There’s
nothing quite as striking or stunning as a rainbow after a deluge of rain that
brings life to a standstill. Even while
dark clouds still threaten more rain and there’s only a promise of sun, the
rainbow becomes a sign that the storm is finally over and life can begin again.
It’s at these moments that we are
reminded of how great God is and how fragile we truly are in this life.
God always
looks for ways to prod us to acknowledge the power of God to save. God initiates the grace and is the One to take
the first step and is the One who clearly shows us what life is all about.
The Old
Testament describes the covenant that God makes with Noah and his descendants
after the devastating floods that almost destroyed the first creation. In most of Genesis, we find a God who is good,
life-giving, long-suffering, revising original plans for us, indeed, a God who
never gives up on us, even when we have given up on God [Genesis 9:1-13].
In Mark’s
Gospel, we have Jesus, who has preached to all kinds of people, healed the
sick, driven out unclean spirits, fed the hungry, opened the eyes of the blind,
made the deaf to hear and the dumb to speak, and has yet to hear from His
disciples a declaration of who He is. He finally has to ask them, “Who do you
say that I am?” [Mark 8:27-33]
Our faith is
ultimately a realization that we’re in a very personal relationship with God,
especially with each of the three Persons of the Trinity, God Creator, Jesus
the Savior and the Holy Spirit the Sanctifier. Our faith gets tested when we
experience the storms of life, when the cares and concerns of this life
threaten to drown us and overwhelm us and when we think of ourselves as
irredeemable and without salvation. Even the best of us can point to moments of
darkness in our lives, bad choices made, and wrong decisions embraced.
And then
there’s a sign from God, a rainbow that says to us that God is good, God is
life-giving, God is forgiving and merciful and that Jesus is Love Incarnate. That’s when the Spirit is truly present in our
lives. Do you not hear God asking you,
“Who do you say that I am?”
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