When they had eaten breakfast, Jesus asked Simon Peter,
“Simon, son of John, do you love Me more than these?”—John 21:15
Jesus has a wonderful way of restoring us when we fail Him! He does not humiliate us. He does not criticize us. He does not ask us to make a resolution to try harder. Rather, He takes us aside and asks us to reaffirm our love for Him.
Peter miserably failed his Lord when he fled with the other disciples from the Garden of Gethsemane. Later, he publicly denied that he even knew Jesus. Peter must have wondered if he had been capable of being Jesus’ disciple when he was unfaithful to Jesus in His most crucial hour.
As we begin a new year, we may be painfully aware that we have failed our Lord in many ways. Perhaps we were not faithful. Perhaps we disobeyed His word to us. Perhaps we denied Him by the way we lived. Jesus will take us aside, as He did Peter. He will not berate us. He will not humiliate us. He will ask us to examine our love for Him. He asked Peter, “Do you love Me?” If our answer, like Peter’s, is “Yes, Lord,” He will reaffirm His will for us. If we truly love Him, we will obey Him (John 14:15). Jesus does not need our resolutions, our recommitments, or our promises to try harder this year. If our resolve to obey God last year did not help us to be faithful, it will not make us successful this year. Jesus asks for our love. If we truly love Him, our service for Him in the new year will be of the quality that He desires.
We need to know and remember how God feels about us:
We are “majestic” in His eyes (Literally: excellent, glorious, mighty, worthy)
We are the source of all His delight (Psalm 16:3)
Zephaniah 3:17 puts it this way:
The Lord is with us.
He takes great delight in us.
He will quiet us with His love.
He rejoices over us with singing
Of us He says, “I have loved you with an everlasting love.” (Jeremiah 31:3) He has always loved us! Even before we were conceived!
Yes, I know we are ‘sinners’. That is not new information. But in His eyes our problem with sin has nothing to do with our intrinsic worth. If your daughter contracts cancer, her worth is not diminished in your eyes, is it?
As the kids say, “God don’t make no junk.” The truth is that “you are fearfully and wonderfully made… skillfully wrought”: God’s marvelous creation! (Psalm 139:14, 15) In fact, “while we were sinners” — scuzzball rebels, many of us — Christ died for us. (Romans 5:8) Before we cleaned up our act, He crawled up on that cross for us. Is there a more forceful demonstration of unconditional love?… Of our worth to Him?
So, this week as you enter the shark infested waters of the world, keep in mind the fact that you are
A CHILD OF THE KING. A PERSON OF INFINITE, ETERNAL WORTH!
Have a Blessed New Year in 2010!
