5Once while Jesus was standing beside the lake of Gennesaret, and the crowd was pressing in on him to hear the word of God, 2he saw two boats there at the shore of the lake; the fishermen had gone out of them and were washing their nets. 3He got into one of the boats, the one belonging to Simon, and asked him to put out a little way from the shore. Then he sat down and taught the crowds from the boat. 4When he had finished speaking, he said to Simon, “Put out into the deep water and let down your nets for a catch.” 5Simon answered, “Master, we have worked all night long but have caught nothing. Yet if you say so, I will let down the nets.” 6When they had done this, they caught so many fish that their nets were beginning to break. 7So they signaled their partners in the other boat to come and help them. And they came and filled both boats, so that they began to sink. 8But when Simon Peter saw it, he fell down at Jesus’ knees, saying, “Go away from me, Lord, for I am a sinful man!” 9For he and all who were with him were amazed at the catch of fish that they had taken; 10and so also were James and John, sons of Zebedee, who were partners with Simon. Then Jesus said to Simon, “Do not be afraid; from now on you will be catching people.” 11When they had brought their boats to shore, they left everything and followed him.
Find resources for all the lessons this week here: http://www.textweek.com/yearc/epiphc5.htm
Find resources for this passage here: http://www.textweek.com/mtlk/lk5.htm
Find the electronic version of the passage here: http://bible.oremus.org/?passage=Luke+5:1-11&vnum=yes&version=nrsv
Find Chris Haslam’s exegesis work on the passages for this Sunday here: http://montreal.anglican.org/comments/archive/cpr05l.shtml
Prayer
Lord God, all-holy One, you came among us in Jesus, who sat teaching among the fishermen. He would not depart from us sinners but invited us to follow him and become his disciples, his friends. Place on our lips the good news of salvation and in our hearts a welcome from which no one is excluded, a love that delights in befriending all. We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God for ever and ever.
From Prayers for Sunday and Seasons, Year C, Peter J. Scagnelli, LTP, 1992.
Some thoughts on Luke 5:1-11
This week we move through the Gospel of Luke, skipping the passage at the end of chapter 4 where Jesus heals a man with an unclean spirit and Simon’s mother-in-law. These passages are important to the Lukan narrative because they highlight earlier parts of chapter 4’s focus on the type of Messiah Jesus is to be. At the end of the chapter we see Jesus in action as the one Isaiah prophesied.
So we begin in verse 1 of chapter 5 with the crowd pressing in on Jesus to hear the word of God. Interesting here Luke uses the word ochlos as the type of crowd. The ochlos was a group of people, merchants, cooks, and beggars who followed the military of the time. Here Luke uses the name to describe the motley and mixed group of people pressing Jesus for his teaching. Later in Luke, when the crowd responds positively to Jesus’ message Luke uses the word laos meaning people. While we cannot know Luke’s meaning in the use of the two different terms it is interesting to make a parallel between the people who respond positively to Jesus and the concept of the new people of God living within the new and ever expanding reign of God.
The word of God would have been a phrase heard by the earliest Christians to mean the particular message of redemption, grace, and mission of Jesus Christ.
Jesus comes upon the men, having finished their night’s work of fishing, and he sits down and begins teaching. I love this image of our ministry. We often feel and act as though we are people on the go, yet the image of evangelism here is one of sitting with the people. It would have been the customary form of teaching in Jesus’ time, but perhaps it offers us a glimpse too of an alternative to our lifestyle. It also is a posture for listening and for conversation. Our pedagogical models are of ministers standing and preaching – perhaps based upon a university model, what would it be like to engage in teaching conversations, taking time to sit and engage people wherever they are? In the church, coffee shop, in their work places, over lunch?
So Jesus is teaching from the boat, and when he is done he tells Simon to literally, “push off.” At first I imagine they hover close to shore, then Jesus tells them to go out even further – to the deep water. Here is the moment of discipleship. How often does Jesus ask us to push off into the deep, and we turn and are content to stay in the shallows?
The model for discipleship in Luke is not without the struggle of a follower to question why. Simon certainly does this by telling Jesus, reverently, there are no fish to be had. We have labored all night. How often do we hear this. Good good people of faith will look another straight in the eye and say we can’t we tried that. They will say we can’t there is no one there. Oh we want to believe this. We are so very much like Simon, at least our wounded hearts are. We want to believe that Jesus’ call to go deep will not be transformation. We want to believe going deeper will produce very little. We very much, in our heart of hearts want faith to be so much easier.
“Push off,” says Jesus. And, cast that net out. Of course they pull in a net bursting at the seams. The net in Luke’s Gospel is breaking! The master was right, the teacher was wise.
So great is the catch that Simon calls for help to his partners in the co-op. come and help he calls. Not just one boat is filled but two boats are filled. This is a fact I often forget. As a church we are so often scared that mission is the work of scarcity. There can’t possibly be enough Jesus to go around. Our second excuse is shown to be wrong as there are enough fish to fill both, if not all the boats. These boats were at the point of sinking! Can we dream of a church filled with people to the point of sinking?
Simon falls to his knees before the Messiah. In this miraculous moment we see the image of the great gathering, the cloud of witnesses as Peter recognizes perhaps the message of the word of God which has come to all nations. Perhaps in this very moment Simon recognizes the meaning of Isaiah’s and Simeon’s prophesies to us – all nations will be gathered below the wings of the reign of God through Jesus’ ministry.
In this moment Peter does what we might all do and that is fall to our knees in penitential reverence before the Lord and say, “my lord and my God.” Father Benson, the founding father of the Society of St. John the Evangelist in Boston, once wrote that humility is not a practiced discipline. In fact if practiced it often times has the opposite result. Here we see the natural submission and response to the overwhelming recognition of the Lord and the power of his grace.
The first readers of Luke’s Gospel immediately would have picked upon the fact that Peter uses the term for the resurrected Lord. It would not be lost on them that this Lord in the boat in the Lake of Gennesaret proclaiming the reign of God for all nations and offering a symbol of profound change for the people Israel is the one and same resurrected Christ. Simon’s actions would have been natural and fitting.
Jesus’ response is to give Simon and James and John ministry. When the revelation of Christ is known, and the response of humble praise and repentance is undertaken, God gives us ministry. Here we see the age old pattern that runs throughout holy scripture captured in this moment. Jesus says fear not you will go with me and be a net for people.
One should note that Luke does not use the “fishers of men” imagery that parallels Mark and Matthew; it also parallels the Old Testament prophetic voice of change for the people of Israel. This is not Luke’s intent here. Here Jesus calls for them to, as Luke Timothy Johnson puts it, snare and catch living people. (Luke, 88).
Here we get what will be the hallmark of Luke’s Gospel: they dropped everything and followed. For Luke the image of discipleship to this Messiah is clear: acknowledgement and realization of Christ’s Lordship, a response of humility and repentance – a desire to truly change life by turning away from it to Jesus, the giving of ministry by the Holy Spirit and the immediacy of following.
Will we be so brave to hear the radical words of Jesus to follow him into the deep water? Or, will we stay inside the safety of the shore? Will be we willing when asked to go deep and reach out to people, will we do so? Will we be willing to go to those to whom Jesus sends us? Will we be willing to respond to Christ’s Lordship? Are we able to truly repent and name the things that possess us? Will we be willing to turn from them and follow Jesus? To hesitate, to dawdle, is to miss our mission opportunity.
Quite literally the crowd pressed Jesus until he bumped into Simon, and in that moment the world was changed.
The Lambeth Bible Study Method
This Bible study method was introduced by the African Delegation to the Lambeth Conference of the Anglican Church. It is known by both names: "Lambeth" and "African." This method is derived from the practice of Lectio Divina. The entire process should take about 30 minutes.
Question #5 "Briefly identify where this passage touches their life today," can change based upon the lesson. Find lesson oriented questions at this website: http://www.dcdiocese.org/word-working-second-question
Opening Prayer: O Blessed Lord, who caused all Holy Scripture to be written for our learning. Grant us so to hear them, read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest them that we may embrace and hold fast the blessed hope of everlasting life, which you have given us in our savior Jesus Christ. Amen.
1. One person reads passage. This person then invites a member of the group to begin the process
2. Each person briefly identifies the word or phrase that catches their attention then invites another person to share.
3. Each shares the word or phrase until all have shared or passed using the same invitation method.
4. The passage is read a second time, preferably from a different translation. The reader then invites a person in the group to begin the process.
5. Each person briefly identifies where this passage touches their life today, and then invites someone who has not shared yet.
7. Each person responds to the questions "What does God want me to do, to be or to change?"
8. The group stands up in a circle and holds hands. One person initiates the prayer “I thank God today for …” and “I ask God today for…” The prayer goes around the circle by squeezing the hand to your right.
9. When the circle is fulfilled, the person who initiated the prayer starts the Lord’s Prayer, “Our father…”
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