I am a sucker for feature articles about when Somebodies were Nobodies; in other words, about celebrities before they were discovered. They’re indicators in life of the twin elements of chance and destiny. I guess I am a fan of serendipity.
At any rate, I was reading recently about one Stefani Germanotta. She was plumb as a child and with big buck teeth. This made unpopular at the parochial school she attended and made her too the target of bullies. No one would have bet on
her
chances of becoming a celebrity. She now goes by the name of Lady GaGa.
In this morning’s gospel lesson, Jesus was somewhere between a Nobody and a Somebody. He was but three days into his ministry. Before that the whole of his life was lived in obscurity doing respectable but relatively menial work as a carpenter. It was John the Baptist who discovered him. As Jesus approached him, John declared,
Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.
Jesus there and then left his old life behind and embarked upon his public ministry. He began straightaway to assemble his disciples, calling Peter, Andrew, Nathanael, and Philip. Then came his first miracle at the wedding at Cana. Recall that this was three days into his ministry.
Jesus attended the wedding at Cana with his mother, but his newly called disciples tagged along. The wedding was smooth sailing, until the wine ran out. Now we can well imagine the crisis this would have occasioned, because it would have occasioned a crisis in our own day.
Your daughter has been planning her big day for over a year. And it has been a lot to plan: the ceremony venue, the reception venue, the guest list, the dresses for bride and bridesmaids, the menu, the registry, the photographer, the flowers, the invitations, the rings, etc., etc., etc. You were placed in charge of one thing: the wine. Her big day finally arrives. Midway through the reception, the last bottle of wine is uncorked.
Sorry sweetheart I underestimated,
wouldn’t quite cut it. The night still young, the guests sober as judges. You’ve wrecked your daughter’s big day. It’s the kind of thing you’d never live down. I’d call that a crisis.
But Jesus, three days ago a nobody, now commanded the scene. Jesus requested that the servants fill the six stone water jars which were at hand for various cleanliness rites. Each held thirty gallons so we can do the math - that’s 180 gallons. That’s a lot of water. Then in the twinkling of an eye it was 180 gallons of wine, and wine so fine that the steward was flummoxed. Why was wine of such quality held back?
So Jesus was somewhere between a nobody and a somebody -- a month ago, a total nobody: the guy next door, the guy in front of you at the grocery store line, the guy who fixes your furnace… a month from now, a total somebody: the greatest celebrity of his day.
But in Jesus’s case there’s a wrinkle. Because his case involved performing miracles. One day he couldn’t or he wouldn’t perform them, and the next day he could and would. That seems odd. It seems implausible. Are we actually supposed to believe that pretty much out the blue Jesus started performing miracles?
It’s not that we’re skeptics by nature. We believe in lots of things, things that are marvelous, things that are mind boggling, things that are stupendous. We believe in technology. We believe in science. We believe in modern medicine. We believe in space travel. It’s just that they are a lot more empirical.
But yes, we’re actually supposed to believe it. We are actually
not
supposed to put the gospels to the test. We are actually supposed to believe that pretty much out of the blue Jesus started performing miracles.
Put slightly differently, we are actually supposed to believe
that through Jesus Christ divine mysteries began to be revealed.
In fact, John’s entire esoteric, abstract, downright confusing gospel (And I challenge anyone to read his prologue with any understanding) can be summed up in that one sentence.
We are actually supposed to
believe that through Jesus Christ divine mysteries began to be revealed.
Let John’s gospel speak for itself:
But to all...who
believed in his name, he gave the power to become children of God,
For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever
believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.
Believe me that I am in the Father and the Father is in me.
The first of his signs, Jesus did at Cana in Galilee, and manifested his glory...and his disciples
believed in him.
I would provide more examples, but in the twenty chapters of John’s gospel, there are over fifty of them. We’d be at it all day.
Yes, we are actually supposed to believe that through Jesus Christ divine mysteries began to be revealed.
And it really shouldn’t be that
hard
to believe. Don’t we all believe the supernatural transcends the natural? Don’t we all believe in the dignity and freedom of each and every human life? Don’t we all believe in the cause of justice? Don’t we all believe self-sacrifice to be the means to redemption? Don’t we all believe in the priority of peace over violence? Don’t we all believe that mercy and forgiveness lead to reconciliation? Don’t we all believe in the primacy of love? These are precisely the divine mysteries revealed through Jesus Christ.
Holiday season is again upon us. Even in the days of Covid, the games have begun. Thanksgiving and Black Friday are behind us -- But these were just the warm up. The main event lies before us - Christmas -- the ordering and wrapping of gifts, the baking of cookies and candies, the decorating of homes inside and out, Christmas movies, Christmas trees, Christmas music... Did you ever wonder what we’re playing at?
We may have lost sight of it in all the rush and clamor, but at the base of it, at the very base, we are playing at believing in the divine mysteries revealed through Jesus Christ. So if we want to mark Christmas with any integrity whatsoever, we would
do well to believe it. And if we do, we will see miracles this season and always. Amen.
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