Empty Nets
Simon
answered, “Master, we’ve worked hard all night and haven’t caught anything.
But
because you say so, I will let down the nets.”
Luke
5:5 (NLT)
They were weary, frustrated, and disappointed. Over and
over, during the long hours of the night, they’d cast their nets into the Lake
of Galilee without catching a single fish. Never before had they encountered
such a setback. There would be nothing to sell at the market, no money to bring
home to their families.
As he washed one of nets at the water’s edge, checking
for rips or tears, Simon kept his gaze on the task before him. He couldn’t bear
to look at his fishing partners, James and John. He was all too conscious of
the disappointment and frustration stirring in their hearts. Little did the three of
them know that the man standing in the midst of a crowd, teaching and
preaching, would change their lives forever.
There have been times in my life when I’ve suffered from
that empty-nets syndrome. No matter how much I try, no matter how much I toil,
my nets come up empty. I have nothing to claim, nothing to share, nothing to
show for my hours of labor.
Yet, God can redeem those times of emptiness. When I come to
the realization that my all my efforts, all my resolve and determination, all
my toil are only as effective as God’s supremacy in my life, when I run to God
empty-handed, that’s precisely when He is able to fill me with His love, His
grace, His wisdom and His power that He might be glorified.
Simon’s nets were eventually filled to overflowing. Not
because of anything he did or said, but because of his surrender and obedience
to Jesus. By faith, he cast his nets into the lake and pulled in the biggest haul
of fish he’d ever seen.
Empty that we might be filled. This is the paradox of
grace.
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