Moments in the life of a Pastor

Walking with God


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29. Citizens of Christ – Part 4

1 Peter series – “Holding onto Hope in a Hostile World”

1 Peter 2:13-17

13 For the Lord’s sake, submit to all human authority—whether the king as head of state, 14 or the officials he has appointed. For the king has sent them to punish those who do wrong and to honor those who do right. 15 It is God’s will that your honorable lives should silence those ignorant people who make foolish accusations against you. 16 For you are free, yet you are God’s slaves, so don’t use your freedom as an excuse to do evil. 17 Respect everyone, and love the family of believers. Fear God, and respect the king.

  • Show Respect

Vs 17 tells us to respect others, and it comes on the heels of Peter’s Instruction to live sanctified lives and not sinful ones, to live in freedom and not fornication. There is a direct correlation to respect and living right. You will never respect others if you don’t first respect yourself. If we are living in sin with no regard or respect for self how do we expect to respect others? The word respect here means to give honor, to hold others in high regard. In the Old Testament it literally means a “heavy weight” meaning that we assign the greatest possible weight to a person in terms of respect. To respect someone means to consider them to be weighty, where to dishonor means to treat them as if they were light or insignificant. Do you prize people. So many of us prize possessions over people, but there are only 2 things that are eternal, God’s Word and people. To honor is to treat with distinction; to dishonor is to treat someone like dirt. How are you treating the people God has put in your life? So many of us only hold heavy those who we think can help us. We esteem those with power, possessions and position but do we value the homeless and the helpless, do we show worth to widows and orphans? Peoples worth is based on the Word of God not on the worlds values. We’re called to be courteous and kind to all people and to considering them weighty because they have been made in the image of God. Everyone matters to God and therefore they should matter to us. If we are going to have the same values as God then we have to start valuing what He values. God calls people precious, He sent His Son to die for them and when we see start seeing people as precious we too will honor and serve them with our lives. When it comes to the family of God we are not just to respect but to respond with love. The word for love here is agapao, which is unconditional. Our love for God’s children is not based on our feelings it’s based on obedience to the Father. Our love is not based on whether it is received or returned. What conditions are you putting on other Christians? Not only should we love our fellow family members in the faith but we should fear God, which means to revere. Some of us have become so familiar with God that we no longer have a healthy fear of Him. Instead of reverence and an awe of the Almighty we take God for granted. Are you responding with reverence? Again Peter calls us to honor the king, which is incredible when you think about the kind of man Nero was. It’s as if Peter had to preach this twice because he knew there would be some pushback. In a similar way, we are called to esteem the office of the president, even if we don’t like the particular person in the office. Ultimately it all comes down to whether we have submitted and surrendered to God as our highest authority. God’s name is used four times in five verses because it’s not about you or your boss or your teacher or your mayor or your governor or the Supreme Court or the President it’s all about the Almighty. At its core, submission is a spiritual issue and until we have surrendered to the Savior we will struggle. 


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28. Citizens of Christ – Part 3

1 Peter series – “Holding onto Hope in a Hostile World”

1 Peter 2:13-17

13 For the Lord’s sake, submit to all human authority—whether the king as head of state, 14 or the officials he has appointed. For the king has sent them to punish those who do wrong and to honor those who do right. 15 It is God’s will that your honorable lives should silence those ignorant people who make foolish accusations against you. 16 For you are free, yet you are God’s slaves, so don’t use your freedom as an excuse to do evil. 17 Respect everyone, and love the family of believers. Fear God, and respect the king.

Not only are we to submit rightly but we are to:

  • Serve Readily 

In verse 15 Peter tells us that it is God’s will that we live honorable lives, the word honorable means not just holy lives but helpful lives. When we do, it will silence the ignorant people who make foolish accusations against you. We are to live the kind of lives that make the message of God’s grace both beautiful and believable. Paul challenges the Christians living on the immoral island of Crete in a very similar way in Titus 3:1: “Remind them to be subject to rulers and authorities, to obey, to be ready for every good work.” It’s imperative that we walk with integrity as Daniel did, Daniel 6:4: “So the governors and satraps sought to find some charge against Daniel concerning the kingdom; but they could find no charge or fault, because he was faithful; nor was there any error or fault found in him.” Living a holy and helpful life is not just God’s wish it’s His Will. So often I hear Christians who say that they want to know what God’s will is for their life, yet this usually has to do with location or vocation, where do you want me to live and work. But do you realize that God cares more about how you live than where you live, He cares more about your walk than your work. When it comes to wanting to know and walk out God’s will I’ve found that it’s helpful to start with what we absolutely know with certainty to be His will. Are you living out what you already know to be His Will? If you are not being obedient to His known will why worry about what you wonder is His will, and why would God reveal more of His will when you won’t walk out what He has already revealed? Now when God’s people were sent into exile into Babylon, they were aliens and strangers in a foreign land, much like Christians are today in our culture. God told them to build houses, start families and work, but they were to also seek peace and pray for the city in which they lived. Jeremiah 29:7: “And seek the peace of the city where I have caused you to be carried away captive, and pray to the LORD for it; for in its peace you will have peace.” God was calling them to be good citizens. We are not just called to submit to those in charge but we are to serve our communities. Peter says that when Christians serve others by doing good it will “silence the ignorant.” The word silence here means, “to muzzle” or “to gag.” Jesus used this same word when he shouted to the raging sea in Mark 4:39: “Peace, be still! And the wind ceased and there was a great calm.” When we serve our community, it will silence our critics. Instead of condemnation there will be commendation. The problem is that we want to silence the world by shouting back at them instead of serving them. The truth is we are not going to reach the world only with our word we need works. What if we stopped wasting our energy defending our rights and started living right. You don’t have to defend your character if it’s correct. What if we were to let our walk and our works be our witness? What if we were to stop talking about Christian principles in private and start practicing them in public? What if instead of constantly complaining and criticizing the culture we confronted it with compassion. Why are we so surprised by the sick sin we see in our society, look heathens live like hell, and the Savior is the only solution. So how did the Savior live, by criticizing sinners or serving them? We hold the hope, unfortunately many of us are also holding out when it comes to hope. Verse 16 in the NKJV says: “As free, yet not using liberty as a cloak for vice, but as bondservants of God.” We have been set free from sin to serve the Savior. So why would we be fools and use our freedom to serve sin? That’s like a prisoner who is set free from jail and choses to use his freedom to commit a felony! Peter is saying that we have liberty but not a license to do whatever we want. We’re to use our liberty to demonstrate virtue, not to justify our vices. You can’t serve society and be a slave to sin. We have been freed from sin so that we can serve the Savior. True freedom is living on mission for the Master. A “bondservant” is one bound to another in servitude, completely committed to do the will of his master and not his own. Peter is drawing on the Old Testament concept of a servant who was free to leave but who willingly submitted himself to serve a master he loves and respects. A bondservant was surrendered wholly to the Master’s will and devoted to him to the disregard of his own interest. We are not simply “volunteers” signing up for an hour or two of our time; we are surrendered servants seeking to serve the Savior.