Three Hands Behind the Miracle | Len Prado-Lambiquit
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The miracle of feeding 5,000 people begins not with a grand display of power, but with a single boy’s willingness to surrender five barley loaves and two fish—resources that seemed insignificant, even laughable, in the face of overwhelming need. The sermon reveals that three hands are behind every miracle: the hand that releases (the boy’s simple obedience), the hand that distributes (the disciples’ active sharing), and the hand that multiplies (Jesus’ divine power). The core message is that God doesn’t wait for us to be complete or impressive—He works through our brokenness, our smallness, and our surrender. When we release what we have, even if it feels inadequate, and distribute it with faith, God performs supernatural multiplication. The story isn’t just about bread and fish—it’s a blueprint for spiritual breakthrough: stop waiting for more, start offering what you have now. The 12 baskets of leftovers weren’t just a sign of abundance—they were tangible proof that God never wastes anything, and He never forgets those who trust Him.
Your small offering—time, talent, or resources—is enough if you release it to God.
God multiplies what you surrender, not what you hoard.
Miracles begin when you stop focusing on lack and start acting in faith.
You don’t need to be perfect to be used by God—just available.
Distribution is not optional; it’s how God’s miracles flow through us.
…and 3 more takeaways available in PodZeus
The Miracle of the Feeding of 5,000
The sermon opens with a reading of John 6:1-13, setting the stage for the miracle of the feeding of 5,000. Jesus, grieving the death of John the Baptist, seeks solitude but is followed by a massive crowd. The disciples face a logistical crisis: 15,000 hungry people with only five loaves and two fish. The scene establishes the tension between human impossibility and divine possibility.
The Hand That Releases: The Boy’s Surrender
“The lunch of a young man, it was not enough. But that's what he has. That's what he has. And he gave it to the Lord.”
The Hand That Distributes: The Disciples’ Role
“You don’t need to be able to make it for you. You don’t need to make it for you. What is your name? I-distribute. What is your name? I-distribute.”
The Hand That Multiplies: Jesus’ Divine Power
“Gratitude is not pretending that everything is perfect. Gratitude is recognizing that God is still working.”
The 12 Baskets of Leftovers: Proof of God’s Faithfulness
After everyone eats, twelve baskets of leftovers are collected—mirroring the number of disciples. This isn’t random; it’s a divine sign. The leftovers represent God’s abundance, His refusal to waste, and His promise to never leave His people in need. The sermon ends with a call to stop waiting and start offering what you have now.
“The lunch of a young man, it was not enough. But that's what he has. That's what he has. And he gave it to the Lord.”
“Gratitude is not pretending that everything is perfect. Gratitude is recognizing that God is still working.”
“You don't need to be able to make it for you. You don't need to make it for you. You don't need to make”
Host
Guest
Jesus
person
Disciples
person
Bible
book
Five loaves and two fish
other
12 baskets
other
Andrew
person
Philip
person
John the Baptist
person
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