"WHY WE FAIL THE LORD"

MARK 14:66-72

INTRO. After Jesus' intense agony in the Garden, He was betrayed by one of

His own and then arrested by the Temple guard. All His disciples

forsook Him and fled. Peter, who would later deny Him, followed Him

afar off. Peter was confused, yet courageous. He had attempted to

defend Jesus in the garden, but Jesus stopped him and even forbade

him to come to His aid. Peter could not understand. In the Garden of

Gethsemane, when Jesus stopped him from fighting the arresting

party, Peter had to flee for his life. But Peter loved his LORD too

much to flee too far away. His love for Jesus stopped him, turned him

around, and led him back to Jesus. He followed the mob from a safe

distance. The trail ended up in the Courtyard of Caiaphas' palace. It

took enormous courage for Peter to enter the courtyard, for Peter was

risking his life by being there. But he had to see what happened to

his LORD. He hoped against hope that Jesus was just waiting to act

and take over. He had to see.

Jesus had predicted earlier, that very night, that Peter and all the

disciples would forsake Him and flee. "..Before the cock crow twice,

thou shalt deny me thrice," the LORD had told Peter. But Peter

vehemently denied, "If I should die with thee, I will not deny thee in

any wise. Likewise also said thee all." None of us desire to fail the

LORD. But so many times we do! Failing the LORD is very, very

serious. It is something we want to avoid if at all possible. Peter did

not want to deny Jesus, but he did! All our failures in the Christian

Life are faith failures! Peter learned that when we allow our faith to

fail we then fail God. Later in life, the aged Apostle wrote in the

Second Epistle bearing his name, the importance of Faith as being the

foundation. To faith we should add virtue, knowledge, temperance,

patience, godliness, brotherly kindness, and charity. He went on to

write, “for if these things be in you, and abound, they make you that

ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our

LORD Jesus Christ.. Wherefore the rather, brethren, give diligence to

make your calling and election sure: for if ye do these things, ye shall

never fall.” (2 Peter 1:8,10).

Faith can overcome failure! 1 John 5:4 tells us, “for whatsoever is

born of God overcometh the world: and this is the victory that

overcometh the world, even our faith.” Faith overcomes, but the flesh

fails! Peter rested on the arm of the flesh and failed. The same will

happen to us if we rest in the flesh and not in our faith! Peter failed

Jesus in several areas, and his failure reached its climax in an actual

denial of the LORD. I want us to try and answer this question, "Why

Do We Fail The LORD?"

PETER FAILED THE LORD BECAUSE:

(1) HE WAS MISPLACED

MARK 14:66—“And as Peter was beneath in the palace...”

A. THE WRONG PLACE. Peter was where he should not have been. He was

with the crowd of rejecters, sitting with them and warming himself by their

fire. The crowd there was probably discussing the trial and mocking,

joking, and cursing Jesus because of His claims. Peter was out of place.

He should have been alone or else with the other disciples in prayer,

seeking an answer to their confusion.

B. THE WRONG PATH. When we allow ourselves to enter into places or into

situations where we know we should not be, then we open ourselves up for

failure. Someone has said, "if you lie down with the dogs you're going to

get fleas." We must guard our steps so as not to be in places or situations

that might open us up for failure!

There is a song which the little children often sing that says, "Be careful

little feet where you go, be careful little feet where you go. For the Father

up above is looking down in love, so be careful little feet where you go."

We, as Christians, must be careful where we go! The Bible tells us,

"Abstain from all appearance of evil." (1 Thessalonians 5:22). If it looks

bad stay away! Don't go there!

ILLUS. To pray against temptation, and yet rush into occasions, is to

thrust your fingers into the fire, and then pray that they may not

be burnt. The fable saith, “that the butterfly inquired of the owl,

how she could do with the candle that singed her wings; the owl

counseled her, not so much as to behold the smoke.” If you hold

the stirrup, no wonder Satan gets in the saddle (1).

Peter was in the wrong place because he followed the wrong path. When

we are in the wrong place, it becomes much easier for us to yield to

temptation!

(2) HE MISUNDERSTOOD THE LORD'S WORDS

A. THE CONFUSION. Jesus, during His earthly ministry, spoke to the

disciples much of the coming Kingdom. Mark says that, "He came into

Galilee, preaching the gospel of the kingdom" (Mark 1:14,15). The Parables

in Matthew 13 speak about the beginning, growth, and consummation of

the Kingdom. But Peter and the rest of the disciples misunderstood His

words concerning the Kingdom. They thought of it in physical and

material terms only. They failed to see the Spiritual kingdom, that is:

--the death and resurrection of Christ.

--the LORD'S indwelling power, His rule and reign in the human

heart.

--the remaking of a new heavens and earth (2 Peter 3:10).

Thus Peter was confused. Peter had drawn his sword and attacked when

the arresting party came for Jesus in the Garden. Peter had been ready

to act in the flesh, to fight to establish the LORD'S Kingdom (v47), but

Jesus had rebuked him and stopped him. On top of that, Jesus had not

blasted his enemies nor made His move; but rather, He had allowed them

to take Him, voluntarily surrendering to their abuse. Peter could not

understand. He was confused. His mind was reeling and searching for

answers.

B. THE COMPARISON. Have you ever felt like Peter? Confused, without

understanding, and searching for answers? Many times we can't

understand the LORD'S ways, but even then we must trust Him! He knows

what He's doing (Isaiah 55:8-9)! If we fail to trust Him, it is then that we

doubt and fail Him!

(3) HE WAS MOTIVATED BY FEAR

MARK 14:67-71

A. FEAR LEADS TO DENIAL. In these five verses, we see the three denials of

Peter. All of these denials are motivated by fear! All of these fears are

failures. To fear is to fail. Why? Because 2 Timothy 1:7 tells us, "For God

hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound

mind." I agree with the statement, "Faith chases our fear, or fear chases out

faith." Faith and fear are at opposite ends of the same spectrum. When

we doubt, we move toward fear. But when we trust God and commit our

way to Him we are growing in our faith as God would have us to do and

moving ahead on the Faithway!

B. FEAR LEADS TO DISOBEDIENCE. Peter had created a bad situation for

himself. He had attacked the arresting party (v47). He had failed to wait

upon the LORD'S directive, acting in the arm of the flesh and doing what he

believed was best. Therefore, to some degree he was a hunted man. In the

scuffle, he had forsaken the LORD and fled for his life. But Peter's great love

for Jesus and his great hope that Jesus might yet make His move had

stopped Peter and turned him around. He followed Jesus, although from a

safe distance (v54). Throughout the entire incident his heart was probably

palpitating with fear--fear of being recognized, arrested, and killed.

Peter’s fear resulted in three denials-three failures:

1) He feared the damsel (vvs. 66-68). This caused Peter to act pretentious.

The word means "to pretend to be something one is not." Look at what

happened. A maid simply walked up to Peter and said that he had also

been with Jesus of Nazareth. There seems to be no threat or danger in this

statement to Peter. At worst, it seems it may have led to some bantering or

ridicule. The rejecters stood around bantering back and forth about Jesus

and His claims. In their minds and talk He was but a fool. Peter had a

great opportunity to be a witness for Jesus, sharing His love and

compassion for people, but Peter cracked under fear. He denied Jesus,

pretending he knew nothing about Him nor had anything to do with Him.

The fear of ridicule and embarrassment often causes a person to deny

Jesus. This denial can be by: voice, by act (going along with the crowd), or

by silence. Many profess Christ on Sundays and among believers, yet say

not a word about Him during the week. Or else, they live no differently from

the world. No one ever knows they are believers (Mark 8:38)!

Someone has asked the question, If you were charged with being a

Christian, would there be enough evidence to convict you? Would your

friends and co-workers have suspected it all along? or would it be a total

shock to them?

2) He feared the Crowd Twice (vvs. 69-72). This time a maid recognized

Peter and said to the crowd standing around, “This is one of them.” (v69).

The pressure this time on Peter was greater because the crowd was present.

He denied more emphatically this time. Matthew says, "he denied with an

oath." Note four things:

a) Peter actually denied Jesus before men and used an oath. This oath in

essence said, "I swear by God, I do not know this man. I know nothing

about Him." Notice Peter's downfall thus far: lying led to swearing.

Instead of denying Jesus, he should of been upstairs in the courtroom

standing by the LORD'S side and testifying for Him!

b) Peter was falling more and more into sin. He was denying Jesus because

He was not by His side, he was among the LORD'S rejecters. He was

standing with the LORD'S rejecters because he had fled the LORD. He

had fled the LORD because he had acted in the flesh. He had acted in

the flesh because he had not accepted the LORD'S words.

c) Peter was fearing persecution. This was Peter's first real test of face to

face life-threatening persecution. And he was failing terribly. He was

failing despite the fact that Jesus had told Him time and again that he

must suffer for God.

d) Peter followed Jesus eagerly when Jesus was popular and had a large

following. But he could not stand the heat when Jesus was being

opposed and rejected by many.

HE WAS MISPLACED, HE MISUNDERSTOOD THE LORD’S WORDS, HE WAS MOTIVATED BY FEAR, and finally…

(4) HE WAS MASTERED BY FEAR NOT BY FAITH

MARK 14:70-72a

A. FEAR IS RELENTLESS. AS the crowd approached and confronted Peter

the pressure on him reached its climax. V71 says, "But he began to curse

and to swear.." His chest was bound to have been pounding with emotion

and fear. His mind was reeling and trying to figure out a way to escape.

His lips, cursing and swearing, burst forth in a final emphatic denial, "I

know not this man." Note he called the LORD "this man." That was all

Jesus was to the rejecters with whom Peter was standing. A mere man.

Peter's denial gave no honor whatsoever to Jesus Christ. On many

occasions we see Peter calling Him Master and LORD, but in his denials he

refers to him as "the man, this man" (2). Peter’s failure had reached its

climax, and v72 tells us, “and the second time the cock crew...” Just as the

LORD had predicted before the crowing of the cock the second time Peter

had denied Jesus three times! Why did Peter fail the LORD? Because Peter

failed to trust Jesus in midst of confusing and threatening circumstances.

Jesus was being tried and condemned to die before Peter's eyes, yet Jesus

said He would arise. Peter had misunderstood Jesus' words, therefore his

faith was weakened when things didn't turn out as he believed they would.

He was thus unprepared for the events facing him. He was mastered then

by his fear instead of his faith! We must trust the LORD in every

circumstance and in every avenue of life; if not we will fail Him just as Peter

failed! (Proverbs 3:5-6).

B. FEAR IS REMORSEFUL. Note Peter's downward fall: Lying led to

swearing, and swearing led to cursing; no one but the LORD knows how

much further Peter would have fallen if he had not been divinely arrested in

his sinful career. Many men heard the cock crow that morning; but to Peter

it carried a solemn reminder of the LORD'S warning: "before the cock crow

twice, thou shalt deny me thrice." (v30) (3).

But the cock crowing did not affect Peter as much as what Luke records

concerning this account, "and the LORD turned, and looked upon Peter..."