-Bringing Your Insufficiency to Jesus
Philip calculated the impossibility—200 denarii wouldn't feed the crowd.
Andrew found a boy's lunch but questioned its adequacy.
Both responses reveal our human tendency to measure God's power by our limited resources.
The barley loaves were the cheapest bread, food of the poor.
The fish were tiny, insignificant.
Yet Jesus didn't wait for better resources. He took what was offered and multiplied it beyond imagination.
What meager offering are you withholding from Jesus because it seems too small?
Your time, talents, or trembling faith may feel embarrassingly insufficient.
But God's math doesn't work like ours.
He doesn't need your abundance; He desires your surrender.
Stop counting what you lack and start trusting the Creator who spoke the cosmos into existence.
Bring your lunch to Jesus today—whatever you have, however small—and watch Him work miracles through your willingness.
Andrew found a boy's lunch but questioned its adequacy.
Both responses reveal our human tendency to measure God's power by our limited resources.
The barley loaves were the cheapest bread, food of the poor.
The fish were tiny, insignificant.
Yet Jesus didn't wait for better resources. He took what was offered and multiplied it beyond imagination.
What meager offering are you withholding from Jesus because it seems too small?
Your time, talents, or trembling faith may feel embarrassingly insufficient.
But God's math doesn't work like ours.
He doesn't need your abundance; He desires your surrender.
Stop counting what you lack and start trusting the Creator who spoke the cosmos into existence.
Bring your lunch to Jesus today—whatever you have, however small—and watch Him work miracles through your willingness.

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