By Fr Antony Christy, SDB –
Isaiah 62:1-5;1 Corinthians 12:4-11; John 2:1-11
Today the Word establishes the beginning of the public ministry of Jesus. After the Baptism where Jesus is seen in public this is the incident that can be interpreted as the beginning of his life and work among people. The Word also defines what the purpose of the ministry is: it is to replenish the rapport between God and God’s people.
The imagery that holds the common thread between the first and the Gospel reading today is that of marriage. Often the relationship between God and God’s people is spoken of in terms of the faithfulness between the bride and the groom, as in the first reading from Isaiah. God wishes an intimate relationship with God’s children but at times our lives run dry. It’s also a pastoral concern that after all the weeks of Advent and Christmastide the ordinary season might seem too ordinary and eventless – that is the ordinariness of life. As the wine ran short, our lives too will run dry at moments.
We hear often people saying today: ‘that’s it, that’s the end of my patience’, ‘I cannot stand it anymore’, ‘why should I put up with it anymore?’, ‘I have reached the brink of my tolerance’, ‘I cannot go on further’, or ‘I give up’…and so on! These are the moments we are referring to – when our life runs dry! What can we do? Nothing! Nothing can be done at that time and that is why the Lord invites us right at the beginning of this liturgical year, when our spirits are still fresh and alive – prepare for a dry moment, anyway the Lord shall be with you there too!
When it is so probable that the dry moment would show up, but we can do nothing then because we are dry, it only goes to say that we should do something already now. Permit me to make an allegorical interpretation of the Word today: it seems good reflection to make on our lives. There are three things beautiful that could happen when our life runs dry…
1. Have your jars ready: When the wine ran short and Jesus looked around, there were six stone jars according to the custom of the Jews. When our life runs dry and the Lord wants to intervene we should have something ready for the Lord to use from our lives. Like the loaves the Lord used, like the mud that the Lord used, we see the Lord using these jars today to make the Lord’s presence felt.
When our life runs dry too, we need to have at least empty jars ready… that is the basic disposition to the Lord, our ordinary and regular habits of prayer, our basic ongoing relationship with the Lord and not some occasional business based interactions, our hope that the Lord is with us constantly, our trust in the goodness that belongs to God… these the basic dispositions that the Lord can work on.
It is important that we work on these and keep these ready in our ordinariness of life, for a dry patch. The culture today seems to switch from celebration to drudgery… one moment you are happy and effervescent and once it is gone you are down in the dredges. There is no midway about it. We are called to be sober, conscious and aware of what we are going through and build attitudes, habits and support systems that would serve us at times of dryness.
2. Get your jars filled: Use all the gifts that you have, to stand strong, endure the moment. It is important that we endure them, when we reach moments of trials and dryness. One who endures shall receive the crown, instructs James (1:12), isn’t it? You have splendid gifts given you, by the Spirit of the Lord. Gifts that can sustain you, strengthen you and take you across a weak patch… if only you are aware of them and know how to use them. These are your weapons in moments of dryness, provided you know you possess them.
In your youth get to know your Lord, says Ecclesiastes, to mean that when we are in good spirits to ascertain the foundations of our life that we shall be supported when times come that may assail us. Take up the arrows in your quiver, which until then were preserved for this moment. Do no be unaware of the extraordinary gifts of prudence, will and endurance that the Spirit fills you with – they are great means to sustain yourself at passing moments of darkness. Remain firm with the Lord, become aware of the presence of the Lord and call upon the Lord, waiting on the Lord!
3. Taste the transformed wine: We may have the jar and we may have them filled but it is Jesus who makes it wine! We may have all it takes to make this life meaningful and fruitful but be wondering why it isn’t really working out… Jesus renders it fruitful; the Spirit makes our abilities true gifts. Wait, wait with patience and trust and the Lord will transform – your tears into joy (Jn 16:20), your shame into radiance (Ps 34:5), your weariness shall be replenished (Jer 31:25)… all this when you are able to endure with the Lord, wait on the Lord and allow the Lord to work on you! We see a tendency today, as soon as a little problem arises, we are out running from pillar to post seeking and begging someone or something to solve the problem.
We have lost the courage to sit at the feet of the Lord and seek the light. We have lost the trust that everything that happens in our lives has something important to communicate to us. We have lost the faith that the Lord is there beside us even while we shall walk in the darkest of valleys and the Lord’s crook and staff shall be there to guide me to light, to fullness, to sweetness of the new wine!
When our lives run dry… let’s take our jars filled to Jesus and he will transform them into wine; let’s surrender to the Spirit and the Spirit will make us God’s children again.
Fr Antony Christy is a Salesian Priest from 2005, who has a Masters in Philosophy (specialisation in Religion) and a Masters in Theology (Specialisation in Catechetics). He is currently pursuing his doctoral research in Theology at Salesian Pontifical University, Rome. Walking with the Young towards a World of Peace and Dialogue is the passion that fires him.