‘They Left Their Father’: The Ties of Fatherhood and the Call of The Gospel (Matt. 4:21-22; cf. Matthew 8:21-22; 10:21, 34-37; 19:20-30)

When Jesus calls James and John they are mending their nets with their father.  They leave the boat and their father, and follow him.

This is no trivial detail – a product of the fact that (unlike Simon and Andrew, in the previous verses) the sons of Zebedee happened to be on a job with their dad on the day when Jesus called them.  It’s a pattern that Matthew keeps returning to through the rest of his gospel.  For the disciples, the call to follow Jesus means literally leaving the family and the family business to travel around Galilee and Judea to go on the road with the itinerant rabbi Jesus.

This side of Jesus’ resurrection and ascension, ‘following’ Jesus obviously doesn’t mean wandering around Galilee with him.  But the core question of whether you are prepared to rank your loyalty to him even higher than your loyalty to family (and Jesus ranks that pretty highly) does not fade away at the end of Jesus’ earthly ministry.

When Jesus sends his disciples on mission in Matthew 10, he gives instructions that seem to be deliberately intended (eg. v. 18) to anticipate some aspects at least of the mission to the Gentiles that they will be sent out on after the resurrection.  His words in vv. 21-22 and 34-37 about being prepared to endure even the hatred and opposition of your brother or your father or your children are repeated in more general terms in Matt. 24:10.

The ‘leaving’ decision in this age may not always be the decision to leave a secular career for a paid ministry job – in fact for most Christians it won’t be that – but it may be.  Or it may be a decision to do the same job in a different part of the world, for the sake of Jesus and the gospel, or a host of other decisions that involve forsaking comforts and possessions and opportunities in order to serve God’s mission in the world.

The preparedness to ‘leave’ and to be ‘hated’ – even by your own father – is at the heart of what it means to be a disciple.

* David is married to Nicole and is the father of Jacob, Rebecca and Elsie. For work he lectures at Morling College in Sydney.

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