When Simon Peter saw this, he fell at Jesus’ knees and said, “Go away from me, Lord; I am a sinful man!”
Luke 5:8 (NIV)
When I’m asked to deliver a message, I often take a few moments before I speak to survey the room. I look at the people sitting there. If it’s among our local gathering of Jesus’ followers I know most of them. I know many of their stories.
In those moments I allow myself to consider the very real struggles that are represented by every face.
Fear, anxiety, and depression
Marriages struggling to survive
Bodies carrying pain
The quiet ache of loneliness
Financial pressure
Struggles at work
Children in full rebellion
Sometimes I will start with a prayer and simply name these things out loud. I want my message to meet people where they are. That’s the whole point of Jesus’ message —He meets people where they are.
Today’s chapter is filled with simple, every day people with every day struggles.
Empty nets.
Incurable disease.
Paralysis.
Social conflicts.
Religious judgement.
God has moved into the neighborhood, and He brings abundance.
An abundance of fish to fill empty nets
An abundance of healing — lepers cleansed, the lame walking
An abundance of grace — sins forgiven, feasts with sinners
An abundance of challenge — it’s the religious He confronts
What I find fascinating is the change that takes place when individuals have an encounter with Jesus.
Peter, James, and John walk away from the biggest catch of their lives.
Matthew leaves his lucrative career in an instant.
A leper and lame man become walking billboards of what God can do inside and out.
But the religious fundamentalists? They dig in deeper.
As I meditated on this in the quiet this morning, it struck me that this is exactly why I take that moment before the message. In that room are living representatives of all the people in today’s chapter. Every day people with every day struggles. And yes, there are always religious fundamentalists in the room more concerned about rules than real righteousness.
My job, as I see it, is to bring the same Jesus we meet in today’s chapter. There will always be religious rule-keepers — that doesn’t change. But Jesus truly changes people when they have an encounter with Him at the intersection of their very real, every day lives.
I know I did. And that’s a Message worth sharing.
After all, it’s why God moved into the neighborhood in the first place.
I will be done the next two days on a little personal retreat.
Lord willing, I’ll be back next Monday.

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.








