STC Foundations Daily

Podcast: 22 June 2020


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Hello and welcome to a new week of our Foundations Daily podcast. My name is Liam, I’m part of the staff team here and I’m going to be picking up the baton from where my colleague James left off last week, and his excellent reflections on Peter’s first letter.
REFLECTION:
Today’s passage is 1 Peter 3: 8-12. We are going to focus on verses 9-10:
 Do not repay evil with evil or insult with insult. On the contrary, repay evil with blessing, because to this you were called so that you may inherit a blessing.  For,
“Whoever would love life
and see good days
must keep their tongue from evil
and their lips from deceitful speech.
Honestly, how are you finding lockdown life today? This week? We read and hear a lot at the moment about the collective challenges we’re facing on both a global and national level. These are indeed exceptional times we find ourselves in. And yet, amidst all of that, there are our own personal challenges that we are encountering everyday which have perhaps been exacerbated as a result of this crisis.
For us, we’re finding that as a family – we have two small kids and we’re soon to add baby number three into the mix – there are times, especially in the last few days and weeks, when our relationships with one another have become a little fractious – most notably evidenced in how we sometimes speak to each other. It’s felt like the structures and routines we put in place at the start of lockdown have begun to wear thin and the, at times, monotony of everyday life has brought with it annoyance and frustrations, expressed in sometimes cross words with one another. Perhaps if you’ve got small children you can identify with this also?
Your challenges are probably very different to ours but we all experience them nonetheless and  today’s passage I think has a lot to teach us about how we are to live, how we are to be an effective witness for Jesus in times of great challenge. In today’s scripture, Peter addresses the issue of unity. In verse 8 he calls for the church to ‘like-minded’ – of one mind and heart evoking here a reminder of how the early church lived – that which we see described in the first few chapters of Acts. Peter calls for the church to demonstrate that it is ‘sympathetic’, ‘loving’, ‘compassionate’ and ‘humble’.  Wow – how much of a challenge is this? Maybe as we reflect upon these our minds are drawn to one that we are finding particularly challenging at the moment. An attitude that perhaps God is actively seeking to develop in us at this time?
In today’s focus verses, Peter spells out further how we are live in such a way that we seek to cultivate unity in our relationships. I’m reading from the Message version here:
No retaliation. No sharp-tongued sarcasm. Instead, bless—that’s your job, to bless. You’ll be a blessing and also get a blessing.
Whoever wants to embrace life
and see the day fill up with good,
Here’s what you do:
Say nothing evil or hurtful;
It’s important to remember here that Peter’s is speaking specifically into the situation that these predominantly non Jewish Christians found themselves in. As they were persecuted continually by their Greek and Roman neighbours for their faith in Jesus, there must have been a huge temptation to fight back – both in action and word.  Knowing this makes what Peter says next all the more challenging. No…he tells them. You are called to live differently. To not retaliate. To not trade insults. To not seek to get even. And in this way, Peter tells them, you will be blessed and you will bless others.
This language of blessing takes us all the way back to creation. When God blesses something he gives life to it, the ability to pro-create. God in the beginning blesses the living creatures. He blesses us – humans. He blesses a day – the Sabbath. And then in Genesis 12 God makes a covenant, a promise to Abraham that through him he will bles...
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STC Foundations DailyBy STC Sheffield