Feast Day: November 30th | Patronage: of Scotland, Barbados, Georgia, Ukraine, Russia, Greece, Cyprus, Romania, Patras, and Burgundy; for Fishermen, Fishmongers, Rope & Textile Makers, Singers, Butchers, Farm-Workers; Protects against Fever, Cough, Convulsions, Sore throats, and for Pregnant women | Iconography: Holding Book or Scroll (as Apostle), Leaning on Saltire (X/Diagonal Cross; from his martyrdom), With Fishing Net (as Fisherman), With Crazy White Hair (Because Making Disciples does that to you).
While walking by the Sea of Galilee, he saw two brothers, Simon (who is called Peter) and Andrew his brother, casting a net into the sea, for they were fishermen. And he said to them, “Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men.” Immediately they left their nets and followed him.
– Matthew 4:18-20
If you will, put yourself in this scene, in the sandals of Simon and Andrew. They were fishermen, living in Capernaum, going out on the Sea of Galilee to catch fish and sell them to makes ends meet. Not a particularily prominent industry, but important. Simon has a Aramaic name, but his younger brother Andrew has a Greek name, which immediately brings to mind the mix of Jews and Greeks that lived up here, as well as the Roman governors who kept an eye on things, and levied a tax on the brothers every time they caught a fish.
Then they encountered John the Baptist and these were the kind of men who took the prophetic character seriously. Something about this man from the desert – calling out sin, calling for repentance, claiming the messiah was on his way – captured their solid, hardworking, but faithful hearts. Later in the Gospels Andrew’s being practical, pragmatic, and hardy is reinforced. He’s the guy who pointed out the kid with five loaves and two fish before the multiplication in Galilee (John 6:8-9). He is also the one when Jesus predicts the destruction of the Temple to push aside his horror and ask “when will this be?” (Mark 13:4)
But it is also Andrew (with Philip, the two apostles with Greek names) who bring some Greeks who were in Jerusalem for the Passover to meet Jesus. Now, this is right before His passion, so it displays that same pragmatic bent: “well, I don’t know what to say to them … and I know Jesus has things on His mind … but I’m just going to bring them to Him.” BUT, this little scene brings out something else about Andrew: He invited people to meet Jesus. Here he does it with the Greeks, earlier he did it with Simon his own brother.
And this is where I hope he can inspire and help all of us this week. He was just a fisherman, nothing special there. He had a certain practical, blue-collar, realistic approach to just about anything. Yet this does not slow him down from making disciples of those around him. He doesn’t give some glorious, convincing, engaging pitch. He doesn’t have the mind to win arguments or write epistles. He isn’t, at this beginning, working miracles or convicting sinners. He doesn’t even seem to have the closest relationship to Jesus (compared to Peter, James, or John) or have some sort of leg-up on the spiritual life. He just knows something about who Jesus is, how Jesus has called him, and he just extends the invitation to concrete people around him.
Our challenge this week: I want all of us to consider how we have come to follow Jesus, and then tell that story to one other person. Four steps (these are all from Acts 26, when St. Paul gives his testimony to Agrippa!):
- My life before knowing Jesus intimately – What was I like socially, spiritually, emotionally before Christ impacted me? (Paul speaks about his devotion to Judaism, how it prepared, but also closed him off to Jesus.)
- How I came to know Jesus, and His Church – What happened when I encountered Jesus (perhaps in a new, or gradual way)? Who or what brought me into deeper relationship with Jesus? (Paul talks about the road to Damascus.)
- Life in Christ – How do I live now? What has changed inside my heart, in my actions, in my plans or dreams? (Paul tells of the dramatic conversion that happened in him and how he has now gone to preach the Gospel).
- What next? – Speak on where Jesus continues to work in you – none of us are finished yet! But, also ask the other person for their response. What if Jesus entered their life? What if they said “yes” to Him? Where might He be inviting them?
– Fr. Dominic hasn’t got this figured out either! And neither did Andrew! But he went from just fishing, to following the messiah, to proclaiming that message to the whole world. But the key was just telling others the story of how he met the Lord.