1 Peter 2:4-12 · The Living Stone and a Chosen People
Who Are We, Really?
1 Peter 2:4-12
Sermon
by King Duncan
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There’s an old story about a small church out in a rural area that needed a pastor to fill in for a time. So they contacted a nearby seminary. The seminary sent a student who had never been outside of the city. When he arrived at the church, the student preacher was shocked to see a hound dog seated on the second row next to the church’s lay leader, a crotchety older man who was known to run off young student pastors.

In a heat of righteous indignation the young preacher headed straight toward the dog. He screamed at it and drove it out of the church. The startled congregation held its breath, to see what the lay leader would do, but nothing happened.

After the sermon everyone quickly scooted out the side door and waited for the older man to come out. When he graciously greeted the young pastor at the front door, everyone was taken aback. They had never seen him be that courteous to a student pastor before. The old lay leader extended his hand and said, “I want to thank you for kicking my dog out of church.”

The pastor was also shocked, “You want to thank me?”

“Yep,” said the older man, “I wouldn’t had my dog hear that sermon for nothin’.”

Churches are sometimes funny places. Sometimes things happen in churches that aren’t so funny. Sometimes they’re downright tragic. Churches can be a disappointment to God.

Some of our older members may remember a radio program years ago called “The Back To God Hour.” In one city “The Back to God Hour” was broadcast in the time slot immediately following the weekly broadcast of a local church. The pastor of that church recalls that each week at the end of his church’s broadcast the announcer would come on the air and say these words‑ ‑ “You have been listening to the service of worship at Chalmers United Church, now ‘Back to God.’” (1)

I don’t want to sound judgmental, but that could probably be said in all honesty after some church services, “Now, back to God.” The church does not always measure up to God’s call.

A man named Bruce journeyed to Rwanda as a short‑term missionary. He worked for several weeks doing refugee relief. One day he was traveling along the road with his driver, Winston, when the jeep made a sudden stop by a large open field which had been recently bulldozed. As Winston departed the vehicle, he asked Bruce to come with him. They walked to the edge of the field and stood silently for some time. As Bruce studied the field, it soon became apparent that this was not just any field. It was a mass grave for hundreds who had been slain in the nightmare of tribal violence.

Winston stared out upon the open field and quietly spoke: “This is the place,” he said with tears in his eyes, “where I learned to hate God. I would often come and stand and look out over the hundreds of bodies, the bodies of my people, the bodies of my friends and my family. I would stand here and I would scream out at God saying, ‘Why, why have you not done anything to prevent this? Why have you abandoned us?’

“And for many, many weeks God remained silent. But as I stood here, day after day, hating God, this is also the place where I again learned to love God. For one day, as I stood here cursing God, God answered me. He said, ‘Winston, I never abandoned you. I was here all along . . . suffering with you.’

“And on that day,” Winston continued, “I realized that I had directed my question to the wrong person. My question should not have been put to God. My question should have been put . . . to the church.” (2) “Why do you not do something?”

And it is true. There are many times when the church has remained silent in the face of unspeakable evil. I’m certain that many times in our history the world has directed that question to us: “Why do you not do something?” I’m equally certain that God directs that question to us as well. “Why do you not do something?”

I love the church of Jesus Christ. I believe in the church. But let’s face it. We are not having the impact on the world that Christ has called us to have. It may be that we have not understood who or what Christ has called us to be. Listen to these words from today’s lesson from I Peter and ask yourself what it is you believe Christ asks of us: “But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light. Once you were not a people, but now you are the people of God; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy.”

Who are we? “A chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God . . .” I am convinced there are many people who do not understand who we are and what we are about.

Many people--even many on our roll--look at the church as a chapel, a temple, a shrine--even, God help us, a museum, perhaps. That is, to many people the church is a place you go . . . to pay homage to God. Some go weekly, some go every month or so, some perhaps twice a year. Once they’ve done that, they feel they have fulfilled their religious obligation. These are nice people. However, they don’t have a clue about what it means to be a church.

The church is not a place we go--the church is who we are! We are “a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God . . .” This building is not the church. It is where the church meets. When you leave this building you are still the church. When you go to your civic club, you are still the church. When you dine with your family, when you have recreation, when you go to the office, when you fulfill your civic responsibility and cast your ballot on election day, you are still the church. And if you do any of these things with no thought to God, you are betraying your calling as a follower of Jesus Christ.

Around 125 A.D. Aristides, the philosopher, described the early Christian community to the Roman Emperor Hadrian like this: “They love one another. They never fail to help widows; they save orphans from those who hurt them. If they have something, they give freely to the person who has nothing; if they see a stranger, they take him home as a brother or sister in the spirit, the Spirit of God.” That’s who we are--or at least, that’s who we’ve been called to be. Church is not a place we go; church is who we are!

I am convinced that is a picture of many modern Christians, not just Unitarians. Many of us are nice people, religious people, but we are confused about who we are and what we are supposed to do.

It would be helpful, I believe, to think of ourselves as priests. [The priesthood of all believers, after all, is supposed to be the rock upon which Protestant faith is based, but it is a doctrine which has been nearly forgotten.]

When I say that we are to think of ourselves as priests, I don’t mean that in a religious sense, serving the sacraments, hearing confessions, etc. However, we are all called to be representatives of God, just as a priest represents God.

We are to be priests to one another. Christian believers have a responsibility for one another. The New Testament is clear about that.

Dr. Jim Standiford, a prominent pastor in San Diego tells about his father, a devoted churchman. His father loved the church but he was a frequent and severe critic of those with whom he disagreed on church matters. Standiford recalls times when his father “chewed out” the Administrative Board of his home congregation. His father could be a difficult man at times. Then his father’s mother died.

Dr. Standiford’s grandmother was one of the matriarchs of the congregation. She was affectionately known to all as “Mother Standiford.” At the end of her funeral service, as Standiford’s dad was beginning to walk down the aisle out of the church behind her casket, he collapsed. Two of the very persons he had so recently publicly criticized came to his side, lifted him, and walked down the aisle one on each side supporting him. It was in that moment, as a high school junior, that the younger Standiford saw the church in a whole new light. Suddenly he understood what the church was. Those two men’s demonstration of their love for his father became Jim Standiford’s call to ministry. (3)

Who are we? Priests to one another. Regardless of whether we see eye-to-eye on things, we have a responsibility for one another. There is a Zulu proverb that goes like this: “When a thorn pierces the foot, the whole body bends over to pull it out.” When one person in a community experiences pain, the rest of the community shares its strength with that person in order to ease the pain. That’s who we are. Priests to one another.

We are also called to be priests to the world. That is, we are God’s representatives to our neighbors, our friends, our co-workers, and to the wider world for whom Christ died.

A leader at a church conference told about his young son, who one day came home from school with something he wanted to show to his Mom. “Mom, we are studying dinosaurs, look what I have!” he said enthusiastically. He showed her a picture of a gigantic dinosaur towering over a two‑story house. Then he asked his mother a difficult question, “When did we kill off all the dinosaurs,” he asked, “so that it would be safe for houses to be built and kids to play outside?”

“Well,” replied his mother, “we didn’t kill off the dinosaurs, and we don’t know exactly how they were eliminated. Many scientists believe that it was a result of an ice age when the plants the dinosaurs ate were frozen out and the dinosaurs starved. Others suggest it was a giant meteorite that caused a great change in the temperature and dinosaurs could not adapt and survive in the cold. Nonetheless,” explained his mother, “it was the result of tremendous climate change that humans were able to build cities and children were able to play outside, not the result of a successful hunting campaign.”

This leader went on to suggest that in similar fashion the task of the church is not necessarily to slay giant dragons, as much as it is to change the climate so that the Gospel may flourish. (4)

That’s a wonderful metaphor. The purpose of the church is to change the spiritual, social, moral and political climate of our world so that the kingdoms of this world bear a more striking resemblance to the kingdom of our God. We do this by ministry to individual persons in need, and we do this by the witness of our lives to the world.

The church is not a place we go--the church is who we are! We are “a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God . . .” We are to be priests to one another. We are to be priests to the world.

We are people who have a strong sense of God’s presence in our lives.

Author Jane Smiley in her novel A Thousand Acres describes the condition of many people who bear the name Christian. She tells about a highly dysfunctional family. They had many problems. Still, they were faithful in their attendance at church each Sunday. Here is how the novel’s narrator sums up their religious commitment: “We came to church to pay our respects, not to give thanks.” (5)

That’s how many people regard the church. They pay their respects, but they have no real consciousness that God is alive in our world. They come to pay their respects, but not to give thanks. It grieves me that many of the people who come to this church feel that way. No wonder the church has so little impact on our world. We need to show them who we are: “a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God . . .”

A few weeks after he was elected President of the United States, Ronald Reagan shared with the nation a letter he had received from an elementary school in Iowa. A child had written, “Dear Mr. President, You have now been elected President of the United States; now go to the Oval office and get to work.”

It’s time for the church of Jesus Christ, this royal priesthood, called by God to represent Him in the world, to get to work so the world knows exactly who we are! Do you know who you are? It’s a lot to live up to-- “a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God . . .”


1. As told by Rev. C. Wayne Hilliker, http://www.chalmersunitedchurch.com/sermons/aug29s93.htm.

2. Reverend Martin C. Singley, III, http://www.tellicochurch.org/Archives/001029.html.

3. http://www.fumcsd.org/sermons/sr080606.html.

4. The Rev. Robert Hansel. Cited by Philip W. Snyder, http://www.stjohnsithaca.org/Sermons/2006Sermons/Sermon_10_29_06.html.

5. Scott Hoezee, http://www.calvincrc.org/sermons/2000/matt22.html.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preching Second Quarter 2008, by King Duncan