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Summary: A sermon about the transforming and never-failing love of Christ.

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“Let Me Tell You What Love Can Do”

John 21:1-19

Let’s go back three years before our Gospel Lesson for this morning.

Jesus had gone out and selected 12 men.

They were your average everyday kind of guys...and Jesus found them doing your average everyday kind of things...

...and when Jesus found them He said to them “Follow me,” and they dropped their nets...

…or left their tax booths or whatever…

...they dropped everything they were doing...

...they left everything they had loved...

...everything that was familiar to them...

...and they did it...

...they followed Jesus!

And in following Jesus, they saw some very amazing stuff.

They met a lot of interesting people.

And they began to notice that their priorities had begun to change in some of the most radical of ways.

The things that used to seem important to them...

...well, those things weren’t quite so important anymore.

Instead, what was becoming most important was listening to Jesus teach, helping Jesus minister to the masses, following Jesus wherever the Spirit led.

And as time went by they became more and more convinced that Jesus was exactly who He said He was: The Son of God--The Messiah.

They might not have understood exactly what that meant and what dimensions that would take, but they came to believe it more than anything else in the whole world.

And throughout the Gospels we are shown Peter who assumes that Jesus needs the perfect, the best, the smartest, bravest, and larger than life super-disciple!

And so, he works hard to make himself that.

Peter is the one who asks the BIG questions, makes confident declarations and brash decisions…

…and even tries to protect Jesus with a sword.

Like Peter, have you ever tried to put on your best show for Jesus—the bravado, the promises, the right answers, the brave face?

Eventually, though, the truth comes out, doesn’t it?

Crumbling under pressure, Peter lies to protect himself.

Far from being perfect, Peter is overcome by fear and it leads him to a place he never wanted to go—never dreamed he would go.

In John Chapter 13, when Jesus is telling the disciples about His upcoming death, He says to them, “Where I am going, you cannot follow now, but you will follow later.”

To which Peter asks Him, “Lord why can’t I follow you now? I will lay down my life for you.”

“Then Jesus answered, ‘Will you really lay down your life for me?

Very truly I tell you, before the rooster crows, you will disown me three times!”

Peter never would have believed it...if only, if only it hadn’t come true.

Peter had failed Jesus.

Can you imagine the shame and embarrassment he must have felt?

Peter is buried in it.

He isn’t who he wants to be, or who he thinks others want him to be.

It’s as if everyone has discovered his nakedness!!!

His deepest, darkest secret.

He is a coward…not brave at all.

And this becomes a kind of tomb for Peter.

How could he go on?

So, when we meet Peter at the beginning of our Gospel Lesson for this morning…

…even though Jesus has already appeared to the disciples…and thus to Peter twice…

…Peter is a broken, crushed man.

Nothing mattered anymore.

Life had lost its luster.

Have you ever found yourself feeling this way?

Have you ever failed the Lord so miserably that you thought He could never, never ever forgive you?...

…and even though people have told you over and over again…that Jesus forgives you…

…you still cannot forgive yourself?

Is there anyone here this morning who has disqualified themselves from the race due to some indiscretion?

Do you ever feel as if you simply have too much baggage to follow Jesus?

Do you ever feel, that, you are somehow…just not good enough to make the cut?

I have a feeling that this is how Peter felt on the morning of our Gospel lesson when he had decided to go back to doing the same thing he had left behind three years earlier.

I think Peter felt so lost and confused that he fell back into his old way of doing things…fishing for fish.

Peter was really feeling low.

Peter had failed Jesus.

No one would want a cowardly disciple like Peter.

The Good News is that, like Peter, we may sometimes fail Jesus but Jesus never fails us!

And Jesus never stops wanting us on His team, as a part of His family.

Jesus never loses confidence in us even when we have lost confidence in ourselves.

Jesus never gives up on us no matter what!

For LOVE...Pure and undefiled, unconditional LOVE never gives up!

“Love never fails,” the Apostle Paul tells us in 1 Corinthians 13.

And that is what Jesus IS—LOVE made flesh.

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