This Changes Everything!

     If Alaskans ever needed a biblical justification for their favorite summer pastime, they need look no farther than John 21:3, wherein Simon Peter says, “I am going fishing!” and the others reply, “We will come with you!” As the saying goes, if you give a man a fish, you feed him for a day. If you teach a man to fish, he will sit in a boat and tell tall tales all day!

       Most Alaskans don’t fish for a living. We do it to relax,    enjoy companionship, and fill the freezer. But up until he met    Jesus, Simon Peter was a commercial fisherman. Not fully     appreciating the implications of the first two appearances of the resurrected Christ, it looks now like he is going back to the life he knew before…and with similar results!

       But there is no going back. He may not realize it yet, but the Resurrection literally changes everything.

       So much of this encounter with the Risen Christ is a reflection of previous moments with Jesus. Just like on the shores of the Sea of Galilee, they fished all night and caught nothing, but at the word of Jesus, their nets are full to breaking. Again, realizing that it is Jesus, Peter jumps out of the boat, just like he did when he went out on the water towards Jesus during the storm. (Only this time, he gets wet!). And just like when Jesus fed the 5000, the menu is fish and bread. There is no doubt in their minds that this is Jesus as they sit down to share a meal.

       But then things take an interesting turn. There is a loose end that needs to be tied up.  Jesus takes Simon Peter aside for a little chat. Notice that Jesus does not address him by the new name he gave his friend at Caesarea Philippi. Instead, he uses his original name: “Simon, son of John.” There is a good reason for this. Three times Peter had denied Jesus. This was a complete denial. In denying Christ, Peter gave up his heritage. He needs to be reconciled. Just so, three times Jesus asks him if he loves him, and three times Simon Peter replies, “Yes, Lord, you know I love you.” Thus, Peter’s three-fold denial is reconciled by his three-fold profession of love. He is restored. We know this because when they are finished, Peter receives the same invitation as in their first encounter.  Jesus said to him, “Follow me.”

       This encounter with the Risen Christ gives me hope. Unlike Peter, I can’t count the number of times I have denied Christ by my sins. But like Peter, I have come to know that as many times as I have denied him, if I turn back to him in love, Christ is willing to restore me to grace. It is an infinite love I cannot fathom, of which I am not worthy, but for which I am extremely grateful.      

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