George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
September 10
The Boat's Breadth
Cast the net on the right side of the
ship--Joh 21:6
Turning Back to Old Tasks
There are few scenes in the Gospel more
impressive than this scene in the early morning by the sea of Galilee. Not even
the meeting between Christ and Mary in the garden is more touching or tender
than this incident. Calvary was past; the night of darkness was ended; Jesus
had risen and the awful strain was over. It is in such hours that men
instinctively turn again to the common toils which the strain has interrupted,
and in such an hour Peter said, "I go a fishing." So Peter and his
comrades toiled all night, but for all their toil, their fishing was a failure.
Night--nothing--how these words chime together; night--nothing,
morning--Master. For in the morning the risen Christ stood by the lake and
cried to them, "Children, have ye any meat?" There was only one
answer to that straight question--it was No (we may be near to Christ and yet
be starving); then He said to them, "Cast the net on the right side of the
ship." They cast it therefore, and it was filled with fish. Whereon in an
instant the disciple whom Jesus loved, and to whom the love of Christ gave eyes
like the eyes of an eagle, turned to his comrades and Said, "It is the
Lord."
The words, then, that I wish to dwell upon
are these: Cast the net on the right side of the ship. And what do they suggest
to me? These three important truths. First, what we long for is often nearer
than we think. Second, we should never be afraid to change our methods. Third,
Christ can manage things for us better than we can ourselves.
What We Long for Is Often Nearer Than We
Think
You see at a glance that it was so that
morning. Somehow, within the sweep of their nets, was the harvest of the sea
these men were looking for. All night they had toiled without one sign of fish;
they had lost heart; they were weary, hungry, hopeless. "Ah!" they
would whisper, "this lake is sadly changed; there used to be good fish in
it. There doesn't seem one in it now." But the fish were there, as
plentiful as ever, nor were they far away in remote bays and creeks: cast the
net on the right side of the ship--and it was full of great fishes, a hundred
and fifty and three. What they had toiled for all night was not remote. What
their hearts were set on was not far away. When Peter and Thomas and John recalled
that morning amid the stress and the struggles of the after years, it would
flash on them as one of its sweetest memories that what we long for may be
nearer than we think.
Now often in reading the Bible I am struck
with the divine insistence on that truth. And I take it that when God repeats a
thing, He is bent on getting it graven on our hearts. Let me only recall to you
the case of Hagar when she fled with Ishmael under the taunts of Sarah. Her
flight lay through the desert with her child, and in the desert her womanly
strength gave out. There was no water there; and her child was perishing, and
she cried to Abraham's God. And then and there God opened Hagar's eyes and
within a stone's cast of her child there was a well. She would have given all
the world for water, and it was running near her all the time. She thought of
the well beside the tent of Abraham, and there was a spring not a hundred yards
away. And the days would pass, and Hagar would reach Egypt; and she would dwell
among the temples of idolatry, but she would remember, when all her hair was
silvered, that the things we long for may be nearer than we dream.
Everyone of us needs to learn that lesson. We
are so prone to think that the best is inaccessible. But all that we long
for--happiness, love, peace, power--like the hundred and fifty fishes, is just
here. Ah, if all that we craved for was remote, life would not be so tragic as
it is. If all that we craved for was very far away, the story of humanity would
be less pitiable. But the pity of a thousand lives is this, that love and joy
and power and peace are here, yet by the breadth of a fishing boat men somehow
miss them, and all their life they are toiling in the dark. It is easy to run
away from home. It is not so easy to run away from self. Believe that the
kingdom of heaven is within you. Believe that the best and the brightest is
just here. The things that we crave for, without which we cannot live, which
make all the difference between morn and midnight, these things are always
nearer than we dream.
And if that is so of happiness and love you
may be certain it is so of Christ. Peter and Nathanael and James and John made
that discovery beside the lake. The scene was full of memories of Jesus: every
light that twinkled on the lake shore recalled Him. I do not think one hour
would pass that night, when the nets were shot and the fishing boat was
rocking, but the name of Jesus would be on Peter's lips. They were longing for
Him with a longing quite immeasurable; they missed Him unutterably; they could
not live without Him. And they learned in the morning when He stood on the
shore and called them that the Christ they longed for was nearer than they
thought. Do I speak to any who are longing for a Savior--to any who have toiled
all night and have caught nothing--to any who are saying "My life is a
sorry failure, although God knows I have struggled in the dark?" Behold! I
stand at the door and knock, says Christ--the very power and presence that you
need. It is easy to believe what Christ wrought in Galilee. It is easy to
believe His power in the past. The hard thing is to believe that here and now
there is One who can redeem and save and change you. Yet that is what you are
longing for now. No one else knows it; they think you are quite satisfied. But
you are not satisfied, and I tell you that all that you long for is nearer than
you dream.
We Should Never Be Afraid to Change Our
Methods
Just think what would have happened by the
lake if the disciples had been mastered by that cowardly fear. All night they
had cast their nets on the left side--there may have been some fisherman's
superstition in the matter--they were simply doing what they had been taught to
do; they were holding fast to universal custom. Then in the morning came the
ringing voice "Cast the net on the right side of the ship. Try a new
method now. Adopt new plans. Strike out on a new course in the grey dawn."
What a deal the disciples would have lost if they had sullenly refused to make
that venture! No mighty fish would have filled their net to breaking. No one in
the boat would have cried, "It is the Lord." The figure would have
vanished from the shore; the hot sun would have mounted, and a dreary day would
have followed a weary night. But they cast their nets and everything was
different. They altered their plans, and the day became divine. It was Christ
who was near them; the Savior whom they loved. They had a day of royal
fellowship with Him. And I think that in after years when Peter and James and
John were fighting their Lord's battles in the world, as often as they recalled
this scene in Galilee they would never be afraid to change their methods.
In our moral and spiritual life we must get
rid of this debasing fear. When we have been toiling all night and have caught
nothing, it is time to cast the net upon the other side. Henry Drummond used to
tell us of a duel that he had witnessed in one of the German universities. The
combatants faced each other, and the swords made rapid play, and stroke after
stroke was given, parried, baffled. Then suddenly, quick as a flash, one
fighter changed his tactics; with the swiftness of thought he gave an
unlooked-for stroke, and by the unlooked-for stroke the first blood was drawn. We
are all fighting heavenward and Godward in a duel far more terrible than that
of German students. There is not one of us in whom the flesh does not lust
against the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh, and sometimes it seems as
if victory were impossible. Try some new plan tonight. Strike out upon fresh
lines. Have the courage to adopt a novel stroke. You have been fishing on the
left and failing long enough. Cast the net on the right side of the ship.
Of course, I would not have anyone imagine
that Jesus is putting a premium upon fickleness. There is no more hopeless
character in the world than that of the fickle and inconstant man. The very
fact that all through the weary night the disciples had evidently fished on the
left side shows that in all of them there was that noble doggedness without
which strong character is never forged. The man who can toil all night though
he gets nothing is the rough material out of which saints are made. There is
something heroic in all quiet persistency, especially when not one fish comes
to the net. But to all of us, I imagine, there come mornings like the morning
that dawned on these fishers at the lake; hours when we feel more intensely,
when we see more vividly, when hopes are born in us and when new vistas open.
It is in such hours, if we be men at all, that we will never hesitate to make
great changes--we will cast our nets on the right side of the ship. We have
never really prayed, but we shall pray now. We have never been thankful, we
shall be thankful now. We have let devotion take the place of service, or we
have let service take the place of prayer. Beware of the tyranny of habit in
religion. There are ruts for the heart as well as for the wheels. We have
toiled all night upon the left and have caught nothing. Cast the net on the
right side of the ship.
And that is not only a lesson for the
individual; it is a lesson for the whole church of Christ. I am no advocate of
ill-considered changes. A mighty church must always be slow to move. I love old
sanctuaries worn by the hand of time, and the grass-grown corners where our
fathers sleep. I love to worship simply and in quiet places where the leaves
brush against the windows and the birds are singing, where there are rugged
faces round me that have known what tears are, and where I can bow in reverence
before Almighty God. I love solemnity and dignity in worship. I love a church
mellowed and grey with years. But the question of questions is not what I love.
The question of questions is what about the nets? Are they full; are they empty;
are there any fish in them? Are men being saved? Is the world being redeemed?
If it is not, then let the dead past bury its dead, and cast the nets on the
right side of the ship. Do not be eager for a change of methods. Do not be
afraid of a change of methods. Measure the matter by the nets, and the nets
only--by the power of the church with a dying and lost world.
New occasions teach new duties,
Time makes ancient good
uncouth,
They must up and ever onward
Who would keep abreast
of truth.
Christ Can Manage Our Daily Lives Better
Than We Can Ourselves
Now just think of it, Peter and James were
fishermen. They had been falling into that lake since they were babies. They
knew every bay in it and every trick of the wind and every art and secret of
the fisherman's craft. Then Jesus came to them. He gave directions. Did they
resent it as gross interference? They did what He bade them, and doing it they
found that He could manage their business better than they themselves.
Now after we have preached, businessmen
sometimes say, "Ah! the minister knows nothing about business." That
may be true, yet I should like to say in passing that the more I know
businessmen, the more I honour them. In the face of risks we ministers know
nothing of, they show a courage and a patience that put some of us to shame. I
have felt a hundred times that had I but half the consecration to my business
that I see in the lives of some businessmen to whom I preach, I might be less
haunted with the sense of doing nothing. But that is by the way, my point is
this--though the minister does not understand, remember Christ does. He can
give advice to the most cunning fisherman, and the fisherman will never regret
that he adopted it. Consult Him when all your labour is a failure. Go to Him on
the eve of every venture. Tell Him all about it. Ask His advice on it. He knows
far more about fishing than Peter ever did. It is such a pity that the fish
should all be there, and that by a boat's breadth you should miss your share of
them--the share which God in His providence meant for you and which you lose
because you will not take His way.
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