Genesis 32.22–31
John 18.12–27
Lent is a season that invites
us to stop pretending.
It draws us away from religious
performance
and into honest
self-examination.
We are asked, gently but
persistently,
to look at ourselves in the
light of Christ’s journey to the cross
and to ask uncomfortable
questions.
Where do we shrink back? Where
do we compromise?
Where does fear shape our
choices more than love does?
The story of Peter’s denial
sits squarely within that Lenten work.
It is not an easy story,
because Peter is not a villain.
He is not Judas.
He is not an enemy
of Jesus.
He is a devoted disciple, a
passionate follower,
someone who has
left everything to walk this road.
And yet, when the pressure
rises,
when association with Jesus
becomes dangerous rather than inspiring,
he falters.
He denies even knowing the one
he loves.
That is why this gospel story
matters so deeply.
It tells the truth about
denial, about fear, and about restoration.
It reminds us that failure is
not the end of the story.
It reminds us that the gap
between our promises and our actions is real.
And it reminds us, most importantly,
that God’s faithfulness does
not collapse when ours does.
We began worship with words
that frame this whole encounter:
“Lord, you know our weakness.
Have mercy on us.
Even when we deny, you remain
faithful.”
That is not sentimental
reassurance.
It is hard-won theological
truth.
The God revealed in Jesus is
not surprised by our frailty.
God knows the limits of our
courage.
God sees the tremor in our
voice before we speak.
And still, we are called.
Still, we are invited into
discipleship.
Still, we are trusted with the
work of love in the world.
Lent does not ask us to become
stronger by sheer willpower.
It asks us to become more
truthful.
To name our fear.
To recognise our capacity for
denial.
And to discover that we are
held, even there,
by a mercy deeper than our
failure.
John’s Gospel sets Peter’s
denial
within the unfolding drama of
Jesus’ arrest.
The soldiers and officials
come,
Jesus is seized and bound,
and he is led away for
questioning.
Peter follows, at a distance.
He has not fled entirely.
He is still near enough to see
what is happening.
But he is no longer at Jesus’ side.
What is striking in John’s
telling
is the contrast between Jesus
and those around him.
Jesus is composed. He speaks clearly.
He answers questions directly.
Even in arrest, he is not diminished.
He knows who he is and why he
has come.
There is a quiet authority about him, even in chains.
Around him, however, anxiety
ripples.
The disciples scatter.
Peter oscillates between
courage and fear.
Only moments earlier in the
garden he had drawn a sword,
striking out in misguided
defence.
It was an impulsive act of loyalty, bold but confused.
Yet that flash of bravery
quickly evaporates.
Now, standing by the fire in
the high priest’s courtyard,
he is asked a simple question:
“You are not also one of this man’s disciples, are you?”
And he says, “I am not.”
It’s tempting to imagine Peter
calculating,
carefully choosing
self-preservation.
But the text suggests something more immediate and human.
This is not cold betrayal. It
is panic.
It is the instinctive reflex
of someone suddenly aware of danger.
Each denial comes under
pressure, in the glare of suspicion,
and each time he retreats
further from the truth of who he is.
The scene is painfully
recognisable.
Courage in the abstract is
easy.
Courage in the cold night,
under hostile eyes, is something else entirely.
And so Peter’s denial becomes not just his story, but ours.
Peter’s denial is painful to
read, but it is not alien to us.
It follows a pattern that is
deeply human.
When fear rises, clarity falters.
When danger feels close, our
instincts take over.
The promises we made in safety can dissolve under pressure.
Peter had promised unwavering
loyalty.
He had insisted that even if
others fell away, he would remain.
There is no reason to doubt his sincerity.
He meant it when he said it.
But sincerity is not the same as steadiness.
In the courtyard, beside the
charcoal fire,
his body responds before his
theology does.
A question is asked. A threat is implied.
And his mouth forms the words:
“I am not.”
It’s easy to judge from a
distance.
But most of us know what it is
to lose our nerve.
We know what it is to stay silent when we should speak.
We know what it is to soften a
conviction
because we do not want to
stand out.
We know what it is to protect ourselves first and trust God later.
Peter’s denial is not
monstrous. It is recognisable.
That is why pairing this
reading with Genesis 32 can be illuminating.
Jacob, on the night before
meeting Esau,
finds himself
alone by the river Jabbok.
He wrestles through the dark
with a mysterious figure
who is at once
stranger and God.
It is a scene thick with
vulnerability.
Jacob is afraid. His past is
catching up with him.
He has deceived and grasped
and manoeuvred for much of his life.
But now he cannot strategise his way forward.
He must wrestle.
And in that wrestling, he is
changed.
He receives a new name,
Israel, and he leaves with a limp.
He is marked by the encounter.
His vulnerability becomes the
place of transformation.
Peter’s courtyard is not as
dramatic as Jacob’s riverbank,
but it is just as revealing.
In that moment of denial,
Peter encounters the truth
about himself.
He is not as strong as he imagined.
His courage is more fragile
than he thought.
Yet this exposure, painful as
it is,
becomes part of the reshaping
of his discipleship.
Like Jacob, he will carry the mark of this night.
It will humble him. It will
deepen him.
It will make him a different
kind of leader.
Both stories remind us that God
does not wait for us to be impressive.
God meets us in the dark, in
fear,
in the places where our
self-confidence fractures.
And of course, fear does more
than make us anxious.
It can distort who we are.
It can shrink our world to the
size of immediate survival.
Under its influence, identity becomes negotiable.
Peter, who has left everything
to follow Jesus,
now distances himself from him
in order to stay safe.
“I am not,” he says. Three
times.
The tragedy of the denials
lies in the gap between
intention and action.
Peter intends to be faithful.
He intends to stand with
Jesus.
But when tested, his behaviour contradicts his commitment.
That gap is where so much of
our spiritual struggle lives.
We intend to love our
neighbour.
We intend to speak truth.
We intend to act justly.
Yet fear of exclusion, conflict, or loss
can bend us away from those
intentions.
There is a cost to that
bending.
Something in Peter fractures
as the rooster crows.
The Gospel tells us that Jesus turns and looks at him.
And it is a devastating image,
not because it
suggests condemnation,
but because it suggests
recognition.
Peter sees himself clearly in that glance.
And yet, even here, Jesus is
not absent.
He is not distracted. He is
not done with Peter.
The story does not end in the courtyard.
It moves through trial and
crucifixion,
through death and
resurrection.
The one who remains composed in
arrest
will also be the one who seeks
Peter out after Easter,
who cooks breakfast on the shore,
who asks not for perfection
but for love.
Fear has a cost, but it does
not have the final word.
Denial is real, but so is
restoration.
The God who knows our weakness
is also the God who rebuilds
our identity,
not on our bravest moments,
but on grace that endures even
our worst ones.
One of the most striking
features of this passage
is not simply Peter’s
collapse, but Jesus’ steadiness.
While Peter wavers in the courtyard,
Jesus stands under
interrogation.
While Peter distances himself from danger,
Jesus moves towards it.
There is a quiet clarity about
him throughout the scene.
He knows who he is.
He knows the truth he bears
witness to.
He does not bluster, and he does not retreat.
John’s Gospel consistently
portrays Jesus as deeply rooted in identity.
He belongs to the Father.
He has come to reveal divine
love.
And he will not abandon that vocation,
even when it leads to personal
suffering.
His composure is not emotional detachment;
it is faithfulness.
It is trust in the One who sent him
and in the purpose that holds
his life together.
That contrast matters.
Because if Peter’s story were
the only story here,
we might leave with despair.
Human courage falters.
Human promises fail.
Human love trembles under
pressure.
But the good news of this passage
is that our discipleship rests
not on our unbroken record,
but on Christ’s unbroken
faithfulness.
God’s commitment to us
does not rise and fall with
the steadiness of our devotion.
It does not depend on how loudly we profess belief
or how bravely we perform
under scrutiny.
The covenantal faithfulness
revealed in Jesus
is deeper than our
inconsistency.
Even as Peter says, “I am not,”
Jesus continues to embody, “I
am.”
Even as Peter distances himself,
Jesus draws near to the
suffering of the world.
That is the ground on which
restoration becomes possible.
Let’s face it, Lent can easily
become a season of introspective heaviness.
We name our failures.
We confess our shortcomings.
We sit with the reality of
sin.
And that honesty is necessary.
But Lent does not end in
self-reproach.
It moves towards Easter.
It moves towards reclamation.
Peter’s denial is not the final
word over his life.
The Gospel story carries us
forward to the shoreline of Galilee,
where the risen Jesus prepares
breakfast and calls Peter by name.
Three times Peter had denied
knowing him.
Three times Jesus asks, “Do
you love me?”
It is not an exercise in humiliation.
It is an invitation to speak
love where once there had been fear.
And each affirmation is met not with suspicion,
but with commission: “Feed my
sheep.”
Restoration is not simply
forgiveness as erasure.
It is forgiveness as
recommissioning.
Peter is not cast aside because of his failure.
He is reshaped by it.
The one who has discovered the
limits of his own courage
becomes a leader who knows
that ministry depends on grace.
The wound of denial
becomes the place where
humility grows.
In that sense, our failures can
become sites of deep learning.
When we discover that we are
not as brave, not as consistent,
not as steadfast
as we imagined,
we are also freed from the
illusion that everything depends on us.
Dependence on God stops being
pious language
and becomes lived necessity.
We learn to trust not in our capacity to get it right,
but in the mercy that meets us
when we do not.
That is why Lent is not about
cultivating shame.
It is about allowing grace to
find us
precisely where we would
rather hide.
So where does this leave us as
a community?
It would be easy to keep Peter
at a safe distance,
as a cautionary tale from long
ago.
But the Gospel invites us to see ourselves in him.
Where have we softened our
discipleship because it felt costly?
Where have we chosen silence
rather than solidarity?
Where have we distanced ourselves from Christ’s way
of justice, compassion and
truth
because it risked
misunderstanding or exclusion?
Perhaps our denials are subtle.
A conversation we avoided.
A prejudice we did not
challenge.
A neighbour we failed to see.
A system we benefited from
without question.
Fear does not always shout.
Sometimes it whispers that
this is not the moment,
that someone else will speak,
that we should not make things
awkward.
The hymn we will sing shortly,
“When I needed a neighbour,”
refuses that comfort.
It asks us to recognise Christ in the vulnerable
and to see that love of
neighbour is the measure of discipleship.
To step towards the one in need rather than away.
To risk inconvenience for the
sake of compassion.
But we do not step forward by
shaming ourselves into action.
We step forward because we
trust the mercy of God.
We confess honestly, knowing we are not discarded.
We admit our fear, knowing we
are not abandoned.
And from that secure ground,
we can dare to live
differently.
A community shaped by grace
becomes a community capable of
courage.
Not flawless courage, but faithful courage.
The kind that knows its own
limits and relies on God’s strength.
Peter’s denial reminds us of
our frailty.
Jesus’ steadfastness reveals
God’s constancy.
Between those two realities,
the Christian life unfolds.
We are not asked to pretend we
are stronger than we are.
We are invited to bring our
weakness into the light.
The God we worship already knows it.
“Lord, you know our weakness.
Have mercy on us.”
That prayer from our call to worship is not a last resort.
It is the beginning of
transformation.
Even when we deny, God remains
faithful.
Even when fear distorts our
actions, grace holds us fast.
And in that grace we are not left unchanged.
We are forgiven. We are
restored.
We are strengthened to follow
again.
So as we continue our Lenten
journey,
may we trust the One who does
not waver.
May we allow our failures to become doorways
to deeper dependence.
And may the merciful God who
forgives our failings
also strengthen us, day by
day,
to follow faithfully in the
way of Christ.
Let us pray.
Faithful God,
you see us more clearly than
we see ourselves.
You know the promises we have
made,
and the promises we have
broken.
You know the moments when we have spoken with courage,
and the moments when fear has
tightened our throats.
In the quiet now,
we bring before you the places
where we have said, in word or in action,
“I am not.”
Where we have distanced
ourselves from your way of love.
Where we have chosen safety
over compassion.
Where we have remained silent rather than stand alongside another.
Hold those memories gently.
Not to shame us,
but to heal us.
As Peter stood in the courtyard
and met the gaze of Jesus,
so we dare to stand before
you.
Not hiding.
Not excusing.
Simply present.
Let your gaze be mercy.
Let your presence steady us.
Where fear has shaped us,
breathe your peace.
Where shame has settled,
speak your forgiveness.
Where we have lost confidence in ourselves,
root us again in your
faithfulness.
We thank you that our story
does not end in denial.
We thank you that your love is deeper than our inconsistency.
We thank you that you meet us not only in our strength,
but in our vulnerability.
Reshape our hearts in this
Lenten season.
Teach us a courage that grows from trust.
Teach us a humility that grows from grace.
Teach us a love that turns again towards neighbour and stranger alike.
And in the stillness now,
as we rest in your presence,
remind us that we are known,
we are forgiven,
and we are called by name.
Amen.
.jpg)
.jpg)
