“Where in the world is God?” He is helping you.
John 2:1–11 Three days later, there was a wedding
in Cana of Galilee. Jesus’ mother was there. 2Jesus and his
disciples were also invited to the wedding.
3When the wine was gone, Jesus’ mother said
to him, “They have no wine.”
4Jesus said to her, “Woman, what does that
have to do with you and me? My time has not come yet.”
5His mother said to the servants, “Do
whatever he tells you.”
6Six stone water jars, which the Jews used
for ceremonial cleansing, were standing there, each holding twenty or thirty
gallons. 7Jesus told them, “Fill the jars with water.” So they
filled them to the brim. 8Then he said to them, “Now draw some out
and take it to the master of the banquet.” And they did.
9When the master of the banquet tasted the
water that had now become wine, he did not know where it came from (though the
servants who had drawn the water knew). The master of the banquet called the
bridegroom 10and said to him, “Everyone serves the good wine first,
and when the guests have had plenty to drink, then the cheaper wine. You saved
the good wine until now!”
11This,
the beginning of his miraculous signs, Jesus performed in Cana of Galilee. He
revealed his glory, and his disciples believed in him.
The parents have tried for so long to have a child.
Finally, they are excited to announce to their friends and family that God has
blessed them with that child. Then months later comes the heart-wrenching news
that the new mother suffered a miscarriage.
The father of four learns he has cancer. He seeks
treatment and the Lord blesses the treatment, so the doctor’s report is that
the father is now cancer-free. Then half a year later, the cancer comes back
with a vengeance. This time, there is no cure.
The couple is getting ready to celebrate their fifth
wedding anniversary. It was a long, hard struggle to get to this milestone.
Then the wife tells the husband that she met someone at work. He pays more
attention to her. She wants a divorce.
We have a God who changes water into blood. “In the
sight of Pharaoh and his officials, Aaron lifted up the staff and struck the
water that was in the Nile. All the water in the Nile was turned to blood. The
fish that were in the river died, and the river smelled so bad that the
Egyptians were not able to drink water from the Nile. There was blood in the
entire land of Egypt” (Exodus 7:20-21). God takes the beautiful, life-giving waters
of the Nile River and turns them ugly, cesspools of death.
God is there when the son we shipped off to fight in a
war overseas comes home missing an arm or a leg or the desire to live. God is
there in the hospital room when the doctor breaks the news that the disease is
terminal. God is there in the courtroom when the divorce papers are signed
breaking what he had joined together. He is there converting pleasure to pain,
hope to heartache, life to loss.
We have a God who changes water into blood.
We also have a God
who changes water into wine. At the wedding in Cana: “six stone water jars,
which the Jews used for ceremonial cleansing, were standing there, each holding
twenty or thirty gallons. Jesus told them, ‘Fill the jars with water.’ So they
filled them to the brim. Then he said to them, “Now draw some out and take it
to the master of the banquet.’ And they did. … The water had now become wine”
(John 2:6-9) God takes an impending disaster and turns the wedding into an even
greater cause for celebration.
God is there in
the courtroom blessing the childless couple with their adopted son. God is
there when the runaway daughter returns home to her parents. God is there when
the child whom the doctors said would never live more than a few weeks celebrates
another birthday. He is there converting the ordinary to the extraordinary, the
mundane to marvelous, the inconsequential to incredible.
We have a God who
changes water into wine.
As far as miracles go, changing
water into wine at a wedding party doesn’t seem to be all that important. Yet
there is comfort for us in how Jesus chose to reveal his extraordinary power
for the first time in a very ordinary situation. There comes a time for each of
us when the wine runs out. Yet we have a Savior who cares enough to help us in
both the ordinary and extraordinary issues of life.
Jesus
is attending the wedding of a regular couple. It doesn’t seem that they were
noteworthy enough for St. John to even record their names. The wedding takes
place in Cana in Galilee. Not in Jerusalem. Not in the temple. Not in Rome. In
lowly Cana, in the backwoods of Galilee in the north. Jesus takes six stone
jars water jars which the Jews used for ceremonial cleansing for their hands
and bodies and has the servants fill them to the brim with water from Cana’s
well.
All
very ordinary.
Doesn’t
it seem like our lives are often dominated by common, ordinary things?
Homework, memory work, bus rides and basketball practices? Trudging off to
work, dealing with traffic, struggling to pay the bills and taking our
medication? Do you find it difficult to believe that the God who laid the
earth’s foundation, who enters the storehouses of snow, who brings forth the
constellations in their seasons, who raises his voice to the clouds and sends
lightning bolts on their way (Job 38), is the same God who is interested in the
petty grind of your daily life?
Jesus uses this ordinary setting for his extraordinary
first miracle. And what does Jesus choose to do for his very first miracle to announce
his divine presence among humanity? Does he move mountains? Does he cause the
sun to stand still in the sky? Nothing outwardly extravagant for everyone to
see and get excited over. There is a lack of wine at a small-town wedding for a
humble couple and Jesus quietly creates an abundance of delicious wine.
Jesus chooses this very ordinary setting to reveal his
glory (John 2:11). Moses could not look upon the glory of Lord and live (Exodus
33:20). Sinners cannot face the glory of the Holy Lord. Yet, here the holy Lord
reveals his glory in a way people can witness him without being destroyed. The
holy Lord covers his glory with human flesh so sinful people can walk shoulder
to shoulder with their God. St. John writes of Jesus: “The Word became flesh
and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the One
and Only, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth” (John 1:14).
Jesus does not first reveal his glory in stilling the
storm, healing the sick, casting out demons or raising the dead. Our incarnate
God – the Lord covered with flesh – reveals his glory at a wedding by turning
water into wine.
So much of our lives are made up of unexciting,
uninspiring moments. Routine. Tedious. Commonplace. Like a hamster running on its
wheel in its cage.
But Jesus is there amid our humdrum, everyday lives. God’s
merciful concern extends to the mundane needs of our day-to-day lives. He
doesn’t promise to give us anything extravagant. He literally promises us only “daily
bread” (Matthew 6:11). Part of God’s glory is that amid the mundane, he still
“graciously gives us all things” (Romans 8:32). This is also a part of God’s
glory. No detail of our lives is too unimportant to escape the notice of our
Savior. While God may not often (or ever) do something so obviously miraculous
as turn water into wine, he is at work in the little details of our life
reveals his glory perhaps in something as simple as “daily bread.”
The other night in our Lutheran Book
Club, we were asking the question of where in the world is God in the life of
the nursing home patient suffering from dementia. We’ll call him “Fred”. Fred’s
dementia confines him to a wheelchair. He cannot get dressed, go to the
bathroom or feed himself. His mind and body have withered. He barely speaks. He
rarely recognizes what’s going in his life.
The question was asked about what good
could come from this?
It seems like God has turned Fred’s life
from water into blood.
Yet, Fred’s son comes regularly to see to
his father. While he is there, he does everything the nurses would do for his
dad. He dresses him. Feeds him. Takes him to the bathroom. God is allowing
Fred’s son the opportunity to “honor his father” and keep God’s fourth
commandment (Exodus 20:12).
Fred’s son brings his children with him
weekly to see their grandpa. They color pictures for grandpa. They read stories
to grandpa. It isn’t a lot of fun for them to be quiet in the nursing home. It
smells kind of funny. It is pretty depressing for a little child. But they see
the love their father has for their grandfather. God is allowing them grow to
respect their dad for the respect their dad displays to their granddad.
Fred’s pastor comes to visit him
regularly. The pastor sits close to Fred. He tells him what is going on in his
life and in the life of Fred’s church. He shares God’s Word about sin and grace,
suffering and patience, with Fred. He prays for Fred. Though Fred’s eyes are
usually glazed over and he doesn’t speak, every once in a while, a brightness
returns to Fred’s eyes and his mouth moves along with the words of the Lord’s
Prayer or one of the hymns the pastor sings to Fred. God is allowing the pastor
to tend for all of God’s sheep, no matter who they are or what they are like.
Something else was mentioned in our book
club that I hadn’t thought of before. The doctors, nurses and staff have
employment because of Fred and others like Fred. God is allowing them to
fulfill their vocations in caring for the needs of his people.
Mary, the servants and the disciples,
were probably the only ones who realized that Jesus had performed this miracle.
Everyone else was happy with the wine, but they were going on with the wedding.
It seems like God has turned Fred’s life
from water into blood. But, when you really examine Fred’s life, you realize
that Jesus is performing lots of little miracles through the faith and actions
of His people. Fred’s son, grandchildren, pastor and Christian staff realize
they are being used by Jesus, so that in that whatever they do, they are doing
it all for the glory to God (1 Corinthians 1:31).
And Jesus is revealing his glory (John
2:11).
Jesus is turning water into wine.
We might ask, “Where in the world is
God?” He is right there – helping you.
The greatest way that Jesus helps you is
by forgiving your sin, dying to appease the wrath of his Father and rising from
the dead to open heaven to you. That’s what Jesus means when he says to his
mother, “My time has not come yet” (John 2:4). His time is the time of his
glory – the hour of his death. This is why Jesus came.
He came to turn water into blood. He uses
Fred’s dementia, your mother’s cancer, your sister’s car accident, to cut the
ties that bind us to this earth and bring his saints home to heaven.
He came to turn water into wine. He uses
water and his Word to change eternal destinations. He uses bread and wine with his
Word to strengthen faith and give hope. He uses his Word to offer forgiveness
and peace.
Turning water into blood or turning water
into wine are both tied to Jesus’ glory revealed at the time of his death and
resurrection. This is why Jesus came. He did not come to fix every little
problem, including a wedding party that ran dry before its time. He came to die
as the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world (John 2:29). And in
dying, he takes care of everything else. “He would did not spare his own Son,
but gave him up for us all – how will he not also, along with him, graciously
give us all things” (Romans 8:32)?
Miracles do not come cheaply. They are
signs of who Jesus is and what he has come to do. They all point to the cross.
They point out that Jesus is with you in the mundane, the menacing or the
marvelous. He is there to help you. Amen.
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