LITURGY IN FOCUS

THE WORD OF GOD THIS WEEK

12th Sunday of Ordinary Time

Reflection: Winds of faith

By SISTER MARY McGLONE

Poor Job! Miserable as he was, he made everything worse for himself by picking a fight with God. And God seemed to enjoy the challenge. 

Poor Job! He questioned the Almighty who only questioned him back. But, lo and behold, Job’s questioning resulted in a greater sense of himself and God and their relationship. That’s well worth the embarrassment of being asked if you think you’re ready to replace the creator.

Job’s interaction with the God of wind and sea led him into awe, traditionally called “the fear of God.” What Job heard from God underpins something Pope Francis wrote in “Laudato Si’, on Care for Our Common Home”

“From the beginning of the world, but particularly through the incarnation, the mystery of Christ is at work in a hidden manner in the natural world as a whole.” Every bit of creation reveals God to those who have eyes to see. God is near, always.

One of Mark’s most striking depictions of Jesus’ self-revelation as Son of the Creator comes in today’s Gospel — a story repeated by Matthew and Luke. Mark offers a subtle hint about what’s going on as he quotes Jesus’ decision to take the disciples over “to the other side.” This was no jaunt. It marked a real transition. Jesus had just taught about the subtle, prodigious seeds of the reigning of God. What he didn’t explain was that moving into the new would be far from peaceful. (Remember the seed that must die?)

Crossing over, the boat got caught in ferocious weather. Mark’s word for the “squall” denotes a whirlwind — a favorite term used in the Hebrew Scriptures to describe God’s powerful, disturbing communication. This same word describes God’s address to Job, from out of the “storm.” (Matthew uses a term like tsunami.)

The folks in the boat with Jesus suddenly felt like Job: uncomprehending and panicked. Job had no idea why he was suffering. The disciples couldn’t explain the tempest, they could only react with terror. In both cases, God was not acting like they expected. Job was not being justly rewarded for his goodness, the disciples felt that if Jesus had been sent by God, they should be safe with him. Job cried out to God and the disciples tried to awaken Jesus to their shared plight.

Why did God let it happen? Why was Jesus unperturbed by the raging storm?

We should probably interpret this story in the light of the cross and Resurrection — after all, Mark wrote it with that hindsight. Perhaps the transition Jesus was leading his disciples through entailed a new understanding of their relationship with God. Like Job, they seemingly operated in a transactional world: do good, get rewarded; stay with God and you’ll be safe. If they were with Jesus, there should be no storms.

When they woke him up, Jesus addressed the storm, shouting something like, “Shut up! Be muzzled!” This sounds like an exorcism.

Exorcism was core to Jesus’ ministry, especially when we understand that expelling demon(s) was but a minor part of it. Throughout his ministry, and especially in the cross and resurrection, Jesus demonstrated that evil does not have the upper hand — he banished it time and again. From Day One of his ministry, Jesus revealed how God’s mysteriously ever-present love overpowers even death.

What might this say to us? In a sense, it seems easier for us to appreciate Job’s experience than that of the disciples. We are sometimes willing to hear God’s voice putting us in our place and calling us into a deeper relationship. The disciples at sea witnessed a phenomenal, seemingly unrepeatable, feat of power over nature, something more in the category of resurrection than everyday life.

Jesus asked the disciples, “Why are you terrified? Have you no faith?” Perhaps that questions us as much as it did them. Do we live like people who believe in the Resurrection? Do we behave as if God can absorb and transform everything that is evil and dangerous? What would it look like to live with that kind of faith?

Job and the disciples came to believe that God’s ways were not theirs, that God’s love appears in unexpected, seemingly chaotic circumstances. If we can learn that kind of faith, we might be freed from holding God to our expectations and be unafraid to venture the transformational crossings over Christ would lead us through. St. Paul takes this one step further and says that if we believe, the impelling love of Christ will carry us to live, not for ourselves, but for and with and in him who has led the way. 

Today’s Liturgy of the Word is a not-so-subtle call to live as a new creation. Instead of cowering in the storm, we can be people of the Resurrection — and discover how whirlwinds can blow us into deeper faith.

Reading I

(Job 38: 1, 8-11)

The Lord addressed Job out of the storm and said:
Who shut within doors the sea,
when it burst forth from the womb;
when I made the clouds its garment
and thick darkness its swaddling bands?
When I set limits for it
and fastened the bar of its door,
and said: Thus far shall you come but no farther,
and here shall your proud waves be stilled!

Responsorial Psalm

(Psalm 107: 23-26, 28-31)

Reading II

(2 Corinthians 5: 14-17)

Brothers and sisters:
The love of Christ impels us,V
once we have come to the conviction that one died for all;
therefore, all have died.
He indeed died for all,
so that those who live might no longer live for themselves
but for him who for their sake died and was raised.

Consequently, from now on we regard no one according to the flesh;
even if we once knew Christ according to the flesh,
yet now we know him so no longer.
So whoever is in Christ is a new creation:
the old things have passed away;
behold, new things have come.

Gospel

(Mark 4: 35-41)

On that day, as evening drew on, Jesus said to his disciples:
“Let us cross to the other side.”
Leaving the crowd, they took Jesus with them in the boat just as he was.
And other boats were with him.
A violent squall came up and waves were breaking over the boat,
so that it was already filling up.
Jesus was in the stern, asleep on a cushion.
They woke him and said to him,
“Teacher, do you not care that we are perishing?”
He woke up,
rebuked the wind, and said to the sea, “Quiet! Be still!”
The wind ceased and there was great calm.
Then he asked them, “Why are you terrified?
Do you not yet have faith?”
They were filled with great awe and said to one another,
“Who then is this whom even wind and sea obey?”