Saturday, July 14, 2007

An Incomplete Miracle?

Six (~25-gallon) stone jars of water? Coming from Saint John, that's especially troubling. The apostle was all about sevens as the number of completion -- six is the number of incompletion, imperfection, the Beast's first, middle and last name etc. It should have been seven jars (or even eight, the number of renewal) but six? Jesus' first miracle -- the turning of water into wine at the wedding feast in Cana -- is recorded in Saint John's gospel. I had always been bothered by one detail in an otherwise perfectly beautiful story. What happened to the seventh and eighth jars? Was Jesus trying to show us earthly marriage is doomed to be incomplete? Was it because Jesus hadn't started his ministry? Saint John recorded numbers carefully (seven miracles in the gospel, Revelation's seven seals, seven vials, seven woes, etc.) so I didn't think the answer is as simple as, "that's just the number of jars they had." Then a wonderful answer came to me.

The logo to the right is for a convent of an order of nuns who take a vow of service (among other vows). The logo depicts the miracle at the Cana wedding as Mary asks Jesus to help and instructs the servants to "do whatever he tells you." Jesus tells them to fill the six large jars with water which they do. Then Jesus tells them to draw some out and to take it to the head steward and the steward is surprised at the quality. This logo shows a nun of the order as a servant who is either filling up the large stone jars or who is drawing some out to give to the weddig party (and I love the ambiguity).


Count the jars in the picture. Indeed where is the seventh jar? It is in the hands of the servant heeding the advice "do whatever he tells you" and laboring to complete the task (in this case, carrying 150 gallons of water). And when I look closely, the eighth jar is there too. It is the jar in the hand of the servant who, once the miracle is performed, labors to carry the marvelous result of God's love back to the people. We are the seventh jar - the completion. We are the eighth jar - the renewal. Jesus is allowing us to be an integral part of both the completion and the renewal.

The first miracle at the first sacrament -- the spotless sacrament. Water (rots with age) was changed to wine (becomes tastier and more valuable with time). Worldly marriages are at their zeniths at the beginning but when Jesus is invited into my wedding and marriage, just when it looks like the celebration will die down, out comes the best wine. And I'll keep saying, "you saved the best until now." (John ch.2:1-22)

1 comment:

Clay said...

Thank you for sharing, Joseph.

I do love the idea that we are allowed to be co-laborers in the miraculous work of Jesus. It makes me think that the miracle might not have taken place if the servant hadn't done "whatever He tells you."

I thank God that in my life, as I obey, Christ is actively bringing completion and renewal.
I am equally thankful for the wine I have yet to taste. Our Lord is not a God of half-measures. Indeed, the best is yet to come!

Alleluia!