31 “Simon, Simon, behold, Satan has demanded to sift you men like wheat; 32 but I have prayed for you, that your faith will not fail; and you, when you have turned back, strengthen your brothers.” Luke 22:31-32 (NASB 2020)
Failure always asks a question of the heart. Not whether we have failed, but how we will respond.
There are two paths Scripture lays before us: one that leads to restoration, and one that ends in despair. Both Peter and Judas failed. Both were warned. Both were overcome by guilt. Yet their endings could not be more different.
Peter failed publicly and painfully. He had once confessed that Jesus was the Christ, the Son of the living God. He had been renamed, (Cephas to Peter), commissioned, and spoken over. His confidence grew, perhaps too much. At the table he declared he would die with Jesus. But when the moment came, determination collapsed. He did not pray. He did not lean on grace. And when the pressure rose, he fell.
Ashamed and broken, Peter returned to fishing. Failure pulled him back to what was familiar, to what felt safe. Like Elijah fleeing from Jezebel, his heart seemed to cry, “I am no better than those before me.” Like Isaiah standing exposed before holiness, he became painfully aware of his weakness and undone by his own failure. He once said in Luke 5:8 “Go away from me, Lord; I am a sinful man,”. This time he appeared to say, not as confession alone, but as resignation. It was as though Peter concluded, I am bound to fail. I will always fall short. I am only a sinner, only a fisherman. I am of no use to You. In his shame, failure tried to redefine his identity. It told him that his calling was cancelled, his future finished, and his place in the story over.
Judas also failed. When Judas, who had betrayed him, saw that Jesus was condemned, he was seized with remorse and returned the thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests and the elders.“I have sinned,” he said, “for I have betrayed innocent blood.” Mathew 27:3-5. When events unfolded differently than he expected, remorse flooded in. He confessed his sin, acknowledged innocent blood, and was overwhelmed by guilt. But his sorrow turned inward, not upward. He could not believe mercy was still possible. He concluded that nothing, not even God, could receive him again. And in despair, he made a final and irreversible decision.
This is the dividing line.
Jesus had already spoken to Peter, “When you have failed, strengthen your brothers.” Not if you fail, but when. Jesus did not pray that Peter would never stumble. He prayed that Peter’s faith would not fail, that Peter would not stop believing in the goodness of God.
Faith is not the absence of failure. Faith is trusting the character of God after failure. “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9).
When Peter wandered back to fishing, Jesus went after him. Peter did not pursue Jesus; Jesus pursued Peter. And when they met, Jesus did not rehearse the failure. He asked one question only: “Do you love Me?”. No interrogation about what he did but about his loyalty. No punishment. No reference to the denial. Love was the qualification. And love was enough. Then came the reinstatement: “Feed My sheep.” No résumé required. No record of achievements. No proof of worthiness. Failure did not disqualify Peter. Unbelief would have.
Prayer
Lord, I bring You my failures without excuse and without hiding. Where shame tells me I am finished, speak Your restoring truth. Guard my faith when I fall. Teach me to believe in Your mercy more than in my weakness. Restore my calling, realign my heart, and send me forward again not by my strength, but by Your grace. Amen.
Quote: Failure does not end a calling; losing faith in the mercy and grace of God does.