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There's a remarkable story in Matthew chapter
4 that we often take for granted because we've heard it so much.
Simon and Andrew had heard that Jesus was the Messiah. One day,
Jesus was walking by the Sea of Galilee and saw them casting a
net into the sea. And He said to them, "Follow me, and I will
make you fishers of men." Straightway they left their nets and
followed Him.
Imagine that! You've heard that this man is
the Messiah. He comes to you and asks you to leave your work,
leave your family and follow Him. He wants you to go with Him
around the countryside to teach, and says you'll do greater
things with your life than just the day-to-day grind. He'll make
you fishers of men. He'll make you someone who can lead souls to
God, who can be an instrument in the hands of God in
transforming lives and leading them to the light.
Would you believe Him? Even if you believed
He was the Son of God, might you still feel inclined to say,
"Yeah, but He doesn't know me. There's nothing special about me.
I can't be useful to Him. I'm just an ordinary person with a lot
of problems and hang-ups."
But Jesus took these ordinary men, not
scripture scholars, but ordinary fishermen and made them His
apostles, men of God with power to act, heal, and teach in His
name. That is one of the most powerful messages of Jesus Christ
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that He can take ordinary people and transform them into
extraordinary instruments in His hands. And this doesn't just
apply to Simon and Andrew; it
applies to you and me.
One might also say, "But what about my life?"
What of Simon and Andrew? Did their lives change when they
dropped their nets and followed Jesus Christ? Of course! Jesus
even changed Simon's name to Peter. They were never the same
again. That had to have been scary for them at that moment of
decision. I wonder if they even understood how much their lives
would change? Did they know that they would work mighty miracles
in His name? Did they even begin to comprehend that they would
help bring thousands to the feet of Jesus Christ where they
would find salvation for their souls? I doubt it.
"Whom do men say that I the Son of man am?"
asked Jesus of His disciples. They answered, "Some say that thou
art John the Baptist: some Elias, and others Jeremiah or one of
the other prophets." Jesus replied, "But whom say ye that I am?"
Simon Peter answered, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the
living God."
Jesus answered and said to Peter,
"Blessed art thou, Simon Barjona: for flesh and blood hath not
revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven."
(Matthew_16:13-17) John the Revelator explained, "the testimony
of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy." (Revelation_19:10). When we
have a testimony of Jesus, we are exercising the spirit of
prophecy
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gift of the Spirit (see 1Corinthians_12).
Even though Peter had the spirit of
prophecy to declare that Jesus is the Son of the living God, the
Lord later told Peter at the Last Supper, "Simon, Simon, behold
Satan hath desired to have you that he may sift you as wheat.
But I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not: and when
thou art converted, strengthen thy brethren.�
Even though Peter had a testimony of the divinity of Jesus
Christ, he was not yet converted. According to the thesaurus,
converted means transformed,
recreated or changed.
There is a difference between knowing
the path and walking the path.
There is a difference between knowing, doing and becoming. The
gospel of Jesus Christ invites us to become someone new. As Paul
said, "Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature:
old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new."
(2Corinthians_5:17)
When we drop our old lives, throw down our
nets and follow Jesus Christ, we start on a path that can seem
quite scary. We may feel like we're leaving not only our old
habits behind, but also sometimes even our very selves behind.
But it is always worth it. The person He transforms us into is
more beautiful, exciting, vibrant and happy than anything we
could have become on our own. And isn't it only fitting, only
logical, that God can do so much more with a life than we can
make of it ourselves?
God takes ordinary people and transforms them
into extraordinary instruments in His hands. No matter how
boring, untalented or ordinary we feel we are, Jesus Christ, if
we let Him, will transform us into individuals who can make a
miraculous difference in the world around us.
by Marnie Pehrson
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