Northwestern
Minnesota Synod Council
June 20, 2015
Mark 4:35-41
One of the reasons
I find the Bible so compelling...is that it includes all sorts of stories one wouldn’t
expect to find there.
The Bible wasn’t edited
by some public relations spin doctor who wanted to round off all the rough
edges....make every character appear admirable....or include only episodes with
proverbial happy endings.
Garrison Keillor
likes to say that all of us carry around a back stage view of ourselves—a side
of ourselves that we go to great lengths to keep others from seeing.
But the Bible has
no such pretensions. The Bible lets it all
hang out. The Bible airs all the dirty
linen of its leading characters.
Take, for example,
this story from Mark 4.
This is hardly the
disciples’ shining hour. They come off
here like something of a cross between the Three Stooges and a troop of Cub
Scouts in the woods on their first overnight camp out. The disciples’ foolishness here seems
matched only by their fear.
Although at least
four of the disciples were fishermen by trade--stalwart men of the sea!-- you
wouldn’t know it from this story. They
venture out onto the unpredictable Sea of Galilee as darkness is coming on, apparently
without checking the horizon for storm clouds.
Then, when a storm
does blow up....they quickly forget basic rules of seamanship--like lowering
the mainsail or tossing out excess baggage.
Instead, they do the last thing seasoned sailors should do: they panic!
In the pandemonium,
the disciples frantically shake their sleeping leader and confront him with a
question: “Teacher, don’t you care if we perish? Don’t just lie there--do something!”
Then, at the
conclusion of the story....after Jesus has handled the situation,
effortlessly commanding the storm to cease....the disciples aren’t much farther
along than they were at the beginning...able only to stammer the question: “Who
then is this, that even wind and sea obey him?”
What a bunch of
duffusses! They can’t sail, can handle a storm, can’t see Jesus for who he
obviously is.
Like so many other
episodes in the gospels where the disciples are blind or doubting or slow to
see the obvious or just plain mixed up....this story might have been one they’d
have preferred to forget. It could have
been discreetly edited out of the final draft of Mark’s Gospel--but it wasn’t.
Why?
With all the other
tales that could be told...why did Christ’s first followers cling so tightly to
a story that made them--its tellers--look so bad?
The short answer
to that question is that this story of the stilling of the storm wasn’t merely
a “once upon a time” event.
This story was treasured
in the early church.....because it was the kind of thing that kept happening to
the fledgling community of the crucified and risen Christ.
The first
Christians held on to this story because they saw themselves “in the same boat”
as the disciples out on that windswept evening on the Sea of Galilee.
Tradition has it that
Mark’s gospel was written in Rome, a vast empire, ruled in the first century by tyrants like
Domitian and Nero--who not only fiddled while Rome burned, but who blamed the
Christians for striking the match. As
one ancient Roman author put it: “If the Tiber river rises too high, or the
Nile too low, the cry goes out: ‘The
Christians to the lions!’”
Mark’s gospel was,
in all likelihood, written in Rome, by one who hoped to proclaim Jesus’ story
in such a way that his persecuted sisters and brothers would be strengthened by
it....even as they prepared themselves to be baptized with Christ’s own baptism
of suffering and innocent death.
That raw
experience of brutal oppression left the community for whom this gospel was
first written feeling small and alone and
helpless against the might of a cruel empire....whether they were waiting in
dungeons or being carted off to the arena to become appetizers for lions.
The believers in
the church of Mark could easily imagine themselves adrift on a raging sea,
tempest-tossed, threatened with certain, slow, agonizing death. They might well have wondered where their
Lord was when they needed him the most.
Why was this unflattering
portrait of the disciples kept in the New Testament by the early church?
Because it was a mirror which, when
the members of the early church looked deeply into it, saw themselves--their
peril, their danger, their doubts, their fears.
Perhaps that is
why this text has burned its way into our consciousness as well....even as
it has found its way into our own churches, especially in the art and architecture
of our church buildings.
There’s a reason
why we call the place where the congregation sits on Sundays the “nave,” as in “navy.” The place we gather on Sundays is like that
little craft on the storm-tossed Sea of Galilee!
There’s a reason
why the altars in so many of our synod’s churches include paintings of Peter
sinking in the waves....or of Mary crying at the tomb....or of the disciples adrift
in a storm in their wind-swept little boat.
Those paintings adorn
our altars because they are mirrors which--when we look into them deeply--allow
us to see our predicaments, our perils, our doubts, our fears, our faithlessness....faithlessness
which seems to go hand in hand with faith itself.
This morning it is
hard not to think of our sisters and brothers in Christ at Mother Emanuel
African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, SC—a church where I had the
privilege of worshiping (with Joy and our daughter Kristen) in the spring of
2003.
What is it like
today for the members of Emanuel—who have good reason to wonder whether it is
safe to attend a Bible study or a prayer meeting as their fellow members were
doing this past Wednesday evening?
This is America in
the 21st century, not Rome in the 1st century, for crying
out loud! And this is not the first
time an African American congregation in our country has been targeted by
racist extremists.
I’m guessing that
our friends at Mother Emanuel church are clinging to stories like this one, of
Jesus stilling the storm, rescuing the infant church once again.
But there is more
here in Mark 4 than a “mirror” showing ourselves as we truly are. There is Someone else here in each of these
embarrassing pictures of ourselves.
We see Another who
is always there in these pictures, standing alongside us in our perils and fears,
sticking with us in our faithlessness.
Jesus is there--in
each of these unflattering portraits of ourselves as believers. In our treasured altarpieces, Jesus is always
there, yanking the sinking Peter out of the water….drawing near to the inconsolable
Mary Magdalene at the tomb…peacefully asleep in the hold of a boat that’s
likely to be swamped at any minute.
These snapshots of
the faith community—Jesus is in all of them!
These same
scriptural images that cast us in a most unflattering light…make Jesus look awfully
good. Stories like this one say lots about
us, but also speak volumes about Jesus.
…and that’s the
real reason we’ve come to treasure these stories. For each of them tells the same story: when
we are weak, he is strong.....in fact, our weakness, magnifies his strength.
Jesus is not ashamed
to be found among fearful doubters who panic at the drop of a hat. Jesus does not withdraw from the company of
folks whose fickle faith can turn to mush--just like that.
Jesus hangs in
there with you and me and the whole human family....ready always to rebuke our
faithlessness even as he admonishes all the forces of evil that cause us to
lose faith. Jesus hangs in there with
us, in the bottom of every sinking ship we find ourselves on....in order to
keep opening our ears to hear his own sovereign Word:
“Peace, be still....be
still and know that I am God.”