P1694:6, 151:5.1
The multitude continued to increase throughout the week. On Sabbath Jesus
hastened away to the hills, but when Sunday morning came, the crowds returned.
Jesus spoke to them in the early afternoon after the preaching of Peter, and
when he had finished, he said to his apostles: "I am weary of the throngs;
let us cross over to the other side that we may rest for a day."
P1694:7, 151:5.2
On the way across the lake they encountered one of those violent and sudden
windstorms which are characteristic of the Sea of Galilee, especially at this
season of the year. This body of water is almost seven hundred feet below
the level of the sea and is surrounded by high banks, especially on the west.
There are steep gorges leading up from the lake into the hills, and as the
heated air rises in a pocket over the lake during the day, there is a tendency
after sunset for the cooling air of the gorges to rush down upon the lake.
These gales come on quickly and sometimes go away just as suddenly.
P1694:8, 151:5.3
It was just such an evening gale that caught the boat carrying Jesus over
to the other side on this Sunday evening. Three other boats containing some
of the younger evangelists were trailing after. This tempest was severe, notwithstanding
that it was confined to this region of the lake, there being no evidence of
a storm on the western shore. The wind was so strong that the waves began
to wash over the boat. The high wind had torn the sail away before the apostles
could furl it, and they were now entirely dependent on their oars as they
laboriously pulled for the shore, a little more than a mile and a half distant.
P1694:9, 151:5.4
Meanwhile Jesus lay asleep in the stern of the boat under a small overhead
shelter. The Master was weary when they left Bethsaida, and it was to secure
rest that he had directed them to sail him across to the other side. These
ex-fishermen were strong and experienced oarsmen, but this was one of the
worst gales they had ever encountered. Although the wind and the waves tossed
their boat about as though it were a toy ship, Jesus slumbered on undisturbed.
Peter was at the right-hand oar near the stern. When the boat began to fill
with water, he dropped his oar and, rushing over to Jesus, shook him vigorously
in order to awaken him, and when he was aroused, Peter said: "Master, don't
you know we are in a violent storm? If you do not save us, we will all perish."
P1695:1, 151:5.5
As Jesus came out in the rain, he looked first at Peter, and then
peering
into the darkness at the struggling oarsmen, he turned his glance back upon
Simon Peter, who, in his agitation, had not yet returned to his oar, and said:
"Why are all of you so filled with fear? Where is your faith? Peace, be quiet."
Jesus had hardly uttered this rebuke to Peter and the other apostles, he had
hardly bidden Peter seek peace wherewith to quiet his troubled soul, when
the disturbed atmosphere, having established its equilibrium, settled down
into a great calm. The angry waves almost immediately subsided, while the
dark clouds, having spent themselves in a short shower, vanished, and the
stars of heaven shone overhead. All this was purely coincidental as far as
we can judge; but the apostles, particularly Simon Peter, never ceased to
regard the episode as a nature miracle. It was especially easy for the men
of that day to believe in nature miracles inasmuch as they firmly believed
that all nature was a phenomenon directly under the control of spirit forces
and supernatural beings.
P1695:2, 151:5.6
Jesus plainly explained to the twelve that he had spoken to their troubled
spirits and had addressed himself to their
fear-tossed minds, that he had
not commanded the elements to obey his word, but it was of no avail. The Master's
followers always persisted in placing their own interpretation on all such
coincidental occurrences. From this day on they insisted on regarding the
Master as having absolute power over the natural elements. Peter never grew
weary of reciting how "even the winds and the waves obey him."
P1695:3, 151:5.7
It was late in the evening when Jesus and his associates reached the shore,
and since it was a calm and beautiful night, they all rested in the boats,
not going ashore until shortly after sunrise the next morning. When they were
gathered together, about forty in all, Jesus said: "Let us go up into yonder
hills and tarry for a few days while we ponder over the problems of the Father's
kingdom."