in the Gospel this Sabbath, we have a post resurrection encounter with Jesus. Of course, after trying to wait and decide what to do, Peter decides to go back fishing. He's tried this ministry thing, but he didn't get the results he wanted. He got stuck. So, standing on the shores of the Sea of Tiberius, he states, "I am going fishing". Maybe they were all there reminiscing. Maybe they were throwing rocks along the shores, wasting time. Maybe they were thinking about "the good ole days"; maybe they were feeling nostalgic. So there, in the middle of the night, they go fishing. At dawn, they still hadn't caught anything. A voice is heard along the shores. They can't make out who it is, since they're a football field away. He says, "Children, have you caught anything to eat?".
That's funny. He called them children. A bunch of grown men. His followers. He called them children.
They didn't get the hint.
He tries something else: "Cast the net over the right side of the boat and you will find something". This, of course, is a reference to the first time Jesus told Peter where to throw his net.
They still don't get the hint.
So they throw the net over, and when the boat almost capsizes, then John, the beloved says, "It is the LORD!!"
Then Peter runs to meet him. Wait, he's in a boat. Doesn't matter. He runs in the water. He's not walking on the water, mind you. But he's still moving towards Jesus. Even when he's sinking; now, he's running. Like a child.
He gets it again. He sees the Lord again.
"Facebook" is a wonderful and strange thing. Wonderful to see so many people i lived and worked and played with for many years. Strange, for you stumble upon them all by accident. It's crazy. Facebook is addictive enough...lol..... Then throw in a perpetual high school reunion. It's a new kind of nostalgia. :) There's a real temptation in myself to think about the past so much that im not present to, well, uh, the present :)
Here is where the lesson is :)
Peter and his friends went and reminisced. They wanted to "go back" to the way things used to be. Thinking about the past was a nice distraction from the now. From the space of their heart and soul in the present. They were tired. They were lonely. They were doubting where they were in life. Memories came flooding back. Good times. Bad times. Joy. Heartache. Betrayal. The inner monologue that questions, "am i where i should be? What would have happened if....?"; "I wonder how they are doing..." ....and instead of being present, they were stuck in the past.
But they had encountered the living God; and His notion of remembering is different. To God, there is no past, and there is no future. There is only NOW. They had communed with Him. Walked with Him. Lived with Him. Witnessed much; and transformed from the inside out. So when they tried to "go back", He was already there waiting for them. We can take some real meaning for our lives, in God, from this story:
- Time itself is evidence of mercy. God doesn't need it; but we do, because we turn away from Him, and in our state of frailty, we need an opportunity to turn back. Even though the rift is repaired in God's eyes, we can't see it.
- God has always been pursuing us, calling us back to Him. If you find yourself thinking about the past, maybe He is using the same ways He first called you. That seems like the most obvious, and yet, we're oblivious. He wants you to remember everything, including how he first called you.
- In our remembering, we need to ask for the grace He is offering to respond to Him like a child, like Peter; uncomplicating it all.
- In His embrace, we have freedom to "remember" our past with a heart of gratefulness; even in the tough memories
- God desires for us to be "present" at all times. That is, to be who we are now, in Him, as we consider our past, and surrender our speculation about the future.
"Peter, do you love me?"
"Yes Lord"
"Feed my lambs"
He said this 3 times, to repair what Peter had done in His denial of Christ, in his denial of Love. May Christ encounter you
in your heart as you "remember", and as you remember, may you continue to respond to God in the present, and "feed His lambs"
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5 comments:
good stuff to chew on.
excellent thoughts...words I needed to read today.
I hope you will blog more this year.
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