Exodus 13:17--14:31 · Crossing the Sea
Dark Waters
Exodus 13:17--14:31, Joshua 3:1-4:24
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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Prop: sound of water may be used in the background along with visuals

Song: Wade in the Water

One of my favorite phrases is “I’m up to my neck in alligators.” For some reason that phrase always tickled my funny bone and stuck to my ribs. It means, to be overwrought with deadlines and expectations, to be nearly consumed, to be working to full capacity. It means, “I’m close to drowning in work,” “I’m in nearly over my head,” “I’m in full deep.” Or as we also might say, “If I don’t keep paddling, I’ll be in deep doo-doo.”

What is it like to be in that kind of “deep water?” To be in deep water is to be so engulfed that it’s hard to swim ashore, keep afloat, get solid footing, or gasp for air. The alligators only make it worse, suggesting not only deep water, but swamp water. Or to marry two metaphors, can you really “drain the swamp” when you’re “up to your neck in alligators?”

Imagine for a moment being entrenched or ensconced in muddy, marshy, syrupy, gooey swamp muck. Not a pleasant thought, is it? Or what about a river full of rapids? Or a growing whirlpool? Or a raging river? Or a stormy sea? Or a stagnant, dark pond?

While water may bring up pleasant, peaceful images, water can also be a frightening place, especially if you’re trapped within it. For those on ships in the midst of a tumultuous storm in the night, the sea can feel dark and threatening. For those trapped underwater when air runs out, the sea can feel like a black, menacing tomb. For those swept away by tsunamis and tidal waves, water can feel like a deadly and powerful undertow. For those drawn down into a quick-sand-like swamp, infested with hungry alligators, the world can feel dark indeed!

This kind of “dark” image of water inspired the recent movie, due out November 22, 2019, “Dark Waters,” in which a chemical company defense attorney discovers a dark secret about DuPont Chemical Company that threatens the lives of 40,000 people with poisoned drinking water.

The “dark” in the waters surrounding these communities may not have been swamp, but it was infested –with poisons, and secrets, and life-threatening chemicals.

For the attorney in the movie to help the people of this community, he would have to “wade” in full force –into the soupy muck that had become corporate politics, corruption, money, and power. He could have looked the other way. But the truth of the matter is, if you want to wrestle alligators, you’ve got to wade in the water. Only then can you drain the swamp.

Disciples of Jesus are adventurers, risk-takers, those willing to enter into dark, murky waters in order to bring light and the cleansing power of God to those in need. We are those who for the good of all people are willing to wade into dark watery places to rescue the meek and carry across the helpless, to destroy the forces of evil and to reach new places of promise.

Throughout the scriptures, in fact, every time God’s people are called to a new covenant or a new life in a new time and place (whether literal or spiritual), they must literally “wade through the water.”

Often, if we want to come into the light, if we want to bring others into the light, we must first be willing to venture into deep, dark places, into deep, dark waters.

In today’s scripture story in Exodus 14, we find the people of God, led by Moses, wading into the waters of the Red Sea in faith to escape the pursuing Egyptians. The scriptures tell us that the angel of God moved the pillar of cloud from in front of the Israelites to behind them, coming between the armies of Egypt and Israel. The cloud brought darkness to one side and light to the other. Then the Lord drove back the waters to allow the people through. But the Egyptian chariot wheels became jammed in the mud of the shore, and the sea rushed in over them.

The Israelites were at first terrified, but Moses assured them that the Lord would see them through. If they had remained on the shore, they would have been consumed. The only way through to the other side, was to wade through the water. And as they did, the waters receded, and they passed into a new place.

This same phenomenon would happen again for Joshua, as he led the next generation of Israel through the Jordan and into the promised land. Joshua tells the priests to stand in the Jordan river and wait for the miracle to come. The miracle happened only after they waded into the river, not before. And as they stood in the river, the water stopped flowing. “No sooner had they set their feet on the dry ground than the waters of the Jordan returned to their place and ran at flood stage as before.” (Joshua 4:17-18).

We as people of God, as the Israelites before us, fear the unknown, the tumult, especially the dark. And yet, Jesus promises us to be our Light. Although Jesus stilled the storm for his frightened disciples in our gospel for today, he never encouraged them to stay secure upon the shore. As fisherman, as adventurers, as disciples of Jesus, their place was upon the waters, seeking new places, rescuing people. Dangerous? Sometimes. Deadly? Not when Jesus is with us. His light and His hand, like the mighty hand of God, will always see us through. But first we must wade in the water.

The small town of Newtok, Alaska faced a challenge when their Bering Sea community became threatened and eroded so badly that their homes began collapsing into the sea. They had lived in that town for many generations and were frightened and dismayed to pick up and move from their ancestral homes. And yet, they knew, if they stayed, they would be swept away into the sea. So, they moved 10 miles north to Mertarvik and established a new home there. When your landscape changes, you adapt, or you die.

So, it is too with our personal landscapes and our cultural landscapes. It doesn’t matter whether we are talking about the Israelites leaving the security of their long-time Egyptian homes in the most cosmopolitan city in the world as they knew it to trek across the desert and to cross through the sea, or whether we are talking about our own challenges today in crossing boundaries and borders to reach the people of our own surrounding communities and to help them start a new life in Christ in a way they can understand. No matter where or who you are, God is calling you as a disciple to lead the way, to cross over into new places and new times, to put aside your fear of the future and to embrace the dark waters of the unknown, knowing that God will lead you through to a new and better place.

“Wade in The Water,” an old spiritual from the south is said to have secret codes embedded into it, to reassure those slaves crossing the Ohio River that once over the border, they would be free. For those fleeing on the Underground Railroad, they hoped to wade into the water as soon as they could and to travel through water as much as possible, so that the bloodhounds sent to track them would lose the scent, and they would be able to escape and be assured safe passage. You can see how this was done in another recent movie, due out this month, the biography of Harriet Tubman.

But the dark waters in the song were not just a way to safety but a challenge of faith to those who would dare to escape and put their trust in God for their just redemption.

What challenges in your life feel frightening and dark? Do you have fears that are keeping you from moving forward and wading into the unknown, into a future that may feel unsteady or uncertain?

Today, ask Jesus to be your guide and your light, your assurance and your hope, as you stand up, and wade into the waters, where your own future awaits.

Put aside your fear.

Put aside your doubts.

Just wade into the waters and see what God will do.


*Calvinearl.com

Based on the Story Lectionary

Major Text

The Story of the Exodus Through the Sea (Exodus 14)

Minor Text

The Story of Creation (Genesis 1)

The Story of Noah (Genesis 7-9)

The Song of Moses and Miriam (Exodus 15)

Psalm 77, 95: The Lord Rescues Us From the Deep

Psalm 66: The Lord’s Salvation Through the Waters

Psalm 136: The Lord’s Mighty Creative Hand

The Book of Jonah [stages of grief]

Jesus Walks on Water (Matthew 14:22-33 and John 6:16-21)

Jesus Stills a Storm (Mark 4:35-41; Luke 8:22-25)

Paul’s Shipwreck (Acts 27)

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., by Lori Wagner