Intro
Today, we hear about Jesus doing something strange, of capturing people, of 
hauling them in by His words.  That’s what happened to Jesus’ first 
disciples--they were “captured” by His Word and His call for them to be His 
disciples.  

Jesus’ first disciples lived by the Sea of Galilee.  They were fishermen who 
were mending their nets when Jesus found them.  Two brothers, Peter and Andrew, 
were casting a net into the sea.  Then they heard a voice calling to them from 
the shore.  “Follow me,” Jesus said, “and I will make you fishers of men.”  
After that, Jesus called James and John, who were mending their nets in their 
father’s boat. 

Main Body
Those words of Jesus, “follow me,” are like His word “repent.”  They are 
action, doing words, power-packed words from the Son of God.  They do what they 
say.  And so the fishermen left their nets and followed Jesus.  They had no 
idea what they were getting into that day.  But the words “follow me” from the 
mouth of Jesus into the ears of the fishermen turned them in a new direction.  
And they followed. 

Repenting and believing are like that.  They are not realities that we create 
within ourselves.  They are what the Word, Jesus, does as the Spirit He has 
sent works through the Word of God.  Think back to creation.  Then God said, 
“Let there be light,” and there was light.  The Word does what it says.  The 
Word says “repent,” and stubborn, stony hearts of sinners turn from sin toward 
God.  The Word says “believe,” and unbelieving hearts trust that Jesus died to 
save them from their sins. 

The Apostle Paul tells us, “God… made us alive with Christ even though we were 
dead in [our] trespasses” (Ephesians 2:4-5).  The spiritually dead can’t 
spiritually decide, repent, believe, turn, or even twitch.  The Small Catechism 
describes it this way: “I believe that I cannot by my own reason or strength 
believe in Jesus Christ, my Lord, or come to Him.” 

Jesus comes to you, breathing His life into you, speaking His Word to you, 
enlivening you, turning you toward Him, and putting the gift of faith within 
you.  He meets you in the darkness and deadness of unbelief, sin, 
self-centeredness, and the idolatries of self.  “Repent.  Be turned from 
yourself to Christ, for God has forgiven you.  Believe it!”

Jesus told His first disciples-made-apostles to speak such words.  “Fishing for 
men” sounded like crazy talk to them.  And it was.  But that’s what Jesus would 
teach and sanction them to do.  “Disciple all the nations by baptizing them 
into the Name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to 
keep all that I have commanded you” (Matthew 28:19-20).  That’s how they would 
bring others into the kingdom, by casting wide the net of baptism, hauling in 
the catch, and teaching them the truths of Christ. 

You know what happens to fish caught in a net, don’t you?  They die!  And so it 
is in baptism.  In baptism, you died and were buried in Christ’s death.  But 
that was a good death, all so you may be raised with Him in His resurrection 
(Romans 6:3-5).  Death and resurrection to life is the way of Jesus--and of all 
who follow Him!  

If we look at ourselves, we know that we aren’t qualified to be disciples of 
Jesus!  No one is.  As it was with the first disciples, so it is with us.  But 
thank God: Being Jesus’ disciple has nothing to do with your qualifications, 
any more than it has to do with a fish being qualified to be caught in a net.  
But it does have everything to do with Jesus.  As it was with the first 
disciples, so it is today. 

Think of Jesus’ first disciples.  Did they choose Jesus or did Jesus choose 
them?  Jesus chose them.  The fishermen didn’t choose Jesus.  And it’s the same 
with us.  The Word, Jesus Himself, has to capture us so we can be His 
disciples.  

Why is this so?  Because of our fallen nature, something else has already 
captured us: Our sin, the power of death, and the devil’s enslaving ways.  
That’s the reality of being born in this fallen world.  And that’s why our Lord 
Jesus has to capture us by His Word.  He seeks to capture us to rescue us from 
the tyranny of the devil and the punishment we deserve because of our sin.  

How then did the Lord’s Word capture you?  It was when God the Holy Spirit 
combined our Lord’s Word with water in your baptism.  There, the Holy Spirit 
brought you into your Lord’s kingdom.  There, the net of Jesus’ life-giving 
death did its life-saving work. 

This net of the Word, of Baptism, saves you (1 Peter 3:21).  This net of 
baptism gives eternal life to you.  And the Lord’s Word continues to capture 
you, drawing you near to Him, even right here and right now.  Today, the Lord 
has already come to you in the words of Holy Absolution, in the Scriptures read 
during this Divine Service, and He is coming to you right now in His preached 
Word.  And soon He will come to you when you receive Jesus’ body and blood in 
His own Supper. 

Today, Jesus’ Word for you is still “follow Me,” for Jesus has defeated eternal 
death and still gives you His victory of life.  Yes, Jesus says “follow Me” 
into death, but it’s not death as the world would know it.  Jesus says “follow 
Me” into death to sin, to everything that would lead away from Jesus to the 
road back to God the Father.  

That means that, although we walk through the valley of the shadow of death, we 
can fear no evil.  Why?  It’s because Jesus is with us.  We can walk into that 
gloomy valley without fear because we follow our Shepherd into it.  And we know 
that He not only went into death, but came out of it, defeating death forever.  
And we know that He will never leave us because He tells us so.  

Yes, Jesus has chosen you to follow Him: Your baptism tells you so.  And Jesus 
is still calling you here, today, through His Word.  But He’s not calling you 
to leave your work and your family.  No, He’s calling you to follow Him where 
you are, to live in the freedom of His forgiveness.  And He’s calling you to 
show the world what it means to live under the umbrella of His grace. 

For you are born anew from above as a child of God.  Christ has freed you from 
the slavery of sin and death--but not from the responsibilities of life.  
Jesus’ death and resurrection give you freedom to work--not freedom from work.  
That’s because, in Christ, you know that life is more than the stuff of this 
world.  Because of Christ, you are “in the world but not of the world.”  

For you are a chosen one of God, seasoning the earth with the life of Christ 
(Colossians 4:6).  You are a light, reflecting the light of salvation into all 
the places where you live out your life.  God has made you His own possession, 
that you may proclaim the praises of Him who called you out of darkness into 
His marvelous light (1 Peter 2:9). 

Today, Jesus still says to you, “Follow Me.”  For each of us, both you and me, 
we who have been baptized into Christ Jesus, are put on the path that leads to 
the Father’s house, where the joys are unending, and the homecoming is eternal. 
 

It is through lives that are given to such following that Jesus still uses to 
“catch others.”  Evangelism isn’t just delivering information--as if the 
matters of faith could be so easily parsed.  No, evangelism is calling others 
to come along and walk with you the way home, the way to the Father that Jesus 
has opened for us all.  

Besides serving others where God has placed you, you simply confess Christ in 
your everyday life.  All Christians are to do that, pastor and layperson alike. 
 But you might be thinking, “How do I confess Christ?”  Jesus tells us.  

Jesus says, “Let your light shine before others, so they may see your good 
deeds and give glory to your Father in heaven” (Matthew 5:16).  The Apostle 
Peter also tells us.  He says, “Always be ready to give an answer to everyone 
who asks you about the hope that you have” (1 Peter 3:15).  That’s how you 
confess Christ to others in your everyday life--through your words and deeds. 

You don’t have to change jobs or leave your family to be a light for Christ in 
this world.  Just live your life in such a way that others see God through you, 
that others hear you tell them of Jesus.  There is no greater calling than 
that, than by word and deed, to be the shining light of Christ to others. 

For the Gospel of God conquers the darkness of death.  And when you confess 
Christ to others, some will even believe and thank you for it, if not now, then 
in eternity.  God has loved us all in His Son.  Proclaim that.  Let others know 
that they can come home.  For God loves them and has sent His Son to be the 
eternal cure for what ails us all. 

But before we can be doers of God’s Word, we must be hearers of His Word.  
Before we can be followers of Jesus, we must be hearers of Jesus.  Before we 
can be fishers of men, we must be caught in the net of Jesus’ death and 
resurrection.  His Word must have its way with us.  

And Jesus’ Word is no empty, human word; it is the Word of God come in the 
flesh.  And when Jesus speaks, lives are changed: The demons flee and those 
born in the death of their trespasses and sins now live. 

Conclusion
We, too, were once dead in our trespasses and sins.  But now we are alive, 
secure within Christ’s liberating grace.  So sing the Savior’s freedom song.  
Let others know of the loving Father and His gracious Son; sing to the living 
Spirit and the freedom won, for now and through all the ages.  For in Christ, 
we can do no other.  Amen. 


--
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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