Sunday, June 20, 2021

Who is Jesus for us amid the storms of our lives?

 

Twelfth Sunday in OT  B  2021

On this Father’s Day, we. thank and pray for all our fathers, those living and those who have gone home to God.  Our dads have loved us into life and have protected us and calmed our fears from our earliest years.  My dad went home to God 26 years ago, but his faith, his love, his protection lives on in my heart. Our fathers have revealed to us the God who loves and who calms the fears of our lives.

In the first scripture reading, Job suffers great calamities – the death of children, destruction of property, and debilitating illness.  He asks the question WHY in the sense why do good people endure such hardships in life?  That is our question as well.  God speaks to Job and asks him to trust in God when we don’t understand why bad things happen to good people.

God’s love for Job doesn’t suddenly remove the struggles and crosses of his life, but God does accompany Job in the midst of the calamities of his life and leads him to trust in God even in the midst of life circumstances he cannot control.

The Job reading prepares us for the Gospel.  The disciples were traveling in a boat on the Sea of Galilee that seems unequal to the weather it faces.  And so, a violent storm and the waves came crashing in over the side of the boat.  The disciples were in a state of panic fearing for their lives.

That boat on the Sea of Galilee symbolizes us and our Church as we seem overwhelmed by the storms of life?  The storminess on the Sea of Galilee represent all those situations in life that cause us to be fearful.

The disciples were concerned about the inaction of Jesus who was asleep in the back of the boat.  From the disciples’ perspectives, Jesus wasn’t getting it.  It’s like our correct axiom: “Houston, we have a problem.”  The disciples wanted immediate action from Jesus. The disciples had lost the confidence of their prayer life and the question they asked took on the tone of a hostile accusation: “Teacher, don’t you care about the crisis we are facing?

 Can we identify with the fear of the apostles about the seeming absence of Jesus at times in our life?  In what situations do we lose the confidence of prayer and resort to fear and anxiety? 

We ask the question why did God allow Covid-19 to take so many lives?  When our whole planet was wrestling with this pandemic, where was our good and gracious God?

 

When it comes to the health of our children, when it comes to a break in a significant relationship, when it comes to job pressure, money pressures, when it comes slipping into fear and depression, do we wonder whether the boat we are in can withstand the storms of life?

For the first disciples and for us who also are disciples of the Lord Jesus, Jesus calls us back to our true center with two tough questions:  Why are you terrified?  Do you not yet have faith?

I invite you to consider the temptations of your life as the violent squall and the surging sea that threaten us and make us fearful.  When we’re insulted, it’s like being buffeted by winds?  When we’re angered, it’s like being tossed about by waves.  When we’re insulted, our instinct is revenge.  But revenge produces an even worse situation – shipwreck.  Consider temptations as windy squalls and surging seas.

In these situations of fearfulness, do what the disciples did.  Wake us Jesus who is asleep in our hearts.  Then like the wind and sea, we are called to quiet down and be still and trust that Jesus who is the master of the sea and the waves is the Lord and Savior of your life.

As we seek to wake up Jesus who seems to be asleep in our hearts, we need to discern who is asleep.  Is Jesus asleep and indifferent to the cross we are experiencing or is it we who are asleep when the fears of our life control our inner space so much that our trust in Jesus as the Lord and Savior has been completely eroded?  The tire hits the road in our spiritual journey when the storms on the Sea of Galilee invade our personal space and when we are gripped with fear.

Psychiatrists tell us that toxic fear and worry is a disease of the imagination.  Fear robs us of the inner peace we seek.  It keeps us from enjoying the present moment.  How much of our lives is controlled by the fear of what might go wrong?

The very first words out of the mouth of the angel Gabriel when he speaks to Mary are: “Do not be afraid.”  Scripture scholars tell us those four words are repeated 365 times in the Scriptures.

Why so much attention to the single emotion of fear?  Fear cripples our ability to become transformed – which is the whole purpose of the Gospel and of the coming of Jesus Christ into our anxiety-ridden world.  Jesus is focused:  we cannot move forward in faith until we have learned how to deal with our fears.

With 70% of our state now being vaccinated and we gradually remove the health restrictions caused by the pandemic, how do we reinvigorate and reimagine the ministries of our parish and how do we come together as a parish community respecting the faith journey of one and all? 

The Sea of Galilee is a gift of God to us for its beauty, and the storminess of the sea is our challenges to convert the fears of life into trust in His abiding presence in our life. 

The Gospel calls us to be mindful of God’s faithfulness towards us.  We need to discern who is Jesus for us amid the storms of our lives.

May we also discern how the Lord calls us to help others to navigate the storms of life as they need and value the compassion care and presence of a calming friend and a fellow traveler.

 

Have a Blessed Day.

 

 

 

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