Recently I have been reflecting on another example of Jesus asking one of his beloved children a question. It is when Jesus met Peter on the shore after his resurrection in John 21. I can't help but think of myself like Peter. It's probably funny to some of my friends and family because in some ways I'm not like Peter at all. Maybe we all are a little like Peter. Peter was passionate and excited about what Jesus was doing. He was super-pumped about being one of the closest members of Jesus's insiders, and he had plans. He was often the first to talk, the first act, and the first to jump head first. Peter was gifted naturally and spiritually. The gospels tell us he recognized Jesus as the Messiah by a God-given revelation. He was willing to die to see Jesus fit into his plans. But like many of us, Peter's plans didn't include the full plan of God. It included some of the details, but it lacked God's heart of sacrificial love. So on the darkest day in history we find Peter unable to endure. His own heart betrayed him. Although he had a love for Jesus, his love for God was based on who God was for him, not who he was for God. I believe in those dark hours of Peter's betrayal, God began to change Peter's heart. Not only did he realize his dreams were unfulfilled, but he realized he was losing his best friend. I believe in those hours of grief God began to prioritize Peter's life. He found himself thinking of Jesus's voice more then Jesus's Roman take over. Peter found himself missing the friend and the comforter more than the one who would fulfill his noble plans.
When Jesus met Peter on the shore after his denial, Jesus didn't answer the many questions Peter had wrestled with in those dark hours. He didn't mention the failed plans or explain to Peter his much greater agenda. He simply asked Peter a question. He asked Peter the same question three times, " Peter do you love me?" I don't think Jesus was looking for an answer. He already knew the answer. He knew that in his failure Peter was a changed man. He knew Peter now understood the difference between self and love for God. Jesus knew that Peter truly loved him now, so this moment became Peter's greatest commission, "Feed my sheep". Peter was to now live a life of sacrificial love in the footsteps of his savior.
It's this question and this commission that has been knocking on my heart so sweetly this week. In the many moments of uncertainty and vulnerability after my last post, I find myself hearing Jesus remind me of the power in simple devotion and pure love for God. It's not the number of Facebook followers, speaking events, powerful meetings I have been a part of, or even wonderful compliments that people may give that matter to God. It's the simple act of loving him and sharing his love with others. It's the small moments and small things that make all the difference in the life of a disciple of Jesus. Jesus cares about the small things. The overlooked person in a crowd, the kind word, the simple act of forgiveness no one may ever see, the silent prayer in the midst of heart ache, and the hug for the hurting matter so much to Jesus. When I kiss my kids goodnight, praise God for the sunset, or get my husband a drink of water, it matters to God. It matters to God when you admit a wrong, or when you say thank you at night. Asking Jesus simply to teach you more about him and his heart for the hurting matters to God. The amazing thing about Peter is that the biggest failure in his life turned into his greatest triumph. He realized his love for Jesus was stronger that his love for anything else, including himself.