Showing posts with label May 2024. Show all posts
Showing posts with label May 2024. Show all posts

Saturday, May 18, 2024

Matthew 5:10-12, Revelation 2:10-11: Peloris Determination

 Presented to TSA AV Men's and Women's Breakfast, 18 May 2024 by Major Michael Ramsay

  

 

Pelorus Jack was a Risso's dolphin that was famous for meeting and escorting ships through a stretch of water in Cook Strait, New Zealand., a notoriously dangerous channel used by ships travelling between Wellington and Nelson.

 

Pelorus Jack was first seen around 1888 when he appeared in front of the schooner Brindle when the ship approached French Pass, a channel located between D'Urville Island and the South Island. When the members of the crew saw the dolphin bobbing up and down in front of the ship, they wanted to kill him, but the captain's wife talked them out of it. To their amazement, the dolphin then proceeded to guide the ship through the narrow channel. And for years thereafter, he safely guided almost every ship that came by. With rocks and strong currents, the area is dangerous to ships, but no shipwrecks occurred when Jack was present.

 

In 1904, someone aboard the SS Penguin tried to shoot Pelorus Jack with a rifle. Despite the attempt on his life, Pelorus Jack continued to help ships.

 

Many sailors and travellers saw Pelorus Jack, and he was mentioned in local newspapers and depicted in postcards.

 

Jack was last seen in April 1912

 

Like Jack, We have to never weary in doing good (Galatians 6:9). For whoever loses their life for Christ’s sake will gain eternal life (Mattew 10:39). Therefore, like Jack, let us continue on helping others no matter what persecution we suffer for indeed as we are faithful even unto death we will indeed receive the crown of life.

Sunday, May 12, 2024

Luke 1:30-38 & 2 John 2:1-6: Kyria Electa Mary on Mothers Day Weekend

Presented to Westhaven and Echo Village, May 11th and 12th, 2024 by Major Michael Ramsay

Based on Genesis 4, 1 Samuel 1, Matthew 20:20-28, Luke 1:26-56. 2 John: Mother’s Day Haikus. Presented to The Salvation Army Alberni Valley Ministries on Mother’s Day, 08 May 2022, by Sarah-Grace and Heather Ramsay. Available on-line here: 

https://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2022/05/genesis-4-1-samuel-1-matthew-2020-28.html


This weekend is Mother’s Day. Today we are going to chat about two mothers from the Bible, Mary and Kyria Electa. 

2 John:1-6: 

1 The elder, 

To the KYRIA ELECTA and her children, whom I love in the truth—and not I only, but also all who know the truth— 2 because of the truth, which lives in us and will be with us forever: 

3 Grace, mercy and peace from God the Father and from Jesus Christ, the Father’s Son, will be with us in truth and love. 

4 It has given me great joy to find some of your children walking in the truth, just as the Father commanded us. 5 And now, dear lady, I am not writing you a new command but one we have had from the beginning. I ask that we love one another. 6 And this is love: that we walk in obedience to his commands. As you have heard from the beginning, his command is that you walk in love. 


KYRIA ELECTA 

2nd John says it is addressed to a specific mother and her children. Her name ‘Kyria’ translated to English from Greek literally means ‘Lady’ and her other name ‘Electa’ literally means ‘chosen’. Thus, the NIV reads this letter as written to the chosen lady. Kyria Electa was chosen as one of the first Christian pastors. She encouraged her children - those who have come to faith through her and presumably her natural born children as well. John sent her this letter of encouragement and it is neat because he concluded this short letter by sending greetings from the children of another woman pastor/teacher in the church. 


God has used and is using many mothers and others in many roles in His church. Mothers especially are great teachers of their children. In times gone past before daycares and kindergartens moms were the primary teachers of the next generation. It is my hope that we would all be encouraged as Kyria Electa to continue to teach and care for one another. 


Our next mother today is from the Gospels. She is probably the most well known and most often represented mother in artwork in the history of the world. The next mother we have today is Mary. 


Luke 1:30-38: 

30 But the angel said to her, “Do not be afraid, Mary; you have found favor with God. 31 You will conceive and give birth to a son, and you are to call him Jesus. 32 He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of his father David, 33 and he will reign over Jacob’s descendants forever; his kingdom will never end.” 


34 “How will this be,” Mary asked the angel, “since I am a virgin?” 


35 The angel answered, “The Holy Spirit will come on you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God. 36 Even Elizabeth your relative is going to have a child in her old age, and she who was said to be unable to conceive is in her sixth month. 37 For no word from God will ever fail.” 

38 “I am the Lord’s servant,” Mary answered. “May your word to me be fulfilled.” Then the angel left her. 


MARY  

Mary was chosen by God to give birth to the Son of God and raise Him and care for Him. I can’t imagine what it must have been like for her to see Him grow and do the things He does. I can’t imagine what it would be like for her to realize and respect her son as the Lord. I can’t imagine what it would have been like for her to see him upon the cross. He loved her so much: He entrusted her care to his friend even while He was upon the cross. I can’t imagine then what it would be like for her to know of His resurrection and eternal life. I can’t imagine how humbling it would be to see what God has and is doing through her little boy. 


Moms, dads, and families are often proud of their children. They are very happy when they see how God uses them. God used Mary’s son, His Son, to accomplish so much in this world and the next. Mary’s son is also the Son of God and He was conceived, born, lived, died, and rose again so that we may all live forever more. 


On this Mother's Day weekend, let us all take Jesus up on that offer and let us all serve Him both for now and forever more. 


Let us pray: Dear God on this Mother’s Day, we thank you for our mothers and others who love us. We pray for those near and dear to us. We pray that You will be with them and care for them; Lord we pray that we will know that You are near us and those we love in times of trouble. Lord, we thank you for loving us for now and forever more. 


Amen. 

Saturday, May 4, 2024

Matthew 5:43-38, 18:1-5 and Hosea 1:21-23: Lessons from Star Wars

Presented to Warehouse 614, 03 June 2018 and Alberni Valley Ministries, 05 May 2024, by Captain (Major) Michael Ramsay


This is the 2024 BC Version; to view the 2018 Toronto version, click here:

https://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2018/06/matthew-543-38-181-5-and-hosea-121-23.html

 

Yesterday was May the fourth. You know what May the Fourth has become known as in recent years? Star Wars Day!... “May the Forth be with you” is, of course, a play on a famous phrase from those movies. I think my oldest two daughters and I have seen all the movies that were released in the theatres (at least the ones since they have been born) – so has my mom. We haven’t watched all the spin off series and everything. But yesterday as it was May the Fourth and Susan had gone to see Rebecca, Heather and I watch a Star Wars film or two. And today I will share with you some lessons that we can learn from the Star Wars franchise.

 

I did really like the original movies from the 70s and 80s and a couple of the others. One of the other much later ones that the older girls and I saw in the theatres was SOLO. It was the back story of one of the main characters of Star Wars, Han Solo.

 

SOLO, was a good movie. It can be seen as a stand-alone action-adventure show. You don’t need to be a Star Wars fan to enjoy the movie. There was one scene in the film that stuck in my mind. Han, the main character, was emigrating from his home planet and a customs official asked him for his name and he said, ‘Han’; then the official asked Han who his people were so he that could assign him a last name. Han replied that he didn't have any people; so, after the customs official thought for a while, the surname 'Solo' was awarded to him. Thus, we have the name ‘Han Solo’. And that brings us to the first of three lessons from Star Wars that we are going to look at today.

 

LESSON 1: WHO ARE MY PEOPLE?

 

Hosea 1: 21-23:

“In that day I will respond,”

declares the Lord—

“I will respond to the skies,

and they will respond to the earth;

22 and the earth will respond to the grain,

the new wine and the olive oil,

and they will respond to Jezreel.

23 I will plant her for myself in the land;

I will show my love to the one I called ‘Not my loved one.’

I will say to those called ‘Not my people,’ ‘You are my people’;

and they will say, ‘You are my God.’”

 

Who are your people? When I was studying restorative justice at Simon Fraser University a few years ago now, my instructor asked us the same question for one of our papers. I pondered this for a while and wrote a long essay claiming many people as my people: my family, the people I grew up with, those in The Salvation Army, those in the community in which I lived at the time and all the communities in which I had lived previously, people in the courts and people in the prisons where I was ministering at the time and previously; my colleagues, associates, friends, clients, neighbours; anyone I could think of I claimed as my people. And now, of course, if I were asked that same question, ‘who are my people?’ It would be many people in town here who are part of the groups I am a part of, the people we work with on the streets, our friends at the Bread of Life; the first thing to come to my mind, however, when asked ‘who are my people?’ would, of course, be all of you. You are my people. You are my friends.

 

I am your people. Furthermore, as we submit to the Lord, we are all His people. We are part of the family of God. Even if at one point in our lives we were not part of God's family, He wants us to be part of His people and when we accept Him as Father we join his family. When we accept Him as Lord we become one of His people. When this is the case, we are no longer solo but we always have the Lord to turn to and to lean on in times of crisis; therefore, if you haven't already, I invite you to accept the LORD's invitation to be one of His people today.

 

When we do become his people, He will transform us from darkness to light, from secrets to honestly and from hatred to love.

 

LESSON 2: LOVELY LIGHT SABERS

 

Matthew 5:43-48:

“You have heard that it was said, ‘Love your neighbour and hate your enemy.’ 44 But I tell you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, 45 that you may be children of your Father in heaven. He causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. 46 If you love those who love you, what reward will you get? Are not even the tax collectors doing that? 47 And if you greet only your own people, what are you doing more than others? Do not even pagans do that? 48 Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect.

 

These days we see a lot of hatred in the news and in social media. People hate this person. People hate that person. People hate this person for hating that person and people hate those people because they all hate these people. So much hatred!

 

There is a pivotal moment in the original movie franchise, where the main bad guy, the antagonist, Darth Vader is trying to turn our hero, Luke from good to bad, from truth to secrecy, from the Light to the Darkness; He wants to convert him from good to bad; how does he try to do this? He tries to do this by enticing him to hate. He tells Luke that only his hatred can destroy his enemy: this is a lie of Darth Vader and this is also a lie of our enemy, the Enemy, the devil. In the real world, hate cannot defeat evil; hate can only become evil. Hate is what turns a good person, bad; it is love, Jesus’ love, which redeems us. As soon as we give into the temptation to hate someone, we have given into the Enemy: we have become his prey.

 

Martin Luther King Jr said, “Hatred paralyzes life; love releases it. Hatred confuses life; love harmonizes it. Hatred darkens life; love illuminates it.” “Let no man pull you so low as to hate him.” “I have decided to stick to love...Hate is too great a burden to bear.”

 

‘Do you know what the stupidest expression in the world is?’ - a firefighter once asked me - ‘fight fire with fire;’ ‘you don’t fight fire with fire; that just causes a bigger fire!’ It is the same with hate. Hate cannot drive out hate. Only love can do that. If I get drawn into hating someone because they hate something or someone than I have just caused love to shrink and hate to grow. If on the other hand we love our enemies and pray for those who persecute us, then even we may be called children of our Father in heaven. If we love more than just those who love us then indeed we may even be perfect as our heavenly Father is perfect. Therefore let us resolve to love one another and let us wish each other well - even those who may wish us ill.

 

LESSON 3: NEW REVISED EDITION

 

Matthew 18:1-5:

At that time the disciples came to Jesus and asked, “Who, then, is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?”

2 He called a little child to him, and placed the child among them. 3 And he said: “Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. 4 Therefore, whoever takes the lowly position of this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven. 5 And whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me.

 

Our life can't be edited. It can be changed. I remember watching the original Star Wars in the theatre in 1977. In 1981 one of my friends had this neat new machine: a VCR. It was really quite something. We could actually pause shows and even rewind parts of them and watch them over and over again. I saw Star Wars and The Empire Strikes back more than once or twice.

 

Many years later, early on in this century, a friend lent me DVDs of the trilogy. I couldn't believe it. The movies had actually changed! They weren’t the same movies that I saw in 70s and 80s. I was sort of in shock: Why was Jabba the Hutt in Star Wars? Who was this new Darth Vader at the end of Return of the Jedi? I don't remember Storm Troopers on lizards, and I am pretty sure that Han shot first in that very famous bar scene. I asked my friend why the movies were different from when I first saw them; he replied that he hoped that the changes didn't ruin the movies for me.

 

A while later, when I was able to look on-line for movies, I looked for copies of the Star Wars movies as I would have seen them in the 1970s or 1980s. I couldn't find them anywhere. I tired every way I could think of to find them, but I could only find the revised versions of these movies. The originals are forever in my memory and have made an impression on me; the original versions of the movies have left significant impressions on many people. The movies, however, are no longer like that.

 

This is like our life. There are things that some of us may have done that we wish we had never done. Maybe our actions have caused someone physical injury that has not healed. Maybe our actions have caused someone emotional or psychological pain that has not healed. Maybe our actions have changed circumstances in such a way as nothing will ever be the same again. There is now a new normal. The repercussions of past actions may stick with us and others like the memory of an original version of a movie or an old song that we cannot find anymore. We cannot change what has happened or how it has affected us.

 

However, we can be changed so that these things from the past never happen again. God can take all the bad things in our life and make sure that they never replay again. God can change us even more than George Lucas can change his movies. God can forgive our sins, transform our stories, and make us brand new today. He can take out the parts that hurt and hinder us and rewrite our script so that we are a blessing to others. So, to that end today, if there is anything that we want rewritten in our story, if we haven't offered our life up to the Lord for changing yet, I invite us to do so this very day.

 

Let us pray.



Monday, June 4, 2018

Matthew 5:43-38, 18:1-5 and Hosea 1:21-23: Lessons from Star Wars.


Presented to Warehouse 614, 03 June 2018 and Alberni Valley Ministries, 05 May 2024, by Captain (Major) Michael Ramsay

This is the 2018 Toronto version. To view the 2024 BC version click here:
 
Last Sunday after church my daughters and I went to see SOLO. Has everyone who wants to see that movie seen it yet? If you haven’t I may need to remember to give you a couple of spoiler alerts in the sermon here.

My two eldest girls and I have seen most of the newest ones in the theatres. ROUGE 1 was definitely the best of the newest ones but all of them are surprisingly good. I say surprising because I remember watching the prequels. Before I was an Officer, one of the businesses that I ran was publishing the Journal of International Education. One of our sponsors was the IMAX; so we often were able to watch shows fro free on these great big screens. I remember watching the first prequel on the big screen and walking away wondering what just happened. Some things seemed not quite right. I was working in the field of international education at the time and I was even left wondering: was this racist? There have certainly been those who have suggested that Japanese and Jamaicans cultural stereotypes were exploited for the film.

Even given the fact that the original 3 films are classics and all of the latest films have been very good, I still head out to any new Star Wars movie with a little bit of hesitation.

SOLO, however, was a good movie. It can even be seen as a stand alone movie for people who like action-adventure movies, of course. There was one scene in the new movie that stuck in my mind. Han was emigrating from his home planet and a customs official asked him his name and he said, ‘Han’ and then he asked Han who his people were so he could assign him a last name. Hans replied that he didn't have any people; so, after the customs official though for a while, the surname 'Solo' was awarded to him. Thus we have Han Solo.

LESSON 1: WHO ARE MY PEOPLE?

Hosea 1: 21-23
“In that day I will respond,”
declares the Lord—
“I will respond to the skies,
and they will respond to the earth;
22 and the earth will respond to the grain,
the new wine and the olive oil,
and they will respond to Jezreel.
23 I will plant her for myself in the land;
I will show my love to the one I called ‘Not my loved one.’
I will say to those called ‘Not my people,’ ‘You are my people’;
and they will say, ‘You are my God.’”

Who are your people? When I was studying restorative justice at Simon Fraser University, my instructor asked us the same question for one of our papers. I pondered this for a while and wrote a long essay claiming many people as my people: my family, the people I grew up with, those in The Salvation Army, those in the community in which I lived at the time and all the communities in which I had lived previously, people in the courts and the prisons where I have and was ministering at the time, my colleagues, associates, friends, clients, neighbours; anyone I could think of I claimed as my people. And now of course, if I were asked that question today, ‘who are my people?’ the first thing to come to my mind would be all of you. You are my people. You are my friends.

I am your people. Furthermore, as we submit to the Lord, we are all His people. We are part of the family of God. Even if at one point in our lives we were not part of God's family, He wants us to be part of His people and when we accept Him as Father we join his family. When we accept Him as Lord we become one of His people. When this is the case, we are no longer solo but we always have the Lord to turn to and to lean on in times of crisis, Therefore, if you haven't already, I invite you to accept the LORD's invitation to be one of His people today.

When we do become his people, He will transform us from darkness to light, from secrets to honestly and from hatred to love.

LESSON 2: LOVELY LIGHT SABERS

Matthew 5:43-48:
“You have heard that it was said, ‘Love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ 44 But I tell you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, 45 that you may be children of your Father in heaven. He causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. 46 If you love those who love you, what reward will you get? Are not even the tax collectors doing that? 47 And if you greet only your own people, what are you doing more than others? Do not even pagans do that? 48 Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect.

These days we see a lot of hatred in the news and in social media. People hate this person. People hate that person. People hate this person for hating that person and people hate those people because they all hate these people.

Harbour Light has been showing a number of the original Star Wars films this past moth. The Lieutenants there are big Star Wars fans. Rebecca, Sarah-Grace, Heather and I joined them to watch Star Wars. Heather even dressed up as Darth Vader and the day we joined them fo see a movie was on the ultimate Star Wars day. Do you know when Star Wars Day is every year? May the fourth – May the Fourth be with you.

There is a pivotal moment in the original movie franchise, where Darth Vader is trying to turn Luke from good to bad, from truth to secrecy, from the Light to the Darkness; how does he try to do this? He tries to do this by making him hate. He tells Luke that only his hatred can destroy his enemy: this is a lie of Darth Vader and this is also a lie of our enemy, the Enemy, the devil. In the real world, hate cannot defeat evil; hate can only become evil. Hate is what turns a good person, bad; it is love, Jesus’ love, which redeems us.

Martin Luther King Jr said, “Hatred paralyzes life; love releases it. Hatred confuses life; love harmonizes it. Hatred darkens life; love illuminates it.” “Let no man pull you so low as to hate him.” “I have decided to stick to love...Hate is too great a burden to bear.”

‘Do you know what the stupidest expression in the world is?’ - a firefighter once asked me - ‘fight fire with fire;’ ‘you don’t fight fire with fire; that just causes a bigger fire!’ It is the same with hate. Hate cannot drive out hate. Only love can do that. If I get drawn into hating someone because they hate something or someone than I have just caused love to shrink and hate to grow. If on the other hand we love our enemies and pray for those who persecute us, then even we may be called children of our Father in heaven. If we love more than just those who love us than indeed we may even be perfect as our heavenly Father is perfect. Therefore let us resolve to love one another and let us wish each other well - even those who may wish us ill.

What does it look like to love our enemies?

LESSON 3: NEW REVISED EDITION

Matthew 18:1-5:
At that time the disciples came to Jesus and asked, “Who, then, is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?”
2 He called a little child to him, and placed the child among them. 3 And he said: “Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. 4 Therefore, whoever takes the lowly position of this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven. 5 And whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me.

Our life can't be edited. It can be changed. I remember watching the original Star Wars in the theatre in 1977. In 1981 one of my friends had this neat new machine: a VCR. It was really quite something. We could actually pause shows and even rewind parts of them and watch them over and over again. I saw Star Wars and The Empire Strikes back more than once or twice.

Many years later, early this century, a friend lent me DVDs of the trilogy. I couldn't believe it. The movies had actually changed! They weren’t the same movies that I saw in 70s and 80s. I was sort of in shock: Why was Jabba the Hutt in Star Wars? Who was this new Darth Vader at the end of Return of the Jedi? I don't remember Storm Troopers on lizards and I am pretty sure that Hans shot first in that very famous bar scene. I asked my friend why the movies were different from when I first saw them; he replied that he hoped that the changes didn't ruin the movies for me.

A while later, when I was able to look on-line for movies, I looked for copies of the Star Wars movies as I would have seen them in the 1970s or 1980s. I couldn't find them anywhere. I tired every way I could think of to find them but I could only find the revised versions of these movies. The originals are forever in my memory and have made an impression on me; the original versions of the movies have left significant impressions on many people. The movies, however, are no longer like that.

This is like our life. There are things that some of us may have done that we wish that we had never done. Maybe our actions have caused someone physical injury that has not healed. Maybe our actions have caused someone emotional or psychological pain that has not healed. Maybe our actions have changed circumstances in such a way as nothing will ever be the same again. There is now a new normal. The repercussions of past actions may stick with us and others like the memory of an original version of a movie or an old song that we cannot find anymore. We cannot change what has happened or how it has affected us.

However, we can be changed so that these things from the past never happen again. God can take all the bad things in our life and make sure that they never replay again. God can change us even more than George Lucas can change his movies. God can forgive our sins, transform our stories, and make us brand new today. He can take out the parts that hurt and hinder us and rewrite our script so that we are a blessing to others. So, to that end today, If there is anything that we want rewritten in our story, if we haven't offered our life up to the Lord for changing yet, I invite us to do so this very day.

Let us pray.


daily blogs at


Sunday, March 30, 2008

Mark 4:35-41: We Stand in Awe of You

Presented to Tisdale Corps on March 30, 2008
and Nipawin Corps on April 6, 2008
Alberni Valley Ministries, 19 May 2024
By Captain (Major) Michael Ramsay

When we were in College back in Winnipeg, on Friday nights I used to help out with the street outreach at the Weetamah corps. We would walk around the streets at night to see who we could offer a warm meal, a hot chocolate or a place to stay down at the shelter (the Booth Centre) for the night. We then tell them about Jesus.

Now these nights usually go quite late -until 1 or 2 in the morning sometimes – and so at the end of a long week at the college, I am just exhausted and really quite look forward to my one day of sleeping in – Saturday morning.

Well this one Saturday about 6am or so – four or less hours after I crawl into bed – Rebecca (who was then only 4) and Sarah-Grace (who was 3 at the time) come bounding into our bedroom.

“Daddy, what’s a trout?” Rebecca, as a four year-old, asks me as she and her sister climb on my bed. “What’s a trout?”

(aside: You know what it is like when you try to respond to someone but you really don’t want to wake up – that is what it is like)

“What’s a trout?”
“A fish, why do you ask”
“A fish?”
“Yes a fish”
“Oh”
“Like Nemo…”
“Short of, I think Nemo is a Clown fish”
“Oh.”
“Daddy,” asks Sarah-Grace, who has been standing there the whole time, “what’s a trout?”
“A fish”
“Like Nemo”
“No”
“Daddy”
“Yes, Sarah-Grace”
“What’s a trout?”
“A chipmunk. A Chipmunk!” I snap back with all the composure of one who has not had enough sleep.

The girls run out of the room laughing, none the worse for wear. I put my pillow over my head and just try to get back to sleep wondering just what that was all about and why I was woken up for a question that no one seemed to want the answer to anyway.

At this point, in comes Susan. Slowly and today with the calm demeanour of the caring mother and wife. I know I have spoken a little harshly to my daughters, so I listen intently as she lifts the pillow from my head and gently asks me, “Michael, What’s a trout?”

Looking back at the story of Jesus calming the storm recorded in Mark 4:35-41, I imagine that it must have been about the same feeling for Jesus as he was awakened from his sleep. The disciples are waking up Jesus with a simple request for him but they (unlike my daughters) are panicked. The storm had come up. They wake Jesus and ask –verse 38 – “Teacher, don't you care if we drown?”

How could they ask that? Really. Not only because they should know he does care but also because this is later in the same day as he has healed a man with leprosy (Matthew 8:1-3), taught about the Kingdom of Heaven and even told and explained many parables directly to his disciples.[1] He has just finished also, as Matthew 8 tells us, healing the Centurion’s servant, healing Peter’s mother-in-law and healing many others.

Here’s the thing. The disciples believe he can save them – or they would not have asked –verse 38 - "Teacher, don't you care if we drown?" What they don’t know, however, is how or even if he wants to – as verse 41 makes clear in their astonishment in the fact that even the waves obey Him. The disciples don’t know how or even believe that Jesus will save them. They are panicked. Jesus notes, Verse 40, that the disciples don’t have faith[2]. They don’t have faith.

Today, do we have faith? Real faith? Not just a belief that Jesus can do things but a faith that Jesus will do what is best for us viz. a viz. His Kingdom. In our world today, we are faced with many storms as indeed other boats on that same see with the disciples that day faced that same storm: People nowadays face debt, families face deep personal divides and struggles, divorce, adultery, custody fights; we face all kinds of things.[3] Sometimes we face new experiences that aren’t unexpected. Sometimes we are totally surprised. We know that God can save us. Sometimes, isn’t it true though that we don’t have faith that He will save us? Sometimes we do seem to treat God as if he can’t; Jesus, as if he is sleeping and in need of a good waking up before he even bother to help us, if he can.

Sometimes do we feel like he doesn’t know that the storm we are in is really serious? Sometimes does it seem that He won’t care if we drown in our struggles? Sometimes, in our personal struggles, do we try to wake him with – like it says in verse 38, “don't you care if we drown?” Sometimes, do we in a panic, barge in on the Lord. -“God please do something quick. I’m going to be fired or my marriage is falling apart or my family hates me or I don’t have any money to pay the bills: Do something…if you care…if you can!

There was a time in my life when I was certainly tempted to try to wake the Lord in this way. I owned many businesses before I became an Officer in The Salvation Army. It was a lot of work and a lot of fun but in the early days, there were times that I really did not know if we would make it. Money was tight. Sometimes I didn’t know if we would be able to keep my promises to my staff and my customers. Sometimes I would send my salespeople out as more like bill collectors and if they didn’t come back with the funds we needed I would not speak kindly to them and then tell them to go home for the day. And then when I am alone, my fervent attempts to wake up God could begin… ‘Help, I’m drowning,” I would cry. Save me…if you care…if you can!

Now I should make it clear that neither I nor the text here is saying that we shouldn’t go to the Lord when we are in this trouble. It is saying that we should go to the Lord but that we should go to the Lord in faith believing that He actually can and will save us. Mark spends a lot of time talking about the interaction between God’s miracles and our faith. When we approach the Lord we must do so in faith. We must believe in and trust the Lord. In our requests and storms we must, like James 1:6-7 says, believe and not doubt, because he who doubts is like a wave of the sea, blown and tossed by the wind. That [person] should not think he will receive anything from the Lord. We must go to the Lord with faith.[4]

Jesus did save the disciples from the storm, it says (Aside voice:) This is significant, as Williamson notes: "in the original text, Jesus speaks only two words at this point..."Be quiet! Be still. The simplicity and brevity of his command express the assurance of one who is in control."[5] Just as Jesus has always saved me from my crises (aside voice:) though not always the way that I think He will, He will always come through and always continue to save us.

A prime example of this sort of thing is the story of another person caught in a boat in a storm in the Bible – Jonah[6]. You remember the story of Jonah. Jonah has faith. Jonah knows what God wants him to do and Jonah knows that God will do what He says. The only problem is that Jonah doesn’t want Him to. You see, God told Jonah to preach to the people in Nivevah so that they will not be destroyed BUT Jonah wants them to be destroyed. Jonah doesn’t like the Ninivites: they are the paramount superpower of his day and they will eventually destroy his homeland. But in this, he has faith. When the storm comes up, He knows God will calm the storm. He has so much faith that he EVEN suggests that the crew, in this storm, throw him overboard and they do…and of course Jonah and everyone else survives. Jonah grumbled a lot precisely because he does have faith. He knew God would calm the storm. It is very likely that the author here, Mark, has this in mind when he is retelling the story of how Jesus calms the storm.[7]

The disciples, like Jonah, can and should have this same faith in God because, ultimately, somehow, whether we understand it or not, God’s will will be done. He can save us and He does want what’s best for us in His kingdom.

Here, the disciples do eventually realize that, praise the Lord. They are terrified (!) as verse 41 says. The Greek nuances of this word, ‘terrified’, actually refer to a “reverent awe.”[8] They are in awe of Him. They are in complete terrible awe of Jesus – and this is good.

Notice this: Jesus is right in the storm with the disciples. They are not alone. They know, from what that have seen already that He can save them and now as they see Him do it they are in a full “reverent awe.” They can have faith in Jesus as they face life’s storms. They don’t need to panic. They can be calm because Jesus has calmed the storm and because Jesus can calm any storm.

And Jesus can still calm any storm; so today we can still have faith as we face life’s storms. I know some of us here are going through some particularly serious family problems: Jesus is God. God is in control. And unlike when my kids wake me up with the same question over and over again, (slow down and emphasize:) God can always be patient and forgiving. WAVES MAGAZINE, one particularly stressful business I owned, always went to print. I never lost my house or office or anything except maybe my self-composure over it. My staff, in this business AND my other businesses always got their paycheques and more. The Lord provides even and especially where we cannot. We can have faith. And as with the disciples and just like with Jonah, where God saved him and the Ninivites, it is not always as we anticipate that He will but we can have faith.

We don’t need to panic: He has provided. He is providing. I have faith. I am in reverent awe (M.C.). We don’t need to panic; somehow, someway, our storms too will all be calmed. We can stand in awe and have faith in Jesus.

You know that you can have that peace, that reverent awe as well. When the waves of life’s storms are crashing over our bow, we don’t need to panic. When we approach the Lord, we can stand in awe of Him and have faith that he will save us.

I know that many of us in this room are going through some significant struggles with family and friends, marriage breakdowns and custody struggles. The storms at times seem overwhelming but Jesus can calm the storms. Any who are caught in the midst of the storms right now, I encourage you to come up to the mercy seat and pray in faith.

Amen.

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[1]The parable of the Sower, the lamp under a bushel, and the parable of the growing seed (Mark 4:1-20, 21-25, 26-35) He explained all these in private to the twelve.
[2] (cf. 7:18; 8:17-18, 21, 32-33; 9:19 for other similar rebukes)
[3] CBC News. “1 in 5 Canadians don't plan to retire: StatsCan” n.p. [cited 05 06 06] On-line: http://www.cbc.ca/story/canada/national/2006/03/27/womenretirement060327.html employment opportunities change or diminish as indeed do people’s savings gambled away on the stock exchange
[4] Like is recorded in James 1:6-8: when [one] asks, he must believe and not doubt, because he who doubts is like a wave of the sea, blown and tossed by the wind. That [person] should not think he will receive anything from the Lord; he is a double-minded man, unstable in all he does.”
[5] Lamar Williamson Jr., Mark. (Interpretation: Atlanta: John Knox Press, 1983), 101
[6] Jonah is a prophet in ancient Israel around 740 –750 BC during the time that Assyria is the area’s superpower. God tells Jonah to preach salvation to the people living in their capital city, Nineveh. Jonah does not want to do this. He knows that the Ninevites will repent and be saved. He doesn’t want him to – he doesn’t like the Ninivites, after all they are the paramount superpower of his day and committing all the violent acts that superpowers tend to commit in foreign lands - and shortly after their salvation, in 722, God will actually use them to destroy Israel, the northern kingdom. But Jonah has faith that the Ninevites will be saved - he never doubts - he just doesn’t want any part of it, so he boards a ship and runs away in the opposite direction.
[7] Robert A. Guelich, Mark 1-8:26. (WBC 34A: Dallas Texas: Word Books, 1989), 266
[8] Ibid.