Curtis Brown Curtis Brown

The Grace of Second Chances

Sunday Rewind is a 5-day Devotional based on the weekly sermon at Resonate Community Church

Sunday Rewind is a 5-day Devotional based on the weekly sermon at Resonate Community Church

November 23rd Sermon, Day 5

Here's the most encouraging part of Peter's story: his biggest failure didn't disqualify him from God's purposes. Jesus rebuked Peter sharply, but He didn't reject him. In fact, this moment of correction became a turning point that prepared Peter for incredible leadership in the early church. The same Peter who resisted the cross would later preach boldly about it. The same Peter who tried to protect Jesus from suffering would later willingly suffer for Jesus. God doesn't discard us when we misunderstand Him or resist His ways. Instead, He shapes us, restores us, and calls us again. This is the heart of grace - not that we never fail, but that our failures don't have the final word.

Every time we mess up, every time we miss the point, every time we try to lead instead of follow, God is still working. He's still shaping us. He's still calling us. Peter's story teaches us that obedience today becomes clarity tomorrow. We don't have to understand everything God is doing to trust Him and follow Him. Sometimes the very thing we resist becomes the thing God uses most powerfully in our lives.

If you've been feeling disqualified because of past mistakes or current struggles, take heart. God's grace is bigger than your failures, and His calling on your life is stronger than your resistance to it. Like Peter, your greatest moments of growth often come through your greatest moments of correction. God isn't finished with you yet.

Bible Verse

"Jesus turned and said to Peter, 'Get behind me, Satan! You are a stumbling block to me; you do not have in mind the concerns of God, but merely human concerns.'" - Matthew 16:23

Reflection Question

How has God used past failures or corrections in your life to prepare you for something greater?

Quote Jesus didn't give up on Peter. Jesus rebuked Peter, but he didn't reject him.

Prayer

Thank You, Lord, that Your grace is bigger than my failures and Your calling stronger than my resistance. Help me to receive Your correction with humility and trust that You're still working in my life. I believe You're not finished with me yet. Amen.

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Curtis Brown Curtis Brown

Where Comfort Ends, Calling Begins

Sunday Rewind is a 5-day Devotional based on the weekly sermon at Resonate Community Church

Sunday Rewind is a 5-day Devotional based on the weekly sermon at Resonate Community Church

November 23rd Sermon, Day 4

There's something beautiful and terrifying about this truth: our calling often begins exactly where our comfort ends. Peter discovered this when Jesus revealed that following Him would lead to a cross, not a crown. Everything Peter thought he knew about his future with Jesus was suddenly turned upside down.

But here's what Peter couldn't see in that moment - this uncomfortable revelation was actually the beginning of his greatest calling. God has a way of using our most uncomfortable moments to birth our most significant purposes. The job loss that leads to a new career. The health scare that redirects our priorities. The relationship that ends and opens our hearts to serve others in pain. The dream that dies and makes room for God's bigger dream. We naturally resist discomfort, but God often uses it as a doorway to something greater. This doesn't mean God causes our pain, but He certainly knows how to use it for our good and His glory.

When Jesus disrupted Peter's comfortable expectations, He wasn't being cruel - He was preparing Peter for a calling that would impact the entire world. Sometimes God has to make us uncomfortable with where we are before we'll be willing to go where He wants to take us. The question isn't whether discomfort will come - it's whether we'll let it become a stepping stone to our calling or a stumbling block to our faith.

Bible Verse

"From that time on Jesus began to explain to his disciples that he must go to Jerusalem and suffer many things at the hands of the elders, the chief priests and the teachers of the law, and that he must be killed and on the third day be raised to life." - Matthew 16:21

Reflection Question

What area of discomfort in your life might God be using to prepare you for a greater calling?

Quote Calling often begins where comfort ends.

Prayer

Father, help me to see discomfort not as something to avoid, but as a potential doorway to Your purposes. Give me courage to step out of my comfort zone when You're calling me to something greater. I trust that Your plans for me are good. Amen.

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Curtis Brown Curtis Brown

Loving Jesus As He Is

Sunday Rewind is a 5-day Devotional based on the weekly sermon at Resonate Community Church

Sunday Rewind is a 5-day Devotional based on the weekly sermon at Resonate Community Church

November 23rd Sermon, Day 3

There's a profound difference between loving Jesus and loving our idea of Jesus. Peter fell into this trap, and if we're honest, so do we. We can be passionate about our faith, active in church, and still find ourselves loving a version of Jesus that we've created rather than the Jesus who actually is. We want the Jesus who blesses our plans but not the one who might disrupt them. We want the Jesus who opens doors but not the one who sometimes closes them for our good. We want the Savior but not the sacrifice that comes with following Him.

Peter loved the idea of a Messiah who would make his life easier, more comfortable, more successful by worldly standards. But Jesus came to make our lives meaningful, not necessarily easier. He came to transform us, not just to give us what we want. The question that pierces through all our religious activity is this: Do we love Jesus as He actually is, or do we love our customized version of Him?

The real Jesus calls us to take up our cross daily. He calls us to love our enemies, to serve others, to find our life by losing it. This isn't always comfortable, but it's always good. When we learn to love Jesus as He truly is - in all His challenging, transforming, sometimes uncomfortable glory - we discover a relationship that's far richer than anything our imagination could create.

Bible Verse

"When Jesus came to the region of Caesarea Philippi, he asked his disciples, 'Who do people say the Son of Man is?'" - Matthew 16:13

Reflection Question

How might your personal preferences or desires be shaping your understanding of who Jesus is rather than letting Scripture define Him?

Quote Peter loved his idea of Jesus more than he loved Jesus himself. Peter loved the Messiah he expected, not the Messiah Jesus actually was.

Prayer

Lord Jesus, I want to love You as You truly are, not as I want You to be. Help me to embrace all of who You are - Your love and Your lordship, Your grace and Your truth. Transform my heart to desire what You desire. Amen.

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Curtis Brown Curtis Brown

The Danger of Leading Instead of Following

Sunday Rewind is a 5-day Devotional based on the weekly sermon at Resonate Community Church

Sunday Rewind is a 5-day Devotional based on the weekly sermon at Resonate Community Church

November 23rd Sermon, Day 2

Picture this: Peter, the impulsive fisherman, pulling Jesus aside to correct the Son of God. It sounds almost comical, doesn't it? Yet how often do we do the same thing, just more politely? We pray, but then we tell God how He should answer. We ask for guidance, but we've already decided what advice we're willing to take.

Peter's mistake wasn't that he cared about Jesus - it was that he tried to take the driver's seat. He moved from follower to leader in a matter of moments, and Jesus had to firmly redirect him. This happens to us more than we'd like to admit. We start following Jesus, but somewhere along the way, we subtly begin trying to lead Him. We want Him to bless our plans rather than surrendering to His plans. We want Him to open the doors we think should be opened, rather than trusting Him to open the right doors at the right time.

The moment we step out of our position as followers and try to become the leader, we lose sight of God's calling on our lives. Following requires humility, trust, and the willingness to go where we might not have chosen to go. But here's the encouraging truth: when we get back in our proper place as followers, God's calling becomes clearer. Sometimes the best thing we can do is step down from the driver's seat and let Jesus lead again.

Bible Verse

"Jesus turned and said to Peter, 'Get behind me, Satan! You are a stumbling block to me; you do not have in mind the concerns of God, but merely human concerns.'" - Matthew 16:23

Reflection Question

In what areas of your life have you been trying to lead Jesus instead of following Him?

Quote We'll always miss God's calling on our lives when we try to lead instead of follow.

Prayer

Jesus, forgive me for the times I've tried to take control instead of trusting Your leadership. Help me to follow You with humility and faith, even when Your path doesn't make sense to me. I choose to get behind You and let You lead. Amen.

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Curtis Brown Curtis Brown

When Our Expectations Meet God’s Reality

Sunday Rewind is a 5-day Devotional based on the weekly sermon at Resonate Community Church

Sunday Rewind is a 5-day Devotional based on the weekly sermon at Resonate Community Church

November 23rd Sermon, Day 1

Have you ever been so sure about what God was going to do, only to have Him do something completely different? Peter experienced this whiplash moment when Jesus revealed His true mission. One minute Peter was declaring Jesus as the Messiah with divine revelation, and the next he was rebuking the very Son of God he had just confessed. Peter had painted a picture in his mind of what the Messiah would look like - a conquering king who would overthrow Rome and establish an earthly kingdom. But Jesus painted a different picture entirely: one that included suffering, rejection, and death.

Sometimes our expectations of how God should work can become barriers to seeing how He actually wants to work. We create mental images of what our calling should look like, what our breakthrough should resemble, or how our prayers should be answered. But God's ways are higher than our ways, and His thoughts higher than our thoughts.

The beautiful truth is that God's plans are always better than our expectations, even when they don't match what we had in mind. Peter couldn't see it then, but Jesus' way of suffering love would accomplish infinitely more than any political revolution ever could. When our expectations collide with God's reality, we have a choice: we can resist like Peter did, or we can trust that God sees what we cannot see.

Bible Verse

"From that time on Jesus began to explain to his disciples that he must go to Jerusalem and suffer many things at the hands of the elders, the chief priests and the teachers of the law, and that he must be killed and on the third day be raised to life." - Matthew 16:21

Reflection Question

What expectations about God's plan for your life might be preventing you from seeing what He's actually trying to do?

Quote Peter had expected for Jesus to be a leader, but not that kind of leader. He expected Jesus to be a savior, but not that kind of savior. And Peter expected victory, but not victory that came through death and a cross.

Prayer

Lord, help me hold my expectations loosely and trust Your ways even when they don't match my plans. Give me the wisdom to see that Your thoughts are higher than mine, and the faith to believe that Your way is always best. Amen.

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