Friday, April 17, 2026

One at a Time (Friday Devotional)

Jesus answered them, “Very truly, I tell you, you are looking for me not because you saw signs but because you ate your fill of the loaves.”

- John 6:26


At the beginning of the week, our dishwasher bit the dust, and we haven’t gotten around to replacing it quite yet. As a result, I’ve been handwashing the dishes every morning and most evenings.

It’s been something of a blast from the past for me, since the first apartment Lindsey and I ever shared—Section 8 apartments built in the 1950s—didn’t have a dishwasher either. In those days, I actually kind of enjoyed the slow, tedious, methodical process of scrubbing every last plate, fork, and glass. But with three kids now running around our house, I fully expected it to be nothing but an unpleasant chore this time around.

To my surprise, I have once again found myself taking an odd pleasure in the work. Something about starting with a mountain of dishes in the sink and then working my way through it one spoon at a time is satisfying. It’s not as efficient as the electric dishwasher, but going one by one turns a chore into a joy.

It reminds me a little of Jesus’ approach to ministry. Our eyes are often drawn to the work Jesus did for big crowds of people, like when he fed the 5,000 or preached to multitudes. If we were planning Jesus’ ministry, we probably would have put a lot more of those encounters on his agenda—we’d have had him preaching in the Roman Coliseum, not in backwoods towns in Galilee.

Yet more often than not, Jesus' ministry was about individual encounters rather than pleasing crowds. Indeed, sometimes he would send the crowds away at the height of his popularity lest they get the wrong impression about his purpose. Jesus was more interested in one conversation with a widow than speeches to multitudes.

In our “efficiency is everything” culture, it’s worth remembering that the kingdom of God plays by different rules. There is not much earthly glory to be found in slow, intentional, personal ministry—especially compared to the lure of making a big impact that will be recognized by many. But there is more to God’s work than numbers. Don’t underestimate the value of sharing the gospel one person at a time.

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