Johannine Hours Mark 4: 35-41 November 1996 _____________________________________________________________________ [The "Johannine hours" are meant as a way of seeking God in silence and prayer in the midst of our daily life. During the course of a day, take a moment to read the Bible passage with the short commentary and to reflect on the questions which follow. Afterwards, a small group people can meet to share what they have discovered and perhaps for a time of prayer.] The same evening, Jesus wanted to leave the place where he had spent time teaching. His disciples "took him in the boat just as he was": the departure seemed hurried. Did Jesus feel threatened? He knew that the followers of Herod Antipas, the ruler of Galilee, were preparing to do away with him (Mk 3,6). "Crossing to the other side," to "the territory of the Gerasenes," Jesus and his disciples would be out of the reach of Herod's power. But scarcely had they escaped danger from other human beings than the forces of nature attacked the little fishing boat belonging to those who followed Jesus. Even those experienced fishermen did not know what to do. They no longer recognized their sea of Galilee: the waves were like the open jaws of the great Abyss, ready to swallow them for ever. So they cried out with fear. And their distress was mingled with a reproach: "Don't you care that we are lost?" Then Jesus woke up. He had absolutely no part in the agitation surrounding him. He spoke two words, and everything quieted down. But how could he have fallen asleep "on the cushion in the stern" during a storm? Only a child could have done this. Jesus was not a child, but, as the psalm says, "he keeps his soul in peace and silence, like a little child in its mother's arms" (Ps 131). The words to calm the storm arose from his silence in God. Centuries later, Isaac of Ninive would say, "Quiet yourself, and heaven and earth will fill you with peace." By asking "Have you still no faith?" Jesus showed that he did what he did for the sake of our faith. The one whom "wind and the sea obey" also says to the cares, the fears and the suffering that cause turmoil in our souls, "Silence! Be still!" Faith is nourished by the quiet created by the words spoken by Christ. How do I react in situations when my experience does not suffice to allow me to find a way out? For the disciples, Jesus' words transformed a threatening reality, the stormy sea, into a place where a new encounter with him in peace became possible. What enables us today to find the quiet which is necessary for an act of trust? "Johannine Hours" - 11/96 - ©71250 Taizé-Community, France. community@taize.fr ----------------------------------------------------- file: /pub/resources/text/taize/johannine: jh9611.txt .