Into Winds, Onto Waves

Links for today’s readings:

Apr 10 Read:  Hosea 11 Listen: (1:53) Read:  Matthew 14 Listen: (4:14)
Apr 11 Read:  Hosea 12 Listen: (1:51) Read:  Matthew 15 Listen: (4:23)
Apr 12 Read:  Hosea 13 Listen: (2:26) Read:  Matthew 16 Listen: (3:43)

Scripture Focus: Matthew 14.25-33

25 Shortly before dawn Jesus went out to them, walking on the lake. 26 When the disciples saw him walking on the lake, they were terrified. “It’s a ghost,” they said, and cried out in fear. 27 But Jesus immediately said to them: “Take courage! It is I. Don’t be afraid.” 28 “Lord, if it’s you,” Peter replied, “tell me to come to you on the water.” 29 “Come,” he said. Then Peter got down out of the boat, walked on the water and came toward Jesus. 30 But when he saw the wind, he was afraid and, beginning to sink, cried out, “Lord, save me!” 31 Immediately Jesus reached out his hand and caught him. “You of little faith,” he said, “why did you doubt?” 32 And when they climbed into the boat, the wind died down. 33 Then those who were in the boat worshiped him, saying, “Truly you are the Son of God.”

Reflection: Into Winds, Onto Waves

By John Tillman

The disciples tried to do what Jesus said. They couldn’t. Then Jesus stepped in.

Matthew, Mark, and Luke describe Jesus calming a storm (Matt 8.23-27; Mark 4.35-41; Luke 8.22-25). Jesus walking on the water is a separate event recorded in Matthew, Mark, and John (Matt 14.22-33; Mark 6.45-52; John 6.16-21). 

When Jesus walks on the water, there is no “storm,” but there is a strong wind. The wind, and the waves it kicks up, oppose the disciples’ progress. They are stuck.

From the mountain where he was praying, Jesus saw them struggling. He presumably prayed for them. He came to them. Then, he enabled them, especially Peter, to do things beyond their capacity. He stopped the wind. He helped Peter walk on the water. John’s account tells us that Jesus miraculously transported the boat from the middle of the lake to the shore.

Like the disciples, we have been sent to do what we can’t do. The prevailing winds of culture are against us. Our best efforts cannot gain any ground.

Also like the disciples, Jesus sees us, he prays for us, he comes to us, and he enables us to exceed our capacity.

It seems strange to tell someone to do something they can’t do. You wouldn’t tell a young child to fix a leak under the sink or change the timing belt under the hood of a car. However, you can tell a child, “Come help me fix the sink,” or “Come help me fix the car.” Doing something with someone, forms something in you.

When a child holds the flashlight for a parent working under the sink or under the hood, they are participating and (hopefully) learning. The child might come back to the living room and report to their other parent, “I fixed it!” In a way, they did. Even if they didn’t technically do any of the work themselves.

We are formed by participating with God in what he commissions us to do. We cannot do it. Jesus does it for us, through us, and with us. He turns the wrenches on nuts too tight for us to budge. We hold the flashlight. He stops the winds too strong for us to overcome. We step out of the boat. He helps us walk where we would normally sink. He catches us when we fall.

We merely obey and follow him. Even if that means walking into the winds and onto the waves.

Divine Hours Prayer: The Refrain for the Morning Lessons

Everyone will stand in awe and declare God’s deeds; they will recognize his works. — Psalm 64.9

– From The Divine Hours: Prayers for Springtime by Phyllis Tickle.

Read more: Cultivation Must Be Learned

Spiritual wisdom and knowledge, like agricultural knowledge, must be passed on, with its seeds, from one generation to the next.

Read more: Clumsy Doves

Pain tends to heighten our spiritual sensitivities. Some of us stumble into the presence of God after the long dark night of the soul.

Cultivation Must Be Learned

Scripture Focus: Matthew 14.16
Jesus replied, “They do not need to go away. You give them something to eat.”

From John: For the next couple of days, we will look back at some posts from 2019 about the spiritual work of cultivating a deep spiritual life of growth and discipleship. 

Reflection: Cultivation Must Be Learned
By John Tillman

Cultivation requires intergenerational transfer.

The first training schools for ministers in the church were communities called, in Latin, seminarium, meaning “plant nursery” or “seed plot.” The root word (we just can’t escape agricultural metaphor) also gives us the word semen, the literal “seed” of humanity; seminal, implying an original source of thought or work; and, seminar, a focused time of learning.

Spiritual wisdom and knowledge, like agricultural knowledge, must be passed on, with its seeds, from one generation to the next.

I learned to shell purple-hulled peas (a more flavorful cousin to black-eyed peas) because I sat on a porch with my family and shared in the work before sharing in the meal. Many of us learn agricultural knowledge from a loved one. We learn to tell if a fruit or vegetable is ripe, how and when to prune roses, how to properly root a cutting of a plant, or at what depth to set bulbs in order to have blooms at the proper time.

In individual, cultural, or generational isolation, we lose the ability to transfer or receive knowledge. And in one-way relationships, there is no ability to contextualize knowledge, to discuss it, or to practice together how to live it out. This is why one of the most rewarding parts of The Park Forum is when I hear from readers, and discuss what has challenged or encouraged them. 

There are limits to the level of community that is possible for a geographically distributed ministry like The Park Forum. Distributed communities, like long-distance relationships, require energy and investment to maintain. It is our hope that The Park Forum is a community tool, a seedbed, a source of cuttings that can be planted and rooted in your community.

More of us need to sit around biblical teaching, as my family sat around a bucket of unshelled peas, extracting the value from the harvest together, one pod at a time. When we share in the work of extracting the goodness of the land, we gain more than a harvest of nutritional content or monetary gain. We gain community.

Who is your community? With whom are you processing God’s Word? Who are the believers, older in the faith, from whom you are learning? Who are the believers, younger in the faith, with whom you are sharing what you have learned? 

*If you have not joined our Park Forum Cultivators Facebook Group, please see the description below and follow the link to join us there.

Divine Hours Prayer: The Request for Presence
Teach me your way, O Lord, and I will walk in your truth; knit my heart to you that I may fear your name. — Psalm 86.11

– Divine Hours prayers from The Divine Hours: Prayers for Autumn and Wintertime by Phyllis Tickle

Today’s Readings
Genesis 15 (Listen – 2:53)
Matthew 14 (Listen – 4:14)

Read more about Cultivation Is Supernatural
A stronger faith, and a greater crop yield comes when we invest in cultivation. Cultivation is not natural. It is supernatural.

Read more about Milk of the Word, A Precedent to Growth
It’s not that we are still drinking milk when we should have been weaned, but that we’ve never drunk it consistently.