Tuesday of the Thirteenth Week in Ordinary Time
Optional Memorial of the First Martyrs of the Church of Rome
First Reading: Amos 3:1-8; 4:11-12
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 5:4b-6a, 6b-7, 8
Gospel: Matthew 8:23-27
Daily readings: https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/063026.cfm
Amos opens today with something that sounds severe but is actually a word of intimacy: "You alone have I known, of all the families of the earth — therefore I will punish you for all your iniquities." That word "known" is the same word used for the deepest kind of relationship in Hebrew Scripture. God is not punishing Israel like a distant judge punishing strangers. He is correcting people he is close to, people he brought out of Egypt, people he carried like a father. The warning comes because the relationship is real.
Then the string of rhetorical questions — do two walk together unless they have agreed? Does the lion roar without a reason? Does a trumpet sound in a city without alarming the people? — each one pointing to the same truth: things happen for reasons, and God's warnings through the prophets are not random. When hardship comes, when things shake loose, there is often something God is saying in it. The question is whether we are listening. "The Lord GOD has spoken; who can but prophesy?"
Then Jesus and his disciples get into a boat. A violent storm comes up. The disciples wake him in a panic: "Lord, save us! We are perishing!" And Jesus gets up, rebukes the winds and the sea, and there is great calm. Then the small, stunning question the disciples ask each other: "What sort of man is this, whom even the winds and the sea obey?" They have been with him. They have watched him heal people, teach crowds, touch the untouchable. And still the storm reveals how little they really knew. The answer to the disciples' question is the same answer Peter gave yesterday: the Christ, the Son of the living God. The one in the boat with you in the storm is that one.
Today we also remember the First Martyrs of Rome — the Christians burned and killed by Nero following the Great Fire of 64 AD, the ones Tacitus described as being covered with the skins of beasts and torn by dogs, or nailed to crosses and set afire as living torches after dark. They knew the answer to the disciples' question. And they got into the boat anyway.
A few questions to sit with today:
1. Is there a storm in my life right now — a fear, a crisis, a season of uncertainty — where I have been reacting with panic before turning to Jesus? What would it look like to wake him first?
2. When hardship has come, have I asked what God might be saying through it — not in a self-punishing way, but with the openness of someone in a real relationship listening for a word?
3. Is Jesus someone I really know, or someone I know about? Where does the difference show up in how I handle hard days?
4. What would it cost me to trust him enough to stay in the boat?
One small thing for tomorrow:
The next time something goes wrong tomorrow — a frustration, a difficulty, an unexpected interruption — before you react, say one sentence: "Lord, you are in this boat with me." Not a long prayer. Just that. Then see what follows.
Lord Jesus, you were asleep in the stern of the boat, and the storm was real, and your disciples were genuinely afraid. You did not shame them for waking you. You just got up and spoke, and there was great calm. I need that today. There are storms in my life that I have been managing on my own, trying not to bother you with, white-knuckling through on my willpower. Forgive me for forgetting you are in the boat. Help me to turn to you first — before the panic, before the plan, before I decide I need to handle it myself. Through the intercession of the First Martyrs of Rome, who knew exactly who you were and trusted you with everything, give me even a small portion of that faith. Amen.
If you'd like to share: what storm are you in right now — and have you woken Jesus yet, or are you still bailing water on your own?