THE FIRST FOUR
Among the
fishermen of Capernaum, Jesus found His first disciples. Almost every day He
was on the beach of the lake; sometimes the boats were going out, sometimes
they were coming in, the sails swelling in the breeze; and from the wooden
boats the barefooted men climbed down, wading knee-deep in water, carrying the
baskets filled with the wet silver of dead fish piled together, good and bad,
and with the old dripping nets.
They
put out sometimes at nightfall when there was a moon, and came back early in
the morning just after the setting of the moon and before sunrise. Often Jesus
was waiting for them on the strand and was the first to greet them. But the
fishing was not always good, sometimes they came back empty-handed, tired and
depressed. Jesus greeted them with words which cheered them, and the
disappointed men, although they had not slept, listened to Him willingly. One
morning two boats came back towards Capernaum while Jesus standing by the lake
was talking to the people who had gathered around Him. The fishermen came
ashore and began to arrange the nets; then Jesus entered into one of the boats
and asked them to put it out a little from the land so that He might not be
pressed upon by the crowd. Upright near the rudder He taught those who had
remained on the land, and when He had left speaking He said to Simon, "Launch out into the deep, and let down
your nets for a draught." (Luke 5:4)
And Simon,
son of Jonah, owner of the boat, answered, "Master,
we have toiled all the night and have taken nothing, nevertheless at thy word,
I will let down the net." Vs.5.
When
they were only a short distance from the bank, Simon and Andrew, his brother,
threw out into the water a large net. And when they drew it back it was so full
of fish that the meshes were almost breaking, Then the two brothers called
their partners in the other boat, that they should come to help them, and they
threw out the net again and drew it up again full. Simon, Andrew and the others
cried out "a miracle!" and
thanked Jesus, who had brought them this good luck. Simon, impulsive by nature,
threw himself at the knees of their guest crying, "Depart from me; for I am a sinful man, O Lord." Vs. 8.
But Jesus, smiling, said, "Follow
me, and I will make you fishers of men." Vs. 10.
When
they went back to the shore they pulled the boat up on the land, and leaving
their nets, the two brothers followed Him. And a few days after this, Jesus
saw the other two brothers, James and John, sons of Zebedee, who were partners
of Simon and Andrew, and he called them, while they were mending the broken
nets; and they too said farewell to their father, who was in the boat with the
sailors, and leaving the broken nets half-mended, followed Him. Jesus was no
longer alone: four men, two pairs of brothers more deeply brothers in this
common faith, were ready to accompany Him wherever He wished to go, to break
bread with Him, to repeat His words, to obey Him as a father, and more than a
father. Four poor fishermen, four plain men of the lake, men who did not know
how to read, nor indeed how to speak correctly, four humble men whom no one
else would have been able to distinguish from others, were called by Jesus to
found with Him a kingdom which was to occupy all the earth. For Him they left
their faithful boats which they had put out into the water so many times, and
so many times tied up to the wharf; they left the old fish nets which had drawn from the
water thousands of fish; they left their father, their family, their home. They
left all that to follow this man who did not promise money or lands and spoke
only of love, of poverty and perfection. Thus if their spirit always remained
too low to understand their master, always a little rustic and common, and if
sometimes they doubted and were uncertain and did not understand His truths and
His parables, and at the end abandoned Him, all will be exonerated to them for
the candid, unquestioning promptness with which they followed Him at the first
call.
Who among
us today, among all those now living, would be capable of imitating those four
poor men of Capernaum? If a prophet should come and say to the merchant, "Leave your bank and your counter";
and to the Professor, "Come down
from your chair and throw away your books"; and to the statesman, "Give up your portfolios and your lies
which are only nets for catching men"; and to the working man, "Put away your tools for I will give
you other work"; and to the farmer, "Stop in the middle of the furrow and leave your plow among the
clods, for I promise you a more wonderful harvest"; and to the factory
hand, "Stop your machine and come
with me, for spirit is more precious than metal"; and to the rich, "Give away all your goods, for you will
acquire with me an inestimable treasure"; . . . if a prophet should
speak thus to us, men of the present day, how many would follow him with the
simple-hearted spontaneity of those fishermen of old? But Jesus made no sign to
the merchants who stood trafficking in the open places, and in the shops, nor
to those who observed the tiniest commands of the law and could recite by
heart verses from the Bible, nor to the farmers rooted to their land and their
live-stock, and certainly not to the affluent, surfeited, satisfied, who care
nothing about any other kingdoms because their kingdom has long since been
realized.
Not by
chance did Jesus select His first companions from among fishermen. The
fisherman who lives a great part of his days in the pure solitude of the water
is the man who knows how to wait. He is the patient, unhurried man who lets
down his nets and leaves the rest to God. The water has its quirks, the lake
its fantasies, no day is like another day; he does not know when he goes away
if he will come back with his boat full or without a single fish to cook for
his dinner. He commends himself into the hands of God, who sends abundance and
famine. He consoles himself for bad days by thinking of the good days which
have been and which will come. He does not desire sudden riches, and is glad if
he can exchange the results of his fishing for a little bread and wine. He is
pure in soul and body. He washes his hands in water and his spirit in solitude.
Of these
fishermen who would have died in the obscurity of Capernaum without anyone
except their neighbors being aware of them, Jesus made saints whom men even today
remember and invoke. A great man creates great men; from a lethargic people he
raises up prophets; from a debilitated people, warriors; from an ignorant race,
teachers. In any weather fires are lit if there is a hand capable of kindling
them.
Jesus found among the men of the people of Galilee, His apostles.
Jesus did not seek armed warriors, men who would lay their enemies
low, conquerors of provinces. His apostles were to fight; but the good fight of
perfection against corruption, holiness against sin, health against sickness,
spirit against matter, the happy future against the past, henceforth sterile.
They were to aid Him in bringing His joyous message to the heavyhearted. They
were to speak in His name in places where He could not go, and in His name to
carry on His work after His death.
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