3rd
Sunday in Ordinary Time
Readings for today's reflection can be found at: http://usccb.org/bible/readings/012614.cfm
He
said to them, “Come after me, and I will make you fishers of men.”
Today’s gospel begins
with a reference to the arrest of St. John the Baptist. The full story of
John comes up later in chapter 14 of Matthew’s gospel. The focus here is to
give attention to the fact that Jesus has gone to Capernaum. Matthew sees this
as a fulfillment of the prophecy of Isaiah that we heard in our first reading, “Land
of Zebulun and land of Naphtali, the way to the sea, beyond the Jordan, Galilee
of the Gentiles, the people who sit in darkness have seen a great light, on
those dwelling in a land overshadowed by death light has arisen”. The early Christians saw
this as a reference to the messianic king, and Jesus was that King!
The mission of
Jesus becomes clear as he invites all, through his preaching, to “Do penance,
for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” Further, the mission of Jesus included a
shared ministry from the very beginning. Andrew, Simon Peter, James and John
must have heard the preaching of Jesus. So, though it seems like they
immediately left all behind to follow Jesus, I’m sure they must have given some
thought as to who this Jesus was. Then they came to a decision, and had the
strength and courage to follow through in following him.
Do we have the
courage and strength to follow Jesus as Andrew, Simon Peter, James and John
did? Jesus said to them, “Come after Me.” At once they left their nets and
followed. One aspect of this story I want to point out is that of the nets they
left behind.
The message of
Jesus was that the kingdom of God is at hand and He calls us to reform our
lives to enter the kingdom. The trouble is that we want the kingdom but not the
reforming. We’re happy living our lives as we want, not as God wants. But yet,
we want to go to heaven.
We want to know
the rule of God in our life, forgiveness and growth in grace, the sense of
belonging to a spiritual community, the peace of being united to God’s will –
but we don’t want to give up the nets that trap us, that hold us back! As a
result we get entangled in those nets. These entanglements are not the
responsibilities we have in our life because those can be ways of serving the
Lord. Rather, those entanglements
are the people and relationships that distance us and separate us from Christ.
We don’t want to
give up gossiping, cutting corners, wrong relationships, immoral behavior, and
habits of arrogance, rash judgment or addictions. So, we try to find ways of
having it both ways and we can’t. Those nets weigh us down and hold us tight. We
need to leave behind the nets, the distorting entanglements of soul and heart
and mind.
The Gospel shows
us the ones who left their nets and followed as Jesus gave them a new mission,
new seas to sail, deeper purpose for their lives. For us, to follow Jesus is
not a matter of leaving family or job. It’s a matter of leaving behind a way of
living, and that is far more difficult.
The reign of God
is open to all of us. We just have to be willing to turn away from our sinful
attachments and place Jesus in the center of our lives. We need to make a
commitment to follow Jesus. Then we will experience the kingdom to the extent
that we let those nets go. It’s hard to follow the Lord if we are dragging all
kinds of tangled webs woven from bad memories, angers and sins.
They left their
nets behind and followed Jesus. Are you willing to do the same and follow
Jesus?
“Come
after me, and I will make you fishers of men.”
Very good, Deacon Tom! I never thought too much about the nets and what they could represent in our lives. Good insight!
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