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1 Peter: Odd Life, Good God Sample

1 Peter: Odd Life, Good God

DAY 3 OF 10

My wife (Grace) and I (Mark) have the great blessing of godly older spiritual authority that knows us, loves us, and oversees us like mature spiritual fathers and mothers. One of these men had been faithfully serving his church for decades when a time of transition came. Wanting to learn as much as I could from the succession, I jumped on a plane to spend a few days with our pastor and his successor. The handoff was as smooth as an Olympic track relay team, and I am happy to report that the church is flourishing with a new senior leader.  

Passing the baton from one leader to the next is hard enough, but handing it from Jesus Christ to anyone else has to stand as the most precarious leadership handoff in history. After His resurrection and before His ascension, the Lord Jesus needed to decide who He would hand the baton to. After defeating death, Jesus appeared in person to meet with Peter (Luke 24:34; 1 Corinthians 15:5). Following Peter’s denial of Jesus, the gospel of John closes with the epic face-to-face reconciliation, “do you love me?” conversation between Jesus and Peter where he is commissioned to lead and feed the people of God. Peter had dropped the baton before Jesus died and needed to pick it up again. In this, we see that ministry leaders are not perfect but that God in His grace uses their imperfections to help qualify them for even greater ministry by learning through erring.  

Church history picks up the story of the disciples after Jesus returned to Heaven in the book of Acts, which might be better titled the Acts of the Holy Spirit as He is the moving force pushing the message and ministry of Jesus to the nations. Acts opens with Peter clearly stepping forward as the leader of early Christianity, to preach the legend-making and legacy-changing sermon on Pentecost (Acts 1:15). Seemingly no one questioned or opposed his leadership because He was appointed by Jesus and anointed by the Spirit.  

God, the Holy Spirit, then fell from Heaven on the people in conjunction with Peter’s preaching, as Jesus’ prayer that the Kingdom would come was being fulfilled (Acts 2). Once the Spirit of God baptized the early church, just like Jesus after His baptism, the people of God were empowered to continue Jesus’ ministry under the leadership of His hand-selected successor, Peter. 

From that moment onward, Peter is the preacher, leader, and public figure of the Church without question or opposition (2:14; 3:12). Peter is the one who represents Christ and Christianity to the Jewish leaders (4:8) and serves as the public authority for things such as the discipline of a married couple that died for lying to the Holy Spirit (5:3). God, the Holy Spirit, worked mightily through the early church, but the person who is most noted for having the hand of God rest upon them in power is none other than Peter (5:15).  

Over and over, the Spirit of God anoints Peter with power and appoints Peter for leadership. The moral of the story is more than your personality, past, or problems; it is the presence and power of God that makes a great leader. Peter was not perfect, but he filled the leadership vacuum left by Jesus’ ascension, and every Christian in world history has benefitted from him. 

God used Peter to build His Kingdom which the Bible refers to as “Zion”. Today, God’s Kingdom rules in the unseen realm, and Jesus taught us to pray and prepare for the day when God’s Kingdom would come to earth and God’s will would be done. In the Old Testament, God’s Kingdom/Zion was manifest on the earth with the holiest people who were the priests, and the holiest place which was the Temple. That was the connecting point between Heaven and earth, where sin was forgiven, lives were changed, families were healed, and joyful celebration was had. Peter extends these hopeful concepts to the life of every Christian as today our lives are God’s Zion and Temple, founded on Jesus Christ as the cornerstone upon which all our life is built so that God’s grace transforms all of life!   


Reflection: 

1. What does it mean to practically have Jesus be the cornerstone of every area of your life (e.g. physically, mentally, emotionally, spiritually, financially, martially, parentally, vocationally, etc.)?  

2. What makes your soul sick (e.g. who are you unforgiving of, where are you being a hypocrite, who are you slandering, who do you envy)? What makes your soul healthy (e.g. Bible study, prayer, worship, service, evangelism, tithing, etc.)?  

3. When Peter talks about the Kingdom of God as Zion, which is Heaven and Earth coming together forever with the Second Coming of King Jesus, what things are you most looking forward to in Zion? 


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About this Plan

1 Peter: Odd Life, Good God

If there is hope for Peter, there is hope for anyone. If there is hope for Peter, there is hope for you. Peter’s life was odd, but God was good. That is the secret to Peter’s success and this 10-day plan will help you study the book of 1 Peter to more deeply understand God’s goodness and faithfulness in the midst of confusion, condemnation, and persecution.

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We would like to thank Mark Driscoll for providing this plan. For more information, please visit: https://realfaith.com