A Life Full of Hope 1 Peter 1:13-25 1 Peter 1:13-25 Introduction
A Life Full of Hope 1 Peter 1:13-25 1 Peter 1:13-25 Introduction
A Life Full of Hope 1 Peter 1:13-25 1 Peter 1:13-25 Introduction
Last week we saw how our lives, troubles and all, somehow fit into a gigantic master plan that
God was orchestrating. God has prepared an inheritance for us and we are waiting for that day
when we will fully come into it.
Prophets in ancient times spoke of the salvation that we experience in Jesus Christ.
We are living each day filled with hope, looking for the fulfillment of all that God has had
planned since the very beginning.
Now with all of that made clear to us, what does God expect from us as a response?
That’s what Peter is going to talk to us about today – the transformation that ought to take
place in us as a result of our salvation.
Belonging to Jesus for eternity is supposed to transform how we live right now.
Peter is picturing a man in a robe, tucking his skirts under the belt, so he can be free to run,
work or engage in some physical activity.
We want our minds to be spiritually focused, alert and ready for action, so that the cares of this
world do not distract us in our service to Jesus Christ.
1:13 And we should always be looking toward the return of our Lord.
Peter calls it His “revelation” or “Apocalypse.”
“The Revelation of Jesus Christ” is the title John gives to the book of Revelation in the very first
verse of that book.
Both John and Peter are referring to that day when Jesus Christ returns and is truly revealed.
1:13 By the way, Peter is clearly referring to Christ’s future return. (See also 1:7)
John uses the same words, most naturally referring to the same end-times events.
Therefore it is unlikely that John would have been talking about events now long past, such as
the destruction of Jerusalem, as a preterist view of Revelation would have us believe.
1:14 Our former lusts of worldly ambition, power, pride and pleasure are inconsistent with a
live of obedience.
When we come to know Jesus we should no longer be driven by the same desires.
Paul was more or less saying the same thing back in Romans 12:2.
1:15-16 Our first priority should be to imitate the holiness of God right now.
God is completely disconnected from all forms of sin and evil.
He wants us to be like Him in that respect.
1:15-16 Two big reasons why we can make God’s holiness our goal:
o We are made in God’s image. This is why even an atheist may live an essentially good
and useful life. We don’t have to believe in God to be aware of the difference between
right and wrong.
o We have trusted Christ. This, if we let it, will make our moral vision clearer and increase
our ability to live a life consistent with God’s holiness.
Belonging to Jesus for eternity is supposed to transform how we live right now.
1:17 Here in the USA we normally try to downplay the fear of God.
Our preference is for a God of love who doesn’t have anything about Him that we would ever
fear.
And our lack of fear now shows pretty badly.
We’ve reached a point of imbalance and need to once again reconcile the two ideas of a God
who loves us with a God that we should fear.
1:18 The idea of redeeming has to do with the price paid to purchase a slave’s freedom.
In Jewish culture this was often done by the near kinsman or goel paying the master the price to
free the slave.
In Hellenistic culture, the price was often paid to the temple of a god.
The priest would then give most of that price to the slave owner, keeping a cut for himself.
1:18 In our case, no amount of silver or gold could have redeemed us or freed us from the
bondage to sin and death that we were once in. Peter calls it:
your aimless conduct received by tradition from your fathers
While sometimes difficult to admit, tradition and culture can be a form of bondage if it doesn’t
include faith in the living God.
1:19 Christ, being the perfect sacrificial lamb that He is, offered His blood on our behalf,
buying us out of bondage to sin and purchasing our eternal freedom.
1:20 God has now revealed Christ to fulfill the plan that He foreordained before the
foundation of the world – before creation ever took place.
God’s sovereign purpose centers on Jesus Christ; the totality of history climaxes in Him.
But notice also that Christ was “manifest in these last times for you.”
God had you in mind when He sent Jesus.
Belonging to Jesus for eternity is supposed to transform how we live right now.
1:22 It is by means of a process of active obedience that we purify our souls in the sense
Peter means here.
And that obedience has to include fervent love for one another.
Peter is not really being original. He heard something like this from Jesus.
o See John 13:34-35.
1:23 The way we enter God’s family is by being born into it – or “born again” as Peter puts it
here.
Our physical birth eventually results in physical death.
Spiritual birth – or rebirth – since it takes place subsequent to physical birth – results in eternal
life because it is accomplished by means of the eternal word of God.
1:24-25 Each of us has to face the reality of death and no one really likes that.
Therefore, immortality has always been one of the great quests of the human race.
And, in the words of that great American philosopher Woody Allen:
o “I don't want to achieve immortality through my work. I want to achieve it through not
dying.”
1:24-25 The content of the gospel message, should we believe it by faith, has within it the power
to transmit eternal life from God to us.
When we trust in the blood of Christ to cleanse us, and believe in the reality of His resurrection,
we receive the gift of eternal life that God offers to us by faith.
We are born again by the eternal word of God.
Belonging to Jesus for eternity is supposed to transform how we live right now.
1 Peter 1:13-25 Conclusions
As to God’s holiness:
o God has nothing in common with sin or evil.
o In the same way, we should make it our goal to separate ourselves from such things.
o We are not implying that perfect holiness is attainable here in this life.
o Still, for the Christian, conscious obedience is the only acceptable course – not willful
sin.