In the Gospel of John, the very first thing Jesus does is go to a party. Sure, there’s the famous intro and his cousin John introduces him to some of his first followers, but the first action the gospel narrates is Jesus, his mother and his friends attending a wedding celebration in Cana.
It’s quite a well known story because Jesus brings the wine. Kind of. Wedding celebrations in those days were big week-long events involving the whole community and everyone brought food and drink. They ran out of wine and Jesus’ mother tells him to help them out. He tells the servants to fill some large pots with water and then they serve it and, when they do, it had become wine. And not just any old plonk, the best quality stuff. And a lot of it, too, more than they needed. The steward of the feast even congratulates the groom on holding back the good stuff until now. Crisis averted, party saved, it’s a miracle.
Is it, though?
It’s often referred to as “The Miracle at Cana” or “The First Miracle” Jesus did, but really, any street corner magician could probably pull that off. Maybe not in the quantity Jesus did, but is it really that spectacular? And compare it to other “miracles” of Jesus. No one was healed, physically or spiritually. Justice wasn’t done, no lives were saved, the hungry weren’t fed. Okay, you could argue he helped the thirsty and saved the groom some embarrassment, but it just doesn’t stand up well with the others, does it?
The so-called miracle’s not the point here, though. There’s more important things to notice, and the author of John wants you to. At the conclusion of the story, they write “Jesus did this, the first of his signs, in Cana of Galilee and revealed his glory, and his disciples believed in him.”
It’s a sign. Signs point to things, they impart information and direction. You’re not supposed to focus on the sign, but what it points to.
The gospel that begins with the Word and how “the Word was made flesh” to live among us, puts Jesus right in the middle of a life-changing community event. And I don’t think for a moment that he was sitting quietly in a corner being a wallflower. I think he was in among the people, eating, drinking, dancing and having a great time celebrating. It was time to be just one of the people, not the messiah, not yet.
Even so, as one of the people he makes transformation happen. Ordinary, everyday water, essential to the fabric of who we are, is transformed into something tasty, delicious even, fruitful, enjoyable and lively. Jesus transforms the ordinary into the spectacular. How’d he do that?
Easy enough to say “well, he’s Jesus.” Sure, but what is Jesus but the divine spirit of love, grace, compassion, the good that has been from the beginning - the very things that he’ll demonstrate with the “miracles” of his life. A life that shows us we are capable of all that, too.
As he leaves the wedding with his disciples all chatting excitedly about the miracle, I imagine him saying something like “you think that was cool, watch this.”