By the Sea Once More
      
      
         695
      
      
        Again Jesus applied the test to Peter, repeating His former words:
      
      
        “Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou Me?” This time He did not ask
      
      
        Peter whether he loved Him better than did his brethren. The second
      
      
        response was like the first, free from extravagant assurance: “Yea,
      
      
        Lord; Thou knowest that I love Thee.” Jesus said to him, “Feed My
      
      
        sheep.” Once more the Saviour put the trying question: “Simon, son
      
      
        of Jonas, lovest thou Me?” Peter was grieved; he thought that Jesus
      
      
        doubted his love. He knew that his Lord had cause to distrust him, and
      
      
        with an aching heart he answered, “Lord, Thou knowest all things;
      
      
        Thou knowest that I love Thee.” Again Jesus said to him, “Feed My
      
      
        sheep.”
      
      
        Three times Peter had openly denied his Lord, and three times Jesus
      
      
        drew from him the assurance of his love and loyalty, pressing home
      
      
        that pointed question, like a barbed arrow to his wounded heart. Before
      
      
        the assembled disciples Jesus revealed the depth of Peter’s repentance,
      
      
        and showed how thoroughly humbled was the once boasting disciple.
      
      
        Peter was naturally forward and impulsive, and Satan had taken
      
      
        advantage of these characteristics to overthrow him. Just before the
      
      
        fall of Peter, Jesus had said to him, “Satan hath desired to have you,
      
      
        that he may sift you as wheat: but I have prayed for thee, that thy faith
      
      
        fail not: and when thou art converted, strengthen thy brethren.”
      
      
         Luke
      
      
        22:31, 32
      
      
        . That time had now come, and the transformation in Peter
      
      
        was evident. The close, testing questions of the Lord had not called
      
      
        out one forward, self-sufficient reply; and because of his humiliation
      
      
        and repentance, Peter was better prepared than ever before to act as
      
      
        shepherd to the flock.
      
      
        The first work that Christ entrusted to Peter on restoring him to
      
      
        the ministry was to feed the lambs. This was a work in which Peter
      
      
        had little experience. It would require great care and tenderness, much
      
      
        patience and perseverance. It called him to minister to those who were
      
      
        young in the faith, to teach the ignorant, to open the Scriptures to them,
      
      
        and to educate them for usefulness in Christ’s service. Heretofore Peter
      
      
        had not been fitted to do this, or even to understand its importance.
      
      
        But this was the work which Jesus now called upon him to do. For
      
      
        this work his own experience of suffering and repentance had prepared
      
      
        him.
      
      
        Before his fall, Peter was always speaking unadvisedly, from the
      
      
        impulse of the moment. He was always ready to correct others, and