Thanks to our newfangled three year lectionary, we reflected on St. Matthew's account of Jesus walking on the waters of the lake, where he meets his disciples in the fourth watch of the night. There they are, a long way off from land, making no headway because the waves and the wind are against them. Terrified at the dimly seen presence of Christ they cry out, thinking they've seen a ghost. Jesus replies:
"Take heart, it is I, have no fear," Θαρσεῖτε, ἐγώ εἰμι· μὴ φοβεῖσθε. Then, after rescuing a drowning Peter, Jesus enters the floundering boat, stills the storm and the disciples worship him, "Truly, you are the Son of God." What does this teach us?
To state the blazingly obvious, that Jesus is God, Psalm 29 come to life, "The voice of the LORD is upon the waters; the God of glory thunders; * the LORD is upon the mighty waters." And that's worth the emphasis, the miracle happened, the Word made Flesh, the I AM who spoke to Moses from the burning bush, note the Greek, ἐγώ εἰμι, (I am) now speaks in power to his disciples on the water.
The miracle is real and by it Jesus reveals himself as God to his friends so that they might put their faith in him and be saved, in this case from the storm, but we can go further. The Fathers of the early Church, no small authority, saw the miracle as an allegory or symbol of the Christian life, the life of the Church. Thus:
The disciples represent the faithful, their boat the Church, the ark of salvation. The waters of the lake are the waters of the world and its waves are its tribulations, at every level, which pound against the ship. And the wind is the tempestuous blast of Satan, who would blow the Church off-course from the far side of the lake, which is the Kingdom of Heaven, paradise.
Yes indeed. In every age the Church sets sail across the waters and is pounded by the world and by Satan, both of which hate and would destroy her. And note, apart from Christ the disciples make no headway, as Jesus says elsewhere, "I am the vine, you are the branches... apart from me you can do nothing."
Exactly, but with him, with the Lord upon the waters, we find salvation, both corporately as the Church writ large, the Mystical Body of Christ visible and militant on earth, and personally, as the Church writ small. Here Peter's experience speaks powerfully. It is a miracle within the miracle which illustrates the whole.
He glimpses Christ and hears his voice and asks, "Lord, if it's you, bid me to come to you across the water." Jesus replies, "Come." Peter does, stepping off the boat and into the water, impetuous, only to be distracted by the wind. He begins to sink, to drown, and cries out, "Lord save me!" Jesus does, he catches him and brings him to the safety of the ship.
Is this not the story of our lives? We glimpse Christ, we hear his word and Christ answers our questioning faith, "Come." So we set off across the stormy water to meet him and be with him. Then calamity, catastrophe strikes. The waves pound, the wind blows and no earthly power can save us, so we cry out with Peter, "Lord, save me!"
It's the prayer of desperate faith and Christ, in his love, mercy and strength hears that call and lifts us up from the depths, de profundis, to safety, to union with himself, and puts us back on the vessel of salvation.
I tell you, I've been there many times, no fooling, and I know you have too in far more extremis than I. But take heart, have no fear, the Lord, who is God upon the waters, is with us and is even now guiding his Church and we ourselves to the far shore of paradise. Fall down then, with the disciples in the boat, and worship the Saviour.
Here endeth the Lesson,
LSP
Wonderful exhortation. I have always approached this more visually, as in, “Keep your eyes on Christ, whether in stormy waters or when at ease.”
ReplyDeleteIn reading your account here Father, and in ruminating on hearing you speak these thoughts during Mass earlier, I am struck by the sheer simplicity of it all. Simplicity, not "simple for simpletons."
ReplyDeleteWords were written about and concerning The Word To Be Made Flesh (the Old Testament). The Word Became Flesh. The Enfleshed Word spoke words (the New Testament Gospels).
And now, just as Christ Himself blessed and broke and served the Bread of Life to His disciples, in this blog post (and in the hearing of it) you have blessed and broke open and served to us the words of The Word made flesh.
Hell's minion warriors have dropped their swords.
Blessed be God: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost.
And blessed be His Kingdom, NOW AND FOREVER.
Amen!
Great sermon Pastor, thank you. I don't know how people are getting through these times (in my opinion, end times ) without faith in Jesus.✝️
ReplyDeleteDid not attend the NO this week, but our priest in the VO brought up this reading- take your eyes off Jesus and you start to sink.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Paul. The visual aspect's important and the Church Fathers certainly focus on it too.
ReplyDeleteBut this time around I was struck by Peter's "miracle within a miracle" speaking to the whole -- as Christ saves the Church so too does he save her members, "Lord save me!"
Time and again, eh?
Amen, Prodigal!
ReplyDeleteWhat a powerful text.
Thanks, Anon, and yes, the waves are certainly pounding and the wind's picking up. But hey, take heart, have no fear.
ReplyDeleteToo true, DOS. Maybe I'll go down that path next time.
ReplyDeleteWonderful lesson LSP. One of my favorite readings, to remind me to always trust in the Lord.
ReplyDeleteSouthern NH
Thank you, Parson. I know I am grateful that I can always call on our Lord, and He will always answer.
ReplyDeleteYou all be safe, stay cool, and God bless.
That's the best summation and analysis of the Walking on Water moment I've ever heard or seen.
ReplyDeleteReally wish someone of your skill had been one of my Sunday School teachers.
NH, glad it was helpful. What a wondrous miracle!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Linda, he does hear our desperate cry for help and I'm always amazed at the abundance of his grace, far more than we could ever imagine, time and again.
ReplyDeleteBless you.
Beans, that's high praise and I appreciate it.
ReplyDeleteSuch power in the Gospel.