Come Follow Me

Matthew 4:18-20 As Jesus was walking by Lake Galilee, he saw two brothers, Simon (called Peter) and Simon’s brother Andrew. These brothers were fishermen, and they were fishing in the lake with a net. Jesus said to them, “Come, follow me, and I will make you a different kind of fishermen. You will bring in people, not fish.” Simon and Andrew immediately left their nets and followed him.

I wonder … when was the last time that you heard Jesus speaking to you? When was the last time that you heard Him calling you to follow Him? Well? When was the last time?

I was looking at a photo taken by a man called Ken Duncan the other day. It’s a recent picture of a fisherman in his boat on the Sea of Galilee – the place where Jesus found Peter and Andrew, James and John.

And okay … the guy’s wearing jeans and a tracksuit top. And yes, there’s a Mercury outboard on the back of the boat, but it just brought that whole place to life for me; the place where Jesus went to find His disciples. Not in the temple. Not at the best theological seminary in Jerusalem. Not even in the local synagogue. Nope! Jesus went to Galilee, down where the fishing boats came in.

It was an ordinary place, full of ordinary people like you and me who that day, as things turned out, encountered this extraordinary Jesus.

Matthew 4:18-20 As Jesus was walking by Lake Galilee, he saw two brothers, Simon (called Peter) and Simon’s brother Andrew. These brothers were fishermen, and they were fishing in the lake with a net. Jesus said to them, “Come, follow me, and I will make you a different kind of fishermen. You will bring in people, not fish.” Simon and Andrew immediately left their nets and followed him.

So you’re just cleaning and packing up the nets after a hard night’s work out there on the water and this Jesus comes along and says, “Come, follow me.” And the lads did what? They immediately left their nets and followed him.

Funny thing is, He’s still doing that today. Ordinary people in ordinary places. Come, follow me.

That’s God’s Word. Fresh … for you … today.

‹ Previous Next ›


Blessed by this devotion?

Share it with a friend!


Dig Deeper