Sunday 9th February ~ “Fishing”  (Luke 5:1-11)


Intro:  Our New Testament lesson is from the fifth chapter of Luke.   Jesus has just begun his ministry of teaching and people are beginning to notice him.  They are starting to follow.  Word is spreading, not only is he a great teacher, now we discover he also knows how to fish.   Let us listen for God’s word to us.   (READ)    

Fish stories amuse us.   My in-laws used to fish a great deal, and they are part Irish so I’ve heard some good ones.   I’m sure in every family, or set of friends, there is someone who can tell a good tale of “the one that got away”, and describe in great detail the wild adventure that was the last fishing trip.   When it comes to “tall tales” I’m not sure which holds first place, fishing or golf.   It seems like there are all kinds of “almost miracles” that happen everyday.   I almost made this putt, or I almost caught the biggest trout in the lake.   I’m not a fisherman, but I do love to listen to fishing tales once in a while, there is such passion and animation in the telling, even if the facts may trouble one’s logical and rational side.   It is fun to hear of an “almost miracle” no matter how unbelievable it may be.   We can listen, laugh and then we keep going on with life as usual.  

But that’s not the kind of miracle story we have in Luke.  Jesus has just begun his public ministry.  He is going about the countryside teaching and preaching.  It is early in the morning and he already has a crowd following him.  He comes to the shore.  You can hear the tired and frustrated chatter of the fishermen coming in from fishing all night.  It’s been a worse than average night of work.  You hear the gravel as the boats are pulled up on shore—the nets tossed on to the beach to be sorted and stored.  They should smell fishy but they don’t.  The breeze is still from the land towards the lake.

Jesus needs to find a way to get a little distance from the press of the crowd so that he can share his message with all who want to hear.  Jesus asks Simon to let him teach from the boat.  It is an inconvenience.  Simon and his coworkers are tired.  They fished all night.  They did not catch anything.  Nothing makes a person more frustrated than to work all day and get nothing accomplished.  Now Jesus interrupts ending of their day.  Take me out a little way so I can see the crowd and the crowd may see me better, Jesus asks. 

We do not know how long Jesus preached.  We do not know the sermon.  Maybe he was working on an early version of the Sermon on the Mount.  Maybe he was refining his series on the Lost Sheep, the Lost coin, and the Lost Son.  But when Jesus finishes he tells Simon and the workers to let down their nets.  Now Simon shows some frustration.  Look, we are the fishermen.  We know what we are doing.  We fished all night.  Nothing.  Now you come meddling, asking for favors and telling us how to run our business.  They may have had no interest in listening to him at all.  When you are tired and frustrated at your work, the last thing you want is some upstart stranger telling you how to do it right. 

Yet for some reason Simon and his workers obey.  Who knows what it was about how Jesus talked with them, or what he said, but they go ahead and set out with their boat and net.  And the catch is magnificent.  So great that Simon and his workers have to call for help from the second boat.  Simon and his friends are really lucky.  This will make them rich for the day.  This is a dream catch, breaking nets, that almost sink the boats!  It is the hope that kept him going out day after day, that one day there would be more than he could ever pull in.  It would be like winning the lottery.  But Simon doesn’t react with joy.  This is not a little miracle story.  Simon knows that he is in the presence of the mystery and power of God and in that presence everything in his life is up for grabs and Simon begs Jesus to leave.  Get away from me, for I am a sinful man.

Little miracles are enjoyed.  The ones that come by and say hi, that don’t shake things up too much.  But if the truth be told, we may not really want the great miracle of the presence and power of God which suddenly makes everything you ever thought you knew about the world, everything you thought you knew about fishing, the invasion of the Holiness of God which makes everything you thought you knew about yourself, suddenly inadequate, and incomplete.  Here in this boat suddenly Simon was face to face with the moment which forced him to have to make a decision about whether or not to really believe in the presence and power of God involved in our lives or to deny what had happened to him, return to shore and pretend that it never happened and forever to live the rest of his life trying to pretend it never happened.

Right then, he would be shaking.  His muscles overtaxed with the demands of hauling in this huge catch.  But more so his soul shaken with the awareness of God that was standing right there before him in the person of Jesus Christ.  This was more than the best catch ever, it was a very real sign of God’s abundance and overwhelming action in his life right then, right there before his eyes.  This miracle was for Simon Peter, the fisherman.  There were more fish there than he ever imagined.  He could do things he never thought possible, if he followed Jesus’ word.  When he thought all his efforts would bring up nothing, Jesus says “go out again”, against what makes sense, against what all your training and experience might tell you, go where I send you says Jesus, and wait with your nets, you will be surprised and shaken. 

Little miracles of strange and delightful events which allow us to go on about our daily lives comforted with the thought that maybe our world really is surrounded by a greater power, love and mercy.  We enjoy those.  But the great miracles which come to confront us with the majesty of God, those are more troubling because the stakes seem so high.  Follow me and I will make you fishers of people.  And Simon and his coworkers left everything and followed.

Little miracles we like, but big miracles which suddenly change the whole way you look at your life, at the way you look at how the world treats you, changes all your plans for the future, which come to you and has all the feel of being compelled by something in a new direction, we don’t really want those miracles very often.  We don’t want them or if we suddenly begin to tremble with excitement at the adventure of being called into this whole new world, saying yes send me, there are others who will not celebrate with you.  Most of us are used to how things are and it’s Ok to keep it this way. 

Little miracles, like even Jesus turning water into wine, we like them, we don’t have to change much.  The wedding party can keep going.  When the party is over we can all go home and get on with our lives.  What happened to Isaiah and to Simon led to a lifetime of change.  Maybe we put so much attention on the little miracles because we are not sure what we would do with the bigger one.

Sometimes we can see things with our own eyes and still miss the reality of what is before us. Sometimes we can be so bound up with our expectations of what is, or focused on what we think is important, that we can be caught off guard when the bigger picture comes into focus.  God gets out of the temple and into the world where the deep need is.   Into each of our lives Jesus comes at some point, calling to us saying “come into the deep water come out a little further than you are used to going, take a few risks and throw out your nets.  See what is out here.  Go, do what you already know how to do, but do it in a new way, in broad day light, and out where the water is deep.   This call may cause us to shake, and awaken to new possibilities and realities as we become a loving and beloved community of faith.  Amen.