Mt. 4/12-23
Background.
Galilee was the "wild west" of Palestine, a rough, unruly place with bandits
and revolutionaries wandering about and a population which was considered by
the religious elites in Jerusalem to be uncouth and semi-literate religiously
and infected by the paganism of the area. It was called the "Galilee of the
Gentiles" because there was a large population of Hellenistic pagans mixed in
with the Jews who had only recently begun to resettle a land which had been
devastated by earlier wars. A rough parallel to what Jesus did when he
walked along the lakeside and summoned his disciples would be if he had
walked down the pain street of Tombstone Arizona and selected the odd cowboy
and merchant and drifter for his band. He certainly did not search for the
best and the brightest of his time, though he probably knew of what the men
would be capable in years ahead. There are, perhaps, more potentially great
men (in the world) than humankind recognizes.
STORY
Once upon a time a coach named Gary Barnett went to a high school that had
two great players in its senior class. He told them both of all the
educational advantages of attending Northwestern University. He also promise
that the school would turn the corner in its football program and that within
four years they would play in the Rose Bowl. The young men listened politely
and then laughed, also politely. Northwestern in the Rose Ball, coach, you
gotta be kidding. We want a real football program. We're going to Michigan
and you'll be watching us on television on New Year's Day. Well, this last
New Year's day someone was watching the Rose Bowl on television and it wasn't
Coach Barnett. The young man had missed a golden opportunity when they chose
Blue over Purple. One wonders how many other people Jesus invited to come
follow him, turned him down. And how often we miss a golden opportunity when
we turn away from a challenge Jesus presents to us.