1 Peter 5:12-14


I Peter 5:12-14
(A Bible Study Led by Dr. Larry Reynolds)
January 17, 2013
 
I realize that this is the kind of passage that many of us tend to skip over in our personal Bible study.  We tend to read the personal greetings in the NT letters as if they have little application to our lives.  But it is a mistake to do that.  God included these greeting passages in Scripture for a reason and there is much for us to learn from them.  From this paragraph we can see some qualities that should be in the lives of those who choose to follow Jesus.
 
WE SHOULD BE FAITHFUL
1.      Notice how Peter begins this greeting in verse 14 – “Through Silvanus, our faithful brother (for so I regard him), I have written...”  This could mean that Silvanus was the scribe who wrote down Peter’s words or that Silvanus was the one who delivered the letter from Rome to the churches in Asia Minor...NT scholars are almost unanimous in agreement that “Silvanus” which is a proper form of the name “Silas” is the same Silas who is associated elsewhere in Scripture with the ministry of the Apostle Paul...the Scripture tells us much about him...
--don’t know when he first came to faith in Christ, but was a leader in the early church in Jerusalem...(Acts 15:22)


--was part of a delegation sent to carry a letter of encouragement and instruction from the Jerusalem church to the new Gentile Christians in Antioch...(Acts 15:22ff)
--accompanied Paul on his 2nd missionary journey (Acts 15:40)
--was with Paul in Philippi when they were beaten, thrown in prison, and eventually freed from their chains by an earthquake...(Acts 16)...--mentioned by name in three of Paul’s NT letters [2 Cor., 1 & 2 Thess.] and may have been the secretary who penned Paul’s words...
--was obviously with Peter in Rome when I Peter was written...probably served as Peter’s secretary...and probably was the one who delivered this letter to the churches...
2.      No wonder Peter called him “our faithful brother”...Silas was a person who stayed with it...from the early days of the church in Jerusalem, through the rigors of a difficult missionary journey, to staying by Peter’s side in Rome, he never left his post...he never quit...he never gave up...he just kept faithfully doing what God had called him to do...
 
1.      James Dobson tells moving story of Marine Corporal Jeffrey Lee Nashton who was severely wounded in bombing of the Marine barracks in Beirut, Lebanon in the 1980's...was transported to a hospital in Frankfurt, Germany...one day Marine Corp Commandant Paul Kelly came to visit the wounded soldiers in that hospital...when Commandant Kelly stopped at Corporal Nashton’s bed, Nashton, unable to speak because of his wounds motioned for a slip of paper and a pen...on the paper he wrote two words and pressed it into the Commandant’s hands...the words were “Semper Fi” the Latin motto of the Marines meaning “forever faithful”...[J. Dobson/G.Bauer, Children at Risk, Word, 1990, pp.187-188]
2.      And that is how God’s people should be…forever faithful!
 
WE SHOULD BE ENCOURAGERS
1.      In last part of v.12 Peter explains his reason for writing...he says “I have written [for the purpose of] to you briefly, exhorting and testifying that this is the true grace of God.  Stand firm in it!”...the word translated “exhorting” is parakaleo...compound word...para is preposition meaning by or beside...kaleo is verb meaning to call... word carries idea of being called to stand beside another person for purpose of helping, upholding, encouraging...


2.      That’s what Christians should do for one another in the church...we’re not to beat each other down...we’re not to attack and fight and devour each other...we are to build each other up...to encourage each other...

3.      As story first published in Reader’s Digest tells of a man named Marion Gilbert who witnessed something that graphically demonstrates the power of encouragement... one morning opened his from door to get the newspaper and found a little stray dog sitting on the front porch with the paper in its mouth...Gilbert said he praised the dog, scratched its head, and gave it a treat...the next morning he found the same dog sitting on his porch, tail wagging, surrounded by eight newspapers... [Reader’s Digest, February, 1994, p.12]

4.      That’s what encouragement can do...and to be the kind of people God desires us to be, we should encourager rather than discourage others…

 

WE SHOULD BE GROWING

1.      Notice what Peter says in v.12...”I have written to you briefly...” ...what did he mean by that...one person says there are only 2,585 words in I Peter...I didn’t count them so I’ll just take the word of someone who says he did...the text of the letter could fit on four single spaced typed pages...and Peter is saying, “This isn’t all there is...there is more to the Christian life than this...there is more to learn than I can tell you in a single letter...”

2.      The Christian life is a pilgrimage, a journey...as we travel the road of Christianity our lives should be marked by—

--a constantly growing in the faith...

--a steadily deepening relationship with the Lord...

...we must never be content, never be satisfied with where we are...there is always more to learn...always more to experience...always more to understand...

3.      We must never forget that no matter—

--how much we think we know...

--how spiritually mature we think we are...

--how grounded we are in Scripture...

Our spiritual lives are always a work in progress...

4.      In the book Holy Sweat Tim Hansel tells of picking up a friend from the airport who was returning from attending the 40th reunion of his high school class...Hansel says he noticed the friend seemed depressed and asked why...here’s what the friend said, “It has been forty years, forty years--and they haven’t changed.  They had simply gained weight, changed clothes, gotten jobs...but they really hadn’t changed.”...and then after a long pause Hansel’s friend continued, “I never, never want that to be said of me, Tim.  Life is too precious, too sacred, too important.  If you ever see me go stagnant like that, I hope you give me a quick, swift kick where I need it ... I hope you’ll love me enough to challenge me to keep growing.” [Tim Hansel, Holy Sweat, Word, 1987, pp.54-55]

5.      And to be the kind of people God desires for us to be, we must continue growing and maturing in the faith…

 

WE SHOULD BE AFFECTIONATE

1.      While the word affection does not appear in these verses, the concept permeates the passage...

--greetings are sent from “She who is in Babylon...”...that phrase probably refers to the church in Rome...”she” probably refers to a church...in the NT the church is often referred to with feminine pronouns...”Babylon” is a cryptic way of referring to Rome...so Peter sends greetings to these church from the church at Rome...

--greetings are sent from Mark...this is most likely John Mark, the writer of the second gospel and earlier travel companion of Paul...

--then Peter instructs them to “Greet one another with a kiss of love...”...this is a reference to the eastern tradition of greeting someone with a kiss on the forehead or on the cheek...it was sign of goodwill much like our handshake...

And the cumulative affect of all those statements is to create a tone of genuine affection as Peter closes this letter...

2.      And, of course, that’s how Christians are to relate to each other...     

 

CONCLUSION

1.      The heart of this passage is the command at the end of verse 12 to “Stand firm…”  This is a military term carrying the idea of not retreating in the face of an attack.  The people to whom this letter was addressed were facing an onslaught of terrible persecution.  In effect Peter tells them to get ready for battle and don’t give ground. How is it possible for Christians to do that?

2.      I’m not sure where I heard it, but there is an interesting fact about the huge groves red cedars that dot the western coast of our nation...from a distance they appear tall and sturdy and strong...but underground their roots are shallow...and the thing that keeps these majestic trees from toppling over is not just their root system...they gain strength to stand by leaning on each other...their branches literally reach out and touch the branches of other trees...their roots intertwine with the roots of trees near them... and while they can’t stand alone, together they are strong...

3.      That is how it should be among God’s people…as we—

--remain faithful to our calling...

  --encourage and support one another

 --continue growing and maturing in the faith...

 --express genuine love and affection for each other...

We are able to “Stand firm!”