Verse 16 picks up with a passage of time, presumably from
lunchtime to evening perhaps dinner time when the disciples decide to go down
to the Sea of Galilee and take a boat over to the city of Capernaum. Perhaps after not knowing where Christ was
for a period of time, they thought He might have gone ahead of them there based
on prior discussions with Him. Perhaps
it was just their best idea of where they might find Him. Whatever their thinking, they entered the
boat, and made for the other shoreline.
Verse 17 makes it clear, that it was now dark, and Jesus was not already
with them in the boat. This distinction
was important to John to specify for this part of the story. And as their luck would have it, or perhaps
as Satan often does with us when we find ourselves outside of the immediate
presence of Christ; verse 18 continues … “And the sea arose by reason of a
great wind that blew.” Enter the storms of
life.
We do not exist in a neutral world. The life that surrounds us is not passive to
our decisions and actions. Battle lines
are drawn in every aspect of life we find ourselves within. The forces of evil are not simply dormant or
uninterested in our fate. They have but
one recourse left to them. They are
doomed, with a certainty they cannot escape.
They have no illusions about winning the final war with God. They lost the first one in heaven and were
cast out. They lost the second one at
the resurrection of Christ when not even death could hold back the love of
God. And they will lose the third one
when fire will rain down and consume the remnants of their now tortured
existence ending their lives forever.
This fate is inescapable. Given
that, the only meaning they have left, in a doomed existence, is to spread the
pain of loss to God, by dragging as many of us with them into the abyss as is
possible. This is their entire purpose
now, as after their failure at the resurrection of Christ, no hope is left to
them for conquering God. So to cause us
pain, is to cause God pain. To see us
fail, is to “win” against God, to deprive God of the only treasure He is
invested in, our freedom from pain. It
is against this battle, that seas will arise with a great wind. It is against this battle, that your life
will not be free from the pain this world can bring. Evil forces are not sleeping where your life
is concerned, they are actively attempting to bring you pain, and thereby cause
pain to God.
But as Satan and his forces are not dormant in the battle,
neither are the forces of the Lord. In
verse 19, John begins as if to offer a prelude to coming events, by stating how
far they managed to move the boat by rowing it (around 25 to 30 furlongs). How poignant that our best efforts against
the storms of Satan show such meager results.
But verse 19 continues … “they see Jesus walking on the sea, and drawing
nigh unto the ship: and they were afraid.”
Here in the middle of a storm no less, is Jesus walking on the sea
heading right towards them. And their
first response was fear. In the middle
of a battle against the storms of life, we see approaching us, the miraculous
presence of Christ, we see our hope on the horizon, and our first response is …
fear. How could a miracle really happen
to us? How could something we “know” to
be impossible, be happening in spite of our “knowledge”. How could the impossible become
possible? Enter Christ. Experienced fishermen knew how to handle a
boat. They knew the effects of gravity
on water. They knew that walking on
water was simply and clearly impossible, particularly during a storm. These are all facts upon which science would
side with the knowledge of the fishermen disciples; undisputed facts. Yet that is exactly what their bewildered
eyes are giving witness to. Christ is
doing what they simply “knew” He could not do.
In the human vernacular, we call this a miracle.
And what is the response of our loving God to our irrational
fears? I use the word ‘irrational’
because our God has done nothing to ever make us question His motives, or His
love. Every act of God in our lives
whether miraculous or mundane has demonstrated it is always in our best
interest. But despite our history with
Him, we still react in fear to what we do not know, or rather, when our
“knowledge” is undone by what He does.
Verse 20 says … “But he saith unto them, It is I; be not afraid.” Christ begins by identifying Himself to his
disciples. This is not some dark
apparition, or evil spirit, it is Christ, in the flesh, God in man. And as such, you have no reason to fear. When the storms of Satan surround us, the sea
is high with waves and winds that threaten to tear apart our lives, and we see
the miraculous presence of Christ, we have no need to fear. We can relax.
We can set aside the facts we “know” to be true, and begin to experience
the miracles Christ is doing in front of our eyes, and despite our
knowledge. Facts, and accumulated
scientific knowledge, are often set aside in the face of love.
Verse 21, brings a third miraculous demonstration to John
and his contemporaries. But it does more
than that. It once again outlines the
entirety of the gospel in a single verse.
It states … “Then they willingly received him into the ship: and
immediately the ship was at the land whither they went.” They by choice, “willingly” received him into
the ship. They took Christ in. They accepted Him into their company, into
their lives. This is our part in the act
of salvation. We must choose to accept
what Christ is offering, namely His transformative presence in our lives. When Satan rages against us, our defense is
not to keep on rowing. Our defense is
not to wage war on Satan, for Satan is the master of war and will swallow us up
in a second. Our defense is not to look
to the strength of our boat, or our oars, or our will power, or our
determination. Our defense is to take
Christ into our boat. Our defense is to
accept that what we cannot do, Christ can do.
Our defense is to recognize our defeat, unless we are to be given a
victory from outside of ourselves. This
victory can only come when we “willingly” accept it from the only God who
offers it. When we accept Christ into
our lives, when let go of the oars, and take the hand of God, there are
results. Immediate results emerge. The disciples found themselves IMMEDIATELY
transported to the shore they were aiming for.
Zero delays in the gifts of God. Zero further rowing on the part of the
disciples, they took no further action to arrive at their destination, they
simply found themselves there, by a miracle they could not explain. This is how salvation works. We do not cure ourselves from evil, we are
cured by Christ, in a method we will never be able to explain, as it is NOT OUR
WORK. It is the work of Christ that saves
us. The rowing stopped, but the
destination was reached anyway, and at a rate the disciples thought to be
impossible. Again, our accumulated
scientific knowledge of facts, is set aside in the face and presence of
Christ. Again, what is impossible to us,
is accomplished by Christ. We are NOT
able to save ourselves from the bondage of self-service. But Christ is. Christ does what we cannot. Christ alters the rules, we have been bound
by. He transcends our knowledge and
facts, and does what we cannot do. This
was no act of partnership on the part of the disciples; they did not accept
Christ into the boat, and then keep right on rowing it themselves. They took Him in, the storm became
irrelevant, and they reached the destination in an instant. Christ did the “work”, they only took Him in.
The words of John echo through the ages. They outline in physical form, the same
process we must engage in from a spiritual perspective if we are ever to see
ourselves freed from the bondage of evil.
The point of this witness of John was not merely that Christ could bend
the laws of physics, or redefine them at will.
The point of this witness of John was not that they could defeat the
storms of life through the actions they took.
The point was only to take Christ into the boat. The point was to set aside what we know to be
true, and accept what Christ offers in spite of what we know. It is not our definition of the rules of
physics that we must allow Christ to remake; it is our definition of
truth. Truth will not be found within
us, it will be found only in Christ.
Facts are only relevant in Christ.
Salvation is only possible through the outside gift of Christ to us as
we allow it. Rapid transit is not our
goal. Rapid reformation of who we are
is. If we are to be remade in the image
of Christ, we must learn to let go the entirety of who we are today, and be
willing to be remade completely. There
is no shred of us, worth holding on to in this process. The new creature He wishes to make of us
needs no stain of our past to ruin the new model He will create. And His results are guaranteed. His work beyond our understanding, but
effective, and complete none the less.
The potential of who we are to become, can only be found
when we let go of our ideas of control, and allow Christ to recreate us, and
show us what we are yet to be. It is not
our job, or our focus, to figure out “how” Christ does what He does, but simply
to accept it. We gain the benefit of the
work of Christ, without knowing exactly how He does it. The storms that today are so ever-present,
become so completely irrelevant when Christ enters our presence. Whether it is our health that threatens us,
financial ruin, relationships in total decay, even imprisonment for the crimes
we have committed; a life made free by Christ can make all these storms of no
concern. For it is a greater freedom He
offers. It is a greater purpose He offers. It is a greater love He offers. It makes every second of the life we have one
that is worth living. It makes every
opportunity we have to share love even more precious. It makes every soul around us, of infinite
value, a prize to be shared through the eons of time in a place where pain will
exist no more. People we once thought to
be our ‘enemies’ can through the love of Christ reflected through us, become
our closest friends. When we see life,
through the lens of an infinite God, who plans for us to share a life of
complete freedom on a timeline without end, what is important to us here
changes. It is not that storms cease to
exist, but that they cease to be relevant.
Transformation is potential that Christ alone can bring, to offer us a
vision of life and truth, beyond what we know.
This is His gift. This is what He
offers.
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