Don't
toss me aside, banished forever from your presence. Don't take your Holy Spirit
from me.
-- Psalm
51:11
Playwright Oscar Wilde was right on the money when he noted that experience is
simply the name we give to our mistakes. Whether it's on the job (a missed deadline) or in
the home (left the water
running in the tub), mistakes can be both costly and painful.
If there was anyone who knew something about mistakes--and also rebounding from
them--it was David, Israel's most famous king as well as an ancestor of Jesus.
His mountaintop moments included killing the giant Philistine warrior Goliath
and leading his army to decisive victories. On the other hand, David was twice
a fugitive: once while evading jealous King Saul and then years later when his
own son chased him from the throne. David also committed adultery with one of
his officer's wives and then had the unsuspecting man killed to cover his own sin.
Psalms, a
collection of poems written and compiled by David, records his emotions as he
encountered the epic peaks and bottomless valleys of life.
Maybe your own slip-ups and blunders haven't been of biblical
proportions. But they might have felt like it. After all, how many times have
we all made such huge mistakes that it seemed like the end of the world? We blew it. It's over. And we'll never
get back.
Life-changing errors can cover a lot of territory. They might
affect our personal relationships, careers or even spiritual lives--and maybe
all of the above. But the good news for Christ-followers is that we worship a
God who not only knows what we're going through, he also cares. What's more,
he's also a God of second (and third, fourth, fifth, etc.) chances.
Like King David, the apostle Peter had a world of experience with
mistakes and comebacks. In fact, after Jesus was arrested and the other
apostles had scattered in fear, Peter emphatically denied that he even knew
Christ. And not just once,
but three times!
Jesus was soon tried and convicted on false charges. And then he
suffered a horrific, painful death--in our place--through his crucifixion
between two deserving criminals. Crushed by guilt, Peter believed that his own life was essentially over. After all, if anyone had blown it, it was him. But Christ had other plans
for this apostle of little faith. We read early in the New Testament's Book of Acts that
Peter--now filled with the Holy Spirit--boldly defied the same religious
authorities who had earlier condemned Jesus to death.
Failure and defeat are both elements of the human experience.
But here's the Good News: They
don't have to be permanent or define us. As we search for our own
life-comebacks, let's take Peter's victorious testimony about his
Master--Jesus--to heart:
"In no one else can
salvation be found," he proclaimed. "For in all the world no other
name has been given to men but this, and it is by this name that we must be
saved!"
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