
Jesus' First Miracle Is Profound
We tend to breeze past the wedding at Cana. It's a nice story — Jesus turns water into wine, the party goes on, everyone's happy. But I think we miss something profound when we treat it as just a warm-up act.
This was Jesus' first public miracle. His first statement to the world about who He was and what He came to do. And He chose to do it at a wedding, turning water into wine.
Think about that for a moment.
More Than a Party Trick
Of all the things Jesus could have done to announce Himself — healing a leper, calming a storm, raising the dead — He chose to save a couple from embarrassment at their wedding reception. He chose to turn the ordinary into the extraordinary. He chose joy.
The stone jars He used were meant for ceremonial washing — the old way of purification under the Law. He filled them with something new. Something better. The old covenant, made new.
And the master of the banquet said something that should stop us in our tracks: "Everyone brings out the choice wine first and then the cheaper wine after the guests have had too much to drink; but you have saved the best till now."
Saved the Best for Now
That's the Gospel in one sentence, isn't it? The world tells you that the good stuff comes first and it's all downhill from there. Youth is wasted on the young. Your best days are behind you.
But Jesus says the opposite. He saves the best for now. For this moment. For whatever season of life you're in, whatever struggle you're facing, whatever ordinary Tuesday you're living through — He has something better in store.
The first miracle wasn't just about wine. It was about transformation. About taking the empty vessels of our lives and filling them with something beyond what we could ask or imagine.
And that's profoundly good news.