JUNE 21ST 2015. TWELFTH
SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME
GOSPEL: Mark
4:35-41
Translated from a homily by Don Fabio Rosini,
broadcast on Vatican Radio
Don
Fabio’s reflection follows the Gospel reading ...
(Check us out on
Facebook – Sunday Gospel Reflection)
GOSPEL: Mark 4:35-41
With the coming of
evening, Jesus said to his disciples, ‘Let us cross over to the other side.’
And leaving the crowd behind they took him, just as he was, in the boat; and
there were other boats with him. Then it began to blow a gale and the waves
were breaking into the boat so that it was almost swamped. But he was in the
stern, his head on the cushion, asleep. They woke him and said to him, ‘Master,
do you not care? We are going down!’ And he woke up and rebuked the wind and
said to the sea, ‘Quiet now! Be calm!’ And the wind dropped, and all was calm
again. Then he said to them, ‘Why are you so frightened? How is it that you
have no faith?’ They were filled with awe and said to one another, ‘Who can
this be? Even the wind and the sea obey him.’
The
Gospel of the Lord: Praise to
you Lord Jesus Christ
Kieran’s summary
. . . The Gospel tells of the calming of
the storm. The disciples are crossing the water. This evokes the Passover, when
the people of Israel crossed the Red Sea with God’s help. But in the Gospel,
the disciples are seeking to do it by themselves whilst Jesus is sleeping. This
is the typical condition of humanity! We seek to do everything by ourselves, in
our own way, relying on ourselves and utterly directed to ourselves. We exclude
God because we are focussed only on ourselves. This is the condition that leads
us surely to shipwreck. Why does Jesus wait until the ship is almost sinking
before he wakes up? It is the disciples who wait until the ship is about to
capsize before they call on Jesus! It is only when the situation is desperate
that we realize that we need God. This Sunday we are invited to call on the
Lord. Let us ask him to calm the disorder and chaos in our lives. If we seek to
do everything ourselves then things will end in disaster. Let us focus on who he
is, instead of being always focussed on who we ourselves are.
Job
is in the midst of a terrible crisis, but the Lord reveals himself as the one
who has power over the chaotic and uncontrollable
God speaks to Job in the middle of the hurricane. Job has
been going through a terrible period of trial and tribulation, an enormous test
of his faith that brings him to a direct experience of God. And he experiences
God in the midst of the storm, the suffering, the absurd. God proclaims himself
in a strange way, in a way that Job did not expect. The Lord announces that he
has power over the sea when it “leapt tumultuous
out of the womb, when I wrapped it in a robe of mist and made
black clouds its swaddling bands.” This poetic language evokes the account
of how the Lord created the universe from chaos, darkness and non-governability.
Yet these seas are easy for the Lord to control; the passage in Job tells us: “Come
thus far, I said, and no farther: here your proud waves shall break”.
The disciples are crossing the water – an image of the
Passover. But they seek to do it all by themselves, relying only on their own
capacities.
In the Gospel the disciples comes to
know the Lord in the interior of a storm. They ask themselves: “Who is this
that even the seas and storms obey?” Of course there is only one person that
the seas and elements obey – God himself. The disciples are crossing the lake.
This is a classical Passover image – the crossing of water. But the disciples
are undertaking this challenge all by themselves. This is the typical attitude
of the human being: to rely on oneself. But he who seeks to depend only on
himself will never get beyond himself, whilst he who puts his trust in God will
arrive at a more profound knowledge of God.
It is only when the situation is desperate that we start to
realize what really matters and begin to call on the Lord’s name
The image of God sleeping is curious and
evokes the moment when Jesus will be sleeping in death after his crucifixion.
On Holy Saturday, Jesus is shrouded in silence and impotence, and humanity is
conscious of the evil that it has perpetrated in killing the Just One. The
centurion, who presided over his killing, looks on Jesus and says, “Truly this
is God”. Holy Saturday is the moment when we are stopped in our tracks and all
we can do is seek the resist that which is greater than us: when we rage
against the wind and the sea, against that which cannot be brought under
control. How many marriages refuse to seek help, striving instead to do
everything with their own miserable capacities, arriving ultimately at
shipwreck! How many people refuse to renounce their absorption in themselves
and their reliance on their own way of thinking! They need to awaken God! The
Lord cannot enter our lives until we call out, “Enter! Wake up!” In the Gospel,
Jesus waits until the boat is filled with water and ready to capsize. It is
only then that the disciples realize that they cannot depend on their own
talents to continue. It is only when the storm is at its height that we begin
to ask ourselves, “What really counts in my life?” It is only then that the eternity
of God begins to come into relief and that we start to call on his name. It is
only when the situation is out of control that we begin to realize what really
matters.
This Sunday let us call on the Lord’s name, asking him to
control the chaos, disorder and storms in my life.
Jesus reveals that he is not merely
their Master, but something much more. He tells the storm to abate and it does
so immediately. This is the same dominion that Jesus reveals in his exorcisms.
In the midst of all the storms of life, God has the power to manifest himself.
He can block that which is disordered and chaotic within all of us. This Sunday
we are all invited to say, “Lord there are many things that are greater than
me. It is foolish of me to try to confront these things by myself. Wake up Lord
and do that which you know to be right! Bring things to the conclusion that you
and you alone wish. I know that you are my Lord. Help me to prostrate myself
before you and be aware of who you are, instead of being constantly preoccupied
by who I am”.
No comments:
Post a Comment