If social media posts are reflective of where our culture is
at the moment, few texts in all of Scripture would be better than the words of
1 Peter 3:13-22 to encourage us. Social media – and many main stream media
talking heads – suggest that 2016 was about the worst year in the history of
mankind and, depending on how you voted in November, 2017 will either be the
ultimate cure-all year or a downhill slide into the abyss of what started in
2016.
The hyperbole with which so many describe our current
culture may be guilty of overlooking some rather important historical moments.
Was 2016 really more difficult than 1861-65 – the years of the Civil War? Or
1941-45 – the years of World War II? And that is just looking at two moments in
our own history. What about the persecution early Christians faced just for
following Jesus? Or Christians in many parts of the Middle East today whose lives are put at risk simply
by being Christian.
The text I mentioned from 1 Peter 3 suggests that “even if
you should suffer,” that doesn’t mean you aren’t “blessed.” And beyond that
Peter urges his readers – who most likely had far more difficult lives than I
do, “do not fear their intimidation, and do not be troubled.” For Peter, the
presence of “troubled times” is a reason “to sanctify Christ in our hearts.”
For much of my life, I heard all sorts of apologetics people
quote verse 15 in a way that defended their tendencies to believe that
presenting a dozen or so reasons some part of the Bible was true was what Peter
encouraged his readers to do. Whether or not that approach is healthy or not is
not for me to say, but I’m pretty sure it isn’t what Peter was talking about.
When, in the midst of “intimidation and trouble” if I am living
a “sanctifying Christ in my heart” kind of life, it likely will cause people to
ask questions. Apparently I am supposed to be cowered by the “intimidation and
trouble” that those who don’t know Christ might bring my way. When I don’t
respond that way – “I sanctify Christ in my life” - that will generate
confusion, perhaps even questions.
The “ingredient” in life that will be so counter-intuitive
to the fact that I should be cowered by evil is one word: hope. Hope is such a vital word in our experience of faith. The
challenge with the word is that in our daily languages we use that word so
casually. Go and buy a lottery ticket, the clerk might say, “Hope you win.” Of
course your chances of winning are pretty slim. Back in December, after the
final exam in a class I taught at Point University, I had an email from a
student who did very little work all semester, failed the course project and
final exam, and clearly was going to fail. His email contained this phrase, “I
hope I am going to pass your class.”
If that’s what Peter means by “hope” then we are, quite
frankly, hopeless and all the doom and gloom of social media posts would be
appropriate. But that isn’t hope, as Scripture describes it. Hope is “confident
assurance” that God keeps His promises. That is so certain, that the Holy
Spirit Himself was given to us as “guarantee.” (Ephesians 1:13,14) Solomon’s
prayer of dedication for the Temple (1 Kings 8:22ff) is deeply rooted in the
idea that God keeps His Word!
As Paul nears the end of his life, he is still talking about
“faith, hope, and love.” In 2 Timothy 1:12 he defines hope like this: “for I
know whom I have believed and I am convinced that He is able to guard what I
have entrusted to Him until that day.”
If Paul could say that in view of the circumstances of his
own life at the moment – then I’m pretty certain that I ought to be saying the
same!
So, at the beginning of a New Year – 2017 – that will have
all sorts of challenges and moments of uncertainty, maybe Peter’s advice to
early believers should be our resolutions. Let’s live in a way that causes
non-believers to ask us “how do you do that?” Then, with gentleness and
reverence, we can tell them about our hope in Christ.
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