Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Luke 5:10
And so [was] also James, and John, the sons of Zebedee, which were partners with Simon. And Jesus said unto Simon, Fear not; from henceforth thou shalt catch men.
10. partners ] Here koinonoi, ‘associates’ in profits, &c.
Fear not ] Accordingly, on another occasion, when Peter sees Jesus walking on the sea, so far from crying Depart from me, he cries “Lord, if it be Thou, bid me come to Thee on the water” (Mat 14:28); and when he saw the Risen Lord standing in the misty morning on the shore of the Lake “he cast himself into the sea” to come to Him (Joh 21:7).
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
10. thou shalt catch ] Literally, ‘thou shalt be catching alive.’ In Jer 16:16 the fishers draw out men to death, and in Amo 4:2, Hab 1:14, men are “made as the fishes of the sea” by way of punishment. Here the word seems to imply the contrast between the fish that lay glittering there in dead heaps, and men who should be captured not for death (Jas 1:14), but for life. But Satan too captures men alive (2Ti 2:26, the only other passage where the verb occurs). From this and the parable of the seine or haulingnet (Mat 13:47) came the favorite early Christian symbol of the ‘Fish.’ “We little fishes,” says Tertullian, “after our Fish ( , i. e. ) are born in the water (of baptism).” The prophecy was first fulfilled to Peter, when 3000 were converted by his words at the first Pentecost. In a hymn of St Clement of Alexandria we find “O fisher of mortals who are being saved, Enticing pure fish for sweet life from the hostile wave.” Thus, He who “spread the fisher’s net over the palaces of Tyre and Sidon, gave into the fisher’s hand the keys of the kingdom of heaven.” “He caught orators by fishermen, and made out of fishermen his orators.” We find a similar metaphor used by Socrates, Xen. Mem. ii. 6, “Try to be good and to catch the good. I will help you, for I know the art of catching men.”
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Fear not – He calmed their fears. With mildness and tenderness he stilled all their troubled feelings, and to their surprise announced that henceforward they should be appointed as heralds of salvation.
From henceforth – Hereafter.
Shalt catch men – Thou shalt be a minister of the gospel, and thy business shall be to win people to the truth that they may be saved.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Luk 5:10
Fear not; from henceforth thou shalt catch men
Fishing for men
To be good fishermen we must be–
I.
ARDENTLY ENAMOURED OF THE FISHING.
II. INTIMATELY ACQUAINTED WITH THE FISHES. In following the analogy, we may observe that, because of his acquaintance with the fishes, the fisherman knows–
1. Where to fish. A novice would throw in his line anywhere; but not so the fisherman. Fishes of various sorts must be sought in various localities, and in some places you may seek in vain for any. Many a man has toiled all the night and has taken nothing, simply because he has been trying in the wrong place; while others round about him have made a good tide. For one sort he may go to the quiet lake and the gentle stream; for another to the open sea or the deep channel; while for others he has to go out into the great wide ocean. And in our spiritual fishing we must learn where to catch men. We may find opportunities in the quiet lakes of our own domestic circles, or in the pleasant streams of our social friendships. Because of his acquaintance with the fishes, the fisherman also knows–
2. How to fish. Like men, fishes differ very much in their dispositions and habits, so that what would be suitable for catching one class would not be successful with another. For instance: While some must be drawn, others must be driven. I have seen fishermen, after casting their net, row round about it, making as much noise as possible with their oars, in order to frighten the fishes into it; while, in other instances, a bright light has been burned in the boat to allure them, if possible, into the snare. It is exactly so with men. Some are caught in shoals, while others must be caught singly. There are some that never can be taken in a net, and there are others that can never be taken with a line. You must go about it very cautiously. The fish is a shy creature, and many would-be sportsman has driven away all chance of success by his incautious procedure. Almost anybody can cast a net, but it requires an expert to use the line. People can successfully address large assemblies, who are ill at ease when in personal intercourse with the ungodly. This is a work that demands all our skill and care. You may see a wonderful example of this in our Saviours conversation with the woman at the well. I have been in the same boat with several persons, each provided with similar lines, hooks, and bait; and yet some have been as wonderfully successful as others have been strangely unfortunate. The secret, to those who understood fishing, was obvious. The good fisherman, knowing exactly how to manage and tempt his prey, could, with inferior apparatus, secure success; while the novice, with the best patent gear, might sit, and wait and watch in vain. The application is easy. Seek to allure men! Make your Christianity an attractive thing! Surround all you do with the genuine sunshine of the Bible! Reveal Christ, and He will draw all men unto Him. Again, his acquaintance with the fishes will teach the fisherman–
3. When to fish. A word in season, how good it is! Some fishes are to be caught when the tide is high; others, when it is low; and others, when it is slack. Some can be obtained only in cloudy weather, and others may be caught when the sky is clear and bright. For some the daylight is needful, and for others there is no time like the night. And the fit season for approaching men may be equally various. As in fishing, so, as a rule, with men, the best time to seek them is during the slack of the tide. It is not well to make the attempt during either the full swing of the flood, or of the strong rush of the ebb. Indeed, no ordinary lead would carry your bait to where they are. You must seek men when they are quiet. It is worthy of observation that most fishes arc caught best in cloudy weather. When the sky is murky and lowering, then the fisherman puts out to sea. This certainly suggests to us the appropriateness of Christian words in seasons of sorrow.
III. MORALLY QUALIFIED TO BE FISHERMEN. Piety, patience, perseverance, and every Christian grace will be needful in this work. Its difficulties are neither few nor small. (W. H. Burton.)
Catching men alive
Thou shalt catch men. The word catch is different from any word that has been used concerning the fish, and expresses the catching alive of the prey to be caught; so that the phraseology of our Lord seems to carry with it the thought that fishers of men are to toil for living creatures, and that unless they be caught alive they might as well not be caught at all. How well would it be for all those who are called to be fishers of men, to remember that their work is not to fill their boat with fishes which may serve as food for themselves, but to catch living men and make them servants of the Most High God. (Bishop Goodwin.)
Fishers of men
The design of this miracle was twofold. It was intended–
1. To produce an immediate effect upon the minds of Peter and the rest, to deepen their faith in the Master who had called them, and to set forth His power, His watchfulness, His love. But still more–
2. To take effect in the future; it was emphatically a prophetic miracle–to be looked back to and to yield inexhaustible comfort again and again amid the heavy cares and discouraging tasks of the years to come, when the gospel-net had been finally put into their hands, and they had become fishers of men. St. Peter was to translate into spiritual language all that belonged to his old fishermans life. He was to understand that it had been in a homely, but still most real, way a preparation for the new unearthly service to which Christ was calling him. So you may remember the simple shepherd-life of David is set forth in the seventy-eighth Psalm as a preparatory discipline for kingly rule. And so, according to the fancy of an early writer, the trade of tentmaker followed by Saul of Tarsus prefigured the work which lay in store for Paul the apostle, as the maker of tabernacles for the people of God, the founder of Churches all over the known world. (Canon Duckworth.)
The promise that Peter should become a fisher of men was made still more impressive by a great symbolical miracle.
1. The number of fish caught at Jesus word represented the men he should some day take.
2. As he fished all night and caught nothing, so had he afterwards to labour long in Israel without winning a single human soul.
3. So, too, at Jesus word, he put further out into the deep of the great Gentile world, and drew there a great draught.
4. Last of all, there were two boats to fill–the Gentile-Christian and the Jewish Christian Churches. Then the net began to tear, and the opposition of these two sections threatened the Church with a grievous schism. But the draught was brought safely to land, to the confounding of the circumcised Jew, through whose instrumentality this Divine action had been brought about. (B. Weiss.)
Men-catchers
The man who saves souls is like a fisher upon the sea.
1. A fisher is dependent and trustful.
2. He is diligent and persevering.
3. He is intelligent and watchful.
4. He is laborious and self-denying.
5. He is daring–not afraid to venture upon a dangerous sea.
6. He is successful. He is DO fisher who never catches anything. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
There is as much analogy as contrast between the first and second vocations of the sons of Jonas and Zebedee.
1. Like the fisherman, the minister of the gospel must be furnished with a good net, i.e., he must be conversant with the Scriptures, and mighty in them.
2. Like the fisherman, he must be acquainted with the sea, i.e., the world, and not fear to confront its perils in pursuance of his calling.
3. Like the fisherman, he must now mend, now cast his nets.
4. Like the fisherman, he must labour perseveringly, and wait patiently.
5. Like the fisherman, he must enter into the spirit of his vocation, i.e., he must be animated with the enthusiasm of the holy ministry.
6. Like the fisherman, he must dare to expose his life (Act 20:24).
7. Like the fisherman, he must draw in his net after having cast it. (C. Babut, B. D.)
Sympathy a bait
It is a fact of which we can scarcely make too much, that nothing baits the gospelfishermans hook like sympathy. (Dr. J. Clifford.)
Purposeless sermons
Are an insult to God and man. A sermon that aims at anything short of catching men is a mistake. Let us beware of converting means into ends. (Dr. J. Clifford.)
Catching bait
The fisherman, however, thinks far less of his gathering bait than he does of his catching bait, in which he hides his hook. Very numerous are his inventions for winning his prey, and it is by practice that he learns how to adapt his bait to his fish. Scores of things serve as bait, and when he is not actually at work the wise fisherman takes care to seize anything which comes in his way which may be useful when the time comes to cast his lines. We usually carried mussels, whelks, and some of the coarser sorts of fish, which could be used when they were wanted. When the anchor was down the hooks were baited and let down for the benefit of the inhabitants of the deep, and great would have been the disappointment if they had merely swarmed around the delicious morsel, but had refused to partake thereof. A good fisherman actually catches fish. He is not always alike successful, but, as a rule, he has something to show for his trouble. I do not call that man a fisherman whose basket seldom holds a fish; he is sure to tell you of the many bites he had, and of that very big fish which he almost captured; but that is neither here nor there. There are some whose knowledge of terms and phrases, and whose extensive preparations lead you to fear that they will exterminate the fishy race, but as their basket returns empty, they can hardly be so proficient as they seem. The parable hardly needs expounding: great talkers and theorizers are common enough, and there are not a few whose cultured boastfulness is only exceeded by their life-long failure. We cannot take these for our example, nor fall at their feet with reverence for their pretensions. We must have sinners saved. Nothing else will content us: the fisherman must take fish or lose his toil, and we must bring souls to Jesus, or we shall break our hearts with disappointment. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Sucking off the bait
Walking to the head of the boat one evening, I saw a line over the side, and must needs hold it. You can feel by your finger whether you have a bite or no, but I was in considerable doubt whether anything was at the other end or not. I thought they were biting, but I was not certain, so I pulled up the long line, and found that the baits were all gone; the fish had sucked them all off, and that was what they were doing when I was in doubt. If you have nothing but a sort of gathering bait, and the fish merely come and suck, but do not take the hook, you will catch no fish; you need killing bait. This often happens in the Sunday-school. A pleasing speaker tells a story, and the children are all listening; he has gathered them; now comes the spiritual lesson, but hardly any of them take notice of it, they have sucked the bait from the hook, and are up and away. A minister in preaching delivers a telling illustration, all the ears in the place are open, but when he comes to the application of it the people have become listless; they like the bait very well, but not the hook; they like the adornment of the tale, but not the point of the moral. This is poor work. The plan is, if you possibly can manage it, so to get the bait on the hook that they cannot suck it off, but must take the hook and all. Do take care, dear friends, when you teach children or grown-up people, that you do not arrange the anecdotes in such a way that they can sort them out, as boys pick the plums from their cakes, or else you will amuse but not benefit. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
Over-cautious fishermen
A very zealous revivalist of our acquaintance was wont to say that over-cautious preachers were like fishermen who refuse to cast forth the net for fear they might catch a devil-fish. (From Herveys Manual of Revivals.)
Sinners must be taken out of their native element
We must never be satisfied till we lift sinners out of their native element. That destroys fish, but it saves souls. We long to be the means of lifting sinners out of the water of sin to lay them in the boat at the feet of Jesus. To this end we must enclose them as in a net; we must shut them up under the law, and surround them with the gospel, so that there is no getting out, but they must be captives unto Christ. We must net them with entreaties, encircle them with invitations, and entangle them with prayers. We cannot let them get away to perish in their sin, we must land them at the Saviours feet. This is our design, but we need help from above to accomplish it: we require our Lords direction to know where to cast the net, and the Spirits helping of our infirmity that we may know how to do it. May the Lord teach us to profit, and may we return from our fishing, bringing our fish with us. Amen. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The draught of fishes
This miracle illustrates–
I. THE LOW LEVEL OF A LIFE WITHOUT CHRIST FOR ITS MASTER. Fishing had become to these men the chief end and whole aim of living. Up to this time their life was exceedingly narrow. It had no horizon wider than the sea which held their food and supplied their trade. Thus they would have lived and died, but for the call and commission of Christ. The secular ideal of life always binds men to earth. Only Christ can raise it.
II. THE TRUE RELATION BETWEEN BUSINESS AND RELIGION, Our Lord lived a carpenter before He died a Saviour. Through all His early manhood He consecrated manual toil by His own example, and so He wedded the daily and spiritual life for ever in one. Here He sanctions Simons business, even while crowning it with a higher calling. Our Lord is master both of business and religion; no drudgery is too low or mean to become, when done for Christs sake, the very service of God. How this transfigures the net of the fisher, the miners pick, the grocers scales, the clerks tape: in each of them can be discerned a humble tool for the accomplishment of the Divine will. The servants broom, thus held, becomes a sceptre in the hand that holds it.
III. THE SECULAR LIFE, SUBMITTED TO CHRIST, BECOMES A SCHOOL FOR THE SPIRITUAL LIFE. It was in doing His daily work for Christs sake that Peter took his first and most needed lesson in apostleship–the lesson of humility. And thus it is, through the arts and implements which are the most familiar, that the Lord is always seeking to lift men up from secular to spiritual lives. As the Eastern astrologers were pointed to the Redeemers cradle by a star; as the woman of Samaria, in the very act of drawing water out of Jacobs well, was led to dip and drink of the sweeter waters of life; as Peter, the fisherman, by a surprising draught of fishes was made lowly enough to catch men–so through the humblest art or calling of the daily life, the Lord is reaching down hands to train and mould us for a purer spiritual life and service. The counting-room is no longer narrow, when thus its higher use as schoolroom of the soul is recognized. Dollars and cents no longer degrade men when they learn to read on their face, not the name of Caesar only, but the holier seal and superscription of God. The irritating cares of home cease to fret the housekeepers spirit when she begins to treat them as part of that ministry by which the Lord seeks to make her a more profitable servant.
IV. THE NOBLE SERVICES OF A LIFE CONSECRATED IN ALL ITS ACTIVITIES TO THE LORD. Not all at once; we cannot enter school and graduate the same day. It needs many lessons; line upon line of experience; but success does come at last.
V. PRACTICAL LESSONS.
1. The service of the Lord is always the truest service we can render to ourselves. We have all something to give up to become followers of Jesus. Yet give it up! Yours will be a strange experience if the things you give up for Christs sake do not soon look small beside the things you have gained. They will be, in comparison, as the Sea of Galilee to the world, as the worth of a fish to the value of an immortal man.
2. No business on earth is worth following for its own sake. It may be an honest and innocent business; but if it be not also a Christian calling, and that by our own most deliberate choice, it will certainly dwarf the higher nature of him who follows it. It may keep us alive. It may bring us gains. But what are life and wealth worth, in any sober mans estimate, when thus secured? The successes of millionaires have been commonly the worst mistakes of life. There is a higher law reigning over all trades, professions, occupation (1Co 10:31).
3. The climax of all callings is to be a fisher of men. (J. B. Clark.)
The noblest calling
An eminent New England divine, in his last sickness, was asked by a friend, What seems to you now the greatest thing? Not theology, said this prince of theologians; not controversy, again replied this chief of debaters; but, gathering up his last breath to speak the words, while his spirit hovered at the gate of heaven, the greatest thing in the world is to save a soul. He spoke of what he knew, for he had felt the joy of delivering many; and could the witness of all saints, from Peter down to the last ascended, be taken, would it not be the same, the greatest thing on earth is to save a soul? (J. B. Clark. )
The net of a genuine Christian life
You and I may never be heroes of a Pentecost; we are not masters of the great seine, which Peter and John of old, and some modern disciples, shoot out and catch men by the thousands; but have we not some humble hand-net with which we can take a few? Along our coast line, for some years, men have been setting up what they call weirs, consisting of a series of enclosed ponds, connected with each other by openings, and terminating, at last, in a netted fence running far out into the bay. Against this netted fence the fish, in their progress, strike, and, following it down, they are safely enclosed, at last, in the smallest pond where they are easily captured when the tide is out. Like this netted arm, running far out into the busy world, is a genuine Christian life. It has none of the special gifts of a Finney or a Moody, but in the coming and going tides more than one soul is arrested by this standing net of a godly life. Unconsciously guided by the holy barrier in their way, they are drawn into stiller waters, and when the tide goes out at last, many, I believe, will be found taken for Christ, and taken by fishers of men whose chief skill has been to stand, to stand firm and without rent, in the midst of a restless sea. (J. B. Clark.)
Catch men by love
Would you be a fisher of men? And do you ask, How may I succeed? Love is the best pilot, the only wise interpreter. Love men as Christ loved them, and you will not mourn your small skill or limited chance. Love will soon show you your own best way. To catch men without love is as hopeless as to catch fish without a net. Love is the net. There never was a wicked sinner unsoftened by a pure and steadfast love. There never was a wayward scholar who did not reward the faithful, patient love of his teacher. Let our love be only such that we can pray as Christ prayed for men, can weep as Christ wept over them, can bleed as Christ bled for them, can stretch our arms of help as wide as He stretched His on the cross of sacrifice I Then we shall be able to catch men, for so He drew us, and so He is drawing the world to Himself. Fear not, He seems to say to all who love, yet shrink from this holy calling, fear not; love men, and you shall catch them. (J. B. Clark.)
Ministerial lessons
Christs method of training His ministers for their high office was very remarkable. It was by a miracle, especially designed to represent, in a figure, their future office, me that the homely trade in which they were engaged was for ever hallowed to be the emblem of the gathering into the Church of such as should be saved.
1. The unwearied patience and consummate skill, without which the fisherman cannot be successful in alluring his prey, are, no doubt, fit illustrations of that constancy of purpose and that heavenly wisdom which are such important elements in the character of the Christian teacher.
2. And, perhaps, the fact that the four disciples had toiled all night and taken nothing, and yet were ready, at their Masters bidding, again to let down the net for a draught, is recorded as an instance of that unwavering faith in the Divine promise, and that patient continuance in well-doing, which had prepared these simple-minded peasants of Galilee for that office in which the Christian minister has only to obey, while he leaves results in a higher hand, and, even when he fears he has bestowed labour in vain, still to labour on, in reliance upon the assurance that Gods word shall not return to Him void.
3. But perhaps the chief ministerial lesson which our Lord intended to convey to the minds of His apostles was this–that as even the fisherman, in spite of all his skill, must still depend on the power of Him whose is the sea, for He made it, so all the success of the gospel preacher is of the Lord alone. (J. S. Hoare, B. D.)
Fishers of men
I. NONE SHOULD ENTER THE MINISTRY BUT THOSE WHO ARE CALLED OF CHRIST, There are other voices to which young men are apt to listen.
1. There is the voice of the love of a life of literary ease. The young man has a passion for books; his daily toil seems to him mean and degrading; and he fancies that if he were in the ministry he would have nothing to do but to study, and that study would be a lifelong and ever-increasing delight. At the best he becomes a respectable bookworm, who hates preaching, which so greatly interferes with his studies; but he must preach or starve, and so he preaches sermons about the gospel–very learned sermons–which do his hearers about as much real good as would an admirable lecture on the chemistry of food delivered to a number of farm labourers who at the close of a days toil had hurried into a kitchen! hungry for food.
2. There is a voice of the ambition to be respectable, genteel!
3. There is the voice of the love of publicity. Sometimes a little success in delivering half a dozen addresses to a Sunday School, or in making as many speeches in a debating society, turns a young mans brain, and he is sure that his proper place is in the ministry.
4. There is still another voice to which many young men are apt to listen, imagining that it is indeed the voice of Christ calling them to devote themselves to the ministry–the voice of a sincere desire to do good. This desire is quick and powerful in the heart of every young man who has really given himself to Christ. But it is a pitiable mistake to imagine that the call to do good and the call to become a preacher of the gospel is one and the same thing. To none of the voices that I have named should a young man listen when he is debating the question whether he should devote himself to the ministry of the Word. Before he takes that solemn, and in many cases irrevocable step, he should be very sure that it is the voice of Christ that he has heard saying to him, Follow Me, and I will make you a fisher of men.
II. BUT–this is the second fact that should be pondered–WHEN A MAN HAS HEARD THAT CALL HE SHOULD OBEY IT AT ANY COST. It may be that he cannot do so without making sacrifices; like Simon and Andrew, James and John, he may have to leave behind him nets, boats, valuable fishing-tackle, and dear friends; he may have to give up great present advantages, still greater prospective advantages; but like those of whom this narrative speaks to us, he should cheerfully forsake all, and follow Christ. Amos, the herdsman, was as true a prophet of the Lord as Isaiah, although he was reared in a palace. The other young man is in the counting-house; he is the eldest son of the successful head of the firm; he knows that in due time he will be a partner in the firm; he, too, is called, clearly called–he has no doubt that it is Christs voice he hears–yet he hesitates, for the nets and boats that will have to be left are too many and too valuable; he reminds himself of the fact of which of I have reminded you, that it is not in the ministry only that a man can do good, and so, with this excuse, which he knows is for him a lie, he silences the Voice that calls so clearly. And hence comes that fact, which all the Churches deplore, that so few young men come forth from the middle and upper ranks of society to serve our Lord Jesus Christ as preachers of His Word. This was Garibaldis most effective appeal to his fellow-countrymen:–Soldiers, your efforts against overwhelming odds have been unavailing. I have nothing to offer you but hunger, thirst, hardship, death: let all who love their country follow me (July 22, 1849). Such an appeal does Christ address to-day to the sons of our Christian merchants and landowners. (Christian Age.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 10. Thou shalt catch men.] , Thou shalt catch men alive; this is the proper signification of the word. Fear not: these discoveries of God tend to life, not to death; and ye shall become the instruments of life and salvation to a lost world. These fish are taken to be killed and fed on; but those who are converted under your ministry shall be preserved unto eternal life. See Clarke on Mt 4:18, &c., where this subject is considered more at large.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
10. Simon, fear notThis showshow the Lord read Peter’s speech. The more highly they deemed Him,ever the more grateful it was to the Redeemer’s spirit. Never didthey pain Him by manifesting too lofty conceptions of Him.
from henceforthmarkinga new stage of their connection with Christ. The last was simply, “Iwill make you fishers.”
fishers of men“Whatwilt thou think, Simon, overwhelmed by this draught of fishes, when Ishall bring to thy net what will beggar all this glory?” (See onMt 4:18.)
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And so was also James and John, the sons of Zebedee,…. Who were in the other ship, and had been beckoned to them to come and help them, and did come, and were witnesses of the miracle:
which were partners with Simon; were sharers with him in loss and gain in the fishing trade; these were equally astonished at the miracle, as Simon and his brother, and the men that were in the boat with them, where Jesus was:
and Jesus said unto Simon; who was at his knees, and expressed his dread of his majesty, and the consternation of mind he was in particularly:
fear not; do not be afraid of me, I shall do thee no harm, nor shall the boats sink, or any damage come to any person, or to the vessels, nor be so much amazed and affrighted, at the multitude of the fish taken:
from henceforth thou shalt catch men; alive, as the word signifies, or “unto life”, as the Syriac and Persic versions render it; thou shalt cast the net of the Gospel, and be the happy instrument of drawing many persons out of the depths of sin and misery, in which they are plunged, into the way of life and salvation; and which was greatly verified, in the conversion of three thousand at one cast, under one sermon of his, Ac 2:41
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Thou shalt catch men ( ). Periphrastic future indicative, emphasizing the linear idea. The old verb means to catch alive, not to kill. So then Peter is to be a catcher of men, not of fish, and to catch them alive and for life, not dead and for death. The great Pentecost will one day prove that Christ’s prophecy will come true. Much must happen before that great day. But Jesus foresees the possibilities in Simon and he joyfully undertakes the task of making a fisher of men out of this poor fisher of fish.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Partners [] . In verse 7 the word rendered partners is metocoi; from meta, with, and ecw, to have. The word here denotes a closer association, a common interest. The kindred noun, koinwnia, fellowship, is used of the fellowship of believers with Christ (1Co 1:9); the communion of the body and blood of Christ (1Co 10:16); the communion of the Holy Ghost (2Co 13:14). The persons referred to in verse 7 might have been only hired workmen (Mr 1:20), temporarily associated with the principals.
Thou shalt catch [ ] . Lit., thou shalt be catching, the participle and finite verb denoting that this is to be his habitual calling. Both Matthew and Mark make the promise to be addressed to Peter and his companions; Luke to Peter alone. The verb zwgrew, to catch, is compounded of zwov, living, and ajgreuw, to catch or take. Hence, lit., to take alive : in war, to take captive, instead of killing. Thus Homer, when Menelaus threatens the prostate Adrastus :
“Adrastus clasped the warrior’s knees and said, O son of Atreus, take me prisoner” [] .
Iliad, 6, 45, 6; compare Iliad, 5, 378.
So Herodotus : “The Persians took Sardis, and captured Croesus himself alive” [] . – 1 86. There is certainly a reason for the use of this term, as indicating that Christ ‘s ministers are called to win men to life. Compare 2Ti 2:26, where, according to the best supported rendering, the servant of God is represented as taking men alive out of the power of Satan, to be preserved unto the will of God; i e., as instruments of his will (compare A. V. and Rev.). The word thus contains in itself an answer to the sneering remark of the Apostate Julian, that Christ aptly termed his apostles fishers; “for, as the fisherman draws out the fish from waters where they were free and happy, to an element in which they cannot breathe, but must presently perish, so did these.”
12 – 16. Compare Mt 8:2 – 4; Mr 1:40 – 45.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “And so was also James and John, the sons of Zebedee,” (homoios de kai lakobon kai loannen huious Zebedaiou) “And well as James and John sons of Zebedee.” Fishing neighbors nearby, partners in the trade who had come to Peter’s rescue that day, at his distress call, Luk 5:7; Mat 4:21-22.
2) “Which were partners with Simon.” (hoi esan koinonoi to Simoni) “Who were share-partners in the fishing business with Simon Peter,” Luk 5:7, as we are laborers together with God, to bear one another’s burdens and cares, 1Co 3:9; Gal 6:2.
3) “And Jesus said unto Simon,” (kai eipen pros ton Simona ho lesous) “And Jesus said directly to Simon Peter,” who had fallen at his knees or feet, Luk 5:8.
4) “Fear not;” (me phobou) “Do not fear,” or be in a fearful condition, for children of God are not to be cowed by fear, though they are to have reverential fear, Luk 12:32; Rom 8:15; Heb 2:15; 1Jn 4:18.
5) “From henceforth thou shalt catch men.” (apo tou nun anthropous ese zogron) “From now continually, all your life hereafter, as a new phase of your life, you will be taking men alive,” as you have taken these fish, as a fisher of men, a glory-excelling this, Mat 4:19; Mat 8:26.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
Luk 5:10
. For afterwards thou shalt catch men. The words of Matthew are, I will make you fishers of men; and those of Mark are, I will cause that you may become fishers of men. They teach us, that Peter, and the other three, were not only gathered by Christ to be his disciples, but were made apostles, or, at least, chosen with a view to the apostleship. It is, therefore, not merely a general call to faith, but a special call to a particular office, that is here described. The duties of instruction, I do admit, are not yet enjoined upon them; but still it is to prepare them for being instructors, (340) that Christ receives and admits them into his family. This ought to be carefully weighed; for all are not commanded to leave their parents and their former occupation, and literally (341) to follow Christ. There are some whom the Lord is satisfied with having in his flock and his Church, while he assigns to others their own station. Those who have received from him a public office ought to know, that something more is required from them than from private individuals. In the case of others, our Lord makes no change as to the ordinary way of life; but he withdraws those four disciples from the employment from which they had hitherto derived their subsistence, that he may employ their labors in a nobler office.
Christ selected rough mechanics, — persons not only destitute of learning, but inferior in capacity, that he might train, or rather renew them by the power of his Spirit, so as to excel all the wise men of the world. He intended to humble, in this manner, the pride of the flesh, and to present, in their persons, a remarkable instance of spiritual grace, that we may learn to implore from heaven the light of faith, when we know that it cannot be acquired by our own exertions. Again, though he chose unlearned and ignorant persons, he did not leave them in that condition; and, therefore, what he did ought not to be held by us to be an example, as if we were now to ordain pastors, who were afterwards to be trained to the discharge of their office. We know the rule which he prescribes for us, by the mouth of Paul that none ought to be called to it, unless they are “ apt to teach,” (1Ti 3:2.) When our Lord chose persons of this description it was not because he preferred ignorance to learning as some fanatics do, who are delighted with their own ignorance, and fancy that, in proportion as they hate literature, they approach the nearer to the apostles. He resolved at first, no doubt, to choose contemptible persons, in order to humble the pride of those who think that heaven is not open to the unlearned; but he afterwards gave to those fishers, as an associate in their office, Paul, who had been carefully educated from his childhood.
As to the meaning of the metaphor, fishers of men, there is no necessity for a minute investigation. Yet, as it was drawn from the present occurrence, the allusion which Christ made to fishing, when he spoke of the preaching of the Gospel, was appropriate: for men stray and wander in the world, as in a great and troubled sea, till they are gathered by the Gospel. The history related by the Evangelist John (Joh 1:37) differs from this: for Andrew, who had been one of John’s disciples, was handed over by him to Christ, and afterwards brought his brother along with him. At that time, they embraced him as their master, but were afterwards elevated to a higher rank.
(340) “ Il les prend en sa compagnie et conversation domestique, afin de les faconner a enseigner puis apres les autres.” — “He takes them into his society and private conversation, in order to prepare them afterwards to instruct others.”
(341) “ Pour suivre Christ des pieds, c’est a dire exterieurement;” — “to follow Christ with the feet, that is to say, externally.”
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(10) Which were partners with Simon.The Greek word is not the same as that in Luk. 5:7; that expressing that they were sharers in the work, this a more general partnership in business, as in Phm. 1:17.
Thou shalt catch men.This is St. Lukes equivalent for the I will make you fishers of men in St. Matthew and St. Mark. The word implies that what is caught is taken alive. The only other passage in which it occurs in the New Testament is 2Ti. 2:26.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
10. Sons of Zebedee The children and wife of Zebedee often occur; but it is in this transaction alone that we catch a glimpse of Zebedee himself.
Mat 4:21. As all the evangelists concur in silently leaving him out, Blunt concludes that he died shortly after, and notes this as one of those “undesigned coincidences” that show that truth is the basis of the Gospel histories. He also acutely conjectures that either James or John was the apostle who desired to be permitted to go and bury his father, namely, Zebedee.
Julian the Apostate endeavoured to turn the simile of fishing against Christianity; inasmuch as fish were caught from their living element for death. But for the very purpose of avoiding this cavil, or rather from the very intention of a good symbolical meaning, our Lord uses not the word , which signifies simply to capture; but the word , which signifies to take alive, being compounded of the words alive and capture. So in the Latin, the word servus, signifying servant or slave, is from servare, to preserve, because slaves were generally prisoners of war saved from death for servitude. The same word is used by Paul, 2Ti 2:26: Taken captive by him at his will. Whatever may be the destiny, therefore, of the literal fish, the souls they symbolize are captured by the spiritual fishermen into the service of the giver of life.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘And Jesus said to Simon, “Do not be overawed, from now on you will be taking men alive.” ’
And Jesus then gently said to Simon Peter. “Do not be overawed, from now on you will be taking men alive.” It was His call to Peter to follow Him, and both knew it, just as both knew that Peter had had a life-changing experience. And it was an illustration of the fact that his future life was to be involved in ‘netting’ men. He was to be a ‘winner of souls’. In the other Gospels the call is put more blatantly, ‘Follow Me.’ Both were surely said, for in neither case do we have the full conversations. From now on Jesus was going to train Peter to be a preacher, a catcher of men. And for Peter and the others life would never be the same again.
As we have already seen the picture of men of God as fishermen is found in the Old Testament. The scattered children of Israel were to be gathered by ‘fishermen’ fishing them (Jer 16:16). No wonder Jesus chose fishermen. They were skilled at it.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Luk 5:10. Thou shalt catch men. Thou shalt captivate, or take alive. The exact meaning of the word . See 2Ti 2:26 in the margin. To catch, implies something more of artifice than the word carries with it, or the occasion seems to require.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
10 And so was also James, and John, the sons of Zebedee, which were partners with Simon. And Jesus said unto Simon, Fear not; from henceforth thou shalt catch men.
Ver. 10. Thou shalt catch men ] See Trapp on “ Mat 4:19 “
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
10. ] Compare, and indeed throughout this miracle, the striking parallel, and yet contrast, in Joh 21 with its injunction, ‘feed My lambs,’ ‘shepherd My sheep,’ given to the same Peter; its net which did not burst: and the minute and beautiful appropriateness of each will be seen: this, at, or near, the commencement of the Apostolic course; that, at how different, and how fitting a time!
It is perhaps too subtle, and hardly accordant with the rules of emphasis, to find (with Me [48] . and Stier) a fitness in as expressing the ethical catching of men. I prefer taking it as the word common to both acts merely as catch .
[48] Meyer.
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Luk 5:10 . , dependent on : fear encompassed them also, not less than Peter and the rest. This special mention of them is not explained, unless inferentially in what follows. , fear not, addressed to Peter alone. He alone, so far as appears , is to become a fisher of men, but the other two are named, presumably, because meant to be included, and in matter of fact they as well as Simon abandon all and follow Jesus (Luk 5:11 ). : the verb means to take alive, then generally to take; here and in 2Ti 2:26 . The analytic form ( ) implies permanent occupation = thou shall be a taker.
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
also James = James also.
Zebedee. Aramaean. App-94.
not. Greek. me. App-105.
catch = be capturing (alive), used of taking captives. Greek. zogreo. Occurs only here, and 2Ti 2:26.
men. App-123.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
10. ] Compare, and indeed throughout this miracle, the striking parallel, and yet contrast, in John 21-with its injunction, feed My lambs, shepherd My sheep, given to the same Peter; its net which did not burst: and the minute and beautiful appropriateness of each will be seen: this, at, or near, the commencement of the Apostolic course; that, at how different, and how fitting a time!
It is perhaps too subtle, and hardly accordant with the rules of emphasis, to find (with Me[48]. and Stier) a fitness in as expressing the ethical catching of men. I prefer taking it as the word common to both acts-merely as catch.
[48] Meyer.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Luk 5:10. , unto Simon) He spake to Simon especially, though not to him alone, inasmuch as Simon was the one who had spoken in Luk 5:8. Comp. Mat 4:18-19. Luke also, as well as Matthew, has this saving of Jesus, in order that he may definitely describe those to whom the Saviour spake [just as he more definitely specifies the persons addressed in the following instances, with which comp. the parallel Gospels]: ch. Luk 6:20; Luk 6:27, Luk 9:23, Luk 11:45, Luk 16:1, Luk 12:22; Luk 12:41; Luk 12:54.- , Fear not) Peter ceased to fear when he became accustomed to the miracles.- , from henceforth) This was accomplished, ch. Luk 9:2.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
James: Luk 6:14, Mat 4:21, Mat 20:20
partners: Luk 5:7, 2Co 8:23
from: Eze 47:9, Eze 47:10, Mat 4:19, Mat 13:47, Mar 1:17, Act 2:4
Reciprocal: 1Ch 17:7 – I took thee Pro 11:30 – winneth Jer 5:26 – catch Mat 10:2 – James Luk 2:18 – wondered Joh 21:3 – I go
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
THE FUNCTION AND SIGNIFICANCE OF MIRACLE
Fear not; from henceforth thou shalt catch men.
Luk 5:10
In considering this narrative there are two subjects on which we may dwell; first, the general function of miracle in the ministry of our Lord; and next, the symbolic significance of this miracle in particular.
I. The function of miracle.What this true function of miracle is may best be gathered from Johns comment on the first miracle at Cana of Galilee (Joh 2:11). By it He manifested forth His glory, and His disciples believed on Him. Various words are used in the Gospel narratives to describe miracles. The simplest, and perhaps least significant, is the word which we render wonder. The second is a word denoting properly a power at work. The third is the word sign. Of what is miracle a sign? The answer is clear. It is a sign of the manifest intervention of a superhuman will and purpose in the realms of nature and of humanity, working in the one absolutely, in the other with the concurrence through faith of the wills of those on whom it works. As such, it is intended further to call the worlds attention to the character and mission of Him Who works it, and to incline men to listen reverently to His Word, and bow to His authority. Its function is thus simply preparatory.
II. The symbolic meaning of this particular miracle.The key to that meaning is given by His charge to the Apostles to be fishers of men, and by His parable (see Mat 13:47-50), which likens the Kingdom of Heaven to a draw-net cast into the sea. In all points of the narrative we trace the ever-recurring experience of the Church of Christ, especially in the apostolic age, but also at all great epochs of progress and revival.
His messengers are to be earnest and faithful fishers of men.
Bishop Barry.
(SECOND OUTLINE)
FISHERS OF MEN
Observe:
I. The presence of Christ ensures success.The net enclosed a great multitude of fishes. We can wash the Gospel nets. We can mend the Gospel nets. We can let down those nets into the seething sea of human life; but without the Spirit of Christ we cannot save, or help, or comfort a single soul.
II. St. Peters astonishment.St. Peter did not mean depart, and Christ knew it. There were two causes for St. Peters astonishment. He saw the glory of his Lord; he felt the sinfulness of his own heart. Such an experimental acquaintance, both with Christ and with self, is necessary to the salvation of any man.
III. The Lords gracious promise.The Greek is, Thou shalt take men alive. Fish are caught for death, for food; men are to be caught for life. Every true minister of the Gospel can look his people in the face and say, I seek not yours, but you. The real object of the preaching of the Gospel is a gathering of souls unto God; that men may be brought out by grace from lives of self-pleasing and self-indulgence, and led to consecrate themselves to Christ as their only Lord and Master.
Rev. F. Harper.
Illustration
There was a circumstance connected with the miracle that St. Peter had witnessed, which was especially to be attended to in connection with his future ministry. The general life of a fisherman was no doubt toilsome and hard; but it was also upon the whole successful. Christ chose a moment in St. Peters life for the enforcing of the great lesson which He desired to teach when the labour had been peculiarly unsuccessful; they had toiled all night and had taken nothing, and it was after this night of fruitless effort that Christ joined the party and bid them once more cast out their nets. It was not, therefore, the general success of their occupation that made Christ choose the life of fishermen as the type of the life of His Apostles; He would not represent the work to which he called Peter and James and John as an ordinary work, which they had only to go about as they would about any other work in order to ensure success; he rather took the fishermen at a moment when their human sagacity and skill had failed them, and when they had given up their endeavours for the time as useless, in order to show them that the mainspring of their success in their future work was to be, not confidence in their own skill, but faith in Himself. Moreover, the personal presence of Christ could very much strengthen the lesson.
(THIRD OUTLINE)
THE MINISTERS CALLING
What was true of St. Peter is true, in measure, of every Christian minister.
I. The sea.The sea, in which the catcher of men plies his benevolent vocation, is the world of human society. In its vastness, in its vicissitudes, in its uncertainties, in its dangers, this world of humanity is as a great ocean, both inviting and yet often repelling the toil of the toiler.
II. The fish.The fish which are sought in this sea are human souls. As the disciples, in exercising their calling, sometimes toiled all night and caught nothing, because the fish were wary or were elsewhere, so we are reminded, by the figurative language of the text, that it is a hard, laborious, unpromising task in which the preachers of the Gospel are engaged. Toil is often followed by disappointment and discouragement.
III. The net.The net which is cast into this sea is the Gospelan instrument devised by Divine wisdom, and adapted to enclose souls of every kind. Without the net the fisherman is helpless; with the net he is Divinely equipped.
IV. Things which make for success.The qualities of the successful fisherman are to be imitated by the faithful minister of Jesus Christ. Skill, assiduity, patience, perseverance, with the blessing of God, may effect great wonders.
V. The result.The catching of the fish may represent the bringing souls within the sacred and secure environment of the Church, and the landing of them may picture the leading them to heavenly felicity. The Christian minister is only satisfied and rewarded when those who are far from God are brought nigh, are made partakers of eternal salvation.
Illustration
This miracle had a twofold object. It was intended to produce an immediate effect upon their minds, to deepen their faith in a Master Who had called them, and to set forth His power, His watchfulness, His love. But still more it was intended to take effect in the future; it was emphatically a prophetic miracle, it was to be looked back to and to yield inexhaustible comfort again and again, amid the heavy cares and discouraging tasks of the years to come, when the Gospel net had been finally put into their hands, and they had become fishers of men. How many a time when that net has been cast and drawn to the shore by weary arms and found emptyhow many a time the memory of this scene has revived the sinking hearts of workers for Christ! The great triumphs of the Gospel of Christ have often been like the miraculous draught of fishesoverpowering surprises after periods of stagnation. The success has been perilous from its very magnitude, and the suddenness of its demand upon the strength and skill of those who had to reap it.
Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary
0
This is the same event given notice in Mat 4:18-21, but that passage omits the items of the net and mass of fish.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Vers. 10b, 11. The Call.
In Matthew and Mark the call is addressed to the four disciples present; in Luke, in express terms, to Peter only. It results, doubtless, from what follows that the call of the other disciples was implied (comp. launch out, Luk 5:4), or that Jesus extended it to them, perhaps by a gesture. But how can criticism, with this passage before them, which brings the person of Peter into such prominence, while the other two Syn. do not in any way, attribute to our evangelist an intention to underrate this apostle?
The analytical form , thou shalt be catching, expresses the permanence of this mission; and the words, from henceforth, its altogether new character.
Just as the fisherman, by his superior intelligence, makes the fish fall into his snares, so the believer, restored to God and to himself, may seize hold of the natural man, and lift it up with himself to God.
This whole scene implies certain previous relations between Jesus and these young men (Luk 5:5), which agrees with Luke’s narrative; for in the latter this incident is placed after the healing of Peter’s mother-in-law, when the newly called disciples were present. We must go further back even than this; for how could Jesus have entered into Peter’s house on the Sabbath-day (Luk 4:38), unless they had already been intimately acquainted? John’s narrative easily explains all: Jesus had made the acquaintance of Peter and his friends when they were with John the Baptist (John 1). As for Matthew and Mark, their narrative has just the fragmentary character that belongs to the traditional narrative. The facts are simply put into juxtaposition. Beyond this, each writer follows his own bent: Matthew is eager after the words of Christ, which in his view are the essential thing; Mark dwells somewhat more on the circumstances; Luke enriches the traditional narrative by the addition of an important detail the miraculous fishingobtained from private sources of information. His narrative is so simple, and at the same time so picturesque, that its accuracy is beyond suspicion. John does not mention this incident, because it was already sufficiently known through the tradition; but, in accordance with his method, he places before us the first commencement of the connection which terminated in this result. Holtzmann thinks that Luke’s narrative is made up partly from that of Mark and Matthew, and partly from the account of the miraculous fishing related in John 21. It would be well to explain how, if this were the case, the thrice repeated reply of Peter, Thou knowest that I love Thee, could have been changed by Luke into the exclamation, Depart from me! Is it not much more simple to admit that, when Jesus desired to restore Peter to his apostleship, after the denial, He began by placing him in a similar situation to that in which he was when first called, in the presence of another miraculous draught of fishes; and that it was by awakening in him the fresh impressions of earlier days that He restored to him his ministry? Besides, in John 21, the words, on the other side of the ship, seem to allude to the mission to the heathen.
The course of events therefore was this: Jesus, after having attached to Himself in Judaea these few disciples of John the Baptist, took them back with Him into Galilee; and as He wished Himself to return to His own family for a little while (Joh 2:1-12; Mat 4:13), He sent them back to theirs, where they resumed their former employments. In this way those early days passed away, spent in Capernaum and the neighbourhood, of which John speaks ( ), and which Luke describes from Luk 4:14. But when the time came for Him to go to Jerusalem for the feast of the Passover (Joh 2:13 et seq.), where Jesus determined to perform the solemn act which was to inaugurate His Messianic ministry (Joh 2:13 et seq.), He thought that the hour had come to attach them to Him altogether; so, separating Himself finally from His family circle and early calling, He required the same sacrifice from them. For this they were sufficiently prepared by all their previous experiences; they made it therefore without hesitation, and we find them from this time constantly with Him, both in the narrative of John (Joh 2:17; Joh 4:2-8) and in the Synoptics.
Fuente: Godet Commentary (Luke, John, Romans and 1 Corinthians)
Verse 10
We are not to suppose that these words are all that was said. They express the substance of what was, perhaps, a long conversation.
Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament
Jesus does not depart from nor reject sinners who feel conviction because of their sin. He draws them to Himself and sends them out to serve Him. Jesus used the fish to represent people that Peter would draw into the kingdom of God and before that into the church (cf. Acts 2; Act 10:9-48). This seems to be a reference to catching in the sense of saving rather than in the sense of judging and destroying.
"Fishermen caught live fish to kill them, but the disciples would be catching people who were dead to give them life." [Note: Bailey, p. 112.]
Peter and his three companions immediately abandoned their life as fishermen to become Jesus’ disciples full-time (cf. Luk 14:33; Luk 18:22). Only Luke recorded that Jesus had contact with Peter before He called Peter to follow Him (cf. Luk 4:38). These fishermen left the greatest catch of their career, undoubtedly, because of what it showed them of Jesus. [Note: Morris, p. 114.] It is unlikely that they were able to finance their life as Jesus’ disciples with this catch of fish, as one commentator suggested. [Note: Geldenhuys, p. 182.]
"Luke did not lay particular stress on the thought of giving up all to follow Jesus (Mar 1:18; Mar 1:20): the accent is on Luk 5:10 with its call to mission." [Note: Marshall, The Gospel . . ., p. 206.]
The general emphasis in this incident is on the authority of Jesus. His words had powerful effects. The only proper response to them was submission. Blessing would follow in the form of participation in Jesus’ mission.
"The major application in the miracle of the catch of fish centers around Jesus’ instructions and Peter’s responses. In the midst of teaching many, Jesus calls a few people to more focused service. Peter is one example of such a call. Everyone has a ministry, and all are equal before God, but some are called to serve him directly. Peter has the three necessary qualities Jesus is looking for. He is willing to go where Jesus leads, he is humble, and he is fully committed." [Note: Bock, Luke, p. 163.]
This whole first section describing Jesus’ teaching mission (Luk 4:14 to Luk 5:11) focuses on Jesus’ authority and the proper response to it.