Mark 4:35-41 The Bible says that: When evening had come, Jesus said to his disciples, “Let us go across to
the other side.” When Jesus invites us to take up our
cross and follow him, he invites us to live a life of discipleship that
ultimately leads to heaven. The end of
our journey of faith is eternal life in the glories of heaven where there is no
suffering—no sorrow—no separation from the Lord or his people. That is what awaits us in heaven.
But the journey
there…well that is something else altogether.
The Bible says that “it is
through many tribulations that we enter the kingdom of God.” There are examples of that precept in our
readings today.
Job was a man who was “blameless and upright”. He feared
God and shunned evil and yet he lost everything except for his own life. The Apostle Paul served the Lord courageously
and sacrificially and yet endured “hardships,
calamities, beatings, imprisonments, riots, labors, sleepless nights, and
hunger.” How true it is that…
“It is through many tribulations that we
enter the Kingdom of God.” It’s
always been that way for God’s people-- and it will be that way for us.
When Jesus invites
us to be his disciples, he is not inviting us to go with him on a journey of
safety and ease and luxury-- any more than he promised the disciples that they
would sail the Sea of Galilee on smooth waters.
But he does
promise us that he will be with us on the journey and that he cares for us and
that he is greater and more powerful than any trial or tribulation that we face
and that he will bring us safely home.
He did it for the disciples on the Sea of Galilee and he will do it for
us in our journey to heaven. The Bible
says that:
…leaving
the crowd, they took him with them in the boat, just as he was. And other boats
were with him. And a great windstorm arose, and the waves were breaking into the
boat, so that the boat was already filling.
I
had a friend in Kingsville who had a boat.
Occasionally he would take me out into the Gulf of Mexico to go
fishing—30 or 40 miles out into the gulf.
That far out into the gulf, four to six foot swells are called “smooth
seas”. I always begged to differ. Four to six foot wells meant that the boat
was moving up and down four to six feet at a time. I’ve been out there when swells were more
than that and I can’t imagine being on a stormy sea.
What
I was always struck by is how small and weak and insignificant I felt being out
there in the ocean on that little boat-- and how powerful and overwhelming are
the forces of nature in comparison.
There are all kinds
of situations in life like that that the child of God faces. A few little cancer cells have the power to end
our life. One hail storm has the power
destroy our crops and our livelihood.
One genetic mutation can lead to a birth defect or miscarriage. In a few short hours a hill country stream
can turn into a raging torrent that sweeps away houses and lives. One crazy person with a gun can kill nine
people while the study the Bible and pray.
That is the way
life is (even for the Christian) in a world that has been broken by sin and
ruined by Satan. There is nothing we can
do to stop it or change it any more than the disciples could stop the wind and
calm the seas.
And that makes us
feel helpless and powerless and afraid and it makes us wonder: Where is God in the midst of this? Why won’t he help? Doesn’t he care about us? The Bible says that:
Jesus
was in the stern, asleep on the cushion. And the disciples woke him and said to
him, “Teacher, do you not care that we are perishing?”
We
understand that question don’t we? We
have asked it ourselves in the midst of hard times. But that question in the heart of a believer
reveals a fundamental misunderstanding we have of what our life with God will
be like.
We have this
mistaken idea that life with God as a disciple of Jesus means that somehow,
some way, we are going to magically escape all the difficulties that go with
living in a world broken by sin and Satan.
(And there are plenty of false prophets in the church today who make
their living telling people that lie).
But it is not true and it never has been true!
From the moment
sin entered into the world, Adam struggled to make a living against a creation that
fought against him every step of the way.
Eve brought her children into the world through pain and suffering. There was conflict in their marriage and
family. The Israelites suffered through
terrible droughts and famines. Evil men persecuted
the people of God. The apostles were
martyred except for John and he was exiled on a desert island.
That’s the way
life is for the child of God living in a broken world. The Bible says: “Do not be surprised at the painful trial you are going through, as if
something strange were happening to you.”
What the disciples learned
that day (and what we need to remember) is that just because we are following
Jesus, that doesn’t mean we won’t face hard times and frightening trials.
But in the midst
of that storm, Jesus hadn’t abandoned the disciples and he won’t abandon us in
the storms of life. Instead he will come
to our aid and meet our need just like he did that day on the stormy seas. The Bible says that:
Jesus
awoke and rebuked the wind and said to the sea, “Peace! Be still!” And the wind ceased, and
there was a great calm.
There
is a reason that Jesus slept through a storm that terrified his disciples and
there is a reason that his words immediately calmed the sea and there is a
reason that he could walk on those same waves.
It’s the same reason that in his presence the blind could see and the
lame could walk. It’s the same reason
that in his presence hunger became plenty and death became life. It’s because in the presence of Jesus, the
creation meets her Creator and her brokenness has to give way wholeness.
That
is what Jesus wants us to understand.
There is no trial or difficulty that we will ever face that is greater
or more powerful than Jesus Christ. His words
calm stormy seas and give healing to the broken and call the dead from their
tombs. That is who Jesus is-- and he is
with us and hears us as we call to him and will bring us safely through whatever
storm we are facing.
But we do have to
understand one thing. Real deliverance
is more than making it through the storms of life. Real deliverance is making it to our heavenly
home. You see, even after the storm was
stilled, that wasn’t the end of the challenges the disciples faced.
They would face
people who were possessed of demons.
They would face fellow Jews who rejected them and their message. They would face thousands of people who were
hungry and had no food. And they would even
face another long night on a stormy sea.
And so it would go for them throughout their life until they died a
martyr’s death.
Jesus hadn’t come
to get them out of one jam after another—he had come to deliver them from the
trials of life in a broken world altogether.
So it is for us. Real
deliverance. Real safety. Real wholeness does not come when Jesus helps
us out of the next mess—it comes when he brings us home to heaven.
That deliverance
was not accomplished by an act of his sovereign, almighty power. It was accomplished by a profound act of
humility where he identified with our sin (our faithless fears, our lack of
trust, our shameful doubts) and carried that whole sorry mess to the cross to
pay the price for all the times we have not trusted a good and gracious God as we
should.
He rose again and
ascended to heaven to show us what he really came to do: to forgive our sins and gives us a new life
unencumbered by death and to bring us to our heavenly home.
That living Christ
is still with his people in the storms of life and he will bring us through
them—either by stilling the storm--or by bringing us to our heavenly home.
And so, the words
that Jesus spoke to the stormy seas he also speaks to our hearts that are
tossed to and fro by the storms of life:
Peace! Be still! I am with you.
You don’t have to be afraid!
There is nothing you face more powerful than I! Peace!
Be Still!
Then Jesus asked
them a question that he still asks his disciples today: He said to them, “Why are you so afraid? Have
you still no faith?” Well dear
friends in Christ, why are you so
afraid? Have you still no faith?”
The
only response to those questions from the child of God is this: Lord I believe! Help my unbelief! Help me to believe that you are with me! Help me to believe that you are more powerful
than anything I will ever face! Help me
to believe that you will bring me safely home!
He is—and he will. That Bible
says that: The disciples were filled with great fear
What
I find so interesting is how the fear of the disciples changed over the course
of their journey. In the midst of the
storm they feared the wind, they feared the waves, they feared for their
lives.
But
at the words of Jesus their fear and their trust and their love found its
proper object and that is God. We are to
fear, love, and trust in God above all things.
And because they had gone through the storm with Jesus, because they had
heard his words, because they had experienced his deliverance—now it had. They asked one another:
“Who then is this, that even the
wind and the sea obey him? It is
God. That answer would go with them into
the next storm and the next trial and the next hardship. And so it does for us. Jesus is Immanuel, the God who is with us and
Jesus is the Lord who saves. That is who
is with us in the storm of life. That is
who will bring us safely home. God.
Well,
that is where our text ends but that is not really where the story ends. Our story began with an invitation from Jesus
to his disciples to go with him to the other side. If you have your Bible open you can see how
the story ends in the first verse of chapter five: they
came to the other side. Here’s
the thing…
Jesus
did not invite the disciples to go with him only to see them overcome by the
story seas. He was with them every step
of the way and his powerful presence delivered them safe and sound on the other
side.
So
it is for us. Jesus has not called us to
come and follow him only so that we can be overcome by the storms of life. He has called us to journey with him so that
we can safely reach our heavenly home. May
God grant it to us all for Jesus’ sake! Amen.
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