Tuesday of the Eighteenth Week in Ordinary Time
(Jeremiah
30:1-2.12-15.18-22; Matthew 14:22-36)
A boat adrift
at sea well symbolizes the early Church after the resurrection. It is suffering persecution, false teachers,
and other difficulties. Seemingly Jesus is
not present in its need. But he is watching
over it all the time like parents viewing their children with closed-circuit
video. Peter, the Church’s vicar,
suffers the same cowardice that he literally exhibited in his denial the night
Jesus was taken captive. The people on
the shore, however, appear more credulous as they bring their sick to him for
healing.
Such an
interpretation runs the risk of eroding belief in the gospels. Yet it appears that there is considerable
symbolizing and imagining in the formation of the gospels. What is fundamental is not literal accuracy
of all gospel accounts. Rather it is the
reality of Jesus having given his life for the redemption of humanity and God’s
approval of the sacrifice with raising Jesus from the dead. For this reason, we proclaim with the
disciples of today’s passage, “’Truly, (he is) the Son of God.’” We also
entrust to him our sick and hurting.
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