Mark 14:27-31 ; 66-72

Mar 1, 2026    Mitch Green

We are hours from the Cross.


The table has been set.

The hymn has been sung.

They walk into the night.


Before the nails. Before Pilate. Before the crowd.

Mark slows down and shows us Peter.


In this sermon from Mark 14:27–31 and 66–72, we walk through Peter’s bold self-confidence, his painful denial, and the surprising hope Jesus speaks even before Peter fails.


Peter says, “Even if they all fall away, I will not.”

But before the rooster crows twice, he denies Jesus three times.


This passage forces a question:

What will happen with your faith under pressure?


In this message, we explore:

•The danger of spiritual self-confidence

•How quickly we can collapse under pressure

•And the powerful promise of restoration spoken before our failure ever happens


The good news?

Our failure doesn’t surprise Jesus — and it doesn’t have to define us.


If you are confident in yourself, Peter’s story is a warning.

If you are crushed by failure, Peter’s story is comfort.


The answer isn’t “try harder.”

The answer is trust the promises of Jesus.


In Christ there is:

•Forgiveness for real denial

•Strength for real weakness

•Courage that grows out of humility


Join us as we look honestly at failure — and even more honestly at the restoring grace of Jesus.