Address given at Templederry, St Mary's Nenagh and Killodiernan on Sunday 13th August 2017, the 9th after Trinity, Year A
It is terrifying to be out on the water at night
in a small boat in a gale. I know, because I have been.
I was a teenager, and
it was a wild night. My mother and I had to row less than a hundred yards to
the island on Lough Derg where we were staying. It was blowing a gale, with a
big sea running, and waves breaking. With one oar each, side by side, we pulled
against the wind, inching forward, sometimes being thrown sideways as the wind
caught the side of the boat, shipping water all the while. We made several
attempts and were thrown back, but eventually we made it to calmer waters, and
arrived safely on the other shore. By that time I was shaking like a leaf,
terrified. My mother probably was too, though she never let me see it of course.
It taught me a lesson I’ve never forgotten: respect for the water – it’s not
our native element, and we underestimate the power of wind and wave at our
peril.
Today’s reading from
St Matthew’s Gospel (Matthew 14:22 -33)
brings this memory back to me. The same event is recorded in both Mark’s and
John’s Gospels. I feel I can identify with the disciples, even though I suppose
I wasn’t in real danger, as they must have been. The Sea of Galilee is renowned
for the fierce and dangerous storms that suddenly appear out of nowhere, and
abate just as quickly. I see it in my minds eye as rather like our Lough Derg –
it’s about 40% bigger in area and wider, but not so long. And sailors know how
quickly a squall can blow up on Lough Derg.
The disciples had got into trouble in one of
Galilee’s notorious storms.
Immediately after
feeding the 5000, Jesus sent the disciples off in a boat, while he told the
crowds to go home, and went off up the mountain to pray by himself.
The disciples had set
out in the evening light, unaware of the coming storm. Mark tells us that Jesus
‘saw that
they were straining at the oars against an adverse wind’. I imagine
the night was bright and moonlit for Jesus to be able to see the little boat.
‘Early in the
morning’, Matthew tells us,
Jesus ‘came
walking toward them on the sea’. The Greek words translated as
‘early in the morning’ literally mean ‘in the 4th watch of the
night’. In those days, with no clocks, time during the night was counted in 4
watches of 3 hours each. So sometime between 3 and 6 am, Jesus, walking on the
high ground after praying all night, saw the little boat struggling through
waves and spray, and came down to help.
But what is this about Jesus
walking on the sea?
Should we imagine Jesus far from land, in the middle of the lake,
walking on the water, stepping over the waves? This is how most Christians have
imagined the scene, I suppose, and many artists have depicted it. But we should
be aware of a translation difficulty here. The Greek words translated as ‘on
the lake’ could equally mean ‘towards the lake’, or ‘at the lake’, that is by
the lake shore.
The truth is that there are two perfectly possible interpretations of
this passage. The first describes Jesus miraculously walking on the water in
the middle of the lake. In the second, the disciples’ boat is driven by the
wind to the shore, Jesus comes down from the mountain to help when he sees them
struggling in the dim light of dawn, and Jesus walks through the surf towards
the boat. Both interpretations are equally valid. Some will prefer one and some
the other.
When the disciples saw Jesus they were terrified, believing him to be a
ghost, until Jesus spoke to them, saying, ‘Take heart, it is
I; do not be afraid’.
Whichever way we interpret the Greek, the significance to the disciples
is perfectly clear: In the hour of their need, Jesus came to them,
to help and reassure them.
Only Matthew adds the detail
about Peter trying to walk on the water too.
It’s a charming vignette, isn’t it - and so in character for Peter, from
the other things we know of him. He was brave and impetuous, but he often found
it hard to live up to his good intentions. Remember, it was Peter who swore
undying loyalty to Jesus only to deny 3 times that he knew him the very next
day.
When Jesus said ‘Come’,
Peter bravely ‘got
out of the boat, started walking on the water, and came toward Jesus’.
But his courage failed him and he started to sink. ‘Lord, save me!’ he shouted, and
‘Jesus
immediately reached out his hand and caught him, saying to him, “You of little faith, why did you doubt?”’
Whether Jesus was miraculously walking on water, or whether he came
through the surf on the shore to help the disciples in the boat, Peter surely
learned this: It is not always easy to follow Jesus, but
Jesus is always there to catch you when you stumble and sink.
Finally, what can we learn from
this story, 2000 years on?
Well, surely the same things that Peter and the disciples learned! They
were privileged to know Jesus in the flesh and to sail the Sea of Galilee with
him. But we are privileged too to know the spiritual reality of the living
Christ.
In life the wind is often against us. Life for every one of us sometimes
feels like a fearful struggle, with ourselves, with our circumstances, with
temptations, with sorrow, with the consequences of decisions made, by us or by
others. Many today struggle with fear for the future of a world that seems to
be spinning out of control towards disaster, fear of an impoverishing Brexit,
fear of life destroying climate change, fear of nuclear war between the USA and
North Korea. But none of us need struggle with our fears alone. In the hour of our need, Jesus will come to us as he did to
the disciples long ago, to help and reassure us. Just listen for
his voice saying, ‘Take heart, it is
I; do not be afraid’!
If we seek to follow Jesus, we will find like Peter that it is not
always easy. It will test our faith at times. Our faith will not always be
enough and we will have doubts. But when we feel ourselves going under, if we
cry out ‘Lord
save me’, Jesus will be there for us, just as he was for Peter,
reaching out his hand to catch us. Jesus is always there
to save us when we are sinking. Just listen for his voice
saying, ‘You of little faith, why did you doubt?’
Let
us finish in prayer:
Mighty God and ruler of all
creation,
even when all hope seems lost.
Help us to face all trials with
serenity
as we walk with Christ through the
stormy seas of life
and come at the last to your
eternal peace.
We ask this through Jesus Christ
our Lord,
who lives and reigns with You and
the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever. Amen
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