Sermon for Epiphany 2, One Year, preached on Thursday, January 16, 2025.
The wedding feast at Cana presents us with something of a conundrum. Its miracle is confusing and almost shocking. It is not a grand show of His power but it is a grand display of His mercy. Jesus shows us how He plans on using His power. He is not going to dazzle the eye but touch the heart. The first fact is that they have run out of wine. Why? Why did they run out of wine? Did they plan poorly? Were they cheap? Were they poor? Were the guests gluttons? Were they so drunk that they had continued to consume the wine long after they were already tipsy? They have run out of wine is the report of Blessed Mary to Jesus but that is about it.
The second fact is the intention of Blessed Mary. Was she reporting this to Jesus because His own glass was empty? Was she giving the signal that it was time to leave and the party is over and time to go home? Or was she asking Jesus to do something about it – saving the embarrassed couple from their shame. In any case, Jesus says that this is not His hour of glory. Of course it is not – Jesus has come for the glory of the cross and not to restore glory to a wedding reception winding down because it has run out of gas.
If we treated this as allegory, we would see larger meanings to this all. The world has run out of wine. The things that once brought gladness have been overcome by the things that cause sorrow, shame, fear, and scandal. The world has run out of gas and the party is almost over. The world is tilting in the balance of climate change and pollution and dwindling resources. The world is drunk with its own sense of power and ability thinking that banning straws or building electric cars will make everything better. Jesus says that this is not His problem. Of course, it isn’t. Jesus has not come to repair a broken world so that a sinful people may continue to sin and suffer the effects of that sin. He has come to end the reign of sin once for all and this comes not by turning water into wine but by turning wine into the blood that cleanses us from all our sin.
If we think this is a miracle of the kingdom that will prompt faith from reluctant hearts, we have this wrong as well. Faith comes by hearing and miracles do not convince the doubting heart – only the Spirit does. We still think that a few more miracles would not hurt the cause. No, healing does not prevent the healed from dying but it sure makes us feel better. A little more of a bad life is better than none. So what is Jesus to do? Give them wine to prolong their stupor or make them sober up to the reality of what sin has done? Which would YOU do if you were Jesus? Would you give into a feel good moment or would you skip the party and head to the cross where the glory of salvation will be revealed for all people to see?
We know what Jesus did. He did both. He did it all in spades. He did not give them a few more gallons of wine but hundreds and hundreds of bottles of wine – far more than a small wedding reception of people could every consume in that one occasion. What this means is this. Our Lord does not leave you in your misery because He will give you glory at the end. No, He is with us always even to the end of the age. He visits us in our troubles to gladden our hearts but not with alcohol to deaden us to the pain. No, He gives us the joy of the Kingdom in the midst of our suffering. Beloved you are God’s children now? If God be for us, who can be against us? Your glory is not to come but Christ with you now.
Our Lord comes to us in the midst of our sins and our sinning with forgiveness and with the power of the Holy Spirit to help us leave behind our sinful ways and strive to be the holy, righteous, and godly people baptism says we are. He does not deaden our feelings but opens our hearts to the joy of the kingdom that can never be taken from us. He sets His table in the presence of our enemies and we feast upon the cup of the kingdom, the foretaste of the feast to come.
Our Lord does that for us now even while He accomplishes all things for our salvation. He pays the price for sin we could not pay. He fights the devil for us because we could not win in his game of wits and temptation. He empties the grave of its sting and steals from death its victory and raises us up with Him to everlasting life. That is the miracle of Jesus. He does not choose between now or forever but is with us now and forever, bestowing upon us grace upon grace that we neither deserve nor merit and bringing to completion in us what He has begun.
Yes, the party is over but that does not mean that life is only drudge and sorrow and pain. If Christ is there, hope is there and life is there and joy is there. That is the abundant mercy displayed in this parable. God sent His Son into the world not to condemn the world but that the world might be saved through Him. That means we have hope, joy, peace, comfort, and contentment even now through His grace and yet it is not quite what shall be when He comes in His glory to usher in the wedding feast that has no end, will never run out of wine or time, and will overwhelm us with joy!