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Processing fish and calling apostles on the Sea of Galilee
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The Sea of Galilee - photo by Deseret Connect
When Jesus was born, the largest and most important city on the Sea of Galilee was Magdala perhaps the same town as the New Testaments Dalmanutha and Magadan on the western shore.

Josephus Jewish War says that the Roman general Cassius (later one of the assassins of Julius Caesar) took 30,000 captives from Taricheae, as Magdala was known to classical authors. That number may be exaggerated but, plainly, the town was sizable.

The name Taricheae derives from the Greek word tarichos, which refers to salted, smoked, or dried meat (especially fish). The Greek geographer Strabo (d. A.D. 24) commented on the towns excellent fish, which were very highly regarded even in the markets of Rome.

Around A.D. 20, however, Magdalas status would be threatened when the Roman client-king Herod Antipas, son of Herod the Great, founded a new city called Tiberias which he named in flattery of the emperor Tiberius Caesar.

But Magdala wasnt overshadowed immediately, and its connection with Christianity guarantees that it will never be wholly eclipsed. It is, for example, very likely the place from which Mary Magdalene received her name. Moreover, as observed in Biblical Archaeology Review by Marcela Zapata-Meza and Rosaura Sanz-Rincn of the Universidad Anhuac Mxico, which conducts archaeological research there, Although there is no archaeological evidence that Jesus visited Magdala, it is almost certain that he did.

Why? Not only because of Mary Magdalene. Referring to the Galilee region generally, Matthew 9:35 tells us that Jesus went about all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and healing every sickness and every disease among the people. In 2009, during the construction of a new hotel, a small first-century synagogue was discovered at Magdala. We can be quite confident that Jesus preached in that newly found synagogue.

The verses immediately following Matthew 9:35 read as follows:

But when he saw the multitudes, he was moved with compassion on them, because they fainted, and were scattered abroad, as sheep having no shepherd. Then saith he unto his disciples, The harvest truly is plenteous, but the labourers are few; pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that he will send forth labourers into his harvest (see Matthew 9:36-38).

An intriguing article published by S. Kent Brown, a retired Brigham Young University New Testament scholar with many years of experience in Israel and the region around it, suggests that Jesus took practical action to recruit more workers for his cause, and that Magdala or Taricheae may have played a central part in that (see The Saviors Compassion, Ensign, March 2011).

Capernaum, where the future apostles Simon Peter, Andrew, James, John and Matthew lived, sits approximately six miles northward along the lake shore. It was a fishing village of perhaps about 1,500 people, and boats regularly set out from it onto what the New Testament sometimes calls the lake of Gennesaret.

The story to which Brown calls attention is the account, often called the miraculous draught of fishes, recounted at Luke 5:1-11. They had had no luck, but Jesus tells Peter and his associates to cast their net one more time. Doubtful, but already deeply impressed with Jesus, they do so and now they gather so many fish that their two boats nearly sink with the weight of the catch.

Verse 11 concludes the story by saying that, when they had brought their ships to land, they forsook all, and followed him.

But surely they didnt just wastefully leave all those fish aboard their boats. Instead, Brown suggests, they would have taken the fish for processing very likely to Magdala (or Taricheae), the most important center for such work in the area. A catch of fish as large as Luke describes would have sustained the families of the fishermen for months, if not for perhaps even a year or two.

Jesus would shortly call these men to leave their familiar Galilee in order to be fishers of men (Matthew 4:19). So the miracle of the wondrous catch of fish may have been not only intended to demonstrate Christs power over nature but designed as a practical measure to care for the apostles families while they were away.
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