It is dawn. A lone figure is bending over a charcoal fire on the shores of the Sea of Galilee. He looks up, scanning the horizon. When he catches sight of a boat heading for shore, he recognizes it as his disciplesā boat. He cups his hands around his mouth, calling out, āCaught any fish?ā Discouraged voices bounce back over the water: āNo.ā He calls again, āCast the net on the right-hand side.ā They mutter to themselves, āThatās what weāve been doing all night,ā but they do cast it on the right. Before they know it, the net is so heavy with fish they have to wrestle with it to keep it from breaking. As they approach shore, John, a disciple-fisherman, says to Peter, another disciple-fisherman, āIt is the Lord.ā
āBring me a few fish,ā calls the voice. Peter jumps into the water, grabs the net, and brings it and the boat safely to shore. While he counts the fish, the other men clean some to bring to the man at the fire who is waiting to grill them a fresh-caught breakfast. When the fish are ready and the bread is toasted, he summons them to come and eat. Each disciple picks up bread and a fish. He prepares a breakfast sandwich for himself and sits down with them on the ground.
Now they know he is not a ghostly apparitionāhe eats human food. They are eating together again, just like the night they ate the Passover supper with him before he died. They all know that this man is the Jesus whom they loved and were still mourning. The mysterious presence of their risen Lord strikes them dumb. They canāt find words to express their throbbing joy
(John 21:1-14).
When I see the Lord in his resurrection body eating bread and fish, I know he is alive in the flesh. He is the man whose hands bled from hammered nails, whose head dripped blood from piercing thorns, whose side had a wound so deep a disciple shoved in a hand, whose rising shook the earth. I marvel that he cared so much for the human needs of his earthly friends that he himself made their breakfastāand ate it with them. This post-Easter appearance moves my spirit to a deeper perception of his resurrection: He is still the God-Man.
I recall that the poet Ezra Pound felt the same way:
I haā seen him eat oā the honey-comb
Sinā they nailed him to the tree. (āBallad of the Goodly Fereā)
About the Author
Charlotte F. Otten is a retired professor of English at Calvin College. She attends Calvin CRC in Grand Rapids, Mich.