Fear is one of the most difficult things to face.
For the ancient Israelite the sea was a fearful place. That was the place that demons lived. It was a fearful place. And, here are the disciples, not only away from land but in a horrible storm. It is night. They are frightened out of their heads.
And, Jesus comes walking on the water. Fred Craddock suggests in a sermon called, “Faith and Fear,” that the point of this story is this: Only God can walk on the waves. “In other words,” Craddock writes, “there is no power, no storm, no wind, no force in the world that God cannot conquer, no evil over which God is not superior, nothing that can destroy your life because God loves and cares for you.”
But, knowing that and believing that are two different things. Peter finds out. Testing the truth of the God-who-walks-on-the-water, he steps out of the boat, is seized by fear and sinks.
We are swimming in an ocean of fear. We fear terrorists. We fear the downturn in the market. We fear for our health. We fear for our loved ones. There must be a thousand fears that we live with every day. Real threats create waves of anxiety.
If there is no greater force in the universe than the forces that create fear, we shall surely drown. Is there nothing to combat the sea of fear?
Craddock closes his sermon with this paragraph:
“In the boat – and we are all in the boat – we can give pep talks to each other. ‘We’ll make it. Some of you bail, we’re going to make it,’ We can start whistling and singing. But the plain fact is that without trust in God, we are not going to make the shore. But if we trust in God, ‘we are more than conquerors through him who loves us…, and neither death nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.’”
Fear is a difficult thing. We can never overcome fear by ourselves. Faith is the only cure.
Jesus reaches down to Peter and lifts him into the boat. “You of little faith,” he said. “Why did you doubt?”
I don’t think he addressed only Peter. Those words are meant for all of us who are afraid.
-- Rev. Richard Lancaster
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