When the new
millennium began, Pope John Paul II wrote a letter to the Church and used the
words of Jesus to Peter from today’s Gospel.
In latin, they are “duc in altum”—“put out into the deep”.
You might
imagine Peter’s confusion or perhaps muttering under his
breath, when Jesus, a carpenter, spoke those words to him, a professional
fisherman, telling him how to do his job.
Peter and his crew had just fished all night and had just finished
cleaning all of their equipment when Jesus instructed Peter to cast his net
into deep waters.
Even though
it contradicted his professional sensibilities, trusting his master, he cast
out into the depths of Lake Genesseret, and catching so many fish, they had to
call for another boat to bring them all in.
In his
uncertainty, he placed his deep trust in the Lord, and that made all the
difference. Pope John Paul II, sensing
the challenges the Church would face in the new millennium: failing economies,
impending wars, a culture becoming bent on instant gratification and
materialism, he called reminded us of the Lord’s command to Peter: to cast out
into the deep, in his own person spiritual life. If we are going to remain faithful amidst all
of these worldly pressures and temptations we must seek to be ever more deeply
converted to Christ, to love him ever more deeply, to drink deeply of the Holy
Spirit.
In another
sense, those words, “put out into deep
waters” is a call to every Christian, no matter their state in life, to take up
the missionary mandate of the Church: to reach out to those who do not
have faith, to reach out to the poor and suffering, and to not be afraid to
witness to the truth of the Gospel in the public sphere and the political
realm. Just like Peter casting out into
deep waters to bring in this miraculous catch of fish, we too can make a miraculous
catch, when we cooperate with Jesus.
Where are
the deep waters in your own life? Who are the fish that seem just out of reach?
A fallen away family member? An angry neighbor? Who needs to be invited back to
Mass…to the Confessional…to speak with the priest about an annulment…who needs
to be gently confronted about an addiction or unchaste behavior?
Today and
all days we must have a radical trust in the Lord, rooted in prayer, in seeking
ever deeper conversion to Christ for ourselves and others for the glory of God
and salvation of souls.
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