Verse 1
THE MIRACLE OF THE CATCH OF FISH V. 1-11
1) "And it came to pass," (egeneto de) "Then it came to be," occurred as a result of the excitement that had been stirred by His synagogue teaching and preaching.
2) "That as the people pressed upon him" (en to ton ochlon epikeisthai auto) "As the crowd that had come pressed upon him," regarding their interest in His message and mission, both to hear Him preach and to see the miracles He was performing, John 2:11; John 3:1-2; John 20:30-31.
3) "To hear the word of God," (kai akoueinton logon tou theou) "And to hear the Word of God," the glad tidings of the kingdom of God that Jesus had been preaching throughout the regions of Galilee, Luke 4:43-44; Mark 1:14-15.
4) "He stood by the lake of Gennesaret," (kai autos en hestos para ten Iimnen Gennesaret) "And as he was, standing by (alongside) the Lake of Gennesaret," also known as the Sea of Galilee, Matthew 4:18. Only Luke uses the term "Lake of Gennesaret." It is the most sacred, or sanctified body of water on the earth.
This is known as the: 1) Sea of Tiberias, 2) Sea of Galilee, and 3) Sea of Gennesaret, located in the northern part of Palestine. To the north in view is snow-capped Mt Hermon, and the mountain ranges of upper Galilee. It is estimated that a fleet of near 4,000 ships and boats sailed and docked on the lake in the days of our Lord.
THE SEA OF TIBERIAS
A fresh water lake in northern Palestine. This lake has several names; sometimes it is called the Sea of Galilee, from the province in which it is situated; sometimes the Lake of Tiberias, from the city of that name on its western shore; and sometimes, as in this case, the Lake of Gennersaret, from a plain of that name between the cities of Capernaum and Magdala. In form it is an irregular oval, with the large end to the north. It is about fourteen miles long, and nine miles wide, and is about 600 feet below the level of the Mediterranean Sea. "Seen from any point of the surrounding heights, it is a fine sheet of water, a burnished mirror set in a framework of rounded hills and rugged mountains, which rise and roll backward and upward to where Hermon hangs the picture against the blue vault of Heaven." The water is sweet and wholesome, and the fish abundant and of excellent quality. In our Lord’s time it was covered with a gay and numerous fleet of 4,000 vessels, from ships of war down to fishing boats.
Phillips Brooks