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1st Peter

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two letters claim to have been written by the apostle Simon Peter (sometimes called Cephas) ... The Cruciform Pattern. Christians live their lives between the times ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 1st Peter


1
1st Peter
  • Persecution, Honor and Shame

2
Peter the Rock
  • two letters claim to have been written by the
    apostle Simon Peter (sometimes called Cephas)
  • 1 Pt 11, 2 Pt 11
  • Peter is one of the best known and beloved
    figures in early church (150xs he is mentioned in
    NT)
  • inner circle of disciples (Gethsemane)
  • famous Peter stories?

3
Question of Authorship
  • Peters authorship was not questioned until
    recent times.
  • all early evidence points to Peters authorship.
  • Arguments against it are
  • severe persecution under Domitian
  • but what about Nero?
  • the literary quality is too advanced for a humble
    Galilean fisherman
  • who says! (John Bunyon of Pilgrims Progress)
  • with help of Silas (512)

4
Cappadocian church entrance
5
Written from Babylon?
  • claims to have been written from Babylon (513)
  • code name for Rome
  • Peter and Paul were in Rome under Nero
  • note 11-3 (where are these places?)
  • to exiles! implying images of Israel to
    Christians feeling exiled in this world
  • written to combat the shame of isolation which
    Christian faith tended to induce
  • language of honor chosen and destined by God
  • he wrote to encourage Christians who in
    persecution and alienation

6
Pliny the Younger
  • http//www.earlychristianwritings.com/text/pliny.h
    tml
  • They asserted, however, that the sum and
    substance of their fault or error had been that
    they were accustomed to meet on a fixed day
    before dawn and sing responsively a hymn to
    Christ as to a god, and to bind themselves by
    oath, not to some crime, but not to commit fraud,
    theft, or adultery, not falsify their trust, nor
    to refuse to return a trust when called upon to
    do so. When this was over, it was their custom to
    depart and to assemble again to partake of
    food--but ordinary and innocent food. Even this,
    they affirmed, they had ceased to do after my
    edict by which, in accordance with your
    instructions, I had forbidden political
    associations. Accordingly, I judged it all the
    more necessary to find out what the truth was by
    torturing two female slaves who were called
    deaconesses. But I discovered nothing else but
    depraved, excessive superstition.

7
Honor for the Marginalized
  • Peter addresses a critical situation
  • addressees once participated in the social and
    cultural life of their communities
  • since conversion to Christ, they have become
    marginalized and abused
  • not because Christianity has been outlawed
  • but because they refuse to participate in civil
    religion and participate in a secret one.
  • Christianity was a dangerous sect everywhere
    spoken against (Acts 2822).

8
Photos of Cappadocia
9
What kind of persecution?
  • Christians are called to suffer for the name
    (415-16)
  • yet the abuse is mostly verbal (222-23 39-16)
  • a positive attitude toward the state is
    encouraged (213ff)
  • indicates there is no outright government
    persecution
  • perhaps occasional arbitrary acts
  • refusal to participate in civil religion was seen
    as eliciting the anger of the Roman gods
  • all unfortunate events were blamed on the
    Christians who made the gods angry.

10
What to think of it all
  • 1 Peter instruction on how to think about the
    shame of being a Christian
  • how to live faithfully in the world
  • how to put it in a broader perspective
  • does not present a theological essay
  • but what he says is based on deep theological
    reflection
  • expresses an underlying narrative framework
  • How be encouraged in suffering?
  • you are not those whose impiety encourages the
    wrath of the gods
  • there is a different storyline than this!

11
Peters Subversive Story!
  • God created the world (419)
  • God chose a people through whom to work (29-10)
  • God sent Christ who was rejected by humans but
    exalted by God (24)
  • God sent the Spirit and Christian evangelists who
    established a new people of God (112)
  • God will send Christ in the future to conduct the
    final judgment (17, 13 47).
  • Christians live their lives between Christs
    resurrection and return

12
The Cruciform Pattern
  • Christians live their lives between the times
  • Christs pattern of suffering and exaltation is
    foundational for present living
  • just as Christ was misunderstood and suffered
    unjustly for the sake of others
  • we are called to follow in his steps (221,
    38ff)
  • all Christians are called to be subject to
    governing authorities (213-17)
  • most vulnerable Christians (slaves, wives) are
    instructed to act so as to testify to faith in
    Christ (218-36)
  • this follows the example of Christ and will be
    vindicated in judgment (31-2 45-7)

13
Early Christian Paintings
14
Conversion as New Birth
  • Peter seeks to combat the shame their new loyalty
    to Christ elicits
  • suspicion related to their refusal to participate
    in civic festivals and associations related to
    the deities of their city.
  • P - conversion a new birth (13)
  • change of identity and status in new family
  • the covenanted people of God formed in Christs
    image

15
Status Changed
  • Changes reflect a new status in the family
  • no hope to true hope (121)
  • impurity to purity (118 43)
  • slavery to freedom (118)
  • perishability to imperishability (14)
  • ignorance to knowledge (114)
  • flesh to spirit (46)
  • no mercy shown to those to whom mercy is shown
    (210)
  • not my people to my people (210)
  • disobedience to obedience (12, 22)

16
Toward a new status
  • this language honors members who have lost all
    honor in public society
  • it confirms the benefits of belonging to a new
    group in light of the heavy cost
  • it also encourages new members to live a life
    worthy of their calling
  • helps alleviate the pain of breaking old
    allegiances to family and municipality

17
Outsiders Perspective
  • Christianity was suspected of undermining the
    social fabric.
  • new loyalties to Jesus strained old ones (to city
    and family) to the breaking point
  • Mark 1029 Matt 1034-38 1 Cor 710-16)
  • this is a world of honor and shame
  • loss of reputation and honor often a cause of
    suicide
  • loss of honor had a significant effect of
    identity and behavior

18
House in a Rock!
19
Resident Aliens
  • members of church appear to be aliens
  • not only implies a loss of honor
  • but a loss of support of family and civic
    associations.
  • If Christians are aliens or exiles (11, 17)
  • they nonetheless are citizens of a new
    commonwealth (12)
  • even part of Gods own family (13-5)
  • read 21-12

20
Two Stories Told
  • God chose Jesus (26) and honored him by
    constituting him as the cornerstone of the new
    temple (27)
  • this cornerstone is precious to the only judge of
    honor and status, namely God
  • yet dishonored and rejected by others (28)
  • similarly, Christians are a chosen race
  • a royal priesthood, a holy nation (29)
  • marks of real honor coming from God himself, the
    only real judge that matters.

21
A Really Old Church
22
Living Stones
  • Like Jesus, Christians are precious to God
  • even if they are dishonored by their neighbors
  • like Jesus, Christians are living stones built
    into a new spiritual house (25)
  • Jesus story serves as a paradigm for how God
    apportions honor
  • the only honor that counts comes from God
  • this heavenly honor cancels out suffering which
    is shame and dishonor from ones neighbors

23
Social Relationships
  • all social relationships are transformed
  • all believers are exhorted to holiness (116, cf.
    211-17 38-22)
  • if you suffer, suffer for the right reasons
  • for Christs sake, not because of your own sin
  • Christians should practice the same respect for
    rights and duties as God does
  • and to be sensitive to honor and status as
    defined by new family, new story, new God

24
Slaves and Priests
  • slaves may be a royal priesthood in the church
  • yet suffering under a harsh taskmaster (218)
  • they can find the true meaning of their negative
    experience by observing Jesus and imitating him
    (221)
  • his suffering was a means to glory and
    vindication
  • suffering comes even to the elect
  • they should not return evil for evil (the way of
    honor among their neighbors 39)
  • but interpret their social dishonor as a blessing
    (315)
  • again, based on the Jesus story of his shame and
    vindication (318-22)

25
New Holiness
  • holiness will result in living a life of a
    person born anew to a living hope through the
    resurrection of Jesus (13).
  • Like the obedient Jesus who honored God,
  • converts are to conform their lives and values
    according to the basic model of Jesus
  • esp. as he is described in 318-22
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