I read this today with our HCC
Thursday morning Bible study crew and thought to myself: “Self, you and a lot
of your friends and virtual friends need to think and pray long and hard on
this before our next tweet or post on Facebook.” Simon “Rocky” Johnson (you may know him as the
apostle Peter) writes:
8 Now finally, all of you should be
like-minded and sympathetic, should love believers, and be compassionate and
humble, 9 not
paying back evil for evil or insult for insult but, on the contrary, giving a
blessing, since you were called for this, so that you can inherit a blessing (1 Peter 3:8-9).
all
of you
Peter’s letter is written to Christians living as the decided
minority in their world. Here in this
part of his epistle, he writes to instruct Christ-followers how to interact
with other believers. He means, of
course, to address a specific group of folk in a specific time and place,
namely, first-century Christians scattered and displaced in the Roman provinces
of northern Asia Minor (modern-day Turkey).
What the Lord Holy Spirit moves upon him to write, however, is perfectly
suited for two millennia of Christians all around the globe, including twenty-first-century
believers in the USA today.
So, when Pete says, “all of you,”
he means you and me, each of us and all of us who rely upon Jesus Christ for
our salvation and who claim to adhere to His teaching and endeavor to follow
His example – whatever your tribe or denominational tag, whatever your race or ethnicity,
whatever your socio-economic status, whatever your political persuasion. If we belong to Jesus Christ, we all belong
to one another.
I will let you mine the treasure trove of Christian conduct to
which Peter calls us. In fact, we would
all do well to invest some time and brain cells and shoe leather in replicating
each part of the behavior he promotes.
May I save you from scrolling back up and simply remind you:
8 … all of you should be
like-minded and sympathetic, should love believers, and be
compassionate and humble, 9 not paying
back evil for evil or insult for insult but, on the contrary, giving a
blessing, since you were called for
this, so that you can inherit a blessing (1 Peter 3:8-9).
you
were called for this
Hey, brother and sister believer in Jesus Christ, we are “called for this.” We are called to give
blessing, to encourage, to love one another just like Jesus Christ loves us (cf
John 13:34-35. Go ahead, look it
up. You’ll be glad you did).
What if we are called to be a blessing to other people, even and
especially in the virtual world of our social networks? Maybe now would be a good time to take
inventory of your last dozen or so updates and responses on your Facebook
feed. Any blessing there? Anything there that sounds like what Jesus Christ
calls us to be?
Pete draws inspiration from the Hebrew hymnal and quotes one of
the psalms to seal the deal.
10 For the one who wants to love life
and to see good days
must keep his tongue from evil
and his lips from speaking deceit,
11 and he must turn away from evil
and do what is good.
He must seek peace and pursue it,
12 because the eyes of the Lord are on the righteous
and His ears are open to their request.
But the face of the Lord is against
those who do what is evil (1 Peter 3:10-12; Psalm 34:12-16).
and to see good days
must keep his tongue from evil
and his lips from speaking deceit,
11 and he must turn away from evil
and do what is good.
He must seek peace and pursue it,
12 because the eyes of the Lord are on the righteous
and His ears are open to their request.
But the face of the Lord is against
those who do what is evil (1 Peter 3:10-12; Psalm 34:12-16).
seek peace
The last phrase in verse 11
jumped out at me. Any of us who desire
to love life and live well, must devote ourselves to “seek peace and
pursue it.” On
this text, Pastor Greg Pouncey writes:
… Conflict usually
erupts because someone wants to win. Someone
wants to win an argument, win a battle, or win a war. Christians have an obligation to pursue
peace, not victory, at all costs.
… If we win a battle with our lost neighbors but lose our
witness, we have worked against God’s ways rather than for them.
This is not a call to put our
heads in the sand or to play nice as if the world is not the wacky hot mess
that it is. In my estimation peace is
not so much the absence of conflict as it is a campaign to stay the course, to
keep calm, to trust ever more deeply, even in the throes of the most violent
storms, in God’s Word, God’s work, and God’s way.
I am also of the opinion that
peace is not the same as uniformity. Uniformity
would have us all dress alike, talk alike, or vote alike. Unity, on the other hand, celebrates
diversity and flavors and perspectives even as it brings us together like one
large, multi-colored tapestry. Uniformity
demands we all ride on the same bus, listen to the same music, follow the same
schedule, and take the same route. Unity
allows for vehicles of many shapes and sizes and seating capacities, endorses
freedom in our pace, and celebrates the songs we prefer on the roads of our
choice.
(Don’t try to make those
metaphors walk on all fours, dear reader.
John 14:6 makes clear the only way to the Father is Jesus Christ. Revelation 7:9-10 makes just as clear that
Father revels in the rich, vibrant variety in our forever faith family.)
seek peace and
pursue it
We have to pursue this peace. This requires effort. This involves rigor. This is a call to action that may leave us
breathless and weary here. Remember,
though, that “here” is not Home.
Listen, I don’t care very much
anymore for whom you voted or did not vote.
This is a landscape upon which we followers of King Jesus should stand
out from the rest of the planet. Whether
the onlookers live in the lands of the far left or the far right or the big,
squishy middle, we who bear His name should stand out as exceptional by virtue
of our profound love and respect for and humble service to one another and our neighbors. We should, as our Savior prophesies, be
recognizable to the world as His disciples, His people, His family by our love
for one another.
Now is the time. Let our world and our networks see in no
uncertain terms that we are His, we belong to one family, and we will seek peace and
pursue it by His grace and for His glory!
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