|
|
 |
|
Liturgical day
: Tuesday 18th in Ordinary Time |
Today's Gospel (Mt 14:22-36): After the crowds have eaten their
fill, Jesus obliged his disciples to get into the boat and go ahead
of him to the other side, while He sent the crowd away. And having
sent the people away, He went up the mountain by himself to pray. At
nightfall, He was there alone.
Meanwhile,
the boat was very far from land, dangerously rocked by the waves for
the wind was against it. At daybreak, Jesus came to them walking on
the lake. When they saw him walking on the sea, they were terrified,
thinking that it was a ghost. And they cried out in fear. But at once
Jesus said to them, «Courage! Don't be afraid. It's me!».
Peter answered, «Lord, if it is you, command me to come to you
walking on the water». Jesus said to him, «Come».
And Peter got out of the boat, walking on the water to go to Jesus.
But, in face of the strong wind, he was afraid and began to sink. So
he cried out, «Lord, save me!». Jesus immediately
stretched out his hand and took hold of him, saying, «Man of
little faith, why did you doubt?». As they got into the boat,
the wind dropped. Then those in the boat bowed down before Jesus
saying, «Truly, you are the Son of God!».
They
came ashore at Gennesareth. The local people recognized Jesus and
spread the news throughout the region. So they brought all the sick
to him, begging him to let them touch just the fringe of his cloak.
All who touched it became perfectly well.
|
|
Commentary: Fr. Lluc Torcal OSB cist (Monk of Santa Mª de Poblet,
Catalonia)
«Lord,
if it is you, command me to come to you walking on the water»
Today,
we shall not look at Jesus sleeping on he boat while it sinks, nor
rebuking the winds and the waves with a single word, so his disciples
may be amazed (cf. Mt 8:23-27). But, today's action is no less
disconcerting, whether for his first disciples or for us.
Jesus
had obliged his disciples to get into the boat and go ahead of him to
the other side; and after the crowds have eaten their fill, He had
sent the crowd away. And, then, He went up the mountain by himself to
pray. And He remained there alone. (cf. Mt 14:22-23). Without
his Master, the disciples were having troubles to face the wind. It
was then when Jesus came to them walking on the water.
As plain and simple
people would, the disciples were terrified to see him: men do not
usually walk over water, so they thought they were seeing a ghost.
But they were wrong: it was not an illusion what they were looking
at, but the very Lord, who was inviting them —as He did quite
often— not to be afraid and trust him to awake their faith in
them.
This
faith was first demanded to Peter, who said: «Lord, if it is
you, command me to come to you walking on the water» (Mt
14:28). With this words, Peter showed that faith consists of abiding
by the word of Christ: he did not say «let me walk on the
water» but he just wanted to follow what the very and only Lord
could command him to do, to believe the truthfulness of the Master's
words. His doubts, however, made him reel, but they led the other
disciples to bow down and confess before their Master: «Truly,
you are the Son of God!» (Mt 14:33). «The group of
those that already were apostles, but did not yet fully believe, when
they saw the waters waving below the Lord's feet and appreciated his
steps were firm through the stormy waves (...) they believed Jesus
was the true Son of God, and accepted him as such» (St.
Ambrose).
|
|