St. Peter & St. Paul,
Apostles
June 29, 2025
Text:
Matt. 16:13-19
The Feast of Saints Peter and Paul
is one of the oldest saints’ days on the Church calendar. It commemorates the day on which, according
to tradition, both Apostles were martyred in Rome. Same day under Emperor Nero, St. Peter being
crucified upside down, St. Paul, beheaded.
That is a powerful thing, the shedding of blood for the confession of
Christ… the shedding of blood for the One who shed His blood for our
redemption. The word “martyr,” from the
Greek word μάρτυς, literally means “witness.”
St. Peter and St. Paul were martyred for their witness to Jesus
Christ, that He is God, the Son of God, who died for the sins of the world, and
that He is now risen from the dead, lives, and reigns.
The emperor sought to silence them. But their blood only sealed their ministry this
side of the veil. Behold, they still
speak. This very day, we hear their
voices. Peter, declaring of Jesus that
which was revealed to him by the Father, “You are the Christ, the Son of the
living God” (Matt. 16:16; ESV). Paul,
having received the Gospel revelation directly from Jesus, relating the signs
and wonders God had done through him and Barnabas among the Gentiles (Acts 15:12). You can’t actually kill an Apostle. You can’t actually kill any Christian. And you certainly can’t silence them. Because, when you kill them, they just go on
living. And their blood cries out from
the ground, a testimony to the One who shed His blood, but lives
forevermore.
What unlikely candidates they were,
though, Peter and Paul. Right? Peter, a Galilean fisherman, called, now, to be
a fisher of men. But how often is he
shoving his foot in his mouth? We don’t
have it in our text, but right after his great confession of Christ (that
confession being the rock upon which Jesus builds His Church), Peter flubs it
all up by rebuking Jesus for all this suffering and death talk. It earns him a rebuke in kind: “Get behind
me, Satan! You are a hindrance to
me. For you are not setting your mind on
the things of God, but on the things of man” (Matt. 16:23). Or, how about on the Mount of Transfiguration,
when Peter wants to build three tents, one for Jesus, one for Moses, and one
for Elijah? Both Luke and Mark (and Mark
was probably recording Peter’s own memoirs) can’t help but commentate that
Peter didn’t know what he was talking about (Luke 9:33; Mark 9:6)! How about the boast, “Though they all fall
away because of you, I will never fall away… Even if I must die with you, I
will not deny you” (Matt. 26:34-35), and, of course, how did that all end
up? Before the cock could crow twice, three
times Peter denied his Lord. And he
went out and wept bitterly (v. 75).
Good old Peter. He just can’t win. He wants to walk on water like Jesus, but
when he sees the wind and the waves, he doubts the Lord’s Word, and he sinks,
and Jesus has to rescue him (14:29-31) (Boy, if that isn’t enigmatic of what
Jesus does for Peter, and for all of us, over and over and over again, I don’t
know what is!). What else? He wants to verify the empty tomb on Easter morn,
but he can’t outrun John, who beats him to the garden (John 20:4). He wants to see the risen Lord, there, on the
shore, but he seems to lose his mind a little, putting on his clothes
before jumping in the water, even though the boat is only a little way off
(21:7-8). But Peter loves Jesus. And Jesus restores Peter. Three times (one for each denial), “Do you
love me?” And three times, “Feed
my lambs… Tend my sheep… Feed my sheep” (vv. 15-19), and a Promise… An odd
one, to be sure. I’ll paraphrase: “You’re
gonna stretch out your hands… on the cross!
Just like Me. You’re gonna be
dressed… with the cross! Just like Me. You’ll be carried to your death… Just like
Me. And in this way, you’ll glorify
God. Follow Me, Peter. Follow Me… to the cross! To death!
And so, to life.”
And, what about Paul? Saul, as the Pharisee, and son of Pharisees,
was known, according to his Hebrew name?
An up-and-comer among the Jews. A
student of the great Gamaliel. Standing
there, guarding the coats, and approving of Stephen’s stoning (Acts 7:58;
8:1). Ravaging the Church, entering house
after house, dragging off Christians, men and women, to prison (8:3). On his way to Damascus to do the same, Jesus
had to knock him on his keester. “Saul,
Saul, why are you persecuting me?... Who are you, Lord?... I am Jesus, whom you
are persecuting” (9:4-5). Struck
blind for three days (a number I think not insignificant), the Lord restored
his sight and baptized him by the hand of a disciple named Ananias (vv. 17-18),
so that Paul would now open the eyes of the Gentiles from darkness to light,
from the power of Satan to God, that the Gentiles, too, might receive a place
among those who are sanctified by faith in Jesus (26:17-18).
But Paul had his rough edges, to be
sure, even after he became a Christian.
Breaking with Barnabas over poor John Mark’s weakness, not wanting to
take with them on their missionary journey, one who had abandoned them when the
going got rough (Acts 15:38). So… broken
relationships and impatience with the weaker brother. Then, a contentious argument with Peter. Now, Peter was in the wrong, to be sure. He had previously been eating with Gentiles,
but when some men from James came along, suddenly Peter withdrew, so that even
Barnabas was led astray. “I opposed
him to his face,” Paul says of the confrontation with Peter, “because he
stood condemned... I said to Cephas before them all, ‘If you, though a Jew, live
like a Gentile and not like a Jew, how can you force the Gentiles to live like
Jews?’” (Gal. 2:11, 14). In other
words, “Why’d you stop eating with them, Peter?
Just to show off for the Judaizers?
Afraid of what they might think of you?”
Well, Paul was right. But you can
be right without being so… right, you know? So… combative. Prickly, maybe, is the word to describe Paul. Rather difficult, sometimes. You should know that Paul made up with all of
the above. He speaks warmly of Barnabas
and Mark in his letters, and Peter mentions the letters of “our beloved
brother Paul” in his second epistle (2 Peter 3:15). Christians have their differences this side
of the veil, it is true. Saints on earth
are still sinful, simul iustus et peccator. But we must always reconcile. We must always cover over one another’s sins
and weaknesses with love, and bear with each other in patience. As Paul did for the brothers, and the
brothers did for Paul.
Look what Jesus did, though, in calling
Peter… in calling Paul… to be His disciples.
To be His Apostles… arguably the two greatest Apostles. Paul speaks from experience when he writes to
the Corinthians, “God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise; God
chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong; God chose what is low and
despised in the world, even things that are not, to bring to nothing things
that are, so that no human being might boast in the presence of God. And because of him you are in Christ Jesus,
who became to us wisdom from God, righteousness and sanctification and redemption,
so that, as it is written, ‘Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord’” (1
Cor. 1:27-31). Do you see the comfort,
here, for you? If God could use such
unlikely candidates as Peter and Paul to be His two great Apostles… who, though
dead, are still living… and speaking… preaching!... He can use you. He didn’t make a mistake when He called you
to be His own. He loves you. He sent His Son to redeem you by His own
blood and death. You are precious to
Him.
Yes, even you. Even though you so often put your foot in
your mouth, speaking before you think. Even
though you’d rather bypass the cross, and boast in glory. Even though, when the going gets tough, you
deny your Lord to save your own skin.
Jesus loves you. Jesus restores
you. And He calls you to follow Him and
confess Him.
Yes, even you. Even though you’ve done some horrendous
things to others. Even to fellow
Christians. Even though you’ve broken
relationships and shut weaker brothers and sisters out of your life. Insisted on your own way. Been combative. Prickly.
Difficult.
Even you. Repent of all that, of course. Humble yourself. Apologize.
Confess, to God and to your neighbor.
Be absolved. Be reconciled. By the power of Christ’s blood, which covers
all sin. But understand, you belong
in God’s Kingdom, not because you deserve it, but because Jesus says
so. And He brings it about by
His death and resurrection for you. The
day He said, through His disciple (probably a pastor), “I baptize you in the
Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit,” He healed
you. He opened your eyes. He restored you. “Do you love Me? Yes, Lord, you know that I love You.” He called you. “Follow Me.” And confess Me. Confess what My Father has revealed to
you. All the way to death. For dying, you live. And confessing, you speak even beyond the grave.
It’s a powerful thing, confessing Christ
as the Son of the living God, even unto the shedding of blood. Because God is faithful. Christ is faithful. He shed His blood for us. May He now keep us faithful unto death, like
St. Peter, St. Paul, and so to give us the crown of life (Rev. 2:10). In the Name of the Father, and of the Son X,
and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.