Monday, November 2, 2015

Fishing versus Catching

Read Luke 5.

This chapter opens with Jesus teaching a crowd on the shore of the Sea of Galilee.  The fishermen have come in and are cleaning their nets.  It has been a long night of work for them and they have nothing to show for their efforts.  They must be tired, discouraged, and ready to go home.

Then, Jesus came.  First, he got into Simon's boat so he could continue teaching the people.  But what He did next changed Peter's life and the lives of his partners.  "And when he had finished speaking, he said to Simon, 'Put out into the deep and let down your nets for a catch.'"

I cannot read verse five without hearing the whine in Peter's voice.  "We tried that and it did not work."  "This is not a good time to go fishing."  "We're tired."  "We are the professionals here.  We know more about fishing than you do."  Then, he complied anyway.  "But at your word I will let down the nets."  He had just cleaned them and he let Jesus know that the only reason he was doing it was "because you say so."

It is of particular interest that Jesus asked them not to fish but to "catch."  This anticipates what will happen.  Peter's boat could not handle all the fish.  His partners, James and John, were called to help.  Both boats began to sink from the load.  Without question, it was their greatest day of business ever.  As a result, Peter confessed his sin of unbelief.  Next, the three men walked away from their business to follow Jesus.

The miracles of Jesus were never an end in themselves.  They were always used to deliver and validate a message.  The message here was not about fish.  If Jesus can do that with temporal things that will either be consumed or rot in a short time, wait until you see what He can do to eternally change people.  "From now on you will be catching men."  That is the message for every disciple of His.

The will of God and His plans for us have little to do with human capacity, human reasoning, or even human expertise.  At His word creation came to be out of nothing.  By His word He hold all things to together.  He commands and it is so.  It is not what we have but the power of God that makes the difference.

Like Peter, we all have our excuses as to why we are not fully following Jesus and "catching" others for Christ.  We should be praying for and anticipating results.  The old Sunday School song is true.  "I will make you fishers of men, if you follow Me."

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