Isaiah 9:1-4
Psalm 27:1, 4-9
1 Corinthians 1:10-18
Matthew 4:12-23
Sermon by Joel Crouse
At some point, in our lives—because it’s responsible to do so, because living in this world should demand deep thinking—we have to stop and ask where we are being called. Where do we fit? What is our place? Where are we meant to contribute? We start our kids early, trying to teach them that choices matter. We worry about them falling into a job they don’t like, or a relationship where they aren’t loved, or a life that slowly closes in on them until they can’t remember they ever had options. We try to guide them, with lectures, and with love.
And then—quietly—we stop asking those questions for ourselves. We keep going. We assume the time for hearing a call is past. We tell ourselves, I’ve already chosen. I’m already set. I’m already committed. We treat a calling like it’s something for teenagers, or twenty-somethings, or people who still believe the world is wide open.
But this week, listening to our Prime Minister speak at the World Economic Forum, I heard a very adult kind of language about calling—about the moment when you realize the old story you were living by doesn’t work anymore. He didn’t describe the world as gently shifting. He used sharper words: a “rupture,” not a transition—an end to a comfortable fiction, and the beginning of a harsher reality.
And what struck me was the insistence that in a moment like this, the temptation is always the same: to “go along to get along,” to comply, to keep the peace, to avoid trouble—and to hope that playing the part will keep you safe. And then he said, plainly: it won’t.
To make the point, he reached back to Václav Havel’s image of the greengrocer—putting a sign in the window he doesn’t believe, because it’s easier than risking the cost of telling the truth. Havel called it “living within a lie.” And the line in the speech that stuck with me most—was this: it’s time to take the signs down.
Now, whatever you think about Davos, or world leaders, or global speeches, here’s the spiritual question underneath that image: What signs do we keep in our own windows? Not political slogans. Not literal signs. I mean the small performances we keep up because they seem safer than honesty.
The sign that says, I’m fine, when we are not. The sign that says, I don’t need anyone, when we are lonely. The sign that says, I’m done trying, when the truth is we’re afraid of being hurt again. The sign that says, I’ll forgive when they apologize, when the apology may never come. The sign that says, I’ll stay polite, when what we really mean is, I’ll stay distant. We do it to avoid trouble. To get along. To keep the peace. And it works—until it doesn’t.
That is where today’s gospel lands with surprising force. Jesus does not go to children. He goes to adults. People with jobs, and responsibilities, and routines. People who are already committed to a way of life. Fishermen with nets in their hands. People who can say, quite reasonably, This is what I do. This is who I am. This is how I pay the bills. This is what I know.
And Jesus says, “Follow me.” Not as an abstract idea. But as a reorientation of life: “I will make you fish for people.” It’s such a familiar story that we can forget how disruptive it is. It’s not simply about leaving a job. It’s about leaving a way of seeing the world. It’s about turning outward. It’s about relationship.
We sometimes imagine the disciples “immediately” dropped everything as though it was reckless. But it’s more likely that a relationship had been forming—that something had been stirring for a while—until the moment came when the decision became clear. And that’s often how calling works for most of us. Not lightning. More like a slow insistence. A holy pressure. A truth you can’t un-know.
So when Jesus calls them, it’s not just, Come learn new information. It’s, Come live differently. Come take the sign down. Come stop performing the life you’ve settled for, and step into a life shaped by compassion, courage, and community.
Because “fishing for people” is not a recruiting campaign. It’s not about tallying numbers. It’s about moving toward others with your hands open. It’s about healing what is sick. Comforting what is grieving. Making room for those the world overlooks. It is about relationship—with all the messiness that relationship always brings.
And it is risky. It would have been easier to stay fishing. They knew the lake. They knew the work. They knew the rules. Following Jesus meant walking into uncertainty—into other people’s pain, other people’s anger, other people’s need. So why do it? Because the call from God keeps insisting that life is bigger than self-protection.
Our PM used a phrase that belongs in the realm of faith: we can’t keep pretending the old order will magically come back. “Nostalgia is not a strategy.” And spiritually, that’s true as well. Nostalgia isn’t a strategy for relationships either. You can’t build a life by clinging to the version of the past where you didn’t get hurt. You can’t build community by wishing people were simpler. You can’t build peace by keeping your heart locked. You can’t follow Jesus while gripping your nets like they’re the only thing keeping you afloat.
Jesus calls ordinary people—labourers, workers, friends—and the extraordinary thing about them isn’t that they were perfect. It’s that they were willing to move toward others. They didn’t wait to be served; they served. They didn’t hold out for love; they held love out.
That is still the call. Not necessarily to leave our job or abandon our life. But to leave behind the inward-facing posture that makes us smaller. To take down the signs we’ve been hanging in the window because they seemed safer than truth. To stop “going along to get along” in the places where it costs us our integrity, our compassion, our courage.
God will hold our hand while we stand on the shore, guarded and cautious. But at some point, the voice of Christ comes with a bold offer: Come. Follow. Turn outward. Risk love.
It’s a hinge point to be sure, and it will bring unsettling change at the beginning. And then—if we let it—it will bring a life of joy, and value, and purpose. Amen

