1 Pet.3:8 to 4:11
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READ: 1 Pet.3:8 to 4:11
REFLECT/RELATE:
Live long enough, you’ll bleed. Perhaps the saddest thing about our pursuit of comfort is the fact that we never actually catch it. Life is full of suffering; no one gets out of here alive.
C.S. Lewis—the brilliant mind behind the Narnia series—once wrote that “crises reveal character.” Sometimes suffering says more about our hearts than it does our circumstances. Very often suffering reveals our idols—reveals where we look for comfort and security. When our idols are threatened, we become bitter, angry, resentful.
Suffering also says a lot about our religious commitments. If I am a deeply religious person, my tendency is to make an idol out of my religious performance. I may be a pillar in my community, a well-respected member of my Church. But when suffering comes, I don’t know how to handle it. Wasn’t I good enough? Is God angry with me? I may become bitter, guilty, and depressed as I struggle to understand what’s happening. I may search for someone else to blame—casting myself as an innocent victim of wicked circumstances. If only the government would come through for us…then I wouldn’t be in this mess.
If I’m a very non-religious person, I may view myself as basically a good person. So when suffering comes, I don’t know how to react. I may become bitter toward God for allowing bad things to happen to good people.
Suffering is one of our oldest questions. The Biblical character Job wrote a whole book about suffering before most of the Bible was even written. But when we look at the reality of the fallen world we live in, we realize that there’s nothing about suffering that should surprise us. In fact, the Bible promises that those who follow after God will often reap hostility from others. This is why Peter would encourage the early Christians to persevere despite their persecution.
In the middle of this passage we find the key verse: “Always be prepared to give an answer for the hope that you have” (1 Pe 3:15). Why would a message about suffering suddenly turn to the need for evangelism? Because if crises reveal where we place our hope and trust, then crises also provide opportunities to point others to that same hope. “Everybody Hurts,” writes the rock band R.E.M. “When you’ve had too much of this life, hold on.” Suffering forces us to evaluate what it is we hold onto. Peter is offering the Church something to hold onto: the gospel.
This is why the rest of the passage is Peter’s way of unpacking this message. Do you hear what Peter is saying in chapter 3 verses 18-19? He’s emphasising the death and the resurrection of Jesus, the cross and the empty grave. Chances are, we don’t always have a good answer to the questions that arise during times of suffering. But the gospel tells us what the answers can’t be. The cross tells us that the answer can’t be that God’s not loving, because He cared enough to send His Son. The empty grave tells us that the answer can’t be that God’s not powerful, because He raised His Son from the dead. Suddenly the gospel shifts from merely “religious” knowledge to personal conviction. If this world is all there is, then suffering robs our world of meaning. With eternity in view, suddenly we find ourselves waiting for God to make all things new.
REST:
So as we head into the world, we do so with the expectation that we’ll bleed—some of us more than others. But we enter the world with the confidence in a God of love and a God of power. It is His message, His gospel that we carry into a hurting and dying world, offering them the simple message: hold on. Hold on. Hold on.
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