00:00
00:00
00:01
Transcript
1/0
We're going to read two passages
of Scripture this evening, both related. The first is in John
chapter 18, and takes up where we left off
this morning, verse 12. We're going to read John 18,
beginning with verse 12, and read through verse 27. This morning we considered the
opening verses of John 18, especially verse 12, where Jesus is bound. Then the band and the captain
and officers of the Jews took Jesus and bound him and led him
away to Annas first, for he was father-in-law to Caiaphas, which
was the high priest that same year. Now Caiaphas was he which
gave counsel to the Jews that it was expedient that one man
should die for the people. And Simon Peter followed Jesus,
and so did another disciple. That disciple was known unto
the high priest, and went in with Jesus into the palace of
the high priest. But Peter stood at the door without. Then went out that other disciple,
which was known unto the high priest, and spake unto her that
kept the door, and brought in Peter. Then saith the damsel
that kept the door unto Peter, art not thou also one of this
man's disciples? He saith, I am not. And the servants
and officers stood there, who had made a fire of coals, for
it was cold, and they warmed themselves, and Peter stood with
them and warmed himself. The high priest then asked Jesus
of his disciples and of his doctrine. Jesus answered him, I speak openly
to the world. I ever taught in the synagogue
and in the temple whether the Jews always resort, and in secret
have I said nothing. I askest thou me. Ask them which
heard me what I have said unto them. Behold, they know what
I said. And when he had thus spoken,
one of the officers which stood by struck Jesus with the palm
of his hand, saying, Answerest thou the high priest so? Jesus
answered him, If I have spoken evil, bear witness of the evil. But if well, why smitest thou
me? Now Annas had sent him bound
unto Caiaphas the high priest. And Simon Peter stood and warmed
himself. They said, therefore, unto him,
art not thou also one of his disciples? He denied it and said,
I am not. One of the servants of the high
priest, being his kinsman, whose ear Peter cut off, Seth, Did
not I see thee in the garden with him? Peter then denied again,
and immediately the cock crew. And now we turn to Luke chapter
22. And it's in this passage that
our text is found. We'll begin reading with verse
54. Luke 22, verse 54. Then took they him, and led him,
and brought him into the high priest's house. And Peter followed
afar off. And when they had kindled a fire
in the midst of the hall, and were sat down together, Peter
sat down among them. But a certain maid beheld him
as he sat by the fire and earnestly looked upon him and said, this
man was also with him. And he denied him, saying, woman,
I know him not. And after a little while, another
saw him and said, thou art also of them. And Peter said, man,
I am not. And about the space of one hour
after another, confidently affirmed, saying, of a truth, this fellow
also was with him, for he is a Galilean. And what follows
is our text. And Peter said, man, I know not
what thou sayest. And immediately, while he yet
spake, the cock crew. And the Lord turned, and looked
upon Peter. And Peter remembered the word
of the Lord, how he had said unto him, before the cock crow,
thou shalt deny me thrice. And Peter went out and wept bitterly. This event, beloved people of
God, concerning the denial of Jesus Christ by his disciple
Peter, is among the most significant events associated with the crucifixion
of Jesus. That's evident because like the
betrayal of the other disciple, Judas, all the Gospel accounts
record this event in considerable detail. Not only that, but the
significance is also evident when, if you consult the Gospels,
you will discover that there is much that leads up to this
denial and really belong to the denial itself really develops
over several weeks when the Lord rebukes Peter for Peter's objection
and opposition to the instruction of Jesus that soon he will be
captured that he would suffer and he would die. And to that
objection, the Lord responds, get thee behind me, Satan. Then there is the very bold denial
of Jesus himself, or Peter himself, to Jesus' own words. That when
Jesus predicted that he would deny him Peter himself objected
to that very prophecy of the Lord as if he never heard it. Then there was the failure of
Peter to heed the warning of Jesus in the garden, to watch
and pray. And then there is the rebuke
of the Lord to Peter even at his own capture and being bound. There are two especially related
events that we really didn't read, they're hinted at, that
help give this event its significance. And the first is the Lord's prophesying and
warning about this event in the upper room. that shows that this
is not simply a story about one who stumbles or falls into sin. In fact, it's not really even
a story about stubborn pride. But it is an event that concerns
Jesus Himself. that Jesus is making clear that
he must be betrayed, not only, but he must be denied. He must
be denied by his disciples and denied so that we might be accepted. The other event that lends significance
to the denial of Peter is the Lord's forgiveness of him. Really also Peter's repentance
and the Lord's forgiveness of him. That's hinted at in our
own text where we read that Peter immediately went out and wept
bitterly, using almost identical words to those of Judas, who
upon the betrayal of Jesus also wept bitterly. The difference
is that one is true repentance and the other is not. And that
explains then the Lord's forgiveness of Peter, even on Easter morning
when he makes a special trip to see Peter and speak to him. And then even the final instruction
of Jesus to Peter in Galilee before he ascends up into heaven.
Besides the significance of this event for Jesus himself and for
the truth of the Holy Gospel, it is a fitting event for us
to consider on the occasion tonight because of who it is that will
deny Jesus. When the text indicates that
this is Peter, we should not forget that this is the name
the Lord himself gave to him. The Lord gave to Simon the name
Peter and the name Cephas. Both of those names, Peter and
Cephas, mean the same thing. A rock or a stone. And about this same Peter, called
by Jesus himself the rock or the stone, he made confession. He was the one, notably, that
confessed that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the living God, did
so as the leader of the disciples, and about which confession Jesus
Himself said that upon the rock of that confession that He would
build His church. But now it's that one, the rock,
the stone, The great confessor of our Lord Jesus Christ, which
confession he builds his church, that one now is the one who denies
Jesus. Consider with me, denied by the
rock. Denied by the rock. We consider
first the fact. The, what I call significant
fact or event, as well as the occasion, of this denial of Jesus,
who is the true Rock of our salvation, by one called the Rock, is well
evidenced in the four Gospels. Peter, the Gospels make plain,
the Rock, Cephas, the stone, will stumble and stumble mightily
over Christ, the rock of offense. And so many details about that
are covered in the Gospels. We know this denial occurs in
the night, hours after Jesus is arrested, and only hours before
He will be crucified by the Romans that Jesus, after He is bound,
which we considered this morning, Jesus is taken back to Jerusalem
by the guards, and He's brought first to the house of Annas,
who was formerly high priest. Annas, we know, was not a Levite
as he should have been, but rather a political appointee of none
other than Quirinius. You remember him, for it was
his decree, this provincial ruler of Syria, that brought Mary and
Joseph to Bethlehem to pay their taxes. That very same man is
the one who appointed this Annas to be the high priest of the
Jews. We know that he held that position
from the year 7 AD to the year 37 AD, when at the age of 67,
he retires and turns over the office of high priest to his
son-in-law, KFS. And likely, Jesus is brought
to his house first because, among other things, he remained the
head of the Sanhedrin, the judicial rulers of the Jews. The apostles
we know had all but abandoned Jesus. As he had predicted in
fulfillment of Scripture, they shall take the shepherd and the
sheep will be scattered. That includes Peter. who earlier
was so willing to take up the sword and die for Christ with
that sword. We read that whereas John had
left with Jesus and the band of men, Peter had not. Peter had slunk off and walked
far behind that band of men in the darkness so as not to be
seen. So that when he arrives at the house of Annas, the door
is closed And he stands at the door until the other disciple,
who is John, tells one to let him in. John tells us that he
himself was known by the high priest Caiaphas, And that accounts
for his ability to simply enter into the house with the armed
band and then apparently to have free reign within that house
during Jesus' hearing before Annas. And also his knowing the
name of the servant of the high priest whose ear Peter cut off. John knows his name because he's
known and knows Caiaphas. It will be also him who knows
that it's one of Melchizedek's cousins, his kin, who identifies
Peter there by the fire and accuses him also of being a ruler or
a follower of Jesus. He recognized Peter from being
in the garden that night. We read that there are three
distinct times in which Peter denies the Lord, exactly as the
Lord had prophesied. Before the cock crows, thou shalt
deny me thrice. John notes that although they
occur during the two different hearings of Jesus before the
Jews, one before Annas and then the other before Caiaphas, that
they all basically occur at the same time. We may note that the
first hearing of Jesus is really a preliminary hearing in which
they make sure that they have the right man. They ask Jesus
about His disciples and His doctrine. And likely that this is occurring
so that the Jews have time to assemble the real judge who will
be Caiaphas, and the entire body of 70, the Sanhedrin. This buys
them some time, so that after he is done appearing before Annas,
then he is brought before Kephas. These denials occur in the hall
or a courtroom in that house, an open-air courtroom around
a fire. They occur around an open fire,
below and between the two upper room apartments of Annas and
Caiaphas. And there a group of servants,
we read, and officials had gathered to warm themselves in the cool
nighttime air." Besides the number of times that
Peter denies the Lord, the main emphasis of all the accounts
is that Peter emphatically denies the Lord these three times before
certain men. The Gospels go through great
lengths to point this out. The first is an ordinary servant,
a maid, who is simply charged with keeping the door who questions
Peter after letting him in and bringing him over to the fire.
And he, before her and before her questions, denies the Lord
the first time. The second occurs sometimes later
when, again, another servant notices Peter's Galilean accent
and again associates him with Jesus, and again, Jesus or Peter
denies that he knows anything to do with Jesus, knows him,
or has anything to do with him. And the third we read occurs
about an hour later, when this servant related to Malchus, his
cousin, remembers that he has seen Peter in the garden, and
accuses him of that. That's when the third denial
occurs and immediately the cock crows. The point of the Gospels
in recording all this detail is in the first place to show
how easily and how repeatedly Peter had denied the Lord. The point of all this is to show
that Peter had not denied the Lord under great duress, perhaps
at the threat of death, before the point of a sword. Peter did
not deny the Lord Jesus Christ when he was put to a single choice,
deny Christ or die, but he denied the Lord in circumstances and
in situations and before individuals that were not a threat to him,
where he could have easily confessed the Lord Jesus Christ without
any consequences to himself whatsoever. That's the point that John is
making by recording his own presence at the palace. John records that
to show how he himself was not threatened. He himself knew the
high priest. He was easily allowed into the
house. He had apparently free reign
of the house. He perhaps also was challenged
or men knew without a doubt that he was associated with the Lord
Jesus Christ. The same cannot be said of Peter
Peter is there, and Peter denies the Lord before those who are
nothing but common servants, men and women of no account. The only reason Peter could give
if asked why he denied the Lord would be his own personal embarrassment
over what had happened to the Lord. That's the point of all
this. The point of this is that Jesus,
or Peter, who had made wonderful confession of Jesus, that Peter,
who without a doubt loved his Lord greatly, Peter, who was
willing to take up the sword before an armed band and defend
his Lord to the death, when faced with three ordinary servants
in this seemingly unthreatening occasion, not only once, but
three times denies the Lord Jesus. The above also is pointed out
to show how serious then was the sin. Not once, but three
times he denies his Lord. And then the accounts also show,
even those that we read, that each time Peter denies Jesus
more forcefully and more vehemently. One gospel writer even recording
that in his final denial, it is accompanied with cursing and
with oaths. Why? Well, because this is an
example of the essential truth about all sin. An essential truth
not only about how easily one sins against the Lord, but also
that unless one repents of that sin, that sin continues, and
each time it continues. it becomes easier to sin, and
that sin becomes more terrible, more forthright, more outright. That's what's being taught here,
the very truth about sin itself, that such is our heart. that
unless we recognize sin and are brought to repentance, that sin
remains and it continues and it comes forth more easily and
more easily and with more vehemence. And each time is a greater denial
of our Lord Jesus Christ. That, in the first place, it
also teaches how serious is that sin, although it was no longer
enforced, Both cursing and swearing and breaking of oaths and lying
under oath were all serious crimes, even punishable by death, according
to Old Testament law. All blasphemy, all cursing, all
swearing, all lying under oath is essentially denial of our
Lord Jesus Christ, which denial of our Lord Jesus Christ is worthy
of death. We might look at these events
and minimize and say, not much here. Far worse is the crime
and the sin of Judas, who kisses Jesus in betrayal. That's not
really the record of Peter's denial at all. The point of all
the accounts, the point of our text is far worse, is the sin
of Peter. The seriousness of that sin is
compounded not only by the number of times it's committed, but
the fact that both the number of times and the fact that Peter
would deny Jesus is all foretold by Jesus and Peter is warned
about it. That too adds to the sin of Peter. The Lord had warned Peter about
the possibility that Satan tempt him and tempt him greatly. Satan,
he says, get thee behind me. Satan, he says, wants to have
you, Peter, and sift you like wheat. Watch, Peter. Pray, Peter. Peter, you're going
to deny me. No, I am not. I would never do
that. Peter, even before the cock crows,
even before morning, three times you will deny me. And still Peter
denies him. Peter ignores all those warnings. And the question is why? How
could this happen? How could it be that Peter so
easily denies the Lord when his life isn't being threatened,
when simply questioned by some common servants? How could he
deny the Lord the exact number of times that the Lord himself
had predicted, had warned him about? And the answer is because
Peter trusted in himself. The answer is that Peter did
not trust in Jesus Christ. He was looking to himself. He
saw himself as the rock. He saw himself as the solid stone. He saw himself as the leader
of the disciples. He saw himself as the one who
would make himself stand. which explains why even when
the Lord says to him, Peter, watch and pray, why he, of all
the disciples, did not watch and pray, but fell asleep along
with the others, content and sure of himself. As I said, in
many ways, the sin of Peter is far worse than the sin of Judas
Iscariot, for which he would be punished with an eternity
in hell. Judas is warned twice. Peter is warned again and again
and again of the devices of Satan. and that he would deny the Lord. Judas betrayed Jesus, Judas betrayed
Jesus, enamored with an earthly kingdom, which he became disillusioned
with Jesus about when he understood that he would die. Peter denied
Jesus simply out of personal embarrassment. What's the significance of all
this? And it is several. First, with regard to warnings.
One cannot look at this passage and see any kind of positive
fruit or understanding of it unless one sees, first of all,
the warnings to us, even as there were warnings to Peter himself. And let us remember how Peter
received those warnings, even as we receive those warnings
this evening. First of all, the warning about
how easily we can fall into the same sin before men. We need to be warned, beloved,
by this passage from Holy Scripture, that we need not be threatened
with our life and property. We need not be put to the blade
We need not be sent to the executioner before we are tempted to deny
our Lord Jesus Christ. But we are tempted at all times
and in all places to deny our Lord Jesus Christ, indeed, in
all our life. And the warning is, let him that
thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall. And the idea of
that is not that if we think we stand, we may perhaps possibly
fall, but you will fall. It's a warning that we can easily
deny Jesus with hardly saying a word. One need not teach great
false doctrines. One need not fall into great
gross and public sins to deny our Lord. And we must know also
that if we persist in denying Him, we will only deny Him more
easily and with more vehemence and with stronger language, even
perhaps cursing and swearing and with false oaths. There is
a warning also about why it is so easy to fall into the sin
of denying our Lord Jesus. In the first place, because of
who we are. Oh, we may be named wonderful
things by our Lord Jesus Christ. Peter was indeed the rock, Jesus
said so. Peter indeed made an amazing
confession of our Lord Jesus Christ, even as we all do. A
confession that can only be made by faith. A confession that can
only be made by the Spirit of our Lord Jesus Christ, for no
man can confess that Jesus is the Son of God except by the
Holy Spirit. And yet, we can easily deny the
very Lord that we confess. Why? Because we ourselves are
weak. That's the lesson we need to
learn, that we need to remember, and that's the lesson that Peter
would learn and had forgotten when he denied the Lord three
times. And remember now, that's true
of us as regenerated children of God. Indeed, this is the very
same truth that I included in my prayer this morning, and the
truth that we find in the very last Lord's Day of the Heidelberg
Catechism, where it covers the prayer. Remember, Jesus said,
watch and pray. Pray what? Pray, the Lord taught
his disciples, including Peter, lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil. And what does that mean? The
catechism says that means because we are so weak, we cannot stand
a moment. And besides that, because our
mortal enemies, the devil, the world, and our own flesh Peter's
flesh, not just Satan, but Peter's own flesh was assaulting him. Therefore, we pray for Jesus
to uphold us. Not only is it easy for us to
fall into such sins because of ourselves, but because of the
strength of our adversary. Peter is going to be the apostle
who later writes to watch out, to be on the lookout at all times
for Satan, who walks about as a roaring lion, seeking whom
he may devour. Peter knew what he was talking
about firsthand. Jesus had warned him about Satan,
had warned him again and again about Satan, and the reality
of Satan But Peter had ignored those warnings because he couldn't
see Satan directly. Because he was sure of himself,
he thought he could resist Satan in his own strength, but not
so. Do you understand who Satan is?
Do you understand he doesn't fight fair? Do you understand
he knows you better than you know you? He seeks out those
who are vulnerable. He seeks us out when we're most
vulnerable. He appears when there is a crisis. He shows up in times of sorrow
and distress, times of sadness, times of doubt, even as he did
with Peter. He struck. and he sank his fangs
in exactly at the right moment. So this man, this rock, this
leader of the disciples could fall so easily and so terribly. He seeks out and he exploits
our own particular weaknesses, whether as in the case of Peter,
using his own impetuous, proud nature, or our own besetting
sins and weaknesses, whatever they might be. Whatever they
might be, He will use them, He will exploit them, He will use
them to make us deny our Lord. He also seeks, we ought to understand,
high value and important targets. There was a reason why Satan
sought out Peter. There was a reason why Jesus
himself said that Satan desired to sift him like wheat. And the answer is because Satan
knew he was the rock. Satan knew he was the oldest.
Satan knew he was the disciple that all the other disciples
looked up to. Satan knew of his importance to Jesus Christ, that
he was one of the three there near Jesus in the garden. So
also today, Satan doesn't waste his time lurking about in churches
that have all fallen away, doesn't spend his time trying to tempt
and bring down people and individuals who call themselves Christian
that spend their life denying Jesus Christ. No, he attacks
those who confess the name of Jesus Christ, who are his disciples,
who follow him, who show they're willing to defend him, who show
indeed that they love the Lord. There is a warning to avail ourselves
liberally of the means by which to escape such temptations. I
said this morning that in the event where Jesus was bound that
we might be freed, that part of the gospel truth of that is
that Jesus always gives us a way of escape in all temptations. The warning here, therefore,
is to avail ourselves of them. How does one do that? Well, as
Jesus said, watch and pray. Now when Jesus said that, He
didn't mean simply watch out for the devil who walks about
as a roaring lion seeking whom he may devour, but watch for
a way of escape. Watch for the temptation. Watch
for the trial. And in that trial and in that
temptation, watch for the real way of escape. And the way of
escape is never the way of denying our Lord Jesus Christ. Judas found that out. It's rather
the way of confession. The way of trust in our Lord
Jesus Christ. the way of entirely relying upon
Him and Him alone and not at all ourselves. And that's why
His second admonition to Peter was, and pray, and pray. And that's what our Lord taught. That's what He was teaching.
When He told His disciples, He taught Peter himself. Pray not
simply for daily bread, pray not simply for the forgiveness
of sins, but pray, lead us not into temptation, but deliver
us from evil. And that's why also this incident
too is connected to the garden. It really begins in that garden
as we saw this morning. What was the Lord doing in the
garden? He was praying. And why was He
praying? He who is the Son of God, He
who is truly the rock, the only rock upon which God builds His
church, the stone of stumbling and the rock of offense, that
rejected by the builders He upon which the entire edifice of the
church rests, the Son of God, perfect, why is He praying? And the answer is, because He
was in all points tempted like as we are. That's why. Jesus was being attacked. That's
why he was in agony in the garden. Jesus knew what awaited him,
not merely death, but death under the rejection of men, death on
the accursed tree, death under the wrath of God. And so he prays,
and you can be certain that one important part of his prayer
was that he be not led into temptation, but delivered from evil, praying
the very truth of our own Heidelberg Catechism, that God sustain him. There's also a warning here,
beloved, about the seriousness of this particular sin. There's a danger that we minimize
this sin because if you're honest with yourself, and I'm honest
with myself, and we consider ourselves truly We know that
we joined Peter among the ranks of those who have denied our
Lord Jesus Christ, and probably not just three times, but many
times. Many times that we have shut
our mouth. Many times that we perhaps opened
our mouth with open denial. denied him by our walk of life,
as well as our confession. And one reason this event is
recorded in all the Gospel accounts, and why it's so closely linked
to betrayal of Judas, is so that we react with horror and disgust,
understanding the real atrocity and the wickedness and the seriousness
of that sin. That was the warning of Jesus. Surely Peter, when the Lord looked
at him and he wept bitterly, remembered not only the words
of Jesus three times, Peter, Three times, Peter, in spite
of all your bold predictions and in spite of all your bluster,
three times you're going to deny me. But he remembered also what
the Lord said. He that denies me before men,
I will deny before my Father. You don't think those words rang
in his ears? They ought to ring in our ears
also. we ought to be horrified that we would deny our Lord Jesus
Christ. We may rightly ask ourselves,
will the Lord then carry through and deny me before the Father? And there's a warning about that.
Because the denial of us before the Father would be our everlasting
destruction Jesus is indeed going to deny Judas before the Father
and say, depart from me. I don't know who you are. And
Judas might reply, look, Lord, look at all the wonderful things
I did in your name. Jesus is going to say, I don't
know you. And so serious is the sin. But therein also lies the great,
great, great news of the gospel. The gospel of the absolute sovereignty
of our Lord Jesus Christ in this whole matter of salvation. The very reason why he is going
to the cross. If there's one thing that stands
out here, And the whole course of events here is that Jesus
is King. Jesus is sovereign. Jesus is
sovereign over all the events in time and in history, and especially
those concerning His death. That's why the prophecy is emphasized. That's why it's said that all
His apostles, all the disciples were offended that night in fulfillment
of Scripture, that God would smite the shepherd and the sheep
would be scattered This is why it's recorded that Peter said,
even if everybody else would be offended, not I. And Jesus
said, oh yes you will, three times before the cock crows. Jesus is sovereign over the salvation
of Peter. And here we see that salvation
is a matter of mercy and of grace, and mercy and grace alone. What explains the salvation of
Peter, for Peter will be saved? It can't be that his sin was
less than his fellow disciple Judas. Some think so. Some think, well, of course,
Judas was perished. Judas perished everlastingly
in hell. Was damned. His sin was worse. No, it wasn't. It isn't the fact
that he was a disciple and the other wasn't. The Bible presents
these two stories side by side so that we see there is one thing
alone that explains the repentance as well as the forgiveness of
Peter. Because Peter will repent. His bitter tears are bitter tears
of repentance. Judas' bitter tears were not. They were the bitter tears of
unbelief. Proof, by the way, that bitter tears all by themselves
mean nothing. They mean nothing. The issue
is what's in the heart. Well, what was in Peter's heart
was true sorrow of repentance. And we know that because the
Lord afterwards forgives him. The Lord makes clear on at least
three occasions that he not only forgives Peter, But he restores
Peter to the office that he really forfeited by his sin of denial,
because that is what denial really deserves, deposition from office. But now what explains that? And
it's this. I will have mercy upon whom I
will have mercy, and whom I will, I will harden. That's the explanation. It's the only explanation. And therein lies the power of
the warnings. The warnings aren't there so
that we're frightened into terror, so that we run and that we doubt,
but rather the exact opposite, so that we say, if this is the
case, if this is true, and it is, then I can rely for my salvation
upon only one and one alone. You see, Jesus must be denied. There's the blessedness. There's the salvation. There's
the entire significance. Jesus knows he must be denied. Even as we considered this morning,
Jesus must be bound. Why? So that we might be freed. So also, he must be denied and
denied by the rock, denied by one who confesses him, denied
by one even who loves him and believes in him. Why? So that we might be accepted. so that we might be received
in spite of our denials. The teaching here is the grand
teaching of Scripture that there is repentance. And God works
repentance. That repentance is the grand
work of God. And if you doubt that, did you
see? Do you remember what triggers
the bitter tears? With Judas, it was basically
his treatment by the Sanhedrin. He thought he would be a hero
and found out he wasn't a hero. He was just a dupe and a pawn. Peter receives a look, and only
a look. He denies three times. He denies
his Lord and Savior even as he's on trial for his life. And Jesus
has the time, knowing of course everything that's transpired,
to look back and look into the eyes of Peter. And Peter knew. Peter knew at that moment that
he had not just denied any man, but his own Savior. And that
melted his heart with those bitter tears, showing it. The gospel is that in the way
of repentance, there is also forgiveness. That exactly because
of who Christ is, that even when one denies him a terrible sin
worthy of damnation, He is forgiven. He's not forgiven because he
repents. That's not the basis of his forgiveness. But his Christ
also forgives him and tells him he's forgiven as Christ would
do with Peter. And even more so we're going
to see with regard to Peter that indeed will be the rock, a pillar
in the church. a leader of the apostles. He
will be the one appointed to bring the gospel to the Jews.
He will die a martyr, as Jesus himself prophesies, for the name
of Jesus Christ, never again to deny him. What's the lesson
there? And the lesson is that forgiveness is the power to live
a new and holy life. Where does that strength come
from? Where does that power come from? And it comes from the wonderful
words of Jesus Christ to Peter, you're forgiven. I hold not your
sins to your account, exactly because I was denied, so also
you are accepted. Amen, let us pray. Our Father
which art in heaven, O Lord our God, we thank thee for our Lord
Jesus Christ, and that he was denied, even denied by us, and
in that denial is our own acceptance that he did this. He did this
for us, his beloved. Did this in his great mercy and
grace for us, so undeserving because of our own denials and
wickedness and sin against him. Pray, O Lord, forgive our sins.
Deliver us from evil. Keep us from temptation. These things we pray, O Lord,
in Jesus' name, amen.
Denied by the Rock
Series Confession of Faith
| Sermon ID | 422312573843 |
| Duration | 52:51 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - PM |
| Bible Text | Luke 22:60-62 |
| Language | English |
Documents
Add a Comment
Comments
No Comments
© Copyright
2026 SermonAudio.