"For the bread of God is that which comes down out of heaven, and  gives life to the world."  Then they said to Him, "Lord, always give us  this bread."  Yeshua said to them, "I am the bread of life; he who comes  to Me will not hunger, and he who believes in Me will never thirst." John 6:33-35
Inside the Tabernacle stood the Table of the lechem haPanim--the  Bread of the Presence -also called  shewbread. On the table the priesthood placed 12 loaves  continually before the LORD. The priests exchanged the bread with fresh  loaves every Sabbath. When the priests placed the fresh bread on the  table, they removed and ate the old bread. It was their Sabbath bread.
The 12 loaves symbolize the 12 tribes. Leviticus 25 tells us that the  bread was baked fresh and then placed before the LORD each Sabbath. The  ritual of fresh challah (a slightly sweet egg bread) on our Sabbath tables reminds us of  this aspect of the Tabernacle service.
Through this process, the bread  was offered before the LORD and then to the priests. In this sense, it  constituted a shared meal between the priests (representing all Israel)  and the LORD.
Several miracles are associated with the bread of the presence. There  is a tradition that the bread stayed fresh and warm all week long.  The priests used to lift up the table of the bread of the  presence and display it to those who came up for the pilgrimage  festivals, saying to them, "Behold, God's love for you!" How did the  bread show them "God's love for you"? Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi had  taught, "A great miracle was wrought in regard to the bread of the  presence, for at its removal it was as fresh and warm as when it was set  upon the table [a week before], as it is written, 'Hot bread when it  was taken away.'" (b.Menachot 29A quoting 1 Samuel 21:6)
The Second Temple era priesthood was so large the 12 loaves was not  sufficient to feed them all. As a result, each priest received only a  morsel. When God's favor was on the nation, a miracle happened and each  priest was fully satiated though he had eaten scarcely more than a  crumb. In addition, when the priests had eaten and been satisfied, they  found that there were yet leftovers.   Every priest who received a piece of the bread the size of  an olive would eat it and be satisfied, and some would eat it and have  leftovers. (Yoma 38a)  
The miracle of Yeshua feeding the multitudes with the five loaves and  all of them being fed and satisfied is a strong allusion to this  tradition. A further correlation to the bread of the presence can be  seen by combining the two feeding miracles. In the Matthew 14 incident  He breaks five loaves. In the Matthew 15 incident He breaks seven  loaves. Five loaves plus seven loaves makes 12 loaves. They all ate,  they were satisfied, and they gathered leftovers.         
http://ffoz.org/resources/edrash/terumah/the_twelve_loaves.php  2009
 
I've never connected those before. Cool.
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