Follow Thou Me
The fire had burned low on the shore. The fish were eaten. And the Lord had just walked Peter through the hardest conversation of his life.
Three times Peter had denied his Lord beside another fire, in another courtyard, on the night everything fell apart. Now, three times the risen Christ asks him, lovest thou me? Three denials answered by three affirmations. The wound is being healed, stitch by stitch. And then the Lord tells Peter how his story will end. He speaks of stretched out hands and a road Peter would not choose for himself, the road of the martyr. He tells Peter, in so many words, that one day Peter will glorify God by dying for Him.
Imagine carrying that. You have just been forgiven, restored, recommissioned, and then handed the knowledge of your own cross. The weight of it must have pressed down hard.
And what does Peter do? He turns his head.
He sees John following close behind, the same John who had leaned on the Lord’s breast at the supper, and Peter asks, Lord, and what shall this man do? In other words, what about him? If I am to suffer like this, what is his road going to look like?
John, telling the story years later, does not let that question pass without reminding us of something. He takes us back to the upper room, back to the table, back to the night he reclined nearest the Lord and asked, for Peter, which is he that betrayeth thee? Why drag that detail up here? Because it is the very same pattern. At the supper Peter wanted to know another man’s destiny and could not ask it himself. Here on the shore he is doing it again. The head turns. The eyes wander. The heart asks about somebody else’s portion.
And both times, the answer of the Lord is the same in spirit. He will not feed the curiosity. He will not lay John’s future out for inspection. He simply says, if I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee? follow thou me.
There is a tenderness in that rebuke, and there is steel in it too. The Lord is saying, Peter, John’s road is mine to write, not yours to read. Your business is not his calling. Your business is to follow.
How well we know that turning of the head. We are forgiven, we are called, we are given a work to do, and still we crane our necks to study the path of the believer next to us. We wonder why their burden looks lighter than ours. We wonder why their gift seems brighter, their door more open, their season more kind. And while we are measuring our lot against theirs, the Saviour stands in front of us with one quiet, piercing word, follow thou me.
He does not promise that your road will match anyone else’s. He does not owe you an explanation of what He is doing in another man’s life. He has marked out a path that is yours alone, and He asks one thing of you upon it: faithfulness, step after step, with your eyes fixed on Him and not on the man beside you.
Take a few minutes today and name it honestly. Who is the John in your life? Whose road have you been studying instead of walking your own? Write the name down, and beside it write the comparison you keep returning to, the gift you envy, the door that opened for them and not for you, the season that seems kinder than yours.
Related Sermons
Today, when you feel the pull to compare your path with another's, resist it. God has assigned to you a stewardship that belongs to no one else, and what He requires of you there is simply that you be found faithful. When your gaze begins to drift toward someone else's portion, hear the Lord speak it again, over your own heart, what is that to thee? follow thou me. Then turn your eyes back to Him, and take the next step on the road He has set before you.
"The fear of man bringeth a snare: But whoso putteth his trust in the LORD shall be safe." — Proverbs 29:25
Daily Scripture Reading
Join us as we read through the Bible in one year, growing together in God’s Word day by day. Click on any underlined verse to access Pastor Burns’ helpful study notes and deeper insights.
Proverbs 16-18
(Proverbs 17)
(Proverbs 18)
Acts 2:22-47
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This Week's Radio Program
Week Eighteen • May 3, 2026
Trusting God With Tomorrow (Pt. 3)
In this final part of the message, “Trusting God with Tomorrow,” we are brought face to face with a powerful truth from Scripture—while we often plan our days and assume the future, the Bible teaches us that life is fragile, uncertain, and completely in God’s hands. As James reminds us, our life is “even a vapour” that appears for a little time and then vanishes away . The issue is not planning, but planning without God—living as though we are in control of what only God knows.
This message walks through the heart of biblical trust: having a proper perspective of tomorrow, a humble posture before God today, and a surrendered plan that says, “If the Lord will.” Whether facing uncertainty, fear, or the illusion of control, we are called to draw near to God, rest in His care, and trust that His will is good, even when tomorrow is unknown. Because Christ has risen, our future is secure—not in our plans, but in His perfect hands.