Judas and Peter
Be careful what you turn to when you fail. At least two choices come to mind, turning to
remorse and being seized by it or turning to feel real sorrow, repentance and
flowing into God’s grace. Quietness and
reflection can move us to see beyond the current failure. If God our Father gave Jesus on the cross to
provide forgiveness of sins, let us not waste it. Failure does not mean we are forsaken by God,
but that God can power us with more mercy.
Sorrow is ours during the night, but joy comes in the morning. Above all we must guard our hearts as the
Proverb writer said. The real difference
between Judas and Peter is not who chose them. Jesus chose both. It was not their training. The
only perfect teacher, Jesus, trained them both.
It is not one was a sinner and one was not. They both were and we all are. The difference is that Judas was seized with
remorse and cut off his ability to receive and pass along the grace of
God. Peter stayed in the listening mode
to Jesus and heard him say, “Feed my sheep.”
Much good work was still available for Peter and for us.
Matthew 27.
Larry Wishard
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