On Second Thought
Peter loved Jesus deeply, but love alone did not prevent misunderstanding. When Christ revealed that suffering and death awaited Him in Jerusalem, Peter immediately resisted the idea. Matthew 16:22 records Peter taking Jesus aside and rebuking Him, saying, “Be it far from thee, Lord: this shall not be unto thee.” Peter could envision a conquering Messiah but not a suffering Savior. His expectations were shaped by visions of political victory, national restoration, and earthly triumph. The Cross did not fit his understanding of success.
What makes Peter’s reaction so revealing is that his resistance sounded reasonable from a human perspective. No devoted follower wanted to see Jesus rejected, beaten, and crucified. Yet Christ answered Peter with startling severity because hidden within Peter’s protest was opposition to God’s redemptive plan. Jesus declared, “Thou savourest not the things that be of God, but those that be of men.” Peter’s heart was sincere, but sincerity without submission can still become a hindrance to spiritual growth.
I often find myself standing beside Peter emotionally. There are moments when I gladly follow Christ as long as His direction aligns with my expectations. But when obedience involves surrender, discomfort, waiting, or broken pride, something within me resists. The flesh naturally gravitates toward control and self-preservation. Yet the way of Christ continually calls believers toward surrender rather than self-exaltation. That is why Peter later wrote with such conviction in 1 Peter 5:6, “Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God, that he may exalt you in due time.” The disciple who once resisted the Cross eventually learned that humility opens the door to deeper fellowship with God.
The phrase “mighty hand of God” carried significant meaning for Jewish readers. Throughout the Old Testament, God’s mighty hand represented His sovereign power, guidance, and deliverance. Peter was reminding suffering believers that submission to God was not weakness but trust in divine wisdom. The Greek word for humble, tapeinoō, means to bring low or place oneself under authority. This humility is not humiliation forced upon someone unwillingly; it is a voluntary surrender born from confidence in God’s character.
Oswald Chambers once wrote, “Humility is not thinking meanly of yourself; it is simply not thinking of yourself at all.” That insight reaches into the heart of Peter’s transformation. Earlier in life, Peter often thought in terms of personal expectations and emotional reactions. Later, after failure, restoration, and years of walking with Christ, he learned to rest beneath God’s sovereign hand. The Cross changed him. It dismantled the illusion that strength comes through self-assertion.
The way of the Cross still confronts modern believers. Our culture rewards visibility, independence, and self-promotion, yet Jesus consistently modeled servanthood, obedience, and surrender. In Philippians 2:8, Paul writes that Christ “humbled himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross.” The Savior did not avoid submission to the Father’s will. He embraced it fully. Because of that obedience, redemption entered the world.
There is a quiet freedom that emerges when believers stop fighting God’s process. Peter discovered this after painful failure. The disciple who once drew a sword in the garden eventually became a shepherd willing to suffer for Christ’s name. His transformation reminds me that God can reshape impulsive, fearful, prideful people into steady servants of grace. Humility is not passivity; it is yielded strength anchored in trust.
On Second Thought
One of the greatest paradoxes in the Christian life is that surrender often feels like defeat before it becomes freedom. Peter thought resisting the Cross was loyalty to Jesus, when in reality it was resistance to God’s larger purpose. Many believers still wrestle with that same tension. We pray for God’s will while quietly hoping His will matches our own plans, timing, and preferences. Yet Scripture repeatedly reveals that God often accomplishes His deepest work through pathways we would not naturally choose.
The Cross itself looked like failure to nearly everyone watching. The disciples saw arrest, humiliation, abandonment, and death. Rome saw another crushed rebel. Religious leaders saw what they believed was victory. But heaven saw redemption unfolding. What appeared weak became the greatest display of divine strength the world had ever known. That same mystery continues in the believer’s life. Sometimes God accomplishes His most insightful work not through our victories but through surrendered disappointments, delayed answers, and humbled hearts.
Peter eventually understood that humility beneath God’s hand was not surrendering to fate but entrusting himself to a faithful Savior. The believer who stops fighting for personal control often discovers deeper peace than striving ever produced. In losing pride, we gain dependence. In surrendering our demands, we discover God’s wisdom. In laying down ourselves, we find Christ more clearly.
For further reflection, consider this article from Ligonier Ministries.
FEEL FREE TO COMMENT, SUBSCRIBE OR REPOST SO OTHERS MAY KNOW