Luke 5:1-11 · The Calling of the First Disciples
The Journey Begins
Luke 5:1-11
Sermon
by James Merritt
Loading...

If I told you that God would send His son to this earth, that He would only live about 33 years and only the last three of those years would be how His life would be measured, what do you think He would do with those three years? Let’s make it personal. Suppose from the day you were born you knew you would only live 33 years and that your life would be measured by only the last three. What would you do with your life?

It is indisputable that Jesus did more and accomplished more in the last three years of His life than any other human being has in a full life. In fact, He accomplished more than any other nation or kingdom in history. H. G. Wells, the famous author, one of the top historians of the 20th century said this about Jesus:

“More than 1,900 years later a historian like myself who doesn’t even call himself a Christian, finds the picture entering irresistibly around the life and character of this most significant man….the historian’s test of an individual’s greatness is, ‘What did he leave to grow?’ Did he start men to thinking along fresh lines with a vigor that persisted after him? By this test, Jesus stands first among all who have ever lived.”[1]

Someone has said, “You can gauge the size of a ship that has passed out of sight by the huge wake it leaves behind.” By any measure, Jesus left the world’s largest wake behind Him.

It all began with a journey that some men decided to take 2,000 years ago with this soon to become famous carpenter from Nazareth. The story we are going to read today reveals to us the two things that Jesus did in those three years that made such a difference.

Did you know we have a missing persons epidemic in this country? Reports of people who have gone missing have increased six-fold in the past twenty-five years. Every hour 100 Americans, both adults and children, are reported missing (that is 2,400 a day, 900,000 a year).

Perhaps you’ve been driving on the road and the car radio is interrupted, or watching TV and the news comes on with a message in the middle of the day called an Amber Alert. Amber stands for “America’s Missing Broadcasting Emergency Response,” who was named for a little girl named Amber, a nine year old child who was abducted and murdered in Texas.

When you study the three years of Jesus’ life as recorded in the Gospel you find amazingly that His life revolved around missing persons. Every person far from God is a missing person to God. There is an Amber Alert on every empty chair in this Worship Center. Jesus spent the three most important years of His life doing two simple things:

Finding missing persons
Making committed disciples

Of all the things He could have done (write books, make money, start a business, go to school) He gave His life to those two things. He wants you to give your life to those two things. Key Take Away: When you make the purpose of His life, the purpose of your life, you find the real purpose of all of life.

That purpose is found in the process of becoming a follower of Jesus. You can sum up everything Jesus wants you to do in the very first command He ever gave to anyone. It is found in two words: “Follow Me.” Those two words are the foundation of living a purpose-filled life with eternal consequences.

Life is a journey and someone has said that the journey of a 1,000 miles begins with the first step. [Turn to Luke 5]. We are going to read the story of how Jesus called His first followers, but keep in mind you are not just reading a story about them. You are reading a story about you. The steps they took are the steps we must take if we want to get on the greatest journey of all – one that will lead us right into a God-filled eternity. The first step of this journey is simple…

I. Hear The Word Of God

“On one occasion, while the crowd was pressing in on him to hear the word of God, he was standing by the lake of Gennesaret.” (Luke 5:1, ESV)

The gospel writers said the public ministry of Jesus involved three things: teaching, preaching and healing. For three years, Jesus went about the countryside teaching what was right, preaching what was true, and healing what was wrong. This story begins with Jesus teaching and people hearing the Word of God. That is important since every journey of Jesus begins with hearing the Word of God.

Jesus was not teaching from the Bible like I am today, because in that day there was no Bible, at least not as we know it. Jesus was not teaching from a book. He was teaching from His heart. That phrase, “The Word of God” could also be translated “The Word From God.”

Every time Jesus opened His mouth you were hearing the Word of God. His teaching was the Word of God, because He was the God of the Word. John, who is in this story, would later write this:

“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” (John 1:1, ESV)

What was He teaching this crowd? He was teaching the same thing we taught you last week. Before this story, Luke records this in Luke 4:43.

“But he said to them, ‘I must preach the good news of the kingdom of God to the other towns as well; for I was sent for this purpose.’” (Luke 4:43, ESV)

He was teaching them about the Kingdom of God. Light had come to the spiritually dark. Sight had come to the spiritually blind. Freedom had come to the spiritually captive.

Now in order to make sure the crowds could hear Him and create some space between Himself and them, He does a wise thing.

“And he saw two boats by the lake, but the fishermen had gone out of them and were washing their nets. Getting into one of the boats, which was Simon's, he asked him to put out a little from the land. And he sat down and taught the people from the boat.” (Luke 5: 2-3, ESV)

He gets into Peter’s boat and has him push it offshore a short distance. Why did He do that? He was using the water to magnify His voice so all the crowd could hear Him. If you have ever been out on a lake it is amazing how you can be on one side and hear what someone on the other side is saying. Do you know why? Sound travels seven times faster and seven times farther over water than it does over land.

You may be asking, “How did Jesus know that?” The short answer is because He made both the land and the water, but more about that in another sermon. The crowd is hanging on every word and so is Peter, because he has no choice. He is in the boat with Him. Jesus knows exactly what He is doing. He knows the first step to becoming a follower of His is to hear the Word of God - that is step #1. Here is step #2.

II. Trust The Son Of God

“And when he had finished speaking, he said to Simon, ‘Put out into the deep and let down your nets for a catch.’” (Luke 5:4, ESV)

The last thing that Peter wanted to hear Jesus say that day was “Let’s go fishing.” Peter, the professional fisherman, who does this for a living looks at Jesus and thinks to himself, “That is just what you would expect a carpenter to say.”

Remember what Peter and his fishing buddies were doing in that boat? Verse 2 says, they were “washing their nets.” When a fisherman is washing his nets it means the day’s work is done. He has punched the clock. They’ve pulled their nets in, come in to shore, and are now cleaning their nets so they don’t get damaged. It is time to go by McDonald’s and say, “I’ll have a #1 and super-size that,” watch a little ESPN, hit the sack and get ready for the next day.

That is why Peter protests at first.

“Master, we toiled all night and took nothing!” (Luke 5:5, ESV)

Peter was exhausted. He and his partners had fished all night and hadn’t caught one thing. There was a reason they worked at night. The fish in the Sea of Galilee feed at night. In the daytime, they hide under rocks. Even worse, they congregate around the streams and the springs at the edge of the sea, close to shore not in the deep. A fish can’t see a net at night, but he can see it in the daytime and avoid it. Peter sees this request as being foolish for two reasons. First of all, it was the wrong time. The best time to fish was during the night and the very early morning. Second, it was the wrong place. Every fisherman knew that the best place to catch fish is along the shore and not in the deep water. If they went out in front of that crowd, Peter would be the laughing stock of the community and they would be the only boats out there.

This is how the conversation went, “Jesus, I really love you a lot and you are a cool guy, but I am a professional fisherman and you are a carpenter. I know rods and reels and you know hammers and nails. You don’t know anything about fishing.” To this, Jesus probably replied, “Well, from the looks of your empty nets evidently neither do you.”

You need to understand that fishing is back-breaking work. You are laying out a great net in a semi-circle, encompassing a radius of 100 feet, drawing it in hand-over-hand and repeating the procedure again and again and again. Jesus is asking a man who had not slept all night, hadn’t caught one thing, who had just finished washing his net of the dirt, the debris, the trash and the garbage that simply tangles a net, to beach the boat, load a 1000 pounds of wet- nets, row out to deep water in broad daylight and catch fish that won’t even be there.

Peter expected Jesus to say something like this, “Forgive me for being so insensitive. Just forget the whole thing. Pretend this conversation didn’t happen.” Instead, Jesus just folded His arms and looked at him and waited. If you are a husband you have seen that look many times. I’ve had conversations like this many times with my wife, “Teresa, I think that is a bad idea. I really don’t want to do that right now. I had really rather go another time. Can we do this later?” She doesn’t say a word. She just gives me that look and I say, “On second thought, I think that’s a great idea.” So Simon says,

“At your word, I will let down the nets.” (Luke 5:5b, ESV)

Don’t miss the importance of what he said and what he did. What you are looking at is the first example of faith in the New Testament. Faith is simply taking Jesus at His word and trusting what He says. Peter says, “I wouldn’t do this for just anybody, but since I have heard You teach and I’ve seen You work, (by the way, back up in Chapter 4 we read that Jesus had been to Peter’s house and healed his mother-in-law so Peter owed Him one!) I will do what You ask.” God honors faith and faith is simply trusting Jesus and doing what He asks in spite of the feelings within you, the circumstances around you and the consequences before you.

It is this second step of trusting the Son of God that makes the first step of hearing the Word of God come to life. If you hear the Word of God, but you don’t trust the Son of God, then your hearing won’t make a difference. Peter has taken the second step of what will be a life-long journey, but now he is about to experience the greatest thrill of all – the third step. When you hear the Word of God and you trust the Son of God – you….

III. Experience The Grace Of God

Notice exactly what Jesus said to Peter in verse 4.

“Put out into the deep and let down your nets for a catch.” (Luke 5:4, ESV)

Jesus didn’t really say, “Let’s go fishing”, because all fishing is is looking for fish. He said, “Let’s go catch fish” which is a big difference.

Look what happens next.

“And when they had done this, they enclosed a large number of fish, and their nets were breaking. They signaled to their partners in the other boat to come and help them. And they came and filled both the boats, so that they began to sink.” (Luke 5:6-7, ESV)

It is one thing to know how to fish. It is another thing to know where to fish. You talk about a catch! [Show picture of fishing boat] This is a picture of a type of boat they were in. A fishing boat was 7½ feet wide and over 27 feet long. They were filled so full that they both began to sink. We are talking about tons of fish – the greatest in the history of that sea; never before and never since has a catch like that been made. It is the first time in history that a fisherman came home and actually told the truth! “Yes – I really caught that many and yes – they were this big. If you don’t believe me ask Jesus.” Put yourself in Peter’s sandals. How excited would you have been? Can you imagine what he was thinking? He wanted to say, “Jesus, why don’t you and I go into business together? I know how to fish and You know where to fish. I’ve got this vision. We could open up restaurants all over Israel. We could call them something like “Long John Savior” or “Jesus’ Crab Shack.”

Then the thought hit him, “Why would Jesus, a poor carpenter, who didn’t own a home and had no money of his own, travel the countryside preaching, teaching, and healing for nothing? In fact, He could have gotten into somebody else’s boat. Why did He get into mine and why did He give me this catch?” Then it hit him. “Jesus doesn’t care about fish, or about business, or about money. He cares about me. He doesn’t care about prosperity. He cares about people, missing people, like me!” This is how Peter responds.

“But when Simon Peter saw it, he fell down at Jesus' knees, saying, ’Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord.’ For he and all who were with him were astonished at the catch of fish that they had taken.” (Luke 5:8-9, ESV)

Peter, who had called Him, “Master” in the beginning of this conversation, which is a synonym for “captain” now calls Him “Lord.” I don’t know exactly what that means, but Peter either knew at that moment that this man was God or he knew He was somehow in the presence of God. He gets it right. “Jesus, you are Lord. I am a sinner.” It is the first time the word “sinner” is found in the Gospel of Luke. Do you know what a sinner is? It is a missing person.

Jesus agreed with Peter. No argument. You are a sinful man, but as Peter is about to find out, Jesus is not going to leave Peter, but He is going to ask Peter to join Him.

“And Jesus said to Simon, ‘Do not be afraid; from now on you will be catching men.’” (Luke 5:10, ESV)

Seven times in the Gospel of Luke Jesus will say these words, “do not be afraid.” What Jesus said to Peter Jesus says to us. “I don’t care what you’ve done. I don’t care who you are. I don’t care how bad you’ve blown it. You have nothing to fear from Me.” Jesus didn’t come to bring fear. He came to bring forgiveness. It is amazing to me that Peter wanted to send the Lord away, but Jesus wanted to draw Peter closer. At the point you feel most far from God is the point that God wants to be most near to you.

When you meet Jesus and you recognize who He is and you realize what you are, and you resolve to bring what you are to who He is, He won’t reject you with a closed fist, but He will receive you with open arms. When you experience the grace of God it will lead you to step #4.

IV. Follow The Will Of God

“From now on you will be catching men.” (Luke 5:10b, ESV)

The phrase “catch men” is a combination of two Greek words. One word means “alive” and the other means “to catch.” The real sense is “to catch alive.” He said, “Peter, what you are doing for a living is not what you are going to do with your life. You catch fish for a living. You are going to catch people for life. You have spent your life catching fish for the purpose of killing them. You are going to spend the rest of your life catching people in order to give them life.”

Don’t miss this. What Jesus was telling Peter to do was the very thing He was doing. Jesus told Peter to go catch people, because He had just caught Peter. He was saying in effect, “Peter, I caught you so you will go catch others. I found you so you will go find others.”

From now on Peter’s life was going to be built around two things: finding missing persons and making committed disciples. That was the will of God for Peter and those first disciples and that is the will of God for every Christ follower and every church, because every empty chair in this room represents a missing person and our job is to find them and make them followers of Jesus. Step 5 closes the circle.

V. Surrender To The Call Of God

“And when they had brought their boats to land, they left everything and followed him.” (Luke 5:11, ESV)

That one will make you swallow hard. Those four men signed their names to a blank piece of paper that day and Jesus hadn’t even written the contract yet. That is what I want to close with. Christianity is more than just accepting Jesus and His death, burial, and resurrection for your sins so you can go to heaven when you die. It is also so you can live out His purpose in this life and make your life count – not just blowing your life on silver and stuff, but being willing as a once missing person to find other missing persons and to catch others the way you were caught.

Is it scary? Yes, it is. Is it costly? Yes, it is. It is a risk to start a church or pastor a church. It is a risk to live the Christian life in our age and culture today. Make no mistake that Christians are becoming one of the most persecuted religious groups in our nation. It is a risk to share your faith with people you know. It is a risk to stand firm for your beliefs when the world around you says they are antiquated and you are a hater or a bigot or a hypocrite. When you decide to step out and follow Jesus, He takes responsibility for the journey. I hear people say, “You had better give your life to Jesus. You might die.” I say, “You had better give your life to Jesus, you might live.” We need to follow Jesus, not because He needs us, but because we need Him to take life from the monotonous to the momentous.


[1] H. G. Wells: Quoted From The Greatest Men In History in Mark Link, S. J., He Is the Still Point of the Turning World, Chicago: Argos Communications, 1971, p. 111.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by James Merritt