P is for Peter

Impulsive. Excitable. Hasty. Impetuous.

He was one you’d love to meet for happy hour because you just knew what­ever he said and did was going to be entertaining.

Everyone in town knew him as Simon, the Galilean fish­erman, son of Jona. A robust man with a jovial laugh, one could always find him hanging out at the docks with his brother, Andrew, telling Big Fish sto­ries to anyone who would listen. He was quick to say the first thing that came out of his mouth, and didn’t really listen well to others…except for his brother.

It was Andrew that intro­duced Simon to Jesus one day. And quick as a wink, Jesus sized him up and renamed him Cephas, which means Rock in the Syriac lan­guage. The Greek trans­la­tion is the name we know him by.…Peter.

Then, one day as Jesus was walking on the shore, he called to his new friends to come join him. Jumping at the oppor­tu­nity, the brothers dropped their nets, left the docks and became two of the apos­tles and fishers of men.

And we have to pause and wonder if Jesus really knew what he was doing inviting Peter to be part of the group. After all, on more than one occa­sion, it was Peter who would make sudden deci­sions and jump into sit­u­a­tions without much thought. A loose canon you might say. Wouldn’t that be more of a lia­bility than an asset?

But, as usual, Jesus’ judge of char­acter was spot on correct.

Even though Peter proved to be a bit reck­less in his youth, his pas­sion for Jesus and the Gospel was beyond com­par­ison. Once this pas­sion and impetu­ous­ness was har­nessed, he became a pillar of this new faith, tire­lessly spreading the Gospel far and wide. It was Peter that was one of the three wit­nesses to Jesus’ trans­fig­u­ra­tion. It was Peter who was first to enter the empty tomb. It was Peter who Christ spoke to first when appearing to the dis­ci­ples after the resurrection.

It’s Peter who changed the most because of these expe­ri­ences. He became the chief flag bearer for Christianity and never denied his faith again, even when beaten, impris­oned and cru­ci­fied upside-down during Nero’s reign in 67AD.

And it’s Peter we all can iden­tify with the most, isn’t it? How many times have we acted without thinking? How often have we shot off our mouths and then later wished we had never said those words? How many times are we more con­cerned about what we’re going to say next that we never listen to what is being said to us? How many times have we jumped to the wrong con­clu­sion? How many times do we show absolutely no self-control. At. all.

Yes, there’s a little Simon Peter in all of us. But Jesus loved Peter and took all his faults and fail­ures and trans­formed them into strengths. So, there’s def­i­nitely hope for the rest of us!

Linking up with ABC Wednesday

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