31 Days of Paying Attention — Day Sixteen

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We have a small fishing industry here in Santa Barbara. I love to see their small boats sitting just off shore during the various seasons of the year — lobster, crab, salmon. halibut, even sea cucumbers!

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They look tiny against the horizon, don’t they?

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This one was checking traps last week — you can see the trap markers to the left of the picture.
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Working boats and pleasure craft share our marina space and each type brings its own unique kind of beauty to our waterfront. I love to watch a graceful sloop or a sturdy looking catamaran sail by. But it is the working boats my eye is drawn to most often. Some of those boats have been part of the story of our town for decades, holding deliciousness in their freezers and hard working men and women at their helm.

Fishing is work. Yes, it is often pleasurable. But it is work, first and foremost. And somehow the phrasing of today’s quote from St. Paul of the Cross stirs in me a deep reminder of that truth. To fish in the sea of Christ’s sorrow is work, plain and not-so-simple. It does not come naturally to us to reflect on sad things, to step into another’s suffering and see what nourishment we might find there. But oh! It is good work. And necessary work.

Once again, the key word in this quote is ‘love.’ If we can firmly hold onto that powerful truth, everything changes. Christ willingly stepped into that sea of suffering because of divine love — divine love for human persons. This is the kind of ‘atonement theory’ that resonates with me at the deepest level: for God so loved the world. This is the bedrock truth of our faith and taking time to fish in these good waters is one of the healthiest and most life-giving things we can do.

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Comments

  1. Margie Bicknell says

    The apostles became “fishers of men”, and as Christians, we are told to reach out and touch others for Christ. I have never thought about this in terms of fishing. But more like a farmer…planting seeds, but a farmer who may never see the fruit of my labor. I don’t much like not knowing what happens in the future, but I know I am not in charge….Christ is. GOD’s hands are open and God is in charge. God knows the future and God’s grace and mercy is poured out on all of us. I guess fishing and planting are great metaphors, as long as you are doing what Christ asked us to do….be his hands and feet and touch others for Him.

    • Exactly right, Margie. Jesus used both word pictures a lot – fishing and farming/planting. I wonder what other ones we might come up with??