Jesus asks his followers, “Who do you say I am?” Matt’s message weaves this question from Matthew 16.13-20 with an unexpected experience of being found by grace at a nation-wide vigil called Standing in Solidarity with Charlottesville. This is the third week of our worship series, Found, focused on noticing & celebrating grace in our everyday lives.
Worship at The Table (Sacramento, CA) August 27, 2017 Found
Worship at The Table (Sacramento, CA) August 27, 2017 Found
Worship at The Table (Sacramento, CA) August 27, 2017 Found
Worship at The Table (Sacramento, CA) August 27, 2017 Found
Worship at The Table (Sacramento, CA) August 27, 2017 Found
Worship at The Table (Sacramento, CA) August 27, 2017 Found
Worship at The Table (Sacramento, CA) August 27, 2017 Found
Worship at The Table (Sacramento, CA) August 27, 2017 Found
Worship at The Table (Sacramento, CA) August 27, 2017 Found
Worship at The Table (Sacramento, CA) August 27, 2017 Found
Worship at The Table (Sacramento, CA) August 27, 2017 Found
Worship at The Table (Sacramento, CA) August 27, 2017 Found
Worship at The Table (Sacramento, CA) August 27, 2017 Found
Worship at The Table (Sacramento, CA) August 27, 2017 Found
“The Transfiguration of Jesus” Giovanni Bellini, c. 1454-1460 More info at Wikimedia
"Messianic Secret"
FROM THE ARTIST:
“Messianic Secret” Inspired by John 2:1-11 14″x18″ Acrylic on canvas
The Wedding at Cana is my favorite text because there is a lot of humor in it. There’s humor in a mother approaching her son and telling him to do something without ever actually telling him to do it. There’s his pouty resistance to his mother’s non-demand while she completely ignores him and paints him in a corner. There is humor in a raucous wedding reception where the people are so “lit” that the wine has run out. And, for me, it’s particularly humorous that there’s this huge, beautiful secret of which only a few people are aware.
Those people include Jesus’ mother and the select servants who help him pull off the miracle that inaugurates his ministry. Servants are normally meant to be inconspicuous, so I wanted to focus on the servant who goes to the chief steward with a cup full of what, as far as he’s concerned, is water.
If Jesus—whose ministry has not started, so there haven’t been any wonders associated with him yet—tells you to fill jars with water and draw from the jar to give to the chief steward, what is going through your mind at that moment? I invite the viewer to focus on this servant and all his curiosity and expectation, and think of a time when you were surprised by something God did. What actions preceded the miracle? Did it make sense? What did you know, and what was hidden from you? What “secrets” might God be keeping from you now as God works clandestinely on your behalf?