To read the texts click on the texts: Jer 30:1-2,12-15,18-22; Mt 14:22-36
The text of
today appears immediately after the miracle of the feeding of the five thousand
(14,13-21). For the first time in Matthew, the disciples are sent forth without
Jesus. This is also the first time in the Gospel of Matthew that Jesus is
depicted as praying. Many see the boat in which the disciples are is by as
representing the church and here it is battered by the waves. Despite the
seeming impossibility of Jesus being able to reach them, he comes to them in
the darkest part of the night i.e. between 3.00 and 6.00 a.m. By walking on the
water, Matthew is not portraying Jesus as defying the law of gravity, but
subduing the chaos of the waters. Jesus does what only God can do (Job 9,8;
38,16; Ps 77,19 etc), and announces himself as “I am” which is reminiscent of
the name God used to identify himself in Exodus 3,15. The second part of this
pericope in which Peter asks Jesus to allow him to come to him is exclusive to
Matthew. Peter addresses Jesus as believers do in Matthew by using the
title “Lord”. The point that Matthew seems to be making is not only that Peter
took his eyes off Jesus and so began to sink, but also that by leaving the
boat, he indicated that he wanted proof of the presence of Jesus. Peter
cries out with a prayer, “Lord, save me”, and Jesus reaches out and saves him.
The gentle rebuke identifies Peter as a person of “little faith” which in
Matthew is a mixture of courage on the one hand and anxiety on the other. It is
a faith mixed with doubts. The conclusion to this episode in Matthew is
that the disciples worship Jesus as Son of God. Jesus is then portrayed as the
one who can make everyone whole.
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