Goin’ Fishin’
I want to start with something fun and simple. I invite
anyone who wants to, to join me here for a “children’s message.”
This is fun for small children, but pretty simple for older
people. Let’s talk about how the game works. With magnets and metal.
When I have used this game with children, I have suggested we
think of fishing as a way to help other people know about Jesus. We imagine we have
a magnet in one hand and reach out to a friend with some metal in their hand.
When our hands connect, we can bring them to church, or Sunday School, or camp,
or Campus Ministry. I hope you’ll think of fishing for Jesus as simply as
reaching out a hand to a friend and bringing them with you. … Thanks for coming
up.
… I know that fishing for people is much more complicated
for people older than about 5. Magnets and a bit of metal don’t work to connect
us and bring us to one another. But let’s continue to think along with Jesus
about this.
… In this Gospel text, we get the sad news that John the
Baptizer has been arrested by Herod. And we get the news that Jesus has decided
it’s time to step up his ministry. He moves from Nazareth to Capernaum and gets
to know the city and the folks who live there. Matthew says he makes his home
there!
I have always struggled with the idea that anyone
immediately drops whatever they are doing to do something else. So, when
Matthew says the disciples immediately dropped their nets to follow Jesus, I am
filled with doubt. I have a different idea of what this means.
I think it’s likely that Jesus acts like a mission developer,
seeking leaders to work with him to develop the ministry. So, he gets to know
these four fishermen, and maybe a few other men. He talks with them about his
vision for a different way of knowing and serving God. They begin to make plans
to reach more people by traveling throughout Galilee.
Some scholars suggest these four fishermen are poor contract
workers, owing their lives to the Roman fishing enterprise. Others suggest they
are wealthier, and own their boats, and maybe even other houses, which means
they have employees to run the business while they are gone.
My own hunch is that they own their small businesses, and they
need to be out fishing most nights, because they have families to feed. So they
make day or weekend trips to the various regions of the Galilee, rather than
being gone for weeks at a time. As people get to know Jesus, he draws larger
and larger crowds, and the disciples eventually need to do some major event
planning. Once Jesus heads to Jerusalem for the last time, they have others who
maintain their businesses while following Jesus full time.
Anyway, I suggest that Jesus has been talking with these four
fishermen for a while, making preliminary plans, and when he says it’s time for
their first mission trip, they are ready to go. Which takes us back to the “Children’s
Message” about literally fishing for people.
… When we fish for people today, it is not about how many
people we can get in the “going straight to heaven” boat. Fishing for people is
about introducing them to Jesus and the benefits of knowing we are loved, cared
for, forgiven, part of the family.
The Bible usually says, “Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven
is near.” Church leaders around the world are seeking other terms for kingdom
of heaven. Our reading today uses the term “dominion of heaven”. The point is
to make sure we don’t think of the Kingdom of Heaven as a place, but a
condition, an action.
Yes, the term Kingdom in the Bible is intentional. God’s
kingdom contrasts with Rome and its power. But the kingdom Jesus is talking
about is not a place, a territory. It is a state of being in relationship with
God.
I think I have found an acceptable alternative. I was reading
an article about Dr Martin Luther King, who talked about the Beloved Community.
We can recognize the intent of the term kingdom of God as competition against
the political and geographical kingdoms of this world, and go beyond it to a
Community in which all are Beloved.
So, if we go fishing for people, we are inviting them to
join the Beloved Community here at ULC, and the Beloved Community we call the
Church (capital C) with all its diverse expressions. The Beloved Community comes
together in many ways:
We gather around the word and its interpretation, and around
the altar and the Meal with the Beloved Host. We gather for snacks after
church, to seek justice through Family Promise, and to protest against the
Baker Internment Center. We gather for education and for prayer. We offer mercy
to hungry people with our donations of food and money. At ULC, we offer a place
to be more of who God calls us to be, as small children, as students, as grown-ups,
as elder folks.
When we head out to fish for people, our bait is love: love
for God, love for each other in the Beloved Community, and love for those who have
not yet found their way to Jesus. The fish we seek are all around us, in our
neighborhoods, in the organizations where we work and play, and the
organizations where we volunteer.
We need only to open our hands and offer to accompany those
who do not know Jesus. We invite them to join us at something we both enjoy
doing. And we allow Jesus to do the rest.
… A word or two of caution. When people go fishing for fish,
they usually don’t catch anything the first time, in the first few minutes. It
usually takes some time, some patience. It may be casting and recasting with the
fly rod. It may take using the fish finder to locate the sweet spot where the
fish are biting. It may take some time and work to haul in the fish once it’s on
the hook.
Fishing for people takes persistence, and patience. Its
reward is the growth of the Beloved Community.
And, a short story. I grew up loosely connected to church.
It wasn’t a major aspect of my life, but when my first child was born, I connected
with the local Lutheran church and occasionally went to worship. Some young
mothers noticed me and began to invite me to join them at a circle meeting. It
took several invitations over several months before I agreed to go.
The third invitation included three key elements. “At a
circle meeting, we have a speaker and talk about the topic, we meet in large
homes where we can have a babysitter, and I’ll pick you up.” This inviter told
me what happened at the meeting and countered my other challenges – a small
child and no car.
When we go fishing for people, we invite them to something
that makes sense for them, and offer to go with them. And if God is nudging us
to repeat the invitation, we do it again, and maybe again.
Sometimes it fishing for people is as simple as reaching out
a hand, to draw another person closer to us, closer to Jesus, and closer to God’s
Beloved Community. This week, I hope you pay attention to the little nudges God’s
Spirit is giving you to reach out to someone else, to tell them they are loved,
and welcome in the Community. Amen
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