Meditation on Matthew 4:12–23
First Presbyterian Church of Smithtown
Rev. Dr. Karen Crawford
Feb. 1, 2026

Jim and I watched a heartwarming movie yesterday. It was a 2019 biographical drama called, “A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood.” Have you seen it?
It was inspired by a 1998 Esquire article by Tom Junod, “Can You Say….Hero?” Junod was an investigative, hard-hitting journalist who had won awards for his controversial stories but hurt people and made many enemies along the way.
His editor startles him one day when she tells him that she has an assignment for him. He has to go interview Fred Rogers for a puff piece about heroes. When he pleads with her to give him a different assignment, she says that Mr. Rogers is the only one who would talk with him. Junod approaches the work reluctantly and then as he has always pursued his stories, cynically looking for something bad about him to reveal to the world. What he discovers is a man who really is the same man he portrays on his children’s television show, “Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood.”
Rogers, a graduate of Pittsburgh Theological Seminary and ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church, continually surprises and, at first, dismays Junod by how much he seems to care about him, his family, and everyone else he meets. Rogers shows his care through the time he takes with every child or adult who visits him on the set or approaches him on the street, through phone calls, shared meals, and most of all, through listening with kindness and asking gentle but probing questions as others share their deepest wounds and greatest vulnerabilities.
Junod’s relationship with Mr. Rogers gradually changes his perspective on life and faith. He finds healing and wholeness from wounds carried and hidden since childhood. He is strengthened to face personal challenges, examine and express feelings never expressed. At the end, he reconciles with an alcoholic father who abused and abandoned him and his sister as small children and left their dying mother. And the hard-hitting, award-winning journalist comes to the realize that his relationship with his own wife and baby are more important than what he does for a living.
Throughout this sweet movie, which brings back memories from my childhood in the 1960s and 70s and of watching him with my own children in the 1990s, I can only be amazed at all the gifts that God gave Fred Rogers that he faithfully used to fish for people.
Today, when we are experiencing frigid temperatures and the world outside is white and frozen, I hope it warms your heart to be walking with Jesus by the seashore in the gospel of Matthew. Who knows how often Jesus walked by the Sea of Galilee? He had recently left his hometown of Nazareth and moved to the seaside village of Capernaum, which would become his base for ministry. Maybe walking by the sea was what he did every day as he listened for God’s voice and sought God’s will.
The arrest of John the Baptist stirred his move to Capernaum. John and Jesus were friends and kin, as their mothers, Mary and Elizabeth, were cousins. The arrest is a signal; it’s time for his ministry to begin.
Jesus could have done it all by himself. He could have just gone from place to place to heal and feed, encourage and comfort, teach and preach, “The kingdom of God is drawing near.” But he chose to do ministry with a community of people, who would learn from him and share in the compassionate labor—and continue in the labor after Jesus is no longer with them.
Their call, says theologian Anna Case-Winters, is not to “form a cult of Jesus.”[1] It’s not even “to accept him as their personal Lord and savior. They are called to follow him; to walk in the way that he is walking as he proclaims and makes manifest the reign of heaven.”[2] In these four men—Peter and Andrew, James and John—we find a “prototype of all future followers who will respond to Jesus’ call.” They hear his voice, immediately drop everything, and walk away from their work that sustains them and their families. “They do not ask where he is going, and he does not tell them. There is no mention of their being ‘apostles’ to hint at their future importance. Nor is there mention of what this calling will cost them. Did Peter and Andrew have any inkling that they would both end up crucified?”[3]
These four hardworking people are fishers. James and John are also relatives of Jesus. They are sons of Zebedee and Salome, who is a sister to Mary, the mother of Jesus.
Let’s think for a minute about whom the Lord chooses to play such a role in God’s important work of salvation.
First, the shepherds in Luke are among the lowest class of people, living rough in the fields with the animals. This dangerous and lonely work leaves them vulnerable to heat, cold, rain, wind; wild animals, such as wolves, bears, lions, and snakes; and unsavory characters—outlaws, robbers, thieves, and murderers.
The fishermen in Matthew, Mark, and Luke are also among the lowest class of people. In the ranking of occupations by the famous Roman statesman, philosopher, and orator Cicero, “owners of cultivated land rank first and fishermen last. In Athenaeus’s writings they are placed on par with moneylenders and are socially despised as greedy thieves.” What’s more, they are “obligated to the empire, which has an economic monopoly… Not only must they supply enough fish for themselves and the empire they must pay tax upon what they retain and tax upon any transport of fish.”[4] It is no exaggeration to say that “Peter, Andrew, James, and John lead an economically and socially precarious existence.”[5] Jesus’ calling, then, comes first to some of the most vulnerable and ordinary of people.
And all Jesus promises is that he will teach them how to fish for people.
Today, as we remember the call of Christ’s first followers, it is natural to consider our own calls. For Jesus has called us all to follow him. Have you heard his voice? Have you said yes to the call?
The call is unique for every person. We all have different gifts, talents, and passions. Look around and consider your brothers and sisters in the faith. Isn’t it wonderful what God is doing and has done with us? Just think, my friends, that God still has more amazing things planned for you and me. Expect to be surprised!
Watching Mr. Rogers and his patience with the cynical reporter in the film brought tears to my eyes. Because I know it’s true. Fred Rogers really was the person we saw on television. He was imperfect, human, but also good and kind, gentle and faithful. He knew the Lord and understood what God was calling him to do. He didn’t shrink from the challenge. He didn’t let anything distract him from his ministry focus of reaching out to children and young families, helping them manage their feelings and understand that they are special and worth loving, just the way they are. And that the kingdom of heaven isn’t far off in time or beyond this world. It begins at this moment, in this place.

Junod writes in his article that inspired the movie, “Once upon a time, a man named Fred Rogers decided that he wanted to live in heaven. Heaven is the place where good people go when they die, but this man, Fred Rogers, didn’t want to go to heaven; he wanted to live in heaven, here, now, in this world, and so one day, when he was talking about all the people he had loved in this life, he looked at me and said,
“The connections we make in the course of a life—maybe that’s what heaven is, Tom. We make so many connections here on earth. Look at us—I’ve just met you, but I’m investing in who you are and who you will be, and I can’t help it.”[6]
My favorite scene in the movie is when Mr. Rogers is riding the subway to work, and the cynical journalist is with him. The children and adults around Fred Rogers are silently watching as if in awe of him. Suddenly they burst into song,
It’s a beautiful day in the neighborhood,
A beautiful day for a neighbor.
Would you be mine?
Could you be mine?
It’s a neighborly day in this beauty wood,
A neighborly day for a beauty,
Would you be mine?
Could you be mine?
I have always wanted to have a neighbor just like you,
I’ve always wanted to live in a neighborhood with you.
So let’s make the most of this beautiful day,
Since we’re together we might as well say,
Would you be mine?
Could you be mine?
Won’t you be my neighbor?
Won’t you please,
Won’t you please?
Please won’t you be my neighbor?
Let us pray.
Holy One, thank you for your Son, Jesus, who walks along the seashore calling to his first disciples and to all of us to follow him. Help us to hear his voice and courageously and immediately respond, though we know we are all imperfect and in need of your healing in our broken places. Teach us to listen with love and be gentle and nonjudgmental when others with wounds trust us with their stories and struggles. Stir us to share about our relationship with Jesus, the source and finisher of our faith. Lead us to be fishers of people. Amen.
[1]Anna Case-Winters, Matthew, from the series “Belief, a Theological Commentary on the Bible” (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2015), 57.
[2] Anna Case-Winters, Matthew, 57.
[3] Anna Case-Winters, Matthew, 57.
[4] Anna Case-Winters, Matthew, 57.
[5] Anna Case-Winters, Matthew, 57.
[6] Tom Junod, “Can You Say….Hero?” in Esquire (Nov. 1998), accessed Jan. 31, 2026, at https://www.esquire.com/entertainment/tv/a27134/can-you-say-hero-esq1198/?utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=mgu_ga_esq_md_pmx_prog_org_us_18717285305&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=18710104992&gbraid=0AAAAACq-et19pv9XRfFuQ_zedi8dhOm6S&gclid=Cj0KCQiA7fbLBhDJARIsAOAqhsd-Iyx6xUxDcuDfv7sWVkepIU0mLoHrkUmGn7Xhe3Anusa6COq2f1kaAinpEALw_wcB






















