We see the beginnings of Peter’s repentant (yet often impulsive, even after salvation) heart in our text. His actions and speech give us all the good preaching points of a heart turning to God: Peter’s turning things over to Jesus, falling to his knees, and recognition and knowledge that something was different about this Carpenter where even the fish and the nets obey Him.
Even so, we miss the practicality and significance of the moment. This is not in the temple. It isn’t even on dry ground. What is ordinary in this moment and common for every person in the Gospels and in the time following is that the Kingdom is so large that its King will not be relegated to certain places or practices. He flips everything on its head. He sent the perfect rule-keepers away sad. And He gathered and called frail children, flawed hearts and weary souls to Him. He made it clear—early in His work—that He had say over everything (carpentry, His father’s business, water and wine etc.) And when we rub again the vastness of what God does in any economy that we think we have all figured out, He will show us that we will need to repent and turn our conclusions there also. God’s kingdom is massive. William Beebe is given credit for a story about Teddy Roosevelt: At Sagamore Hill, after an evening of talk, the two would go out on the lawn and search the skies for a certain spot of star-like light near the lower left-hand corner of the Great Square of Pegasus. Then Roosevelt would recite: “That is the Spiral Galaxy in Andromeda. It is as large as our Milky Way. It is one of a hundred million galaxies. It consists of one hundred billion suns, each larger than our sun.” Then Roosevelt would grin and say, “Now I think we are small enough! Let's go to bed.” How does catching fish translate to a fisherman at work telling a Carpenter “Go away from me, Lord, for I am a sinful man!”? Peter realized that God is so great that He can point to a place in the water to catch a large amount of fish, and Peter realized just how small we are. When the boat started to sink, Peter realized that he was drowning. Inevitably, you and I will go back to work tonight or tomorrow morning. It will be working in the home taking care of the household, or on an assembly line, teaching, managing, etc. And in the monotony of repetition, we will begin to think some form of our own “This is it. This is the best it can be.” But that is not the kingdom that we are turning toward. Is it really possible that “the earth is the Lord’s” includes your work tasks? Peter's example reminds us to go where God calls us—primarily to learn just how small we are, and also the wonderful gift of how present God is also. Loving Father, what is humankind that you think about us? Forgive me for thinking higher of myself than I am. And for thinking lower of myself also. We need your Son if we ever intend to see well. Amen. Comments are closed.
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