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Failure has a way of convincing us that we’re finished—that our regret disqualifies us from being used by God. Peter knew that feeling well. Bold promises gave way to denial, and confidence collapsed under pressure.
In this message, we follow Peter from the fire of failure to the fire of restoration. We see that Jesus doesn’t meet Peter with shame or interrogation, but with grace, healing, and a renewed calling. Each question—“Do you love Me?”—restores what denial tried to destroy.
As part of the Find Your One series, this sermon reminds us that grace doesn’t just forgive our past—it redeems it. Failure is not final when grace is real, and God often does His best work through people who have been broken and restored.
By GR.CHURCH5
1313 ratings
Failure has a way of convincing us that we’re finished—that our regret disqualifies us from being used by God. Peter knew that feeling well. Bold promises gave way to denial, and confidence collapsed under pressure.
In this message, we follow Peter from the fire of failure to the fire of restoration. We see that Jesus doesn’t meet Peter with shame or interrogation, but with grace, healing, and a renewed calling. Each question—“Do you love Me?”—restores what denial tried to destroy.
As part of the Find Your One series, this sermon reminds us that grace doesn’t just forgive our past—it redeems it. Failure is not final when grace is real, and God often does His best work through people who have been broken and restored.

46,160 Listeners