DANCING ON THE WAVES
If you have ever been to Providence University College and Theological Seminary, you will notice there are three floors. The first floor is the administration level; the second floor is the university college; and the third floor is the Seminary. Jokes are often made that the air at the seminary level is thin, or that they have their heads in the clouds, or that they are above everyone else.
During our winter semester in ’95, a day of prayer was held at which we were given a time for solitary reflection. I put on my winter coat and immediately went outside to the Rat River to be alone with God. It was then that I discovered that seminarians really could walk on water. I had the evidence that we were holier than the undergrads. Of course, as you know, the river was frozen…
Our story in John 6:16-21 is a simple story: Jesus walks on water. John keeps it brief. It’s rather straightforward. When I first read it this week, I thought, what am I going to say? What’s going on here?
The answer is: a lot more than simply walking on water. As with the first four signs, Jesus is revealing more and more about himself with increasing intensity. Though the story is short, the implication is huge. What are we missing in this little narrative?
1. Why did Jesus need to pray? (John 6:15; Mark 6:45-46)
Imagine you are a first-century Jewish fisherman. You know the temperamental nature of the Sea of Galilee and how sudden storms just swoop down from the surrounding hills. You are familiar with this little lake; the sea is another matter. But let’s back up a moment…
Following the feeding of the 5000 men, the miracle of bread prompted the crowd to make Jesus king by force (15). Knowing this, Jesus retreats into the hills.
Mark shares the same story but adds that Jesus “compels” or “makes” the disciples get into the boat and sail across the lake (6:45-46). Mark also adds that once the disciples have departed, Jesus went into the hills to pray.
Two things are happening here. John and Mark are recounting the same story with John leaving out a detail that he assumes we understand. First, Jesus went to pray, but to pray about what? If the people were about to make him king by force, it’s possible that Jesus was tempted to let them. When Jesus was tempted in the wilderness three times by the Devil, one of the temptations was to grab political power. Was Jesus tempted by the allure of political influence? Hebrews tells us that Jesus was tempted in every way like we are (4:15). But he didn’t sin. And one of the ways he overcame temptation was to pray.
The second thing is related to the first. Jesus makes the disciples get into the boat and leave. Jesus knew they were tempted by this same prospect. They believed in their leader and that he would make a huge impact politically speaking. He deserved to wield power. Jesus taught them to pray, “your kingdom come!” Here it is! And if Jesus takes this power, they will surely benefit. Remember how they jockeyed for positions of power, to be next to Jesus, to be on his right and his left? It is possible that Jesus sent them away to protect them from the power of that temptation.
Political influence continues to tempt Christians today. Evangelicals have come to believe that the chief way to impact our world and bring the kingdom of God out is through politics. We have seen in the letter to the Ephesians that God has a program for bringing all things to completion through Jesus Christ. The world will be renewed and those who believe in Jesus will be saved. But that salvation program does not rely on the world’s politics or politicians. Jesus has chosen the church as his agent for change in the world. It is through the church that God manifests the best of his kingdom. Jesus knew that and that is why he wrestled in prayer with this temptation.
2. “Just passing by” (Mark 6:48; Exodus 33:17-23)
The disciples set off across the lake and run up against a sudden squall. It is so severe that they are “straining at the oars” according to Mark. John says, “A strong wind was blowing, and the waters grew rough,” and they were only half-way across the lake. Mark tells us it was between 3 and 6 in the early morning and it was dark.
Which is more terrifying, being on the water in a storm, or seeing a ghost? I don’t believe in ghosts as such, but the first-century Jewish fisherman must have. John says, “When they rowed about three or four miles, they saw Jesus approaching the boat, walking on the water; and they were terrified,” (19).
Mark adds a curious note: Jesus is walking on the lake and “He was about to pass by them” (48b). Isn’t that odd? He’s walking on the lake, and it sounds like he’s just going to saunter by and “Oh, hey, are you guys in trouble?” Was Jesus just going to pass by until they called out in fear? No…
We speak of “passing by” as a secondary thought. “I was on my way to the store and just thought I’d pass by and see how you are.” With God it means something quite different. Jesus was going out to them directly and was passing by. Consider how “God passing by” is seen in the OT: Moses wants to see the glory of God and God says “Okay,” Check out Exodus 33:17-23 (read).
And the Lord said to Moses, “I will do the very thing you have asked, because I am pleased with you and I know you by name.”
Then Moses said, “Now show me your glory.”
And the Lord said, “I will cause all my goodness to pass in front of you, and I will proclaim my name, the Lord, in your presence. I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion. But,” he said, “you cannot see my face, for no one may see me and live.”
Then the Lord said, “There is a place near me where you may stand on a rock. When my glory passes by, I will put you in a cleft in the rock and cover you with my hand until I have passed by. Then I will remove my hand and you will see my back; but my face must not be seen.”
The same expression is used when the LORD tells Elijah to wait on the mountain while the LORD “passes by.”
In “passing by,” God is revealing himself. Jesus is not sneaking by, hoping not to be noticed. He wants to be seen by them. Jesus is causing his glory to “pass by” them so that they may see he is more than some political figure, more than a prophet, more than a man, he is God, and he is showing his glory. They should be frightened.
And when they cry out, Jesus responds, “It is I; don’t be afraid.” Even that means more than a familiar voice in the dark: “It’s okay, it’s just me!” No, John uses an expression here that means more than a greeting. Jesus says, “I, I am” in identifying himself. He is saying, “I Am.” Whenever Jesus says this in John’s account, he is saying, “I’m Yahweh.” This is the name God gave to Moses in Exodus 3 when Moses asked for the name he should give to the Hebrews. God responded, “I AM WHO I AM.” And that’s what Jesus says here.
Jesus walks on water! Scientists would say that this breaks the law of nature. But the laws of nature are based on what we have observed nature to be like. If we see something miraculous, out of the ordinary, we are presumptuous to say it breaks all laws of nature. CS Lewis said that the bread miracle was a miracle of the old creation. Jesus uses natural objects like bread and fish to feed a crowd of believers and unbelievers in a supernatural use of natural objects. But Jesus walking on water is a miracle of the new creation, the invisible realm of life, those realities which are present for the believer. They are not anti-natural acts, but a demonstration of God’s power and working in the natural world. They reveal God’s character to believers to remind us of his person.
3. Master of the Great Big “SEA” (Gen. 1:2; Rev. 21:1)
Imagine you are a first-century Jewish fisherman. How do you feel about the sea? What do you believe is out there?
To a person living in the Ancient Near East, a place like Palestine, the sea was largely an unknown and dreaded place. Jews were not seafaring people. Rivers and streams were useful for their vineyards and crops. But the sea was seen as evil, full of danger, an embodiment of chaos and unpredictability. This was true of Gentiles as well as Jews.
It is no wonder then that the writer of Gensis would describe the world before creation as a watery chaos, a primeval sea, out of which God brought order. “Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep…” (Gen. 1:2). In later OT writings, the sea was seen as the home of the terrible dragon, Leviathan (later symbolized pagan nations). The sea was the home of evil.
But the OT, also revealed Yahweh as the One who controls the sea and stills it. Psalm 89:9 says, “You rule over the surging sea; when its waves mount up, you still them.” And listen to this, Job testifies of God, “He alone has spread out the heavens and marches on the waves of the sea,” (Job 9:8 NLT). The Lord dances on the waves.
This is the perspective of the first-century Jewish person: the sea is evil. In fact, in the NT, the writers continue this view of the sea using it to represent the barrier between us and God. It even represents death or the unknown. When John first sees the throne room of God in Revelation 4:6, there is a sea of crystal separating him from the presence of God, keeping him at a distance. But then God begins to show John how the Lamb that was slain overcomes the world and defeats the Dragon by the Word of God.
The story of God comes full circle. Our Bible begins with this scene of a chaotic sea keeping us from God. It ends with a beautiful picture in Revelation 21:1, “Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and there was no longer any sea.” In other words, death, separation, and the unknown are no more.
Come back to the Sea of Galilee with me. Jesus is walking on the water. He says, “I AM,” and the sea grows calm. What do you think? Who is this Jesus?
G. Campbell Morgan points out that it was a miracle seen only by the disciples. He says it was Jesus’ way of answering the disappointment they must have felt when Jesus refused to be made king. So, he gave them a demonstration of his present Kingship, and that in the realm of nature. It was as though he said, “I have refused to be crowned King upon the basis of bread, but make no mistake, I am King in every realm.” Jesus dances upon the waves amid a storm because he’s the King of Kings and no one is greater.
Last verse: “Then they were willing to take him into the boat, and immediately the boat reached the far shore where they were heading,” (6:21).
John Wesley was an 18th century evangelist who believed in God but was still discovering what faith meant when he was crossing the ocean from England to Georgia in the colonies. Wesley had never been on a ship before. Seven days from land and they were experiencing their third and worst storm. It was so bad that the passengers and crew believed they were going to die at sea. “The sea spilled over the ship, split the mainsail, and poured between the decks as if the great deep had already swallowed us up.” The English passengers screamed in fright, but the German Moravians calmly continued singing a psalm without interruption. Wesely was impressed with their faith in the face of death. He now saw the difference in this hour of trial, between those who truly knew Jesus Christ and those who didn’t. Even though he was a preacher, he knew he didn’t have that kind of faith.
The Moravians had Christ with them in their boat, in their hearts. Wesley had seen Jesus walk on water, so to speak, but hadn’t let Christ into the boat.
Our story of Jesus walking on the water compels us to consider two responses: One is to worship him as God, the same God who dances on the waves and is sovereign over the crashing trials of the life you live. The second is to trust him amid the storm and believe in him, the One who says, “It is I; don’t be afraid.”
Worship and Trust. They go together. When we worship God, we say that God is worth our time and attention. How can you then not trust him?
AMEN