Breakfast on the Beach
Sermon preached by
The Reverend Peter Littleford
29 April 2001
I don't know about you, but I find that the gospel reading set for today
is highly appropriate for a Healing Service, as it is very much concerned
with the healing of the relationship between Peter and Jesus.
It was Lord Rees-Mogg, former editor of The Times. Rees-Mogg who wrote
that if Jesus' resurrection had been an invention, then 'the storyteller
would surely have shown Jesus with more of a sense of occasion. A God who
rises from the dead on the third day in order to cook picnics is a God to be
believed!'
But of course, when we look more closely, what we find is that this
breakfast on the beach is really the stage setting for a more sublime act of
tenderness and condescension by the Risen Lord. After all, this is probably
the first close encounter that Peter has had with Jesus since that fateful
event in the shadowy twilight of a flickering fire-lit courtyard. It was
then that it took only a maid and man with a natural ear for regional
accents to puncture all those lofty protestations of loyalty to Jesus.
And now, several days later, after an unsuccessful night's fishing, they
see a stranger on the shore. Jesus, their Risen Lord, is waiting to greet
them. Was it their mental state or a trick of the light which meant that
they didn't recognise him until the last minute? But first of all he
satisfies their immediate need to catch fish. He respects and works with the
concerns his people bring with them. Jesus doesn't dismiss them or
substitutive his own. He doesn't say, 'Well, Peter, old friend, you and I
need to have an urgent chat, let's get down to business'. Instead he invites
them to breakfast. It is never wise to conduct delicate business on an empty
stomach!
We can all imagine how Peter must have felt at that time —shamefaced,
full of anguish, and agonisingly embarrassed. Most of us have experienced
the dreadful awkwardness and shame when we are brought face to face with
someone we have disowned in an effort to spare ourselves embarrassment. The
charcoal fire must have brought back memories of the High priest's
courtyard. Memories are being kindled as well as the fire. And Jesus asks
Peter, 'Do you love me?'
The three fold question answers to the threefold denial. Of course, left
to himself, Peter would have rather forgotten his treachery and failure. One
denial feeds another. 'Don't reopen old wounds, don't revisit the past', we
tell ourselves. But there's no way of going forward until we've got back,
got in touch with the festering sores, and owned what we have once denied.
Besides, our failure and brokenness usher us into greater wholeness, just as
they do for Peter. 'Our only health is the disease... and... to be restored,
our sickness must grow worse'. Could any interrogation have been more
painful and yet at the same time potentially so affirming? The same question
is pressed home relentlessly, again and again. And again, with each
question, the denials of the past are more deeply confronted, until
gradually they result in a wholeness which might not have been possible
without them. Peter was grieved the third time—'you know', he said to
Jesus with palpable indignation. Experience has taught Peter to distrust his
own judgement, even of himself. The wild, almost reckless, unconsidered
claims of loyalty that masked his inner doubts have long evaporated. Peter's
faith depends no longer upon his own untested idealism but on Jesus' certain
knowledge and love of him. It is the warmth of God's tough love rather than
the sharp wind of his judgement that enables us to discard our protective
defences and lay ourselves bare to his love and healing.
Jesus addresses Simon Peter as he spoke to him by the lake when he first
called him to follow. Peter might have hoped to be spared the facing of his
past, but it is his past which makes Peter who he is, and which becomes the
foundation for a new and glorious future. Peter has not merely been
rehabilitated; he has been recommissioned.
Well, what about us? There are likely to be many of us who live in a
state of denial, struggling in vain to suppress the memory of painful, sore,
bitter, broken or betrayed relationships. For some of us, there will be the
remorse and guilt that a once enthusiastic discipleship to Jesus Christ has
become weakened. Yet, whoever the person and whatever the failure, Jesus
wants to love us back into service, to open the vault of our guarded
memories, and to bring them to light and healing. Jesus wants to make
something new out of our wounds and failures, just as he did with Peter.
Peter's apostasy doesn't annul his call. Peter's denial doesn't cause God to
deny him. It's not our failures that disqualify us from the service of
Christ; it is only our failure to recognise the need for deeper forgiveness.
It is as if forgiveness and vocation go together. So we are all invited to
take Peter's route and to allow this stranger on the shore to meet us with a
love that enables us to open ourselves to him and to receive healing and
commissioning. And he asks of us the selfsame question: John, Mary,
Frederick, Hermione, all of us, do you love me?
May that supreme question remain with us until we, too, are ready to
reply 'Yes, Lord, you know that I love you'. AMEN
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