Holy Week Through the Eyes Of…Sample
Holy Week – Through the Eyes of Peter
“‘But go, tell His disciples and Peter...’” (Mark 16:7 NIV)
What better way to gain a new perspective and deepen our appreciation for what the Lord did in giving His life as a ransom for us than by looking at the events surrounding His death and resurrection through the eyes of the people who were actually there?
Now, Peter had fled with the rest of the disciples when Jesus was arrested in the Garden of Gethsemane; but he followed at a distance when they were taking Jesus to the house of the high priest, where Jesus would be beaten and falsely accused. Trying to follow Jesus at a distance is a mistake. You’re going to get in trouble very quickly. You have to walk closely with the Lord in order to stay true to Him and to His Word.
Peter’s problem actually started much earlier during Jesus’ three and-a-half years of ministry. He thought he was strong and that he would never fail. In fact, he had told Jesus as much when Jesus told the disciples that they would all scatter at the end. Oh, but Peter had been fervent in his insistence that that wouldn’t be the case with him.
Fast forward to that fateful night, when Peter was now warming himself by the fire in the courtyard of the high priest. Someone asked him if he had been with Jesus, and he denied it. Here was another unforced error: Peter was hanging around people he was not supposed to be with, which led to his denying Jesus again ... and again!
How many times are you going to say you don’t know Him, Peter, and even call down curses on yourself in the process? That was a weak moment for Peter. He was put in the pressure cooker, and he just broke down. How bitterly he wept when he realized that Jesus’ words to him had been fulfilled: “Before the rooster crows twice, you will disown me three times” (Mark 14:30).
Thankfully for Peter—and for us—God’s love is deeper than our sin. The Lord can pull us out of the worse pit. He can lift us up out of the muck and mire. When we’re at our worst, He’s at His best.
After Jesus rose from the dead, the angel said to the women who had arrived at the tomb, “Go, tell the disciples and Peter [that Jesus is risen]!” Why Peter? Oh, Peter needed to be ministered to in a special way. After his epic failure, he thought that the Lord would never want to see him again. But the Bible tells us that Jesus actually made a special appearance to Peter—not to rebuke him, but to reassure him of His love. God’s love is unconditional.
So what would Peter tell us today if he could? He would tell us that even though we fail and are unfaithful, God remains faithful.
Let’s make the words of the great hymn our prayer today: “Great is Thy faithfulness, great is Thy faithfulness! Morning by morning, new mercies I see! All I have needed, Thy hand hath provided. Great is Thy faithfulness, Lord, unto me!”
To be continued…
Scripture
About this Plan
"Holy Week Through the Eyes of… " is a new, six-part devotional series by Pastor Jim Cymbala that looks at the days leading up to the death and resurrection of Jesus through the eyes of those who were there to witness it. See what Peter, Pilate, the thief on the cross, and others might tell us today about the central and most important event in all of human history.
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