Do you have Holes in your net?

My net has holes.

“While walking by the Sea of Galilee, He saw two brothers, Simon (who is called Peter) and Andrew his brother, casting a net into the sea, for they were fishermen.” Matt. 4:18 (ESV).

Peter the fisherman, spent a lot of time repairing nets. It’s where Jesus first found him. It’s the livelihood he left behind to follow Jesus.

Mending nets filled much of a fisherman’s life, perhaps even more than fishing. Painstaking care went into cleaning and drying the linen fabric or it would rot and wear out, rendering it virtually useless.

“And after you have suffered a little while,” Peter wrote years later in 1 Peter 5:10,“ the God of all grace, who has called you to his eternal glory in Christ, will himself restore, confirm, strengthen, and establish you.” (ESV). 

“I am so broken, Lord. I am so broken,” I remember weeping. “I don’t think I will ever get fixed, and I don’t know if I can live with that.”

Almost three years had passed, since our daughter’s illness, but the pain hadn’t lifted. It wrapped around me like a lead blanket.

Stacks of journals bled with sorrow. “I feel like the Lord should lift my grief,” I wrote, “pump air into this cloud so it doesn’t overwhelm with its heaviness. But, I’m completely devoured.”

Paralyzed physically, my daughter slowly regained bits of progress, and life re-invented itself, different and unthinkable. Time like bandages covered two horrific years, a teeter-totter between life and death.

Yet, in spite of passing time, I felt immobilized, unable to go forward.

“Put out into the deep and let down your nets for a catch,”Jesus told Peter, an invitation from the God of Creation to a man who knew fish.

Regardless of having worked all night and having caught nothing, the fisherman obeyed. A miracle catch filled their nets to the point of breaking. They called for help from another boat, and the catch overwhelmed both boats to almost sinking. It was enough for Peter, with the heart and vocation of a fisherman, to fall down at Jesus’ knees in repentance and belief.

But Peter, the disciple had holes in his net

Jesus knew the heart and mind of Peter, he understood Peter’s weak spots, yet Jesus loved him.

Scripture tells stories of Peter that bring him to life as a person, raw, human and full of holes.

He boasted. He acted rashly. Impulsive, impetuous, Peter got tangled in self-sufficiency and pride. He lacked tact. He spoke without thinking and acted without restraint. He was at times a coward and other times overtly bold. He demonstrated unruly passion. He got mad and made promises he couldn’t fulfill. He doubted.

I see so much of me in Peter. I am so hole-y.

“…When you have returned to Me,” Jesus told him shortly before the soldiers came to take Him, “strengthen your brethren.” Lk.22:32 (NKJV).

Jesus predicted His abandonment, but Peter would have none of it.

“If I must die with you, I will not deny you,” Peter promised. Mark 14: 31. (ESV).

In the heat of the crisis, when His Master had greatest need of him, Peter hotly decried any knowledge of Christ.

After the greatest happening in history, after the power of God was revealed in the resurrection of Jesus, after Peter had seen the empty tomb and witnessed the resurrected Christ, Peter went fishing. Jesus met him there.

“Cast the net on the right side of the boat, and you will find some fish,” the resurrected Christ invited. “…So they cast it, and now they were not able to haul it in, because of the quantity of fish…” 

Suffering isn’t pleasant, it’s purposeful. 

“So Simon Peter went aboard and hauled the net ashore, full of large fish, 153 of them.” 

Precisely.

And although there were so many, the net was not torn.” John 21:6, 11 (ESV).

Years later, Peter penned these words; “And after you have suffered a little while…He will restore…”

He used the same word that fishermen use to mend their nets, a word he must have used often, known well.

Katartizo,”to mend what has been broken, to repair, to make complete, the way it ought to be, restore even better than before.

Repairs can look messy, but the residual effects if received with surrender and trust add strength and completeness.

While we seek to remove, shorten, placate suffering, God looks at it from a completely different perspective. He wants our pain to serve the purpose for which He has allowed it. He seeks to fix what’s broken, put the pieces back together, whole and complete.

Peter, forsaker of Jesus, later strengthened his brothers in their faith as Jesus had asked him to do.

Character holes became testaments of transformation through a Risen Christ.

God used Peter in astounding ways within the birth and growth of His church. The Apostle became what his name suggested; a steadfast rock, reliable, a leader and proclaimer of the gospel.

Embracing suffering as part of God’s perfecting rebuilds shoddy workmanship and gives it promise of greatness yet to come.

“ the God of all grace, who has called you to his eternal glory in Christ, will himself restore, confirm, strengthen, and establish you.”

It is hope I need today for tomorrow.

 

 

6 Replies

  1. Kelly Smith Reply

    So insightful. My favorite line: “Suffering isn’t pleasant, it’s purposeful.” So good to remember in the middle of the net mending.

  2. Jill Reply

    Sylvia-I love this! Suffering isn’t pleasant, it’s purposeful-absolutely! I love how you tied in Peter’s weaknesses with how He stregnthened others later because of his suffering. Nicely done!

  3. Kim Reply

    I am finally learning this. I used to give up every time it got hard. I have learned that He is with me in the storms and suffering, doing something in me. I have lots of “holes” in me but I refuse to give up because I know He is fixing me and teaching me things.

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