Saturday, September 5, 2015

153 Reasons for Hope. John 21:1-17. Sunday, August 30, 2015

o   Last Sunday morning was the closing rally of the 169th assembly of the Convention of Atlantic Baptist Churches, Oasis 2015.
o   On that morning, the speaker for the rally was Rev. Dr. Peter Reid, our executive minister.
o   Peter read for us the first part of the 21st chapter of the Gospel of John, and the title of his message was: 153 reasons to be hopeful.
o   Now Dr. Reid did not preach a 153 point sermon as I also will not do, otherwise we will be here all day.
o   However, he did find his title in the gospel text that we are about to read.
o   (Read John 21:1-17.)
o   At the beginning of our passage, seven of the disciples had gathered on the shores of the Sea of Galilee.
o   We might wonder, why?
o   Well, first, there was an emotional draw to that area; that is where it all began for Peter, James, and John, and the rest of the disciples.
o   Galilee is where Jesus called them.
o   Second, we also know that at least three of them were fishermen (PJ&J).
o   Third, Jesus said he would meet them in Galilee, and the lake shore would be a natural place to meet Jesus.
o   As they're there waiting to meet Jesus, Peter decides, "I'm going fishing!"
o   The rest agree and go fishing with Peter.
o   Why? Why did Peter go fishing?
o   The events of the week leading up to Jesus’ suffering and his surprising resurrection left them bone tired and depressed, exhausted and discouraged.
o   They felt like failures.  The night Jesus was betrayed, they acted like cowards, running and hiding.
o   The questions the disciples must have been asking themselves after Jesus rose from the dead probably went something like this:
o   What can we do? What do we have to offer? How can God use failures like us?
o   Those negative tapes that often play in our minds were playing in the minds of the disciples.
o   Therefore, exhausted and discouraged Peter decided to return to the familiar. He decided to do something that he might be able to do with a degree of success and the rest with him that night agreed.
o   They figured that since they couldn't follow Jesus right, they could probably do fishing right.
o   Fishing was what they knew. After the way they abysmally failed to follow their Lord and Teacher, fishing was easy.
o   But that night, the Scripture says, they caught nothing all night! They caught nothing all night!
o   And this experience of fishing all night long and catching absolutely nothing adds to their exhaustion and discouragement.
o   Not only have they failed Jesus, but now they can't even get fishing right; something that they figured should have been easy for them.
o   They didn't have Jesus figured right, and now they can't even fish right!
o   After that fruitless night of failed fishing, early in the morning, right at the break of day with the light of the sun filling the sky before it peaks out of the East, Jesus stood on the shore.
o   But the disciples do not recognize that it was him.
o   Jesus already knows the answer to the question he's going to ask them, but he asks, "Children, have you caught any fish?"
o   Nope! Came the reply.
o   "Cast your net on the right side of the boat, and you will find some," said Jesus.
o   So they did and they were not able to haul in the net because there were so many fish.
o   How many times all night long had they cast the net on one side of the boat and then the other side of the boat, but upon hearing the advice of the solitary figure standing on the shore and having nothing to lose, they let down the net.
o   Why would they do this after fishing all night without success?
o   One simple reason: they were exhausted and discouraged and they had nothing to lose. They had nothing to lose.
o   They followed the advice of this unknown person standing on the shore line, and when they did, they could not pull in the net because there were too many fish.
o   I wonder if the apostle John's mind went back to the episode recorded in Luke chapter 5 because that's where my mind automatically goes, the other miraculous catch of fish.
o   Jesus tells Peter to put out into deep water and let down the nets, and Peter says, "Master, we've finished all night and caught nothing but we will do it because you say so," and they haul in a catch so big it begins to tear the nets and the boats began to take on water.
o   Upon seeing the miracle, Peter glimpses the holiness of God present in Jesus asking him to leave because Peter was a sinful man.
o   But Jesus said, "Don't be afraid, from now on you will fish for people."
o   In the moment of that second miraculous catch of fish, John remembered the first miraculous catch, and has a flash of inspiration, it's Jesus! John says to Peter, "It's the Lord!"
o   Can we see what Jesus has done in the lives of his disciples?
o   Before his suffering, his disciples were a cocky, arrogant bunch.
o   They thought they knew what was coming, and that they were the new chosen elite, hand-picked by the Messiah.
o   The cross stripped that away.
o   Jesus tells them he'll meet them in Galilee, and Peter and the seven with him figure, “Well, if we can't follow Jesus right we can at least do fishing right.”
o   They already thought they were at their lowest point, but that whole night they failed even in doing something that was old hat, familiar, comfortable, easy.
o   Jesus stripped away their ability to do even fishing right.
o   And in their brokenness and their willingness to admit their need, Jesus shows up at just the right time. The same is often true of us.
o   Many times in our lives, we need our pride, our self-reliance, even those things that we return to with ease to be stripped away, so that in our brokenness, we find our willingness to admit that we need Jesus, and then we can see Jesus.
o   Without Jesus, we fail. In John 15:5 Jesus said, "I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing."
o   John realized that Jesus was there and with his presence comes divine intervention.
o   We need to remember that true ministry is a partnership. As Jesus said, "apart from me you can do nothing."
o   We can't accomplish anything unless we are abiding in Christ.
o   We can not do ministry in our own power and produce fruit that has eternal significance.
o   True ministry is a divine-human partnership.
o   Well, Peter abandons the others and swims to Jesus. He can't wait!
o   Oh that we would have the same anticipation and excitement about our times in prayer and in the word.
o   Peter hears John's exclamation, the coats on and he's in the water heading for Jesus.
o   The others follow in the boat, towing the net along with them; they arrive on the shore, and there's breakfast!
o   Jesus said to them, “Bring some of the fish you just caught,” which was, of course, with his help, his partnership.
o   153 large fish that filled the net, all of those fish represent success.
o   Those fish point to God's superabundant provision. They didn't need 153 large fish for breakfast, but where God provides he provides super abundantly.
o   Success comes when we partner with the Lord Jesus on his mission in his way.
o   All night long they failed, until Jesus arrived and told them to let the nets down again.
o   Remember what Jesus said in John 15:5, "I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing."
o   Jesus said to them, "Come and have breakfast." None of the disciples asked who he was, for they all knew that it was the Lord Jesus.
o   They went to him and Jesus served them breakfast.
o   He wasn't giving up on them. He meets their physical need and their spiritual need; he gives them food and intimacy.
o   The Lord Jesus wants that for us. He wants us to come to him, to begin again with him, and he wants us to know that things will turn out according to his plans for us as we partner with him.
o   Just as Jesus met the needs of his disciples, so also the Holy Spirit will meet our needs.
o   When we partner with Jesus, there is hope!
o   God doesn't want us to worry and stress and fret over the details, but to focus on the big picture, and the big picture is our partnership with Christ in the mission that he has for us.
o   Are the details important? Yes, they are, but more important is recognizing our need to be with Christ and depend on him and his guidance and direction in our partnership with him in carrying out his mission.
o   When we partner with Jesus, there is hope!
o   After breakfast, the hard word comes. Jesus turns to Peter and says, "Simon, son of John, do you love me more than these?"
o   What is Jesus talking about? To what was Jesus referring when he asked Peter, “do you love me more than these?”
o   Well, I want to suggest that Jesus wasn't referring to the other disciples.
o   I think when Jesus asked Peter that question he was looking at those 153 fish, at that miraculous catch.
o   I think Jesus was asking Peter, “Do you love me more than this miraculous catch of fish? Do you love me more than fishing? Do you love me more than returning to what is familiar, what is easy, what is comfortable?”
o   Why? Because Jesus wasn't calling Peter to do something easy.
o   With those same three questions and same three commands, Jesus was saying to Peter, "I'm not calling you to do something easy!"
o   And the Lord is saying the same thing to us, "I'm not calling you to do something easy. I'm not calling you to return to something that's familiar. I'm not calling you to do something that's comfortable."
o   But When we partner with Jesus, there is hope!
o   The Lord Jesus called Peter out of being a fisherman and into becoming a shepherd of God's people.
o   These are two radically different vocations. Just as Jesus called Peter to do something radically different than what he used to do, so also the Lord Jesus calls us to be and do things radically different.
o   Jesus is asking us, "Do you love me more than... Blank?"
o   As you think about filling in the blank, as we ponder that together, we need to ask ourselves: What is my easy "go to" answer? To what comfortable, familiar thing do I return?
o   We need to be willing to do the hard work that partnership with Jesus is calling us to do.
o   We need to be willing to walk away from what we know, from what's comfortable, from what's easy, and from what we feel we can do with a degree of success.
o   What we know, what's comfortable, what's easy, what we can do successfully is not what God asks us to do because it leaves God out of the picture, and God calls us to do things that would be impossible without him.
o   God calls us to be partners with the Holy Spirit on mission with him.

o   When we partner with Jesus, there is hope!

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