Blog
Dear Trailhead family,
Once upon a time, maybe 10 years ago, I went on a fishing trip to the ends of the earth. The particular end of the earth that I went to was the Great Slave Lake region of Northwest Territories, Canada.
The trip was not my idea but I was there because I was part of the organization tasked with getting a group of six men to Yellowknife, the jumping-off point for the excursion.
My co-worker and I did our part in getting this group from Oklahoma across several thousand miles and to the dock where the float plane would take them and their mountain of gear to the other side of the lake where the monster pike were rumored to be lurking.
A few weeks earlier, my co-worker and I were invited to join the fishermen at their camp, doing the fishermen kind of things that they would be doing. Or we could hang out in a hotel room for a week and do our own thing. The choice was ours.
We chose the fish camp.
Once we arrived at the camp, any illusions of luxury were squashed. These were barebones accommodations, existing only to get man near fish and nothing more.
The cabin I was assigned to was primitive and basic, but not in the trendy way.
It was unusually warm for this region in June, necessitating that windows be open to allow some cooling, but the screenless windows also served as an invitation to millions (Billions? Trillions? I do not want to exaggerate but I do want to be accurate) of mosquitoes who feasted on any exposed flesh. I’m pretty sure I even saw a few mosquitoes trying to get blood out of the timbers of my cabin. Suffice it to say, these were ferocious insects. And it never got dark at night. And the bathroom situation was less than desirable. And, well, you get the idea.
This went on for a week. Mosquitoes, heat, lousy food, poor sanitation.
I missed home.
I missed everything that wasn't this place.
I also missed not being in charge, missed not calling the shots.
But I had said yes to the invitation. And now I knew better what that yes meant.
Kinda like Jesus’ disciples.
In Mark’s account of the life and death of Jesus, he recounts the invitation given to Levi.
Jesus was walking along the lake, teaching the crowd that had gathered. The hills on one side, the water on the other, a slight breeze carrying the teacher’s words. And this teacher was really good. His words were intriguing, authoritative, comforting in an uncomfortable way.
And as Jesus walked and talked, he came across Levi the tax farmer who was doing tax farming stuff, sitting at his tax farming booth.
The story goes that Jesus paused his teaching (or was this part of his message?) and looking at Levi, said two words.
“Follow me.”
And wouldn't you know it, Levi got up and followed him.
“Wanna go fishing?” I had been asked.
“Sure,” was my response, not knowing anything that was in store for me.
“So Levi got up and followed him,” not knowing anything that was in store for him.
But we know what was in store.
A few years later, Jesus was condemned to a criminal's death and those who had followed him knew they could be rounded up and given a similar punishment.
So Levi fled with the others, hiding in an unfamiliar city, missing home.
Missing everything that wasn't this place.
He probably missed not being in charge, missed not calling the shots.
And yet, the story was not over.
Over the course of the week, I found my rhythm- we learned how to combat the mosquitoes, we learned how to sleep in the light, we got hungry enough to enjoy the food and we caught some really big fish.
(Oh, you thought we were still talking about Levi? On second thought, let's do that).
Even though Jesus had been cruelly murdered, he still made the rendevous with his followers in Galilee that he had promised.
There, Jesus, who was dead but now not dead, invited his followers to continue doing what he had done and taught them to do.
And by all accounts, they did.
They shared the news far and wide that a new King had come and everyone was invited to participate in this Kingdom. A Kingdom marked by life instead of death, marked by joy instead of despair, marked by love instead of hate, a kingdom marked by radical self-denial, marked by death to self, marked by giving up on all that is marketed to bring us life and joy and love.
For most of these disciples, the invitation to do what Jesus did meant that they even shared in his death.
This kingdom that Levi left his tax booth to join is the opposite of the tax booth. Rather than getting rich from others, in the Kingdom, money is to be given rather than collected. Rather than working for the powerful in order to be powerful, you now answer to your fellow man, especially the most overlooked of your fellow man. Instead of calling the shots, Levi was learning to be a servant to all.
Did Levi know any of this on the beautiful day along the lake when he got up and followed Jesus?
No, there is no way he could have known.
But in the end, it didn’t matter.
The journey was so much harder and bigger than he could have known and it required so much more of him than he could have guessed that day.
But.
But, in the end, it did not matter.
I believe Levi would have responded to Jesus the same way over and over again.
Because in that simple “follow me,” Levi found the Life that money, notoriety, and success could never give him.
In hindsight, my fishing trip was special not despite the hardship but because of it (and yes, I agree with you that “hardship” is a bit extreme when talking about a recreational activity. But bear with me).
The hardship encountered with following Jesus is not a bug in his system.
Hardship is a feature.
The only question is, will I keep responding with a yes to his invitation to follow him? Or maybe the better question is, will my yes stay a yes when it gets hard?
At least we know a little bit about what to expect.
“Then [Jesus] called the crowd to him along with his disciples and said: ‘Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me. For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me and for the gospel will save it.’” (Mark 8:34-35)
Grace and peace be upon you,
Grant