Justi Andreasen Profile picture
Aug 18, 2025 15 tweets 6 min read Read on X
Why did Jesus SPECIFICALLY tell the disciples to cast the net on the right side of the boat?

This wasn't fishing advice.

Once you understand what 'right side' really means, everything changes about following divine direction (thread) 🧵 ... Image
Peter and the other disciples fish all night but catch nothing.

Jesus shouts, "Cast your net on the right side." They obey and catch so many fish they can't haul the net in. Image
Here’s the secret symbolism:

• The right represents gathering toward the center, like catching fish
• The left represents moving away from the center, like sowing seed.

Christ commands them to fish from the side of gathering. Image
The symbolism goes deeper:

Peter embodies the right hand. He is the apostle who gathers.

Christian art shows the Church as a boat. Noah gathered the animals, like Peter gathers fish.

The nave (meaning "boat") where the faithful stand connects to this ancient ark symbolism. Image
The fish symbolize principles hidden in dark waters - sparkling living things found inside the chaos.

The early Christian fish symbol showed how nourishment can be found in the salty waters of death. Image
Chaotic waters represent death, the primordial ocean, passions, and doubt.

But fishing means bringing out of death and chaos things which are useful and precious.

Peter, as the founder of the Church, is the cosmic fisherman. Image
But why cast the net on the right side?

Because Peter is the Church’s right hand. He symbolizes unity and stability.

As axis and center, he gathers the faithful (fishing for men), giving them a home in the divine order and holding the Church together. Image
But Peter’s right-hand authority carries a danger.

Because he embodies unity, he may see himself as self-sufficient. The sin of the right hand is to mistake the unity and order it creates for totality, believing it can stand without God. Image
Peter needs Paul, the apostle to the Gentiles.

Paul is the Church’s left hand, the traveler and shapeshifter. He becomes "all things to all men" to spread the message across foreign lands.

Paul carries the faith outward, extending the Church beyond its center. Image
But Paul needs Peter too.

Alone, the left hand risks drifting. Its adaptability and wandering can lose focus and scatter. What drives expansion can become aimless if not firmly rooted in the center.

But when should we be Peter, and when should we be Paul? Image
Be Peter when your community needs foundations, unity, and stability.

When people are scattered and need gathering into a center. When chaos threatens, and someone must be the unmovable axis around which others can find their place. Image
Be Paul when the message needs to reach new territories.

When rigid structures have become barriers. When you must adapt and become "all things to all men" to carry truth across boundaries the center cannot cross. Image
It’s a sacred balance.

Every thriving church, family, or community depends on both.

The left and right hands must work together, serving the same body. Image
In each moment, we need to ask ourselves:

Is this a time for gathering or scattering? For strengthening the center or expanding the periphery?

The same Christ who commands, "fish on the right side," also sends apostles to the ends of the earth. Image
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More from @JustiAndreasen

Oct 2, 2025
Most people walk into a cathedral and see stone and stained glass. Few realize they’re stepping into a body.

The nave, the dome, the vault - all are built on human proportions.

Designed so that when you move through it, you complete the mystical body of Christ (thread) 🧵… Image
It’s a secret blueprint.

When you walk into a great cathedral, you're walking into a giant human body.

The nave (where people sit) comes from the Latin "navis" - ship. But there's a deeper meaning: it's the torso, the central body cavity. Image
Look up at any cathedral dome or apse.

That's the head.

The rounded dome mirrors the skull, while the altar below represents the mouth. Here, the Eucharist (the Word made flesh) is spoken and consumed.

For this reason the apse contains the image of Christ, the head of all. Image
Read 14 tweets
Sep 7, 2025
The Parable of the Sower is the Bible’s theory of everything.

It sounds straightforward: a farmer throws seed - some grow, some don’t.

But hidden inside is how you can meet God - or miss Him forever (thread) 🧵 ... Image
A sower scatters seed:

• On the path - birds devour it.
• On rocky ground - it sprouts but withers in the sun.
• Among thorns - it gets choked.
• On good soil - it yields a hundredfold.

Sounds simple. But the details conceal the architecture of reality. Image
First clue: seed = identity.

The seed holds the pattern of what it’s meant to be. The soil isn’t just “context” - it’s your capacity to host meaning.

The question: can identity take root in you? Image
Read 13 tweets
Sep 5, 2025
Why did Abraham's angelic visitors eat the meat he served but leave the bread untouched?

Most people miss this detail.

It sounds strange - but it reveals why some of our sacrifices in life succeed and others fail (thread) 🧵 ... Image
Abraham runs to welcome the strangers.

He orders Sarah to prepare bread. He slaughters his best calf.

But something strange happens. The angels eat the meat. Yet the bread Sarah prepared remains untouched. Image
This might look like ingratitude.

But Christian author Matthieu Pageau explains that to the ancient mind, it revealed something deeper.

Bread and meat are not the same kinds of food. They move in opposite directions. Image
Read 14 tweets
Sep 4, 2025
Why did the disciples fall asleep during Jesus's most agonizing hour?

This strange collapse reveals the core truth of human weakness:

How we slip away from our highest calling - and the only lifeline strong enough to pull us back (thread) 🧵 … Image
Jesus takes Peter, James, and John to Gethsemane.

He asks one thing: "Stay here and keep watch with me."

Then He goes to pray. Image
When Jesus returns, He finds them sleeping. "Couldn't you men keep watch with me for one hour?"

He wakes them. Goes back to pray. Returns again - they're sleeping. Third time - same thing. Three times they fall asleep. Image
Read 14 tweets
Aug 31, 2025
Everyone knows Christ was buried in a tomb.

But the Gospels add a strange detail - it was IN A GARDEN.

That’s not decoration.

That detail hides the key to His death and resurrection (thread) 🧵 ... Image
Gardens in Scripture are never neutral scenery.

They are Eden - where heaven and earth meet, where God walks with man.

A garden is ordered nature - chaos subdued into harmony. Image
The drama of Christ’s Passion circles through gardens:

• He prays in Gethsemane, a garden of olive trees.
• He is buried in a garden tomb.
• Mary Magdalene mistakes Him for a gardener at the resurrection. Image
Read 14 tweets
Aug 30, 2025
The crown of thorns wasn’t just cruelty.

Buried inside that image is something much stranger.

The most unusual coronation in history reveals what power really is - and explains the collapse of leadership today (thread) 🧵 … Image
A crown normally shines with gold, jewels, or radiant light.

It proclaims kingship, glory, and order.

But Christ’s “crown” is chaos woven into a circle: sharp thorns, twisted and pressing into His head. Image
To grasp this, go back to Genesis.

After Adam’s fall, the earth is cursed: “Thorns and thistles shall it bring forth.”

Thorns are not random plants. They are the sign of a creation fractured into painful multiplicity. Image
Read 14 tweets

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