1 Peter 2:4-12 · The Living Stone and a Chosen People
The Priesthood of All Believers
1 Peter 2:4-12
Sermon
by T. A. Kantonen
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"We are all priests." These are the words of Martin Luther. But he did not invent this revolutionary idea. He discovered it in the Bible. When the Bible says, "You are a royal priesthood" and "He made us to be priests," it is not speaking about ordination but about every Christian man and woman. In rediscovering the gospel, Luther also rediscovered the principal means by which the gospel operates, the priesthood of all believers.

What does it mean to be a priest? It means to be consecrated to serve. That is the calling of every Christian. He is a God-appointed channel through which the power of Christ flows into the common life of humanity. To be a Christian is to be a member of the Christian fellowship. But to be a member of the fellowship is to be consecrated to a royal mission. It is impossible to think of the Messiah without the Messianic people. We Christians are the Messianic people. That is why scripture calls us a royal priesthood. We share in the Messiah’s own kingly and priestly mission.

God became real to the human race when he himself became human, when the Word became flesh and dwelt among us. Christianity still shows its true vitality and makes it strongest appeal when it assumes the human touch and is lived out by persons. Not some impersonal message or program or organization, but Christians themselves are the primary agency through which Christ works. The world is a field, he says, and "the good seed are the children of the Kingdom" (Matthew 13:8). He maintains his hold on the world through the men and women whom he reconstructs and uses as his living instruments. He calls them the salt of the earth and the light of the world. As the Father sent him, so he sends them. His cause in in their hands.

Biblical scholars have pointed out that the gulf between the clergy and the laity, which has done so much to cripple the mission of the church, has been promoted by the introduction of a fatal comma into a key passage of the New Testament which describes the church’s mission. The passage is Ephesians 4:11-12. In the King James Version it reads, "He gave some apostles and some prophets, and some evangelists, and some pastors and teachers, for the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ." In the King James Version, as well as the Revised Standard Version, the perfecting of the saints, meaning believers, and the work of the ministry are separated by a comma. In the New English Bible the comma between the saints and the ministers is removed and we read, "to equip God’s people for work in his service." We see the rainbow of multi-colored ministries, all engaged in carrying out the church’s mission.

The church cannot accomplish its mission unless the high status and mission of Christian laymen are fully recovered. The word "layman" itself is derived from the Greek word "laos" which means "people." It is used in the New Testament to designate specifically the Messianic people. To be a layman, then, is the highest honor that the New Testament knows. It means to be a priest and a king, a Christ man and a Kingdom man. The distinction between a minister and a layman is utterly insignificant compared with the distinction of being in Christ or out of Christ. Are you in Christ, a member of his body, the church, and sharing in the work of his Kingdom, or are you on the outside? That is the all-important distinction. Compared with it, all other distinctions are unimportant.

There is nothing technical or professional about this priesthood. Luther is strong in his emphasis that it gives sanctity to every calling in life. When a Christian housewife sweeps the kitchen floor, she does it to the glory of God as much as a nun saying her prayers. When a Christian farm laborer works in the field, he is performing as priestly a function as a bishop at the altar. We may be mechanics, lawyers, doctors, teachers, plumbers, or businessmen, but our life work will take on added worth if we are also Kingdom people. We have to keep pace with the marching orders of our professional, social, and civic responsibilities, but to use Thoreau’s phrase, we also "hear the sound of Another Drummer." There is a spiritual overtone that gives true meaning and dignity to what we are doing.

Even when no direct religious activity is involved, Christian men and women radiate Christ. As an undergraduate in a large state university I had a teacher in philosophy, a Christian layman, whose influence for Christ went out from his classroom into the lives of thousands of students. I came to know another layman, a prominent lawyer, whose practice in dealing with divorce cases was to bring the quarrelsome couples together and to counsel and pray with them. The result was that of every ten cases brought to him he effected a reconciliation in nine, while only one out of ten ended in divorce. That is the pristhood of all believers in action.

Using Luther’s metaphor of "God’s masks," we may think of Christians as the means by which God enters in disguise into places where the church as church has no access. The church may make a pronouncement about management-labor relations, but the power of Christ is released much more effectively into these relations if the industrial executives and the labor leaders are Christians who act as Christians.

But our witnessing is more than simply living the Christian life and exerting indirect influence. We also have the duty of conscious witnessing for Christ. A person who is consecrated to him cannot keep silent. Out of the fullness of the heart the mouth speaks. This duty no one can do for you. As Franklin Fry expressed it, "No one can love my wife for me, and likewise no one can bear witness to my Savior for me." This is an intensely personal privilege and obligation. You cannot hire a preacher to do it for you.

The spread of Christianity in the first century was chiefly a lay movement. During the first persecution of the church in Jerusalem, "they were all scattered abroad except the apostles" and "they that were scattered abroad went everywhere preaching the word" (Acts 8:1-4). Everybody preached the word except the apostles! Christianity spread because every single layman was also a missionary and an evangelist. They were Christians first, and businessmen, fishermen, farmers, and professional men second.

Luke, the author of Acts, is a good example. He was not an apostle or an ordained minister. He was a Greek physician whom Paul had led to Christ and who became Paul’s faithful companion and co-worker. He was "the beloved physician" but he was above all a lay evangelist. He not only brought the Christian message by word of mouth to non-Christians from city to city but he also used his fine literary talents to put the gospel in written form and to give us the history of the early church.

What guiding principles are there for the work of the lay priests? Let the Alcoholics Anonymous be our example. They represent the same kind of contact work as the church. This organization of alcoholics who are trying to rise to a higher level and to help other alcoholics to do the same has done a better job than any impersonal temperance program. Their first principle is this: know yourself. Face yourself frankly, and don’t pretend to be something that you are not. Unless you stop bluffing and fooling yourself, you have no chance at all. The same is true of Christian witnessing. Many church people are poor witnesses because they can tell only what others are supposed to have seen and heard but they themselves have never experienced. We must ask: What is there in my life that requires Christ to explain it? Too often in reciting our sublime creeds and singing our lofty hymns it is as if we had been dropped to these mountain heights from an airplane in a parachute. We have never climbed to these heights.

The first rule of the spiritual life, said Jeremy Taylor, is to be honest with God. It was for this lack of spiritual honesty that Kierkegaard sourged the state church of his homeland. A man well fed and well groomed, cultured and refined, enjoying the prestige he has sought all his life, gets up to preach on the text, "God chose what is low and despised in the world," and no one has sense enough to laugh at the inconsistency of it. The man himself has never suffered but he makes a fair living by speaking about the sufferings of Christ and the apostles. Yet no one calls him to task for his dishonesty. We must not say more than we are entitled to say. In the ancient Egyptian "oath of clearing," contained in the Book of the Dead, a man stands before the judgment seat of Osiris and says, "My fortune was small but it was mine own." The spiritual riches which we seek to transmit to others must be honestly acquired by ourselves. There is truth in Moody’s observation, "No man can lead another man nearer to Christ than he is himself."

The second principle of Alcoholics Anonymous is this: see yourself as a part of a great plan. This is an orderly universe. When I work with it, I succeed, and when I work against it, I fail. Instead of being occupied with myself, I have to learn to see my place in the big scheme of things. When I depend on the bottle for comfort and courage, I am self-centered and immature, sucking the bottle in baby fashion. I have to grow up and see life in a broad objective way.

So it is with our Christian priesthood. It is not a bootstrap philosophy. We do not spin it out of our imagination, nor does it cater to our whims. It results from standing honestly before God and saying, "Lord, what do you want me to do?" And he does have something for each of us to do. Phillips Brooks said to young preachers, "The gospel has never been preached by anyone just like you before." This applies to all of us. The light of God’s truth has never shined through just the kind of prism that your personality and your life-situation constitute. Without you there is a discord in the divine harmony, a gap in the divine plan. Your heart and your head form a combination which is utterly unique and without which God cannot do a certain piece of work that needs to be done.

The third principle of Alcoholics Anonymous is this: do something for others. Forget yourself in the service of others. Never mind whether you get paid for it or not, never mind whether you are appreciated or not. Just learn to look at life from the point of view of the needs of others. Here is the very heart of our priesthood. A Christian, as Luther put it, does not live in himself at all but in Christ through faith and in his neighbor through love. When we become consecrated to Christ, we get a new perspective. We see with the eyes of love.

This truth was brought home to me in a conversation with a pastor in East Germany shortly after the close of World War II. We discussed the Pentecost proclamation which Dibelius, the courageous bishop of Berlin, had just issued, urging the church to remain firm in the face of Communist persecution. I took for granted that maintaining such a stand was the most important task confronting the German Christians living under Russian occupation. But the German pastor said, "While that is important, it is not our most important task. The primary thing is that these Russians with whom we come into contact are men like myself for whom Christ died, and their contacts with us may afford them their only insight into the gospel. Of greatest importance is to make use of this opportunity of witnessing for Christ. By word and example we must give them a true impression of Christ and of his way among his people." Only Christ can bring about that kind of attitude. Anyone can be defiant and hold fast, but one must be a Christian to see in everyone, friend ane enemy alike, a brother and a sister for whom Christ died. And a Christian surrounds him with such patient and resourceful love that the reconciling love of Christ becomes a living reality.

We have a royal mission, a glorious ministry of reconciliation. It is our business to bring the life-changing power of Christ into the lives of all with whom we come into contact. For we are Christ men and Christ women. We are all his priests.

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Good News For All Seasons, by T. A. Kantonen