Page last updated

 

 

 

Leaving It All Behind
a sermon based on Matthew 4:12-23
by Rev. Randy L Quinn

I was in San Diego again last week, and like most of my trips to San Diego, I called my cousin who lives there and we went out to eat.  And like every other time I’ve been there, it began with Cheryl asking me what I wanted to eat.

Each time I go, she takes me to a different restaurant where we try to remember whose turn it is to buy.  This time we ate at the “Fish Market,” a combination seafood restaurant and fresh fish market.  It’s on the waterfront, and the smell in the air in and around the restaurant was filled with the distinct aroma of fish.  It was a fitting place to stop and reflect upon our text for today.

I imagine the smell was not all too different that day when Jesus walked along the shores of Galilee.  There were probably a few stands where the catch of the day was being offered for sale, and I’m sure that many of the men who caught those fish were either mending their nets or cleaning the fish.  Others were taking care of their boats and getting ready for the next catch.

Not many of them were thinking about how their efforts had changed life for the fish, however.  J

I like to eat fish, but I don’t particularly care for fishing, so I’m always appreciative of those who know how and take the time to catch fish so I can eat them.  My dad, on the other hand, doesn’t care to eat fish but he loves the sport of fishing.  In fact, he makes a fishing trip to Alaska each summer with some friends.  I always look forward to those trips because he invariably brings us back some fresh-frozen salmon and halibut. 

Unlike the men my dad goes to Alaska with, however, the fishermen that Jesus meets along the lakeshore make their livelihood catching and selling fish.  And they use an entirely different technique to catch them, too.

Dad, like most people who engage in sport fishing, catches one fish at a time at the end of a fishing pole.  And many are the trips when he comes home without any fish.  (And in fact, we joke about it because if I go with dad, no one ever catches a fish!)

Peter and Andrew, as well as James and John, use nets to capture multiple fish.  It isn’t for sport.  Their lives depend upon the catch.  And the more they catch, the better off they are.

But it’s hard work.

For the fish, however, it’s a different story.  Instead of one fish at a time, whole groups of fish are pulled from the water in the same net.

Two recent animated movies were about fish, Finding Nemo and the more recent Shark.  Both portray the life of fish as having meaning and purpose as living creatures.  Neither film suggests that life is better for the fish once they’ve been caught and taken above the surface.

For the Jewish fishermen who knew their scripture, it clearly was not a good thing for the fish.  They could recall the words of Ezekiel:

'This is what the Sovereign LORD says: "‘with a great throng of people I will cast my net over you, and they will haul you up in my net.  I will throw you on the land and hurl you on the open field. I will let all the birds of the air settle on you and all the beasts of the earth gorge themselves on you.  I will spread your flesh on the mountains and fill the valleys with your remains.  I will drench the land with your flowing blood all the way to the mountains, and the ravines will be filled with your flesh.

When I snuff you out, I will cover the heavens and darken their stars; I will cover the sun with a cloud, and the moon will not give its light.  All the shining lights in the heavens I will darken over you; I will bring darkness over your land, declares the Sovereign LORD.                (Ezek 32:3-8)

Not a very pretty picture for the fish, is it?

So I began to wonder what crossed their minds when Jesus invites these four men to join him on a fishing expedition, not one taken on a boat with a net, but one that would take them into the cities and towns where Jesus would repeat the message spoken by John the Baptist before him:  “Repent.”

What does it mean to take people out of their current circumstances, and create a radical change – as radical as taking a fish out of water?

A few weeks ago, during my daily devotion time, I found myself reading a hymn that I had known, but never really thought about[1].  In it, George Matheson suggests that true freedom can only be found when we allow ourselves to be bound up and imprisoned.

“Make me a captive Lord, and then I shall be free.”

You may have heard his story before, but I recently read about a man who thought he was called to be a pastor, but he didn’t like school.  He decided against college and joined the Marines.  After being discharged from the Marines, he gave college a try.

To help defray his living expenses, he borrowed $900 and bought a pizzeria and renamed it “Domino’s”.  And the rest, as they say, is history.  He had 6,100 stores when he sold the chain.

But do you know why he sold it?

Tom Monaghan had lived a life of extravagance.  He owned his own baseball team.  He had expensive cars and expensive homes and expensive furniture.  (By expensive, I mean a car worth $8 million and a Frank Lloyd Wright dining room set worth $1.6 million!)

But as a multi-millionaire, he found his life lacked purpose and depth.

He remembered his first love – his love for God – and found a way back to the calling he had as a youngster.  He sold it all to support mission work.  He hopes to die broke, but his life has a purpose now.  He wants to bring as many people as he can with him when he gets to heaven.

He has found that true freedom is to be found in service.  He found that only by repenting could he find true happiness.

The sad part for many of us is that we think repentance has a “capital R.”  We think it is a one time experience that changes the direction of our lives rather than a series of smaller decisions throughout our lives that affect our lives. We don’t like to think of repentance with a “lower case r.”

That gets too personal.

We like to hear about the miraculous conversion of a drug dealer or politician.  We like to hear the story of how Christ changed the direction of a movie star.

But we’re just little fish in the pond who don’t want to take the bait for fear we may have to change.

We don’t want to change the way we relate to our parents.

We don’t want to change the way we spend our money.

We don’t want to change the way we spend our free time.

We don’t want to change.

But until we change, God can’t use us.

In the book I just finished reading Erwin McManus makes a distinction between accepting Jesus as our savior and accepting him as our Lord[2].  Too many of us, he suggests, are content with having a savior.  We don’t want to submit ourselves to the will of God.

We want to have Jesus as a friend, not a master.

And I remembered that hymn once again.

“My will is not my own till thou hast made it thine.”

We cannot follow Jesus unless we are willing to let him be the leader.  We cannot be included in his fishing boat unless we leave behind what has become familiar.

But there is also something comforting in realizing that Jesus called these fishermen, even though they had not been trained.  He called plain people like you and like me and promises to be with us every step of the way.

Thanks be to God.  Amen.


[1]  Hymn # 421, United Methodist Hymnal, “Make Me a Captive, Lord.”

[2]  An Unstoppable Force (Group, 2001), p 200.