Jesus is ready to start his
ministry on earth. He’s been
baptized. He had the Holy Spirit descend
upon him like a dove. A voice from heaven
said, this is my Son, with Him I am well pleased. All the preliminaries are done. It’s time for Jesus to get started on what he
came to earth to do.
We
generally think of Jesus starting by calling the disciples. And you know,
this shows how sometimes we really need to take a closer look at some of these
Bible passages that we think we know. Because we all have said it that
way: “Jesus called the disciples.” I’ve said it that way, too.
But if you look at John’s account here, which is the first five of Jesus’
disciples being called, Jesus actually only called one of them. He
accepted them all, of course. He wanted them all. But he was not
the one who initiated things with four of the first five disciples.
Look
at how this works. John the Baptist is standing there with two of his
disciples. Jesus walks by. John the Baptist says who Jesus is.
And immediately the two disciples leave John the Baptist and start
following Jesus.
Those
are the first two of Jesus’ disciples. We’re told that one of them is
Andrew. The other one is not named. We assume it’s the disciple
John, the one who wrote this gospel, and that he simply did not want to use his
own name. There are other places in the gospel of John where he avoids
using his own name, so we assume that’s what’s going on here. But the
point is that these first two disciples were not chosen by Jesus. They
chose to follow Jesus, not the other way around.
And
the third disciple, Simon Peter, was not called by Jesus, either. He’s
Andrew’s brother. We’re told that after Andrew decided to follow Jesus,
the first thing he did was go find his brother Simon Peter and tell him they’d
found the Messiah. Then it says, “and he brought him to Jesus”.
Jesus did not go find Simon Peter. Andrew brought Simon Peter to
Jesus.
The
next disciple is the only one of the first five that Jesus calls. It’s
Philip. We’re told that Jesus “found” Philip, and said to him “Follow
me.” But then, look at what happens. Philip goes and finds
Nathanael and tells him they’ve found the one Moses and the prophets wrote
about. Nathanael is skeptical, but Philip just says, “Come and see”, and
he does.
So
four of the first five disciples were not called by Jesus at all. Two of
them came on their own, after hearing what John the Baptist said, and the other
two came because someone they knew brought them to Jesus. And maybe
you’re thinking, “So what?” What difference does it make how they got to
Jesus as long as they got there? And in one sense, you’re right. As
long as we get to Jesus it really does not matter how we get there. But I
think there are some lessons here for us. Because I think the way these
disciples found Jesus mirrors the way we find Jesus today.
Some
of us are like Philip. Some of us are just kind of going about our
business, living our lives, and suddenly Jesus comes along and speaks to us.
It could be through a direct contact, actually hearing the voice of Jesus
or of an angel. That may seem far-fetched to some of you, but I’ve talked
to enough people and heard enough stories that I believe it does happen that
way sometimes. Or, it could be the Holy Spirit speaking directly to our
hearts and souls somehow. But that’s one way we find Jesus--through the
Lord taking the initiative and speaking directly to us.
But
there was only one of the first five disciples who found Jesus that way.
It was not the way it happened for the majority. And I think it’s
not the way it happens for the majority of us, either. It’s great when it
does, don’t get me wrong. But for most of us it happens in another way.
One
of the other ways it happens is the way it happened for Andrew and John.
They were already following John the Baptist. They’d heard John the
Baptist’s preaching about repentance and forgiveness. They’d heard him
tell them that he was preparing the way for when the Savior came. What
that means is that Andrew and John had a background in the faith. They
were open to the message of salvation. And when they found Jesus, the one
who could give them that salvation, they were ready to follow him right then.
Some
of us are like that. Some of us have grown up in the church. We’ve
heard the word preached. We’ve heard about repentance and forgiveness and
God’s love. We’re open to the message of salvation. And when we
find Jesus, the one who can give us that salvation, we’re ready to follow.
But
some of us are like Simon Peter and Nathanael. Jesus did not send us a
direct message. We did not grow up in the church. We were not
looking for the message of salvation. But then, someone came along and
told us about it anyway. And they brought us to Jesus. Maybe some
of us were like Simon Peter, who seems to have come right away when his brother
went to get him. But some of us are like Nathanael, openly skeptical of
what we hear. And someone says to us, “It’s okay if you’re skeptical.
But come and see. Come and see for yourself.”
What
this shows, I think, is that God has all kinds of ways of calling people to
him. God gives some people a direct message. And that’s awesome
when it happens, but it’s not something in our control. God either does
that or God does not, based on whatever reasons God may have.
God
calls some people through their parents or others making sure they grow up in
the church and have a background in the church. And that’s a wonderful
thing, too, when it happens. But if you’re an adult now, you either grew
up in the church or you did not. We cannot go back and change the past,
even if we’d like to. However we grew up is how we grew up, for better or
worse.
But
sometimes, God uses people to call other people. God used Andrew to call
Simon Peter. God used Philip to call Nathanael. And God can use you
and me to call people to God, too.
Now,
notice, God did not have Andrew and Philip call complete strangers.
Andrew was Simon Peter’s brother. Philip and Nathanael don’t appear
to have been related, but from the way it’s written they clearly knew each
other. The people Andrew and Philip went to were people they already had
a relationship with. Simon Peter knew he could trust Andrew.
Nathanael knew he could trust Philip. That relationship had already
been established.
And
notice, too, that Andrew and Philip did not use any fancy words to persuade
Simon Peter and Nathanael. Andrew simply told Simon Peter, “We have found
the Messiah”. Philip uses a few more words, but he basically says the
same thing. “We have found the one Moses wrote about in the Law, and
about whom the prophets also wrote.” And when Nathanael is skeptical,
Philip does not argue with him. He does not go into a big spiel to try to
persuade him. He simply says, “Come and see.” See for yourself.
We’ll show you what we’ve found, and you can decide whether I’m right or
not.
That’s
all God asks us to do. We don’t have to go onto a street corner and
confront strangers with the gospel. All God asks us to do is to go to
people we know, people we already have some sort of relationship with, people
who know they can trust us. Go to those people, and tell them what we’ve
found. Tell them what our faith means to us. Tell them how
important our faith is to us. Tell them how our faith helps us.
Tell them what this church means to us, how important this church is to
us, how this church helps us. And if they’re skeptical, we don’t need to
argue with them or go into a big spiel to persuade them. All we need to
do is say, as Philip did, “Come and see”. See for yourself. We’ll
show you what we have here, and you can decide for yourself whether we’re right
or not.
We
won’t always succeed. For all we know, Andrew and Philip might not have
always succeeded. Maybe they went to some other people and got turned
down, we don’t know. But we’ll succeed sometimes. And when we do,
we’ll have done what Jesus told us to do. We’ll have made disciples of
Jesus Christ.
We come to God in all kinds of ways. Sometimes God
brings people to himself directly. But sometimes, God uses us to bring
people to him. May we always be open to sharing our faith. And when
people are skeptical, may we always invite them to come and see.
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