Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Lesson 12 - 1 Peter Book Study

In the Spring Sunday school session this class will be looking at the book of 1 Peter using the lessons available at Reformed Forum. These lessons are also available on YouTube under the Reformed Forum account for 1 Peter. The class format is to watch the video together and then discuss the presentation.

Lesson 12 Video Link  -  1 Pet. 5:1–14

NotebookLM generated blog content from the YouTube video:       

The Art of Living on the Edge: 5 Surprising Lessons from Peter’s Final Charge

1. The Exile's Dilemma

In our hyper-connected yet deeply fragmented world, many of us carry a quiet, persistent ache—a sense of being an outsider even in our own neighborhoods. This spiritual homelessness isn't just a modern psychological quirk; it is the very condition the Apostle Peter addresses in his final charge. Writing to "elect exiles" and "sojourners," Peter suggests that the solution to our displacement isn't to blend in, but to lean more fully into the "eschaton"—the appearing of Jesus Christ.

For Peter, the return of Christ isn't a distant, abstract theory or a topic for end-times speculation. It is "axiomatic"—the fundamental assumption that grounds every action. To live as a Christian is to live on the edge of eternity, ensuring that the "fragrance of the eschaton" is stamped upon our relationships, our leadership, and even our anxieties. The question for us today is simple yet piercing: are we merely surviving the present, or is our life oriented by the fire of Christ’s coming?

2. Leadership Must Smell Like the Sheep

Peter’s vision for "eschatological eldership" is remarkably grounded. He doesn’t call for distant executives or polished administrators, but for shepherds who live among the flock. He commands them to "shepherd the flock of God that is among you." This isn't accidental phrasing; it is a call to radical proximity.

This model of leadership is a direct participation in the incarnate work of Christ. Just as Jesus took on flesh to dwell among us, a shepherd cannot guard, heal, or nourish a soul from a distance. Peter speaks here with the authority of the restored; his own mandate to "feed my sheep" was born from the ashes of his denial and the tenderness of Christ’s mercy. He knows that true spiritual authority requires the vulnerability of being present.

"Luther said he did only two things to make the reformation successful. He preached the word, and he drank beer with the saints."

To lead is to teach and to spend time. There are no shortcuts. As the source suggests, if you are going to lead the sheep, you must eventually "smell like the sheep."

3. Anxiety is a Form of Spiritual Amnesia

Perhaps the most profound human element of 1 Peter 5 is its treatment of worry. Peter presents anxiety not merely as a mental burden, but as a "deep forgetfulness"—the "dark underside of our capacity to hope." When we worry, we are suffering from a temporary amnesia regarding the character of the God who provides.

Peter links humility directly to the casting of care. To hold onto our anxieties is, quite frankly, a form of pride; it is the arrogant assumption that we must remain in control. Refusing to "hurl" our cares onto God is a failure of humility, an attempt to detach ourselves from the care of Christ. We must remember that the Chief Shepherd "cares well for you body and soul." Casting anxiety is not a passive release but a spiritual exertion—an active decision to trust the one who never forgets His own.

4. The Paradox of Power: Leading Without "Lording"

To protect the church from the corrosive nature of power, Peter provides three negative and positive pairings. These aren't just rules for church order; they are a call to the "imitation of the Master":

  • Not Forced, but Willing: Service should never be the result of coercion or a begrudging "must," but a "willing" response offered in good cheer.
  • Not for Dishonest Gain, but Eager to Serve: Leadership must never be a pursuit of leverage or personal profit, but a genuine, "eager" desire to help others.
  • Not Domineering, but Being Role Models: Overseers must reject the "lording" style of the world, choosing instead to be examples the flock wants to follow.

This model carries a sense of "fear and trembling" because it replaces the safety of top-down authority with the "vulnerability of being watched." To be an example is to invite others into the messy reality of one’s own life as it seeks to reflect Christ.

5. Resisting a "Tethered Lion"

Peter offers a chilling image of the adversary: "Your enemy, the devil, prowls around like a roaring lion," evoking the terrifying reality of the Roman amphitheaters. Yet, within this warning is a note of supreme confidence. We are not called to defeat the devil—Christ has already achieved that victory at the cross, plundering the strong man.

"We can think of him as a mortally wounded and tethered lion."

The church’s task is not to win the war, but to "resist" and "stand firm." This resistance is a form of spiritual wrestling—an exertion of the soul that refuses to give ground. We stand on territory already cleared and secured by the blood of the Lamb, remaining sober and vigilant even as we know the lion’s end is certain.

6. The Global Solidarity of the "Little While"

Finally, Peter reminds us that our trials are not a freak occurrence. There is a "global solidarity" in suffering; we belong to an international church that shares the same path. In Peter’s worldview, suffering is the norm—the necessary prelude to glory.

He anchors this in the "mighty hand" of God. This is not a hand that merely presses down, but the "saving, powerful, Exodus-making hand" that delivers. Just as God brought Israel through the wilderness, He uses the "little while" of our current age to prepare us for an "unfading inheritance." Peter defines this "crown of glory" not as a golden object, but as "creaturely, covenantal communion"—an uninterrupted, face-to-face joy with the Triune God.

As the text concludes with a powerful benediction:

"The God of all grace... will himself restore, make you strong, firm, and steadfast."

7. Conclusion: The Fragrance of the End

Ultimately, Peter’s charge reveals that God does not summon the church to a mere political project or a temporal social agenda. He has called us to "His own eternal glory in Christ." This is a vertical calling, an upward summons to a heavenly home that is already kept for us.

As we navigate the tension of our exile, we must ask ourselves: in the midst of your "little while" of suffering, does your life carry the fire and orientation of the appearing of Christ, or have you forgotten who is holding the lead?


Thursday, April 23, 2026

Lesson 11 - 1 Peter Book Study

In the Spring Sunday school session this class will be looking at the book of 1 Peter using the lessons available at Reformed Forum. These lessons are also available on YouTube under the Reformed Forum account for 1 Peter. The class format is to watch the video together and then discuss the presentation.

Lesson 11 Video Link  -  1 Pet. 4:12-19

NotebookLM generated blog content from the YouTube video:      

The Architecture of Affliction: Why the "Fiery Ordeal" is Our Only Path to Glory

When life begins to burn, our primary instinct is to scan for the nearest exit. We are conditioned to view hardship as a diagnostic failure—a sign that we have veered off course, lost divine favor, or been abandoned to the cold whims of a chaotic world. We crave a faith that acts as a kinetic shield against the heat, not a theology that serves as a guide through the furnace.

However, in the fourth chapter of his first epistle, the Apostle Peter orchestrates a dramatic "mood shift." Up to this point, he has treated suffering as a looming possibility or a low-level friction. But at verse 12, the language catches fire. Suffering is no longer a hypothetical; it is an urgent, "fiery reality." Peter invites us to shed our surprise and reconsider the ordeal not as a sign of defeat, but as a necessary, transformative participation in the very life of God.

To understand this architecture of affliction, we must look at the two pillars upon which Peter builds his argument: Participation (the relational mystery of the cross) and Purification (the eschatological preparation for glory).

Stop Being Surprised by the Heat

One of the most disorienting aspects of suffering is the sense that it is a "glitch" in the Christian system. Peter deconstructs this immediately. He asserts that the "fiery ordeal" is not a localized anomaly but a global phenomenon—a flame that has burned for centuries to test the genuineness of faith. If we are to follow the Messiah, we must accept the ontological reality that "no servant is above his master." If the world hated Him, it will hate those who bear His name.

"Beloved, do not be surprised at the fiery ordeal which has come upon you to test you... as though something strange or peculiar were happening to you."

This fire is not abnormal; it is eschatological. It is the sifting fire spoken of by the prophets—the furnace intended to prove that our faith is more precious than gold. Within this biblical framework, we live in the tension between the fall and the final restoration. To expect a life without friction is to ignore the "bleeding edge" of the age in which we live.

Participation: The Secret Rhythm of Joy

Peter offers a command that feels intellectually and emotionally scandalous: he tells his readers to rejoice. Yet, he introduces a vital nuance in the Greek text: there is a "joy" for the present and a "super-abundant joy" reserved for the future. We rejoice now because we are participating in the sufferings of Christ. We will be overjoyed—filled with an ecstatic, radiant gladness—when His glory is finally unveiled in its full apocalypse.

Suffering is never neutral; it is a catalyst. It can either harden the heart into a callous stone or crack it open so that new beauty can flower forth. When we face unjust hardship, we are not being pushed away from God; we are being drawn into the mystery of the Passion. This is what "Christian victory" looks like in the present age: it is the unique possession of the kingdom through the fellowship of the cross.

The Spirit of Glory Hovers in the Dark

There is a startling promise for those standing in the middle of the flames: a specific kind of presence. Peter claims that if you are insulted for the name of Christ, the "Spirit of glory... rests upon you."

"If you are insulted because of the name of Christ... the Spirit of glory and the Spirit of God rests upon you."

This "Spirit of glory" is the eschatological Spirit—the bearer of the radiant beauty of the age to come. Peter uses the image of the Spirit "resting" or "hovering" cloud-like over the suffering church, precisely as the Spirit descended upon Jesus at His baptism. The church is not blessed because of its social leverage or political fruit. In fact, it is often "trampled in its outward estate." Its true blessedness lies in the fact that, through the mystery of the Spirit, it is already "tasting the age to come" in the midst of affliction.

Purification: The Startling Logic of "House First" Judgment

Peter then pivots to the second pillar: Purification. He introduces the sobering reality that the fiery ordeal is actually the "appointed time" for judgment to begin—and it begins with "God’s household." This is not a judgment of condemnation, but the sifting fire of Malachi and Zechariah, intended to refine the elect for their inheritance.

Peter quotes the Greek Old Testament (Proverbs 11) to drive home the gravity of this process: “If it is hard for the righteous to be saved, what will become of the ungodly?” This echoes the ethical teaching of Jesus regarding the "narrow gate." The way to life is "hard" and "narrow" because it requires the endurance of the fire.

  • The Way of the Fire: A "hard" salvation that requires the refining of the soul and the endurance of the "great tribulation" of history.
  • The Way of the Chaff: The "easy" path that avoids the refining heat but ends in a fire that consumes rather than irradiates.

The Radical Irony of Continuing to Do Good

The practical response to this cosmic logic is found in Peter's final instruction: "commit themselves to a faithful creator" while "continuing to do good."

There is a profound irony here. Peter is essentially commanding the church to continue doing the very things—honoring others, speaking truth, living uprightly—that are causing their pain. We are called to the "bleeding edge" of non-retaliation, entrusting our souls to the "Faithful Creator." By using this specific title, Peter points to God as the Universal Judge and Maker. Just as Jesus entrusted Himself to the One who judges justly, we remain in the fire, knowing that the God who vindicated Christ in the resurrection will vindicate His people in the apocalypse.

Conclusion: Calibrating Our Hope

The "fiery ordeal" reveals an unbreakable conjunction in the life of faith: suffering then glory. This is the rhythm of our current existence. As the Apostle Paul noted, this "light momentary affliction" is actually preparing for us an "eternal weight of glory" that defies comparison. But this irradiation only happens as we look away from the transient, visible things and fix our gaze on the eternal and unseen.

The fire that consumes the ungodly is the same fire that prepares the elect for their splendor. As you face your own trials, ask yourself: How would it change your endurance if you viewed your hardship not as an accident, but as a participation in the mystery of Christ? We must calibrate our hope toward the coming revelation, finding the strength to remain in the heat, knowing that the furnace of the present is the only forge for the joy of the future.