This week, our dear friend Bob Simmons takes us into one of the most beloved miracles in Scripture—the feeding of the 5,000—but reveals a profound truth we often miss: Jesus wasn't just addressing physical hunger that day. The context matters deeply here. The disciples had just returned from an exhausting ministry tour, depleted and in need of rest. Jesus himself was grieving the brutal murder of John the Baptist. They sought solitude, but instead found themselves facing a massive crowd of perhaps 15,000 people. While the disciples saw an inconvenience and wanted to send everyone away, Jesus saw something entirely different: sheep without a shepherd. His compassion moved him to meet their immediate need, multiplying five small barley loaves and two tiny fish into a feast that left everyone satisfied with twelve baskets of leftovers. But the real miracle wasn't just the multiplication of food—it was the revelation that followed. When the crowd pursued Jesus the next day, wanting more free meals, he confronted them with a deeper truth: they were seeking a sugar daddy when what they really needed was a Savior. We all have a God-shaped vacuum in our hearts, a hunger for meaning, purpose, significance, love, and relationship that nothing on earth can satisfy. Jesus declares himself the Bread of Life, the only one who can fill that eternal longing God has placed within us. The question for us today is simple yet profound: are we seeking Jesus for what he can give us, or for who he is? Are we trying to fill our deepest hungers with temporary things, or have we discovered that only he can truly satisfy?