I’m
baptising some folk at the weekend. They asked me to include the well-known
religious poem Footprints, which speaks of Jesus walking alongside us
throughout our lives, and carrying us in the hardest times. I’m happy to, but I
shall also be retelling an account from the gospels, where Jesus tells his
fishermen friends to put out into deep the water, and there, their empty nets—for
they had fished all night without a catch—are miraculously filled.
Much
of the gospels are centred on Lake Tiberius, the Sea of Galilee. And the lake
functions in the stories of Jesus in at least three ways.
It
is, firstly, the compass of the everyday lived experience of Jesus’ fishermen
friends.
However,
throughout the Bible, the sea, contrasted against the gift of the land, often
represents the chaos that routinely threatens to overwhelm our lives—the shore,
then, being where the gift of life and the possible destruction of life meet.
And
yet, the lake is also the place where the disciples are given a deeper insight
into who Jesus is—calming the wind and the waves, walking on water, directing
miraculous catches of fish. Into the mystery of who God is, in and through this
neighbour who is, in some undefinable sense, more than the boy next door. Here,
then, the shore is the meeting-place of the fully human and fully divine.
This
week is Mental Health Awareness week, and it pertains to all of us, in our
everyday lives: the things we do, the places we go, the people we live
alongside.
It
is possible to live with underlying mental health issues that are well-managed,
enabling us to experience life fully, and, broadly speaking, positively—just as
it is possible to live well with underlying physical health issues.
It
is possible to have no underlying mental health issues, and yet, at times, feel
overwhelmed, even to the point of great danger, the threat of losing (or,
indeed, the consequence of having lost) what we hold dear.
It
is possible to know both gift and danger in our personal makeup—and to
encounter God in both the gift side and the danger side. To grow deeper into
the blessing of the particular clay—with its unique properties—God has
fashioned me, or you, from, breathing life into us. And to put out deeper into
the mystery of the God who has created us, and invites us into friendship.
Don’t
be afraid of your mental health, and don’t be afraid to speak about mental
health. Put out into the deep water. You might be surprised by what happens.
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