Pages

RSS Feed

Monday, April 27, 2026

hree Things Jesus Does When You Fail

“The steadfast love of the LORD never ceases; his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness.” Lamentations 3:22-23 (ESV)

Failure can be isolating. When I'm in the middle of a failure, I often feel ashamed and just want to be alone. But Jesus is with me always, even in my greatest failure.

To help me through my failures, Jesus does three incredible things:

Jesus prays for me. Even before Peter had failed, Jesus told him, “I have prayed for you, that your faith will not fail” (Luke 22:32 NASB).

Even at this very moment, Jesus is interceding—praying—for me. The Bible says, “He is able, once and forever, to save those who come to God through him. He lives forever to intercede with God on their behalf” (Hebrews 7:25 NLT).

Jesus believes in me. In fact, he expects me to heal and recover. That’s why he told Peter before his big failure, “When you have repented and turned to me again . . .” (Luke 22:32 NLT). Jesus knew Peter would sin and fail and eventually come back to him.

The truth is that we all fail, and we fail repeatedly. My biggest weaknesses are often habitual. I don’t just do them one time and that’s it. But God isn’t only there for the big, one-time failure. He’s there for the mistakes I make over and over again. Though I fail repeatedly, God will always believe in me.

Jesus shows me mercy. Jesus is more willing to show mercy than I'm willing to ask for it. When I'm down, Jesus doesn’t beat me up or add to my guilt. Instead, he saves me.

In John 21, not long after Peter had denied Jesus, Peter and some other disciples went fishing. Though they fished all night, they caught nothing. At dawn, Jesus called to them from the shore and told them where to throw their nets. “So they did, and they couldn’t haul in the net because there were so many fish in it” (John 21:6 NLT). 

When Peter followed Jesus’ instructions, he caught more fish than he could possibly handle. Jesus is ready to do the same for me. He can do more in five minutes than I can do in 50 years of planning.

Here’s more good news: God’s mercy toward me is not dependent on my performance. The Bible says in Lamentations 3:22-23, “The steadfast love of the LORD never ceases; his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness” (ESV).

I may give up on God, but he’s never going to give up on me. Jesus is praying for me, believes in me, and will always show me mercy. No matter what I do, God is faithful.

In summary:

This passage shifts the perspective on personal failure from a source of isolation and shame to a catalyst for divine intercession and restoration. By examining the relationship between Jesus and Peter, I see that Christ anticipates my stumbles, proactively prays for my resilience, and maintains a belief in my potential for recovery that far exceeds my own self-confidence. The primary message is that God’s faithfulness is not a reaction to my performance, but a permanent attribute of His character; His mercies are intentionally renewed every morning to ensure that no habitual struggle or singular collapse has the final word in my life.

Bottom Line:

My failures do not exhaust God's mercy; they invite His intercession and provide a platform for His unwavering faithfulness to sustain me.

Next Step:

Practice identity alignment by replacing your "shame-driven isolation" with a "morning mercy reset." Instead of carrying yesterday’s guilt into today’s tasks, spend the first five minutes of my morning explicitly acknowledging that today’s supply of mercy is brand new and independent of yesterday’s performance. This disciplined mental shift moves me from a state of self-condemnation to a state of receptive cooperation with the One who is already interceding for my success.

 

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Recovering from Your Worst Moments

“Immediately a rooster crowed, and Peter remembered the words Jesus had spoken, ‘Before the rooster crows, you will deny me three times.’ And he went outside and wept bitterly.” Matthew 26:74-75 (CSB)

When I experience failure, it sometimes feels like I’ll never recover. But I will. Whether I’ve experienced a failure in my finances, career, or something else, I can recover.

Recovery starts with grieving my failure. Don’t minimize it or pretend it didn’t happen. Don’t rush to try to feel better. Instead, take the time to feel the pain.

This highlights an important life principle: To get past something, I’ve got to go through it. That’s true in so many areas of life, but it’s particularly true with failure.

Grief is the way through failure. When I fail, I just want to forget it, to stuff my emotions and quickly move to the next thing. But that’s a mistake. Grief is the way I learn failure’s lessons.

When I swallow my emotions instead of going through them, my stomach keeps score. It’s like taking a can of soda, shaking it up, and putting it in the freezer. It’s eventually going to explode!

Peter, one of Jesus’ disciples, experienced the grief of failure firsthand. In a time of crisis, he denied that he even knew Jesus, and that failure led to deep grief.

The Bible says, “Immediately a rooster crowed, and Peter remembered the words Jesus had spoken, ‘Before the rooster crows, you will deny me three times.’ And he went outside and wept bitterly” (Matthew 26:74-75 CSB).

Imagine how disappointed Peter must have felt in himself. He had walked alongside Jesus, watching him teach, do miracles, heal people, raise the dead, and offer mercy and forgiveness over and over again. Yet when he was put to the test about his commitment to Jesus, he denied him three times in a row.

But instead of ignoring his failure, Peter did the right thing: He was humble and regretful. He owned up to it and grieved—and that’s the key to healing.

Many people want to take shortcuts when they have a failure. They pretend it was someone else’s fault the business failed and start another one right away. They simply never learn the lesson. 

But there is no shortcut to grieving and recovering from failure. The greater the failure, the more time it’s going to take to heal. Let God work in my heart. I can’t force healing. Recovery is an act of God's mercy, and it will come in time. 

In summary:

This study focuses on the essential role of grief in the process of recovering from personal failure. Using Peter’s "bitter weeping" after his denial of Christ as a model, the text argues that bypassing the emotional weight of a mistake prevents genuine learning and healing. True recovery requires the humility to acknowledge the pain of failure rather than minimizing it or rushing toward a new endeavor. By choosing to go through the pain rather than around it, I allow God’s mercy to work in my heart, ensuring that my growth is sustainable and that I don't carry the "shaken-up" pressure of suppressed emotions into the future.

Bottom Line:

I cannot heal from what I refuse to feel; grieving my failure is the only healthy path to learning its lessons.

Next Step:

Practice "Emotional Inventory": Set aside 15 minutes this week to reflect on a recent setback or disappointment I’ve tried to ignore. Write down the specific emotions I feel—without judging them or making excuses—and present them to God in prayer, asking Him to reveal the lesson within the pain rather than rushing for a quick fix.


Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Whose Opinion Matters Most?

“It is dangerous to be concerned with what others think of you, but if you trust the LORD, you are safe.” Proverbs 29:25 (GNT)

Every time I make a decision based on what other people might think, I unknowingly sow seeds of failure in my own life.

I may not realize it, but fearing the disapproval of others causes more problems in my life than almost anything else. When I worry about what other people think, I tend to do the most popular thing, even if I know it’s wrong. I make commitments that I can’t possibly keep, simply because I'm trying to make everybody happy. This is a recipe for failure.

And it’s one of the reasons Peter failed Jesus by denying him three times. He was more concerned with what other people thought than with being faithful to Jesus.

The Bible says, But Peter followed along at a distance and came to the courtyard of the high priest’s palace. He went in and sat down with the guards to see what was going to happen . . . While Peter was sitting out in the courtyard, a servant girl came up to him and said, ‘You were with Jesus from Galilee.’ But in front of everyone Peter said, ‘That isn’t so! I don’t know what you are talking about!’” (Matthew 26:58, 69-70 CEV).

Peter had just spent three years with Jesus, the Son of God. Yet when he had a chance to acknowledge this privilege, he denied Jesus. Peter was more concerned about what other people thought than he was about identifying with Christ.

Think about how many times you’ve had the opportunity to share Christ and said nothing because you were worried about what other people would think.

Whose opinion matters more to you than God's? When you allow another person to be more important than God, they become your god. That’s called an idol—and it’s a setup for failure.

The fear of disapproval always comes from a hidden wound. Maybe it was a rejection in the past. It might be an unmet need or a trauma I experienced growing up. It’s a deep pain, so it’s hidden deep in me. I call it soul pain.

That soul pain is always related to my identity. If I don’t know who I am, I will be manipulated by the disapproval of other people the rest of my life. I won’t stand up for what I believe or do what’s right. 

The Bible says in Proverbs 29:25, “It is dangerous to be concerned with what others think of you, but if you trust the LORD, you are safe” (GNT).

When I recognize the hidden wounds in my life, God can begin to heal them. And I can live in the freedom of knowing that God’s opinion matters most.

In summary:

This study addresses the destructive nature of "people-pleasing," framing the fear of human disapproval as a spiritual snare that leads to compromise and failure. Using Peter’s denial of Christ in the high priest's courtyard as a case study, the text illustrates how the desire for social safety often outweighs loyalty to God when our identity is insecure. The root of this fear is frequently tied to "soul pain"—hidden wounds or past rejections that cause us to elevate others' opinions to the level of idolatry. The passage concludes that true safety and freedom are only found by shifting our focus from the shifting expectations of people to the secure, unchanging opinion of God.

Bottom Line:

When I allow the fear of human rejection to outrank my reverence for God, I trade my divine destiny for a temporary social safety that will eventually fail me.

Next Step:

Identify one specific "people-pleasing" habit—such as saying "yes" to a commitment I don't have time for or staying silent about my values—and practice "Identity Anchoring" this week: Before responding to others, consciously remind myself that my worth is already settled by God, then make my decision based on integrity rather than the desire for approval.


Monday, April 20, 2026

Don’t Let Your Strengths Cause You to Fail

“If you think you are standing strong, be careful not to fall.” 1 Corinthians 10:12 (NLT)

Failure is part of life. No matter who I am or what my story is, I'm going to experience failure at some point. It’s part of living as an imperfect person in an imperfect world.

Before Jesus went to the cross, on the night that he was arrested, his friend Peter failed him in a significant way. Peter denied Jesus—not just once but three times.

During the Last Supper, Jesus told his disciples he was going to be arrested, die, and three days later come back to life. He said to the disciples, “Tonight all of you will desert me” (Matthew 26:31 NLT). Yet Peter kept insisting he would never deny Jesus. In fact, Peter said three times, “I will never”!

Peter overestimated his strength—and it eventually led to his failure.

Overestimating my own strength is still a common cause of failure today when I think I'm stronger than I really am—when I believe I can handle temptation.

When people overestimate their strengths, there are dire consequences: Businesses fail, battles are lost, and spouses are tempted into affairs.

You might think, “That could never happen to me.” But 1 Corinthians 10:12 says, “If you think you are standing strong, be careful not to fall” (NLT).

No one is exempt. Given the right situation, I am capable of any sin.

When I don’t pay attention to my strengths, they become weaknesses. In other words, an unguarded strength becomes a double weakness because I have a sense of pride about it. 

Peter’s biggest failure, denying Christ, happened right after the Last Supper, a very intimate and powerful experience. The very area where I’ve had a major victory may be exactly where I stumble next.

Resist the temptation to overestimate my strengths. Instead, remember I am a sinful human who needs God’s grace and mercy. Keep my strengths in perspective so they don’t become my point of failure.

In summary:

This passage explores the danger of spiritual and personal overconfidence through the lens of 1 Corinthians 10:12 and the narrative of Peter’s denial. Despite Peter’s bold assertions of loyalty, his self-reliance led to a significant failure, proving that human strength is inherently limited. The text concludes that pride in one's perceived invulnerability is a precursor to a fall, as even major spiritual victories can create a false sense of security. Ultimately, the primary message is that an unguarded strength becomes a double weakness, requiring believers to maintain a posture of humility and constant dependence on God’s grace rather than their own willpower.

Bottom Line:

The highest risk of failure exists where I believe myself to be most invulnerable.

Next Step:

Review my perceived strengths: Identify one area where I feel most confident or "above" temptation, and intentionally implement a new boundary or accountability measure this week to ensure that my confidence remains rooted in disciplined dependence rather than ego.



Thursday, April 16, 2026

The Power of a Wasted Hurt

These sufferings of ours are for your benefit. And the more of you who are won to Christ, the more there are to thank him for his great kindness, and the more the Lord is glorified.” 2 Corinthians 4:15 (TLB)

When I use my pain to help others, God will bless me in ways I can’t possibly imagine.

The apostle Paul went through enormous pain in his life, which is why God was able to use him in enormous ways. He was shipwrecked, beaten, and robbed. He went without food, water, and sleep. Yet God used him to spread the Gospel throughout the Roman Empire. In fact, if I was to ask Paul, “How’d you put up with so much pain?” He’d tell me it was because he wanted to bring people to Jesus Christ. He wanted to help others.

Paul said in the Living Bible paraphrase, “These sufferings of ours are for your benefit. And the more of you who are won to Christ, the more there are to thank him for his great kindness, and the more the Lord is glorified” (2 Corinthians 4:15).

I may never suffer the same ways Paul did, but I will go through pain in life. So I might as well use my pain for good and not waste it.

There are actually three kinds of suffering God uses to help others: self-imposed suffering, innocent suffering, and redemptive suffering.

Some suffering is the kind I bring upon myself. I cause some of my own problems by making poor judgements. I don’t always eat the right foods, make the right decisions, or respond the right way to others.

Innocent suffering is when, through no fault of my own, I get hurt by someone else. Whether I was abandoned, rejected, or scammed, everyone has been hurt by the sins of other people.

But the highest form of suffering is redemptive suffering. This is when I go through pain or problems for the benefit of others.

This is what Jesus did. When Jesus died on the cross, he didn’t deserve to die. He went through that pain for my benefit so that I could be saved and go to heaven. In the same way, God will use my pain to bring hope and healing to others.

Who can better help somebody going through bankruptcy than somebody who went through bankruptcy? Who can better help somebody struggling with an addiction than somebody who’s struggled with an addiction? Who can better help parents of a special needs child than parents who raised a special needs child? Who can better help somebody who’s lost a child than somebody who lost a child?

I am most powerfully positioned to serve the person I once was?

God will never waste a hurt. God will work in my life so that he can work through me to encourage others.

Praise God and rejoice during trials, because suffering will build your endurance and help others in their pain. God can use all three kinds of suffering for good. Start by giving each of my hurts to him and say, “God, I want you to use my pain to benefit others.”

In summary:

In 2 Corinthians 4:15, the Apostle Paul re-frames personal hardship not as a senseless burden, but as a strategic tool for ministry and the expansion of God’s grace. By examining the lives of Paul and Jesus, we see that suffering—whether self-imposed, innocent, or redemptive—attains its highest value when it is leveraged for the benefit of others. The text argues that my greatest platform for service often emerges from my deepest places of pain, transforming personal trials into a catalyst for communal gratitude and the ultimate glorification of God.

Bottom Line:

God never wastes a hurt; your greatest ministry will likely emerge from your deepest misery when you choose to use your pain for the benefit of others.

Next Step:

Identify one specific "past version of myself" who struggled with a challenge I have since navigated—whether financial, emotional, or relational—and commit to a "Redemptive Audit" this week. Instead of dwelling on the "why" of that past pain, document three lessons learned and reach out to one person currently in that same fire to offer the specific encouragement you once lacked.


Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Why Your Motive Matters

Our message is not about ourselves. It is about Jesus Christ as the Lord. We are your servants for his sake.” 2 Corinthians 4:5 (GW)

If I want to be used by God, I need to remember this: It’s not about me; it’s all about Jesus.

“It’s not about yomeu” is the exact opposite of everything I've been taught. Our entire culture appeals to self-centeredness. Advertisements everywhere tell me, “I'm number one! Do what’s best for you! Think of yourself first!”

But I'm not the center of the universe—God is. That’s why, when I make every problem, opportunity, and criticism about myself, I become frustrated and unfulfilled. And I eventually become bored because life is so much more than living for myself.

The Bible says, “Our message is not about ourselves. It is about Jesus Christ as the Lord. We are your servants for his sake” (2 Corinthians 4:5 GW).

Twice in this passage, Paul says it’s all for Jesus. It’s “about Jesus Christ,” and it’s “for his sake.” In other words, learning to follow Jesus is about motivation.

There may be a hundred different things I could do with my life, and God might say: “Because I made you and shaped you, any of those things would be fine with me.”

But God is far more interested in my motivation for doing something than in my methodology. I could be using the right method and be very successful in life. But if I have the wrong motive—greed, competition, envy, or guilt—it won’t count with God.

On the other hand, I could do everything wrong and fail in so many ways. But if I have the right motive—Jesus—then God says, “That’s good enough.” God is more interested in my “why” than my “what.”

The Bible says, “Whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus” (Colossians 3:17 NIV).

Have you found yourself bored or frustrated with life? Choose to make Jesus your motivation today. You’ll find the joy of living for something bigger than yourself.

In summary:

Rooted in 2 Corinthians 4:5, this study challenges the modern cult of self-centeredness by asserting that a meaningful life is found only when Jesus is the central focus. The primary message is that fulfillment is not a byproduct of self-promotion or flawless methodology, but of pure motivation. While the world emphasizes being "number one," the biblical mandate is to serve others for the sake of Christ. Because God prioritizes the "why" behind our actions over the "what," redirecting our internal drive away from greed or ego and toward the lordship of Jesus eliminates the boredom and frustration inherent in self-absorbed living.

Bottom Line:

God values the posture of my heart more than the scale of my success; when Jesus becomes my "why," every "what" gains eternal significance.

Next Step:

Practice "Motivational Recalibration" throughout the day. Before starting a major task or engaging in a conversation, pause and silently state: "I am doing this for the sake of Jesus, not for my own credit." This disciplined action shifts my focus from self-validation to servant-heartedness, ensuring my daily work aligns with my identity as a servant of Christ.

 

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Don’t Be Afraid of Being You

“For we are God’s masterpiece. He has created us anew in Christ Jesus, so we can do the good things he planned for us long ago.” Ephesians 2:10 (NLT)

God didn’t create me to be somebody else. When I get to heaven, he’s not going to ask me why I wasn't more like my sister, my father, or my neighbor. God made me one of a kind, and he wants me to be real.

He wants to use me as me.

The Bible says, “For we are God’s masterpiece. He has created us anew in Christ Jesus, so we can do the good things he planned for us long ago” (Ephesians 2:10 NLT). 

The problem is, many people try to be someone they’re not. They live for the approval of others. Or they think God would love them more if they acted differently. But God’s love isn’t based on how I act. He loves me no matter what I do.

One barrier that often keeps people from being used by God is the fear of being real. Afraid people won’t like me if they find out who I really am, so I live an insecure life. But the Bible says, “The Spirit we received does not make us slaves again to fear; it makes us children of God” Romans 8:15 (NCV).

The antidote to insecurity is God’s Spirit at work in me. When I live as a child of God, despite my mistakes and weaknesses, I'm liberated to be who God made me to be.

My imperfections are actually a good thing. People don’t grow from strengths; they grow from weaknesses. Showing only my strengths to the world won’t make others feel close to me; it may even make them feel jealous or distant. But when I admit my imperfections—when I'm real with others—people draw closer to me.

So I have a decision to make. Am I ready to be real? I can be stuck and enslaved by fear. Or I can be the real me and enjoy the good things God planned for me long ago.

In summary:

Ephesians 2:10 establishes that every individual is a divine "masterpiece," intentionally crafted with a unique identity to fulfill a specific, pre-ordained purpose. The passage shows that the primary barrier to fulfilling this purpose is the "mask of perfection" or the drive for social approval, which fuels insecurity and isolation. By embracing the reality that we are children of God—rather than slaves to fear—we are liberated to be authentic about our weaknesses. This vulnerability does not diminish our impact; instead, it fosters genuine connection and allows others to grow through our honesty, ensuring that our lives align with the "good things" God prepared for us from the beginning.

Bottom Line:

My greatest impact is found in my authentic identity as God's masterpiece, not in a polished imitation of someone else.

Next Step:

Identify one area of my life where I'm currently "performing" to gain approval or hide an insecurity. Commit to a specific act of radical honesty in that area this week—whether that is admitting a mistake to a colleague or sharing a struggle with a friend—thereby aligning my external actions with my true identity as a secure child of God.