Friday Focus: Do Whatever He Tells You
This week Mary gently nudges Jesus into his public ministry.
And she blesses us with the best advice any mother has ever given: Do whatever he tells you. It’s a
surefire shortcut to all the caveats of Christianity. Just do what Jesus tells
you to do, and all the rest will follow. There is not the slightest deviation
from what Jesus tells us and what God expects. That’s because as John’s gospel
goes on to reveal in great detail: Jesus Christ is, was and always will be God.
Mary, his first disciple, has all the proof she needs. From the Annunciation
onward, she has kept it all in her heart. She has been the vessel of
Incarnation. She has nurtured and protected him. She has intimate experience
with God’s vast power. She has seen it grow in her and emerge in her Son. There
is no record that she ever looked for any favor or special consideration. But
now in her compassion for a couple of newlyweds in a bind, she asks for just a
pinch of divine intervention. And Jesus overcomes his reluctance and delivers.
In miraculously transforming water into wine, Jesus
does not call upon the Father to summon up miraculous power. He is not a
prophet or a holy man who aspires to channel the power of God. Jesus Christ is
God, the Second Person of the Trinity. As the soaring first chapter of John
tells us, from the beginning, Jesus is:
the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God. In response to his
mother’s request, this wedding at Cana suddenly becomes the impromptu, out-of-town
opening for his mission of redemption.
At Cana, the Son duplicates in microcosm, the same divine
power over creation that the Father exercises on a grand scale every day. God
created the vine and teaches it to draw water by its roots and with the aid of
the sun turns that water into juice that ferments into wine. Jesus mirrors the
process at Cana. He demonstrates his divinity by willing the water into wine…
no sleight of hand, no magic tricks, no invocation of a higher power. Jesus Christ is Lord of all. Creation is his
to command. And if he wills that water is wine, it is.
This gospel shows us Jesus in transition. It is a
domestic slice of life. While Jesus is obviously still under his mother’s
influence and probably still part of her household, he has begun to attract
disciples. But after Cana, all will be different. His divine nature and his
mission emerge. As John tells us, Cana is: the
first of his signs…and revealed his glory; and his disciples believed in him.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home