Hope in the Storm - Fifth Sunday after Pentecost

Hope in the Storm - Fifth Sunday after Pentecost

Author: Pastor Scott Schul
June 23, 2024

Memories can be funny things.  Some, even those that are quite recent, can be fleeting, like what you had to eat a week ago Thursday.  But others become firmly imprinted on our minds, hearts, and souls, like scenes in a movie, no matter how long ago they happened.  This is especially true with memories of difficult and challenging moments in our lives.  Little details that seem insignificant somehow stick with us.  We even see this in pivotal Bible stories.  Small, seemingly random details in those stories illustrate how that incident, that memory, that experience burned its way permanently into the Church’s collective memory.

For example, at Christ’s crucifixion consider the sensory-rich account of the charcoal fire where Peter denied knowing Jesus.  That’s something Peter would never forget.  Another example is the detailed description of how Jesus’s burial garments were carefully laid out in his empty tomb.

We have an example in today’s Gospel too.  It probably would’ve been enough to just say that there was a storm on the Sea of Galilee, the disciples were scared, and Jesus caused the waves and storms to still.  But Mark added a fascinating detail about how Jesus slept in the stern of the boat on a cushion.  That level of detail reminds us that this wasn’t a fable or a parable.  This really happened to real people and an equally real Jesus.  It was a story they could never forget, and it’s one the people in that boat that day want us to hear and remember as well.

But what was so significant about that storm for the disciples, and why should it matter to us?  I’ll try to answer those questions by sharing a story I can’t forget.  It didn’t involve winds, waves, or rain.  It was a metaphorical storm, but one that carried just as much fear and trauma as anything the disciples experienced that night on the Sea of Galilee.

It was April 2012.  I can remember everything I was doing that day when we got the call that our daughter had collapsed at school and was being rushed to the emergency room.  The school couldn’t offer much detail except that it appeared almost like she’d had a stroke.  By the time we got to the hospital, the diagnosis had become much clearer.  Annika had experienced a traumatic brain injury from blows to the head in gym class the day before that left her seriously concussed.

I remember seeing her in a wheelchair and the glazed look on her face as she struggled to remember who her parents were.  I remember how her voice and personality had reverted to that of a child, as her brain sought comfort in a time before all of its circuits were scrambled.  In the ensuring weeks and months, the storms grew even fiercer as she experienced crippling headaches, sudden bursts of terrifying anxiety, severe memory loss, and an inability to even balance herself.  And every time we thought she might finally be getting better, she’d bump her head on something and the whole cycle would begin anew.

I was as scared as I have ever been in my life.  I will never forget the first Sunday at my old parish when I announced what had happened.  I started crying as I told my congregation about my daughter’s condition.  I felt so helpless, just like I’m sure those disciples felt that night.  It seemed my daughter’s entire future was shattered, and I grieved for her and for us because as those storms raged, it seemed as if all hope was lost.

Have you experienced a storm like that, a time when you felt utterly and completely hopeless?  It’s a terrible place to be, but I’m certain everyone hearing this sermon has a story like this.  What do you do when it seems like all hope is lost?  I’ll tell you what I did.  I can’t say I’m very proud of it, but I take a little comfort from the fact that my reaction was similar to what the disciples did in that boat.  I got angry.  I was so angry with Jesus.  Where was he?  Why wasn’t he doing something about this?

My anger reached its boiling point while I was on one of our Grace medical mission trips in Nicaragua.  Again, the details remain crystal clear.  All the Grace men on that trip were in one big bunk room.  It was a sultry Central American evening and everyone was asleep and snoring after a long workday.  Except for me.  I was having it out with Jesus yet again, because my daughter had suffered another relapse, and being thousands of miles away, I felt even more helpless than usual.  In my head I screamed and raged.  I bargained.  I negotiated.  And then I raged some more.  “Where are you?  How can you just stand by while this girl’s future goes up in flames?  Don’t you care what’s happening to her and to us?”

When my anger finally wore me out and I was still, I finally got a response.  I still remember the words.  “OK.  I’ve heard you.  Now stand down.  I’ve got this.”  Somehow, in that moment, I felt, for the first time in a very long time, a sense of hope.  Jesus, there on his cushion, had woken up and assured me that he had never forgotten us or abandoned us.  He was reminding me that he saw farther beyond the horizon than I ever could, and that in his eyes, there was a future.  There was hope.  It brought a peace to me that I hadn’t felt in a long time.  It was like a surge of new life. 

To be clear, Jesus didn’t promise that my daughter would get better, but he did assure me that we’d get through this… just like those disciples did.  But why?  Had we done something to earn this assurance?  Was there a certain prayer or ritual of ours that forced Jesus into this?  No.  I didn’t do anything meritorious.  Neither did the disciples that day.  They, just like me, were scared and hopeless.  Jesus didn’t respond because he had to, but because he wanted to.  And he wanted to simply because of love.

But you see, here’s the problem with Jesus.  As our Gospel says, when you take him into your boat, you take him “just as he is.”  That means Jesus has his own way of doing things and his own timing.  It can be terrifying.  Infuriating.  Perplexing.  But experience has taught me that in the long run, Jesus’s way is always better than anything I could ever conceive.

Friends, innumerable cable news stations and internet sites compete to tell you about all the world’s problems.  And indeed, we live in stormy times.  You don’t need me to tell you that.  But what you may not fully appreciate is that the Church is the one place that’s going to tell you that no matter how bad the storm is, there is hope... because Jesus is with us in the boat, no matter how asleep or disengaged you may think he is.  And it is that hope in Christ that keeps us alive and striving and fighting for a better world and a better future.  Look, life isn’t easy.  Some days are really, really hard.  But as Martin Luther King, Jr. once said, “We must accept finite disappointment, but never lose infinite hope.”

My daughter got better and went on to do things we never thought possible.  That’s why I hold onto this story.  Likewise, years after that storm, the disciples kept telling their story of the time Jesus delivered them and gave them hope in a moment when all hope seemed lost.  That story enabled them to endure countless future perils that threatened to extinguish hope.  And then they wrote it all down, even the little detail about the cushion, because they knew that we would need that story too as we carry on their work in our own perilous and sometimes hopeless times.

So friends, in all your storms, hold tightly to this story.  Do you see him?  Jesus is in the boat.  He loves you and he won’t abandon you.  Cling to him.  Because as long as there’s Jesus, there is always hope.  Amen.

Gospel Text: Mark 4:35-41

35When evening had come, [Jesus said to the disciples,] “Let us go across to the other side.” 36And leaving the crowd behind, they took him with them in the boat, just as he was. Other boats were with him. 37A great windstorm arose, and the waves beat into the boat, so that the boat was already being swamped. 38But he was in the stern, asleep on the cushion; and they woke him up and said to him, “Teacher, do you not care that we are perishing?” 39He woke up and rebuked the wind, and said to the sea, “Peace! Be still!” Then the wind ceased, and there was a dead calm. 40He said to them, “Why are you afraid? Have you still no faith?” 41And they were filled with great awe and said to one another, “Who then is this, that even the wind and the sea obey him?”

Copyright Rev. Scott E. Schul, 2024 All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in whole or in part without written permission. 


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