Session 1 Course,Context,Content

10
Stones Living being the people of God in the world the first epistle of peter zion church adult fellowship community

description

session 1 handout

Transcript of Session 1 Course,Context,Content

Page 1: Session 1 Course,Context,Content

StonesLiving

b e i n g t h e p e o p l e o f G o di n t h e w o r l d

t h e f i r s t e p i s t l e o f p e t e r

z i o n c h u r c h a d u l t f e l l o w s h i p c o m m u n i t y

Page 2: Session 1 Course,Context,Content

why are you reading this? there’s nothing here. move along.

Page 3: Session 1 Course,Context,Content

living stones • ii

zion church • afc 2 • winter 2012

1 Peter 2.4–10 ESVAs you come to him, a living stone rejected by men but in the sight of God

chosen and precious, you yourselves like living stones are being built up as a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices

acceptable to God through Jesus Christ. For it stands in Scripture: “Behold, I am laying in Zion a stone, a cornerstone chosen and precious, and whoever believes in him will not be put to shame.”

So the honor is for you who believe, but for those who do not believe, “The stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone,”

and “A stone of stumbling, and a rock of offense.” They stumble because they disobey the word, as they were destined to do.

But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his own possession, that you may proclaim the excellencies of him

who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light. Once you were not a people, but now you are God’s people;

once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy.

Living Stonesbeing the people of God in the world

The title for this class is taken from the text below, drawing on 1 Peter’s central metaphor for God’s people who are a new-creation construction project in the

midst of old creation. We as living stones are both God’s temple, His dwelling on earth, and God’s priests, His sacrificing-ones for earth; we are modeled on the Living Stone who was God dwelling on earth bodily and whose life is

the sacrifice that saves the nations.

the first epistle of peter

Page 4: Session 1 Course,Context,Content

living stones • iii

class schedule*Week 1 Jan 8 Course, Context, ContentWeek 2 Jan 15 1 Pet 1.1-12Week 3 Jan 22 1 Pet 1.13-25Week 4 Jan 29 1 Pet 2.1-10Week 5 Feb 5 1 Pet 2.20-25 and SummaryWeek 6 Feb 12 *

* there will likely be a congregational meeting in the middle; if not, we will go for six weeks and the last two sessions will be altered

Page 5: Session 1 Course,Context,Content

living stones • iv

I. Salutation: A Book for Priests in Exile, 1.1-2II. Introduction: Coming Salvation, Present Situation, Ancient Scripture, 1.3-2.10 A. Salvation and Suffering, Anticipated and Expected, 1.3-12 1. Salvation Anticipated Later: A Living Hope, A Permanent Inheritance, A Ready Salvation, 1.3-5 2. Suffering Expected Now: The Joy of Refining in Various Trials, 1.6-9 3. Salvation Anticipated Before: The Savior's Prophesied Suffering and Glory, 1.10-12 B. Christian Conduct meets Prophetic Word in Eschatological Living, 1.13-25 1. Ultimate Hope and Imitated Holiness, 1.13-16 2. Saintly Behavior and Sanctifying Blood, 1.17-21 3. Brotherly Love and Lasting Word, 1.22-25a 4. Hope, Live, Love: This is the Gospel, 1.25b C. Christian Mission meets Prophetic Word in Eschatological Dwelling, 2.1-10 1. Putting off and Growing Up: The Good God and His Transforming Word, 2.1-3 2. Priests and Temple: The Living Stone and His Holy Nation, 2.4-10III. Living Stones: Living in Exile, Looking like Jesus, 2.11-5.11 A. Introduction: Set Apart and Slandered; Good Deeds for Glory, 2.11-12 B. Life in Exile: Test Cases for Suffering to Redeem a Broken World, 2.13-4.11 1. Living regarding the State, 2.13-17 2. Living regarding Masters, 2.18-20 3. Looking like Jesus: Redemptive Suffering, 2.21-25 a. The Exemplary Model of Christ, 2.21 b. The Innocence of Christ, 2.22 c. The Submission of Christ, 2.23 d. The Substitution of Christ, 2.24 e. The Redemption of Christ, 2.25 4. Living regarding Marriage, 3.1-7 a. Wives: Winning without Words, 3.1-6 b. Husbands: Honoring as Heirs, 3.7 5. Living regarding Antagonists, 3.8-12 6. Looking like the Christ: Suffering for Righteousness, 3.13-22 7. Conclusion of the Test Cases: Persevering in Suffering unto the End, 4.1-11 a. Exiles Suffer rather than Sin, 4.1-6 b. Exiles Serve unto the End, 4.7-11

1 Peter Outline Proposal

Page 6: Session 1 Course,Context,Content

living stones • v

C. Life in Exile: A Community that Looks like Christ, 4.12-5.11 1. Living in a Hostile World: Shared Suffering and Coming Judgment, 4.12-19 a. Sharing in Christ's Suffering, 4.12-13 b. Mocked in Christ's Name, 4.14-16 c. Vindicated in Christ's Judgment, 4.17-19 2. Living in a Holy Community: Selflessness and Humility, 5.1-5 a. Elders: Selfless Shepherds, 5.1-4 b. Young Men: Submissive Servants, 5.5a c. Everyone: Humility in Community, 5.5b 3. Living in a Spiritual War: Entrusting unto the End, 5.6-11 a. Trusting in God's Powerful Care, 5.6-7 b. Resisting the Accuser with the Brothers, 5.8-9 c. Trusting in God's Restoring Care, 5.10-11IV. Closing: Exiles in Babylon, 5.12-14 A. Written in Community, 5.12 B. Written from Babylon, 5.13 C. Written for Community, 5.14

Page 7: Session 1 Course,Context,Content

Living Stones • Zion Church • Notes, Jan 8, 2012 / 1

Course, Context, Contentan introduction to 1 peter

Why?Deuteronomy 31(1)(2)(3)

Course: Why? What? How? What for?

What?

How?

What for?

Page 8: Session 1 Course,Context,Content

Living Stones • Zion Church • Notes, Jan 8, 2012 / 2

Context: Peter the Rock

Content: 1 Peter’s Message

Page 9: Session 1 Course,Context,Content

Living Stones • Zion Church • Quotes, Jan 8, 2012 / 3

Course, Context, Contentan introduction to 1 peter

Content: 1 Peter’s Message

All excerpts below from 1 Peter, Joel Green (Two Horizons; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2007).

On God’s People and the World“Pivotal questions surface in 1 Peter – pivotal for God's people then and now, and indeed in all

times this side of the eschaton. What to do with Rome? What to do about Rome? What to make of

Rome?” (Green, 1).

It's a helpful thought, this. Basically, Green is saying that 1 Peter deals with the question: how

is the new creation community to operate as such in the midst of and in relation to the old creation

which surrounds it and which it is supplanting?

Green acknowledges that “Peter understands that the problem is not Rome per se” (ibid.) and

thus calls Rome Babylon. He continues, “‘Babylon’ was a cipher for a world hostile to God, and,

for Peter, this is what Rome had become. Peter thus highlights emphatically the problems of

Christian life and witness in the presence of a world system not only out of step with God's

purpose but actually set against it. … This reference to Babylon pulls back the curtain on the real

context in which Peter's audience made their lives, focusing attention on the systemic character of

harassment and the institutionalization of evil in patterns of sanctioned behavior and organizational

structures that legitimate and propagate such behavior,” (ibid.). 1 Peter, then, focuses on how God’s

people are to live in the middle of a system that is organized to actively and hostilely oppose them

and their God.

Green goes on to discuss 1 Peter's options about what to do with Rome. “Among the available

options, we might think of withdrawal into a kind of alternative community in which faithfulness

to God is exercised in relative anonymity within the empire; or moving to the margins of

populations centers, to the underground, from which to execute attacks on the Empire, whether

secretly or openly; or moving persons into position of leadership of the cities, perhaps as esteemed

benefactors, in order to participate innocuously in Roman society,” (1-2). Green also helpfully

discusses how our ecclesial positions influence which of the three choices we make (2-3); refer to

his commentary if you wish to read it.

Page 10: Session 1 Course,Context,Content

Living Stones • Zion Church • Quotes, Jan 8, 2012 / 4

Content (excerpts) continued…

Green then makes an excellent point

concerning our usual attitude toward “Rome”

versus 1 Peter’s position that is helpful in

pondering our own ecclesial position. He writes,

“The typical options we entertain do little or

nothing to address the most basic of concerns here.

This is because our tendency is to imagine that,

whatever tactics we formulate, we can execute

them by putting the politics of Rome to work for

us. We will use the same instruments of influence,

but we will use them better, and for a good and

worthy cause,” (3).

1 Peter and the World“1 Peter is about God and the ramifications of

orienting life wholly around him. This entails

refusing the conventions of honor and status that

constitute Roman politics in favor of the valuations

and judgment of the merciful God who has chosen

and honored what the systems of this world have

dismissed. To read 1 Peter is to be told not how we

might think about God, but what God thinks of us.

Here in 1 Peter is an invitation to adopt God's way

of seeing things and to live accordingly …” (3).

“Because 1 Peter does not name tactics of

resistance in terms explicit and recognizable to our

ears, we may be tempted to imagine either that

Peter counsels sectarian withdrawal from society

or proposes optimism toward Babylon. What if,

instead, we were to read this letter from the

perspective of its central icon, the passion of Christ

– that visible and horrible manifestation of what

happens when life is lived according to God's view

of the way the world really is? What if, instead, we

were to read this letter from the perspective of its

primary temporal orientation, the End – that

actualization of God's purpose, the judgment, the

vindication of the faithful, which undermines the

claims of Babylon (in all its guises) to its own

ultimacy or importance?" (4).

1 Peter and God’s People“The homeless people of God comprise God's

household under construction, and a priesthood

whose vocation it is to mediate God's presence

wherever they find themselves. As they journey

through suffering in hope of eschatological honor,

they bear witness in the present to the coming new

age,” (4).

“Peter describes his audience as ‘aliens’ and

‘strangers in the world,’ foreigners in this sense:

their commitments to the lordship of Jesus Christ

have led to transformed attitudes and behaviors

that place them on the fringes of their

communities,” (6).

“1 Peter was written to address Christians in

such circumstances as these – not so much to

resolve the enigma of the suffering of God's people

as to give significance to their distress and to

articulate how best to engage a world set against

those allegiances, attitudes, and actions that are

consistent with God's agenda,” (6).

“Together with the Book of Revelation, 1 Peter

is unrivaled among NT documents for its concern

with questions of Christian identity, constitution,

and behavior in a hostile world,” (11).