A Resurrected Lord for Real Life

Jesus in Our Ordinary Moments

Getting Closer to Jesus: John 21 is a rather strange chapter. In a sense, it almost seems unnecessary. John 20 could have easily been the conclusion of this amazing Gospel, for it more than adequately tells the resurrection story (John 20:1-10), more than adequately offers proof that Jesus was alive (he visibly appears four times to his disciples in John 20:11-29), more than adequately issues Jesus’s Great Commission to his disciples (John 20:21-23), and more than adequately summarizes the purpose of John’s account as well as the core of salvation that we read about again at the end of John 21 (John 21:30-31).

But then, like a man who wears both belts and suspenders, as if we really needed any more, here comes chapter 21 offering even more stories that Jesus is alive indeed. Yet these stories are a bit strange in that they are not so much grand appearances of the Resurrected Lord in his empty tomb splendor, a la chapter 20, they are more of the garden variety insertions of Jesus into the everyday life of his disciples:

• Jesus shows up at the fishing business during the graveyard shift and offers some helpful advice: “Hey fellas, try throwing your nets on the other side of the boat. I betcha there’s a bunch of fish over there!” (John 21:6)
• After work, he has breakfast with his team: “Hey guys, I got a fire going, so bring some of those fish you just caught. Let’s eat before you head home.” (John 21:9-14)
• Before they leave, he offers some challenging but encouraging professional direction to Peter, discouraged from failing the Lord in his moment of need: “Hey Peter, I know you denied knowing me at my trial, and you probably think that’s a deal breaker for me ever using you as team leader to this band of disciples, but chin up, I’ve got a big job for you.” (John 21:15-23)

Much has been made in this chapter about the disciples going back to what they previously knew—the fishing business—as if they were giving up on their call to ministry. But after the grand appearances of the Resurrected Lord in chapter 20, certainly these guys weren’t giving up on Jesus—they were more than convinced he was alive, and the Lord over death and Author of life. No, they were simply doing what men did in those days—work. They were bi-vocational pastors, so perhaps they were just being responsible.

Much has been made about the miraculous haul of fish—153 large ones, to be exact. But was it a really a miracle or was it the result of Jesus seeing from the shore what the disciples a hundred yards into the water couldn’t—a school of fish on the opposite side from where they were looking. In commentary on John, William Barclay offers this interesting insight into this incident, quoting H.V. Morton, a well-known nineteenth-century travel writer who extensively wrote on the Holy Land,

It happens very often that the man with the hand-net must rely on the advice of someone on shore, who tells him to cast either to the left or the right, because in the clear water he can often see a shoal of fish invisible to the man in the water.’ Jesus was acting as guide to his fishermen friends, just as people still do today.

Much has been made about Jesus’ interaction with Peter—a difficult conversation where the Lord presses him on the depth and strength of this disciple’s love. Many preachers have highlighted the different Greek words for love used by Jesus (agape) and Peter (philos), as if there were some veiled secondary conversation going on between the two. But perhaps this was nothing more than the Lord showing a struggling disciple, embarrassed and discouraged that he had failed the Lord, that Jesus indeed had big plans for a future of ministry impact.

For certain, John 20 is about the spectacular, undeniable miracle of the Resurrected Lord walking out of an empty tomb, but chapter 21 brings to us the spectacular, undeniable miracle of a Resurrected Lord waking into our ordinary moments. As I ponder the purpose of this addendum to the resurrection, it seems to me that more than anything, this chapter is simply yet thankfully showing us how Jesus goes out of his way to come to us in our mundane moments—the difficult slog of our daily work, the banality of our breakfast, the harsh reality of redirecting our failure into building blocks of a future usefulness in service to him.

John 21 is the ongoing miracle of the Risen Lord in the rote details of our dull dailiness.

Thank God John included this postscript of a Risen Savior who goes out of his way be the Resurrected Lord for real life.

Take the Next Step: Write down three ordinary moments of the day that is ahead of you—a stop for coffee on the way to work, a trip to the post office, taking out the trash when you come home, etc. Now, thank God in advance that Jesus will be with you in those moments, and anticipate how he will help, encourage, and direct you as you go about your ordinary day.

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