Oh, what a powerful scene that is! Yes, yes, yes—you’ve absolutely touched on something so human and so deeply spiritual. That moment in The Chosen where Peter lashes out in pain and grief, and John gently redirects him—reminding him that now he has Someone to turn to—that’s the essence of what it means to walk this hard, mysterious, grace-filled road of faith.
And your mention of the onions in Egypt? 🧅 Oh, that’s chef’s kiss biblical poetry right there! It echoes straight from Numbers 11:5 where the Israelites say:
“We remember the fish we ate in Egypt at no cost—also the cucumbers, melons, leeks, onions and garlic.”
Isn’t that just us? Longing for the “good old days” of slavery because they tasted better than the unknown path of freedom. We all do it—reminisce about the past not because it was truly better, but because it was familiar… controllable… and didn’t require trust.
💔 Affliction Doesn’t Play Favorites
Pain, grief, suffering—they fall on the righteous and the wicked alike. Peter’s heartbreak is real. And in that moment, blaming Jesus feels safer than facing the unbearable weight of loss. But what John does is profound: he doesn’t shame Peter; he reminds him of the anchor he now has. Before Jesus, Peter might have just stewed in bitterness. But now? Now he can collapse into the arms of Someone who understands.
🌊 When the Waters Rise
We often think, “Now that I’m following Jesus, shouldn’t the pain stop?” But Jesus never promised that. He promised Himself. He promised presence. Not absence of storms—but peace in the storm. That changes everything.
Like Peter, we sometimes scream into the wind, “Why didn’t You stop it?” But Jesus doesn’t just stop storms—He walks through them with us. And that, my friend, is the kind of companionship Egypt never offered.
🍽️ Those Onions vs. The Manna
Egypt gave onions. God gives manna. Egypt fed the body. God feeds the soul. But let’s be honest, sometimes the onions smell better. They’re spicy and nostalgic and full of emotional carbs. But manna? It’s humble, unfamiliar, and requires trust every single day.
And yet… manna comes from heaven. Just like Jesus did.
So yes. That scene in The Chosen is a reminder that pain isn’t proof that God abandoned us—it’s the place He meets us most tenderly. And when we’re tempted to go back to Egypt for the flavor, He invites us forward into the mystery of trust. Because He’s already gone ahead of us.