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Snorts of laughter and quiet giggles swept through the room as I held up my homework assignment. It was our second knitting class and our teacher had asked us to construct a basic dishcloth. Everyone else’s looked pretty much the same: four sides, even stitches, squared corners. Mine resembled an amoeba.

 

It’s not that I have anything against those one-celled critters…it’s just that my failure tempted me to abandon that class for good. And, knitting is one thing, but the stakes are much higher when it comes to failure in our spiritual lives.

 

The Apostle Peter is famous for his spiritual shortfall—he denied knowing Jesus. When a servant girl identified him as a Christ-follower, he replied, “I don’t know this man you’re talking about!” (Mark 14:71).

 

Despite this defeat, Peter later went on to preach the Gospel so powerfully that his audience was “cut to the heart” (Acts 2:37). When they heard his message; many of them repented and were baptized in Jesus’ name.

 

Failure presents us with two choices: give up, or try again. No matter how badly we slip up spiritually, we don’t have to become unraveled and quit the Christian life. As believers, we can hang on to this promise: although we may fall, “the Lord will uphold us by the hand” (Psalm 37:24). 

EPILOGUE
I did finish one (knotted and bumpy) rainbow-colored scarf after the classes ended, but that’s the only action my knitting needles have seen in quite a while…J