Paul states that “the love of Christ overwhelms us” – how often have you meditated on the love of Christ and been overwhelmed by it?
Seeds:
First Reading: Job 38:1, 8-11
Psalm: Psalm 106(107):23-26, 28-32
Second Reading: 2 Corinthians 5:14-17
Gospel: Mark 4:35-41
Sapling:
The Babylonians had a story: there was a monstrous creature called Tiamat. She represented the sea and was the mother of almost all the gods and creatures on the earth.
One day, some of her children rose up and killed her husband Apsu. This enraged Tiamat and she made terrible war on her children.
Eventually she was defeated by Marduk, who used her body to create the world.
To the Babylonians Tiamat was the chaotic embodiment of the seas and oceans. She was terrifying: what is more frightening than massive waves and the dread of being drowned by them. Her chaos had to be brought into order, so she had to be defeated by Marduk and her chaos made to serve order by becoming the foundations of the ordered and structured world we now live in.
The Israelites lived for many years adjacent to or under the dominion of the Babylonians and their culture. It left a lasting impact. No doubt many of them would have known the story of Tiamat. The sea represented chaos and danger, something to be feared, something uncontrollable and untameable.
With that in mind, read again the words from Job in the first reading. Do you see what’s happening?
The chaotic overwhelming power of the sea was not defeated in a battle by one of its children but tamed from within by the word of its Creator: God spoke from the heart of the tempest. God wrapped it, bound it, and gave it a verbal command to exist by.
It’s that last verbal command that is so powerful. It’s picked up in the Gospel passage when the Sea of Galilee threatens the lives of the disciples in the midst of a tempest. Jesus speaks and gives it a command, a command which it obeyed.
There’s so much to unpack here, but let’s just look at two things:
First, God has no need to fight with his creation. He is in charge – he gives a command and creation obeys. Just like in the beginning: let there be light, and there was light. Or when bread and wine obey the words of God: this is my body, this is my blood.
Secondly, the God who spoke from the heart of the tempest to Job is the same who spoke to the tempest on the Sea of Galilee.
That’s why the disciples ask in awe: “Who can this be?”
This act of power by Jesus drives them to ask questions about who he is.
I spoke about this a few weeks ago, but it bears repeating again because it’s repeated in Mark: the focus is on who Jesus really is. The message is plain: Jesus and God are one.
At this point in the Gospel narrative, the disciples don’t fully know what that means. That’s ok, the Gospel will continue taking them and us on a journey to unpack that. For today, let’s just ponder on what it means for God to be the creator in charge of all things, and for Jesus and God to be one.
Fruit: