John 21.
I want to speak this morning,
the Lord helping me,
on Jesus restores Peter.
Jesus restores Peter.
John 21:15-23.
Lord, help us now.
John 21:15-23.
"And when they had finished breakfast,
Jesus said to Simon Peter,
'Simon, son of John,
do you love Me more than these?'
He said to Him,
'Yes Lord, You know that I love You.'
He said to him, 'Feed My lambs.'
He said to him a second time,
'Simon, son of John, do you love Me?'
He said to Him,
'Yes Lord, You know that I love You.'
He said to him,
'Tend My sheep.'
He said to him a third time,
'Simon, son of John, do you love Me?'
Peter was grieved
because He said to him the third time,
'Do you love Me?'
And he said to Him,
'Lord, You know everything.
You know that I love You.'
Jesus said to him,
'Feed My sheep.
Truly, I say to you,
when you were young,
you used to dress yourself
and walk wherever you wanted,
but when you are old,
you will stretch out your hands
and another will dress you
and carry you where
you do not want to go.'
This He said to show by what kind of death
he (that is Peter) was to glorify God.
And after saying this, He said to him,
'Follow Me.'
Peter turned and saw the
disciple whom Jesus loved
following them,
the one who had been
reclining at table close to Him,
who had said, 'Lord, who
is it that will betray you?'
when Peter saw him, he said to Jesus,
'Lord, what about this man?'
Jesus said to him,
'If it is My will that he
remain until I come,
what is that to you?
You follow Me.'
So the saying spread abroad
among the brothers
that this disciple was not to die.
Yet, Jesus did not say to him
that he was not to die,
but if it is My will that he
remains until I come,
what is that to you?"
During the 40 days
between the resurrection
and the ascension of Christ,
where was Jesus?
Well, He was not as commonly thought
on earth continually for
40 days in Jerusalem.
He's now after the resurrection
what has been called
the Heavenly Man in Paradise.
And He will now over 40 days
make appearances in and around Jerusalem.
He appears to many.
That is, He surprised
unannounced appearances.
He just pops into locked rooms.
He just suddenly appears here and there.
Two guys walking on the Emmaus road,
grieving, sharing,
suddenly this Stranger appears,
starts walking with them -
He's making appearances.
Resurrection appearances.
The Gospels say that when they
were in the upper room at one point,
He came and stood among them.
How many appearances were there?
After the resurrection,
before the ascension?
Well, 14 are mentioned in the Gospels,
in the book of Acts, Galatians,
and 1 Corinthians 15.
Different days and different times
the Lord appeared.
First to Mary Magdalene,
second to some women
returning from the tomb,
third to Peter, fourth appearance
was to the two on the Emmaus road,
fifth appearance was
to 10 of the disciples
in the upper room,
the sixth appearance was 11 of them -
remember Thomas wasn't
there the first time -
11 disciples in the upper room,
the seventh appearance
is this one - John 21.
The disciples fishing on
the Sea of Tiberius.
This is here in John 21.
And there are six more,
including appearances to James,
Stephen, Saul of Tarsus,
and John on the isle of Patmos.
And then the biggest group
Paul interestingly mentions
in 1 Corinthians 15,
how the Lord appeared to over 500
at one time.
So here in John 21 is His 7th appearance
where the disciples are fishing,
they've gone fishing.
And virtually all of this
chapter of John 21
records this appearance,
this event, this experience
of the Lord with the disciples
and particularly with Peter.
The entire scene - He comes to all of them
and He's on the shore, they're fishing,
He says come, let's have
breakfast together.
And they recognize that it's the Lord.
So this account is about Him
appearing to all of them,
but then He's got His eye
particularly on one of them.
And the entire scene is especially meant
to restore Peter fully,
where Peter knows it -
and not only where he knows it,
where he feels it
and he experiences full restoration.
You know, I'm a baseball fan.
My son was a good baseball player,
and Philip Neeley and I,
we have an annual trip
to watch one pro baseball game.
I enjoy baseball.
We usually talk more about the Gospel
and the kingdom
than we do watch baseball,
but I like baseball.
A triple in baseball is more rare
even than a home run.
Well, Peter had a triple denial of Jesus.
And remember he went out and did what?
He wept bitterly.
If you documented all of Peter's
major responses to the
Lord Jesus in 3 years,
where he was right or he was wrong,
where he was victorious
or he was a failure,
at the calming of the sea in the boat,
his response was:
"Depart from me, Lord,
for I am a sinful man."
That's a victory.
That's a right response.
And then he says later
when the Lord asked him:
"Who do men say that I am?"
"Peter, what about you?"
"You are the Christ, the
Son of the living God."
Victory.
Right.
"Flesh and blood have
not revealed this to you.
My Father in heaven revealed this to you."
And then, Peter turns around
this same hour when the
Lord has told them plainly
He's going to be rejected,
He's going to suffer and die.
Peter takes Him aside, and Mark says
that Peter began to rebuke Him.
And the Lord interrupts
him and rebukes him
and says, "Get behind Me, Satan!"
Failure.
Peter's failure.
Walking on the water,
sinking in unbelief.
Failure.
Discussing who's going to be the greatest.
Failure.
Self-confidently affirming:
"I will never fail. I will never deny You.
Even if everyone else does, I will not."
Failure.
He denies the Lord three
times with an oath,
failure, failure, failure.
Seven of these nine times were failures,
like a necklace that you
might have stringed together -
two nice pearls with seven
ugly thorns on the necklace.
Well, the pearls are nice
and they're wonderful,
but it would be better if there
weren't the ugly thorns, right?
What would that final massive failure
of denials do to Peter's heart?
And where did it leave him spiritually?
We don't know.
The Gospel writers don't
give us an insight.
They don't give us details.
They don't give us Peter's
testimony about it.
But what happens in the heart and mind
and emotions and in the soul
of a believer who stumbles so much?
Who fails?
Who in weak moments
makes wrong choices?
And is not even themselves?
And they sin so miserably?
You know, if the other disciples
had been around the fire that night
with Peter warming himself
and had heard Peter,
they would have all been shocked.
Perhaps if they had been there
he would have been strengthened
to not deny the Lord, but he does.
What does a Christian experience
within the walls of his own heart
and his own thoughts?
All Christian experience - good or bad -
involves and never lacks
true human emotion, feelings.
The human drama of experiential realities
that go on that God sees,
that you experience,
and nobody knows it's going on
when it's happening.
Wounded, hurting, reeling, doubting.
What all was Peter experiencing?
We don't know.
What is certain is this:
All Christian experience -
both victories in obedience
and failures in sin -
all Christian experience has woven into it
the human fabric of every real
human emotion, struggle, and battle.
Anger.
Fear.
Frustration.
Weak moments of compromise.
An unrenewed mind
that in moments doesn't view things right
and you believe a lie.
Deep feelings.
The pull of wrong desires.
When you know it's wrong
and you're pulled more toward it
than away from it.
Defeat in your heart by wrong choices.
Hope and sadness,
small and big consequences.
Small and big compromises.
And the sadness with feelings
of defeat and failure.
A believer can be left
in such a condition.
It's like getting the breath
knocked out of you severely.
You can't function.
You can't even think clearly for awhile.
You can't respond,
you can't talk about it.
The heavens are brass.
Your mind is clouded
with feelings and thoughts and struggles.
You don't even know how to see reality.
You're left stunned and passive
and unable to do
anything except feel pain.
So Peter's condition -
probably some of this
and much of this in there
after the resurrection.
When he realizes the Lord is raised,
he's astounded, he's amazed.
You know he had joy.
But he had to still have baggage.
And isn't that the process
of sanctification
when the Lord saves us?
Sanctification is the Holy Spirit
dealing with all our baggage.
A lot of baggage.
Still regrets that will
hinder Peter's future
had to have been there.
If not, why would Jesus
pull him aside here
not to remind him of his past,
not to say, hey Peter, remember the fire?
Remember what you did?
Remember when our eyes met?
Remember, Peter?
The Lord didn't do that.
Not to remind him of his past,
but to call him to the future
and heal him with His love.
That's what's involved here.
That's what's going on.
How does the Lord do this?
There is nothing more beautiful and wise;
there is no more beautiful and wise
approach in the Bible
of personal restoration and revival
than the Lord's dealings with Peter here.
What is the Lord's approach and process?
Well, it's wonderful. Look at v. 12.
Let's go to IHOP (breakfast restaurant).
Let's have breakfast, guys.
What was Peter thinking?
Apparently, he and the Lord
had not had a sit down yet.
They had not been able to discuss things.
And Peter it seemed -
we don't know what was said -
but here's a post-resurrection
restoration breakfast party.
And they're just going
to eat together first.
What an approach! It breaks the ice.
Let's have breakfast.
This is relational. This is time together.
And after a fellowship
meal with all of them,
and an atmosphere of welcome
and acceptance and peace,
Jesus then turns His attention one-on-one,
He turns His heart and His attention
to Peter for one-on-one ministry.
And we're going to see beginning in v. 15
the Lord's call of Peter not to look back,
but His call of Peter to go forward.
Onward, upward, out of the lowlands
of a blistering defeat.
The higher ground of love and grace.
What does the Lord say
to Peter to restore him?
First of all: Love Me.
Verses 15-17,
"When they had finished breakfast,
Jesus said to Simon Peter,
'Simon, do you love Me more than these?'
'Yes Lord, You know I love You.'"
Verse 16,
"Simon, do you love Me?"
"Yes Lord, You know I love You."
Verse 17,
"Simon, do you love Me?"
Peter was grieved, but he said,
"Yes Lord, You know everything.
You know that I love You."
Why this broken record of love?
Peter had a triple denial,
and here the Lord hits a triple too.
Do you love Me?
Whatever failure you've had -
distance or last week -
the Lord's word to you right now is:
Do you love Me?
Do you love Me?
Isn't it obvious that Jesus is
gently blowing on the embers
of Peter's wounded heart
to rekindle a mutual love relationship?
Breakfast is finished with all of them.
And He sits down with Peter:
Peter, do you love Me?
Do you love Me more than these?
Now what did He mean by that?
More than these things?
No, obviously, that's
not what He's saying.
Do you love Me more
than you love these other disciples?
That's not it either.
It's this: Do you love Me
more than these other disciples love Me?
Why would the Lord do that?
Because Peter, remember,
had confidently boasted days before:
If they all forsake You, I won't.
I'm further along in my
sanctification than these guys are.
I'll never do it.
I'll die with You before I deny You.
Peter confidently stated he would have
devotion that exceeds theirs.
Well, you know, it didn't
take death to deny Jesus.
It only took a servant girl by the fire
glancing at him and then
taking a second look
and realizing: Hey, you were with Him!
You're one of them!
It only took that for Peter suddenly
to deny the Lord three times
even with an oath.
That's all it took.
Peter didn't have the devoted
love he thought he had.
He wasn't as far along as he thought.
He didn't see that he
was yet capable of this.
He thought more highly
of himself than he should.
He boasted of greater love,
but he failed the first test.
And even did what others did not do.
He denied the Lord three times.
So certainly, the Lord is
saying to Peter and to us:
Peter, what about your love for Me now?
Do you still believe you love Me more
than the others love Me?
What's the Lord doing here?
He's doing heart surgery on Peter here
to begin the healing balm
of restored love.
It would be hard and humiliating
to be in Peter's place
because those feelings
and human thoughts and emotions
of how does the Lord really view me now?
We've not really yet talked about this.
It's hard to look Him in the eye.
Because He looked at me after I denied Him
and that look has haunted me ever since.
How could I have done it?
What a fool I was!
What a failure I've been!
Where do I stand now?
Do the other disciples
even want me around?
Do they trust me?
Things can't ever be the same.
As the song says,
that was then, but this is now.
What all did Peter feel?
Well, we're not clear, but what is clear
is wounded Peter wasn't healed yet
and Jesus is healing him here.
In light of his denials, his humiliation,
his seeing his own heart,
his tears of repentance,
where does his love for
the Savior stand now?
Now, how is loving the Savior
when you've sinned against Him
and you've failed Him so much?
Restored love is the need.
And isn't that the need for all of us?
Always.
And it's always the remedy
for restoration and for
being turned again.
The Lord Jesus Christ here
loves Peter tenderly,
patiently, and perfectly,
and not only wants Peter to know it,
He wants Peter to love Him right then.
That's why He's saying:
Do you love Me, Peter?
Come on, give Me your love.
Give Me your heart afresh.
He wants Peter's love
restored so Peter will be healed.
Now after the third question
(Peter, do you love Me?),
Peter is grieved.
What kind of grief was this?
It was not the grief of
embarrassment or hurt feelings.
It was the grief of a sad, tender heart
who had failed his Lord.
Feelings of loving sorrow
mixed with longing for the Lord.
Christ is drawing Peter
with cords of love here.
A threefold cord of a question of love.
Christ - the goodness of God
is bringing Peter fully back
and it's painful. It's painful.
This is Gospel surgery at its best.
Someone said, "Gospel
surgery's always free,
but it's not always easy."
Lee Dodd in our church weeks ago
one Sunday morning speaking about Peter,
he said, "It's as if Jesus is applying
the healing ointment of His love,
but it's going to sting a bit."
Have you ever had a nurse
or a doctor tell you that?
Now this is going to hurt a little.
The Lord Jesus' questions
were stinging a bit.
So Jesus is going for Peter's heart,
and guess what, He's going to get it.
He's going to get it fully back.
Peter, where does your love
stand with Me now?
Because love is stronger than death.
Love is stronger than a denial.
Love is stronger than a failure.
Love's stronger than you blowing it
and not knowing if you can recover.
Could Peter now truly say or not:
If ever I love Thee, my Jesus, 'tis now.
Peter must face it and answer it.
Do you really love Me, Peter?
Not just with human sentiment
and human love, but with divine love.
The call to love Him.
Secondly, verses 15-17.
The Lord says to Peter,
"Shepherd My sheep."
"Shepherd My sheep."
The Lord is not only restoring
Peter's love for Him,
He's restoring Peter's
call to future ministry.
But don't you think Peter felt inside:
I'm done.
I'm disqualified.
How could I?
Who could ever listen to me again?
Who could ever trust me again?
Isn't it profound in a way
that the triple denier of Jesus
becomes the Apostle to the Jews?
I think that's pretty amazing.
The Lord links the
threefold call to love Him
with a threefold call to
now shepherd His sheep.
If you love Me, feed My lambs.
If you love Me, tend My sheep.
If you love Me, feed My sheep.
Now the word "tend" there
means to act as a shepherd toward them
in all that it means.
In every way it means to shepherd
and care for them, you do that.
If you love Me, this is My
love expressed through you.
Tend the sheep.
To feed means just that.
Give them the rightful nourishment
for spiritual health and growth.
So, Peter's sermon at Pentecost
is the fruit of this exhortation.
1 and 2 Peter is the fruit
of this exhortation:
Peter, feed My sheep. Care for My lambs.
Two words used about the sheep here:
The first one (sheep)
is not the older, more mature sheep.
It's the younger smaller sheep.
They're not lambs, but they're younger,
smaller sheep.
Distinct from the older, bigger ones.
Peter, you are to give special care
to the smaller sheep
who have growing needs.
You love Me? You care for
these smaller sheep.
This is the word "lambs."
My lambs - young, new converts.
The word is only used in the plural form
in the New Testament.
These smaller sheep
and even the little lambs -
your love for Me involves your heart
having endearment to them,
tenderness toward them,
care for them - loving, tender care
of My sheep and My lambs.
My young ones are of a
special concern to My heart, Peter.
And if you love Me,
you take care of My sheep.
I want them on your heart.
Your love for Me is real and applied
especially toward the care of My sheep.
This says something that's major:
Love for the Savior
that translates into
real love for His sheep
is the first requirement of a pastor.
Love for the Savior
that translates into real
love for His sheep
is the first requirement of a pastor.
For every Christian also
toward their brethren,
because we cannot love God
whom we haven't seen,
if we don't love the brothers
and sisters we do see.
Love Me, Peter!
Shepherd My sheep.
Third, v. 18-19.
Die for Me.
You're going to die for Me.
When you were young,
you went about wherever you wanted -
you could go fish, you could come in,
you could go wherever you want to,
you were independent, you were free.
When you're old, it's going
to be a different story.
Others are going to gird you
and they're going to take you
where you in the natural realm
would not want to have to go.
They're going to take you
where you don't want to go.
And John's commentary: This He said
signifying to Peter
what kind of death he was going to die.
Peter's here called to be a martyr.
Peter's crucifixion is affirmed
in the early centuries
by Eusebius, Tertullian, and others.
And it's prophesied by Jesus here
and it's commented on later by Peter
in 2 Peter 1:14.
"Since I know that the putting
off of my body will be soon
as our Lord Jesus Christ
made clear to me."
In two epistles, Peter is shepherding,
feeding, tending to the sheep
and the lambs in love as his last ministry
before he knows where he's going.
Called to die as the Lord died.
Now we're all called to live unto the Lord
and we're all called to be willing to die,
and some will be called to die.
But whether we live or whether
we die, we're the Lord's.
But Peter, this is in your future.
So love Me, feed My sheep, care for them,
and then, you're going to die like I died.
God is glorified in the death of martyrs.
If you've never read "Fair Sunshine,"
get it and read it.
Two ladies in that book -
maybe they were both Margaret's -
do you remember?
One was about 60,
one was a teenager or 20's -
two Margaret's.
They were caught
by the persecuting authorities in Scotland
for attending a church
meeting or for owning a Bible.
They took them out in the sea
and the chained the older one
out in the water
so she would be drowned
first with the tide.
They chained the younger one
in a little more shallow water,
but it was strategic -
so she would have to face
and see her sister in the faith die first.
And they died victoriously.
Some are called to die.
Peter's called to die here.
Love Me.
Feed My sheep.
Die for Me.
Fourthly, verse 22.
Really, 21, "When Peter saw him
(that is John) he said to Jesus,
'Lord, what about this man?'
Jesus said to him,
'If it's My will that he
remains until I come,
what's that to you? Follow Me.'"
Verse 23, "So the saying spread abroad
among the brethren..."
Here's bad hermeneutics;
here's bad Bible interpretation.
The saying spread among the brothers
that this disciple was not going to die.
So it went viral.
Things could go viral in that day too.
The saying spread abroad
among the brethren
that John wasn't going to die.
He was going to live till
the Lord comes back.
"Yet Jesus did not say to him
that he was not going to die,
but He said 'if it's My will
that he remains until I come,
what is that to you?'"
The fourth truth in being a disciple:
Don't misunderstand the Lord's teaching.
Don't misunderstand the Bible.
They were guilty of bad hermeneutics here,
wrong interpretation of one statement.
And it's amazing that even
though John clarified this,
Augustine even into the
4th and 5th centuries,
Augustine said there were those
in the Christian world that still believed
John was somewhere in hiding alive
and wasn't dead yet.
Heresy is hard to kill.
Heresy often begins right from Scripture.
Deceiving spirits, misinterpretation,
misunderstanding of Bible verses,
listening out of carnal curiosity
to bad teachers.
I spoke to a Jehovah's Witness recently,
in recent weeks,
and I said I've got a question for you.
Why is it that you don't believe
Jesus was bodily raised from the dead
even though the Bible
clearly shows that He was?
He was physical. They touched Him.
And his answer was this:
Well, He couldn't have been that
way when He went to heaven.
It had to be spiritual
because the Bible says
flesh and blood shall not
inherit the kingdom of God.
What a proof text of heresy!
So we must take heed how we hear.
We must take heed what we hear.
We must understand and understand
and be clear so as not to be misled
or mislead.
That's why John puts his commentary here
so we won't misunderstand
the Lord's teaching.
Fifthly, v. 20-22.
The Lord tells Peter:
Keep your eyes only on Me.
Now where do you find that?
Well, notice what the
Lord had said to Peter
at the end of verse 19.
"Follow Me."
Follow Me - but what did Peter do?
The next sentence says
he turned and saw John.
The Lord has said, "Follow Me."
Peter turns and sees John.
Peter is distracted about
God's will for John.
Think about it, here's this big context
of the Lord restoring Peter in love,
calls him again to shepherd the sheep,
tells him how he's going to die,
and then the Lord says, "Follow Me."
Wouldn't that be enough for now?
Well, apparently not,
because Peter turns and looks at John
and says what about him?
What about him?
Why did Peter do that?
It may have been if he realizes
he's going to die, he was close to John,
he wonders is this his fate too.
What are You going to do with John?
What about John's future?
And Jesus in essence said:
What about John?
Was I talking about John?
Is My business about
John's future your business?
Or as we would say:
This is on a need-to-know
basis and guess what?
What is that to you?
Follow Me.
See, we're called not to be
distracted by others,
and Christ called us -
especially by those we love
and are closest to.
We're not to be distracted by others
and their calling, God's will for them,
their situations.
And Peter was distracted
with a viewpoint, an attitude,
nosiness, meddling, wondering
about what was not his business.
How easy is it for people to become
a distracting hindrance to
our single-eyed devotion.
Our minds can so easily be
on other's path more than our own path.
If John's future was
Peter's responsibility,
Jesus would have mentioned it to Peter.
He did not say:
Peter, here's your new commission.
Love Me, feed My sheep, die for Me,
and oh, here's information about John
because you're responsible for him also.
He didn't say that.
Jesus restores the fallen Peter,
reaffirms his calling,
and has to rebuke the nosy Peter.
Peter should leave all distractions alone
because they weren't his.
What is that to you?
What business is that of yours?
And how often do we need to hear this?
Well, I don't think that church over there
is quite doing right.
What's that to you?
You follow Christ.
Well, I don't think they
have the right view
of which translation of the Bible to use.
What's that? That's none of your business.
You follow Christ.
Well, I think they're too young
to be going to the mission field.
How much are we carnally curious
about other people's issues
when we haven't even
fully dealt with our own
and we aren't fully obeying Christ
as to what He's shown us to do?
Jesus declines to
satisfy Peter's curiosity.
It is no business of Peter's
what's going to happen to John.
Even if the Lord wills
for John to stay alive
even to His return,
why would Peter even need to know that?
He doesn't need to know.
He doesn't need to know
anything about John.
How much do we need to know
about God's purpose and will for others?
Even those we're closest to?
How much do we really need to know?
Elders and pastors need to know.
Church leaders need to know more,
oftentimes for the protection.
But generally speaking,
how much do we need to know
about God's business
in other people's lives?
What is that to you,
O thou nosy Christian?
Mind your own business.
Keep to your own stuff.
You know, one of the greatest examples
of this mistake is Josiah.
He reigned 31 years in Jerusalem.
He became king when he was 8 years old.
At 16 years old, the Bible says
he began to seek the Lord seriously.
He began to seek the God of David.
And he began purging Jerusalem
of idols and carved images.
One of the best kings in Israel's history.
And 2 Kings and 2 Chronicles
gives his record.
He kept the Passover in Jerusalem.
He appointed priests to their offices
and encouraged them in the
service of the house of God.
He put the ark in the temple
that Solomon built.
He cut down the altars of Baal.
And he was present himself
when his men cut those altars to Baal down
the Bible says.
He told the priests: Consecrate yourselves
and prepare for your brothers to do
according to the Word
of the Lord by Moses.
The singers, the sons of Asaph,
were under Josiah's leadership in Israel.
And the Bible says,
"...No Passover like it had
been kept in Israel
since the days of Samuel the prophet."
2 Chronicles 35 summarizes Josiah's life.
The rest of the acts of Josiah
and his good deeds
are written in the book of the kings.
But you know what?
You remember his major misstep.
One big misstep cost him his life.
He didn't apostatize
and worship the Baals.
He didn't love like Solomon
loved a bunch of strange women
and let them pull his heart away
to false gods like Solomon did.
What did Josiah do?
He didn't mind his own business.
He began meddling in
affairs that weren't his.
He began to pick a fight with a dog,
but the dog didn't want to fight him.
But he picked the fight
and the dog had to fight him.
2 Chronicles says after
Josiah prepared the temple,
he heard about Neco, the king of Egypt,
who was going to war with someone
over near the Euphrates River.
And it's not Josiah's business;
it's not his battle.
He doesn't have a bone to pick.
Israel's welfare is not at stake.
But he couldn't leave it alone.
Josiah goes out to meet Neco
basically to pick a fight
when Neco wasn't coming to Israel.
And the Bible says, "Neco
sent messengers to Josiah,"
and said this: What do we
have to do with you, O king?
What do we have to do with each other?
I'm not coming against you this day
but someone else.
Listen, I'm in a hurry. Stop!
Because God is with me,
lest He destroy you.
And here was Josiah's mistake:
The Bible says, "Nevertheless,
Josiah did not turn away from him."
He did not listen to the words of Neco
from the mouth of God,
but instead he came to fight,
and the archer shot Josiah
and he died and was buried.
And the Bible says all Jerusalem
and all Judah mourned for Josiah
and Jeremiah the prophet
lamented his death.
Neco was saying:
What is that to you?
You worship Jehovah.
What is that to you?
This isn't your fight.
You're not called to meddle here.
Watch meddling.
A dear favorite preacher
of mine said one time:
Watch out for meddling.
Don't meddle in what's not your business.
Don't be concerned about stuff
that's not for you to fix.
You follow Christ.
You stay focused on Him
and don't let people -
even those you love the most -
distract you from steadfast,
single-eyed obedience.
What is that to you, Peter?
You follow Me.
And that's the final thing
the Lord said to him.
Not only: Love Me,
feed My sheep,
die for Me,
mind your own business,
but "Follow Me."
And the Lord says it twice here:
Follow Me.
And then at the end He says,
"You follow Me."
Just follow Me.
Love Me,
care for My sheep,
follow Me, feed them, love them,
watch out for them,
don't let anyone mess with My bride,
shepherd My sheep.
Follow Me.
And in closing, let's just think about
a couple of thoughts here.
First lesson is this:
Restoration for a backslider -
restoration for a failed disciple.
Restoration and not defeat
is Christ's purpose for every one of us.
You may have come here
out of a recent fall, out of defeat.
Maybe for months, you've
been in bad state.
Disappointments, failures,
secret things.
The Lord Jesus Christ says to you
this morning in your condition:
Love Me!
I want your heart's love.
Love Me.
Forget the past.
I'll clean you up.
I'm going to have those shepherd you,
care for you.
You may be the weakest lamb.
Just love Me. That's where you start.
Just love Him.
Just love Him.
Restoration, and not defeat,
is God's purpose for every child of God -
the younger sheep
down to the weakest lamb.
Secondly, failures don't disqualify you
necessarily from future growth
and future ministry.
Some failures will put people
properly out of the ministry.
But that's a small category, isn't it.
But failures - the worst of them -
don't disqualify you
from being restored in the love of Christ,
from following Him,
and being a blessing to love others
because you love Him.
Thirdly, it's the Gospel alone,
the love of Christ alone for His own
that is the healing remedy for anyone
who has fallen.
Backslider, I'll say what
Spurgeon said one time.
He lifted up his voice and said
there's a backslider here today.
Come back home.
And I say that to you today.
Backslider, love Him.
Follow Him.
How deep the Father's love for us!
Oh, the deep, deep love of Jesus.
Let's sing that.