Sunday, April 14, 2013

THE MIRACLE OF WALKING ON THE WATER


JOHN 6:16-21
          Now when evening came, His disciples went down to the sea, and after getting into a boat, they started to cross the sea to Capernaum. It had already become dark, and Jesus had not yet come to them. The sea began to be stirred up because a strong wind was blowing. Then, when they had rowed about three or four miles, they saw Jesus walking on the sea and drawing near to the boat; and they were frightened.
          But he said to them, "It is I; do not be afraid." So they were willing to receive Him into the boat, and immediately the boat was at the land to which they were going (NASB).
INTRODUCTION
          At the 1997 Brickyard 400 Auto race, NASCAR driver Lake Speed learned a firsthand and amazing effect of prayer. His car had been having mechanical problems. Sitting on the track in preparation for a qualifying run, he waited in frustration because his car wouldn't start. Meanwhile, he prayed. Finally, his crew chief Jeff Buice took a wrench and hand-cranked the engine Model-A style. The car started, and Lake Speed road unto the track and post the second fastest qualifying time of the day.
          Victor Lee writes in Sports Spectrum:
          Later, when Speed returned to the pits to get ready for the final practice session, he found his crew tearing out the engine. Shocked, he asked what was going on. "Lake, that engine was blown before you qualified." Bruce said, noticing that it had blown during NASCAR pre-race inspection. Lake looked more closely. Oil was everywhere.
          Bruce continued, "I wasn't going to tell you anything, because time had run out. But I was already trying to figure out how I was going to spend Saturday. Even if it started, I surely didn't expect it to a lap, and surely not to run good enough to make the race."
          Lake's assessment: "God did a major mechanical miracle." I always pray right before the race. Sitting on that track, when it didn't start, I prayed, "Lord, I don't know what's going on here, but if there is any way, I'd like this thing to start." Driver Lake Speed went on to finish twelfth in the race, his second best finish in 1997.
          Skeptics, cynics, and the anti-supernatural have raised objections in this particular miracle of Jesus in recent times. Some of these critics say that when Jesus walked on the water, it was winter time and the bottom of the lake had formed sheets of ice that a person could walk on it. It takes more faith to believe in that kind of explanation of this event. Dr. Darrell Bock of Dallas Theological Seminary argues that Palestine does not get too cold in winter time that ice can form in the sea or lake. It takes more faith to believe in the critics' explanation of the miracle because it is impossible for any person to walk on the water during a severe winter time when the surface of the sea had turned to ice. Jesus would not have sent the disciples to an icy lake in the middle of the night.
          The Apostle John includes this event because it forms part of the seven signs of Jesus in his Gospel narrative. This miracle is also recorded in the Synoptic Gospels (Matthew 14:22-36, and Mark 6:45-54). However, John's account is a brief or an abbreviated version. He does not provide all the details because of the purpose of his Gospel narrative. If you want to get the details of the miracle, you have to go to the Gospel of Matthew.
          You should not confuse this miracle with the one when Jesus was asleep in a boat and was awakened by the disciples to calm the raging sea. In this miracle, we have a familiar story of exquisite beauty, about which there are a few facts to be explained.
          I. THE STORM AT SEA VV. 16-18
          After the miracle of the loaves and the enthusiasm created by such a wonder, Jesus constrained His disciples to go by boat to the other side of the lake. Why did He constrain them to go? Was it because of their love and growing admiration of Him, they were reluctant to leave Him even for a moment? Knowing the intention of the multitude to make Jesus a king, were they unwilling to leave Him at the moment of His approaching exaltation?
          To the disciples, no day had been so bright; now they must go before Him to the other side and their bright day ended in a troubled night. They wanted to bask in the sunshine of the Master's fame, but He knew that there was more danger in the favor of the crowd than from the fury of the storm.
          Therefore, Jesus sent them ahead, and the storm had the effect of saving them from wrong ambitions. The disciples had to learn that stormy night along with the bright day worked together for their good. Life is a mixture of peaceful and stormy days. Sometimes you are on top of the mountain; other times you are down in the valley. That is what life is all about at this side of eternity. However, the good news is that God who provides you with peace is the same who walks with you in the storms. The God who takes you to the mountain top is the same God who walks with you in the valley. The God who walks with you in the day time is the same who walks with in the night. When Jesus sent the disciples ahead of Him in the night under the stormy sea, He knew what He was doing.
          The disciples had to learn that He who fed them miraculously with loaves and fishes was the same One who sent them to encounter the storms and waves of an angry and tempestuous sea. The disciples had to learn that Jesus does not send His own to warfare at their own expense. The strength of Jesus would be available to them to endure and conquer the trials ahead. Sometimes when we go through the crucibles of life, we behave like Christ does not know our troubles. We begin to sing to ourselves the Lord does not know the troubles that I see. Who told you that the Lord does not know the troubles that you see? He who knows the number of hairs on your head knows everything that you are going through. He whose eye is on the sparrow watches over you. Therefore, when Jesus sent the disciples to the middle of the sea at night, He knew what He was doing. The question is, "Are you perceptive to what the Lord is doing in your life?"
          II. THE SAVIOR WALKS ON THE SEA VV. 19-21
          As for Jesus, after the frenzy of the people to make Him king, He went to the mountain for rest, solace, and communion with the Father. Jesus perceived that the people wanted to take Him by force and make Him king. Now at last they have found someone who is powerful enough to rescue them from the tyranny of the Romans, they might have said to themselves. However, the Omniscient One knew what their intentions were. The ambition of the crowd was not part of Jesus' earthly mission at this point of time. Yes, His kingdom will come but not as these multitudes have envisaged. Jesus has shown us that it is not an act of cowardice to run away from temptation and seek the counsel of God. Had Jesus accepted the invitation to be their king, He would have forsaken the cross, and had He forsaken the cross, you and I would have died in our sins. However, solitude on a mountain on His knees gave Him the victory at the cross. Going to the mountain to pray, Jesus shows us the combination of deity and humanity in one person. As the Creator of the universe, we adore Christ, and as the Man at prayer--solitary, continuous, and special prayer, He is our model and we must emulate His example.
          Let's go back to the predicament of the disciples. Out on the lake, the disciples were hard pressed, for one of the strongest storms common to the area had given them the scare of their lives. I believe that this storm was an ordinary one because some of the disciples, you recall were professional fishermen. They had seen various kinds of storms. Therefore, for them to be terrified was not a child's game at all. They were in no way closer to shore and the waves were contrary. What made the conquest with the storm more distressing is that Jesus was not with them as on the other occasion when He was asleep at the helm of the boat. What do you do when you have a crisis and Jesus is nowhere in sight? The disciples were tossed and tormented by the waves, for the winds were contrary. They are tossed up and down because the Lord of the sea is not in sight. The disciples felt lonely and scared at a time when they needed Christ the most. Have you felt lonely and scared?
          What the disciples did not know was that in His time of solitude and communion with His Father on the mountain, Jesus was praying for them. Jesus knew that the torrential storm would beat and terrify them, therefore He pray for them. When Jesus saw the extremity of the disciples, He came walking on the water to their rescue. Our Lord is not indifferent to our circumstances in life. He is keenly cognizant of every storm that you are going through and He will respond at the appropriate time. Sometimes Christ delays in coming to your rescue in your storms, because you are trying to fight the storm in your own puny strength. Sometimes too, you are not calling on Him, but rather calling others to help you in your struggle. In your fruitless efforts, He is waiting for you to call on Him to help see you through the storms of life.
          A boy was trying to lift up a load and couldn't. Out of frustration, he blurted out, "Would somebody help me?" The father said, now you are talking, because you had not asked for help.
          The Gospel of Matthew states that when they saw the figure approaching them they were more terrified because they thought they were seeing a ghost. The Lord had seen their plight and is coming to save them and yet they mistake Him for a ghost. Fear and frustration can sometimes blur your vision. When Jesus draws near, He tells them, "It is I; don't be afraid." The phrase, "don't be afraid" is Jesus' most used word of command in the New Testament. Jesus was saying to the disciples, "Stop being afraid." Jesus is saying to you today, "Stop being afraid." Jesus says it is "I." In Koine Greek it means, "I AM." It is the statement of deity. It is the word that God used when He was sending Moses to Egypt. He said if they ask you, who sent you tell them that "I AM" sent you. If "I AM" is with you why should you be afraid? If "I AM" is present in your life, why should you toss and turn?
          How encouraging and assuring such an inspiring voice must have meant to the disciples. The majesty of the approach was perfected in the tenderness of the address, "It is I; don't be afraid." You say, but I cannot pay my mortgage or rent this month, and I may lose my house, Jesus says, "It is I, don't be afraid." You say, my children are sick and I don't know what to do. Jesus says, "It is I, don't be afraid." Whatever you are experiencing in life, please bring Jesus to the equation and you will see that when He is present nothing is impossible.
          When Jesus uttered such a word at such a time, peace flooded the heart of the disciples. They realized that it was not an ordinary voice, but the voice of the Master of the sea. What storms of life are you fighting today? Call on Jesus and He will calm the storm for you. It was as if Jesus was saying to the disciples, "It is alright." Don't be afraid. I am your Friend, your Deliverer     and I have come to rescue you. Maybe today Jesus has come to the rescue of somebody who is reading this message. I don't know what you may be going through today, but I can assure you that Jesus is saying to you, "It is I, don't be afraid."
          As soon as Jesus uttered the words, "It is I, don't be afraid," their fears were rebuked and scattered as they were brought face to face with the Mighty One (see Genesis 16:11; Judges 6:13; Daniel 10:12, 19; Rev. 1:17).
          III. THE IMPORTANCE OF THIS MIRACLE
          When someone asks you what is the purpose or significance of this event what are you going to say? What took place at the lake on that stormy night in the life of the disciples was the demonstration of Christ's Omnipotence. As the Creator of the seas and winds, He revealed His authority over them, and they being His, He could see them as He desired. Such a supernatural feat was a further evidence of Christ's sovereignty over His creation.
          When the human mind contemplates the works and ways of God, the question arises, "How can these things be?" Such a query, however, is one of unbelief, not of faith. No miracle should stagger the heart that has learned to trust God and believe in His Word. That does not mean that you have to be naive and believe everything. However, with God all things are possible.
          The precious lesson of the miracle is instructive and comforting. Faith is tested by storms of life. If someone told you that you would not face any storm in life when you became a Christian that person lied to you. Your faith like precious stone would be tested (1 Peter 1:7). The second lesson is that when it seems that the storm is about to drown you in the raging sea know that Jesus is ever near. Tossed to and fro on the waves of a troublesome world, it may seem as though He has forgotten you, but His eye is ever upon you, and suddenly in your extremity He intervenes. If you are sinking into despair and doubt what you need to do is cry out, "Lord save me" and He will! The hard lessons of faith are only learned on the open sea where the waves are rough, where the wind is relentless, and where the risks are real.
          The miracles are pictures of what Jesus offers to do in your heart. Therefore, the miracles of Jesus cannot be set aside as some skeptics want us to do. The miracles are in fact, the key to what Jesus did. In the miracles of Jesus, we are called to make a choice. The choice is yours to make. Should you assign it to God? Or should you explain it away? However, one thing is certain; you cannot sit on the fence. You cannot be neutral; you have to make up your mind. Did Jesus come to bring God to us, or is He a fraud, or worse, an instrument of evil? The choice is yours to make with its ramifications.

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