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Get Out Of The Water
Contributed by Gerald Roberts on Jul 30, 2024 (message contributor)
Summary: Waters have throughout antiquity been a scary endeavor especially the ocean its deep, dark, and dangerous. God has been telling people to get out of the waters or our sinfulness.
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John 6:16-21 Get out of the Waters
1. Jesus comforts his disciples on the Sea of Galilee by saying, “It is I; do not be afraid.” But is that what he really said?
• The Sea is Deep, Dark, and deadly
• That’s what many people think of the ocean,
• There are many Scary Movies such as The Meg, Leviathan, Underwater, Deep Blue Sea, Ghost Ship, Open Water, The Deep, Jaws.
• “You’ll never go in the water again.”
• Humans have been terrified of the big blue sea for thousands of years. “Myths about deep-sea monsters can be found in ancient cultures from all across the globe,”
2. Like the movie Jaws the screams “get out of the water” Scriptures teach us the fear of the sea and God even says Get out of the water
• God told Noah Get out of the water he said, “Make yourself an ark of cypress wood,” (Genesis 6:14). Then God sent a great flood on the earth, with the goal of killing every living thing. God said it: Get out of the water!
• God told Pharaoh Let my people go He was saying don’t get in the water. In Exodus, the Israelites fled the Egyptians to the edge of the Red Sea. There, God parted the sea, and the “Israelites went into the sea on dry ground, the waters forming a wall for them on their right and on their left” (14:22). Then, the opening closed, and the Egyptians were drowned.
• God helps his people get out of the waters. God said through the prophet Isaiah, “When you pass through the waters, I will be with you, and through the rivers, they shall not overwhelm you” (43:2).
• God helped Jonah get out of the waters of chaos. And the prophet Jonah faced death when he was tossed off a ship into the sea. In the belly of a large fish, he prayed to God, “I called to the LORD out of my distress, and he answered me … The waters closed in over me; the deep surrounded me … Deliverance belongs to the LORD!” (Jonah 2:2, 5, 9).
3. The disciples get in the waters on a boat after the feeding of the 5,000.
• The disciples go down to the Sea of Galilee, get into a boat, and start rowing across the sea to Capernaum.
• They probably thought Jesus wants some time to himself, they head across the water without him.
• Suddenly, The sky becomes dark, a strong wind begins to blow, and the sea becomes rough, making their progress difficult.
• they see Jesus walking on the sea and coming near.
• The whole situation terrifies them: Not only the wind and the waves, but the sight of Jesus walking on the water. Then, he says to them, “It is I; do not be afraid” (v. 20).
4. When were in the waters of chaos Jesus wants to help us get out of the waters
• Life sometimes can and will terrify us
• Jesus says, “It is I; do not be afraid.” In our most terrifying times, when the sky is dark and the sea is deep, we do not have to fall victim to terror
• Jesus is with us, offering us peace in the middle of the watery chaos.
• Jesus does not simply love us and provide for us. Jesus gives us peace.
• Jesus provides. And when you are feeling frightened by the storms in your own life — financial, medical, relational — and terrified of drowning in raging waters, do not be afraid. Jesus offers you peace. “Peace I leave with you,” says Jesus a little later in the gospel of John; “my peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world gives.
• Do not let your hearts be troubled, and do not let them be afraid” (14:27).
5. Jesus said, I Am, Do Not Be Afraid
• The words that Jesus speaks to the disciples in the boat are both surprising and significant. In the original Greek, he says something that you might not expect. He does not actually say, “It is I.” Instead, he says, “I am.” Yes, he uses one of the most ancient names for God, the great “I AM”
• When we translate the story, we usually have Jesus say, “It is I.” It does not make sense to our English-language ears for him to say, “I am; do not be afraid.” But the truth is, Jesus says, “I am.” This means that Jesus is not acting on his own when he offers us provision and peace. No, he is acting with the power of God, the great “I AM.”
• Remember God with Moses at the burning bush? “God said to Moses, ‘I AM WHO I AM.’ He said further, ‘Thus you shall say to the Israelites, “I AM has sent me to you.”’” (Exodus 3:14).