(Homily 12th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Yr. B)
The
message emanating from the liturgical readings of this Sunday presents God in
His sovereignty, Jesus in his human and divine natures and God’s power over the
created order. God spoke from the tempest to respond to Job’s interrogations,
and Jesus spoke to the storm and calmed the fears of the disciples. The
question that lingers is this: “who can this be?” The first reading presents
God as the Creator and Sustainer of all there is, man inclusive, while the
Gospel passage serves as an attempt to unravel the question of and on Jesus’
identity, who is He (Jesus)? Then from the question of who Jesus is, to
the question of who a Christian should be and what ought to be his or her
comportment. To this, the Gospel says that a Christian is one who has
Christ in his boat, who welcomes Him in his or her heart and makes Him a
companion in his journey of life. In the same vein, St. Paul in the second
reading reiterates that a Christian is a new creature, one who
has been captured and possessed by Christ and continually moved by the love of
Christ.
In
the first reading (Job 38:1.8-11) we see partly the
ordeal of Job. The book of Job poses before us, the profound
question on how to reconcile God’s existence and love and man’s suffering.
In fact, each of the comforters of Job had spoken his mind, and Job too
responded to their arguments and provocations. Job indeed spoke for all
of us. Finally, Yahweh speaks to Job, He spoke to him “from the heart of
the tempest” (v.1), which denotes a theophany, the
manifestation of divine presence. In his response, Yahweh asserted His
transcendence and the inapplicability of the human standards to judge His ways.
No doubt, Job was inexistent at creation! So he cannot
comprehend the power and workings of God. Indeed, in this passage, we are
confronted with the question of why sometimes God does not intervene in some
human ugly situations or He permits certain things that in human viewing are
unjust. On this, the book of Job questions, how can you understand the
designs of God, and His actions, as small as you are? This passage
reveals God’s identity, when the Lord told Job “Who put limit to the sea… and I
said here you will arrive and not beyond, thus far shall you come and not
further.” Therefore, God presented His transcendence as the Creator. As
such, the questions of and for meaning raised by Job can only find
response in the workings of God and in God. Be that as it may, the first
reading introduces us and prepares the ground for the Gospel passage on the
stilling of the storm. In that bid, it reveals the symbolic meaning attached to
the sea in the Jewish culture. It reminds us of God’s power over the created
order.
In
today’s Gospel (Mark 4:35-41) St. Mark featured the great event and
spiritual adventure of Jesus demonstrating his power as God over the created order, He calmed the
storm. The whole Gospel of Mark is centered on the question: who
is Jesus? Above all else, let us situate ourselves very well into the
context of this passage. It was already evening and Jesus invited His disciples
let us go to the other side of the river, which means there is a mission there,
something needed to be done at the other side. As we can read in Mark
5:2: “as soon as he came down from the boat, a man with unclean spirit met
Him.” We see the same event equally in the Gospel of St. Matthew, when he asked
them to go to the other side and he went to pray, and when they were faced with
a great storm, He surfaced walking on the water (cf. Mt 14:22-32).
As
they were sailing to the other side, when they saw the great storm of wind,
they disciples were filled with fear, and they turned and saw Jesus sleeping on
the cushion (was He really sleeping?) as if He was not concerned
with their well-being. They reproached Him this time around, do you not care if
we perish? As Mark narrates it, He woke up immediately and calmed the
sea: “Peace! Be still”. And upon Jesus’ command there was great
calm. Here, Jesus is presented as one with authority even over nature. Even
though Jesus was with them, they still ran into a storm. Thus, the
presence of Jesus with us doesn't mean that we would never encounter
difficulties. On the other hand, it does, however, mean that, when
the difficulties do arise, all we have to do is to call on him with faith.
No matter what you are passing through today, Jesus is aware of it, he is aware
of your own storm too, but he leaves you to choose how to deal with it. No
doubt, we will have problems; but we also have a solution: “Ask, and you will
receive” (Mt. 7:7). This indeed is a reminder to us that the
acceptance of Jesus as our Lord and Saviour, is not a guarantee that we will be
free from troubles or from the storms of life. Instead, faith
requires and demands the risk or better the courage of a radical trust in and
out of season, to remain assured that Jesus is always present even when he
is silent and appears to be sleeping. Beyond that, Jesus wants us to
discover that he is greater and bigger than our fears and our storms. Even
when the forces of darkness threaten to ensnare or overwhelm us, let us be rest
assured that Jesus can save us. His liberating presence is ever active and
powerful. It is not only that he saves us from the storm but another
important dimension to this miracle is that he brings us out and leads us
through to the other side, strengthened for our mission in life, and opens
up a new horizon.
Beloved
in Christ, like the disciples of Jesus we too need sometimes to cry out
in our fear, panic and storm: "Do you not care?" and like
the disciples be open to discover that he really cares about us even more than
we can ever imagine. Prior to the passage of our first reading today, Job
entreated the Lord: “I cry to you and you give me no answer; I stand
before you, but you take no notice. You have grown cruel to me and your strong
hand torments me unmercifully” (Job 30:20-21). Again, we could hear
the supplication and words of bewilderment of the disciples to Jesus: “Teacher,
do you not care if we perish?” (Mark. 4:39). These two
expressions of need might have taken place so many years ago, but they reveal
our yearnings and cry of help today. They reveal and evoke our cry for help
in a society like ours that has lost the respect for the sacredness and dignity
of human life, our cry in a country where our leaders are insensitive and
unconcerned to the plight of the masses, our cry in a country where political
divide and tribalism have plunged us into an existential quagmire and
uncertainty of the future even of our life. Ours still remains a cry
for help! Just like the boat of the disciples, the boat of Nigeria is
filling and sinking, Lord rescue us!
When all was calm again, Jesus now turned and reproached His
disciples, with a dint of surprise “why are you afraid? Have you no
faith? With these words, it does appear Jesus was asking them: You
still don’t have faith in me? You have not yet understood who I am? You
don’t understand that I have the power to control nature? There is an implicit
invitation in the interrogation of Jesus, and that is the invitation: “Do not
be afraid” for I am with you. His presence drives away fear, with Him
we can fight our fear with faith. As a matter of fact, through the boat of
the disciples, St. Mark intends to reveal to us our own existential boat that
at times because of great storm is already filling. And to us, in certain
circumstances is as if Jesus is sleeping especially when we are encountering
difficult and painful situations, as if He is absent from our life. Contrarily,
St. Mark is intent rather to make us understand that it is not so, He will not
allow us to get drown if he is with us. And Jesus can only be with us if we
believe in Him, if we put our trust in Him, if we abandon ourselves to
Him. Having Him in our boat means that we have nothing again to fear;
if at the mention of His name every knee bows (Phil. 2:10), imagine
what happens at His presence!
The
first reading and the Gospel raise the question of the identity of Jesus. This
question captured the attention of the three Synoptic Gospels, in Mt
8:27: “what kind of man is this, that even the winds and the sea obey
him.” Mk. 4:41: “who can this be? Even the wind and the sea
obey him.” Lk. 8:25: “who can this be? That gives orders to
winds and waves and they obey.” But what does Jesus have to say about himself?
He says: “It is I, the first and the last, I am the living one. I was dead but
look I am alive forever and ever” (Rev. 1:17b-18). And of him
others say: “Jesus is the image of the invisible God” (Col. 1:15).
“Truly this man was Son of God” (Mk. 15:39). “The beginning of the
gospel of Jesus Christ, Son of God” (Mk. 1:1).
Drawing
the issue further, from who then is this? we can pass to the question who then
is like Him, for none is like him. There are numerous scriptural passages that
explore this dimension: “Yahweh, who is like you, majestic in sanctity, who is
like you among the holy ones, fearsome of deed, worker of wonders? (Ex.
15:11); “Who is like Yahweh our God? (Ps. 113:5); “Yahweh, who
can compare with you?” (Ps. 35:10); “Who in the skies can compare
with Yahweh? Who among the sons of god can rival him?” (Ps.89:6);
“No one is like the God of Jeshurun: he rides the heavens to your rescue, rides
the clouds in his majesty” (Deut. 33:26); “To whom can you compare
me, or who is my equal? says the Holy One” (Is. 40:25); “Yahweh,
there is no one like you, so great you are, so great your mighty name” (Jer.
10:6).
Indeed,
one of the literary preoccupations of Mark’s Gospel is about the identity of
Jesus, who is He? This is the question that St. Mark intends to pose to all his
readers. And the answer is implied in the question of today’s episode, “Who
then is this, that even wind and sea obey Him?” He that commands the
wind and the sea! He cannot be a simple man. In the Old Testament the
dominion over wind and sea is a prerogative only of Yahweh. We remember the
episode of the Red sea (cf. Exodus 14), and Psalms (Ps.
103-106) recount the greatness of the Lord over all. In fact, the
Psalmist says you “appointed the winds your messengers, flames of fire your
servants. You fixed the earth on its foundations, for ever and ever it shall
not be shaken” (Ps. 104:4-5). Therefore, if Jesus has this
prerogative ascribed only to Yahweh, He is God, for upon His command the wind
and the sea were calmed. The Jesus of Mark is a “moving Jesus”,
always on the move to meet men in their difficult moments, and as He moves, he
calms the existential storms of those He meets. The Jesus of Mark is close to
human reality, he enters into people’s houses (cf. Mk.
7:24) and goes into the Synagogue (cf. Mk 3:1). But sometimes when we are
confronted with the storms of life, we like the disciples begin to question
Jesus, we call on God to ask Him why? What is your own storm? What
type of storm are you passing through now, I can hear the words of Jesus saying
“Be still”. He will equally calm your own storm. Jesus is inviting us
too, to the other side, for a transforming encounter, leave fear behind, fight
fear with faith. And you will actually be a new creature.
The
second reading (2Cor 5:14-17) similarly continues with the
question of Jesus’ identity and not only, also of the identity of Christians.
Jesus according to the second reading is the One who died for all. Christians
are those who live not for themselves but for Him who died and was raised for
their sake. Secondly, a Christian is a new creature, a new creature because old
things have passed away, and the new has come. The new identity
occasioned by His death and resurrection. St Paul
in his reflections on salvation in Christ completed the picture of Jesus
presented in the Gospel. It is as if St. Paul tells us, Jesus saves, not
because he calms a storm but because he accepted death out of love for the
sinful humanity in obedience to His Father’s will.
Above all, our three readings today ferried us in a journey
of discovery, from discovering who God is, to who Jesus is and finally who a
Christian is called to be. A Christian is one who takes Christ in his boat,
who welcomes him in his heart and makes him a life companion. Child of God have
you allowed Jesus in, in the boat of your life? Is He your companion in the
journey of life? More so, the storm foreshadows the future trial that the
disciples and the Church were to experience. For in the broad sense, this story
evokes the image of the Church, which many a times has been referred to as the
boat of Peter, and like the disciples, the Church on her earthly pilgrim
continues to invoke the assistance of Christ in the storms which beset her. But
in this story also we have symbolized the life experience of each one of us,
for the series of storms that beset us. However, we find an assurance of faith
in the words of D. Bonhoeffer when he affirmed that God “does not save me from
the tempest but in the tempest. He does not protect from pain, but in pain. He
did not save the Son from the cross but in the cross.” In the midst of every
kind of storm, we pray o Lord that you help us to learn to put our trust in You
in order to overcome our fears. Amen!
(Fr.
Vitus Chigozie, SC)
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