Tuesday, April 26, 2011

1 Peter 4:1-6 Body dying, Spirit living

As we just celebrated Easter weekend, we can still have that vivid picture of Christ hanging on the cross, dying for our sin, and this can also be seen as a way of living for us today.   Not that we start hanging ourselves on a tree with spikes, but the illustration that Jesus was done with sin on the cross because it was His decision, His will to do that for us.   We too need to do the same and be done with sin.

Peter calls the church to not live as 'the pagans do', but to 'live according to God in regard to the spirit' (vs 6).   Peter does also talk about the fact that we are going to have to give an account at judgement time in regard to our actions.   We are not living to fulfill our desires, but to live according to the ways of God.  

That's what makes us different, and sometimes that's what makes life harder.    Peter encourages believers to live a holy life (1 Peter 4:4) and that some people will think us strange.   This is were the Church needs to encourage each other, lift each other up, instead of tearing down.   This is were we are called to encourage each other in our faith because we face the same choices every day .. whether or not to follow the ways of the world, the way of selfishness, or the way of holiness that God has set before us.

Monday, April 11, 2011

1 Peter: 3:18-22 Baptized in Freedom.

Christ died for our sins once and for all ... what a great promise/revelation.   That no longer are we bound by the laws of sin, with no choice of doing what is right, but we are now free from the bonds of sin that easily entangles us.   Peter also uses the flood in Noah's time as an illustration of baptism, how the old and corrupt of that world was washed away, so that Noah and his family could begin anew.    Christ has saved us from the old ways.   We now can have a new life, a new beginning because of what He has done on the cross for us.

This passage also mentions that Christ preached to the spirits in prison whom had rejected the ways of God back in Noah's time.    Jesus was proclaiming his victory over death, that sin no longer has hold over us.   I'm also wondering if he preached redemption to those spirits in prison (3:18-19).    What did he preach?    Peter doesn't tell us in this letter, but his emphasis was on the symbol of baptism, and letting us know that Christ is at God's right hand "with angels, authorities and powers in submission to him."   

Peter tells us that Christ is sitting at God's right hand with authority and power.    What a great hope we have in Christ, but it is real hope, not a hope that is wishful thinking, but a hope that is built on the promises of God, and the knowledge of what God has already done for us.