Let down your nets

 Let down your nets for a catch.

This moment didn’t come randomly, but at a time when the fishermen had labored all night without catching anything. These weren’t beginners but seasoned fishermen (Luke 5:4–6; John 21:6).

When they found nothing after a whole night of effort, they knew it wasn’t likely they would find fish now either. Humanly speaking, scientifically and logically, it seemed impossible. Yet when Jesus said, “Let down your nets for a catch,” 

Peter answered, “Master, we have toiled all night and caught nothing; nevertheless, at Your word I will let down the net.” They obeyed—not because the situation looked favorable, but simply because Jesus said so.

You know the result. They caught not one or two, but “a great number of fish, and their net was breaking.” All it took was trying one more time—this time with faith in Jesus’ word.

In our own lives, when past failures mock us, when disappointments whisper that it is impossible, when rejections warn us not to try again for fear of being hurt, God still says, “Try one more time.”

Maybe the blessing is just one effort away. One leap of courage away. One last step of faith away.

Above all, it requires faith to act when our minds insist it cannot be done. Like Peter walking on the water (Matthew 14:22–33), we can do the impossible as long as we keep our eyes fixed on Jesus. The moment Peter looked at the wind and the waves, he began to sink. Jesus said, O you of little faith, why did you doubt?” The problem wasn’t that Peter couldn’t walk on water—it was that his focus shifted.

Likewise, when we dwell on past failures or on what others might think (our own “wind and waves”), that’s when we falter. But when we keep our eyes on the Lord, everything will be alright.

So let down your nets for a catch—

one more time.

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