Back to the story: Jesus is walking on the shore and calls to them: "Friends haven't you any fish?" "No," they answered. I wonder what their tone was toward this mysterious person on the shore asking them about their non-existent catch (they didn't know it was Jesus). But when Jesus asks them to throw their net on the right side of the boat, they do so and haul in a huge catch of fish. John then realized it's Jesus on shore and tells Peter. Peter jumps out and gets to shore where Jesus is waiting with a breakfast of bread and fish (by the way, it's hilarious that Jesus somehow has fish already when the disciples couldn't get any the whole night). But notice what the breakfast is cooking over when Peter comes to shore: a fire of burning coals. Remember the Greek word for a charcoal fire? Anthrakia, the same Greek word used for the fire in John 18, where Peter denied Jesus. If you have ever grilled over a charcoal fire, you know that it has a distinct smell. I wonder what was racing through Peter's mind as he smelled that familiar smell. Regardless, the message to Peter is one of Jesus' grace and mercy in the face of Peter's fear and denial. What followed was Peter's reinstatement to the group of Jesus' disciples.
Jesus did many other things as well. If every one of them were written down, I suppose that even the whole world would not have room for the books that would be written.
Praise God for His word!
Hazaq, hazaq, v'nithazeq!
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