Tag: Peter

  • The Night the King Knelt: Jesus, Judas, and Peter

    It was the final evening before the Cross.

    The room was ready, the Passover meal had been prepared, and Jesus—fully aware of what was to come—chose to spend His last free hours not in isolation or defense… but in service. Humble, shocking, intimate service.

    “Jesus… having loved His own who were in the world, He loved them to the end.” (John 13:1)

    Let that settle. He loved them—fully, knowingly, unwaveringly.

    And then He rose from supper, laid aside His garments, girded Himself with a towel, and poured water into a basin.

    He got down on His knees. And the King of Glory washed their feet.

    But this moment wasn’t just about humble leadership. It wasn’t about hygiene. It wasn’t even just a symbol.It was a revelation. And the contrast between how He treated Judas and Peter shows us just how deep that love runs.

    He Washed Judas.

    Yes, that Judas.

    Judas had already made the deal. Thirty silver coins. The price of a slave. The plan was in motion. And Jesus knew it all—

    “…Jesus knew who would betray Him…” (John 13:11).

    And yet He knelt before him anyway.

    No skipped turn. No avoided eye contact. No exposed accusation.

    Jesus washed the feet of His betrayer.Imagine that. Imagine the hands that had healed the blind gently wiping the dust from the feet of the man who would hand Him over to death. It was mercy poured out without condition. It was one final invitation. A moment of holy confrontation.

    But Judas didn’t break. He didn’t confess. He didn’t weep.He got up from the table and walked away with clean feet—and a defiled heart.

    He chose darkness, even as the Light knelt before him.

    How many times do we do the same? How often does Jesus offer us mercy—again—and we harden our hearts, justify our choices, and walk right out into the night?

    And…….He Washed Peter.

    Oh, Peter. Impulsive, passionate, and stubborn.

    When Jesus came to him with the basin, Peter resisted.“Lord, are You washing my feet?”

    “You shall never wash my feet!” (John 13:6, 8)

    That sounds noble. Like reverence. But it was pride cloaked in piety. Peter was trying to control the narrative—to protect Jesus, to preserve the hierarchy. But Jesus wasn’t having it.

    *If I do not wash you, you have no part with Me.” (v. 8)

    That stopped Peter in his tracks. And true to form, he flipped to the opposite extreme:

    “Lord, not my feet only, but also my hands and my head!” (v. 9)

    Peter didn’t fully understand yet, but he surrendered. And Jesus met him right there—in confusion, in boldness, in brokenness. Jesus knew Peter would deny Him in just a few hours, not once, not even twice, but three times. Yet Jesus didn’t withhold His hands. He didn’t shame him or scold him.

    He washed him.He loved him.He prepared him—for failure… and for restoration.

    Where Judas hardened, Peter would eventually weep bitterly and return. That’s the difference. Not perfection, but repentance.

    So What Does This Mean for Us?

    It means Jesus still kneels today. He still offers cleansing. He still serves with nail-scarred hands—those who betray, those who deny, and those who simply misunderstand.

    It means no part of us is too dirty for Jesus to wash. But He will not force His grace on anyone. Judas shows us what it looks like to refuse. Peter shows us what it looks like to wrestle with pride… and then surrender.It means love kneels before us and asks: Will you let Me wash you? Will you let Me serve you? Will you follow Me… all the way to the cross?We love the idea of a God who reigns. But Maundy Thursday confronts us with a God who kneels. A Savior who scrubs the very feet that will carry betrayal and denial. A Messiah who looks us in the eye, knowing every failure, and says: “I still want you.”

  • Faithful Still

    There’s a song that’s been rolling around in my head since my feet hit the floor this morning. The first verse and chorus go like this:

    When my heart is racing deep within my chest
    When I’m underneath the weight of anxiousness
    When my fear is raging and I can’t catch my breath
    I will remember

    You are faithful still
    You have carried me through the deeper waters
    Walked beside me through the fire
    Faithful still
    You have closed the mouth of bigger lions
    Conquered even greater giants
    Gone before me, and You always will
    You are faithful still

    And it’s true. Even when we struggle with our own faithfulness to Him—fighting giants, facing lions, overwhelmed in deep waters, struggling to keep our heads above the waves as the tempest rages—He’s there. Faithful Still.

    Time after time, God promises in His Word that He will be faithful in so many ways, and I’d like to explore some of them here.

    He is Faithful in Our Trials

    Though life’s circumstances often rock our boat and the winds of uncertainty blow, Scripture repeatedly reminds us that God is faithful to His promises. Even as Jeremiah suffered under the horrific conditions of Babylon’s siege and occupation, he wrote:

    “This I recall to mind, therefore I have hope… His compassions never fail. They are new every morning; great is Thy faithfulness.” (Lamentations 3:21-23)

    The psalmist tells us in Psalm 46:1, “God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in time of trouble.” And Paul, who endured immense suffering for the sake of Christ, said in 2 Corinthians 12:9, “My grace is sufficient for you, for My power is made perfect in weakness.”

    No matter the size of the storm, God is there. Faithful Still.

    He is Faithful to Keep His Promises

    By all accounts, God made no fewer than 7,000 promises in His Word—and He is faithful to keep them all. People, even those closest to us, will make promises and break them, often breaking our hearts in the process. I know… I’ve been guilty of it myself.

    But Moses reminds us in Numbers 23:19, “God is not a man, that He should lie… Does He promise and not fulfill?” Paul, in Romans 4:21, declares that he was “fully persuaded that what He had promised, He was also able to perform.” And Peter affirms in 2 Peter 3:9, “The Lord is not slack concerning His promises.”

    Whatever the circumstance, the evidence is undeniable—He is Faithful Still.

    He is Faithful Even in Our Doubt

    We all have those moments—not doubting God’s existence, but His willingness to come through in time… to meet our needs… to save our loved ones… to heal… Hits home, doesn’t it? Or is it just me?

    No matter how many times He proves Himself, we still doubt. Yet Isaiah reminds us in Isaiah 59:1, “Behold, the Lord’s hand is not shortened, that it cannot save; nor His ear heavy, that it cannot hear.”

    Paul urges us in Hebrews 10:23, “Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for He who promised is faithful.” And David, in Psalm 94:19, writes, “In the multitude of my anxieties within me, Your comforts delight my soul.”

    Even Peter, called by Jesus to step out of the boat in the middle of the storm, took his eyes off the Master and began to sink beneath the waves. But when he cried out for help, Jesus responded—not with condemnation, but with a question:

    “Why did you doubt?”

    Even when we doubt, even when we wonder if He’s even listening—He is Faithful Still.

    He is Faithful When We Stumble

    It’s happened to all of us. We’re walking along on our spiritual journey, and out of nowhere, something trips us up—a temptation, a mistake, our own stubborn pride.

    David, who had his own share of failures, writes in Psalm 37:23-24, “The steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord… though he fall, he shall not be utterly cast down.” Micah declares in Micah 7:8, “Rejoice not against me, O my enemy; when I fall, I shall arise.” And Paul reminds the church at Philippi in Philippians 1:6, “He who began a good work in you will complete it.”

    So even when we stumble and fall flat on our faces, God is there. Faithful Still.

    Regardless of where you are in life—your circumstances, your doubts, your struggles—God is always there, His hand reaching out just as it did for Peter. Because He always has been, still is, and always will be…

    Faithful Still.