“Lord, if it’s you,” Peter replied, “tell me to come to you on the water.” “Come,” he said. (MT 14:28,29)
1. Be Willing to Clean the Toilets
By the time Jesus got through training and purging the soul of Peter, he was willing to do anything for Jesus. During that training the “walk on water incident” was early evidence to Jesus that Peter was extremely desperate to please his Master. You can bet if he was willing to put his life on the line, he’d wash toilets and even the city dump if asked. Some need to show up Saturday night when the janitor is scheduled to clean the church and get down on their knees and (not pray) scrub the bathroom floors and clean the toilets. No preaching, no ministering or praying for people, just get “spiritually janitorial.”
Beware of “spiritually loitering” with the wrong intent. Peter had that when Jesus started to wash the disciples’ feet and he said, “No, Lord.” And, only after Jesus insisted with the threat that Peter could have nothing to do with Him unless he let Jesus go forth (John 13:4-9) did Peter allow Him.
2. Concentrate on Your Mission
Rare is it when Jesus tells you one day, when you get older, that you will die a not so pleasant death for Him. Peter had that kind of day (John 21:18-19). Peter didn’t take it well and started to look around the crowd, wondering about John’s future. Jesus must have thought quite highly of Peter to actually give him that kind of personal prophetic information. What would you have done if you knew nothing but persecution and a horrible death at an old age awaited you? Quit? I might have thought about it. “That’s my future?”
After Jesus basically told Peter to mind his own business, Peter resolved in his heart he was in for the long haul, good or bad. Are you? No matter what? You may be willing to do anything for God, but make sure it’s for the right motive.
3. Have Nothing to Fall Back On—God is Calling Many to Walk on the Water
In other words, it’s God or nothing. Many already have permission to walk on the water. Walking on the water means that “thing” that Jesus called you to do (whether it was many years ago or just yesterday); it is still valid, it is real and it is not a dream (see Philippians 3:13).
Jesus would have wanted all of the disciples to say, “Lord, if it is You, invite me to come to You on the water.” Once he got the go-ahead, either Peter was going to walk on water or he was going to drown, period. But he had no advance agreement that Jesus was going to grab him. This wasn’t play-acting; this was a real storm, real waves and real danger.
But be of good cheer! Many are getting older now and thinking they have missed it. I don’t think so. And here’s the good news: the majority have been on GPS (God’s Positioning Schedule) and are ready to be called out of the boat…and you will not sink. You will not swim or sink; you will walk to Jesus.