John 18:12–27; Psalm 51:1–12
Lent 3: “From Failure to Restoration”
We know the courtyard. Not the one outside the high priest’s house, but the one in our own hearts—the place where fear whispers louder than faith, where we warm our hands at the nearest fire and hope no one asks who we really are. Peter’s story is painfully familiar because it is ours. He loves Jesus deeply, yet in the cold shadows of that night he says the words he never imagined he’d say: “I am not.”
That courtyard is the space between our intentions and our actions, between our promises and our failures. It’s where we discover that courage evaporates quickly when the questions get too close. And it’s where we learn, as Peter did, that denial isn’t always dramatic—it’s often quiet, subtle, almost reasonable. A small compromise. A moment of self‑protection. A silence when truth was needed.
Psalm 51 gives us the language for what comes next. It refuses to let failure be the final word. It teaches us that confession is not groveling but returning—returning to the God whose mercy is larger than our worst moments. “Create in me a clean heart… restore to me the joy of your salvation.”
Peter’s courtyard ends with a rooster’s cry, but his story doesn’t. Grace meets him on another morning by another charcoal fire, where Jesus restores what fear had broken. That same grace meets us in our courtyards, too—naming the truth, healing the fracture, and calling us back to courage.
Lent invites us to stand honestly in that space: not to shame ourselves, but to let God’s mercy reshape us. The courtyard we know too well can become the place where renewal begins.
What part of your own courtyard is God inviting you to bring into the light this season?
Pastor Greg






