Acts 9:1-6, (7-20) Revelation 5:11-14 John 21:1-19 Psalm 30
Even if your knowledge of the Bible and the foundations of Christianity are limited, you’ve probably joked about St. Peter who holds the keys to the pearly gates and you understand the meaning of the phrase “Damascus Road experience” as in that of Saul of Tarsus, better known by his post-conversion reference as the Apostle Paul. We’re familiar with the fact that The Vatican is centered around St. Peter’s Square and St. Peter’s Basilica with St. Paul’s Basilica just outside The Vatican boundary. Do you know that the “see” of the Episcopal Church is the Cathedral Church of St. Peter and St. Paul? Most call it the Washington National Cathedral without realizing it is the spiritual base location of The Episcopal Church.
Nearly every city has a St. Paul’s Church; many have a St. Peter’s Church. Whether Roman Catholic or Anglican or low-church Protestant; we revere St. Peter and St. Paul as the fearless frontiersmen of our faith, both martyred for their faith, quite likely in Rome on the very grounds that bear their names in eternal notoriety.
From the Passion Narrative still fresh in our minds from Holy Week, we remember Peter’s fervent denials of his affiliation with Jesus in the hours before the Crucifixion. Three times, with growing hostility, Peter negates the assertions of others that he was among Jesus’ followers – three times, and then, as Jesus had predicted, the cock crowed. In Luke’s account of the Passion, we read that, as the cock crowed, Jesus’ eyes locked with those of Peter across the crowd – the two knowingly acknowledging the sound of the cock’s crow, confirming Peter’s three-fold denial as a disciple of Jesus Christ. It is a chilling scene to imagine – Peter convicted, literally, in the eyes of Jesus.
Unlike Peter, Paul’s actions that brought on his conviction by Jesus Christ were not the result of a fleeting sense of fear and cowardice. Paul, known at the time as Saul of Tarsus, had, for months and years, actively, zealously sought to imprison and/or kill the followers of Jesus Christ – “breathing threats and murder” against any who belonged to “the Way” – as the Christian movement was known from earliest times. Saul of Tarsus with all honesty and earnestness decried the Christian movement as heretical – in opposition to God’s will. Jesus of Nazareth blasphemously claimed to be the Son of God; Saul’s chief goal as Pharisee seeking to follow God’s will was to stamp out this blasphemous movement. No one at the time was considered a greater antagonist of Jesus Christ than was Saul of Tarsus.
So, we have Peter, well known for his denial of Christ, condemned personally by the Lord in the hours before the crucifixion; and Paul, the best-known persecutor of Christ and his followers who would kill to stop the Way. Yet, to this day we worship in the most world renown cathedrals consecrated in their honor, the most sacred landmarks bear their names. How could these seemingly non-redeemables be redeemed – and not just redeemed, but lifted to the level of highest esteem in all of Christendom? We simply cannot imagine Christianity without the input of these dissenters turned apostles – Peter and Paul.
Peter and Paul were confronted by the unquestionable reality of the Risen Lord. Despite their illustrious pasts, Peter and Paul were not lost to Jesus Christ; as none is lost. Peter and Paul were redeemed by the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ that conquered sin, evil, and death – redeemed just as you and I are redeemed.
Peter confronts the Risen Christ on the shore of the sea – “Naked,” says the writer of John, “he put on some clothes, for he was naked” – naked, as Adam realized he was naked just at the time of his recognition of his fall into sin – his denial of God’s authority. It is only at that time of realization that Adam and Eve became aware of their nakedness. Similarly, Peter is aware of his nakedness before the risen Christ.
Having thrice denied Christ on the eve of the crucifixion, Peter thrice responds to Jesus’ question, affirming his love for the risen Christ here on the beach, [“Yes, Lord, you know everything, you know that I love you.”] and thrice receiving his call to ministry. “Feed my lambs; tend my sheep, follow me.” Peter is redeemed; we will read in our lessons from the Acts of the Apostles in coming weeks of his leadership in the establishment and ongoing nurturance of the Church in Jerusalem. These are our roots; these are the sparks that could not be stamped out, even as Peter went on to pay the ultimate cost of discipleship, crucified upside down in Rome during the reign of Emperor Nero.
And, Paul, having never known the earthly Jesus personally, was confronted by the risen Christ in a flash of light that knocked him to the ground as he heard the words, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?” Those called upon to care for Saul in the aftermath were skeptical and fearful. In a vision, Jesus assured them: “He is an instrument whom I have chosen to bring my name before Gentiles and kings and before the people of Israel; I myself will show him how much he must suffer for the sake of my name.”
In the months and years to come Paul was embraced by these earliest Christians who provided his base as he moved north and west into Galatia, Asia Minor, crossing into modern-day Europe at Corinth, and finally Rome, establishing the house churches as he journeyed tirelessly, writing prolifically to these house churches, so that today we are blessed and guided by these writings to the Ephesians and the Corinthians and the Romans and others as they sought to BE the Church. And, Paul, too, would pay the ultimate cost of discipleship, being martyred in Rome after his much-lauded arrival there in the decades following the Resurrection.
In our state of sinfulness, we stand naked before God – God for whom no secrets are hid.
But, none is lost to Jesus Christ. No matter the depth of your faithlessness, no matter the extent of your sinfulness, Jesus came to recue you and me; Jesus came to redeem all.
Our call to discipleship may not be as specific and sensational as Pau’s call on the Damascus Road; our discipleship likely will not lead to martyrdom, as thousands are martyred still throughout the world each year purely because they refuse to deny their faith in Jesus Christ, but our call to follow Jesus Christ is just as real as it was for Peter and Paul.
Jesus is saying, “Follow me.” If Peter and Paul could follow, it should be pretty simple for us. Abiding in his Word, basking daily in the light of our redemption through faith in Jesus Christ, our nets are filled to overflowing.