19 January 2020
Text: John 2:1-11
In the name of +
Jesus. Amen.
Sometimes
people make light of our Lord’s miracle in Cana, turning water into wine at a
wedding feast. Sometimes people laugh
because it involves alcohol. Sometimes
people speculate that Jesus was making a show of His power, or making sure
people knew that He was God.
But
Jesus is not a comedian (though He is witty), nor is he a magician (He is the Creator). He is God in the flesh who has not come to
condemn man for His sinfulness, but rather to save him, by forgiveness, by
mercy.
Jesus
is not motivated by power or the desire to be accepted. He is motivated by His love for His creatures:
love that manifests itself as mercy. For
He knows how far the world has gone from His original plan. He knows how wretched our condition is, thanks
to sin. And instead of being repulsed by
us, instead of turning away from us, instead of writing us off and starting
over – He has mercy, and He comes to fix that which is broken.
And
no act of mercy is too great or too small for Him. For even as His Father intimately knows every
sparrow on the planet, He the Son, likewise knows us. And in knowing us, He willingly took flesh in
our broken world to save us from our sorrows, great and small.
Jesus
is in Cana for a wedding. He Himself
created the institution of marriage, in which one man and one woman become one
flesh, committed to one another for life. And in this holy state of matrimony, each is
better off than when he and she were alone. Men and women who are called to married life
are better off together than alone. Not
everyone is called to married life, but to those who are, Holy Matrimony is the
most natural, blessed state of all. And
if God wills it, such unions are blessed by children. This is how God, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit
chose to bring new people into the world.
What
a delight for Jesus to witness a man and a woman carrying out the divine plan
to which they were called. And as is
universal around the world, there is a celebration. There is a feast. There is food and drink and toasts and music.
There are beloved friends and family
members to bless the couple. Money has
been saved to make this day special.
But,
of course, we live in a fallen world. Things
do not always go as planned. And the
couple’s wonderful day is about to be ruined. For whatever reason, there is not enough wine
for the guests. This was not a problem
that could be solved with a quick drive to a big box store and a swipe of the
credit card. This was going to be a
major disappointment for all in attendance.
In
the grand scheme of things, this may not seem like a big deal. Nobody is dying. The house didn’t catch on fire. Marauders did not show up plundering and
putting people to the sword. Nevertheless,
this holy day to celebrate a holy estate was on the verge of being turned into
a negative, desecrated, if you will, by the lack of something needed for the
celebration. And only God knows the
words that might have been spoken, the hurt feelings that may have occurred, the
broken relationships that might have taken place. We do not know the road not taken.
And
so Jesus saves the day by exercising His mighty power. He is not looking for affirmation, but for the
provision of mercy to a newly-married couple and their families. It is fitting that He uses stone jars used in “Jewish
rites of purification,” as He is going to do something that not even the
ceremonial Law was capable of doing. Jesus
is going to do the seemingly impossible – that is, impossible for anyone except
the living God.
Our
blessed Lord has the servants “fill the jars with water.” And then He commands water to be drawn out. “Take it to the master of the feast,” He says.
“So
they took it.” The servants obey the Word
of Jesus, even as do the very molecules of water. The water had become wine. The master of the feast “did not know where
it came from.” But the servants
did. Often Jesus reveals Himself to the
most lowly.
Because
of this action, the bridegroom is praised instead of humiliated. “Everyone serves the good wine first,” says
the master of the feast, “and when people have drunk freely, then the poor
wine. But you have kept the good wine
until now.”
The
groom is a hero. The bride’s reputation
has been saved. The families of the
couple continue to rejoice. The master
of the feast is astonished. And the
lowly servants have been introduced to Jesus – the one who showed mercy to the
newlyweds. And while this was a small
miracle in the grand scheme of things, for the couple, this was no small deed. Perhaps it saved them from events that could
eventually have ruined their marriage. Their
holy day remained joyful, and not a day of pointed fingers, blame, and harsh
words.
And
the disciples of Jesus also saw something for the first time: that Jesus
manifested His glory – not in glorifying Himself, but in covering the shame of
an ordinary and obscure man and a likewise ordinary and obscure woman. His glory is in His mercy, in His love, and in
this love being shown not to the mighty and powerful, but to those of ordinary
estate.
Jesus
blessed a marriage. Jesus took away
their reproach. Jesus commanded not only
servants, but water itself, to do the will of His Father. And what’s more, with this first great miracle
as recorded by John the Evangelist, in this “first of His signs,” we see that
the “disciples believed in Him.”
They
do not believe in Him only for the sake of the miracle, of the power, of the
remarkable action that only God could do, they believe in Him because His power
is wielded in love and mercy. Jesus has
not come to condemn, but to save.
And
on this day, our Lord Jesus Christ saved a wedding feast from disaster.
Of
course, He would do many more signs over the next three years, healing many
sick, including the blind and the deaf, the leprous, and the demon-possessed. Each miracle that He does is an act of mercy,
of making someone whole. He will even
raise the dead: which is His mission – to restore life to the dead, we who are
dead in our sins and brought back to the dust from which we were created. Jesus would die for the sins of the world, and
then rise to life to render death itself impotent against His mighty power of
forgiveness and mercy. And He, the Bridegroom
of the Church, will allow Himself to be humiliated in order to save His
beloved, His Bride. And He will invite
her to the eternal wedding feast, where indeed, the good wine will be served
last, for all of eternity.
Jesus
is not a comedian, but we laugh with joy and delight. Jesus is not a magician, but He does truly
change the world by means of His Word. There
is no trickery here, only honest mercy by God in the flesh. And when he says: “I forgive you all your
sins,” and when He says, “This is My body,” and “This cup is the New Testament
in My blood,” we too see Him manifest His glory: His glory that is His love and
mercy and salvation, even commanding bread and wine to bend to His will for our
sake and for our salvation.
For
indeed, our Lord has kept the good wine until now. Amen.
In the name of the Father
and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
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