1 Kings 19: 9-18
Matthew 14: 22-33
August 13, 2023
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“Peter answered him, “Lord, if it is you, command me to come to you on the water.” He said, “Come.” So Peter got out of the boat, started walking on the water, and came toward Jesus. But when he noticed the strong wind, he became frightened, and beginning to sink, he cried out, “Lord, save me!”
Prayer: May we hear your voice in the silence and the storms, O God, and place our utmost faith in you. Amen.
The late M. Scott Peck famously wrote “Life is difficult” as the first words to his best-selling book, The Road Less Traveled. Many of you probably have read the book, yes? If not, I recommend you do… it has lots of good insights and wisdom. But, Peck is right. Life is difficult. Sometimes terribly so. It can be rough out there.
At the height of the Covid pandemic, doctors, nurses, medical technicians, chaplains, music therapists, first responders, all of them, were all saying, “It’s rough out there.”
Financial people watch stock markets go down more than up, interest rates that are on the rise, and we all know about gas and food prices doing the same. So we can say, “It’s rough out there” when it comes to the economy.
As a pastor for almost 40 years, I see and hear people’s pain much of the time. Folks struggling with family crises, mental illness issues, loss of loved ones, poor decision-making, anger management, substance abuse, and so on—yeah, we can all say, “It’s rough out there.”
We all have rough days. It was pretty rough out there for Elijah. He was literally running for his life. When he called upon God to wipe out the prophets of Baal, and God obliged, well, that ticked off King Ahab and Queen Jezebel. Because they worshiped the god of Baal more than the God of Israel. And their soldiers literally chased Elijah out of town and pursued him to take him out!
So, yeah, Elijah feels that everyone is against him because of his faithfulness to God. And he finds himself alone in a dark cave. And after some incredible natural phenomena, he’s alone in the silence. But, that’s when he hears God’s still small voice in the sound of silence. And he complains, but God doesn’t answer his complaint. Instead, God gives him his next instructions. That gives him hope.
It was pretty rough out there for Peter and his fellow disciples, too. As they were heading toward the opposite shore, the storm they were in battered them all about. They couldn’t keep the boat under control. The strong wind kept them from getting to the shore. The waves lifted them way up… and way down again. And huge deluges of water pounded the small boat, crashing onto the bow and the stern.
But even in the rough seas, guess who comes to them walking on the sea? Jesus, the rough water walker. That gives them hope.
Now of course, we’re much better off using these stories metaphorically, looking beneath a literal interpretation to one that gives us deeper meaning. Perhaps Matthew did the same thing when writing the story. I find it helpful to remember that Matthew wrote his gospel after the Jewish-Roman War, when Jerusalem was conquered in 70 AD by Rome. So the early Christians living in Jerusalem, all converts from Judaism, these poor people were battered and tortured by the storm of Roman persecution. So, it stands to reason that Matthew wrote the story to give hope to his fellow Christian believers… to come out to Jesus, who is in the political storm with them, to put faith in God, in spite of the hardships.
I think that’s a huge takeaway for us from this story. Christ gives us the encouragement to come to him in our stormy seas. To put our trust in God when navigation in life’s storms is difficult, when the waters are rough, when resistance is great. To hope to God that who we see coming toward us on the rough water is not a figment of our imagination, but truly is God in Christ, the rough water walker coming to us in the midst of our storms.
And God knows we’re living through some pretty stormy seas. Not long ago, two teenaged youth spraypainted obscenities against the LGBTQ+ Community on our church parking lot. Thankfully, the two confessed and wrote us letters of apology. That gives me hope.
We hear of a few people in local school districts who want to ban books (as in Texas), even burn some (as in Tennessee). In Utah, the Bible is banned from one school district because of its risqué stories.
And the rough waters of social injustice are raging when we experience the wind and the waves of racism, White supremacy, Christian nationalism, misogyny, patriarchy, homophobia, transphobia, biphobia, economic elitism, classism, and so many more.
Even within the church there are storms raging. The Southern Baptist Convention recently upheld its doctrine that women can’t be pastors, even though some of them are. Seriously? And the United Methodist Church has upheld their doctrine that gay people cannot be pastors, even though some of them are. O Lord, save us!
And God knows what rough waters each of us has. Which of course, differs from one person to the next.
But another takeaway is that with a focus on God in the middle of our storms, we have the strongest asset ever when we go through those rough waters. Because Christ says to us, “Take heart! I AM [here]. Don’t be afraid.” That’s a little interesting side note that Matthew uses to make his point. In the actual Greek, Jesus literally says, “Take heart! I AM.” Matthew is connecting Jesus to the Divine name of God found in Exodus (I AM WHO I AM). Adding the word ‘here,’ or rephrasing it to read “It is I,” are the translators attempts for better flow in English. But that misses Matthew’s point that God in Christ is with them. It’s God who is with us in our rough seas. Which is the best we could ever ask for.
But, we’re skeptical, right? I mean I can identify with Peter, asking, “Is that really you, Jesus?” If it’s really you, God, prove it to me. Command me to come out. Come out of the safety of boat. Tell me to walk with you.
And Christ, the rough water walker says, “Come on! Be a rough water walker with me!” In other words, come out of the boat of status quo, of safety and comfort. Come out from the familiar and complacent place. Come out to God in Christ, follow Jesus, even when it feels like it’s impossible, like walking on water. Come out and find a source of healing and life in our world when facing those things that do harm.
And Peter gets out of the boat. He becomes a rough water walker. Because when you focus on God and not the storm, you can stand in the midst of rough waters with Jesus.
But, when the focus is on the storm and not on God, on our problems, our worries, and the rough waters, then we lose focus on God and start to sink. Then our inner peace, our spiritual confidence begins to fade. I wonder if our inner spirit of confidence and peace shrinks or expands in proportion to our faith in God. Do you think?
For example, we all know of the mental illness storm our nation is experiencing for the last two decades or so. Of course, as more and more mass shootings occur, mental illness is often a key contributor. And for many of us, the quiet confidence of faith is fading as this terrible storm rages on.
But, thank God for those in Durham, North Carolina who were inspired to create a program called HEART which stands for Holistic Empathetic Assistance Response Teams and is tied to the 911 system. These teams of people are unarmed mental health and social work professionals, working within the new Community Safety Department and are responding to 911 calls that are of a nonviolent nature. Through HEART, mental health clinicians are available on the phone for people in crisis, and three person response teams are dispatched to provide compassionate care. They are also trained to de-escalate social disturbances before the need for law enforcement (Villegas, Isaac, “Nonviolent Crisis Response in my City,” The Christian Century, August 2023, pg. 32).
Just when faith was fading, Christ reaches out through people on the HEARTeams rebuilding hope that the rough waters of mental illness will not be with us forever. That the people on those teams are rough water walkers in the middle of that storm.
My beloved in faith, we’re so much like Peter sometimes, it’s scary.
But this is one of those times that it’s a good thing. Because we can be rough water walkers. Because Peter got off the boat in faith. So can we. He became a rough water walker by focusing on Jesus in the middle of the storm. So can we. Like him, we also notice the strong wind, pounding waves, and we get scared. And we sink. And he prayed desperately—“Lord, save me.” So do we.
But thanks be to God that God can reach out to grab us, catching us even in our fear, even when we are sinking. Thanks be to God that with faith in God, we are rough water walkers, for God is with us through any of our crises.
And eventually we’re back in the boat, and waves are calm, and the wind has ceased. Amen.
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