion with God Himself.
II. In order to make this feasting still more solemn, it had been
usual at all... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:8
The services of the despised
I. The lesson I would draw from the scene is, on the one hand, the
lesson of Christ's own gospel to poor, humble, ill-endowed, ungifted
persons, and at the same time the encouragement, the blessing, the
multiplication which He gives to little things. These ough... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:11
This narrative falls mainly into two portions, both of which suggest
for us some important lessons. There is first the preparations for the
sign, and then there is the sign itself. Let us look at those two
points in succession.
I. The preparations for the sign. Christ's preparation in mak... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:12
The Revised Version correctly makes a very slight but a very
significant change in the words of this verse. Instead of "fragments,"
it reads, "broken pieces." The general notion, I suppose, is that the
fragments are the crumbs that fell from each man's hands as he ate,
and the picture bef... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:17
Note here
I. Christ's thoughts about His disciples. (1) He leaves men, whether
the world in general or His own people in particular, for a time in
fear and danger. The text records an isolated act, but it is an act in
the government of the Unchanging One. The principle of that act runs
th... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:19
The pathway of the King. We have here:
I. The struggling toilers. The solemn law under which we live demands
persistent effort and imposes continual antagonism upon us. There is
no reason why we should regard that as an evil, or think ourselves
hardly used because we are not fair-weather... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:28
Difficulties respecting Justification by Faith
I. It is an important rule to seek for the most exact language on any
subject in those writings which treat of it generally and directly,
rather than in those where it is spoken of by the way, the notice of
it arising out of some other matter... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:35
I. The conversation of our Lord was well fitted to damp the zeal of
those worldly-minded ones whose only object was to use His aid in
resisting the Roman power. He had never sought to make partisans. He
would simply encourage the faith which would lead them, whose hearts
were honest, from... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:36
The Reason of Faith
I. Look first at two kinds of faith which are universally practised;
for if faith is, in the nature of things, absurd or unintelligent, we
shall be as likely to discover the fact here as anywhere. And we may
discover, possibly, that the very persons who discard faith,... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:44
These words have often been supposed to mean that no one can become a
Christian unless an irresistible influence is put forth by God for his
conversion. I think, if you look at the words of the text in their
connection, and in relation to the circumstances in which they were
written, you... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:48
I. It is in the Lord himself alone that the power of life dwells, and
from Him that it goes forth. There is no intermediate agent. He is the
life of men, and it is by feeding on Himself that eternal life is both
obtained and assured. But as in the miracle, so in this which is
signified by... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:53
The Words of Christ
Let us take the words of the text, and by seeing the different ways in
which they have been misinterpreted, let us learn to hold fast the
lessons of our Lord in all their original freshness and piercing
power.
I. First, there was the error of those who understood, or... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:57
_(with Galatians 2:20)_
The Meaning of Justification by Faith
I. Looking steadily at the two passages of Scripture which I have
chosen for my text, we shall gain the clue to the full scriptural
truth about justification. First of all, St. Paul, speaking of himself
many years after his co... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:58
Means to Faith the Scriptures and Prayer
I. It is not enough to love the character of Christ; who can help
loving it? It must be something of a closer and more personal feeling,
if I may so speak, that will make Him become to us the bread of life;
and this feeling will only be gained by... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:61
Christ is the life of the world. It is as the world's life that we
have fellowship with Him. It is as the world's life that faith
recognises Him and rejoices in Him. Christ our life! This is our
watchword and our experience. To say that Christ is our life, is not
only to say there is life... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:66
Forsaken ideal
This sorrowful appeal from the less noble but natural feelings of the
twelve to their very highest and most spiritual thoughts was not in
this case in vain. The appeal "Will ye also go away?" revealed the
higher nature of the Apostles, perhaps even to themselves; showed th... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:66
The First Confession
In connection with this narrative many practical lessons suggest
themselves. I select only the following:
I. We are reminded by this history of the fluctuating character of
human applause.
II. We are shown the tap-root from which all apostasy springs. Judas
put tem... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:67
The Danger of Relapse
I. Experience has so often proved that men have not laid fast hold on
the grace which they had received, that we may well conceive our Lord
to say to each successive congregation who have professed to be His
disciples, "Will ye also go away? For eighteen hundred yea... [ Continue Reading ]
John 6:70
I. Note first, the relation of Judas and Jesus Christ. He was one of
the twelve selected Apostles; he had all the privileges, all the
opportunities, of Christ's near and dear companions; he was chosen, as
were Peter and John and James, out of the increasing number of
disciples, to be the... [ Continue Reading ]