To read the texts click on the texts: Job 38:1,8-11; 2 Cor5:14-17; Mk 4:35-41
A Sunday school teacher
was trying to get her class to dramatize the story of the Stilling of the
Storm. She explained to the children how they should dramatize the roles the
disciples, the wind, and even the boat itself. Next she asked each child which character
they wanted to be in the play. Each child in turn spoke up. One wanted to be
Jesus, another wanted to be Peer, and others wanted to be the disciples. The
teacher was taken aback when she came to a small stammering girl at the back of
the class, who said, “I would like to be the cushion holding up the head of
Jesus.”
While at first we might
wonder at the choice of this “passive” role, a deeper reflection will enable us
to see that there is a profound wisdom in the choice that this girl made. In
the story of the calming of the storm, which is the Gospel text of today, the
cushion beside Jesus comes out best. The disciples are agitated, the waves are
violent, and the boat is being tossed about. It is Jesus and with him, the
cushion on which he rests, that is most serene, calm, and at peace. The reason
why Jesus is serene and calm is because he has supreme authority over all of
creation including the sea.
This supreme authority of
God over all of his creation and especially the sea is brought out
magnificently in the first reading of today with the series of questions that
God asks Job. The answer to the question about who is really in control might
seem obvious to us: God alone. However, it is not as obvious to Job. The reason
for this is that everything in Job’s life seems to be going awry. It is not
easy for him to understand how God is in control when a lot of things in his
life are totally beyond control. He cannot make sense of what is happening to
him. He can find no rational explanation for it. In such a situation, how is
Job expected to believe that God is still in control? In such a situation, how
can Job know that it is God “who shut in the sea with doors” and “prescribed
bounds for it”? How can Job be expected to believe that God is still the master
of the sea with the ability to stop the waves?
These are also the
questions in the minds and hearts of the disciples of Jesus who are in their
boat on the Sea of Galilee. The storm rages and threatens. The waters lash the
boat. Their lives are in danger. Will Jesus be able to save them? Can he stop the
waves? Does he have control over the sea? If he does, why is he asleep? Why
does he not do something
When things in our lives
go awry, when nothing seems to go the way we plan, when the road ahead is steep
and the going is difficult, and when the boats of our lives are being rocked by
the waves of uncertainty and insecurity, then it is not easy to continue to
believe that God is on our side. It is not easy to trust and to hope. It is not
easy to have faith. We, too, continue to ask questions. Sometimes, like the
disciples, we even accuse God and Jesus of lack of concern over our plight. We
accuse God of not caring enough about us.
Job was able to realize,
much later, that God was always in control. Just so, the disciples come to
realize that, though Jesus appears to be asleep, apparently doing nothing, he
is in fact very active and doing everything. Though he does not seem to them to
be concerned over their plight, the truth is that he is very much concerned.
The difference, however, is that whereas the disciples given in to agitation,
anxiety and fear, Jesus does not.
This concern of the Lord
for the whole of humanity was shown in the most perfect of ways on the Cross.
This is what Paul speaks about in the second reading of today. Christ’s death
is the transformative event for all of life. Nothing is the same after that.
The first radical change brought about by the death of Christ is that now those
who believe will live no longer for themselves but for others, in and through
Christ. However, this is not all. The death of Christ is an event that
encompasses and transforms the whole universe.
This is why believers
will look at themselves, at others, and at the universe in a new way. The old
ways of looking, the doubt, uncertainty, anxiety, insecurity, the lack of faith
and, above all, fear, is replaced by the new way. This new way is a way of
confidence, surety, faith, and love. No matter how rough the sea, no matter how
high the waves, no matter how much the boat is rocked and, no matter how
dangerous the way ahead might seem, those who believe in Christ know that he is
in the boat and, with a word, he will calm the storm.
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