JOHN 21
The scene in our Gospel story is the Sea of
Galilee, just after the crucifixion. Seven of the disciples were there feeling
probably a little guilty; only John had remained at the Cross leaving the
others to feel a sense of betrayal. The main character in this story however is
Peter, the man who denied the Lord and is now devastated with himself, a
feeling which many Christians may have passed through. Now things are going to
change as he meets the risen Christ.
When the chapter begin they are all wondering what is going to happen to them,
all their plans and hopes for the future have been blown apart. There is
nothing to induce a feeling of hopelessness so much as a time of tragic
failure. Peter had wept bitterly after denying Jesus; he had been so close to
the Lord for three years and failed Him at the last days. We may all have
experienced a similar feeling when we have succumbed to temptation in a time of
weakness and regretted doing so, realising we have let the Lord down.
What would our life be like if our actions were in line with what we said? How
many people regularly sing and say words in Church,e and then go out into the
world and behave in a contradictory way? I know clergy who recite the Creed,
but do not accept the Virgin Birth, or/and, the physical resurrection of our
Lord. How shameful is that? Let no one therefore think ill of Peter, for as
Paul stated, there is no one righteous, no not one.’
I like the story of a Church where the congregation had just sang ‘stand up for
Jesus’ and the Vicar had gone into the pulpit, when two men wearing black hoods
walked in brandishing guns. Who is going to stand up for Jesus here they asked?
The choir ran out, the Wardens and best part of the congregation. The men took
off their masks, put down their guns and said, ‘carry on now Vicar, we have got
rid of the hypocrites.’
The disciples decided to get on with their lives and went out fishing, and it
was the practice to go out at night using torches to scan the water, so
attracting fish to the boat where they would then be netted. We are told that
nothing seemed to be going right for them as they had caught nothing. But help
was at hand.
Jesus was on the water side, saw their need, and went to meet them. The Lord
will come to our help when He is needed too. The Bible is full of stories,
offering comfort and bringing light and hope into souls which are grieving. No
matter if our condition is one of loss or failure, Jesus will not cast us off
if we are repentant.
Jesus made, Peter realise his failure, and still speaks to us in various ways.
Often through a preacher, who will have no knowledge of your problem, but the
words he uses may have been given to him by the Lord to speak to your heart.
Whilst God, as a God justice cannot overlook sin, He will try to make our
hearts feel we have offended Him, until we confess our betrayal of Him.
Jesus told the fishermen where to cast their nets, and we are told specifically
they caught 153 fish. This was thought to represent the number of different
kinds of fish that existed, and is an indication to us that God wants us to go
out and bring the gospel to all men and women.
The story tells us these men were in effect just drifting along when Jesus
brought them back to be successful, and rather than send a storm to teach them
a lesson for letting Him down, He tends to restore them by love. He cooked
breakfast for them around a charcoal fire, like the one Peter stood around when
he denied the Lord.
Jesus then had a personal meeting with Peter, something we should all seek, for
it is good to talk privately with the Lord. Three times Jesus asked Peter if
the loved Jesus, and three times He said feed my sheep. By that Jesus meant
teach people the Word of God, and what Jesus could mean to them. How we need to
heed Jesus command, for the Word of God is not being taught in too many Churches,
and is being vastly moderated, diluted and indeed twisted in others. Even
within Churches, immoral behaviour is being tolerated and accepted.
I once knew a Vicar who was so devoted to teaching about Jesus. He saw one of
his congregation in a supermarket and went up to her, then introduced her to
another unknown woman and said ‘this is Mary, she wants to tell you what Jesus
means to her’, then left poor Mary together with the unknown woman./
Another time he was walking along a London street with a Vicar friend, and said
the next person he met he would tell them about Jesus. They walked a few yards,
and there was a window cleaner up a ladder. The Vicar shouted, ‘come down I
want to tell you about Jesus.’ The window cleaner told him to go away, or words
to that effect, so when the window cleaner stepped from his ladder on to a
window ledge, the Vicar took away the ladder and said, ‘now will you come
down’?
Jesus would not want us to be so committed perhaps as that dear Vicar, just
want us to tell a friend we go to worship Him at Church would be a
start. Better still, invite your friend to Church.
We have come to the last Chapter of the Gospel which many people feel is the most
precious, because John was so close to Jesus, and who on the Lord’s death, took
care of the mother of Jesus.
We know from this
Gospel, that the future history of Christians, both in life and death, is
foreknown by Christ. The truth before us
is comfort to a true believer, whilst to non-believers to know their future
would be sorrowful. The whole future is
known and arranged by Jesus, there is no such thing as luck, chance or
accident, in the journey of life.
This may help those who
lose someone dear and find life in the present too awful to bear, can look
forward with hope to once again be joined with that precious one. We walk a
long road to heaven, but what joy when we will reach there. All has been arranged by our Lord. Let us
pray while we live in health, that we may glorify God to the end. John Wesley stated, when one found fault with
the doctrines and practices of the Methodists, at any rate they die well.
We learn from these
verses that whatever we may think of the condition of other people, we should
think first of ourself. When Peter asked anxiously about the future of the
Apostle John, he received an answer from the Lord, which was virtually a
rebuke, in that Peter should just concern with himself. The Lord’s warning to Peter is needed in the present day, when
Christians, by human nature fall into a wrong way.
We finally learn from
this Chapter, the number and greatness of Christ’s works during His earthly
ministry. John concludes his Gospel by stating
there were so many other things which Jesus said and did, it would take many
books to fill,, but the human mind would
be unlikely to record them.
So we close this tender
Gospel with feelings of thankfulness, and we can reflect how clear and plain,
is the teaching it gives about the way of salvation. Those who read this Gospel, and believe Jesus
is the Christ foretold in the Scriptures, and go on believing, has life through
His Name. Be sure you are a true believer.
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