Peter stands beside a charcoal fire. John tells us the detail almost casually. A fire burns in the courtyard while Jesus is interrogated inside. Servants and soldiers gather around it for warmth.
It is beside this ordinary fire that the extraordinary fracture occurs. A servant girl asks Peter a simple question:
“You are not also one of this man’s disciples, are you?”
Peter answers: “I am not.” John 18:17
The words fall quietly echoing with a deep dissonance. Throughout the Gospel Jesus has spoken the divine name: “I AM.” The words recall the voice from the burning bush. The voice of God naming himself to Moses. Now Peter answers that divine name with its inversion.
“I am not.”
This is not merely fear. It is something more familiar and more troubling: the instinct to survive by stepping away from truth. Peter is only standing beside a fire trying to stay warm while the empire does its work, which is precisely the danger. The night began with a sword in the garden. Peter swung first. The Gospel tells us he cut off the ear of the high priest’s servant. Violence felt like loyalty. It felt like courage.
But Jesus stopped him.
“Those who take the sword will perish by the sword.” Matthew 26:52
Peter’s first instinct was force. Next is denial. The sword and the lie are not opposites. They are two forms of the same attempt to control the outcome. When the sword fails, the lie steps in. Peter does not shout for Jesus’ death. He does something quieter when he says, “I am not with him.”
Violence often survives through that quieter sentence. While Peter warms himself, the machinery of power is moving smoothly. Everything is happening according to protocol and routine. Stability must be preserved. Order must be maintained. The language of necessity fills the air.
History repeats this pattern endlessly. Violence rarely introduces itself honestly. It arrives wrapped in phrases meant to soften its edges. We do not say war. We say operation. We do not say death. We say targets. And like Peter, we remain near the fire while events unfold somewhere else.
Every generation hears the same promise: War will bring peace. Strike hard enough. Remove the right enemy. Destroy the right threat. Then stability will follow. Theologians call this belief the myth of redemptive violence. It is the ancient idea that destruction can purify the world.
But the Gospel tells a different story. Violence never stays contained. It ripples outward. Families grieve. Children grow up in fear. Landscapes carry the scars of conflict long after the speeches end.
As Martin Luther King Jr. said: “Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars.” Jesus understood this. That is why he refused both the sword and the lie. He would not save the world by force.
And he would not deny the truth of what violence does. The New Testament word apokalypsis means unveiling. War is apocalyptic in that sense. It reveals what was already present. Peter thought he was hiding his fear. Instead, the rooster revealed it. War reveals things about nations in the same way.
Peter breathed that atmosphere in the courtyard, and so do we. When the rooster crowed, Peter remembered. The Gospel says he wept bitterly. Those tears matter. They are the first truthful thing he does after the denial. Before Peter can become a witness, he must grieve. Before resurrection can restore anything, something must first be acknowledged as lost.
The Psalms teach us to cry: “How long, O Lord?” The prophets teach us to say: "Woe.” Lament is not weakness. It is the refusal to normalize death. Peter’s story does not end in the courtyard.
After the resurrection, the Gospel of John returns him to another charcoal fire on the shore of the sea (John 21). The detail is deliberate. But this time, Jesus asks a different question. Not “Are you with me?” Instead, he asks three times: “Do you love me?”
Peter’s denial will not be erased. It is faced. It is spoken aloud, transformed. From the courtyard’s “I am not” emerges something new: costly solidarity. Tradition tells us Peter eventually dies as a martyr. The one who denied becomes the one who refuses to abandon the truth again.
Every age has its own charcoal fire. Moments when violence proceeds while ordinary people stand nearby, trying to stay warm. Moments when denial seems easier than truth. War reveals us in those moments.
The rooster crows whether we acknowledge it or not. The question that remains is the one Peter eventually had to answer: Will we continue saying “I am not”?
Or will we step away from the courtyard of denial and stand with the One who refused both the sword and the lie?
Peace will not come through domination. We must rebuild the relationships war has shattered.
The rooster has crowed. The fire is still burning. The question remains








