Pundits and politicians on the far right
continue to use the propaganda of fear to capture the imagination of their
audiences and to fuel irrational political agendas. Whether they suggest that illegal immigrants
are ruining our country, or that we are heading towards becoming a socialist
nation, or that Muslims in this country are secretly plotting a take over, each
of these create a false sense
of fear.
Yet, as history has shown us, fear often
leads to extremist reactions such as exclusion, isolationism, xenophobia and
hate-filled violence. Moreover, fear suppresses
our desire to live boldly as messengers of the gospel of peace.
One of the more interesting biblical stories detailing the contrast between faith and fear appears in Mark 4:35-41, where we find Jesus and his disciples crossing the Sea of Galilee in a boat. In the midst of their nautical journey, a raging storm quickly arises and threatens their lives. While the story shows Jesus as a miracle worker who has power over creation, the impact of the story on its readers speaks directly to the empowering strength of faith to overcome the crippling force of fear in the face of evil.
A deeper understanding of the force of
the story rests on the ancient belief that the sea was the place of chaos that
threatens God’s good creation. Simply
put, people of the ancient world held the view that the sea was under the power
of evil and the unpredictable storms on the sea were a challenge to the
creation and a threat of the return of chaos.
In the context of the early Christian
movement in the Roman Empire, the followers of the crucified Jesus may have
identified this story as a narrative about their own persecutions at the hands
of an oppressive regime. Feeling lost in
a sea of violence and oppression, and longing for Christ’s victorious return,
these early believers may have felt that God had left them, that Jesus was
asleep.
The crux of the story hinges on the juxtaposition between the fear-filled disciples and Jesus, who calmly sleeps as the storm rages. In the disciples we witness a dramatic
picture of human fear in the face of evil’s most powerful force, death. In Jesus, however, we discover a peaceful
composure and the assurance of God’s presence, even as evil seems to be winning.
The disciples' fear is brought out most clearly in the
only two sentences spoken by the disciples in this story. Faced with fear of death, the disciples, seeing that Jesus is
asleep, call out, “Teacher, don’t you care that we are perishing?” Their question exposes the volatile situation of the disciples, and the shock, even the
distress they feel because Jesus is sleeping during the onslaught of evil’s
power. They are overcome with the enormous
propagation of fear; a fear that blinds them to the quiet presence of divine
power that is with them in the midst of the storm.
In response to this fear, Jesus asks two
extremely profound questions: "Why are you
afraid?” and “Have you still no faith?" Through these questions, Jesus expresses
disappointment and anger at the fear his disciples have, and he questions whether
they have faith at all. Yet, for Mark’s
audience, Jesus’ query switches the natural human reaction to evil from fear to
the divinely empowered response of faith.
Jesus’ questions assume that his followers should have responded to the
life-threatening storm with the faith that he himself had; a faith that gives
abiding and confident assurance.
But where does Jesus find such faith in the face of fear?
But where does Jesus find such faith in the face of fear?
The answer can be found in another dramatic
scene from Mark. We are very familiar
with the scene in the Garden of Gethsemane, where we see Jesus at one of his
most human moments, a moment of vulnerability, despair, and fear. The intensity of the scene cannot be
overlooked, as the hot breath of fear breathes down Jesus’ neck as he comes
closer to facing evil’s worse action, death.
Yet, Jesus does not let the manipulative
power of fear overtake him, and he turns to the God in whom he places his faith. This faith leads Jesus to reject the force of
fear, to reject the violence that fear produces, and to embrace the calling of
God to go to the cross. Jesus’ faith
overcomes his fear.
Fear is a powerful force. But if allowed to have control, fear draws us from God and God’s call for us to live peacefully and courageously in the world. Fear will only lead us to irrational conclusions and intolerant, and even violent, responses. Faith, however, is the divinely given power that combats and defeats our fears. Indeed, faith gives us courage to reject fear and its reactions in order to live as Jesus lived.
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