| A sign of God’s fidelity |
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Fr Oliver Treanor reflects on the miracle of the marriage feast of Cana and tries draw out what it means.
The first miracle Jesus worked was at a wedding reception. According to St John's gospel he changed water into wine to spare the bridal couple embarrassment and disappointment on their wedding day. Their married life was not going to start with a sense of failure, if he had anything to do with it. St John called it 'the first of his signs' and noted that it caused his disciples to believe in him (in 2:11). A sign is a thing that points to something like itself. So what did this unusual miracle signify? Transforming love They knew as Jesus did that natural affection, no matter how strong, is fragile. That it needs to be protected in a world that is often hostile to fidelity, commitment and self-giving - the very things that support a relationship. These are qualities, however, that demand sacrifice, and there has always been a trend that despises self-sacrifice. It wasn't fashionable in their day and it isn't fashionable now. Yet without discipline, vigilance and care, the tenderness in love goes out of it, evaporates like morning mist. Jesus could not bear to think of that happening to the marriage at which he was an invited guest. The touch of God That's why he worked his first miracle at a nuptial feast. He had a message for married couples before he had a message for anyone else. 'I can fill your boat with wine', he wanted to tell them. And it was true. He did not produce merely a litre of vino rosso at Cana; he produced a deluge. 'There were six stone water jars standing there', recounts St John, 'each holding twenty or thirty gallons'. The banquet was flowing with it, a fine, full-bodied fruit-filled vintage, according to the maitre d'hôtel who was thoroughly astonished at the quality! Enough grace in fact to make it marriage to remember, to give it substance, to make it holy. A sign of God's fidelity 'As a young man marries a virgin', he told his listeners, 'so shall the Lord marry you. And as the bridegroom rejoices over the bride, so will your God rejoice over you' (Is 62:5). Because of this Jesus made matrimony a sacrament. The sacraments are the living signs of God's inexhaustible fidelity. They prove him incapable of breaking his vows. After Jesus, every sacramental marriage is a miracle Jesus' first miracle was to turn water into wine; his last was to change wine into his blood. At the table of the Last Supper he passed the chalice into the hands of the same disciples who believed in him at Cana. 'Take this all of you and drink it,' he told them; 'this is the cup of the new covenant in my blood'. It was another sign. It foreshadowed his death on the cross when he would open his arms in a spousal embrace and pour himself out for his bride the Church. Once again he had left the best wine to the last to show how seriously he took his own wedding and family life. Love without measure And that is why marriage and Eucharist have always been linked, as Jesus intended from the start. One sacrament draws strenght from the other. When couples celebrate the Lord's Supper together their union is supported and fortified and revitalized. Holy Communion reinforces marital union. Witnesses of God's love This article first appeared in The Messenger (July 1998), a publication of the Irish Jesuits. |







