New Church Life Sep/Oct 2014 | Page 38

new church life: september/october 2014 presence is more obvious. We know intellectually that He’s always present, but we don’t feel it in hard times. He asks, “Children, have you any food?” Such an important question: Is your life working for you as it is? Is it feeding your spirit? Until we can really and truly say no, we can’t change. In fact, until then we are likely to resent suggestions for change. When they say no, He then tells them to cast the net on the right side of the boat. Now obviously the fish were not all swimming on one side of the boat. The Lord gave this command purely for its symbolic value. In New Church teaching, the right symbolizes coming from goodness and the left coming from truth. (Arcana Coelestia 10061) You can think of left-brain linear logic and right-brain intuitive whole-person thinking, if that helps, but it’s deeper than that. For us, fishing on the right side means doing something from affection, doing it from love, not doing it merely because it is the right thing to do. It means reaching out to people because we want to help them, rather than out of a sense of duty. There’s a lot to be said for doing things because they need doing. The saying, “Fake it till you make it,” is very powerful and important. It keeps us alive in hard times. And in fact, that willingness to compel ourselves is what allows the Lord to change us from selfish into spiritual human beings. But that’s not the focus for today. That is not what reconnects us with the Lord. We may be doing the right thing when we compel ourselves, just as Peter was doing the right thing when he fished all night, but it’s not feeding our spirit by offering us a vision of and connection with our heavenly Father. What does it look like to fish on the right side? I think it means focusing on process over content. Think of wanting to help someone: a child struggling with a problem, a friend fighting depression, someone whose marriage is in trouble, a friend who has lost a spouse or loved one. Helping someone on content is making sure he or she does it right – sort out the marriage, solve the problem, overcome depression, deal with the grief appropriately – and specifically sort it out the way you’d want that person to. By contrast, when The wonderful thing about this story is how dramatically it works. When we really pay attention to people, when we show them that they matter to us, we find that we can help change lives. And like Peter, suddenly we recognize the Lord in the picture. 424