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Saints were sinners: Why Peter's story of failure and restoration is our story, too

Video Saint Peter’s fall and forgiveness take center stage in Martin Scorsese’s ‘The Saints’ Saint Peter’s story unfolds in a gripping journey of doubt, betrayal, and ultimate redemption in the newest episode of Martin Scorsese’s 'The Saints' on Fox Nation.

Palm Sunday just passed and Easter is upon us. We know the scriptural accounts. We've heard them many times. But this year, we might look for something more — the rest of the story.

When Jesus first called Peter, Peter didn't want the job.

He was a working fisherman. He ran his own boat, managed a crew, negotiated prices at the docks. He was comfortable in his own sun-hardened skin. When Jesus approached him, Peter's first response wasn't confidence. It was humility: "Lord, depart from me, for I am a sinful man."

He likely understood what Jesus was asking—not just to follow, but to help carry a mission whose full cost wasn't yet visible. Peter said yes. And then he stumbled.

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"Oracles of God: The Story of the New Testament" features Jesus speaking with the apostle Peter. (CBN Films/Fathom Entertainment)

He misunderstood Jesus. He argued with Him. At one point, Jesus rebuked him sharply: "Get behind me, Satan." On the night of Jesus' trial, Peter denied even knowing Him — three times. At the crucifixion, he was nowhere to be found. Afterward, he returned to what he knew: fishing in Galilee.

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Jesus did not choose Peter because he was flawless. He chose him knowing exactly who he was — impulsive, brave, fearful, devoted, weak. In other words, human. Peter was the sinner making right and wrong decisions. Lest this point be missed, that means you and me. Saints were first sinners.

Peter's occupation as a fisherman was a nearly perfect model for the ministry Jesus was designing. Fishermen had to be extraordinarily patient, knowing momentary successes were interspersed among distressing failures. It was an occupation of inescapable frustrations. Jesus knew his ministry would follow the same pattern.

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When Jesus asked, "Who do you say I am?" Peter answered: "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God." Jesus responded with full voice: "Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah, for this was not revealed to you by flesh and blood, but by my Father in heaven."

One cannot miss its significance. Jesus was declaring that it was not him, the Son, but God the Father who disclosed this to Peter. To lock in the magnitude of that, Jesus added: "And I tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell will not overcome it."

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Jesus did not choose Peter because he was flawless. He chose him knowing exactly who he was — impulsive, brave, fearful, devoted, weak.

It was a staggering promise — made to a man who would fail publicly within months.

Yet two thousand years later, Christianity remains the world's largest faith. Peter — joined later by Paul — helped carry it beyond Jerusalem and into history. Both would be executed for that mission.

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This is the rest of the story: not just resurrection, but restoration. Not just divine power, but human frailty redeemed and commissioned.

And that matters, because Peter's story is ours. The church was not built on perfection. It was built on forgiven men and women who said yes — and kept going.

Randal Teague is the author of "Jesus and His Fishermen: The Untold Story" (Post Hill Press, March 2026). He has fished in over 100 countries and is vice chairman of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation.

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