Delivered on Lord's-Day Morning, April 16, 1882, by C. H. Spurgeon “And Simon answering said unto Him, Master, we have toiled all the night, and have taken nothing: nevertheless at Your word I will let down the net.” Luke 5:5. How very much may simple obedience partake of the sublime! Peter went to take up the net, but let it down into the sea as he said as naturally as possible, “At Your word I will let down the net.” He was then and there appealing to one of the grandest principles which rules among intelligent beings—and to the strongest force which sways the universe—“At Your word.” Great God, it is “at Your Word” that seraphs fly and cherubs bow! Your angels which excel in strength do Your commandments hearkening to the voice of Your word. “At Your word” space and time first came into existence
and all things that are. “At Your word”—here is the cause of causes, the beginning of the creation of God. “By the word
of the Lord were the heavens made,” and by that word was the present constitution of this round world settled as it
stands.
When the earth was formless and dark, Your voice, O Lord, was heard, saying, “Let there be light,” and, “at Your
word” light leaped forth. “At Your word” day and night took up their places and, “at Your word” the waters were divided
from the waters by the firmament of Heaven. “At Your word” the dry land appeared and the seas retired to their
channels. “At Your word” the globe was mantled over with green and vegetable life began. “At Your word” appeared
the sun and moon and stars, “for signs, and for seasons, and for days, and years.” “At Your word” the living creatures
filled the sea, the air, the land and man, at last, appeared. Of all this we are well assured, for by faith we know that the
worlds were framed by the word of God.
Acting in conformity with the word of our Lord we feel ourselves to be in order with all the forces of the universe,
traveling on the main track of all real existence. Is not this a sublime condition, even though it is seen in the common
deeds of our everyday life? It is not in creation, alone, that the word of the Lord is supreme, but in Providence, too, its
majestic power is manifested, for the Lord upholds all things by the word of His power! Snow and vapor and stormy
wind are all fulfilling His word. His word runs very swiftly. When frost binds up the life-floods of the year, the Lord sends
forth His word and melts them. Nature abides and moves by the word of the Lord.
So, too, all matters of fact and history are beneath the supreme word of God. Jehovah stands in the center of all
things! As Lord of All, He abides at the saluting point, and all the events of the ages come marching by at His word,
bowing to His sovereign will! “At Your word,” O God, kingdoms arise and empires flourish! “At Your word” races of
men become dominant and tread down their fellows. “At Your word” dynasties die, kingdoms crumble, mighty cities
become a wilderness and armies of men melt away like the hoarfrost of the morning. Despite the sin of man and the rage
of devils, there is a sublime sense in which all things—from the beginning, since Adam crossed the threshold of Eden even
until now—have happened according to the purpose and will of the Lord of Hosts. Prophecy utters her Oracles and history
writes her pages, “at Your word,” O Lord!
It is wonderful to think of the fisherman of Galilee letting down his net in perfect consonance with all the arrangements
of the ages! His net obeys the Law which regulates the spheres. His hand consciously does what Arcturus and Orion
are doing without thought. This little bell on the Galilean lake rings out in harmony with the everlasting chimes! “At
Your word,” says Peter, as he promptly obeys, therein repeating the watchword of seas and stars, of winds and worlds! It
is glorious to be keeping step with the marching of the armies of the King of kings!
There is another way of working out this thought. “At Your word” has been the password of all good men from the
beginning until now. Saints have acted upon these three words and found their marching orders in them. An ark is built
on dry land and the ribald crowd gather about the hoary Patriarch, laughing at him, but he is not ashamed, for lifting
his face to Heaven, he says, “I have built this great vessel, O Jehovah, at Your word.” Abraham quits the place of his
childhood. He leaves his family and goes with Sarah to a land of which he knows nothing! Crossing the broad Euphrates
and entering upon a country possessed by the Canaanite, he roams as a stranger and a sojourner all his days. He dwells in
tents with Isaac and Jacob. If any scoff at him for thus renouncing the comforts of settled life, he lifts his calm face to
Heaven and smilingly answers to the Lord, “It is at Your word.”
Yes, and even when his brow is furrowed, and the hot tears are ready to force themselves from beneath the Patriarch’s
eyelids as he lifts his hand with the knife to stab Isaac in the heart, if any charge him with murder, or think him
mad, he lifts the same placid face towards the majesty of the Most High and says, “It is at Your word.” At that word he
joyfully sheathes the sacrificial knife, for he has proven his willingness to go to the utmost at the word of the Lord, His
God! If I were to introduce you to a thousand of the faithful ones who have shown the obedience of faith, in every case
they would justify their acts by telling you that they did them “at God’s word.”
Moses lifts his rod in the presence of the haughty Pharaoh, “at Your word,” great God! Nor does he lift that rod in
vain at Jehovah’s word, for thick and heavy fall the plagues upon the children of Ham. They are made to know that
God’s Word returns not to Him void, but fulfills His purpose, whether it is of threat or of promise! See Moses lead the
people out of Egypt, the whole host in its myriads! Mark how he has brought them to the Red Sea, where the wilderness
does shut them in. The heights frown on either side, and the rattle of Egypt’s war chariots is behind. How came Moses to
so play the fool and bring them here? Were there no graves in Egypt that thus he brought them forth to die in the Red
Sea? The answer of Moses is the quiet reflection that he did it at Jehovah’s word—and God justifies that word, for the
sea opens a wide highway for the elect of God—and they march joyfully through! And with timbrels and dances on the
other side they sing unto the Lord who has triumphed gloriously!
If in later days you find Joshua compassing Jericho and not assailing it with battering rams, but only with one great
blast of trumpets, his reason is that God has spoken to him by His word! And so, right on, for time would fail me to
speak of Samson, Jephthah and Barak—these men did what they did at God’s word and, doing it, the Lord was with
them! Is it bringing things down from the sublime to the ridiculous to talk of Peter and the net which he casts over the
side of his little boat? Oh, no! We are, ourselves, ridiculous when we do not make our own lives sublime by the obedience
of faith. Certainly, there may be as much sublimity in casting a net as in building an ark, lifting a rod, or sounding a
ram’s horn! And it is clear that if it is done in faith, the simplest action of life may be sublimely great! The flash of the
wave, as it covers Peter’s net may be as sublime before the Lord as the Glory of the Red Sea billow when it returned in its
strength.
God, who sees a world in a drop, sees wonders in the smallest act of faith. Do not, I pray you, think that sublimity
lies in masses, to be measured by a scale, so that a mile shall be sublime and an inch shall be absurd! We measure not morals
and spirituals by rods and chains! The common act of fishing at Christ’s word links Peter with all the principalities,
powers and forces which in all ages have known this as their only Law—“He spoke, and it was done; He commanded,
and it stood fast.” We, too, shall have fellowship with the sublime if we know how to be perfectly obedient to the Word
of the Lord! This ought to be the rule of all Christians for the whole of their lives—“At Your word.” This should direct
us in the Church and in the world. It should guide us in our spiritual beliefs and in our secular acts! “At Your word.”
I wish it were so. We hear boasts that the Bible and the Bible, alone, is the religion of Protestants. It is a mere boast.
Few Protestants can honestly repeat the assertion. They have other books to which they pay deference! They have other
rules, other guides, beyond and above, and even in opposition to the one Word of God! It ought not to be so. The power
of the Church and the power of the individual to please God shall never be fully known till we get back to the simple, yet
sublime rule of our text, “At Your word.” I am going to hammer upon that phrase, this morning, as God shall help
me—“At Your word.” This rule has many applications. First, I shall somewhat repeat myself by saying that it ought to
apply to the affairs of ordinary life. Secondly, it should apply to matters of spiritual profiting. And thirdly, and here I
shall enlarge, it ought to find its chief application in our great life business—being fishers of men.
I. “At Your word” should apply TO ALL THE AFFAIRS OF ORDINARY LIFE. I mean, first, as to continuance in
honest industry. “Let every man abide in the same calling wherein he was called.” Many a man, in the present trying crisis,
is half ready to throw up his work and run away from his business because he has toiled all night and taken nothing.
Truly, the financial darkness has lasted long and does not yet yield to the dawn, but yet Christians must not murmur or
leave their posts. Oh tried ones, continue to be diligent in your business, still provide things honest in the sight of all
men. Labor on in hope! Say as Peter did, “Nevertheless at Your word I will let down the net.”
“Except the Lord build the house, they labor in vain that build it.” You know that Truth of God full well! Know
this, also, that the Lord will not forsake His people! Your best endeavors will not, of themselves, bring you prosperity.
Still, do not relax those endeavors. God’s Word to you is to quit yourselves like men, be strong, gird up the loins of
yours mind, be sober, and stand fast. Throw not away your shield, cast not away your confidence, but stand steadily in
your rank till the tide of battle turns! God has placed you where you are—move not till His Providence calls you! Do not
run before the cloud. Take down the shutters tomorrow morning and display your goods! Let not despondency drive you
to anything that is rash or unseemly. Say, “Nevertheless at Your word I will let down the net.”
If I am speaking to those who are out of work just now, searching for some place where they can provide bread for
themselves and for their families, as is their duty, let them hear and ponder! If any man does not do his best to provide for
his own household, he comes not under a Gospel blessing, but he is said to be worse than a heathen and a publican—it is
the duty of us all to labor with our hands for that which is good—that we may have to give to the needy as well as to
those dependent on us. If, after having gone about this city till your feet are blistered, you can find nothing to do, do not
sit at home next Monday sulkily saying, “I will not try again.” Apply my text to this painful trial and yet, again, sally
forth in hope, saying with Peter, “We have toiled all the night, and have taken nothing: nevertheless at Your word I will
let down the net.”
Let men see that a Christian is not readily driven to despair! No, let them see that when the yoke is made more heavy,
the Lord has a secret way of strengthening the backs of His children to bear their burdens. If the Holy Spirit shall make
you calmly resolute, you will honor God much more by your happy perseverance than the talkative by their fine speeches,
or the formalist by their outward show. Common life is the true place in which to prove the truth of godliness and bring
Glory to God! Not by doing extraordinary works, but by the piety of ordinary life, is the Christian known and his religion
honored. At God’s Word, hold on, even to the end. “Trust in the Lord, and do good; so shall you dwell in the land,
and verily you shall be fed.”
It may be, too, that you have been endeavoring in your daily life to acquire skill in your business and you have not
succeeded, or you have tried to acquire more knowledge, so that you could better fulfill your vocation, but up to now
you have not prospered as you wish. Do not, therefore, cease from your efforts! Christians must never be idlers. Our Lord
Jesus would never have it said that His disciples are a sort of cowards who, if they do not succeed the first time, will never
try again! We are to be patterns of all the moral virtues as well as of the spiritual graces! Therefore, at the bidding of the
Lord, work on with mind and hand and look to Him for the blessing. “At His word” let down the net once more—He
may intend to bless you largely when, by trial, you have been prepared to bear the benediction.
This will apply very closely to those who are laboring hard in the training of children. It may be that with your own
children you may not have succeeded yet—the boy’s spirit may still be wild and proud—and the girl may not yet have
yielded to obedience and submission. Or you may be working in the Sunday school, or in the Day school, trying to impart
knowledge and to fashion the youthful minds aright—and you may have been baffled. But if it is your business to
teach, do not be overcome! Stand to your work as though you heard Jesus say, “Whatever you do, do it heartily, as unto
the Lord, and not unto men.” Earnestly, then, at His word, let down the net! I counsel you, dear Friends, in everything
to which you set your hands, if it is a good thing, do it with all your might! And if it is not a good thing, have nothing to
do with it!
It may be possible that you are called to teach the age some moral Truths of God. In most generations, individuals
have been called to carry out reforms and to promote progress. You are bound to love your neighbor as yourself; therefore,
as you have opportunity, do good unto all men. If you have tried, and up to now have not won a hearing, do not
give up your point—if it is a good thing and you are a Christian man, never let it be said that you were afraid or
ashamed. I admire in Palissy, the potter, not only his Christianity, which could not be overcome by persecution, but his
perseverance in his own business of making pottery. His last farthing and his last breath would have gone in discovering
a glaze, or bringing out a color! I love to see such men Believers. I should not like to see our Lord followed by a set of
cowards who could not fight the common battles of life—how should such as these become worthy of the lordlier chivalry which wrestles with spiritual wickedness in high places? It is for us to be bravest among the brave in the plains of
common life, that when we are summoned to higher fields, where still greater deeds are needed, we may go there trained
for the higher service!
Does it seem to you to be a little out of place to be talking thus from the pulpit? I do not think so. I notice how, in
the Old Testament, we are told of the sheep and the cattle and the fields and the harvests of good men—and these had to
do with their religion. I notice how the prudent woman, according to Solomon, looked well to her household. And I
observe that we have in the Bible, a book of Proverbs, and another called Ecclesiastes, with little spiritual teaching in
them, but a great deal of good, sound, practical common sense! It is evident to me that the Lord intends that our faith
should not be penned up in a pew, but should walk the shop and be seen in every walk of life! The great principle of my
text fell from the lips of a working man—and to the working man I return it!
It was connected with a net and a boat—the implements of Peter’s labor—and with these common things I would
link it. And I would say to all who serve the Lord in this present evil world—in the name of God, if you have anything to
do, be not so desponding and despairing as to cease from it, but, according to His word, once more go forward in your
honest endeavors, and, like Peter, say—“I will let down the net.” This may prove a word in season to some who are
weary of the hardness of the times. I shall rejoice if it nerves an arm or cheers a heart. Have faith in God, my tried Brothers
and Sisters. “Be you steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord.”
II. IN MATTERS OF SPIRITUAL PROFITING we must, at the word of Christ, let down the net again. I put this,
first, to those who have been up to this Tabernacle a great many times, heartily, if I am to believe them, hoping to find
salvation. You have prayed before the sermon began that the Lord would really bless the sermon to you. Now, mark, I do
not understand you at all! I cannot make you out because the way of salvation is open to you at this very moment and it
is, “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you shall be saved.” You have nothing to wait for—all your waiting is sinful! If
you say you are waiting for the stirring of the pool, I tell you there is no pool to be stirred and no angel to stir it! That
pool was dried up long ago and angels never go that way now.
Our Lord Jesus Christ shut up Bethesda, when He came, and said to the man lying there, “Rise, take up your bed,
and walk.” That is what He says to you! You have no business waiting—but as you are, and are here this morning, I
would earnestly invite you, at the word of Christ, who has bid us preach the Gospel to every creature—“believe and
live.” Let down the net once more and let it down this way—say, “ My Lord, I believe! Help You my unbelief.” Breathe
a prayer to Jesus that He would accept you. Submit yourself to Him and beseech Him to become, now, at this very moment,
your Savior. You will be heard! Plenty of fish are waiting to be taken in the net of faith. At the Lord’s word, let it
down!
But I will now speak to others present who have been letting down their nets, in vain, perhaps, in the form of importunate
prayer. Have you been praying for the conversion of a relative, or pleading for some other good thing which you
believe to be according to the will of God? And, after long pleading—pleading into the night, for your spirit has been
sad—are you tempted never to offer that petition again? Now then, at Christ’s Word, who said that men ought always
to pray and not to faint—at Christ’s Word, who says, “Pray without ceasing”—let down the net and pray again! Not
because the circumstances which surround you are more favorable, but simply because Jesus bids you, continue in prayer!
And who knows but that this very time you will meet with success!
Or have you been searching the Scriptures to find a promise which will suit your case? Do you want to get hold of
some good Word from God that will cheer you? Shoals of such fish are around your boat! The sea of Scripture is full of
them—fish of promise, I mean—but, alas, you cannot catch one of them. Nevertheless, try again. Go home this afternoon
and search the Scriptures again with prayer! Beseech the Holy Spirit to apply a precious portion to your heart, that
you may, by faith, enjoy the sweetness of it—and who knows but you shall, this very day, obtain your desire and receive
a larger blessing than your mind can fully contain—so that in your case, also, the net shall break through the fullness of
the favor!
Or it may be you have been laboring a long while after some holy attainment. You need to conquer a besetting sin, to
exercise firmer faith, to exhibit more zeal and to be more useful, but you have not yet gained your desire. Now, then,
since it is the Lord’s mind that you should be “perfect in every good work to do His will,” do not cease from your purpose,
but, at His Word, let down your net again! Never despair. That temper of yours will be conquered yet! That unbelief of yours will give way to holy faith! Let down the net and all the Divine Graces may yet be taken in it, to be yours for
the rest of yours life! At Christ’s Word still labor for the best things and He will give them to you.
Or are you seeking, just now, the closer Presence of Christ and a nearer fellowship with Him? Are you yearning after
a sight of His face—that face which outshines the morning? Do you wish to be brought into His banqueting house to be
satiated with His love? And have you cried in vain? Then cry once more, “at His Word,” for He bids you come to Him!
His loving voice invites you to draw near. At His Word press forward, once again—let down the net once more—and
joys unspeakable await you, surpassing all you have ever experienced! Thus you see that there is a just application of the
great principle of the text to our spiritual profiting. God help us, by His gracious Spirit, to carry it out from day to day!
III. The great principle of our text should be applied to OUR LIFE BUSINESS. And what is the life business of every
Christian here? Is it not soul-winning? That we may glorify God by the bringing of others to the faith of Christ is the
great objective of our remaining here on earth—otherwise we would have been caught up to swell the harmony of the
heavenly songs. It is expedient for many wandering sheep here below that we should tarry here till we have brought them
home to the great Shepherd and Bishop of souls. Our way of winning men for Christ, or, to use His own metaphor—our
method of catching men—is by letting down the net of the Gospel.
We have learned no other way of holy fishing! Men with great zeal and little knowledge are inventing ingenious
methods for catching men, but, for my part, I believe in nothing but letting down the Gospel net—by telling out the
story of the love of God to men in Christ Jesus. No new Gospel has been committed to us by Jesus and He has authorized
no new way of making it known! Our Lord has called all of us to the work of proclaiming free pardon through His blood
to all who believe in Him. Each Believer has a warrant to seek the conversion of his fellow men. May not every man seek
to save his brother from the burning? Must not Jesus smile on any man’s endeavor to deliver his neighbor from going
down to eternal death? Has He not said, “Let him that hears say, Come”? Whoever hears the Gospel is to invite others to
come to Christ!
The Word of the Lord is our warrant for keeping to our one work of making known the Gospel—it would be a
sorry act of mutiny if we were either to be silent, or to preach another Gospel which is not another! The Word of the
Lord is a warrant which justifies the man who obeys it. “Where the word of a king is, there is power.” What higher authority
can we need? “Oh, but,” they say, “you ought to advance to something higher than the mere elementary Doctrines
of Grace, and give the people something more in keeping with the progress of the period.” We shall not do so while
Jesus bids us go into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature! If we do what He bids us, the responsibility of
the matter rests no longer with us. Whatever comes of it, we are clear if we have obeyed orders. A servant is not to justify
his master’s message, but to deliver it. This makes it a joy to preach, this doing it, “at Your Word.” Our business is to do
what Christ tells us, as Christ tells us—and to do this again and again so long as we have breath in our bodies!
The commanding Word cries always to us, “Preach the Gospel, preach the Gospel to every creature!” Our justification
for setting forth Christ Crucified and incessantly bidding men believe and live, lies in that same Word which bade
Peter walk the sea, and bade Moses fetch water out of a rock! The result of this preaching will justify Him who commanded
it! No man, at the last, will be able to say to the Savior, “You gave Your servants an impossible task and You
gave them an instrument to wield which was not at all adapted to produce its end.” No, but at the closing of all things, it
shall be seen that for the salvation of the elect there was nothing better than a crucified Savior—and to make that crucified
Savior known there was no better means than the simple proclamation of His Word by honest lips in the power of the
Spirit of the Lord. The foolishness of preaching will turn out to be the great proof of the Wisdom of God!
Brothers, you that teach in the school, or you that preach from the pulpit, or distribute tracts, or speak personally
to individuals—you need not be afraid but what Wisdom will exonerate herself from all charges and vindicate her own
methods! You may be called a fool, today, for preaching the Gospel, but that accusation, like rust on a sword, will wear
off as you use the weapon in the wars of the Lord! The preaching of the Word of God soon puts down all clamors against
itself— those clamors mainly arise because it is not preached. No one calls the Gospel ineffective where it is smiting right
and left like a great two-handed sword! Our reply to the outcry about the failure of the pulpit is to get into it and preach
with the Holy Spirit sent down from Heaven!
Indeed, this Word of Christ, whereby He gives us His warrant for letting down the net, is such that it amounts to a
command, and it will leave us guilty if we do not obey. Suppose Simon Peter had said, “We have toiled all the night, and have taken nothing; and therefore, notwithstanding Your word, I will not let down the net”? Then Simon Peter had
been guilty of disobedience to His Lord and blasphemy against the Son of God! What shall I say to any of my fellow
Christians who profess to be called of God, and to be Christ’s disciples, and yet never let down the net? Is it so that you
are doing nothing for the Truth of God? That you never disseminate the Gospel? Is it so that you call yourselves lights of
the world, and yet never shine? That you are sowers of the seed and yet forget that you have a seed basket? Am I addressing
any members of this Church who are, in this respect, wasting their lives? Is it so that it is professedly your life’s objective
to be fishers of men and yet you have never cast a net, nor even helped to draw one on shore?
Are you dwelling among us under false pretences? Are you mocking God by a fruitless profession which you never try
to make fruitful? I have not the strength with which to condemn you, but I would to God your own conscience might
fulfill that office! What shall be said of the man to whom the Lord gives charge that he shall make known the glad tidings
of salvation from eternal misery—and yet he is sinfully silent? The great Physician has entrusted you with the medicine
which heals the sick—you see them die about you but never speak of the remedy? The great King has given you the meal
with which to feed the hungry and you lock the storehouse door, while the crowds are starving in your streets? Is not this
a crime which may well make a man of God weep over you? This great London of ours is growing heathenish to the very
core and yet our Lord has given the Gospel into the hands of His Churches—what can be the reason for the indifference
of the godly?
If we keep this Gospel to ourselves, coming ages will condemn us as cruel to our posterity. Succeeding generations
will point to our era and say, “What sort of men were these, that had the Light of God and shut it up in a dark lantern?”
In a century to come, when others shall stand in this city and walk these streets, they will say, “A curse upon the memory
of the ministers and people who failed in their duty! They came to the kingdom in a solemn time but never realized their
calling and so missed the end and objective of their being!” May we be spared from such a calamity as this! Yes, we have a
warrant for laboring to spread the Truth of God, and more than a warrant—we have a statute from the Throne of
God—a peremptory command and it is woe to us if we preach not the Gospel!
Now, Brothers, this warrant from Christ is one which, if we are in the state of heart of Simon Peter, will be omnipotent
with us this morning. It was very powerful with Simon Peter. For, observe, he was under the influence of a great
disappointment, yet he let down the net. “We have toiled all the night.” Some say, “We have had all this Gospel preaching,
we have had all these revivals, all these stirs and nothing has come of it.” When was that? I hear a good deal of this
talk, but what are the facts? “Oh,” you say, “you know we have had a great deal of revival a little while ago.” I do not
know anything of the sort! We have had flashes of light here and there, but comparatively so little that it is a pity to
make so much of it.
Moreover, considering the little that has ever been done for it, the spread of the Gospel has been marvelous! Look at
Gospel work at the present moment in India! People say that the Christian faith is not spreading. I say that it is spreading
wonderfully as compared with the labor expended and the sacrifice made! If in that land you spend a penny and get a
thousand pounds, you have no right to say, “What is that? We want a million.” If your desires are thus exacting, prove
their sincerity by corresponding action! Increase your outlay! The harvest is wonderful, considering the little seed, but if
you wish for more sheaves, sow more! The Church has had an enormous return for what little she has done. In England
there have been partial revivals, but to what have they amounted? A flash of light has been seen in a certain district, but
darkness has still remained supreme over the length and breadth of the country!
The papers have reported a great work in a certain spot, but if the papers had reported the places wherein there has
been no revival, we should have had a different view of things! A little corner at the top of a column would have sufficed
for the good—and column after column would not have sufficed to make known the black side of the situation! The fact
is, the Church has scarcely ever been in a state of universal revival since the day of Pentecost! There has been a partial
moving among Christians every now and then, but the whole mass throughout has never burned and flamed with the
earnestness which the grand cause demands. Oh, that the Lord would set the whole Church on fire! We have no cause,
whatever, for disappointment. In proportion to the little effort put out, great things have come to us—therefore let us
get to our nets and say no more about the night in which we have toiled!
But next, this command in Peter overcame his love of ease. Evidently he was tired when he said, “We have toiled all
the night.” Fishing is hard work, especially when no fish are caught. It is natural to wish to be excused from further toil
when you are already weary with unrewarded labor. I have heard some Christians say, “You know I had my time in the
Sunday school, years ago, but then I worked too much for my strength.” No doubt their efforts were stupendous in the
remote ages of their youthful zeal—we can hardly imagine what they must have been like—for no relic remains to assist
our conceptions! At this time they feel authorized to take things easy, for they owe no more to their Lord, or, at least
they do not intend to pay any more!
Is it so that any one of us can cease from service when it is plain that we do not cease from receiving mercy at the
Lord’s hands? Are we not ashamed of the case when it is plainly put? “Take it easy.” Yes, soon, very soon, we shall take it
easy, for there will be rest enough in the grave! Just now, while souls of men are perishing, to relax our efforts is wickedness.
No, no, Peter! Although you may be, now, in a dripping sweat through having toiled all night, you must get at it
again! He does so. The night’s work is nothing, he must work in the day, too, if he is to catch fish! Moreover, the command
of Christ was so supreme over Peter that he was not held back by carnal reason, for reason would say, “If you could
not catch fish in the night, you will certainly not do so in the day.”
Night was the special time for taking fish on the Gennesaret lake, and by day, when the garish sun was lighting up
the waves and letting the fish see every single mesh of the net, they were not likely to come into it. But when Christ commands,
the most unlikely time is likely and the most unpromising sphere becomes hopeful! No act is out of season when
Christ commands it! If He says, “go,” go at once, without deliberation. Say not, “There are yet four months and then
comes harvest.” “The fields are white already to the harvest.” Peter lets down the net at once and wisely does he act at
Christ’s word. The lesson to you and to me is this—Let us do as Peter did and let down the net personally, for the Apostle
said, “I will let down the net.”
Brother, cannot you do something, yourself, with your own heart, lips and hands? Sister, cannot you do something,
yourself, with your own gentle spirit? “I was thinking about getting half a dozen friends to form a committee to relieve
the poor around us.” Nothing will ever come of it! The poor will not get a basin of soup or a loaf of bread. Set about it
yourself! “But I think I might get a dozen to come together and organize a Society.” Yes, and then more resolutions and
amendments all day long—and finish up with passing votes of mutual approbation! You had better get to work, yourself,
as Peter did. And you had better do it at once, for Peter immediately let down the net, as soon as he had launched
out into the deep. You may never have another opportunity—your zeal may have evaporated, or your life may be over!
Peter, however, only let down one net, and there was the pity of it. If John and James and all the rest had let down
their nets, the result would have been much better. “Why?” you ask. Because, through there being only one net, that net
was overstrained and broke. If all the nets had been used, they might have taken more fish, and no net would have been
broken. I was reading, some time ago, of a take of mackerel at Brighton. When the net was full, the mackerel sticking in
all the meshes made it so heavy that the fishermen could not raise it—and the boat, itself, was in some danger of going
down—so they had to cut away the net and lose the fish. Had there been many nets and boats, they might have buoyed
up the whole of the fish—and so they might have done in this case. As it was, many fish were lost through the breaking of
the net.
If a Church can be so awakened that each individual gets to work in the power of the Holy Spirit, and all the individuals
combine, then how many souls will be captured for Jesus! Multitudes of souls are lost to the blessed Gospel because
of our broken nets—and the net gets broken because we are not well united in the holy service—by our lack of
wisdom, we cause loss to our Master’s cause. Ministers need not become worn out with labor if all would take their share!
One boat would not begin to sink if the other boats took a part of the blessed load.
Now, Brothers and Sisters, I close by saying that if I have accomplished anything, this morning, by the help of God’s
Spirit, I hope I have made you ready to accept the following directory of service drawn from the text. The way in which
to serve God is to do it at His Word. I pray that none of us may sink into serving the Lord as a matter of routine. May we
never fall to serving Him in our own strength. We must preach, teach and labor in His name because we hear Him bidding
us do it! We must act at His Word. If this were the case, we should work with much more faith, with much more
earnestness and with much more likelihood of success. It is a blessed thing to see Christ sitting in the boat while you cast
out the net. If you catch a glimpse of His approving smile, as He watches you, you will work right heartily.
We must labor in entire dependence upon Him. We must not preach or teach because, in our judgment, it is the right
thing to do—Peter did not think so—but because Jesus gives the word, and His Word is Law. You may not work because you have any expectation of success from the excellence of yours work, or from the nature of the people among
whom you labor, but because Jesus has given you the Command. You stand there doing a thing which critics sneer at as
absurd, but you do it in all confidence, believing that it must be wise because Jesus bids you do it. I remember well how
some of our Brothers used to talk to us. They said, “You preach the Gospel to dead sinners! You bid them repent and
believe! You might just as well shake a pocket handkerchief over a grave and bid the corpse come out of it.”
Exactly so! They spoke the truth! But I would be delighted to go and shake a pocket handkerchief over graves and
bid the dead live if Jesus bade me do so! I would expect to see the cemetery crack and heave from end to end if I were sent
on such an errand by the Lord! I would accept the duty joyfully! The more absurd the wise men of our age make the Gospel
out to be—and the more they show that it is powerless to produce the designed end—the more will we persevere in
our old method of preaching Jesus Crucified! Our resolves are not to be shaken by that mode of reasoning. We never drew
our argument for preaching the Gospel from the work, itself, but from the orders given us to do it!
We would rather be acting upon the responsibility of Christ than upon our own. I would rather be a fool and do
what Christ tells me than be the wisest man of the modern school and despise the Word of the Lord. I would rather lay
the responsibility of my life at the feet of Him who bids me live according to His Word than seek out an objective in life
for myself and feel that the responsibility rested on my own shoulders. Let us be willing to be under orders to Christ;
willing to persevere under difficulties; willing to begin anew in His service from this very hour. Amen. |