As I strolled through Chicago’s O’Hare airport, something caught my
eye—a hat worn by someone racing through the concourse. What caught my
attention was the message it conveyed in just two words: “Deny Everything.” I
wondered what it meant. Don’t ever admit to guilt? Or deny yourself the
pleasures and luxuries of life? I scratched my head at the mystery of those two
simple words, “Deny Everything.”
One of Jesus’ followers, Simon Peter, did some denying. In a critical
moment, he denied three times that He even knew Jesus! (Luke 22:57, 58,60). His
fear-filled act of denial caused him such guilt and heartache that, broken by
his spiritual failure, he could only go out and weep bitterly (v.62).
But Peter’s denial of Christ, like our own moments of spiritual denial,
could never diminish the compassion of God. The prophet Jeremiah wrote,
“Through the Lord’s mercies we are not consumed, because His compassions fail
not. They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness” (Lam. 3:22-23). We
can take heart that even when we fail, our faithful God comes to us in mercy
and compassion that never fails!
Being imperfect emphasizes our dependence on God’s mercy. (RBC)