Text: Luke 5:1-11
Introduction: The Ordinary and the Extraordinary
Grace, mercy, and peace be to you from God our Father and
from our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Amen.
Imagine for a moment the scene. It is a morning much like
any other. The sun is rising over the Sea of Galilee, casting a golden light
across the water. The air is cool and fresh. And down by the shore, there is a
flurry of activity.
There are fishermen there. Not romantic figures from a
storybook, but hard-working, tired men. Simon Peter, James, and John. They have
been out all night. All night they have cast their nets into the dark water.
All night they have waited, hoping, pulling, straining. And what did they get?
Absolutely nothing. Their bodies ache. Their spirits are low. They are not just
tired; they are empty. They are washing their nets, not in celebration of a
great catch, but in the resignation of a failed night.
Their boat, which should be full of fish, is empty. And
their hearts, perhaps, are starting to feel a little empty, too.
This is the stage upon which Jesus steps. He comes to these
ordinary men, in the middle of their ordinary, and somewhat disappointing, day.
He doesn't come to them in the Temple. He doesn't come to them in a grand
cathedral. He comes to them where they work. He meets them in the middle of
their failure.
That, my friends, is the first profound truth of this Gospel
reading. Jesus comes to us in the middle of our ordinary lives. He finds us in
our routine, in our struggles, in our disappointments. He doesn't wait for us
to get our act together. He comes to us while we are still washing our empty
nets.
Part 1: The Lesson of the Boat
What does Jesus do? He sees the boats. He sees Simon’s boat.
He asks to step into it. He asks Simon to push out a little from the shore.
It’s a simple request. A small act of service. Simon had just spent a fruitless
night fishing, a night of heavy labor. Now, this Teacher, this Rabbi, is asking
him to use his boat as a floating pulpit.
Simon says yes. He does what Jesus asks. He pushes out from
the shore. And Jesus sits down and teaches the people.
Now, this might seem like a small detail. But think about
it. By letting Jesus use his boat, Simon is letting Jesus borrow his space. He
is letting Jesus intrude on his territory. His boat, his livelihood, his little
place of work—he gives it over to Jesus.
And Jesus uses it. He uses Simon’s boat to bring the Word of
God to the people on the shore.
We have a boat. Our lives are that boat. We have our own
space, our own routines, our own plans. And Jesus often asks for permission to
step into them. He doesn’t barge in. He waits. He asks. "May I use this?
May I step into your day?" He asks to use our time, our talents, our
homes, our hearts.
When we say yes, He fills them with His presence and His
Word. He doesn’t just take from us. He gives back. He transforms our ordinary
little boat into a vessel of His grace.
Part 2: The Command to Launch Out
But then, the lesson is over. Jesus stops teaching. He turns
to Simon and says something that, on the surface, sounds almost insensitive. He
says, "Put out into the deep and let down your nets for a catch."
Imagine what Simon is thinking. He is an expert. He is a
professional fisherman. He knows this lake better than anyone. This Rabbi is a
teacher. He knows about scripture and God and parables. What does He know about
fishing?
Simon’s reply is so honest, so human. He says, "Master,
we toiled all night and took nothing!" He's saying, "We worked harder
than you can imagine. We used our best skills. We did everything right. And it
was a total failure. The fish aren’t there."
This is the voice of our own experience, isn't it?
"I've tried everything, Lord. I've prayed, I've worked, I've tried to be a
better person, and it’s all just… empty. I’m tired. I’m discouraged. What’s the
point?"
It's the voice of the doctor who has tried every treatment
and has to deliver bad news. It's the voice of the parent who is exhausted from
trying to reach a wayward child. It's the voice of the person who has been
trying to break an addiction and keeps falling. "All night! Nothing!"
This is the moment of decision. This is where faith meets
reality. And this is where Simon gives us the most beautiful and simple example
of faith. He says, "But at your word I will let down the nets."
He doesn’t say, "This makes sense to me." He
doesn’t say, "I think I’ll get a good result this time." He says,
"At your word. Because you said so. I will do it."
That is what faith is. It is trusting in the Word of Jesus
more than we trust in our own experience, more than we trust in our own wisdom,
and more than we trust in our own strength. It's putting our nets down one more
time, not because we can see the fish, but because Jesus said so.
Part 3: The Miracle of Abundance
And what happens when they obey? The catch is so enormous
that the nets begin to break. There are so many fish that both boats are filled
to the brim, so full that they begin to sink. The very thing they had failed to
do all night by their own effort is accomplished in a single moment by the
command of Jesus.
Simon, James, and John didn't just get enough to pay their
bills. They got more than they could handle. They got an abundance. An
overflowing, sinking-the-boat kind of abundance.
This is what happens when we trust Jesus. It doesn't mean we
will always get rich. But He offers an abundance that is more than just money.
He offers a fullness of joy, a peace that passes all understanding, a purpose,
and a hope that the world cannot give. When we do things our way, we often end
up empty. But when we do things His way, we find we are filled to overflowing.
And this moment of abundance—this miracle—does something to
Peter. It’s not just about the fish anymore.
Part 4: The Reaction
Peter falls at Jesus’ knees and says, "Depart from me,
for I am a sinful man, O Lord."
This is a shocking reaction, isn’t it? The nets are
bursting. The boats are sinking. Everyone is looking at the miracle. But Peter
looks past the miracle to the Miracle Worker. And in the presence of Jesus'
pure holiness, Peter sees himself. He sees all his flaws, his doubts, his
arrogance for questioning Jesus just moments before. He is overwhelmed by his
own unworthiness.
And that, too, is part of our walk with the Lord. Sometimes,
when we experience His goodness, we are humbled. We realize just how much we
need Him. We realize that we don't deserve the goodness He pours out on us. It
makes us shrink back.
But look at what Jesus does. He doesn't say, "Yeah,
you're right. You are a sinner. Get away from me." No. He doesn't even
address Peter's confession of sin directly. He says, "Do not be afraid;
from now on you will be catching men."
He lifts Peter up. He forgives him. He cleanses him. And He
doesn't just send him back to his old life. He gives him a new purpose.
"From now on, your life will be different. Your failures are not the end
of your story; they are the beginning of it." He takes a fisherman who
fails and makes him a fisher of men. He takes an ordinary, tired, empty man and
gives him a new mission.
Conclusion: The Journey into the Deep
So, what does this mean for us today, here and now, on this
5th Sunday after Trinity?
First, it means that Jesus is with you in the ordinary. He
is with you in your workplace, in your kitchen, in your routine. He sees your
exhaustion and your empty nets. He wants to come aboard your boat.
Second, it means He calls you to do something you might not
understand. He says, "Launch out into the deep." He may not be asking
you to make a dramatic, radical change. Perhaps He is simply asking you to be a
little more patient, a little more forgiving. Perhaps He is asking you to say
yes to a task you feel unqualified for. Perhaps He is asking you to trust Him
with a worry you’ve been carrying alone. Maybe you need to launch out into the
deep by speaking a word of truth and love to a family member. Maybe you need to
launch out by offering your time to help someone in need, even when you are
tired. He says, "Do it, because I said so. Trust me."
Third, when we obey, even in a small way, we will find that
Jesus provides. He doesn’t give us a little; He gives us a full measure,
pressed down and shaking together. He fills our lives with His presence in ways
that we could never manufacture on our own.
Finally, when we see His goodness and power, it will humble
us. We will realize we are unworthy. But He will gently say, "Do not be
afraid." He will not push us away. He will call us deeper. He will call us
to a new life. He will say, "Follow Me," and He will promise to make
us fishers of men.
Today, in this service, Jesus is stepping into our boat. His
Word is preached. His body and blood are given. He asks us to trust Him. He
sees our empty nets—our regrets, our sins, our failures. And He says,
"Let's try it again. This time, on My word."
So, let us not be afraid. Let us launch out into the deep.
It is only in the deep water that you catch the big fish. It is only by
trusting in His Word that we find our true purpose and our lasting joy.
He who calls you is faithful. He will do it.
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Spirit. Amen.
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