Acts 3:14
The old adage, “Forgive and forget” is easier to say than it is to do. It is even more difficult when the person that we need to forgive is ourselves, and the deed that we need to forget is of our own doing. We are truly our harshest critic. This is probably because we think of ourselves almost constantly, while the others who are criticizing us think of us no longer than it takes to cut us down.
The Apostle Peter must have spent some sleepless nights over his failure during Jesus’ final night prior to the cross. Peter had claimed that he would never deny the Lord, only to have Christ tell him that he would do that very thing 3 times in one night. Peter probably felt that Jesus did not know quite how much that he loved the Lord, and that surely, he would prove the Master wrong. Sure enough, at the crowing of the morning rooster, Peter had said that he did not even know Christ and the darkness of denial set into his conscience.
Not long after the resurrection of Jesus, Peter decides to forget the whole ministry thing and go back into the fishing business. It was his occupation before Jesus came along and convinced him that he could fish for men, but his failure and his cowardice caused him to feel completely inadequate for such a commission, so fishing became his lifestyle once again. Then, as always, came Jesus, blessing Peter with a miracle of fishes and feeding him breakfast in the natural and in the spiritual. “Feed my sheep” was Jesus’ command to Peter, and not one word was uttered about his denial or his excursion into the fishing profession.
This forgiveness washes the condemnation away from Peter, and equips him to receive the wonderful empowerment of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, leading him to preach a sermon that day that wins 3000 people into the new church. With that fire still fresh in his heart, he preaches again in Acts 3, this time to the Jews of Jerusalem, saying, “Ye denied the Holy One and the Just, and desired a murderer to be granted unto you” (Acts 3:14).
Look closely at his accusation towards the Jews. “Ye denied” could be considered a dangerous way to start a sermon, considering that Peter is known as the disciple that denied the Lord. Some might say, “How dare he preach to someone else about denying the Lord when he did the same thing!” Others would cry, “Hypocrite!” upon hearing such a sermon. Yet Peter shows no hesitation in his accusation, going so far as to tell them that they “killed the Prince of life” (verse 15).
Jesus’ feeding of Peter on the beach in John 21 was His washing away the guilt and condemnation from Peter’s heart. It is necessary that these be removed by the blood of Jesus, for there are many situations and settings that the believer will enter into that he or she needs a clean conscience in order to be a true light for Christ. Guilt will cause us to close our mouths when we should open them, and to open them when they should remain closed. Peter could preach the truth because Peter was living the truth, and he had forgotten who he used to be.
He says it so well in his little epistle, when talking about believers who lack the fruit of the Spirit in their lives, “He that lacketh these things is blind, and cannot see afar off, and hath forgotten that he was purged from his old sins” (2 Peter 1:9). The sun has come up in your life, shining into the dark areas of your past and liberating you from guilt and condemnation. The rooster crows to signify that it is the start of a brand new day; just as he did to remind Peter that the night of denial is over. With the sound of the rooster in his ears, Peter forgot who he used to be, and by that same Spirit, so can you.
The old adage, “Forgive and forget” is easier to say than it is to do. It is even more difficult when the person that we need to forgive is ourselves, and the deed that we need to forget is of our own doing. We are truly our harshest critic. This is probably because we think of ourselves almost constantly, while the others who are criticizing us think of us no longer than it takes to cut us down.
The Apostle Peter must have spent some sleepless nights over his failure during Jesus’ final night prior to the cross. Peter had claimed that he would never deny the Lord, only to have Christ tell him that he would do that very thing 3 times in one night. Peter probably felt that Jesus did not know quite how much that he loved the Lord, and that surely, he would prove the Master wrong. Sure enough, at the crowing of the morning rooster, Peter had said that he did not even know Christ and the darkness of denial set into his conscience.
Not long after the resurrection of Jesus, Peter decides to forget the whole ministry thing and go back into the fishing business. It was his occupation before Jesus came along and convinced him that he could fish for men, but his failure and his cowardice caused him to feel completely inadequate for such a commission, so fishing became his lifestyle once again. Then, as always, came Jesus, blessing Peter with a miracle of fishes and feeding him breakfast in the natural and in the spiritual. “Feed my sheep” was Jesus’ command to Peter, and not one word was uttered about his denial or his excursion into the fishing profession.
This forgiveness washes the condemnation away from Peter, and equips him to receive the wonderful empowerment of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, leading him to preach a sermon that day that wins 3000 people into the new church. With that fire still fresh in his heart, he preaches again in Acts 3, this time to the Jews of Jerusalem, saying, “Ye denied the Holy One and the Just, and desired a murderer to be granted unto you” (Acts 3:14).
Look closely at his accusation towards the Jews. “Ye denied” could be considered a dangerous way to start a sermon, considering that Peter is known as the disciple that denied the Lord. Some might say, “How dare he preach to someone else about denying the Lord when he did the same thing!” Others would cry, “Hypocrite!” upon hearing such a sermon. Yet Peter shows no hesitation in his accusation, going so far as to tell them that they “killed the Prince of life” (verse 15).
Jesus’ feeding of Peter on the beach in John 21 was His washing away the guilt and condemnation from Peter’s heart. It is necessary that these be removed by the blood of Jesus, for there are many situations and settings that the believer will enter into that he or she needs a clean conscience in order to be a true light for Christ. Guilt will cause us to close our mouths when we should open them, and to open them when they should remain closed. Peter could preach the truth because Peter was living the truth, and he had forgotten who he used to be.
He says it so well in his little epistle, when talking about believers who lack the fruit of the Spirit in their lives, “He that lacketh these things is blind, and cannot see afar off, and hath forgotten that he was purged from his old sins” (2 Peter 1:9). The sun has come up in your life, shining into the dark areas of your past and liberating you from guilt and condemnation. The rooster crows to signify that it is the start of a brand new day; just as he did to remind Peter that the night of denial is over. With the sound of the rooster in his ears, Peter forgot who he used to be, and by that same Spirit, so can you.