Of
Course You Can Walk On Water
In Matt. 14,
Jesus fed the 5,000 with 5 loaves & 2 fishes. Versus 20 - 31.
Several years ago the headlines in a Bombay newspaper read,
“Sadhu claims he will walk on water.”
The Hindu holy man had set a date when he would publicly walk across the
surface of a tank of water.
When the day arrived,
a crowd such as only India can mass pressed to the site. The holy man came with a group of his
closest followers & mounted the platform beside the tank. After a few brief preliminaries, he stepped
confidently onto the fluid surface. To
make a long story short & to save Sadhu further embarrassment, let us
simply say he was not the 2nd human being to walk on water.
Now, having implied that only one other person besides Christ
has ever accomplished this feat, referring, of course, to the apostle Peter, I
aver that it is absolutely necessary that every Christian walk on water. For, I suggest a new definition of Faith:
Faith is walking on water.
Faith is walking on water all the time.
A strange definition?
Let me explain. Every bible
reader is familiar with the story recorded in Matt. 14. Jesus & His disciples had been on the
northeastern shore of the Sea of
Galilee, where the Lord had fed 5,000 people.
Afterward He sent His disciples back across the lake while He stayed
behind.
Darkness came on, & a wild storm arose. Throughout the night the disciples, in their
boat, wrestled against the waves & the wind. In the gray, ghostly half-light of dawn they saw what they
thought was a spirit gliding over the wind-whipped waters toward them. Bone weariness & loss of sleep
intensified their reaction. Primeval
terror gripped them, & they cried out in fear.
Then came a calm, reassuring voice, “It is I!” Electrified, Peter exclaimed, “Master, if it
is really You, tell me to come to You on the water.”
“Come!”
And Peter stepped out of the boat onto the water & began to
walk toward Jesus.
In doing so he did what was utterly impossible. He accomplished what no human being ever had
done before or has done since. Hew was
going against a physical law that is absolutely unvarying, from the scientific
point of view. No man can walk on
water. The law of hydrodynamics
unbendingly forbids it. So unthinkable
is the concept that the ancient Egyptians, in representing in hieroglyphics the
idea inherent in the word impossible, used the symbol of a man walking
on water. But Peter walked on
water.
What made it possible for him to do that? What supported the weight of a full-grown
man on a surface that invariably ruptures under the weight of a tiny frog?
The answer is, FAITH. Faith, not as a self-fulfilling force that
creates its own reality from its own assurance, but as an unflawed confidence
in Christ’s word that permitted Him to bring about that wonder.
Here is a lesson that we Christians must learn: The basis of faith is that through Christ we
do what it is impossible for us to accomplish--on our own.
We shall see that the implications of this statement are more
profound, more far-reaching, than we generally recognize.
Whenever a person
genuinely becomes a Christian he has, in effect, said, “Lord, tell me to do the
impossible. Bid me come to You on the
water.” The truth is, unless this is his
understanding of the Christian life he does not adequately comprehend that
life. Christianity is doing the
impossible. The person who is not
seeing the impossible take place in his experience is not truly living as a
Christian.
If my Christianity is a sort of life style I can maintain myself
simply by a bit of self-discipline from time to time, then it is not really
Christianity at all. It is like telling
myself that my twenty-dollar glass bauble is a $20,000 diamond. What I own is essentially a valueless
substitute for the real thing.
Think about that again:
If we can actually carry on our religion on our own, simply giving God a
little lip service from time to time, but maintaining no vital connection to
Him, then we are not really Christians.
A genuine Christian is one who is being something he is not able to be,
doing things he is not able to do. And
he knows it. In a spiritual sense, he
continually walks on water.
What is Christianity all about, anyway? What is its purpose?
Basically, its purpose is twofold: First, to vindicate the character of God (exemplified in His Ten
Commandments) and, second, to restore man to his Eden like condition, which is
to reflect that character.
This was the reason that Christ came to this world. It is of the utmost significance that the
first words spoken of Jesus in the New Testament are: “’You shall call his name Jesus, for He will save His people from
their sin’” (Matt. 1:21).
Have we gone deep enough in our understanding of sin? Sin is a disease that has permeated every
area of the human soul.
Various approaches are made to the sin problem in the
church. One is to treat it
superficially, dealing with the symptoms while ignoring the real issue because
we don’t know how to handle it.
Another approach is to say that man is so elementally sinful
that we can do little else than
deal with the symptoms. We must keep on knocking off the bitter
fruit, and hacking rather ineffectually with our ineffective pocket knives at
the stubborn root. This may result in
some small improvements, but the source remains. The sinful fruit keeps on growing.
John the Baptist, heralding Christ, stated, “’Now the ax is laid to the root of the
trees’’ (Matt. 3:10).
“We may pick the leaves from a tree as often as we please, but
this will not cause the tree to die; the next season the leaves will come out
again as thick as before. But strike
the ax at the root of the tree, & not only will the leaves fall off of
themselves, but the tree will die.” -- My Life Today, p. 265.
Jesus always went for the source. The root must be killed, He said. Whenever He talked about sin, He labored to get this idea across
to His hearers.
It is interesting to note that it is in Matt., where Jesus is
announced as coming to save His people from their sins, that He is most
frequently quoted in defining sin, & this mainly in His Sermon on the
Mount.
Among the Jews of Jesus’ time the Pharisee was the model as a
holy man. (This illustrates how far the
Jews had drifted from the Old Testament ideal.) The Pharisees were extremely careful in their prayers, their
reading of the Scared Oracles, & their Sabbathkeeping. So anxious were they not to desecrate the Sabbath that they had a list of
thirty-nine forbidden activities to
safeguard the day. To the common man,
the Pharisee was assured of a place in paradise.
What a shock it must have been, then, to the crowd gathered
around Jesus on the Mount of Blessing, to hear Him state, “”Unless your
righteousness exceeds that of the scribes & Pharisees, you will never enter
the kingdom of heaven’” (Matt. 5:20).
The Pharisees were concerned with outward things. Jesus went deep. “I say to you that every one who is angry with his brother shall
be liable to judgment” (verse 22).
“It is a sin... to feel
angry” (Child Guidance, p. 95)--selfish, vindictive anger springing from
bitterness & animosity.
“Every one who look at a woman lustfully has already committed
adultery with her in his heart” (verse 28).
“You have heard that it was said, “You shall love your neighbor
& hate your enemy.” But I say to you, Love your enemies” (verses 43,
44). Love your enemies!
Let’s read about what God really is in 1 John 4:8, “He who does
not love (even his enemies) does not know God; for God is Love”.
What is love? What are
its characteristics? How does it work?
From Selected Messages, book 1, p. 217 & Eccl. 12:14, “Love
is patient, love is kind, love knows no jealousy, love is never boastful. Love puts on no airs, never acts
dishonorable, never places her own interest first, & never loses her
temper. Love never imputes evil
motives, never feels glad when others go wrong, but rejoices in everything that
is right & true. Love conceals the
faults of others, always believes the best, never despairs, & remains
steadfast to the end”.
“The law of God takes note of the jealousy, envy, hatred,
revenge, lust, & ambition that surge through the soul, but have not found
expression in outward action, because the opportunity, not the will, has been
wanting. And these sinful emotions will
be brought into the account in the day when ‘God shall bring every work into
judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good, or whether it be evil’’.
When these ideas really are driven home to us by the Holy Spirit
we might, with the disciples, exclaim, “Who then can be saved?” (Matt.
19:25).
And Jesus answered, “With men this is impossible, but with God
all things are possible” (verse 26).
Truly to become a Christian is to appeal to Christ, “Lord,...bid
me come to You on the water”.
“Lord, I want to overcome the sin in my life. I want to be rid of jealousy, of resentment,
of anger, of uncontrolled appetite, of malice.
I want freedom from guilt.
Master, I have tried walking on water on my own. I know I can’t do it. I know that the only way I can is with Your
help. Lord, bid me come to You.”
And the Lord said, “Come!’
To fail to make such an appeal, while still trying to be a
Christian, is to attempt the utterly impossible. It is to endeavor to walk on water without Christ.
So let’s make that appeal & walk on water with Christ.