Sunday, June 21, 2015

Homily: 12th Sunday in Ordinary Time - Jesus quiets the stormy sea



Ancient people hated traveling on the sea and were frightened by the ocean depths.  Even experienced sailors hugged the shore whenever they could, they wouldn’t venture out into the deep water.

It’s not very surprising, that when biblical people would speak of the roaring untamed sea as a symbol for their deepest anxieties.

The very beginning of the book of Genesis speaks of the “Tohu wa bohu” in the Hebrew, the watery depths of the void.  Those primal chaotic waters are part of our earliest imaginings.  Yet, the Lord of Creation brings light and life out of the darkness, as he breaths his Spirit, taming and forming.

In the book of Exodus we hear of another frightening body of water: as Pharoah’s army of chariots and charioteers closes in on the Israelites, they are trapped by the uncrossable Red Sea. It is not until God parts the waters, showing himself again, as Lord of Creation, Master of even the seemingly untamable seas, that the Israelites are able to escape Egypt and take that next step toward freedom.
And in all four of the Gospels, there is a version of the story we heard today.  The storm at sea. 
Again, the stormy waters stand for the chaos of life beyond our control.  All those powers which are opposed to God’s created intentions.  All those difficulties both interior and exterior, physical and psychological that beset us.  All the darkness that befalls us in life.

That’s where the disciples of Jesus are in the Gospel today; they are beset with chaos, anxiety, darkness, bafflement: just like us. 

The Church fathers say that the boat traversing through the storm sea in the Gospel today stands for the Church through the ages—the Barque of Peter making her way through the centuries amidst persecution and misunderstanding and the violence and wars of the nations.  The waves crashing against the boat, the winds whipping around them are symbolic of everything that besets the Church, and besets the individual Christian.

This storm in the Gospel must have been fierce.  For most of the apostles were experienced fisherman, experienced sailors, on the Sea of Galilee—their home turf—well, their home “surf”—so to speak, they knew it well, they’d fished there before, with their fathers and their fathers before them.  They knew its changes and dangers.  If these experienced fisherman were terrified, this must have been a storm of unique severity—no minor problem.

And in the midst of the storm they cry out, “Lord, save us.”  Scripture is filled with such cries out to the Lord, the Psalms especially:  Out of the depths I call to you, LORD; Lord, hear my cry! Says Psalm 130.  Psalm 50, says, “Call upon Me in the day of trouble; I shall rescue you.”
When we find ourselves lost and in the shadow of death—when we are facing the great struggles and storms of life—we are urged by God Himself to call out to Him; when in our desperation we feel utterly incapable of helping or saving ourselves, we are meant to turn to Almighty God, and cry, “Save me Lord.”   

Some of you may be familiar with the story of Bill Wilson.  Bill Wilson was the founder of Alcoholics Anonymous.  Bill was, at the beginning of the 20th century, a bright and gifted man, but who found himself to be completely the prisoner of alcohol.  Because of his drinking, he would suffer great depression, his marriage fell apart, he lost job after job.  Through the treatments of the day, he would get back on his feet for a while, only to fall again.  This terrible pattern of addiction, that perhaps some of you are familiar with, repeated itself so often, that Bill Wilson found himself at the point of utter despair, contemplating suicide.  But it was then, when he was at rock bottom, that he encountered a friend who spoke of a religious way out of addiction; one mediated by prayer.  At the end of his rope, having tried everything, Bill Wilson prayed Psalm 130—Out of the depths I cry to you O Lord.  And in the wake of that prayer, Bill Wilson experienced a spiritual awakening, a spiritual revival, that began a period of sobriety that would last the rest of his life.  And this experience of humbling admitting one’s powerlessness before God—praying to God out of the depths became the foundation of the 12-step program.

Until we hit rock bottom, we still believe they can save themselves. 

Not all of us will struggle with an addiction to alcohol, or narcotics, or gambling, or pornography, but there needs to be, in the life of every Christian, an acknowledgment, that I cannot save myself…I cannot be the person God made me to be on my own; I cannot love others as I’m meant to on our own, I cannot get to heaven on my own.  We need God.  We need to come before him, in the depths of our soul, and acknowledge, we can’t do it on our own.  This humility is a fundamental disposition for authentic faith.

For when the ego, rather than God is at the center—in the end we will reap nothing but a harvest of unhappiness and exhaustion. 

Perhaps some of you here today are in the grips of an addiction, or perhaps you have just lost your job, or don’t know where your next mortgage or rent payment is going to come from, perhaps you just lost a loved one, and you don’t know how you are going to survive without them.  I encourage you to identify with the disciples in the Gospel today, and cry out with them out of your depths.
The disciples, knowing their helplessness, cry out, Lord, don’t you know we are about to drown?  Lord, do something! 

And What happened to the disciples then?  Jesus awakens.  He calms the storm.
Like the Spirit of God which hovered over the chaotic waters in the book of Genesis, Jesus is the incarnate power of God, who can bring peace, and calm, and new life—new creation, from the stormy darkness.

He woke up, rebuked the wind, and said to the sea, “Quiet! Be still!”  Though they had before witnessed the Lord's miracles, and heard his wisdom, here on the terrible sea the most unruly powers of creation submitted to Him, without question - this was a lordship they had not yet even conceived of; this is the lordship of our God and Savior, Jesus Christ.


By coming to us in the Holy Eucharist today, Jesus renews his commitment to be our strength amidst the storms of life, let us commit to him, by accepting our limitations and acknowledging our dependence upon him, for the glory of God and salvation of souls.

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