Do Good Despite Suffering (1 Peter 3:13-22)

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    1 Peter 3:13-22

    Job ThomasAdvanced Homiletics

    Based on the Moves/Structures approach of David Buttrick

    Setting: I am going to preach this sermon in my home church. Its members are generallyspeaking high educated. The Scripture passage is not selected by the preacher; an ecumenical

    preaching schedule is followed. I am preaching this sermon on May 7, 2011. This is the first

    sermon after Easter that the whole church will hear. (The week before there was a baptismal

    service that took place in another church. It was poorly attended by the members of my homechurch.)

    Moves: (1) We are confronted with unjust suffering because of doing the right thing 1Peter 3:14; (2) We are often tempted to leave the good path in these situations contrast to 1

    Peter 3:15-16; (3) but Christ is our example in suffering 1 Peter 3:18; (4) and Christ is our

    example in being victorious 1 Peter 3:19-22; (5) so in this light we should continue to do

    good despite suffering 1 Peter 3:15-17.

    I.

    (Beginning) In 2001 Filip Meert was convicted to 5 years imprisonment because the

    judge ruled he had committed fraud on a large scale. The whole case was based on very poor

    evidence. Wim Van den Eynde, a journalist with the VRT, did research and was appalled by

    the lies and manipulation throughout the trial. Filip apparently was even the person who

    started the investigation when he reported discovering some fraud in the books of his

    company. Throughout the episode of the TV show Koppen, it became very clear to me thatFilip was innocent. What struck me the most was that Filip did his full effectual sentence of

    over three years. Getting out on good behaviour was out of the question, according to thecommittee deciding on this, because Filip never admitted his guilt.

    (Statement)Suffering while doing nothing wrong troubles us. Suffering because of

    doing something good appals us. And yet this is exactly what can happen to Christians.

    (Development)We immediately think of the persecuted Church in several African and Asian

    countries. Members of those churches are imprisoned and mutilated simply because they want

    to follow Jesus. We think of missionaries giving their lives to serving others and getting

    almost nothing in return. But we should also think of our personal lives and the lives of those

    in our near context. I have to admit I found it difficult to relate to the text myself, but when Istarted thinking the theme through, I soon realized that this text speaks to us today. We know

    Christians who have been ridiculed for their faith, or have been ridiculed ourselves. We know

    Christians who have been gossiped about because they refused to gossip themselves. Weknow Christians who have been called names because they refuse to adopt secular morality.

    So did some of the readers of First Peter. Their Christian ethics and conduct provoked

    ridiculing and shaming. They were confronted with a socio-cultural setting that did not accept

    their faith. (Image)You Christians can be so intolerant, I heard somebody say to a friend

    recently. My friend really struggled because of this discussion because he tries to show

    respect for people no matter what they believe. He tries to love them with a love that suits a

    Christian. But he is not willing to compromise. He tries to love people and he tries to liveaccording to Christian ethics. He tries to do good, but that resulted in somebody being quite

    harsh on him. To my friends feeling there was a big distance between how he tries to live andhow that person depicted him. He felt that he had been treated wrongly. (Closure)Suffering

    because of doing goodseemsunjust. Not only that, suffering because of doing good isunjust.It challenges us.

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    II.

    (Statement)It can even challenge us to this extent that we are tempted to leave our path

    of following Christ. We can be tempted to stop doing the good thing. (Development) In being

    confronted with unjust suffering, it can be easy to go with the flow, to adjust the Christian

    standards to make living easier. It seems easier to just blend in with a bullying group or to be

    a bully ourselves in stead of taking a stance against it. It seems more profitable to be just ascompetitive as our colleagues and not caring about the pain we cause to our co-workers in

    doing this; then we will get our boss respect and be promoted. It seems way better to let go

    from time to time and not being the party pooper nobody likes when people start drinking toomuch at a party and wanting you to join them. This was what was at stake in the early church

    Peter was writing to. Social pressure became that intense that temptation to leave the

    community of Christ and the ethics and moral behaviour that go with it, was becoming very

    real. (Image) Being Christian is cool is a statement that is often said. Though it is difficult

    to always guess what people mean by this, I cant help but think that the word cool is

    missing out on some of the tougher implications of being a Christian. Sometimes it is quite

    hard to be a Christian. Further I doubt whether Christianity really is about being cool; it is

    about following Jesus and accepting him as saviour. (Closure) Its often not easy being aChristian and trying to lead a Christian life. We can be tempted to leave the path following

    Christ when suffering crosses, but maybe it is good to look to our example on that road.

    III.

    (Statement)On the road we can look to Jesus. He is our example. And it is not an

    example that is distant from us. On the contrary, he show the way, also in the suffering.

    (Development) On that very path we can see his proper example. Peter, who has lived so

    close to Jesus can testify from his own experience: For Christ also suffered once for sins, the

    righteous for the unrighteous, that he might bring us to God, being put to death in the flesh but

    made alive in the spirit (v. 18). If ever anyone did not deserve to suffer because of his

    conduct, it was Jesus. If ever anyone did suffer unjust, it was Jesus. Human hands, the flesh,

    put him to death. He suffered. He suffered for doinggood and beinggood. (Image)The

    passage of Jesus praying to his Father in Gethsemane always stirs me. Everything in me

    shouts: No! Jesus shouldnt have to die. Jesus shouldnt have to suffer. The prayer to his

    Father is so intense. Often it is even more intense than the Gospel writers depiction of Jesus

    death itself. We can look to this passage in our own unjust suffering; in our suffering becauseof doing something good. (Closure)Christ knows our suffering. He has gone the path before

    us. He even died for us. We should stay on the path despite suffering.

    IV.

    (Statement)But it does not end with the suffering. On the contrary, it ends with victory.

    Great victory. (Development)Jesus was made alive by the Spirit. Through the Spirit, Jesus

    was able to proclaim the Gospel to the spirits. There was much debate on who those spirits

    were, but the best explanation I found was that Peter here refers to a non-biblical Jewish story

    (1 Enoch). In it, it is told how Noahs grandfather Enoch preached doom to fallen angels (The

    Watchers) dwelling on the earth. They are the same we see returning in Genesis 6:1-4; the

    Sons of God. First Enoch tells that in those times God confined them to the earthly realm. It

    was a prison for them. When Jesus went to them, he did not go to convert them to God again.

    He went to proclaim that their doom was complete. He went to proclaim his final victory over

    them. He went to show that through his suffering and the following resurrection he wasvictorious. Death had no grip on him. And Peter immediately adds a second example victory;

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    that is the example of Noah himself living in those days. He probably suffered under the

    laughter of his neighbours when building the ark, but there came victory for him and his

    family. Because of their doing good God did not destroy all of humanity. They stayed on the

    right path and God saved them. (Image)Recently in class we saw a video of Lasse Viren.

    This Swedish 10km runner took a fall right in the beginning of an Olympic race. Together

    with another runner. The other runner stayed down, but Viren got back up and finished therace with a victory. This falling down seemed devastating at the moment, but in light of his

    victory it was not so important anymore. Or even more, it only made the contrasting victorygreater. The finish line gives perspective to the road towards it. For Lasse Viren, but also for

    us. Our biggest example for this is Easter. (Closure)We can look to Jesus victory of all

    angels and powers. His unjust suffering because of doing good is temporary. It fades in light

    of the splendour ahead.

    V.

    (Statement)And that is exactly what we should relate to. Also for us there lies victory

    ahead. In that light we are stimulated to stay on the path following Jesus. (Development)Peterreminds his readers that doing suffering because of doing good is always better than doing

    evil (v. 17). His readers should not let their suffering get the upper hand. They should not be

    afraid of their aggressors. On the contrary, they should keep on honouring God and being

    prepared to be accountable to their neighbours. They should keep their good mind-set; themind-set they asked God at their baptism. This message speaks to us today. We are called to

    keep up with following Jesus. Even in through our suffering our conduct is a testimony to ourenvironment. We should be accountable for our actions. If people look at us, they should not

    be amazed of our conduct in light of Christian love. They should see the clear link between

    our behaviour and the Saviour we follow. Our path and our actions on it should show a strong

    conviction and a life that gives honour and glory to God and does justice to the suffering of

    Christ for us and to his victory over death. (Image)In between Easter and Ascension Day thedisciples lived in a very turbulent period. On the one hand Jesus was still present after his

    suffering and his victory, but on the other hand Christ was not going to stay with them. They

    knew how hard it was being Christ and following Christ. They probably realized thatsuffering lied ahead, but they at the same time could already taste the glory to come. They

    experienced this ambiguity of the prospect of suffering because of belonging to Christ andbeing victorious. But the lives of the disciples show that they went for the victory and took the

    suffering as a temporary evil with it. We can relate to this. (Closure)Keep on doing the good.

    Keep on following Jesus. There is an end to the suffering. There will be victory.

    (Ending)Filip Meerts, unjustly confined, explains his passion for the triathlon after

    being set free again. He tells that so often an anger inside him surfaces. He needs the physical

    outlet of the heavy sports to get rid of that anger. An anger of being treated unjustly and

    knowing that other innocent people still are confined. We can understand his anger, and we

    sometimes also like to do sports to get it out of our system. It would be better however not toleave it at that, but to turn to the hope that is within us. The hope that one-day Christs victory

    will be visibly complete comforts us. On that day the suffering will seems nothing compared

    to the glory we share in. In our present suffering we can pray to Jesus Christ, knowing that he

    understands our troubles and our suffering. We can be comforted by his example in this and

    by our knowledge that everything will work out at the end.

    Amen.