Let us pray… Heavenly Father, You chose us to be followers of Your Christ. You gave us the faith to believe in Him. And when we exercise that faith, accepting Jesus as our Lord and Master, You give us everlasting life in Your paradise. Thank You, Father, for loving us this much. But Father, too often we seem to forget or fail to understand that we have been chosen and called to follow Jesus. And we don’t grasp what that really means. Too often we hesitate to share the Gospel and make disciples as Jesus commanded. Please forgive us these times, Father. Help us be better servants of You and Jesus, better disciples and apostles of our Lord.
Speak to us now, Father, that we might hear Your voice through Your Spirit within us and better understand the message You have for us this day. Please keep us strong in our faith, of one mind and one purpose in our love, our worship, and our service. And please keep us healthy and safe through these trying times. This we pray in the precious name of Your Son, Christ Jesus our Lord.
And now may the words of my mouth and the meditations of each of our hearts be acceptable in Your sight, O Lord our strength and our redeemer. Amen.
Comedian Steven Wright once joked, "There's a fine line between fishing and standing on the shore like an idiot." I must admit I've spent a lot of time standing on the banks of a pond, lake, or river like an idiot. But surely there's more to catching fish than that.
A priest who had spent a fruitless day fishing picked out three fat fish in the market. "Before you wrap them," he said to the store manager," toss them to me, one by one. That way I'll be able to tell the monsignor I caught them and I'll be speaking the truth." Ok, so that's stretching the truth just a bit.
Some failed fishing trips are blamed on the fish. A gentleman by the name of Don Marquis once noted that, "Our idea of fishing is to put all the exertion up to the fish. If they are ambitious we will catch them. If they are not, let them go about their business."
But those of us who have ever spent much time fishing understand that it requires a lot of effort, time, and patience to be successful. First we have to go to where the fish are. Then we need to choose and use the right bait for the kind of fish we hope to catch. And if they don't bite at first, we can't just give up. We need to cast out, again and again, until we finally succeed. Whether we're trying to snatch up fish for supper, or people for our Lord, this is how to ensure a good catch.
One thing I want to point out in our scripture reading that confuses some folks is that the lake of Gennesaret Luke refers to is more commonly known as the Sea of Galilee. Gennesaret was a town on the western shore of the Sea of Galilee, between Capernaum and Magdala, in the area where Jesus did much of His teaching and healing and other miracles, including feeding the 5000, walking on water, and calming the storm. So Gennesaret was a significant location during Jesus’ ministry, especially in the earlier stages, such as calling His first disciples to follow Him. And that is where our scripture event takes place.
Jesus has come near to Capernaum and is walking along the shore of the Sea of Galilee. A crowd gathers, wanting to hear Him teach. Spotting a pair of boats pulled up to shore, with the fishermen off to the side washing their nets, He climbed aboard the boat that Simon just so happened to own. Coincidence? Nope – there is no such thing; everything is planned by God.
So Jesus asks Simon to push the boat out a little ways. His excuse was that He wanted the people to be able to hear Him better. And I say “excuse” because if you’ll think back to the story of Jesus feeding the 5000, He apparently had no trouble being heard by that multitude spread all across the field.
Now after Jesus finished addressing the crowd, He climbed out of the boat and told Simon to go back out into the deeper water and cast out his nets for a catch. What we didn’t see in the full story before our reading started is that Simon and Andrew had been out fishing all night, along with James and John (the sons of Zebedee), and had caught nothing. Cast after cast, their nets came up empty. They were tired and discouraged, yet when Jesus told him to give it another try, something in His voice or demeanor convinced Simon to do just that. And they caught so many fish it almost sank both boats.
When they excitedly came back to shore, Jesus told a humbled Simon that he would now fish for men. Simon and Andrew and James and John would now become fishermen fishing for men to follow Jesus. And they left everything – the fish, their boats, Zebedee – and followed the Lord.
Jesus chose these four men to be His first disciples. Family, we too have been chosen to fish for men, and by that I mean all people, the generic “men”, male and female. We have been called and chosen to tell other people all about Jesus and all that God has done for us. The Apostle Peter reaffirms this calling in the 2nd chapter of his 1st letter to the scattered early church, in verses 9 and 10, when he writes…