““Now come and have some breakfast!” Jesus said. None of the disciples dared to ask him, “Who are you?” They knew it was the Lord. Then Jesus served them the bread and the fish. This was the third time Jesus had appeared to his disciples since he had been raised from the dead.”
John 21:12-14 NLT
Once again, Jesus served His disciples. The moment would not have been lost on them, as they remembered how He had washed their feet in that Upper Room not so long ago. Before them were hands bearing the scars of the cruel Roman nails, hands tenderly passing to them portions of bread and fish, reminding the disciples that before them was the Risen Lord. Perhaps their tired minds were thinking about what was going to happen next, because even death by crucifixion and burial in a tomb was insufficient to stop this Man. He was no revolutionary, intent on overthrowing the occupying forces in Israel. He preached a message of hope, peace, love and eternal life with God in Heaven. How was all this going to impact their lives? So they munched on their breakfast, wondering.
We pilgrims were a people who lived worldly lives, our futures mapped out, or so we thought. We were in a career, at school or further education, facing into the usual things most people get involved in. Finding a wife or husband. Having children and then enjoying grandchildren. Retiring. Solomon decided that such a life was futile and meaningless, and he wrote, “I observed everything going on under the sun, and really, it is all meaningless—like chasing the wind” (Ecclesiastes 1:14). And so we might have agreed with him, until one day we heard the Message of Hope. It may have been through a friend, a family member, at a funeral, or even through a tract or wayside pulpit. But we met Jesus and our journey was immediately changed. All our plans for the future had to be rewritten, but in a way that wasn’t immediately clear. We joined the small company of early disciples on that day – they didn’t know much about their future either, but they knew it had to be different.
Solomon later wrote, “Yet God has made everything beautiful for its own time. He has planted eternity in the human heart, but even so, people cannot see the whole scope of God’s work from beginning to end” (Ecclesiastes 3:11). Our life became one of uncertainty, as we believed in Jesus and followed Him in our journey of Life. And follow Him we still do. We don’t know all the twists and turns in the road ahead. Ananias never thought that one day he would be called to pray for a man called Saul, who had just had an encounter with the Living Jesus on the Damascus Road. But he was obedient to the call, regardless of the consequences. Neither do we pilgrims know what Jesus will ask us to do today or tomorrow – all we must do is to remain available to the call when it comes.
The disciples sat before Jesus, eating their breakfasts, unaware that just round the corner was the Day of Pentecost. We never know, but such an occasion might be waiting for us too.
Dear Lord Jesus. You have our lives mapped out before us, lives of excitement with You. Please guide us in Your ways, this day and every day. Amen.
