To read the texts click on the texts: 1Jn 4:11-18; Mk 6:45-52
With the exception of Luke
who does not narrate the miracle of walking, the other three evangelists do. In
Mark, the story is linked to the previous miracle of feeding the five thousand.
Jesus dismisses the crowd and goes to pray. Mark portrays Jesus as praying
three times in his Gospel. The first time is in 1:35 -38, the second time here and the third time in the garden of Gethsemane (14:32 -42). In each of these three occasions
the prayer is prompted by something significant that Jesus has to discern
about. If in the first instance it is whether he must stay in Capernaum or move
to other parts of Galilee, here it is about his role as shepherd to the people
and in Gethsemane it is about his fidelity to his Father’s will and his
acceptance of the Cross.
Three pointers indicate that
this miracle is to be interpreted as a “theophany” (a revelation of God). The
first is of Jesus walking on the water. While Mark does not intend to portray
Jesus as defying the law of gravity by walking on the water, he does intend to
show Jesus as subduing the forces of evil. In the Old Testament only God has
the power to walk on the water (Job 9:8; 38:16). The second pointer is in the
phrase, “he intended to pass them by” which is a reference most probably to God
as the One who passed by Moses (Exod 33:19–23; 34:6) and Elijah (1 Kgs 19:11 ) in a moment of self
revelation. The third pointer is the
manner in which Jesus identifies himself: I am”. This is the name which God
gives to Moses in Exod 3:14 when Moses asks for it in order to tell the people
with whose authority he would speak. The fact that the disciples are struggling
against the wind is an indication that Jesus approaches them to help them in
their hour of distress.
The disciples in Mark are
unable to understand this theophany and respond not out of faith but fear.
It is not always the
case that the tide is with us and we are rowing in the same direction as it.
There are times when we are rowing against the wind. It is at times like these
when the going is tough, when there seems to be no respite in sight that Jesus
comes to us walking on the water and assuring us that he has and is able to
conquer all the negative forces that threaten to pull us down. He comes to us
in the darkest part of the night when nothing seems clear and visibility is low
to assure us of his presence in the boat of our lives. He comes to us with
words of comfort and hope: “Courage! I am. Do not be afraid”.
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