Why Did Everything Obey Jesus Except the People He Came to Save?

Why Did Everything Obey Jesus Except the People He Came to Save?

Here is a question worth sitting with this morning. In the Gospels, the wind obeys Jesus. The sea obeys Him. Sickness, demons, scarcity, even death let go at His command. So why is it that the one thing slowest to surrender to Him is the human heart? This week’s Wake-Up Call walks through the whole inventory of everything that bows to Christ, then turns it gently on us, and finishes with real comfort: the same authority that exposes our stubbornness is the authority that has already mastered everything we are afraid of. Come and read it. There may be a line in here you need today.

Core Message

Everything in creation obeys Christ’s authority—wind, sea, sickness, demons, scarcity, and even death—yet the human heart is often slow to surrender. Nevertheless, the same Jesus who exposes our lack of trust is the One who lovingly saves us, calms our storms, and invites us to place our complete confidence in Him. 

RISE & INSPIRE  •  WAKE-UP CALLS

Reflection #165 of 2026  •  Post Streak 1060  •  Thursday, 19 June 2026

 

“They were amazed, saying, ‘What sort of man is this, that even the winds and the sea obey him?’”

— Matthew 8:27

അവർ ആശ്‌ചര്യപ്പെട്ടു പറഞ്ഞു: ഇവൻ ആര്? കാറ്റും കടലും പോലും ഇവനെ അനുസരിക്കുന്നുവല്ലോ!

— മത്തായി 8:27

 

WATCH & REFLECT

Everything Obeyed Him

A Wake-Up Call on the Authority of Christ — Matthew 8:27

Reflection

Beloved in Christ, let us begin this morning not with the calm but with the chaos. A boat is filling with water. Seasoned fishermen — men who had spent their whole lives reading the moods of this lake — are clinging to the sides with white knuckles, certain they are about to die. And in the stern, on a cushion, the Lord of glory is asleep. They wake Him with a scream that is half prayer and half accusation: “Lord, save us! We are perishing!” He stands. He speaks. And in the space of a single sentence, the sea lies down like a scolded dog. Then the men, soaked and shaking, turn to one another and ask the question that this entire Gospel is built to answer: what sort of man is this?

Sit with that question, because it is sharper than it sounds. The disciples are not asking it idly. They have just watched something happen that, in the whole of their Scriptures, only One had ever done. So let me put to you this morning a strange and bracing exercise. Let us take an inventory. Let us walk through the Gospels and simply count the things that obey the voice of Jesus of Nazareth — and then ask why the list ends where it does.

The Inventory

The winds obey Him. On the Sea of Galilee He rebukes the gale as a master rebukes a servant, and the howling stops mid-breath. The very air that no human hand has ever held falls silent the moment He commands it.

The sea obeys Him. The waves that were swallowing the boat flatten into glass. The ancient symbol of everything dangerous, everything beyond human control, the deep that the old Hebrews feared as the home of chaos itself — it hears His word and grows still.

The disease obeys Him. Fever leaves Peter’s mother-in-law at His touch. Leprosy, the living death no one dared approach, retreats at His word. Blind eyes open, withered hands unfold, twelve years of bleeding stop in an instant beneath the hem of His robe.

The demons obey Him. The legion that tormented a man among the tombs cannot stay when He speaks. They beg. They negotiate. They flee. The powers of darkness, which terrify us, are themselves terrified of Him.

The bread obeys Him. Five loaves multiply in His hands until a hillside of thousands is fed and twelve baskets are left over. The stubborn mathematics of scarcity bends to His blessing.

Even death obeys Him. This is the summit of the list. He stands outside a sealed tomb four days old and calls a dead man by name, and Lazarus walks out still wrapped in his grave-clothes. He takes a little girl’s cold hand and tells her to get up, and she does. The last enemy, the one that comes for every king and every beggar alike, the one against which all our wisdom and all our wealth are finally useless — even death lets go when He commands it.

Stand back now and look at the whole catalogue. Wind, sea, sickness, demons, scarcity, death. The entire range of the things that frighten us, the full inventory of forces that lie utterly beyond our control — every one of them recognises the voice of Jesus and obeys. There is nothing in heaven or earth that can hold its ground against His word. What sort of man is this? The honest answer, the only answer the evidence will bear, is the one the disciples were too afraid to say out loud that night: this is no mere man. This is God walking on the water He made.

The One Thing That Did Not Obey

And here the inventory turns, and turns sharply, and we must let it cut us before it heals us. Run your eye back down that list of everything that bowed to Him, and notice the one glaring exception. The winds obeyed. The sea obeyed. The sickness, the demons, the loaves, the grave — all of them obeyed. But the people did not.

The crowds came for the bread and left when the teaching grew hard. The religious leaders watched Him heal and plotted His death. His own townsfolk tried to throw Him off a cliff. And here, in this very boat, the men closest to Him — the ones who had left everything to follow Him — are rebuked not for the storm but for their fear. “Why are you so afraid? Have you still no faith?” The wind needed only a word. His disciples needed a question, because their hearts were slower to surrender than the sea.

This is the wound we must not flinch from, beloved. The whole of creation runs to obey Christ — and the only thing in the entire account that resists Him is the human heart. The sea had better theology than the saints. The waves submitted faster than the men He came to save. And before we shake our heads at twelve frightened fishermen, let us be honest enough to find ourselves in the boat. How often has He spoken peace over our storm and found us still clutching the oars? How often has He proved Himself faithful a hundred times, and we meet the hundred-and-first trouble as though He had never once shown up? Every force of nature in the universe knows its Master. The tragedy is that the creatures He loves the most are the slowest to bend the knee.

The Comfort Beneath the Conviction

But here, thank God, the Wake-Up Call does not leave us in the cold water of our own failure. It lifts us. For look again at why this inventory was written down at all. It was not recorded to shame you. It was recorded to settle you. The same authority that exposes the stubbornness of your heart is the authority that has already mastered everything your heart is afraid of.

Think it through. If the wind obeys Him, then the circumstances howling around your life this morning are not beyond His command. If the sea obeys Him, then the chaos that threatens to swamp your little boat will go quiet the moment He decides. If sickness obeys Him, your diagnosis is not the final word. If demons obey Him, no power of darkness assigned against you can stand when He speaks. If scarcity obeys Him, your five loaves are enough in His hands. And if death itself — death itself — lets go at His command, then there is truly nothing left on the list big enough to frighten a child who belongs to Him. The very inventory that convicts you is the inventory that guarantees your rescue.

So your slowness to trust Him does not disqualify you; it simply describes you, and He knew it before He ever stepped into your boat. He did not wait for the disciples to achieve great faith before He stilled their storm. He rebuked their fear, and then He calmed the sea anyway. That is the gospel in a single gesture: He saves the very people who are slow to believe He will. Your wavering heart is not stronger than His steady word. The same voice that the hurricane could not resist is gently, patiently, speaking peace over you — and it will not return to Him empty.

Rise and Trust Him

So rise this morning, beloved, and rise bold. Stop trying to out-row your storm by the strength of your own arms. Stop pretending the boat is not filling; He is not asleep to your danger, even when He seems silent to your fear. Bring Him the honest scream — “Lord, save me, I am perishing” — and then watch what His word can do. The winds will hear Him. The waves will hear Him. The thing you are most afraid of will hear Him. And one day, when the last storm of all is past and the sea is finally still, you will stand on the far shore and understand at last the answer to the question the disciples could not finish.

What sort of man is this? He is the Man who made the wind and walks on the water. He is the Man at whose word death itself unclenches its fist. He is the Man who, knowing your heart is slow, climbed into your boat anyway — and He is the only Man whose verdict over your life finally matters. Everything obeyed Him. Let your heart, at last, be the next thing on the list.

 A Prayer for Today

Lord Jesus, Master of the wind and the waves, I confess that I have been slower to trust You than the sea was to obey You. Forgive the fear that clutches the oars when You have already spoken peace. Speak Your word again over the storm I am carrying this morning, and quiet the chaos I cannot calm myself. Help me to remember that nothing on the list of my fears is bigger than Your command, and that even death lets go at Your voice. Make my stubborn heart the next thing to bend the knee. I bring You my honest cry: save me, Lord, for without You I perish — and I trust that Your word will not return empty. Amen.

 Peace be with you this day, and a settled heart for the week ahead.

— Johnbritto Kurusumuthu, for Rise & Inspire

Which storm in your life have you been trying to out-row by your own strength, and what would change if you finally let Christ speak one word over it? Share a line in the comments. It may be exactly what another reader needs to hear today.

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 Today’s reflection is written by Johnbritto Kurusumuthu, inspired by the verse shared this morning (19 June 2026) by His Excellency, the Rt. Rev. Dr Selvister Ponnumuthan, Bishop of the Diocese of Punalur — a cherished practice he has faithfully continued for over three years.

Rise & Inspire  •  Wake-Up Calls  •  Reflection #165 of 2026

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