1 Peter 2:4-12 · The Living Stone and a Chosen People
A Ransom Paid
1 Peter 2:4-12
Sermon
by Sandra Hefter Herrma
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A few years back, an evangelist came to a modest-sized congregation for a 4-day weekend revival. On the closing night, the congregation formed a circle around the sanctuary and the evangelist turned to the person on her right and said, at a volume easily heard by all, "God loves you. Pass it on." The message was passed through about one-third of the circle when a lady turned to her neighbor and said, "Jesus loves you," rather than "God loves you." Her neighbor caught the error and passed on the original message: "God loves you. Pass it on." But two people later, a man again said to his neighbor, "Jesus loves you. Pass it on." And so the message continued back to the evangelist. This visiting preacher had a point to make, however, so with an expression and demeanor of all seriousness, she said to the congregation, "You have made an error, and it is a common one, but one that needs to be corrected. We find it easy to say, 'Jesus loves you.' We learned that lesson early, in Sunday school, from well-meaning teachers, who understood that Jesus was easier for a child to grasp than the idea of God. But what Jesus came to teach us is that God loves us. If we have not learned that, we have not learned any of what Jesus taught."

The group was tensely quiet. The evangelist looked around the circle slowly, turned to the person on her right, and said, "God loves you. Pass it on." This time, the message made it most of the way around the circle before someone lapsed, and the recipient of the message immediately replied, "No, that's not right. God loves you. That's the message we're supposed to pass on." Everyone started to smile, but one young mother started to cry. When others turned to her in amazement and alarm, she said, "I never heard that before."

One of the reasons the Church has insisted down through the ages that we understand God as a Trinity of co-equal personae (Creator/Father, Redeemer/Son, Sanctifier/Holy Spirit) is that otherwise we will tend to see Jesus, who loves us, as coming to rescue us from the wrath of the Father, who judges us as despicable sinners. Indeed, many popular evangelists have tended to take this attitude, and some of the most powerful historical sermons tend to see us as "Sinners in the Hand of an Angry God,"1 dangling perilously close to hell.

But if we look closely at what Peter is saying here, we will notice that Peter says "you were ransomed" from the attempt to be righteous by force of will or self-discipline according to rules and laws. "Ransomed ... not with perishable things like silver or gold, but with the precious blood of Christ ..."

Now, if a child is kidnapped, and a ransom demanded, who pays the ransom? Isn't the ransom demanded from the parents? And to whom is a ransom paid, but the kidnapper? And what price will a loving mother pay to redeem her baby? Would she not lay down her own life for the child of her own body? What devoted father would not go to the bank and pay every cent he had, if he had to, to redeem his child?

Peter says we are the children, kidnapped by the world, to be enthralled by computer games and bingo, entranced by television rather than relationship, more devoted to shopping than to caring for the poor, electing politicians as long as they don't raise our taxes, and voting them out if they seem to favor some other special interest group than ours.

It is as though we have been mesmerized by some fairy tale witch and are now trapped in the land of sugar plums. Every once in a while we may feel some pang of conscience, some momentary desire for something that goes beyond our world bounded by glitz and the latest fashions in everything from earrings to $40,000 cars. Every once in a while we may look around us and wonder, is this all there is? Just a round of getting whatever your heart desires, and then paying the bills and worrying what we'll do for money when retirement time comes?

Our release has not been easy. Like the hero in some tensely plotted suspense movie, Jesus has had to search for us. And we have been innocently bobbing along with all the other sheep, each of us wondering if we're the only ones who are aware of how life has declined in this country which once was great and is now sinking under the weight of the consumer society and the "feel good" morality we're fed from every direction. Like one of those monster movies, in which those who have had their brains sucked out keep assuring the rest of their community that "it's really okay; you'll like feeling this way once we re-program you," we have learned that we cannot be certain whom to trust by looking. We don't even know if we can trust the "professional" Christians.

In the end, Jesus was captured by the evil forces, the "powers and principalities" as Paul put it, and his life was taken from him. Tortured, executed publicly like a common traitor, buried in a borrowed tomb, he was exulted over in his death throes by those whose interests were met by the fear of the people. The one who came as ransom was dead. They had killed the one who claimed to speak for God, and figured that was that. The ransom was paid, but the captured were not set free. The reign of terror was still in place.

But God had a surprise waiting for them. The dead did not stay dead. The one who came to pay the ransom was himself raised from the dead. "Through him you have come to trust in God, who raised him from the dead and gave him glory, so that your faith and hope are set on God." Our faith and hope were given to us by Jesus the Christ, but he intended that our gratitude should go to God. The point of the sacrifice was to show us how much God loves us, not how much God demands of us, nor that God is bloodthirsty, and needed to have his appetite slaked. The point of the sacrifice was to show us just how far God was willing to go to bring us home -- not just down to his last cent, but down to his willingness to suffer as we suffer, to die as we die.

What more could God do to tell us we are loved, wanted, cared for, of ultimate value? What an amazing gesture this is, that God should come in human flesh and suffer so for us!

"So what does God want?" the suspicious may ask. Well, it is true that God wants something in return. God wants us to be so overwhelmed by the grace shown to us that we will overflow with love for God, but also, that we will purify our souls by obedience to the truth so that we "have genuine mutual love," that we will "love one another deeply from the heart."

When partition came to India, and the Moslems and the Hindus were in civil war, Mahatma Gandhi fasted to bring an end to the turmoil. As he approached death, a Hindu rushed at him on his litter, and threw a crust of bread at the saint. "Eat!" he demanded. "I am going to hell, but I will not have your death added to my burden!" Gandhi, through parched lips, asked how he had earned hell. "I killed a Moslem child," he said. "I threw him against a wall, and broke his head, because a Moslem had killed my son."

"I know a way out of hell," Gandhi replied. As the stunned man listened, Gandhi told him, "Go and find an orphaned child, a Moslem orphan, and adopt him. Take him home to be your son, and raise him to adulthood. But be sure you raise him as a Moslem, in your home."

When we can learn such love for each other, we will have realized the ransom that has been paid for us, the children of God, bought back from death by the blood of Jesus, who was God, in the flesh. When we can demonstrate such love, we shall be set free from sin, and will know how much we have been worth to our loving Father.


1. A sermon of the late Jonathan Edwards.

CSS Publishing Company, AMBASSADORS OF HOPE, by Sandra Hefter Herrma