Annual Meeting Sunday
January 20, 2013
John 2.1-11
+ Since we are having our Annual Meeting today, I think I can admit this. And I’m sure it is not much of a surprise to anyone this morning. Weddings are not one my favorite things. Give me a baptism or a funeral any day over a wedding. I have even preached at weddings how much I don’t always enjoy them.
I should be clear here. It’s not that I hate what weddings represent.
I certainly believe that marriage is one of the seven sacraments. I just
wish that most people saw marriage as a sacrament.
What I dislike are the fluff and fakeness of weddings. And
we’ve all seen that fluff and fakeness. I hate the attempts to make every
wedding like some royal princess wedding. And I dislike all that goes along
with those princess weddings. The fifteen-or more attendants. The bridezillas,
or the momzillas—or yes, even the groomzillas and the dad zillas. Yes, they do
exist.
Still, I actually do enjoy weddings that are truly joyful
events in which two people express their love and their commitment for each
other. And I am very happy that the
Episcopal Church is now finally moving in the direction of finally fully
accepting Blessings of Unions between same-sex couples. Many of you might have
heard that the National Cathedral in Washington just recently OKd “gay weddings.”
So, it’s not fair to say I hate doing weddings. And let me
tell you, in the ten years I’ve been ordained, I have done A LOT of weddings.
So, when whenever I encounter the story from our Gospel reading
today, I do have to wonder: I wonder if that wedding was one of those awful
weddings, with a bridezilla or a groomzilla? There is a great legend that supposedly the
bride and groom at the wedding in Cana were none other than Mary Magdalene and
John the Beloved Apostle. And the story further goes that John was so impressed
with Jesus’ turning the water into wine, that he essentially left Mary
Magdalene “at the altar” to follow Jesus. She, in turn, was so humiliated by
this that she became the woman of ill-repute that she is popularly known as.
Whoever the bride and groom were, certainly it must’ve been
a raucous wedding. The good wine has run
out and the wedding feast is about to crash quickly. Yup, I’ve been at those
weddings too.
But Jesus of course saves the day. No matter if it was a bad
wedding or a good wedding, no matter if some bridezilla or groomzilla were
hounding him, no matter if the groom is about to leave the bride to follow him,
he turns water into wine. And when he does, there is a renewed sense of joy and
exultation. That I think is the gist of
this experience from our gospel reading. It is not just some magic trick Jesus performs
to wow people. It is not some action he
performs at the whim of his mother. He
performs this miracle and in doing so instills joy in those gathered there.
But more than that, by doing this he does what we always
does when he performs a miracle. He
performs miracles not just for the benefit of those at the wedding. It is for our benefit of us as well. Because by performing this miracle, he is
giving us a glimpse of what awaits us all. If we look closely at the story and at some of
the details contained in it, we will find clues of the deeper meaning behind
his actions.
First of all, let’s look at those jars of water. This is probably the one area we don’t give a
lot of thought to. But those jars are important. They are not just regular jars
of water. They are jars of water for the purification rites that accompany
eating in the Jewish tradition. That water
is essentially sacred. It is used to purify people and things. A good Jew at
that time would wash their hands in this water so they could eat their food.
So, what we find is that Jesus turns these waters of purity
into wine. And not just any wine. But abundant wines that bring about a joy
among those gathered.
In a sense, what Jesus has done is he has taken the party up
a notch. What was already probably a good
party is now an incredible party. It’s a
beautiful image and one that I think we can all relate to.
And I think it speaks loudly to us on this Annual Meeting Sunday.
We, at St. Stephen’s are planning this coming year. We are looking ahead. We are planning a year in which there are so
many great and wonderful opportunities and possibilities for us as a
congregation. God has blessed us—and blessed us abundantly, here.
Look around at all the wonderful ministry we are
experiencing. Look around at all the improvements and the good and positives
changes that are happening here. When God blesses, it is not just a little
blessing here and there. It is abundant blessings. It is like the purification water
turned into abundant wine.
The best part of this view of the wedding at Cana is that
Jesus is saying to us that, yes, there is joy here in the midst of us, but a
greater joy awaits us.
Greater joys await us in our future together here at St.
Stephen’s And an even greater joy waits
when the Kingdom of God breaks through into our midst. When these things happen, it is very much like
a wedding feast. When they happen, the waters of purification are turned into the
best-tasting wine because we will no longer have to worry about issues like
purity.
To some extent, the wedding at Cana
is a foretaste of what we do every Sunday (and Wednesday) here at this altar. It is a foretaste of the Holy Eucharist—this
sharing with each other of Christ’ Body and Blood.
One of my favorite Christian writers is Scot McKnight. He wrote a wonderful book called The Jesus Creed. In that book, he writes about the miracle at the wedding in Cana most perfectly in this phrase:
“When the water turns to wine and the eye of faith peers
into the purification vessels, it does not see sacred water but sacred wine.
The eye of faith sees not an image of itself but the image of Jesus floating on
the surface of the wine. Jesus is seen in the wine for who he is really: the
one who not only provides but is himself the joy of the kingdom.”
I love that! Because it
is true. When we see these wonderful things happening in our midst, we can look
closely at it and see Jesus in our midst. We can see Jesus in the ministry we
do together here at St. Stephen’s. We see Jesus here when are gathered together
to hear the Word. We see Jesus when we respond to that Word in what we do when
we leave here. And we see Jesus each time we gather together at this altar for
the Eucharist. Here too, at this altar,
we see Jesus in this wine and when we do we find that he is truly our joy.