St. Matthew, in this section of his gospel, has three
stories about Jesus that all fit together. The first is
the story of Jesus and His disciples on the Sea of
Galilee. Jesus gets into a boat, and the disciples
follow Him. It's important, those words, "followed Him,"
because Matthew wants us to think about ourselves who
also follow the Lord. Suddenly a storm comes up, a
violent, dangerous storm that is certainly going to sink
their boat under its waves. And in the midst of these
terrible winds, and rain, and waves what is Jesus doing?
He is asleep! They have to wake Him up! The disciples
say, "Lord, save us! We are perishing!" In other words
they prayed to Him. When we read this story, we are
certainly meant to think of their words as a prayer we
could pray in time of need and troubles, when our own
boats are in danger. The disciples did not pray to
Christ as God in this story, because they did not yet
understand who Jesus was. They asked Him to help in
whatever way He
could help, perhaps by Him praying to the Lord
God to spare their lives.
When we ask for His help we have the great advantage of
knowing that Christ is truly God in the flesh, as
Jesus continues to reveal here on the Sea of Galilee. He
gets up and rebukes the winds and the sea and everything
becomes calm and peaceful. Many of the religions in that
part of the world had stories about the creation of the
world which was surrounded by chaos and uncontrollable
oceans and winds which were conquered by one god or
another who brought calm and order to this primeval
super storm. The Israelites borrowed this image from
their pagan neighbors and spoke of God as the Lord over
the storms and the waters, and the evil they contain.
This image comes up many, many times in the Psalms, as
in Psalm 92: "the floods lift up, O Lord, the floods
lift up their voice; the floods lift up their tumult.
More powerful than the roar of many waters, more
powerful than the breakers of the sea—powerful on
High is the Lord."
In this great storm story Matthew shows us that Christ
has this exact same power as the God of Israel and power
over the evils of the deep. Those who pray to Him,
"Lord, save us!" can be sure He has the power to save.
The 3rd story of this set is Jesus meeting a paralyzed
man brought to Him on a stretcher. Jesus sees the faith
of those who brought him and the faith of the paralyzed
man, and He says to the man, "Courage, child, your sins
are forgiven." And of course some of the scribes think
He is committing blasphemy. Jesus knows what they are
thinking and asks why they harbor evil thoughts. Is it
easier to forgive sins, or to heal the man? "But that
you may know that the son of Man has authority on earth
to forgive sins"—He said to the paralytic, "Rise,
pick up your stretcher and go home." Certainly the
Christians in St. Matthew's day would have thought of
baptism, the great gift they received which also forgave
their sins. Only God can forgive sins, as the scribes
and everyone else knew. But notice at the end of this
story the people glorified God, "who had given such
authority to human beings." In Mark's Gospel, he writes
that the people gave glory to God saying, "We have never
seen anything like this." Matthew is much more explicit.
Not only is Jesus God, although the people cannot yet
see this, He has given to the Church the divine
authority to forgive sins in His name.
In between this 1st story of the Storm at Sea, and this
3rd story of the Healing of the Paralytic, comes today's
story of the exorcism of the two men possessed by demons
in the Gadarenes territory. They are savage and violent
and they live among the tombs because evil and darkness
and death are things that all fit together very well.
And what irony! They call Him Son of God, and ask why He
is there before "the appointed time," because it was a
belief in Jewish thought that God would allow evil
spirits to afflict people until the final judgment at
the end of the world. But not here, Jesus casts them out
and allows them to enter into pigs and then they all go
off and jump over a cliff and destroy themselves. It may
not seem like it to us, but for Jewish-Christian
readers, this was great humor: devil-stuffed pork ending
up in a suicidal broken heap. It would be like many of
you listening to a story that ends with the lines, "And
that is how all the Beavers in Oregon were suddenly
transformed into Ducks!" Or, perhaps for some of you:
"And that is how all the Ducks in Oregon grew big flat
tails and large front teeth."
Three stories. Three truths about Jesus. He has power
over the storms and the seas and the evils that they can
bring. He can forgive sins by His own word, and wipe out
the evil they have brought, even as He heals the evil of
sickness and disease. He has command over evil spirits
and can cast them out of the lives of men and women.
Jesus is victorious over evil in every account. And so
when they ask the question, "What sort of man is this
that even the winds and the sea obey Him?" we are meant
to give the answer. We are meant to have the answer. If
someone were to ask us "What do you think about Jesus?",
how would we answer them? Would we give them a short
list of facts from the Catechism, or could we also speak
to them in a way that is very direct and personal? What
we are taught by the Church about Christ our God is
important to know and understand, as much as we are
able. But along with that, our personal knowledge of
Christ, our own relationship with Him is also very
important, lest we sound like someone who has read the
book but never met the principal character.
So we need to continue to meet the Lord in the Holy
Scriptures, not simply to hear them or read them. We are
to continue to meet the Lord in our daily prayers, and
not simply to pray them; to continue to meet Him in our
Holy Communion, and not just to receive Him. We should
strive to meet Him in Confession, in the lives of the
Saints, in our reverence for His Holy Mother, in our
participation in His Body, the Church, and in our
interactions with our neighbors, there too we should
look for Him, and especially among those who are poor
and needy, whether materially or spiritually.
There is no doubt in my mind at all that our society has
grown very poor in the knowledge of Christ, whether
willfully so, or in ignorance because no one has taught
them. Yes, there is the Bible. Yes, there is the
catechism. But we, dear friends, are often the first
place where people will come to see the truth of Christ.
The better we know Him, the better we ourselves serve as
living Gospels, not only for our neighbors, but for our
families and loved ones as well.