I know that the sea can calm us when we need solace, excite us when we yearn for adventure, and humble us when we contemplate its vastness and unseen depths. With its waves and billows, the sea seems to speak with the powerful voice of creation itself, as if to say: “There are mysteries here far greater than you.”
When we are out on the water—whether sailing, watching whales, or simply standing at the shoreline—we often sense that we have stepped into a different world. The usual demands of schedules, deadlines, and noise fade. Time slows. Perspective shifts. The sea becomes a liminal space, a threshold where reflection, re-evaluation, and even transformation can take place.
Sailors have a name for this experience: the call of the sea. It is that inexplicable pull that draws people back again and again—the desire to explore what is uncharted, both outwardly and inwardly, to encounter something larger than oneself.
It is not difficult to imagine that those who lived their lives on or near the sea carried these qualities within them: resilience, adaptability, reverence for mystery, and an awareness of life’s fragility. They knew calm waters and violent storms. They learned to change course quickly. They understood that control is often an illusion.
I like to think that these were precisely the qualities formed in the hearts of Peter, Andrew, James, and John. Long before they followed Jesus, the sea had already shaped them. The call of the sea was in their bones.
Then, one day, another call resounded—stronger, clearer, impossible to ignore: the call of Jesus.
“Come after me,” he says, “and I will make you fishers of men.”
Why does this call work? Because God’s voice is irresistible.
Most of us know this from experience. Think about a moment when you made a significant change in your life. A new direction almost always requires risk, trust, and courage. It may be unsettling, but it is often deeply liberating. Once the step is taken, the journey begins—and the heart opens to possibilities that were previously unseen.
The disciples had what we might call “sea-faring legs.” They were accustomed to uncertainty. And Jesus delights in calling such people—not because they are fearless, but because they know how to move forward even when fear is present. God’s voice, stronger than the wind and waves, always calls them back.
The Christian tradition gives us a beautiful example of this in Saint Brendan the Navigator, an Irish monk of the sixth century and patron of sailors and travelers. Legend tells of his voyage in search of the “Island of the Blessed,” but what matters most is not the geography—it is the trust. Brendan believed that God guides those who are willing to sail into uncharted waters.
The first disciples were changed not all at once, but over time. They learned. They failed. They grew. Yet Jesus saw in them the capacity to hear God’s call and to follow it with passion, even when the path led into uncertainty.
Today, some of you may be discerning a change—a change of direction, a change of heart, a deeper conversion. All of us, without exception, are called by God to a purpose and a mission. No two journeys are the same. But when the heart longs for meaning, truth, and transformation, that longing itself may be God’s voice at work.
If that is true for you, then listen. Respond. Step out from the familiar shore.
And with the Church, we pray in the words attributed to Saint Brendan:
Help me to journey beyond the familiar
and into the unknown.
Give me the faith to leave old ways
and break fresh ground with You.
Christ of the mysteries, I trust You
to be stronger than each storm within me.
Tune my spirit to the music of heaven,
and make my obedience count for You.
God’s call is stronger than the sea. And it is calling still.