Hello everyone! Welcome again to Thursday’s foundations daily podcast. Our passage for today is 1 Peter 4: 12- 19. We are going to focus on verses 12-13: Dear friends, do not be surprised at the fiery ordeal that has come on you to test you, as though something strange were happening to you. But rejoice inasmuch as you participate in the sufferings of Christ, so that you may be overjoyed when his glory is revealed.
REFLECTION:
We are going to reflect today on what it means to persevere. And I wonder when I say that word – what comes to mind for you? Can you think of an example? A person? A situation where you yourself or others have had to persevere?
My wife Jo is now 8 months pregnant with our third child. The Brennans are getting super excited about the arrival of Baby B. When I think of perseverance at the minute, I think of Jo. And I just want to take this opportunity to thank her for being a top mum. She’s tired, frustrated and uncomfortable (and that’s just through having to put up with me!) But seriously I want to just honour her for pressing on and getting out there walking round reservoirs with two children who have heaps of energy, getting loads of stuff ready for the arrival of this little one, doing all the Zoom calls with Defined, leading families and even taking the time to give me a COVID cut live on Instagram last Sunday night. Jo – I salute you this day.
I bet we can all think of people who have inspired us through their perseverance and willingness to press on often in the face of adversity. Who through perseverance have maybe go on to achieve things we never thought possible or discovered things about themselves that they never knew. Perhaps what inspires us the most is that through persevering, somehow, some way that person is different, changed as a result of their experience.
As we discussed already this week, this is a super challenging letter because it’s written into a super challenging context. Peter – the author – one of Jesus’ closest followers experienced first hand what it meant to suffer because he knew Him. He’s writing here to Christian believers who were themselves experiencing that also – who were being persecuted, verbally, perhaps even physically abused and discriminated against because of their faith in Jesus. And as we have seen already Peter’s primary reason for writing this letter was to encourage the believers there, the church, to persevere, to keep going and to remain faithful in the midst of all the challenges that they faced.
On Tuesday we reflected on how we too can identify with this in some way. Verse 12 describes their persecution as a ‘fiery ordeal’ and whilst it might not be that way for us – we too, in our way, have had to count the cost of being a follower of Jesus. And that suffering because of our faith should not be a ‘surprise to us’. We should be prepared for it.
But then in verse 13 Peter takes it that step further and writes that we are to rejoice because of it. Is it just me or does that sound a little crazy and, to be honest, a little offensive? How can we rejoice in suffering?
I’m going to give a shout here to Bryony Wells, a member of our church family, who I remember spoke about this idea in a passage from James 1 – a passage very similar to this. What I found really helpful through her words and a recent podcast I listened to by Mike Pilavachi is that there is a distinction for us to grab hold of here and it’s this – we don’t rejoice because of the suffering. Like, thank you God for all this pain and struggle. But we can rejoice in the suffering because as we read in verse 13 when we do so, we do so with Jesus. And specifically here Peter is saying that we experience this when our suffering is a result of our faith in Jesus.
Right now, we can’t meet together as we would like to as church. To be clear this isn’t a result of direct persecution like the people that Peter is writing to.