Our first reading today takes place at Mt. Horeb, which is just another name for Mt. Sinai, where God gave Moses the Law. It is like “Lady Bird Lake” and “Town Lake” are two names for the same body of water, or Mopac and Loop 1 are two names for the same road, so Horeb and Sinai are two names for the exact same mountain.
We find the
Prophet Elijah there. Mt Sinai is quite
a ways from Israel. What is Elijah doing
there? He is hiding. Elijah is on the run from the evil Queen
Jezebel. She is out to kill him, and
Elijah is scarred. It is worth while
reading the whole story in the First Book of Kings. Anyway, Elijah is scarred, defeated,
disgusted, and cowering in a cave on Mt. Horeb.
For Elijah to
stop hiding and continue serving as God’s prophet he needs a boost, a total
reboot, something to get him out of hiding in the ground and to go do his
prophetic duty. So God is going to
encounter Elijah, and thus energize him to continue his mission. That is the setting of our first reading.
Elijah goes
out to meet God. First there is “a strong and heavy wind”, so strong it rending the mountains and crushing
rocks. You could not ignore this
wind. It was strong and powerful and
unavoidable. A hurricane! It was very definite. But,
God was not in the wind.
Then there was
an earthquake. It is pretty hard to
ignore an earthquake, especially a big one.
You KNOW when a earthquake happens.
It is pretty much in-your-face.
But, God was not in the
earthquake.
Then there was
fire! Again fire is attention getting,
clear and pronounced. You don’t walk through a fire and not notice
it. You don’t ignore fire. It is pretty obvious. But,
God was not there either.
How much
easier it would be if God only came to us with clear, dramatic effects that
really got our attention. If God would
only appear to us with Imax 3-D and Dobly surround-sound and huge, explosive,
attention-grabbing wonders!!! Then belief would be easy.
One of the
early Roman critics of Christianity asked, “¿if Jesus is truly raised and is a
god, why doesn’t he
just appear in glory before the Roman Senate, clearly and unambiguously, and
then we would all believe in him?” That
is a good question. Why not make it
clear and obvious, removing all doubt?
But faith
doesn’t work
that way. Why is faith so thin, so
tenuous, so easy to miss, so iffy? //
St Paul in our
second reading wrestles with the fact that his compatriots, the Jews, whom St
Paul loves, did not respond in faith to Jesus as Messiah. It is a problem that vexes St Paul. He says: “theirs the adoption, the glory, the covenants, the giving of the law, the worship, and the
promises; theirs the patriarchs, and
from them, according to the flesh, is the Christ.” They have all this and still,
they didn’t see it, they didn’t hear it, they didn’t get faith in
Christ.
Today we know people who went to Catholic grade school, and even Catholic high school, who grew up in faith-filled homes, maybe even have uncles who are bishops and aunts who are nuns, and yet, faith never took root in them. Like St. Paul we wonder why, and we wish we knew what we could do to help them come to faith in Jesus as the Christ.
But Faith is difficult to achieve. It is not obvious. // It would not be faith if Jesus asks us to come to Him across the paved parking lot. It would be easy, but it wouldn’t be faith. But to walk across the waves? That is faith.
Faith is risky, because it is NOT a sure thing. A genuine adult faith is a risk. It means getting out into the deep waters of
life, where the wind and the waves are strong, where life-long commitments are
made, where forgiveness and generosity and compassion make more sense than
greed and self-centeredness, where everything is less sure and more iffy, and
then doing the foolish thing of getting out of the boat and walking towards
Jesus.
Faith means
walking with gratitude and compassion when fear is all around us, ready to
drown us.
Faith means
moving forward in acceptance and tolerance and peace, when the waves of
pandemic and economic hardship whip up hatred, racism, homophobia, nativism and
anti-immigrant intolerance all around us.
Faith means
believing when the Church does stupid things, when the music is insipid, the
preaching dull, and our fellow Christians are unattractive.
Faith means not
looking for big, concrete, clear observable proofs, but rather listening for
that faint, difficult to discern, “tiny whispering sound”, in our
heart.
It ain’t
easy. But with faith you can walk on
water. Today Jesus says to us: “Come.”
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