9 February 2025
St. Athanasius
Lutheran Church
Epiphany 5 Vienna, VA
“A Net Unlike Any Other”
Text: Luke
5:1-11
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God our Father,
and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
I’ve watched some fishing shows on TV from time to
time, and when the crab pots come up full of crab, when they reel in the big
fish, when they pull up nets full of fish, the fishermen aren’t sad or afraid,
they’re full of joy! They don’t just see fish, they see dollar signs. A catch
like that means they’ll be able to feed their family and pay the mortgage. It
makes all the effort and hard work worth it.
And yet the day we heard about today, with Peter
and his fishing partners out on the Lake of Gennesaret (which is another name for
the Sea of Galilee), it wasn’t like that at all. Peter should have been
ecstatic. With each one of those fish filling his boat and the boat of his
partners he should have seen denarius signs! This would provide for their
families. It is what they worked so hard for. But instead of visions of profits
filling his head, to Peter, every fish that flip-flopped into his boat heaped
another burning coal on his head. The weight of his sin was crushing him.
Until that moment, Peter probably thought he was
doing pretty well. He had a respectable business. Was married, had friends in
the community. Jesus had even come over to his house and healed his
mother-in-law of a fever! All in all, things were going well . . .
But something changed. Something brought him to his
knees.
Maybe he had
grumbled when Jesus wanted to use his boat, if he was tired and just wanted to
go home and sleep . . .
Maybe he
muttered under his breath when Jesus then told them to go back out and fish
again! At the wrong time of the day and in the wrong depth of water and after a
long and frustrating night . . .
Maybe he had
had other impure thoughts that day . . . Maybe he had left the house last night
after a fight with his wife . . .
Maybe it was that little white lie he told the fish
dealer the other day . . .
Maybe it was
remembering the neighbor he should have helped but just didn’t want to be
bothered . . .
All things in the normal course of a day. All
things everybody does. That’s just life, isn’t it? Right?
Until Jesus comes and after all that heaps blessing
upon blessing upon you that you clearly don’t deserve! It is an honor for Him
to use your boat, not an inconvenience. You get to hear Him preach. He wants to
be with you. He enriches you! But all of a sudden, the weight of all those sins
that before felt so small and light now feel so big and heavy . . . and
crushing. Enough to bring a big, strong fisherman to his knees.
This wasn’t the first time Peter had met Jesus. As
I said, Jesus had come over to his house and healed his wife’s mother. But this
time was different. He wasn’t among a crowd of people, Jesus wasn’t doing for
someone else - this was sinful him, in a boat now graciously filled with fish
by the One who created the sea, the fish, and him! And suddenly,
standing next to Him, to Jesus, the Holy One of God, the weight of his sins
seemed to multiply as fast as the spinning numbers of the United States debt
clock! This great catch of fish may have been sinking his boats, but his sins
were sinking him! Quickly. And under such a burden and weight, he found himself
at Jesus’ knees, saying, “Depart from me, for I am a
sinful man, O Lord.”
And then those words: Do not be afraid.
How could he not be afraid?! And yet those words did what
they commanded. They took away his fear. They took away his sin! And
then Jesus gave him another gift - a new life. From now on you will be
catching men. And not just Peter, but James and John, too. And while
Jesus fills the nets and boats of this little fishing company with a multitude
of fish, there’s really only one - or maybe three - fish He
wanted in His net. And for Jesus, that was a very successful
trip. For He landed Peter.
And imagine how many fish Peter caught in the
roughly 2,000 years since that day! Not only in his ministry until his
martyrdom, but even after, through his words and work handed down to us in the
Bible. Peter reminds us so much of ourselves, in his hasty words, his
misunderstanding, his fear, his denials, his failures. And yet how wonderfully
God used him to bring people into the boat of the Church. A good reminder to us
that it is not our goodness, our strength, our friendliness, our effective
techniques, or anything in us that builds the Church. It is the work of God
through sinners like Peter and you and me. That day, the work of God the Son.
These days, the work of God the Spirit.
But more than the fish Peter caught that day or all
the days after that, it was Jesus’ forgiveness that netted Peter. Jesus’
forgiveness that transformed Peter that day, and all the days after that day
when he kept stumbling and fearing and putting his foot in his mouth and
falling asleep and denying and acting like the sinner he was. Jesus did not
leave him or forsake him, but lifted him up and forgave him. With forgiveness
that zeros the debt clock of our sin that always seems to be spinning out of
control! Forgiveness that will not and cannot run out.
And forgiveness is the net that catches men and
women today.
Jesus hasn’t filled our church with fish, but He has filled it
with forgiveness. So that is the gift we have to give, to a world filled with
sin and sinners. They might not even realize they need it, like Peter at first.
He was just living like normal, doing what everyone does, until he realized how
bad our normal is, how great and numerous the sins we do everyday
without even realizing it. Until that weight crushed him and left him no place
else to go but to his knees.
Are there people like that today? There are people like
that today in these seats here! In your seat. For with what
sins is your everyday life filled with? Sins that just seem normal, that
everybody does, that are just a part of life and living. Except they’re not.
And we need Jesus. We need to hear Him. We need to hear His do not be
afraid. Because we are. Maybe you’ve just buried that fear deep down so
you don’t have to deal with it. Maybe it hurts too much. Maybe you don’t want
to admit you’re not okay. We do . . . but we also don’t, right? We confess, but
. . . aren’t I more okay than the next guy, at least?
No. So how good that Jesus is here for you, and His
words are here for you. Do not be afraid. I forgive you all
your sins. These are words that do what they say. For Jesus, here,
is casting the net of His forgiveness and catching sinners - even if just one
or two at a time.
And this is the net Peter - and the Church ever
since - would use as Jesus chose him and trained him and then sent him out as
an apostle. Not everyone wants that forgiveness, or thinks they need
that forgiveness. But when sin bring them to their knees, we have it for them.
To let them know that Jesus has not left them or forsaken them, but is here for
them. To take away the guilt and shame of their sin. And that even when death
rears its ugly head, do not be afraid. Jesus has overcome that,
too. Jesus’ resurrection means that His net even pulls us up out of the grave
to live a new and eternal life.
A new life that you live where God has put you to
live it. He didn’t make you an apostle like Peter, but He didn’t need to. And
that doesn’t make you any less important, just different. With different people
to be with and care for and especially forgive. Here’s how Luther put
it:
Because God is gracious, ready to forgive, and
kind, I go out and turn my face from God to human beings; that is, I tend to my
calling. If I am a king, I govern the state. If I am the head of a household, I
direct the domestics; if I am a schoolmaster, I teach pupils, mold their habits
and views toward godliness. . . . In all of our works we serve God, who wanted
us to do such things and, so to speak, stationed us here.
So where has God stationed you? Wherever it is, and
in all the places He puts you, forgive. In your family, forgive. In your
school, forgive. In your church, forgive. At your work, forgive. In your
neighborhood, forgive. For by forgiving, you’re casting the net of Jesus. And
you never know what you’re going to pull up. It could be a great catch, it
could be just one at a time. But one thing is for sure, the waters are not
fished out. Peter and the others were out all night and caught nothing, but
Jesus knew there were fish to be had.
And maybe for us, too. So we’ll keep being the
church, throwing out the net of forgiveness, showing mercy, helping others, and
letting Jesus do the rest. It’s His net, His Church, His forgiveness, and His
catch. He’ll do it. Maybe in quite surprising ways! Maybe at the wrong time of
the day and in the wrong depth of water. Maybe with the wrong people and in the
wrong neighborhoods. Maybe catching sinners so bad we look at them and think .
. . them? Really? Here? With me? And then we look in the mirror and know:
if there is forgiveness for me, then certainly there is for thee.
Peter learned that great truth that day in his boat
out on the Sea. A lesson he kept learning and a gift he kept receiving everyday. If that doesn’t sound like you, then drop to your
knees (at least in your hearts!), for Jesus is here for you today in this boat,
His Church. To provide for you and enrich you. The God who created the fish,
the sea, and you, now says to you, Take and eat, this is My
Body; Take and drink, this is My Blood. Do not be afraid. With this
gift your sins are forgiven, you are raised to a new life, and can depart in
joy and peace. You are not condemned, you are saved. And in His sight, you are
a sinful man no more.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and
of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.