Failure is one of the most universal—and most painful—giants we face.
It’s the botched business.
The moral collapse.
The parenting regret.
The ministry that didn’t grow.
The conversation that should have gone differently.
Failure can feel like a full stop.
But in God’s hands, it’s often a comma.
“Though a righteous man falls seven times, he rises again.” —Proverbs
24:16
The Bible isn’t a book full of flawless heroes—it’s a story of God using broken, failed, deeply human people to accomplish His redemptive work.
Peter is one of them.
The Rooster’s Crow
Peter loved Jesus. He meant it when he said he’d never leave His side.
But when the pressure hit and the fire warmed his hands, Peter cracked.
“Woman, I don’t know him.”
—Luke 22:57
Three denials. Then the rooster
crowed.
“The Lord turned and looked straight at Peter.” —Luke 22:61
That moment must’ve haunted Peter.
But it wasn’t the end of his story.
From Failure to Fire
Fast forward to Acts 2.
Peter—the same man who denied Jesus—now stands before thousands in Jerusalem and preaches the gospel with boldness.
What changed?
Jesus restored him.
“Do you love me? … Feed my sheep.” —John 21
Jesus
didn’t say, “I told you so.”
He said, “Let’s get back to work.”
How to Slay the Giant of Failure
Admit the failure.
Don’t excuse it. Don’t spiritualize it. Don’t minimize it. Own it before God.
“Against you, and you only, have I sinned…” —Psalm 51:4
Receive God’s grace.
Failure doesn’t define you—God’s forgiveness does.
“Where sin increased, grace increased all the
more.” —Romans 5:20
Learn from it.
Every failure has something to teach you. Ask God to give you wisdom, not just relief.
Let God redeem it.
God doesn’t waste pain. He often uses our greatest failures as the soil for our greatest fruit.
Get back up.
The enemy wants you stuck in shame. Jesus wants you walking in purpose.
You’re in Good Company
Abraham lied.
Moses struck the
rock.
David committed adultery.
Jonah ran.
Peter denied.
Paul persecuted.
And still—God used every one of them.
Failure is never the end of the story when grace gets the last word.
This Is Just One of the Giants
Failure can feel final—but it’s just another opportunity for God to do something new in your life.
In Slaying the Giants in Your Life, we look at twelve giants like this one—fear, guilt, discouragement, worry,
resentment, and more—and uncover how Scripture equips us to overcome them.
Each lesson features Good Questions That Have Groups Talking, designed to spark honest, healing conversations in small groups and Bible studies.
➡️ Click here to get Slaying the Giants in Your Life and discover how your worst moment might become God’s best
work.