Hello everyone, my name is James and welcome to Wednesday’s podcast. Today our passage is 1 Peter 2:1-12. The verses we’ll focus on today are v5 and v9. I’ll only read v5 now.
you also, like living stones, are being built into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.
REFLECTION:
Living stones and royal priests. It all sounds like something we might find on Netflix doesn’t it? To get into this we are going to do some background research and consider the Old Testament. Because in talking about living stones, Peter the writer of this letter, is starting to talk about temples. See in verse 5, “being built into a spiritual house”, that is a temple. In this temple, v5 says there will be offerings of spiritual sacrifices that are acceptable to God.
Who is this?
What is it talking about?
Before Christianity came, before Jesus came, not just the Jews but every religion and every culture in the world had temples. Because everybody understands that there was a gap between us and the divine.
Every culture knew, to some degree, that human beings are small and weak and God is great and powerful. To draw on a word we heard yesterday, if God is majestic and holy, then intuitively people picked up that we can’t just show up and walk in. There is a chasm that has to be bridged. How was that chasm bridged? It was bridged in temples by priests offering sacrifices. Therefore, in the Old Testament in Israel, just like every other place, you had these “ministry experts,” I guess you could call them. They were spiritual experts.
When I did FORM at STC, which is our leadership training year at the church, I heard these spiritual experts described in 3 kinds. 3 kinds of ministers you might say: prophets, priests, and kings.
Prophets brought the Word of God from God to the people.
Priests, however, actually did the reverse. They represented the people to God, offering sacrifices on their behalf. So prophets came from God to the people with the Word; priests came from the people to God with sacrifices on their behalf.
Kings actually represented both God and the people. Kings held people accountable to live as God wanted them to live.
Now this might sound surprising, but in the Old Testament, when it came to the spiritual life, the people were relatively passive. Once a year, they would all pile into Jerusalem, and they let the experts do it. They let the experts prophesy and do priestly sacrifices. In other words, the prophets and priests and kings did the work and the people who turned up received the benefit. Then the New Testament came along. Then Jesus came along. In theory, this all changed.
I say that cheekily, because sometimes the view of church can look pretty Old Testament in ways. One man, and it is usually a man, delivers the sermon, breaks the bread, shares the blessing and off we go to enjoy our Sunday lunch and live our lives.
But here is something interesting I read in prepping for this devotion today. Do we know how revolutionary the early Christians were perceived as at first? Because of how they worshipped? Do we know why the Romans called the Christians atheists? They thought they were atheists because they didn’t seem to really have a religion like everyone else. Why? Because the early Christians had no temples. They met largely in homes. They had no priests, and they had no sacrifices. This was not normal. People were like, “How could you meet with God?”
The Christians replied, “The chasm is gone. Jesus is our Temple, because he’s both God and human. He has bridged the gap.
Jesus is the ultimate Priest, and Jesus gave us the ultimate sacrifice on our behalf and paid for our sins. Therefore, the gap has been bridged. And we can meet with God.”
This is the brilliant part. Because that reply says two things at once. There are no more temples,