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By John MacArthur
This morning, again, we come to the tenth chapter of Matthew. I
would draw your attention to that chapter, Matthew chapter 10. We
have the happy, happy privilege today of looking at the chapter
which details for us the sending of the twelve Apostles. We already
have looked, last week, at some introductory thoughts in verse 1,
and we have moved on this morning to begin to look at the names of
these twelve individuals themselves. Although we will not be able to
spend a message on each one because the Bible doesn't give us that
much information about them, the first name is sufficient to preach
many messages. For the first on the list is none other than Simon
who is called Peter. And I'd like us to focus, if we can this
morning, on that particular individual in reference to the twelve.
But first, before we look specifically at Peter, some general
introductory thoughts that might help us to understand the passage
in its context.
When I was a young boy, my grandfather gave me a copy of a book
entitled Quiet Talks on Service, written by a man named Dr.
S. D. Gordon. And in that book Dr. Gordon paints a fantasy, if you
will, that is most vivid. He shows Jesus walking down the golden
streets of heaven. He has just returned from earth in His ascension.
And heaven is eager to greet Him and welcome Him and the first to
greet Him there is Gabriel and so He and Gabriel are arm in arm,
walking along the golden street. And Gabriel engages Him in a
conversation that in the fantasy goes something like this:
"Master, You died for the whole world down there, did You not?"
"Yes." "You must have suffered much." "Yes," the Lord said. "And do
they all know what You did for them?" replied Gabriel. "Oh no.. .no,
only a few in Palestine know about it so far." Gabriel replies,
"Well, Master, what's Your plan? What have You done about telling
the world that You died for them, that You shed Your blood for all
of them? What's Your plan?" And the Master is supposed to have
answered, "Well, I asked Peter and James and John and Andrew and a
few other fellows if... if they'd make it the business of their
lives to tell others. And then the ones that they tell could tell
others and then the ones that they tell could tell others and
finally it would reach to the farthest corner of the earth and all
would know the thrill and power of the gospel."
And Gabriel is said to have replied, "But suppose Peter fails? And
suppose after awhile John just doesn't tell anybody? And what if
James and Andrew are ashamed or afraid? Then what?"
To which Jesus says, "Gabriel, I haven't made any other plans. I'm
counting totally on them."
That's a fantasy. But not far from the truth. Because that is
exactly the way that God designed the plan to work. He would spend
His time with twelve. The twelve would carry the message. The ones
who heard it from them would tell others and others and others, and
here we are two thousand years later telling it again. To this
generation which shall tell the next generation. But it all began
with twelve men.. .twelve men.
These twelve introduced to us in the first part of chapter 10 are
the foundation of the church. In Ephesians 2:20 it says that the
foundation of the church were the prophets and the Apostles. They
are the foundation with Christ being the chief cornerstone. They
were chosen. It says in verse 1 that He called to Him twelve
disciples. They were sent. It says in verse 2 that they are
Apostles, sent ones. They started out as learners and they became
sent ones, after their training was over.
They received divine revelation. They were the ones responsible for
writing most of the New Testament. They were the ones who were given
the mysteries of the new covenant. They were the ones to whom it was
promised that God would bring through His Spirit all things to their
remembrance whatever Jesus had said. They were the ones who received
the revelation. They were the ones who wrote it down so that the
early church when it met together studied according to Acts 2, the
Apostles doctrine. They were not only the ones who were the
foundation in terms of leadership and authority, but they were the
source of revelation, and they were the framers of theology. They
were given to the church, Ephesians says, "To perfect the saints for
the work of the ministry that the body might be built up." They were
given to build the body.
But it wasn't only what they said that was important, it was what
they were. They were the first set of examples, the first patterns
for people to look to, to see virtue. They are called, and this is
an important title, the holy Apostles. I believe that is a term
which indicates the virtue of their life. And so they receive d
revelation. Having received it they taught it. Having taught it they
codified it, as it were. They framed it into a system of truth and
theology. It then became the substance which the church taught, and
from which it learned.
They also set the pattern of godly, holy, virtuous life. And all of
their authority was confirmed by miracle gifts. It says in II
Corinthians 12 that they had the signs of an Apostle which were
signs and wonders and mighty deeds. But God confirmed them with
miraculous powers.
So, they were the foundation. And it is essential, I think, for us
to see how the Lord works with them and how He disciples them and
how He trains them, how He sends them as the pattern for this in the
twentieth century that we're called to do, discipling others and
sending them to reach the world.
Now you'll remember by just looking back a couple of weeks, that the
Lord had been looking on the multitude at then of chapter 9 and He
saw them as sheep without a Shepherd. They had been mangled and
mauled and devastated and beaten and bruised and left for dead. And
He saw this mass of humanity as a harvest moving toward judgment.
The inevitability of doom, the inevitability of hell, the
inevitability of divine judgment, and He realized because of the
compassion of His heart, that He needed some to help Him to reach
them, to warn them, to preach to them. And so in verse 37 of chapter
9 He points out the fact that the harvest is so great that all of
this mass of humanity moves toward judgment but the laborers are so
few. And these people must be warned, and so he says to His
disciples, "Pray that the Lord will send forth laborers into the
harvest."
And then in chapter 10 He appoints the first laborers, who are the
disciples themselves. And we learn throughout this chapter, how He
basically instructs them in carrying out the ministry that He gives
to them.
Now keep this in mind from our last study, there were four phases in
the training of the twelve. First He called them to Himself by way
of conversion, you find that in John 1. By way of believing in Him
as far as they could believe, as far as they understood. And after
they were called to Him to be disciples, to express their faith,
there was a second call in which He called them away from their
living, away from their normal concourse to follow Him everyday in a
permanent relationship. He called them, if you will, into full time
training.
And now, in chapter 10, we come to a third phase where He sends them
out as interns. This is not their final sending, this is phase
three. They go out to get their feet wet. They've been instructed
for maybe as long as eighteen months, they're going to have another
period of many months of training but before that begins He sends
them out. He wants them to experience some things. He wants them to
hit the wall a few times. He wants them to fail as well as succeed.
And they go out and then they come back. And they go out, and they
come back. And He interacts with them in this teaching internship.
And then, finally, the fourth phase comes in Acts 1 when the Spirit
of God is sent after the ascension. And they then are sent into the
whole world to disciple the nations.
And so, we meet them in phase three here, in chapter 10. This is
their first opportunity to go out on their own, they go two by two.
And He stays very close to watch and see how they fare and then to
teach them off of the experience they're about to have.
But, they are essential. And I want you to get that. They are
essential for the future of the Christian faith. Because they are
the only plan. The Spirit of God, ultimately, will empower them,
they will go and the ones they touch will touch others and it will
go like that. They have been already disciples, verse 1 calls them
disciples. They are about to be Apostles, verse 2 calls them
Apostles. They have been trained, now they're going to be sent. And
that's the goal that God has for all of us, to be trained, to be
sent. And so we looked at that, and we called that the initiation of
the twelve.
Then we also looked at the impact of the twelve in verse 1. You
remember He gave them power, it says. He gave them exousia which
means power or authority or the right. And in that divine authority
He gave them, they could do two things; they could cast out the
vile, evil, wretched, unclean demons and they could heal all manner
of disease and all manner of sickness. That was the gift of miracles
which Paul calls the gift of miracles, it's the gift of dunamis or
power, and if you look at the gospels it's power against the demons.
So, He gave them the gift of miracles. He gave them the gift of
healing. And they went out healing and casting out demons. And this
was a confirmation of their message. The main thing they did was
preach. Go down to verse 6. "Go," it says, "to the lost sheep of the
house of Israel and as you go preach, saying the kingdom of heaven
is at hand."
Their primary task was to preach. But if they came along and
preached, why would people want to believe them? On what basis would
people hear their message? The impact came when they did these
marvelous works of casting out demons, showing they had power of the
kingdom of darkness, and then healing showing they had power over
disease. And so they went preaching. And while they were preaching
they were healing and they were casting out demons as an affirmation
that they were indeed representatives of God.
As Nicodemus had said when Jesus appeared, Nicodemus said:
"We know that Thou art a teacher come from God, for no man can do
the things You do except God be with Him."
And that was what Jesus wanted people to say when they saw these men
as well. That's it's obvious you must be of God because of what you
are able to do.
Now if you look at a very important verse, it might just help to
summarize that thought. In Hebrews 2, listen to what it says in
verse 3 and 4: "How shall we escape if we neglect so great
salvation, which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord." The
first preacher was the Lord. He was the first spokesman. "But then
it was confirmed unto us by them that heard Him." And now we go to
the second generation. The writer of the Hebrews says we got it from
those who heard the Lord. In other words, we got it from the
Apostles. "And God bore the Apostles witness with signs and wonders
and diverse miracles and gifts of the Holy Spirit."
In other words, the word of the Apostles was confirmed miraculously
as they laid down the foundation for the church. So that was their
impact.
Now thirdly, and for this morning, we come to their identity...
their identity. Who are these twelve who are sent? Having been
trained and given this tremendous authority? Let's meet them.
Verse 2: "The first Simon, who is called Peter, and Andrew his
brother, James the son of Zebedee, and John his brother. Philip and
Bartholomew." Another name for Bartholomew is Nathanael. "Thomas and
Matthew the tax collector, James the son of Alphaeus, and Lebbaeus
whose surname was Thaddaeus; Simon the Zealot, and Judas Iscariot
who also betrayed Him."
Now frankly, folks, they're just ordinary men. The only one who may
have had some special wealth was Matthew and he gained it by being
an extortionist and working for Rome. None of them that we know of
had any particular academic background. They aren't the resident
Ph.D.'s of Galilee. As far as we know none of them have any social
status. Not necessarily the highfalutin types, just common people.
Some of them are still utterly unknown to us. All we know is their
names. They were chosen from the common people to be the ones who
would be the first line of agents of Christ to set in motion the
advancement of the Kingdom throughout the history of the world..
.critical. There has been never in the history of the world, a task
to equal the task these twelve were given, never. The most
monumental, incredible thing that any man was ever, in the history
of the world, asked to do was to finish the work that Jesus began.
And that is exactly what it says in Acts 1 verse 1: "The former
treatise have I made, 0 Theophilus, of all that Jesus began to do
and teach." And what He began, you'll carry on. And that's why He
appeared to His disciples for forty days until His.. .until His
ascension, speaking of the things pertaining to the Kingdom. And
then said, Now I've taught you, you wait until the Spirit comes, and
when He comes He will empower you and you'll go into all the world
and be My witnesses. And the plan was in motion. But it all depended
on these twelve.
Now as you look at the list there are some fascinating things to
learn just from the list itself. Let me tell you why. It begins this
way. The first, Simon who is called Peter, there are four lists of
these disciples in the New Testament. One here in Matthew 10, one in
Mark chapter 3, one in Luke chapter 6 and one in Acts chapter 1..
.Matthew 10, Mark 3, Luke 6, and Acts 1. Now listen, there are some
marvelous similarities. In all four lists Peter is always first. And
when Judas is mentioned he is always.. .what?. . .last. That's
interesting. Peter is always first. Why was he first? Was he the
first one chosen? No. John 1 makes it clear that he was not the
first one chosen. But look at the word there, it says the first
Simon who is called Peter. You have to understand the word there.. .protos.
That's an interesting word. In this context it means the foremost in
rank.
You say, - Now wait a minute, I thought the twelve Apostles all had
equal twelve thrones in the Kingdom. I thought the twelve Apostles
were all equal in authority, equal in power, all told to preach, all
told to heal, all told to cast out demons. You're right. They'll all
sit and judge the tribes of Israel. That's right. Well how come
Peter is the foremost? Aren't they all equal?
People ask us all the time when they ask about the eldership of the
church. They say, - Well, if you have elders, don't you just have
one pastor and he calls all the shots? How can you have all elders?
I mean, are they all equal? Do they all preach and teach? And
they're all equal and so forth, in every area? Yes.. .in terms of
office. Yes.. .in terms of authority. Yes.. .in terms of essence.
But no.. in terms of function. Peter was foremost.. protos.
Let me give you another place where that word is used. How about
this? "This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptance that
Christ came into the world to save sinners, I Timothy 1:15, "of whom
I am.. .what?.. .chief." That's the same word. Chief.. .you could
translate it chief. The chief of the twelve was Peter. They had to
have a leader, and he was their leader.
So, first thing to note in the list is that they had a leader. And
there's nothing wrong with that. There are leaders among leaders.
And their leader was Peter.
Let me take you to a second thought. In all four lists there are
three groups.. .there are three groups. Group one, are you ready for
group one? Peter, Andrew, James and John. Group two begins in verse
3; Philip, Bartholomew, Thomas and Matthew. Then comes group three:
James the son of Alphaeus, Lebbaeus called Thaddaeus, Simon the
Zealot and Judas Iscariot. Always, now listen, each group always has
the same four guys in it. They never get out of their group on all
three lists, always the same four.
Their names may be in different order, but they're always in the
same group. And let me tell you another interesting thing. If you
look at the calling of the twelve, you'll find that the first four
were the first ones called. The next four were the next ones called,
apparently. And the last four were the last ones called. So, you
have these three groups of four. The first group called, the second
group called and the third group called.
What is also interesting is we know a lot about those in group one;
Peter, James, John and Andrew. Right? We know a little more about
group two; Philip and Nathanael and Thomas and Matthew. We don't
know anything about group three, except for Judas. And what we know
about him we wouldn't care to know. There's a decreasing amount of
information. There's a decreasing intimacy. The first group, in it
is Peter, James and John who were the most intimate of all. So that
in these groups, I really think you get an insight, the Lord was
very, very close to group one. He was somewhat close to group two.
We don't know that He was close at all to group three.
And that points up a very important factor in leadership. You can't
be intimate with everybody. It's impossible. It's utterly
impossible. Our Lord, even out of the four, drew to Him three. And
out of the three He spent most of His time with.. .whom?... Peter.
Frankly, He had to spend most of His time with Peter because He
couldn't get Peter off His back. I've always believed that Jesus
walked down the road each day and when He stopped, Peter ran into
the back of Him. I think Peter just trailed Him everywhere. He was
forever asking Him questions.
But there's no way in spiritual leadership that you can have
intimacy with everybody. And so the Lord had the close ones, and
then the next group and then He gave what He could give to the third
group.. .even though their function was just as important, their
ministry was just as wonderful in a sense. You'll notice that the
writers, however, of Scripture came out of group one and group two,
mostly out of group one. So, you learn a little bit about how they
functioned together.
Now let me add another thought. Each of the three groups, the names
will be mixed in the group in the different lists, but always the
first name is the same. In every list it's first Peter in his group;
it's second, Philip in his group; and it's third, James the son of
Alphaeus in his group. And that's always the way it is. You know
what that means? That means that even in the individual groups they
had.. .what?.. .leaders. Now that's how leadership functions, you
see. You have.. .you have Peter who is sort of chief over
everything. And then under him you have the most intimate group, and
then you have another group and they have a leader and another group
and they have a leader. And everybody functions, and that's the way
it it among the twelve. And so we gain some insights into that
group.
When Jesus sent them out He sent them out the first time in their
internship, two by two. So they went out in their groups of four
only two twogether.
Now there's an interesting, I think, insight to look at the fact
that they were all so organized. But it was a very comfortable, a
very natural kind of thing. I mean, Peter James, John and Andrew
were sort of all interrelated, they were brothers and they knew each
other, and they were the fishermen in the group. So, they were
probably very close and intimate. The next group, we only know one
of them, was a tax collector and it tells us. We don't know what
Philip did. We don't know what Nathanael did. We don't know what
Thomas did. And the last group, we don't have any clue about what
they did at all. So, it's.. .it's as if that original group all knew
each other, they were all the initial ones called, they were all the
key ones that the Lord wanted to use and then there was a sort of a
fading away in terms of intimacy though not importance in apostolic
ministry.
Now their temperaments were also different, and I just call this to
your attention. Peter, for example, was a man of action. He was
impulsive, he was eager. I call him the Apostle with the foot-
shaped mouth. Peter was always sticking his foot in it. He was
always blurting out, charging ahead in a mad hurry, and in his group
was another fellow by the name of John. All John wanted to do was be
quiet, and meditate, contemplate, loving heart, recline on the
breast of Jesus. And.., and it must have been interesting in that
little group, for Peter and John to work together. In the first
twelve chapters of Acts, you know, the Lord put John with Peter,
which must have been a marvelous lesson for both of them. Peter
wanting to charge all the time and saying - John, will you get up
and get going? Well.. .I'm just meditating, Peter. I'll... Boy,
that's frustrating when you want to get moving.
And then you have in group two a couple of interesting fellows.
There was Nathanael, or Bartholomew. Nathanael believed everything.
He accepted the fact, John 1, just wide open, just didn't seem to
doubt anything, just willing to receive everything. And in his group
was Thomas who didn't believe anything unless he could see it, touch
it, feel it, skeptical. And then you had Matthew who worked for the
Roman government extorting taxes. And you had Simon the Zealot. And
a Zealot was one who was a radical revolutionary, trying to
overthrow Rome. And I can promise you one thing, if Simon had gotten
this close to Matthew anywhere but among the disciples he woul d
have stuck a knife in him.
So you had the political differences. You had the spiritual
differences. You had the basic emotional differences. And all of
this conglomerate of people thrown together and the Lord was going
to make something out of this hash to change the world. The
wonderful story is that they didn't fail.. .they didn't fail.
Now for our time this morning I just want us to look at the first
one.. .Peter, Simon Peter. And I want us to focus on this thought -
How does God build a leader? How does God build a leader? Because
this guy is.. is the key. The first twelve chapters of Acts revolve
around him. He is the key. He preaches the sermon at Pentecost. He
does the first great miracle at the temple. He faces the Sanhedrin.
He is the key. And God is going to make a leader out of this man.
Now last week we saw how the Lord disciples. We saw His whole
pattern of training the twelve, the whole process of discipleship in
terms of the group. Now we're going to pull one guy out, Peter,
we're going to look at him. We're going to say - How does God build
a leader? Very important... .how did He do this? Because the Lord
today is building leaders in His church. And how does He do that?
Peter is really the key to understanding that lesson. The four
gospels are literally filled with Peter. I mean, he's everyplace.
After the name of Jesus, no other name is used as much in the
gospels as the name of Peter. Nobody speaks as often as Peter and
nobody is spoken to as often as Peter by the Lord. No disciple is so
reproved by the Lord as Peter. And no disciple reproves the Lord but
Peter. No disciple ever so boldly confesses and so outspoken
acknowleges the Lordship of Christ and no one denies it so boldly as
Peter. He is a constant conundrum. No one is so praised and blessed
as Peter, and no one else is called Satan but Peter. He had harder
things to say to Peter than He ever said to anybody else. But that
was part of making him the man He wanted him to be.
Now how does God take such an ambivalent character, such a
contradiction in human flesh, and make him a leader? I think there
are several elements. Let me just give you three, basically. Number
one, you have to have the right raw material.. .the right raw
material. The Lord recognized in Peter the right raw material for
leadership. I mean, I'm convinced that Peter was the leader before
anybody acknowleged it. I think he just took over. That's just the
way he was. He had whatever it is that. .that is the raw material,
the raw stuff of leadership.
Suddart Kennedy, the great poet from Britain, wrote lines that I
think really fit Peter. He wrote this, "There's nothing in man
that's perfect. There's nothing that's all complete. He's not but a
big beginning from his head to the soles of his feet."
And Peter was a big beginning. That's what he was. I mean, there was
just potential there. Now what is the raw material looked for in a
leader? First of all, does he ask questions? Does he ask questions?
People who don't ask questions don't wind up as leaders because
they're not concerned about problems and solutions. If you want to
find a leader, look for somebody who asks questions. In the gospel
record, Peter asked more questions than everybody else comgined.
Always asked questions. It's Peter who asks the meaning of a
difficult thing. In Matthew 15:15, "Lord? Will you explain that to
me?" Some of the other guys were just standing there and absolutely
didn't understand a thing, just rocked back and forth in their
sandals, never even bothered to ask. But Peter can't handle that. He
has to ask. Explain this to me, I've got to know. It was Peter who
asked how often he had to forgive. The Lord was talking about
forgiveness and he says - How many times am I supposed to forgive?
Seven times? The Lord says - No, four hundred and ninety times. By
the way, in all of his questioning, he rarely got the answer he
expected.
It was Peter who asked what is the reward of those who've left all
to follow Jesus. In Matthew chapter 19, "Now we've left all to
follow, what's going to be our reward?" We've got to...I'd like to
know. Questions. Peter who asked about the fig tree when it withered
away, would You please explain that? Mark 11. It was Peter who asked
the meaning of the things that Jesus said about the approaching end
in Mark 13, he wanted a full explanation. And after Peter was told
he was going to die as a martyr, he said - Well, what about John?
The Lord says it's none of your business if he lives till the second
coming. And then the rumors spread throughout the church that John
was going to live till the second coming. And the Lord had to
straighten that out by writing a few extra verses in John 21. He was
always asking questions but that's the raw material that leadership
is made out of. See, leadership seeks solution. It asks questions.
And the Lord saw that in Peter.
There's a second element of leadership that I think is important and
that is it takes initiative.., it takes initiative. Leadership
always takes initiative. And you see that with Peter. When the Lord
asks a question, who answers it? Always Peter. Who touched Me? Peter
answers, it was this lady here. Or else he'll.. .or what do you mean
asking a question like that, there's a whole bunch of people pushing
You all over here. I mean, he just took the initiative. Whom do men
say that I am? Thou art the Christ the Son of the living God. Will
You go away? Where we going to go? Always replying.. .always taking
the initiative. It is Peter who even asks questions of the risen
Christ in John 21, wants to know all the details. That's another
mark.
And I would say the third thing that you see in leadership raw
material is that they're always where the action is.. .always right
in the middle of the action. They go through life with a cloud of
dust around them. That's just part and parcel of leadership. They
create things. They make it happ.. .you know, I mean, of all the
disciples, who jumped out of the boat and walked on the water?
Peter. People always say - Oh, Peter, you have no faith, you sunk.
You think Peter had no faith because he sunk, there's guys who never
even got out of the boat. So before you get on Peter's case, realize
where he was. People say - Well, Peter denied the Lord. Right! But
he was in the place where he was confronted with that because he had
enough courage to follow all the way to the house of the high
priest. The other eleven guys had split. I mean, he was always in
the middle of the action. He was always where it was going on. And
when the resurrection came, who was the first one there? Peter and
John. Down there and Peter just roared past John who stood outside
and went right in the place. John, you know, sort of slowed down as
he got there and whissh, you know, Peter right on.. .right in the
middle of everything. I think the Lord saw that raw material, that
inquisitiveness, that initiator's kind of spirit, and that being
where the action is. It just.. .it happened when Peter was there. It
just took place. I mean, you see him in the book of Acts, for twelve
chapters, everywhere he goes, amazing things happen all over the
place.
Now we learn a little bit about him, about that raw material, by
considering his name. His name was Simon, a very, very common name.
He was a son of Jona's, or Jonah, or John. He was a fisherman by
trade. And he lived with his brother Andrew in a village called
Bethsaida. And later they moved to Capernaum. They believe they've
uncovered the place where his house was, and I've been to that
digging site a couple of times, right on the water there at the
Capernaum village, what's left of it. He was married because the
Lord healed his mother-in-law. You remember we studed that. And also
because in I Corinthians 9 there's a most interesting word. Paul is
saying there, he says - The Apostles or the preachers have a right
to lead about a sister as a wife, that is a Christian sister as a
wife, even as Cephas. He was married and it was likely from what
Paul says there that he actually took his wife with him on his
apostolic mission. He went, where-ever he went, with his wife. So it
may have been that the twelve also had a sort of a.. .a family
entourage that was around with them too. He was married. And he was
a fisherman named Simon... common name, common trade, common marital
status. But the guy just had some raw material that the Lord saw.
But, because of his nature he tended so be so shifty. And he was
vassalating. I think the Lord changed his name to try to force into
his subliminal thinking what He wanted him to be and He turned his
name into Peter which means.. .what?.. .stone. So, at first it must
have been kind of a contradiction - Stone? Stone, come over here.
And everytime He said that - he was thinking, I've got to be solid,
I've got to be firm, I've got to be a stone. Because that,
basically, was not what he was. But I think the Lord gave him that
name just to begin to force his thinking down a certain path.
Everytime the Lord wanted to speak to him He could designate what He
wanted to say by just how He addressed him. If He said - Stone -
Peter got one message. If He said -Simon - he got another message.
If He said - Simon Peter - Simon stone - there was a little
ambivalence.
Now, he's called Simon. He's called Simon Peter. And he's called
Peter. And it's interesting, just as a general overview,it's not
always consistent, but he's.. .he's always called Simon in two
cases. Number one, in the secular case. Like it will say in Mark 1 -
Simon's house; or in Luke 4 - Simon's mother-in-law; or in Luke 5
verse 3 - Simon's boat; or in Luke 5, I think it's verse 10 it says
- Simon's fishing partners. It also says in Acts 10 that Cornelius
found his way to - Simon's location. In other words, when you just
want to designate him in a secular way, just want to identify him
with a boat or a house or a.. .a place, or whatever, he's just
Simon. That's his earthy secular name.
Now Simon is also used when he is being reprimanded for sin. So he
is secular Simon and he's sinful Simon. When the Lord wanted to
focus on his sinfulness, for example, he was out there in the
fishing boat and he was doubting the Lord and he was probably
mumbling under his breath in Luke 5, saying, this is ridiculous. You
know, this is ridiculous, and the Lord says, Cast your net on a
certain side of the boat and bring the fish in, and you can just see
him mumbling, 0, man, that's ridiculous, does He think we don't know
what we're doing? We fish for a profession. He's going to tell us..
.and he pulled in so many fish and immediately he said, "Depart from
me, 0 Lord, for I am a .. .what?... sinfulman." The Lord unmasked
his sin and called him Simon.
In John 21 when he came to Him and he had acted in disobedience and
he was when.. .he had gone back to fishing after the resurrection
and after he had been called to preach, he went back to fishing and
the Lord confronted him three times on the shore and said: "Simon,
Simon, Simon." He was being sinful.
He's also called Simon in a sinful setting in Mark, I think it's
chapter 14 verse 37, and they were up in the upper part of the mount
of Olives and they were praying and He came and found them asleep
and He says unto Peter, "Simon, are you sleeping?" And He
reprimanded him for falling asleep.
So, he is Simon in his sinfulness. Simon in his secular identity.
That's just who he was. But the Lord was going to make him stone,
rock, firm, foundation, a living stone, he says he is in his own
epistle First Peter.
You can outline the whole life of Peter this way, Simon, Simon
Peter, Peter. That's the transition. And I think John knew him so
well he just called him Simon Peter because he couldn't figure out
whether he was being Simon or Peter either.
Now, how do you take a guy with this kind of raw material and make
him a leader? First of all, you recognize that raw material, you
recognize what is there. And our Lord saw that in him. And was
willing to .... .to do what had to be done to get him where he
wanted him to be. And that brings us to the second point, the Lord
built a leader; number one, by choosing the right raw material and
number two, by bringing about the right experiences. He brought into
his life the right experiences.
You learn most of all from experience. And He allowed Peter to have
some life-changing experiences. If He was going to transform the
guy, He had to bring some things to pass in his life.
First of all, what I call his revelation, his great revelation. The
Lord gave to Peter the greatest revelation. In John chapter 6, Jesus
had presented the tremendous message on Himself as the bread of life
up in Galilee, and some people couldn't understand it all so some of
His disciples left, some of them just walked away and followed Him
no more, verse 66 says. "And Jesus then asked the disciples, Will
you go away? And Simon Peter says, Lord, to whom shall we go? Thou
hast the words of eternal life. And we believe and are sure that
Thou art that Christ, the Son of the living God." I think when he
said that, he grabbed his mouth and said - Where did that come from?
Because that was some statement. I believe that was a revelation
from God. I believe he started to open His mouth and God just talked
right through his mouth.
And he did that also again in the sixteenth chapter of Matthew. The
Lord said: "And whom say ye that I am?" And immediately:
"Peter said, Thou art the Christ the Son of the living God."
Tremendous statement. And Jesus said to him, "Flesh and blood didn't
reveal that to you, My Father in heaven did." In other words, He
said that's a revelation.
He was transforming this man by letting him know that God wanted to
use his mouth. That God could speak through him. He gave him the
experience of revelation because one day he was going to stand up on
the day of Pentecost and he was going to preach the revelation of
God. And one day he was going to take a pen and he was going to
write the revelation of God. And Jesus prepared him with a
revelatory experience. Gave him the sense that God was moving and
God was there. .this great revelation. What an experience.
And then I call it his great reward. The Lord gave him a great
reward, tremendous promise in Matthew 16. After this confession
Jesus said in verse 18: "I say unto you, you're Peter, thou art
stone but upon this bedrock," He used a different term there, "Upon
the rock of your confession, I will build My church and the gates of
Hades shall not prevail against it." Now watch, "And I'll give unto
thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven." 0 man, He says - Peter, I'm
`going to give you the keys to the kingdom of heaven. What is that?
You, My friend, are going to unlock the Kingdom. Really? Who
preached the first great apostolic sermon? Peter, the day of
Pentecost. To whom did he preach it? To the Jews. Who led the first
Gentile to Christ? Peter. Who was it? Acts 10, Cornelius. He
unlocked the Jews. He unlocked, as it were, the Kingdom to the
Gentiles. He was the opening of the door. And the Lord also gave
that same promise, by the way, to the rest of His Apostles and
extended it all through the ages to all those who, by the
proclamation of the gospel, opened the door to the Kingdom.
Everytime I preach the gospel, I hold that key in my hand. But Peter
was the first.. .a great revelation and a great honor, a great
reward.
But you've got to see his great remission, also. Same chapter,
Matthew 16 verse 21. Boy, Peter's feeling his oats now. Man, he's
gotten revelations.. .when he opens his mouth he might be speaking
or God might be speaking. And that's pretty exciting. Not only that,
the Lord says - you've got the key, you're going to unlock it. And
he is feeling like a leader. And so from that time forth began Jesus
to show His disciples that He had to go Jerusalem and suffer many
things from the elders and chief priests and scribes and be killed
and raise a third day. Jesus is telling him He's going to die, He's
going to suffer. I like this, verse 20: "Then Peter took Him." Now
wait a minute, took Him? That's right. "And began to rebuke Him."
Took who? The Lord, the creator of the universe. He said, Come with
me, we've got to get You straightened out. Unbelievable, the guy
was.. .I mean, he was feeling it.. .and I'm the leader. I've got the
keys now I'm going to start using them. You're first. It's always
the danger in leadership, isn't it, it doesn't know where its limits
are. He took Him, and I don't know whether he grabbed Him by the arm
and yanked Him into the bushes or what, but he said, rebuking Him.
"Be it far from Thee, Lord, this shall not be unto Thee as long as
I'm in charge it isn't going to happen, and I'll promise You that."
He must have, you know, sort of stuck his chest into his tunic. "And
the Lord said to him, Get thee behind Me, Satan." Wow, that is a
very clear lesson. "You are an offense unto Me for you savor not the
things that are of God but those that are of men." You do not know
the plan of God, and you are thinking from the human viewpoint. Get
behind Me, Satan. His mouth had just been used for God and now his
mouth was used for Satan. And now he was doing exactly what Satan
had done in the temptation, he was trying to derail Christ from the
cross and Peter was just as available to the Devil as he was to God.
And that is a great lesson to learn for a leader. You get yourself
into a position where God can use you, and the greater the potential
to be used by God the greater the potential to be used by Satan.
That's a great lesson.
He taught him about the revelatory capacity. He taught him about the
power in the reward of having the keys. He taught him about the
potential to be used by Satan. Tremendous experiences, learning
while doing.
Then we come fourthly to what I call his great rejection.. .his
great rejection. You know, he has so much confidence. The guy just
oozed confidence... I mean, even stupid confidence, unreal, you
know, way beyond normal. He had so much confidence.
Verse 33 of Matthew 26: "Peter answered and said unto Him," the Lord
just told about the prophecy regarding the shepherd being smitten
and the sheep scattered, and He was saying that all the disciples
were going to leave Me and they're all going to run away. "Peter
answered and said, Though all men shall be offended because of Thee,
yet will I never be." I'm not like all men. I'm a cut above the
rest. They may all forsake You, I'll never do that. "Verily I say
unto thee, that this night before the cock crows you will deny Me
three times. And Peter said unto Him, Though I should die with Thee,
yet will I not deny Thee." I will not do that. Confidence.
And I like this, "Likewise said all the disciples." Just like rubber
ducks, if Peter said it we agree. He was the leader.. .He was a
leader. Peter's right, we won't do that. His great, great
confidence.. .but he rejected, he rejected and he denied Jesus,
chapter 26 verse 69, he was outside the court and a maid came to him
saying, "Thou also wast with Jesus of Galilee. Denied it before them
all saying, I know not what thou sayest. When he was gone out into
the porch another maid saw him and said unto them that were there,
This fellow was also with Jesus of Nazareth. And again he denied
with an oath, I do not know the man. After a while came unto him,
they that stood by, and said to Peter, Surely thou also art one of
them for thy speech betrayeth thee. And he began to curse and to
swear, saying, I know no the man. And immediately the cock crowed.
And Peter remember the words of Jesus and he went out and wept
bitterly."
You think that was a lesson? 0 man, was that a lesson. What a
lesson. What an experience. He had an experience of a great
revelation, of a great reward, of a great remission, of a great
rejection. And then ultimately he had an experience I call a great
recommissioning in the twenty-first chapter of John, just quickly.
John 21, the Lord restored him. "Do you love Me," verse 15, "Yes. Do
you love Me," verse 16, "Yes. Do you love Me," verse 17, "then feed
My lambs, and feed My sheep and feed My sheep."
And finally at the end of verse 19 He says, "Follow Me, Peter,
follow Me." And Peter did finally follow. That was his
recommissioning. And it was in a very exciting experience. Peter had
gone fishing and the Lord did'n't let him catch any fish. And he
came to the shore and the Lord gave him an experience he would never
forget as long as he lived as He confronted him with the lack of
love that was demonstrated by his disobedience.
Now, you can add all that together, his great revelation, his great
reward, remission, rejection and recommission, all those... those
were the key experiences of his life, and they led to what I like to
call his great realization. He became the man God wanted him to be.
He really did become that man. And those experiences were part of
making him that man.
But there was a third element. Jesus, to make a leader, needs the
right raw material, the right experiences and thirdly, the right
lessons.. .the right lessons. It wasn't just experiences, Peter also
had to be taught certain principles.
Now what are the things a leader needs to know? Well, let's look at
Peter and use him as our pattern. And what is. .what does a leader
need to learn? You tend to be confident. You tend to be outward,
overt. You tend to be eager, aggressive. The first lesson that a
leader needs to learn is submission and so He taught Peter that.
In Matthew chapter 17 the Lord said - Now, Peter, you go down to
fishing, and you catch the fish and the first fish you bring in you
reach in his mouth and there will be a coin there, and that's so you
and I can pay our taxes. Now knowing Peter you might have assumed
that Peter wouldn't pay any attention to taxation. He wouldn't pay
any attention to the Roman system. He would say -Hey, we're in this
Kingdom business, we're moving on a track, I don't have time to mess
with my taxes. I don't have time to fool with this passing world.
But Jesus taught him to be submissive to the powers that be ordained
of God. And he learned his lesson. Because in I Peter chapter 2 he
wrote this: "Submit yourselves to every ordinance of man, for the
Lord's sake, whether to the king, a supreme, or govenors, unto them
that are sent by Him for the punishment of evil doers and for the
praise of them that do well for so is the will of God. As free and
not using your liberty as a cloak of maliciousness. Honor all men,
love the brotherhood, fear God and honor the king. Be subject to
your masters with all fear."
In other words, he learned submission. He learned that there were
institutions of God that you have to submit to. It's important for
leaders to learn that. There are limits.
A second lesson that a man like Peter needed to learn was restraint.
He needed to learn restraint. The Lord had to put a bit in his mouth
and teach him restraint because he was so unrestrained.
In John 18 he's in the garden and the soldiers come to take Jesus,
you remember? And Peter grabs a sword. He's looking at 500 soldiers,
probably, from Fort Antonia, all the servants of the high priests.
And he just takes a sword, and the Bible says there was a fellow
there named Malchus and Peter cut off his ear. And you know as well
as I do he wasn't going for his ear. I mean, he wasn't a surgeon, he
wasn't going to... just zip his little ear off. I mean, he was going
for his head. The guy had reflexes, he ducked and lost his ear. And
the Lord reached over and gave him a new ear and said - Put that
sword away. You live by the sword, you .. .what?... you die by the
sword. You have to learn restraint. Let God's plan operate. Let God
take care of these matters.
Did he learn restraint? Yes he did. First Peter chapter 2 he says
this: "We have been called to suffer as Christ suffered, leaving us
an example that we should follow in His steps. Who, when he was
reviled, reviled not again. When He suffered, threatened not." In
other words, I saw with Jesus. He accepted it as God's will. He
restrained Himself and left His life in the care of God. I learned
that lesson and I'm teaching it to you. He learned restraint.
Another thing a leader needs to learn is humility. Oh, did he learn
that. "I'll never leave You. All men may forsake You but I'll die
before I forsake You." But he did. And he learned his lesson because
he wrote in I Peter these words, "God, resist the proud but give
grace.. .what?. . .to the humble." He learned.
Also, leaders sometimes need to learn the lesson of sacrifice . . .
sacrifice. You know, he had to be told, - Someday, Peter, John 21
verse 19, somebody is going to come and bind you and take you where
you don't want to go and I'm speaking about the death you're going
to die for Me, you're going to be a martyr, Peter, you're going to
be a martyr. Are you ready for that? And that's when he said -Well,
what about John? I mean, does he get off the hook? Well, what about
him? And the Lord said, None of your business. And then He used the
emphatic pronoun - He said -You follow Me. And that's the last time
He ever had to say that. He learned his lesson, the lesson of
sacrifice. And he learned it so well that he wrote in I Peter:
"Blessed.. .blessed," if you can imagine, "Happy are you who are
reproached for the name of Christ. If any man suffer as a
Christian," chapter 4 verse 16, "let him not be ashamed but let him
glorify God. And let them that suffer commit themselves to God's
care." You learn sacrifice.
I think, too, he needed to learn love. You see, leaders tend to be
task oriented rather than people oriented and they can just plow
people under. And he needed to learn love. And Jesus said to him in
John 21, "Do you love Me? Do you love Me? Do you love Me?" That's
what I want, Peter, I want you to love Me. And I think that's
probably why Jesus hooked up John with him to teach him about that.
And you remember in John 13 where the Lord was washing feet and He
comes to Peter and Peter says - You will never wash my feet. The
Lord says - I'm trying to teach you a lesson, Peter. You don't
understand it now, but you will. And he says - I'll take a bath. Go
ahead. And afterwards the Lord said - "Love one another as I have
loved you." He had given them a great lesson on love and Peter got
the lesson. And later on in I Peter chapter 4 he repeats the lesson
he learned: "Above all things, have fervent love among yourselves,
for love shall cover a .. .what?... multitude of sin." He learned.
I think he needed to learn courage, too. In John 21, Jesus said, if
you're going to follow Me, it's going to cost you your life. Are you
willing? By then he learned. In Acts 4, he goes in front of the
Sanhedrin and he says - I don't care what you say, I'll preach
because I will obey God not men. And they said -Well, you can't
preach anymore. And they went into a prayer meeting and he prayed
that God would give them more boldness and they went out and
preached even greater.
He needed to learn submission. The Lord taught him. He needed to
learn restraint. The Lord taught him. He needed to learn humility.
The Lord taught him that. He needed to learn grace and sacrifice and
love and courage and all of those lessons the Lord gave him. Now how
does the Lord make a leader? He takes the right raw material, puts
it to the right experience with the right teaching and He came out
with Peter. Oh, what a leader he was.
The first twelve chapters of Acts he is the leader of the church:
He is the one who makes the move to replace Judas with Matthias,
chapter 1 of Acts.
He becomes the spokesman of the church on Pentecost, Acts 2.
He, with John, healed the lame man, Acts 3. He defied the Sanhedrin,
Acts 4. He dealt with the hypocrisy of Ananias and Sapphira, Acts 5.
He dealt with the problem of Simon the magician in Samaria, Acts 8.
He healed Aeneas and raised Dorcas from the dead, Acts 9.
He took the gospel to the Gentiles, Acts 10 and 11. And he wrote two
marvelous and glorious epistles in which he repeated all the lessons
that Jesus had taught him and passed them on to us.
What a man he was. He was a man whom God had touched with His grace.
Who could say with the hymn writer, "0 to grace, how great a debtor
daily I am constrained to be, Let thy goodness like a fetter bind my
wandering heart to thee. Prone to wander, Lord, I feel it. Prone to
leave the Lord I love. Take my heart, 0 take and seal it, seal it
for thy courts above."
He was the wandering heart that finally the grace of God captured.
How did it end for him? Tradition says that cruelty came his way in
his death. And tradition tells us that he was crucified, but before
he was crucified he was forced to watch the crucifixion of his wife.
The traditionalist Eusebius in historian writing in his
ecclesiastical history said - "He stood at the foot of his wife's
cross and kept repeating to her, `Remember the Lord, remember the
Lord.' And after she had died, he himself was crucified and pleaded
to be crucified upside down because he was unworthy to die like his
Lord."
He was a leader. And you and I are here today because he was
faithful to his calling. God wants to take the raw material of some
of you, put it through the right experience, teach the right
lessons, make the right leaders.
I believe Peter's life can be summed up in the last words he ever
said, they are recorded in the last verse of the last epistle that
he wrote, II Peter 3:18. Here is his word to you: "But grow in grace
and in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ; to Him be
glory both now and forever. Amen." He could tell you to grow because
that's what he had to do.
Father, thank You for our time this morning, for Your word to us we
are grateful again for how it touches our hearts and speaks to us.
Thank You for the example of Peter. Thank You for what we learn from
him. We ask, Lord, that You would continue to teach us as the Spirit
of God applies these truths to our hearts. Raise up leaders here.
Leaders who would be the ones of Your own choosing. Shape and refine
them. Make them into what You'd have them to be for Your own cause
and for Your glory. May we grow in grace and in the knowledge of the
Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Father, now bring those to the prayer room that You would have to
come. Do Your work in every heart. Bless even the baptism class that
follows in Christ's name. Amen.
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