“When you have repented and turned to me again, strengthen your brothers.” Luke 22:32 (NLT)
When I'm in the middle of a failure, it can seem like nothing good will ever come from it. But God can always bring good from my failures. In fact, my worst failure can become my greatest success. If I let him, God will use my failures to build his church!
Jesus told Peter in Luke 22:32, “When you have repented and turned to me again, strengthen your brothers” (NLT). Before Peter had even failed, Jesus gave him a vision of how God could use his failure for good.
After Peter’s failure (when he denied Jesus three times), Jesus died and then was resurrected. And when he and Peter met again on a seashore, Jesus pointed him to the good God would bring out of his failure. Here’s how the conversation went:
“Jesus said to Simon Peter, ‘Simon son of John, do you love me more than these?’ ‘Yes, Lord,’ he said, ‘you know that I love you.’ Jesus said, ‘Feed my lambs.’ Again Jesus said, ‘Simon son of John, do you love me?’ He answered, ‘Yes, Lord, you know that I love you.’ Jesus said, ‘Take care of my sheep.’ The third time he said to him, ‘Simon son of John, do you love me?’ Peter was hurt because Jesus asked him the third time, ‘Do you love me?’ He said, ‘Lord, you know all things; you know that I love you.’ Jesus said, ‘Feed my sheep’” (John 21:15-17 NIV).
Three times Jesus asked Peter, “Do you love me?” Why did he ask that three times? He was giving Peter the opportunity to make up for the three times he had denied Jesus.
And each time, Jesus gave Peter another way he could use his failure for good: “Feed my lambs. . . . Take care of my sheep. . . . Feed my sheep.”
On the same night that Peter had denied Jesus, another disciple, Judas, also failed Jesus. But, ultimately, Judas became a traitor to Jesus, while Peter chose to become a teacher and a leader.
In Matthew 16:18 Jesus says, “And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it” (ESV).
God is still building his church by using people who’ve failed. In fact, God only uses failed people—because there aren’t any perfect people!
The question is, what am I going to become in light of my failure? It’s my choice.
In summary:
In Luke 22:32 and the subsequent restoration in John 21, we see a profound shift from the weight of failure to the weight of responsibility. Jesus doesn't just predict Peter’s denial; He pre-authorizes Peter’s comeback, framing the inevitable stumble as a prerequisite for leadership rather than a disqualification. By asking Peter three times if he loved Him, Jesus systematically replaced Peter's three denials with three commissions, demonstrating that the purpose of restoration isn't just personal peace, but the active strengthening of others. The core message is that my history of failure is the very soil where God plants the seeds of my ministry; my scars become my credentials for "feeding the sheep."
Bottom Line:
God does not just forgive my failures; He re-purposes them into a specialized platform for serving others and building His Kingdom.
Next Step:
Identify one specific "failure" or period of struggle from my recent past and, instead of viewing it as a gap in my resume, treat it as a specialized curriculum. To align with my identity as a leader who builds others up, reach out to one person this week who is currently walking through a similar struggle and offer them the "strength" Peter was commanded to give—shifting my focus from personal regret to disciplined, outward-facing service.
