There’s something quietly tender about today’s Gospel. Jesus climbs a hillside, sits down—simply sits—and the crowds come. Not polished crowds. Not crowds with their lives in order. These are people carrying stretchers, leaning on friends, limping, hurting, hungry. People who have run out of options. People who have been told they are too broken, too complicated, too much.
And Jesus doesn’t send any of them away.
He heals them. One by one. Word by word. Touch by touch. The Gospel says the crowds “glorified the God of Israel,” but I imagine something else happening too—a collective sigh of relief, an exhale from people who had been holding their breath for far too long.
Then comes the moment that lingers in my heart: Jesus looks at them and says, “My heart is moved with pity for the crowd… they have nothing to eat.” He doesn’t ask if they’ve planned better. He doesn’t shame them for ending up far from home without enough to get by. He sees their hunger—their very ordinary, very human hunger—and calls it worthy of compassion.
Maybe this is what Advent is meant to teach us: God cares about our hunger. Not just the spiritual ache, but the physical one. The emotional one. The places in us that feel empty, tired, depleted. The places we’re embarrassed to admit are running low.
Jesus doesn’t just fill the crowd; he refuses to let them starve. And he does it with the little they have—a few loaves, a handful of fish, nothing spectacular. He blesses what is small, breaks it open, and in that breaking comes abundance.
It makes me wonder how often grace works the same way in our own lives. Not through dramatic signs or lightning-bolt revelations, but through small gestures offered in faith—an honest prayer whispered in the dark, a quiet act of kindness we weren’t in the mood to give, a moment of stillness we fought hard to find. Little offerings placed in God’s hands, multiplied into something we never could have imagined.
Perhaps this Advent, the invitation is simple: bring what you have. Even if it feels like crumbs. Even if it feels like too little to matter. Jesus has a way of turning the smallest things into feasts.