Christ Walks With Us Through Every Storm
Fr. Felix Phiri, SMM
Christ Walks With Us Through Every Storm
T oday’s Homily reflects on the growth of the early Christian Church and the challenges that accompanied that growth.
Drawing from the Acts of the Apostles, the Homily explains how the first Christian community expanded rapidly through the witness of the apostles and their communal life of prayer, generosity, and unity. Yet growth also brought tension, particularly between Aramaic-speaking Jews and Hellenistic Jews over the fair distribution of food to widows.
The Apostles Responded
The apostles responded not with division or political balancing, but by selecting wise, Spirit-filled servants to care for the community. The Homily emphasizes that every member of the Church has gifts that should be placed at the service of others for the building up of the Body of Christ.
Turning to the Gospel account of Jesus walking on the water, the Homily connects the storm-tossed boat to the Church and to the personal struggles believers face in life. Just as Christ came to the frightened disciples and said, “It is I; do not be afraid,” so too Christ comes to believers amid storms of illness, relationships, and financial hardship. The Homily concludes with a powerful spiritual insight: the opposite of fear is not courage, but faith and trust in Christ.
Listen to this Meditation Media.
Christ Walks With Us Through Every Storm
Return to Meditation for the Week
Gospel Reading: John 6: 16-21
Jesus Walking on Water: Russian painter: Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky: 1888
Two years after completing this painting, Ivan painted another image with the same title, but noticeably different.
Why was this image selected:
This painting vividly portrays the luminous seascape and beautifully captures Christ approaching the disciples across turbulent waters. The image strongly reflects the Homily’s reassurance that Jesus accompanies believers during moments of fear, uncertainty, and suffering.
Christ Walks With Us Through Every Storm

