Sermons

Summary: A sermon for the 5th Sunday of Epiphany, Year C

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February 6, 2022

Hope Lutheran Church

Rev. Mary Erickson

Luke 5:1-11; 1 Corinthians 15:1-11

A Change of Plans

Friends, may grace and peace be yours in abundance in the knowledge of God and Christ Jesus our Lord.

There’s a Yiddish saying: “We make our plans and God laughs.” No matter how much we try to plot and control the outcomes of our days, at any moment life may take us in a very different direction. We’ll likely encounter unexpected roadblocks and detours along the way. But in the end, these changes of plans may well lead us to new, fruitful endings.

Something like this happened to Peter and his fishing partners, James and John. Now, Peter had already encountered Jesus in his hometown of Capernaum. Jesus had spoken in the synagogue there. While in the synagogue, Jesus healed a man with an unclean spirit. It was a striking, dramatic scene.

Afterwards, Jesus went to Peter’s house. Peter’s mother-in-law lived with his family, and she was suffering from a high fever. Jesus healed her. That evening, everyone in Capernaum who had a sick family member brought them to Peter’s house so that Jesus could heal them.

So now, Jesus comes down to the lakeshore of Galilee. A huge crowd of people pressed upon him. Jesus sees Peter next to his fishing boat. “Hey, can you row me out a little ways so I can speak to the people?”

Peter takes Jesus offshore a bit and Jesus preaches. After he’s finished, Jesus instructs Peter to row out to the deep and let down his nets. Peter and his fishing partners had fished all night long and had caught nothing but seaweed and flotsam.

Peter follows Jesus’ request, and the once empty nets are now bulging with fish. He hails James and John to come and help. The catch is so abundant, it threatens to swamp both boats.

Peter is overcome. He’s seen Jesus heal the sick and cast out demons. He’s heard Jesus’ marvelous preaching. But this event tops it for him. He’s in the presence of divine power and authority. Peter falls to his knees.

Peter has encountered what might be called a Holy Disruption. There are times when God breaks into our routine and shakes things up. From our perspective, these holy disruptions might feel like catastrophe and chaos. Our best laid plans are shattered. These moments might stem from some disastrous event, something you have no control over: the loss of a job, a health crisis, the end of a marriage. Or it might come from something deep within you, the realization of an emerging incongruity you can no longer ignore: an addiction, internal meaninglessness, an ethical compromise you can’t deny one more day.

This isn’t to say that God necessarily causes the chaotic event. But God definitely uses it and God steps into the gaps with dynamic newness. We believe in the God who says, “Behold, I am making all things new.” That newness, first begun in creation, steps into and through the destruction of death to create new life, resurrection life.

These holy disruptions break in and toss our neat and tidy world up in the air. It might feel like chaos. We might experience them as the sheer destruction of everything we’ve known and relied upon. But from the cracks and between the pieces of our former order, God is going to create a new and vibrant reality.

Our whole world has been embedded in one of these holy disruptions for the last two years. COVID-19 has definitely shattered life as we knew it. We separate our lives into two periods, before and after COVID-19. As people of faith, we trust that God is doing something new within this interruption. We keep our eyes and minds open so that we might recognize the holy inbreaking of God’s grace and life during this time of disruption.

These holy disruptions are associated with emptiness. Peter’s nets were empty. Sometimes we are so full of ourselves that the only way for divine newness to enter our realm is to empty us out. A classic Zen story relates the tale of a wise Zen master.*

People from far and near would seek his counsel and ask for his wisdom. Many would come and ask him to teach them, enlighten them in the way of Zen. He seldom turned any away. One day an important man, a man used to command and obedience came to visit the master. “I have come today to ask you to teach me about Zen. Open my mind to enlightenment.” The tone of the important man’s voice was one used to getting his own way.

The Zen master smiled and said that they should discuss the matter over a cup of tea. When the tea was served the master poured his visitor a cup. He poured and he poured and the tea rose to the rim and began to spill over the table and finally onto the robes of the wealthy man. Finally the visitor shouted, “Enough. You are spilling the tea all over. Can’t you see the cup is full?”

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