Got Wine?  
by Leon J. Suprenant, Jr
Courtesy of Catholic Exchange
03/02/05   




Since our Holy Father introduced the Luminous Mysteries of the Rosary a couple years ago,
it's been a joy and sometimes a challenge for my family to embrace these new mysteries. We
are always on the lookout for new ways of approaching these rich episodes in Christ's life.


As we've given more attention to the wedding at Cana (Jn 2:1-11), the second Luminous
Mystery, I've been amazed at the depth of this passage. There are so many ways to approach
this event, when Christ worked His first public miracle.

For one thing, the fact that it's a wedding itself is significant. As the Catechism of the Catholic
Church notes, "the Church attaches great importance to Jesus's presence at the wedding at
Cana. She sees in it the confirmation of the goodness of marriage and the proclamation that
thenceforth marriage will be an efficacious sign of Christ's presence" (Catechism no. 1613). In
the midst of a culture that devalues marriage, this mystery seriously redirects our attention to
the fundamental goodness of marriage — both as a human institution and as a personal
vocation in Christ.

The wedding at Cana shows our Blessed Mother in action. As we pray in the Hail Holy Queen,
Mary is our "most gracious Advocate" (Catechism, no. 969). As she interceded for the poor
couple who ran out of wine at their wedding, she intercedes for each one of us. Her purpose is
always to manifest and magnify her Son's glory (see Jn 2:11). She encourages each one of us,
as she encouraged the servants at the wedding, to "do whatever He tells you" (Jn 2:5). That, in
an inexhaustible nutshell, is the essence of Christian discipleship.

The wedding at Cana is the first of seven "signs" in the Gospel of John that bring to light the
glory of God shining forth through the Word made flesh. The Catechism succinctly describes
the meaning of this "sign": "The sign of water turned into wine at Cana already announces the
hour of Jesus's glorification. It makes manifest the fulfillment of the wedding feast in the
Father's kingdom, where the faithful will drink the new wine that has become the Blood of
Christ" (Catechism no. 1335; see also no. 2618).

Recently another, perhaps less obvious dimension of this Luminous Mystery came to light for
me. As I was prayerfully reading the passage, I stopped at verse 10, where the steward of the
feast says: "Every man serves the good wine first; and when men have drunk freely, then the
poor wine; but you have kept the good wine until now."

This makes for an interesting contrast with the multiplication of the loaves. In the multiplication
of the loaves, our Lord does just that — He multiplies. The miracle is that a few loaves are able
to feed thousands with plenty left over. There's no mention of the bread somehow improving in
quality. It's enough of a miracle that there's sufficient bread for the multitude.

At the wedding at Cana, however, the "water now become wine" wasn't simply more of the
same. It fact, the steward seems to suggest that at this point the guests would have been
content with a lesser vintage. Yet the wine Jesus miraculously gives far exceeds everyone's
expectation. It is the "good wine."

On a spiritual level, I find myself wanting the "good wine." Where do I find this "good wine"?
This question sounds very much like the question the woman at the well posed to Jesus a
couple chapters later in St. John's Gospel: "Sir, give me this water, that I may not thirst, nor
come here to draw" (Jn 4:15).

In both cases, the answer is found at the Cross, where the blood and water flowing from the
pierced side of Jesus gives abundant, new life. We're speaking here of the sacramental life of
the Church, through which the Blessed Trinity channels divine life to us. And so in the
Eucharist, our Lord changes ordinary bread, along with wine, "the blood of the grape" (Dt 32:
4), into His own Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity. Whenever we receive this "living bread," we
receive the awesome gift of partaking more fully in God's very life. This is the "good wine" par
excellence.

The Lord gives us "good wine" in these sublime sacramental encounters not only to quench
our thirst at the moment, but as a means for us to experience and savor His abiding presence
in our lives in a powerful way.

As psychologist Richard Carlson notes, "Our inbox probably won't be empty when we die." This
is simply a clever way of saying that we tend to approach our lives as a series of tasks to check
off our "to do" list. We push ahead through the seeming monotony of our daily lives toward
some nebulous future moment when we'll be able to enjoy the fruit of our labors.

Yet the future remains in the future. The "good wine" Christ wants to give us is not in the
unattainable future.

Rather, Christ wants to give us "good wine" right now — not as an end in itself, but to prepare
our "taste buds" for the heavenly banquet. The "good wine" is not elsewhere, but can and must
be found right here, amidst our daily struggles. As we become more attentive to the present
moment, to the superabundant "good wine" within our reach, we're better able to allow Christ's
life within us to transform the "water" of our mundane lives.

This life of grace is now, it's real and, like the water made wine at Cana, it's surprising. What
God wants to give us right now is better than anything we could desire or work for on our own.
As Isaiah asks, why do we spend our money for that which is not bread, and our labor for that
which does not satisfy? (Is 55:2). God is not a demanding slave master or even a disinterested
patriarch. He's a Father who delights in the marriage of His Son to His Church and, more
pointedly, who delights in each and every one of us. He is eager to infuse our lives with the
"good wine."


Leon J. Suprenant, Jr. is the president of
Catholics United for the Faith (CUF) and Emmaus
Road Publishing and the editor-in-chief of
Lay Witness magazine, all based in Steubenville,
Ohio. He is a contributor to
Catholic for a Reason III: Scripture and the Mystery of the Mass and
an adviser to CE’s
Catholic Scripture Study. His email address is leon@cuf.org.

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