Here is another panel from Duccio di Buoninsegna's Maesta (Majesty) altarpiece which was created in the early 14th century in Sienna. Some 700 years later some foolish cleric with too much power and time on his hands, had it sawed up and the dozens of paintings of the Life of Jesus and Mary were scattered around the world. This painting of Jesus calling his first disciples now hangs in the National Gallery in Washington D.C.
We heard this Gospel account Sunday Mass a few weeks ago. Here's part of the beautiful and important text.
18 As he was walking along the Sea of Galilee he watched two brothers, Simon now known as Peter, and his brother Andrew, casting a net into the sea. They were fishermen. 19 He said to them, "Come after me and I will make you fishers of men." 20 They immediately abandoned their nets and became his followers. 21 He walked along farther and caught sight of two other brothers, James , Zebedee's son, and his brother John. They too were in their boat, getting their nets in order with their father, Zebedee. He called them and 22 immediately they abandoned boat and father to follow him. Matthew 4:18-22
Duccio opens up the seaside scene in simplicity. He doesn't even paint in a background of mountains, trees and sky. It's as if he has drawn a great golden curtain behind the figures so as not to distract us from the main event. And that main event is this: In Jesus Christ, heaven and earth meet, God is one with us utterly, walking with us and calling to us in love.
"What the Word of God does for the ear, the icon does for the eye." Duccio shows Jesus-God walking along the shore and reaching out to us.
We tend to think the first apostles were peasant types, maybe even simpletons. But recent biblical scholarship suggests otherwise, that while yes, they were fishermen, they were intelligent successful business men. They had their boats and nets. It sounds like a family business. Perhaps they worked in this area because they were taking advantage of tax breaks.
If this is the case, then it would indicate Jesus has come for everyone and not simply those who are desperate or whose lives are wrecked. In another place we'll see Jesus calling a different kind of person—Levi, the despised tax collector. Later still, we'll learn there were women disciples. In my opinion, women tend to be more spiritually awake than men, so maybe Jesus never had to call them, they were just there out of their own un-distracted awareness and desire to learn from Jesus.
If this is the case, then it would indicate Jesus has come for everyone and not simply those who are desperate or whose lives are wrecked. In another place we'll see Jesus calling a different kind of person—Levi, the despised tax collector. Later still, we'll learn there were women disciples. In my opinion, women tend to be more spiritually awake than men, so maybe Jesus never had to call them, they were just there out of their own un-distracted awareness and desire to learn from Jesus.
Notice how Duccio has made sure we see Jesus at the shoreline. The shoreline is the margin or the edge of things. The disciples aren't fishing far out in deep water, but are close enough to shore for Jesus to have had a conversation with them. But at one time or another, we are all on the edge. This is where Jesus finds us—on the edge of another war, on the edge of disaster, on the edge of collapse. When we're emotionally stressed out, we might say, "I'm feeling kind of edgy." Lawless, corrupted people are over the edge. And when Jesus finds us in these edgy places, individually or collectively, he calls to us, "Come follow me."
He can say, "Come follow me" to a nation which is losing its bearings. He can say it to a parish or the universal Church which is distracted from the essential things. Jesus still says, "Come follow me," — and I will show you a new horizon, a new way, new purpose, new meaning, a new solution. And you'll be fishers of men—bringing in people to a new awareness of God's inconceivably deep love.
He can say, "Come follow me" to a nation which is losing its bearings. He can say it to a parish or the universal Church which is distracted from the essential things. Jesus still says, "Come follow me," — and I will show you a new horizon, a new way, new purpose, new meaning, a new solution. And you'll be fishers of men—bringing in people to a new awareness of God's inconceivably deep love.
I imagine when Jesus appeared on the seashore with his invitation, it came as a surprise to the brothers. Look at Andrew's face in the Duccio painting—is he muttering to himself, "I'm working; what's going on with this guy on the beach?"
Our lives are filled with invitations. Do I pay attention to them, or just mumble protests? Do I detect God's presence in the interruptions that matter most?
Our lives are filled with invitations. Do I pay attention to them, or just mumble protests? Do I detect God's presence in the interruptions that matter most?
- The television commercial asking help for the starving children or the animals. That interruption.
- The interrupting thought that I really should go and visit her; she's alone."
- The interrupting thought, "I need to pick up the phone right now and call him; I didn't see him at Mass today."
- The honest realization: "I only watch the channel that supports the way I think already; I'll switch for a few days and hear something new." Ah, that interruption!
- The interrupting thought of a new idea about God.
- The interrupting thought of my having been forgiven.