
Text -- Luke 5:1-3 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Luk 5:1 - -- Pressed upon him ( epikeisthai ).
Luke in this paragraph (Luk 5:1-11; Mar 1:16-20; Mat 4:18-22) does not follow the chronology of Mark as he usually ...
Pressed upon him (
Luke in this paragraph (Luk 5:1-11; Mar 1:16-20; Mat 4:18-22) does not follow the chronology of Mark as he usually does. It seems reasonably clear that the renewed call of the four fishermen came before the first tour of Galilee in Luk 4:42-44. It is here assumed that Luke is describing in his own way the incident given in Mark and Matthew above. Luke singles out Simon in a graphic way. This verb

Robertson: Luk 5:1 - -- That ( kai ).
Kai does not technically mean the declarative conjunction "that,"but it is a fair rendering of the somewhat awkward idiom of Luke to ...
That (

Robertson: Luk 5:1 - -- Was standing ( ēn hestōs ).
Periphrastic second past perfect of histēmi which here is equal to a practical imperfect.
Was standing (
Periphrastic second past perfect of

Robertson: Luk 5:1 - -- By the lake ( para tēn limnēn ).
The use of the accusative with para , alongside, after a verb of rest used to be called the pregnant use, came a...
By the lake (
The use of the accusative with

Robertson: Luk 5:2 - -- Two boats ( ploia duo ).
Some MSS. have ploiaria , little boats, but ploia was used of boats of various sizes, even of ships like nēes .
Two boats (
Some MSS. have

Robertson: Luk 5:2 - -- The fishermen ( hoi haleeis ).
It is an old Homeric word that has come back to common use in the Koiné. It means "sea-folk"from hals , sea.
The fishermen (
It is an old Homeric word that has come back to common use in the Koiné. It means "sea-folk"from

Robertson: Luk 5:2 - -- Were washing ( eplunon ).
Imperfect active, though some MSS. have aorist eplunan . Vincent comments on Luke’ s use of five verbs for washing: th...
Were washing (
Imperfect active, though some MSS. have aorist

Robertson: Luk 5:3 - -- To put out a little ( epanagagein oligon ).
Second aorist infinitive of the double compound verb ep -an -agō , found in Xenophon and late Greek wri...
To put out a little (
Second aorist infinitive of the double compound verb

Robertson: Luk 5:3 - -- Taught ( edikasken ).
Imperfect active, picturing Jesus teaching from the boat in which he was seated and so safe from the jam of the crowd. "Christ ...
Taught (
Imperfect active, picturing Jesus teaching from the boat in which he was seated and so safe from the jam of the crowd. "Christ uses Peter’ s boat as a pulpit whence to throw the net of the Gospel over His hearers"(Plummer).
Pressed (
Lit., were laid upon.

Vincent: Luk 5:1 - -- To hear
The A. V. is correct according to the reading τοῦ ἀκούειν , which it follows. The true reading is καὶ ἀκούε...
To hear
The A. V. is correct according to the reading

Vincent: Luk 5:1 - -- He stood ( αὐτὸς ἦν ἑστὼς )
The pronoun distinguishes him from the crowd which pressed upon him: he on his part stood....
He stood (
The pronoun distinguishes him from the crowd which pressed upon him: he on his part stood. Render the participle and finite verb as Rev., was standing.

Vincent: Luk 5:1 - -- Lake ( λίμνην )
An illustration of the more classical style of Luke as compared with Matthew and Mark. They and John also use θάλα...
Lake (
An illustration of the more classical style of Luke as compared with Matthew and Mark. They and John also use

Vincent: Luk 5:2 - -- Ships ( πλοῖα )
Used of vessels in general. Some texts read πλοιάρια , a diminutive form, meaning little boats.
Ships (
Used of vessels in general. Some texts read

Vincent: Luk 5:2 - -- Were washing
From the sand and pebbles accumulated during the night's work. Luke uses four different words for washing or cleansing: πλύνω...
Were washing
From the sand and pebbles accumulated during the night's work. Luke uses four different words for washing or cleansing:

Vincent: Luk 5:3 - -- Thrust out ( ἐπαναγαγεῖν )
Rev., put out. The special nautical word for putting out to sea.
Thrust out (
Rev., put out. The special nautical word for putting out to sea.

Vincent: Luk 5:3 - -- Taught ( ἐδίδασκεν )
The imperfect. He continued the teaching he had begun on the shore.
Taught (
The imperfect. He continued the teaching he had begun on the shore.
Wesley -> Luk 5:1
JFB -> Luk 5:3
Clarke: Luk 5:1 - -- The people pressed upon him - There was a glorious prospect of a plentiful harvest, but how few of these blades came to full corn in the ear! To hea...
The people pressed upon him - There was a glorious prospect of a plentiful harvest, but how few of these blades came to full corn in the ear! To hear with diligence and affection is well; but a preacher of the Gospel may expect that, out of crowds of hearers, only a few, comparatively, will fully receive the truth, and hold out to the end

Clarke: Luk 5:1 - -- To hear the word of God - Του λογον του Θεου, The doctrine of God, or, the heavenly doctrine
To hear the word of God -

Clarke: Luk 5:1 - -- The lake of Gennesaret - Called also the sea of Galilee, Mat 4:18, and Mar 1:16; and the sea of Tiberias, Joh 6:1. It was, according to Josephus, fo...
The lake of Gennesaret - Called also the sea of Galilee, Mat 4:18, and Mar 1:16; and the sea of Tiberias, Joh 6:1. It was, according to Josephus, forty furlongs in breadth, and one hundred and forty in length. No synagogue could have contained the multitudes who attended our Lord’ s ministry; and therefore he was obliged to preach in the open air. But this also some of the most eminent rabbins were in the habit of doing; though among some of their brethren it was not deemed reputable.

Clarke: Luk 5:2 - -- Two ships - Δυο πλοια, Two vessels, It is highly improper to term these ships. They appear to have been only such small boats as are used t...
Two ships -

Clarke: Luk 5:3 - -- And taught - out of the ship - They pressed so much upon him on the land, through their eagerness to hear the doctrine of life, that he could not co...
And taught - out of the ship - They pressed so much upon him on the land, through their eagerness to hear the doctrine of life, that he could not conveniently speak to them, and so was obliged to get into one of the boats; and, having pushed a little out from the land, he taught them. The smooth still water of the lake must have served excellently to convey the sounds to those who stood on the shore;
Calvin -> Luk 5:1
Calvin: Luk 5:1 - -- Luk 5:1.He stood near the lake Matthew and Mark, according to the usual custom of their language, call it the sea of Galilee. The proper name of thi...
Luk 5:1.He stood near the lake Matthew and Mark, according to the usual custom of their language, call it the sea of Galilee. The proper name of this lake among the ancient Hebrews was
Luke says, that Christ entered into a ship which belonged to Peter, and withdrew to a moderate distance from the land, that he might more conveniently address from it the multitudes, who flocked from various places to hear him; and that, after discharging the office of teaching, he exhibited a proof of his divine power by a miracle. It was no unusual thing, indeed, that fishers cast their nets, on many occasions, with little advantage: and that all their fruitless toil was afterwards recompensed by one successful throw. But it was proved to be a miracle by this circumstance, that they had taken nothing during the whole night, (which, however, is more suitable for catching fish,) and that suddenly a great multitude of fishes was collected into their nets, sufficient to fill the ships. Peter and his companions, therefore, readily conclude that a take, so far beyond the ordinary quantity, was not accidental, but was bestowed on them by a divine interposition.
Defender: Luk 5:3 - -- This was not the first time He had met Simon Peter (Joh 1:40-42). He had first called Peter and Andrew to follow Him when John the Baptist had so dire...
This was not the first time He had met Simon Peter (Joh 1:40-42). He had first called Peter and Andrew to follow Him when John the Baptist had so directed them. Although they were intermittently with Him as He traveled around Galilee, they still continued plying their fishermen's trade as well (see Mat 4:18-20). On this occasion, however, they "forsook all" to go with Him (Luk 5:11). Luke's record is not strictly chronological but topical.

Defender: Luk 5:3 - -- He used a fishing vessel as a pulpit with the docks as a meeting hall on more than one occasion (Mat 13:2), indicating that His first parables of the ...
He used a fishing vessel as a pulpit with the docks as a meeting hall on more than one occasion (Mat 13:2), indicating that His first parables of the kingdom were delivered in this fashion."
TSK: Luk 5:1 - -- it : Luk 8:45, Luk 12:1; Mat 4:18-22, Mat 11:12; Mar 1:16-20, Mar 3:9, Mar 5:24
the lake : Num 34:11, Chinnereth, Jos 12:3, Chinneroth, Mat 14:34; Mar...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Luk 5:1 - -- The people pressed upon his - Multitudes came to hear. There were times in the life of our Saviour when thousands were anxious to hear him, and...
The people pressed upon his - Multitudes came to hear. There were times in the life of our Saviour when thousands were anxious to hear him, and when many, as we have no reason to doubt, became his true followers. Indeed, it is not possible to tell what "might"have been his success, had not the Pharisees and scribes, and those who were in office, opposed him, and taken measures to draw the people away from his ministry; "for the common people heard him gladly,"Mar 12:37.
The Lake of Gennesaret - Called also the Sea of Galilee and the Sea of Tiberias. "Gennesaret was the more ancient name of the lake, taken from a small territory or plain of that name on its western borders. See Num 34:11; Jos 19:35, where, after the Hebrew orthography, it is called Chinnereth"(Owen). The plain lying between Capernaum and Tiberias is said by Dr. Thomson (" The Land and the Book ,"vol. i. p. 536) to be a little longer than thirty, and not quite twenty furlongs in breadth. It is described by Josephus as being, in his time, universally fertile. "Its nature is wonderful as well as its beauty. Its soil is so fruitful that all sorts of trees can grow upon it, and the inhabitants accordingly plant all sorts of trees there; for the temperature of the air is so well mixed that it agrees very well with those several sorts; particularly walnuts, which require the coldest air, flourish there in vast plenty. One may call this the ambition of nature, where it forces those plants which are naturally enemies to one another to agree together. It is a happy conjunction of the seasons, as if every one laid claim to this country; for it not only nourishes different sorts of autumnal fruits beyond people’ s expectations, but preserves them a great while. It supplies people with the principal fruits; with grapes and figs continually during ten months of the year, and the rest of the fruits, as they become ripe, through the whole year; for, besides the good temperature of the air, it is also watered from a most fertile fountain."
Dr. Thomson describes it now as "preeminently fruitful in thorns."This was the region of the early toils of our Redeemer. Here he performed some of his first and most amazing miracles; here he selected his disciples; and here, on the shores of this little and retired lake, among people of poverty and inured to the privations of fishermen, he laid the foundation of a religion which is yet to spread through all the world, and which has already blessed millions of guilty and miserable people, and translated them to heaven.

Barnes: Luk 5:2 - -- Two ships - The ships used on so small a lake were probably no more than fishing-boats without decks, and easily drawn up on the beach. Josephu...
Two ships - The ships used on so small a lake were probably no more than fishing-boats without decks, and easily drawn up on the beach. Josephus says there were 230 of them on the lake, attended by four or five men each. That they were small is also clear from the account commonly given of them. A single large draught of fishes endangered them and came near sinking them.
Standing by the lake - Anchored by the lake, or drawn up upon the beach.

Barnes: Luk 5:3 - -- Which was Simon’ s - Simon Peter’ s. Prayed him - Asked him. He sat down - This was the common posture of Jewish teachers...
Which was Simon’ s - Simon Peter’ s.
Prayed him - Asked him.
He sat down - This was the common posture of Jewish teachers. They seldom or never spoke to the people "standing."Compare Mat 5:1. It may be somewhat difficult to conceive why Jesus should go into a boat and put off from the shore in order to speak to the multitude; but it is probable that this was a small bay or cove, and that when he was "in"the boat, the people on the shore stood round him in the form of an amphitheater. It is not improbable that the lake was still; that scarcely a breeze passed over it; that all was silence on the shore, and that there was nothing to disturb his voice. In such a situation he could be heard by multitudes; and no spectacle could be more sublime than that of the Son of God - the Redeemer of the world - thus speaking from the bosom of a placid lake - the emblem of the peaceful influence of his own doctrines - to the poor, the ignorant, and the attentive multitudes assembled on the shore. Oh how much "more"effect may we suppose the gospel would have in such circumstances, than when proclaimed among the proud, the joyful, the honored, even when assembled in the most splendid edifice that wealth and art could finish!
Poole -> Luk 5:1; Luk 5:3-11
Poole: Luk 5:1 - -- Luk 5:1-3 Christ teacheth the people out of Simon’ s ship.
Luk 5:4-11 The miraculous draught of fishes: Simon and the two
sons of Zebedee fo...
Luk 5:1-3 Christ teacheth the people out of Simon’ s ship.
Luk 5:4-11 The miraculous draught of fishes: Simon and the two
sons of Zebedee follow him.
Luk 5:12-15 Christ cleanseth a leper,
Luk 5:16 prayeth in the wilderness,
Luk 5:17-26 answereth the reasonings of the scribes and Pharisees
concerning his forgiving sins, and healeth the sick of
the palsy,
Luk 5:27,28 calleth Levi from the receipt of custom,
Luk 5:29-32 justifieth his eating with publicans and sinners,
Luk 5:33-35 excuses his disciples from fasting for the present,
Luk 5:36-39 and illustrates the matter by a twofold parable.
Ver. 1,2. It is by many interpreters thought that Luke in this history, to Luk 5:11 , doth but give us a larger account of what Matthew, Mat 4:18 , and Mark, Mar 1:16 , told us shortly. The sea of Galilee (as they call it) and the lake of Gennesaret were both the same, receiving the different denomination from the opposite coasts between which it was.

Poole: Luk 5:3-11 - -- Ver. 3-11. Here is a plain and orderly story, related with many circumstances, tending to show us the power and influence of God upon men’ s suc...
Ver. 3-11. Here is a plain and orderly story, related with many circumstances, tending to show us the power and influence of God upon men’ s successes, in their honest and ordinary callings, and also that God hath a command upon the fish in the sea; together with an account of Christ’ s call of Simon Peter to be a preacher of the gospel. The only difficulty is to reconcile this to what Matthew tells us, Mat 4:18,19 , &c. Matthew’ s words are these: And Jesus, walking by the sea of Galilee, saw two brethren, Simon called Peter, and Andrew his brother, casting a net into the sea: for they were fishers. And he saith unto them, Follow me and I will make you fishers of men. And they straightway left their nets, and followed him. And going on from thence, he saw other two brethren, James the son of Zebedee, and John his brother, in a ship with Zebedee their father, mending their nets; and he called them. And they immediately left the ship, and their father, and followed him. Mark’ s relation doth much agree with Matthew’ s. The differences are in these things:
1. Matthew and Mark speak of Christ’ s calling these disciples as he was walking by the sea. Luke seems to mention it as done in the ship.
Answer: Luke doth not say that Christ spake so to Simon in the ship, though he doth indeed mention those words to Simon, before he mentions their bringing the ship to land, because possibly he would give account of all that Christ did or spake together.
2. a) They might be out of the ship, walking by the sea, before he called James and John, whose call Luke doth not mention, but Matthew and Mark alone.
b) Matthew and Mark mention no ships, nor going of Christ into any, nor any draught of fishes.
Answer: Matthew saith that he saw Simon and Andrew casting their nets into the sea. But there is nothing more ordinary than for one evangelist to relate more fully what another repeateth summarily.
3. Matthew and Mark speak of Andrew being with Simon; Luke mentions Simon alone.
Answer: Luke denies not that Andrew was there, and we are sure Simon alone could not manage the nets with such a draught of fishes.
4. Matthew and Mark speak of the calling of Simon, Andrew, James, and John; Luke only of the calling of Simon.
Answer: It doth not follow from thence that they were not called during Christ’ s walk by the sea after he came out of the ship: Matthew and Mark assure us they were.
5. Matthew and Mark say that James and John were mending their nets.
Answer: Luke saith nothing to the contrary, for he doth not mention their call at that instant when Simon was. That immediately after such a draught of fishes their nets should want mending, and they be so employed, is nothing at all strange. So as it was like there was a little distance of time between the call of Peter and the others; yet Luke, omitting some circumstances mentioned by Matthew and Mark, as well as adding much to this history by them omitted, saith (at least) of more than one, they forsook all, and followed him. Hence appeareth that there may be a coherent history, taking in what all three evangelists say, only allowing that Christ came upon the shore, and walked by the sea side some short time, before he called James and John.
The history instructs us:
1. How good a thing it is for men to be employed in their honest callings, though never so mean. There God meets people with blessings.
2. How much it is our duty to yield obedience to God’ s commands, and how advantageous it will prove, how contrary soever they appear to our sense and reason.
3. Upon whom our blessing depends, let our labour be what it will.
4. That it is the work of the ministers of the gospel to catch men, to gain souls to God.
5. How powerful God’ s calls are: They forsook all, and followed him .
For the difference between what John saith, Joh 1:40,41 , of the call of Andrew and Simon, from what the other three evangelists say, we have spoken something in our notes:
See Poole on "Mat 4:18" , and shall add more when we come to that place in John. In short, John speaketh of another time, before that either of them were called to follow Christ.
Lightfoot -> Luk 5:1
Lightfoot: Luk 5:1 - -- And it came to pass, that, as the people pressed upon him to hear the word of God, he stood by the lake of Gennesaret,  [To hear the wor...
And it came to pass, that, as the people pressed upon him to hear the word of God, he stood by the lake of Gennesaret,  
[To hear the word of God, he stood by the lake, etc.] for they were wont to teach also without the synagogue and Beth Midrash; in the highways and in the streets. "Rabban Jochanan Ben Zaccai taught in the street before the Mountain of the Temple the whole day." See the Gloss upon it: "Ben Azzai taught in the streets of Tiberias."  
This custom R. Judah forbade in this canon: "Let not the doctors teach their disciples in the streets." And accordingly he severely rebuked R. Chaijam, because he taught his brothers' sons in the street.  
And yet it is related of the same R. Judah, R. Judah sat labouring in the law [labouring in the word and doctrine; as the expression is 1Ti_5:17], "before the Babylonish synagogue in Zippor: there was a bullock passed by him to the slaughter, and it lowed." This bullock because he did not deliver from the slaughter, he was struck with the toothache for the space of thirteen years.
Haydock: Luk 5:1 - -- What St. Luke here gives till ver. 10, is mentioned purposely to shew on what occasion, and by what miracle, Peter, Andrew, James, and John, were call...
What St. Luke here gives till ver. 10, is mentioned purposely to shew on what occasion, and by what miracle, Peter, Andrew, James, and John, were called. (Maldonatus)

Haydock: Luk 5:2 - -- Washing their nets. See St. Matthew iv. 18. and St. Mark i. 16, where it is said, that Christ saw them when they were casting their nets; i.e. som...
Washing their nets. See St. Matthew iv. 18. and St. Mark i. 16, where it is said, that Christ saw them when they were casting their nets; i.e. some of them were casting, others washing, or mending, their nets. (Witham)

Haydock: Luk 5:3 - -- Why is it mentioned that there were two ships; that one of them was Simon Peter's, that Christ went into that one, and sat down in it, and sitting he ...
Why is it mentioned that there were two ships; that one of them was Simon Peter's, that Christ went into that one, and sat down in it, and sitting he taught out of that ship? No doubt, answer many of the ancient commentators, to shew that the Church was figured by the bark of Peter, and that in it is the chair of Christ, a permanent authority, prefigured by Christ's sitting down, and the true word of God.
Gill: Luk 5:1 - -- And it came to pass, that as the people pressed upon him,.... As Christ went through Galilee, and preached in the synagogues there, great crowds of pe...
And it came to pass, that as the people pressed upon him,.... As Christ went through Galilee, and preached in the synagogues there, great crowds of people attended on him, and they followed him wherever he went; and so large were their numbers, and so very eager were they to see him, and hear him, that they were even troublesome to him, and bore hard upon him, and were ready to press him down, though they had no ill design upon him, but only
to hear the word of God; the scriptures of the Old Testament explained, and the doctrines of the Gospel preached; and which were preached by him, as never were before or since, and in such a manner as were not by the Scribes and Pharisees; and both the matter and manner of his ministry drew a vast concourse of people after him:
he stood by the lake of Gennesaret; the same with the sea of Chinnereth, Num 34:11 where the Targums of Onkelos, Jonathan, and the Jerusalem, call it,
"the holy, blessed God created seven seas, but chose none of them all, but the sea of Gennesaret.''
And indeed, it was a place chosen by Christ, and honoured, and made famous by him, by his preaching at it, his miracles upon it, and showing himself there after his resurrection.

Gill: Luk 5:2 - -- And saw two ships standing by the lake,.... Or two fishing boats; which were, as the Arabic version renders it, "detained by anchors at the shore of t...
And saw two ships standing by the lake,.... Or two fishing boats; which were, as the Arabic version renders it, "detained by anchors at the shore of the lake"; the one belonging to Peter and Andrew, and the other to Zebedee, and his two sons, James and John:
but the fishermen were gone out of them; that is, either the above persons, or their servants:
and were washing their nets; on shore; they having gathered a great deal of soil and filthiness, but had caught no fish; and therefore were cleansing their nets, in order to lay them up, finding it to be in vain to make any further attempts with them at present; and which considered, makes the following miracle the more illustrious.

Gill: Luk 5:3 - -- And he entered into one of the ships, which was Simon's,.... Simon Peter's, and Andrew his brother's, who were both together at this time, though the ...
And he entered into one of the ships, which was Simon's,.... Simon Peter's, and Andrew his brother's, who were both together at this time, though the last is not here mentioned:
and prayed him that he would thrust out a little from the land: as Simon was the owner of the vessel, Christ desired him; he asked the favour of him to put off a little way from shore; though the Arabic and Ethiopic versions render it, "he commanded him", being his Lord and master: To which the Syriac and Persic versions agree; only they make the orders to be given not to Simon singly, but to others, to all in the boat; the former rendering it, and he said, or ordered, that they should carry him a little way from the dry land to the waters; and the latter thus, and said, carry ye the ship from dry land a little into the sea. And which adds, agreeable to the sense enough, though it is not in the text, "when they had executed his command": had done as he entreated, or ordered, and put off the vessel a little way from the shore:
he sat down and taught the people out of the ship; for the boat was not carried neither out of sight, nor beyond the hearing of the people: this method Christ took at another time, and that for conveniency, as now; see Mat 13:1 and whereas he sat while he taught, this was according to the then custom of the times with the Jews; See Gill on Mat 5:1.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Luk 5:1 The image of the crowd pressing around him suggests the people leaning forward to catch Jesus’ every word.

NET Notes: Luk 5:2 Grk “And he.” Here καί (kai) has not been translated because of differences between Greek and English style.

NET Notes: Luk 5:3 Grk “sitting down”; the participle καθίσας (kaqisa") has been translated as a finite verb due to r...
Geneva Bible -> Luk 5:1
Geneva Bible: Luk 5:1 And ( 1 ) it came to pass, that, as the people ( a ) pressed upon him to hear the word of God, he stood by the lake of Gennesaret,
( 1 ) Christ revea...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Luk 5:1-39
TSK Synopsis: Luk 5:1-39 - --1 Christ teaches the people out of Peter's ship;4 in a miraculous taking of fishes, shows how he will make him and his partners fishers of men;12 clea...
MHCC -> Luk 5:1-11
MHCC: Luk 5:1-11 - --When Christ had done preaching, he told Peter to apply to the business of his calling. Time spent on week days in public exercises of religion, need b...
Matthew Henry -> Luk 5:1-11
Matthew Henry: Luk 5:1-11 - -- This passage of story fell, in order of time, before the two miracles we had in the close of the foregoing chapter, and is the same with that which ...
Barclay -> Luk 5:1-11
Barclay: Luk 5:1-11 - --The famous sheet of water in Galilee is called by three names--the Sea of Galilee, the Sea of Tiberias and the Lake of Gennesaret. It is thirteen mi...
Constable -> Luk 4:14--9:51; Luk 4:14--5:12
Constable: Luk 4:14--9:51 - --IV. Jesus' ministry in and around Galilee 4:14--9:50
Luke commenced Jesus' public ministry with His return to Ga...
