1 Peter 2:4-12 · The Living Stone and a Chosen People
A Peculiar People
1 Peter 2:1-10
Sermon
by John E. Harnish
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Last week we looked at one image of the church, that of a circle of grace—God seeking, claiming and sustaining us. Today, another image, taken from St. Peter's letter to the early Christians of what is now Turkey, Asia Minor—a "peculiar people."

A dictionary definition of "peculiar" says: "Out of the ordinary, strange, odd, unusual." You might say "just plain weird." I preached a sermon by that title in Ann Arbor in the fall. Little did I know that we had visitors from Birmingham, and I suppose I will forever be known by Mackenzie Kreitz as the "just plain weird guy." Of course, "odd" or "out of the ordinary" all depends on what you consider "normal." In Lord of the Rings, Sam and Frodo were amazed to discover that their traveling companions had never heard of "second breakfast," and in the world of Hogwarts, what is "odd" for muggles is perfectly normal for Harry Potter.

But the dictionary also offers a more positive spin on the word "peculiar." It means: "Special, particular, distinctive, belonging to one thing and not another." And I think that is the definition Peter has in mind when he says that Christians are a "peculiar people"…better translated as "God's Own People." 

This paragraph from Peter's first letter is full of mixed metaphors and overlapping images. He seems to get caught up in the emotion and inspiration of what he is saying and grabs every image he can get his hands on to make his point. He employs a well-known rabbinic teaching tool of a series of phrases, each one interpreting the next…like a string of beads:

· New-born babes, tasting the goodness of God

· The living Stone, a cornerstone and lively stones built into a spiritual house

· Stone of stumbling, a rock of offense

· Chosen race, royal priesthood, holy nation, God's own people

So if you want to know what makes us peculiar, look at the connected images: 

1. WE ARE A HOLY NATION. 

Right off the bat, it is obvious Peter is not talking about political citizenship in the nation or state. He is not advocating the divine right of kings or manifest destiny. Nor is he suggesting that one political nation or state is somehow more holy than another. He is, after all, writing in the day when the Roman Empire was in full force, literally covering and controlling the known world. The worship of the Caesar and the state was part of the woodwork, the full melding of religion and state. The creed of the nation was "Caesar is Lord." They really believed that the nation was "holy" and the Caesar, divine. 

Peter is not talking about that kind of allegiance or citizenship. Rather, Peter is writing to this fledgling band of scattered disciples who, in the face of the might of Rome and worship of Caesar, were bold to say: "Jesus is Lord." They are the ones he is calling a "holy nation." Called out from every nation, every tribe and every language by God; marked by the sign of the cross; traveling under the banner of allegiance to Christ as Lord of all. 

"You," says Peter, "because you belong to one thing and not another"
 because you belong to Jesus Christ rather than to Caesar,
 because you worship God alone and not the state,
 because your first allegiance is to the cross rather than to any standard, sign or flag,
"therefore, you are a holy nation, God's own people." 

Now the problem of misunderstanding what it means to be "a holy nation" goes right back to the beginning, with God's original call to the Children of Abraham, the people of Old Testament Israel. As early as the Book of Deuteronomy, obviously the people were beginning to think they were special. We can start to believe it is all about our goodness, our identity, and who we are that makes the difference. 

So as early as the book of Deuteronomy, Moses used the same language and image which Peter now claims for the Christians: 

For you are a people holy to the Lord your God; the Lord has chosen you to be a people for his own possession, out of all the peoples on the face of the earth. It was not because you were more in number that the Lord set his love upon you and chose you, but it is because the Lord loves you, and is keeping the oath which he swore to your fathers, that the Lord has brought you out with a mighty hand and redeemed you. (Deut. 7:6-9) 

Not because you are so special…but because God loves you. Not that you are so holy…but because God has redeemed you. Not that there is something intrinsically better about your state than any other…but because God has claimed you and made you a people of his own possession. You, as the people of God from every people and every state—you are a holy nation, God's own people.

Peter Storey, former Bishop of the Methodist Church of South Africa, now teaching at Duke Divinity School, led the South African Methodists through the difficult and challenging days of their witness against the evil of apartheid. In a sermon in 1989, before the liberation of his nation, Peter said: 

In South Africa, the pagan notion of racial purity and pride has become the nation's god and that sick, false religion stains everything we do. One of the great tragedies of my homeland is that some parts of the Christian Church have become mouthpieces, not of God but of the state. It is time for the church to be the church! 

Jesus brought into being an entirely new, radically different community, offering people citizenship transcending the frontiers of nations and contrasting powerfully with the norms around it. The church is not simply another institution in society, nor is it an extension of the traditions of any state. The church must be different, often over against the ways of all nations.

This alternative identity must be cherished as the most important characteristic of the church…our identity in Jesus Christ. [1]

In a day when the religious right tends to blur the lines between church and state, I think Bishop Storey is right. The church needs to be clear about our identity. Our highest allegiance is to Christ. We belong to one thing and not another. We are gathered from all the peoples of the earth as the Body of Christ, the Kingdom of God, a holy nation.

It makes us a bit peculiar…distinctive, special, particular. We are "God's own people." 

2. AND WE ARE A ROYAL PRIESTHOOD 

Again, the risk is that we get to thinking of the priesthood as an order of princes of the church— elevated, holy, robed in silver and gilded with gold, better than everyone else. Nothing could be further from the mind of Peter or the pattern of Christ.

To be a priest is to be one who goes between God and the people. It is to be one who communicates the word of God to the world. It is to be commissioned with the task of carrying the caring ministry of Christ into the community, to be the ones who break the bread of reconciliation and bear the cup of Christ's mercy to those who are hurting and in need.

And Peter's letter is not addressed to a set-apart class of ordained clergy, since none existed in the church at the time of his writing. I happen to believe in the role of the ordained—I've spent 35 years of my life doing this—but Peter's letter is addressed to all the church. You are all "a royal priesthood." 

All are called to go between God and the world.
All are called to carry the love of Christ to others.
All are called to be the servant people of God.
All are called to be priests to one another.

In contrast to the priests of the pagan temples around them who were venerated, pampered and out of touch with the common people, Peter calls the whole church to the task of servanthood, the calling of Christ.

Again, several years ago, when British Airways was doing well, Peter Storey tells of Dick Georgiades who was credited for turning British Airways into the most profitable airline in the world. When asked the secret of his success, Dick said: 

It's really quite simple. We just turned our management philosophy upside down, and everyone became accountable to person below them rather than the person above them. 

Bishop Storey says: 

Here is a massive corporation embracing the servant lifestyle of Jesus! The focus of the company would be on the humble passenger rather than the top executive. 

So he asks: 

Who is the focus of the church? Who is the person we are concerned about? Who do we exist to serve? For Jesus, there was no question. In the Kingdom, the humble are lifted up and the most vulnerable have pride of place. That's why you can't ask Jesus into your heart alone. He will always ask, "Can I bring my friends?" and his friends will always include the poor, the marginalized, and the oppressed. [1]

Jesus says the final judgment will be on what we have done for "the least of these"…his friends. We are called to be a "royal priesthood" in service to the world.

From the days of my youth, I still remember singing Frank Mason North's great hymn. It challenged me then and inspires me now: 

Where cross the crowded ways of life,
where sound the cries of race and clan,
above the noise of selfish strife we hear thy voice,
O Son of man.

The cup of water given for thee
still holds the freshness of your grace;
yet long these multitudes to see
the sweet compassion of thy face.

O Master, from the mountainside
make haste to heal these hearts of pain;
among the restless throngs abide,
O tread the city streets again.

Till all the world shall learn thy love
and follow where thy feet have trod;
till glorious from your heaven above,
shall come the city of our God. [2]

We are a "peculiar people," a holy nation, a royal priesthood… 

3. WITH A PARTICULAR TASK…

"…to declare the wonderful deeds of him who called us out of darkness into his marvelous light." 

I love that phrase! Take a deep breath…no commas, no semicolons— 

"…to declare the wonderful deeds of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light." 

What a commission. What a calling. What a task. 

Just imagine what it would be like to start every morning, looking in the mirror, saying to yourself that "no matter what work I have to do, my first task is to declare the wonderful deeds of him who called us out of darkness and into his marvelous light."

· No matter how boring the meetings and dull the duties, my hidden agenda is to "declare the wonderful deeds of him who called us out of darkness and into his marvelous light."

· No matter how depressing the headlines or how dark the horizon, my calling is to "declare the wonderful deeds of him who called us out of darkness and into his marvelous light."

When John Wesley sent lay preacher George Shadford to the American colonies with nothing in his saddlebags but his Bible and a Methodist hymnal, he sent him with this commission: "I set you loose, George, on the great continent of America. Proclaim your message in the open face of the sun and do all the good you can." Those early circuit riders were given the charge to "Proclaim scriptural holiness and reform the continent," and they went about doing just that.

We are peculiar…special, distinctive, commissioned with the task of "proclaiming the wonderful deeds of him who called us out of darkness and into his marvelous light." 

One quick story: Let me tell you about Boris and the Methodist Church in Paldiski, Estonia. During the Soviet years, Paldiski was a closed military community. They literally flattened the old town and built one of those bland Communist-era communities with concrete apartment buildings and lifeless streets. When Communism fell, they abandoned the city, taking with them almost anything of value, including the kitchen sink. What's left is a dismal outpost with a struggling economy, little work and disheveled buildings. In the basement of one of the broken-down apartment buildings, you enter through a leaking cellar full of discarded rubble, but then step into one small room, large enough for about thirty people. It's the home of the Paldiski Methodist Church. 

One room, refurbished, painted a fresh white, with a clean floor and new chairs, all done almost single-handedly by Boris and his wife. He speaks only Russian and she speaks Russian and some Estonian, so everything had to be translated from Russian to Estonian to English. It makes for complicated conversation, but in the midst you have never seen such joy, such radiant faith, such hope, such a winsome witness! There in the midst of decay and the darkness of a dank cellar, they are about the business of "declaring the wonderful deeds of him who called us out of darkness and into his marvelous light." 

Odd, strange, out of the ordinary…
Special, distinctive, particular…
Belonging to one thing and not another…
You are a holy nation, a royal priesthood, and God's own people. 

A peculiar people.


1. P. Storey, "With God in the Crucible," page 151, 155

2. UM Hymnal, 427

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by John E. Harnish