2026年3月3日星期二

Following the Lord and Achieving Our Divine Purposes

Luke 5:1-11

Jesus Calls Peter

According to the account in the Gospel of Luke, Jesus’ ministry can be divided into three parts: healing and casting out demons, preaching and teaching, and calling disciples. Luke 5:1-11 records Jesus calling Peter to be among His first disciple.

Let us reflect on Peter’s calling and see what precious lessons it offers.

Let Jesus Get Into Your Boat

Jesus was preaching around the Sea of Galilee, and the crowds pressed in on Him to hear His message. The crowd was so large and space was limited — how could Jesus respond to this constraint?

He saw two boats by the lakeshore; fishermen were washing their nets. Jesus got into Simon Peter’s boat and told him to put out a little from shore. Jesus sat down in the boat and preached to the crowds on the shore.

Jesus demonstrated great creativity. By sitting on boat, Jesus showed the posture of a fisherman catching fish — but truly was catching people’s hearts!

Today, crowds of people with various needs press toward us. Jesus wants to get into your boat — into your life and resources (time, money, and talent) — so He can help meet the needs of others through you. Are you willing to let Jesus get into your boat and use you?

If we’ve passed the midpoint of life, we should wake up and not remain trapped in self-centeredness — always focused on personal enjoyment or endlessly complaining, “I’m hurt!” That only drains and depletes our lives.

Let us welcome Jesus onto the boat now. He will lead us into a wondrous new world and teach us to live for others, and to experience aa abundant, breakthrough life.

Peter was a fisherman washing his nets, not fishing. The night before, he had fished all night and caught nothing — representing life faced with many frustrations. Washing nets symbolizes repetitive, tedious, meaningless life. Is this what your life feels like now? Are you facing helplessness, boredom, meaninglessness, or loss of direction?

Jesus wants to get into your boat, guide you, work with you, help you find direction, and experience breakthroughs. He wants to help you overcome the helplessness and frustration of “washing nets,” and solve the dilemma of unfruitful efforts. Quickly let Jesus onboard!

Those Who Follow the Lord Must First Acknowledge Their Inability

After teaching, Jesus told Peter to put the boat into deep water and, together with his partners, let down their nets. A mere carpenter leading a group of fishermen to cast their nets is ironic!

Peter had already worked all night and caught nothing. If you were Peter, would you obey Jesus and go out again?

Reluctantly, Peter obeyed and put the boat into deep waters. And what happened? Wow — Peter’s net caught such a huge amount of fish that the nets were about to break! The harvest was so abundant it brought trouble.

Peter called his partners in the other boat to help. They came and filled both boats with fish, and the boats nearly sank (v. 7). God’s grace and blessing poured out so much He filled their boats and brought blessings that caused “trouble”!

When Peter saw this miraculous abundance of fish, he knelt before Jesus and said, “Lord, depart from me — for I am a sinful man!” (v. 8).

Peter experienced Jesus’ display of power and holiness and felt conviction of sin. He bowed down, admitting his weakness and sinfulness. Peter knew Jesus had performed healing and deliverance miracles, but now he personally experienced that Jesus cared even for his everyday livelihood. This touched him deeply, so he naturally knelt before Jesus.

This kind of response is the first requirement for those called to serve: only such a person will truly humble themselves before God, rely on Him, and serve Him. Peter understood that people need God, not the other way around. People need God to intervene to reverse their lives.

Jesus not only redeems us from sin and heals our wounds — He also cares for our everyday needs. His caring actions make us impossible not to submit to Him.

Jesus remarkably entered Peter’s life and helped him experience change, surpass obstacles, and catch many fish. Jesus also promised Peter that in the future he would be fishers of men. In fact, Jesus sitting in the boat and speaking to the crowds on the shore had already demonstrated this — catching people like catching fish.

We might forget that we are extremely incapable and need God to intervene to transform our lives. Today, Jesus enters each of our lives unexpectedly too. Let us bow before the Lord, confess we are humble sinners, and accept Him as Lord of our lives. We must obey His commands and follow His footsteps.

Those Who Follow the Lord Experience Reversal and Transcendence

Jesus was originally a carpenter but came out to preach, even leading the way in fishing! Jesus first transcended Himself, and then helped the disciples experience change and transcendence. Jesus protected Peter’s casting of nets and brought abundant harvest, foreshadowing the future fulfillment of Peter’s being “fishers of men.”

Earlier, Peter said, “Lord, depart from me — I am a sinful man!” (v. 8). Now he and his companions left everything to follow Jesus (v. 11).

From then on, Peter’s tools were no longer fishing boats and nets, but the Word of God and the power of the Spirit. Fishing was to kill and consume fish; catching people is to lead them into life. From catching fish to catching people — from killing to giving life — from boat and net to God’s Word and power — this highlights profound transcendence.

Peter’s decision reversed him from being weak and sinful to someone no longer useless. From then on, he could work with God and accomplish entirely new work. Peter and his companions were no longer ordinary fishermen.

Do you long for your life to be reversed like Peter’s? Do you want to experience change, reversal, and transcendence?

If we rely on our own strength and boast in our own abilities, we will only end up self-pitying, abandoning our original purpose, or achieving small results. But let us respond to Christ’s call, walk with Him, and faithfully do His work — we will break through limits and achieve unexpected results!

Conclusion

Jesus said, “Do not fear; from now on you will catch men.” (v. 10).

The Lord Jesus invites believers to partake in His identity and ministry. This is more than merely encountering God or experiencing His goodness.

We are to share in the work and mission of the Lord Jesus Christ. Jesus is the Lord of life — not just a servant who specializes in answering prayers or meeting needs. He is the one who sends us!

Today Jesus wants to reorder your time, money, and talents — shifting from self-centered satisfaction to kingdom-centered living. Then we can become true disciples of the Lord. Our lives will never be the same — they will be turned over, break through the old, and enter into greater abundance.

Jesus said to Peter and his companions, “Do not be afraid!” Indeed, we have nothing to fear. Let us not remain crowds on the shore. Come — let us get into the boat with Jesus, be His disciples, head into deep waters, and cast our nets as fishers of men…