1 Peter 2:4-12 · The Living Stone and a Chosen People
Yes, You
1 Peter 2:2-10
Sermon
by David O. Bales
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Most congregations experience the joy of their former pastors visiting. Often such gatherings occur at anniversaries and other celebrations. The presence of extra pastors in worship offers the opportunity to not only celebrate the congregation's ministry but also to reflect upon what pastors do and who they really are.

In the 1930s in Great Britain, when that nation was gearing up for a defense of its islands and of democracy in the world, posters were put up announcing, "All men in the above age groups are required for the national service except lunatics, the blind, and ministers of religion."

Pastors are often lumped with other groups, sometimes with other educated professions; but how does the Bible instruct us on the person and function of a pastor in relation to all of God's people? First, our text is abundantly clear that there's no essential difference between church leaders and other Christians. The Bible doesn't tell us that there's a better group of Christians called "pastors." First Peter declares all Christians as priests. Peter points to us through the Bible's page, "You," he says. "I'm talking to you. ‘You are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God's own people, in order that you may proclaim the mighty acts of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light.' " Everyone of us.

The New Testament doesn't talk about a special kind of Christian but about the laity, which is the Greek word for the "people." We're all God's laity. We're all summoned into God's service as well as into God's family. As God's people, we're all priests, which means we're all mediators between God and others.

I had a Protestant friend who was married to a Roman Catholic, and he wouldn't worship with her. He also had given up worshiping in a Protestant church years before. He'd quote what he'd learned in Sunday school about the priesthood of all believers, thinking it meant he was his own priest. The New Testament, so adamant that we're all priests, means that we're priests for one another, not for ourselves. As we need to mediate God's grace to others, so we need others to mediate God's grace to us. That's what the church is about.

In the New Testament, we find no ranks of first-, second-, or third-class Christians. We enjoy complete equality between believers because we're equally in need of God's grace. We're equally claimed in order to serve God, no matter what our exact ministry might be.

Jesus spent his ministry bumping against the priests, scribes, and Pharisees who, for different reasons, thought themselves superior to others. Jesus swept aside all distinctions of family, learning, or piety. Certainly all Christians have different gifts, tasks, and responsibilities for God, some public, some private; some more in their family and neighborhood, some more in local or national politics; some more in one congregation and some more in the regional or national church. All must serve God with seriousness and devotion and not in the way we Christians have allowed discipleship to degenerate. Christians have frittered away the high status God grants to all Christians, and many Christians now think and act as though their church leaders are the ones they pay to do the truly religious work.

In her book, China Cry, Nora Lam told about her family in WWII. They fled occupied China to her grandfather's home in Chungking. She realized that she was a foreigner there, and she recognized clothing different than her own. Especially, she wondered about people who wore white cloth bands around their foreheads. She asked her grandfather about them. He laughed and said that a scholar thousands of years before had said that such bands would ward off headaches. She learned that many traditions can be unhealthy, and she never forgot it. She later immigrated to the US and started a very success Christian ministry that empowered all Christians to serve God.

Christians get into the habit of doing things today the way they were done yesterday, and one result is that slowly over the centuries Christians come to consider their pastors as more holy than others. This is why, in worship every Sunday, God summons us to leap across the centuries to the Bible. We don't disregard the insights and influences of our mothers and fathers in the faith, but we make sure that the Bible is our authority, not the traditions that have grown up, promoting pastors to a higher holiness and demoting everyone else to a lesser Christian existence.

Presbyterians who turn to John Calvin for Bible instruction should certainly conclude that ordained people aren't somehow above their non-ordained brothers and sisters in the faith. John Calvin, to the glory of God, was never ordained. As one of the greatest Bible scholars and Bible teachers of all time, he points out that we are each responsible to study the Bible ourselves and that we're all priests for others — whether we are ordained or not. That's the exalted position God grants to each Christian. This is what God recreated us to be through the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ.

Some people really think they hire pastors to pray for them. The Bible instructs us that we all pray for one another. Each of us has direct access to God and each of us is invited to pray, believing that God hears us and works with our prayers, whether about the largest or smallest matters. Every Christian has the task and joy of sharing their faith with others.

If we allow the accretions of tradition to pile up a definition of a pastor, what do we get? A popular survey has determined that the ideal pastor is 28 years old and has been preaching for 35 years. She has one brown eye and one blue. He parts his hair in the middle: blond and wavy on the left side, brown and straight on the right. She has a burning desire to be with teenagers and spends all her time with older folk. He makes sixteen calls a day upon church members and is always in the office to counsel or just to visit. She challenges and inspires but never disturbs the status quo. He condemns sin but never embarrasses anyone.

The Bible announces that we're all priests, able to come right to God with our lives and concerns and able then, especially, to take God's grace to others. No calling is higher than that.

If being directly in God's presence frightens you, if your equality with all God's people overwhelms you, or if biblical religion appears not to be the kind you thought you signed up for, do what Peter tells us in verse 2, "Like newborn infants, long for the pure, spiritual milk, so that by it you may grow into salvation." Long for something more fundamental than church traditions. Desire a vital relationship with God, and if your job of representing God sounds too hard, realize that this is something God does through us. As Peter encourages us, "let yourselves be built into a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ. Let yourself be built," he says. "Let God do it for you, and through you, for others."

The story came out of the French Revolution that in Paris a man saw his friend marching after a crowd toward the barricades. He warned his friend that the barricades wouldn't hold against the troops, and if he went with the crowd he was going to sure death. His friend replied, "I must follow them. I'm their leader." You can lead your pastor. Just, please, make sure that it's the right direction.

Throughout Christian history the church has grown in numbers and quality when the entire people of God have taken seriously the dignity God has bestowed upon them. There's a lot more people in the church who aren't pastors than those who are. You people in the pews far outnumber us who stand on this side of the pulpit. Even though pastors have special training in the Bible, teaching, and counseling, you can do things for Christ we'd never dream of.

I'll tell you about a congregation I served as pastor. When new people attended worship who were used to having a paid professional do everything, they often wondered, where's the pastor? A different person led worship every week. Church members offered prayer, shared a message with the children, gave the announcements, stood with the pastor and spoke the words of baptism and of the Lord's Supper. The people of the congregation understood themselves as colleagues with the pastor, since they're all ministers. They accepted that God offered them the same challenges and blessings of a pastor.

As congregations get used to all Christians serving in worship, they begin to grasp that all Christians serve beyond worship in specifically religious ways like visiting the sick and people in hospitals, expressing care for them, offering prayer, and sharing their faith. Ministry doesn't have to be hoarded by pastors.        

In that congregation, a man came to my office one day and talked about a youth home that our congregation supported. He said they needed a new dormitory and suggested our congregation could raise $50,000. I said I liked the idea and told him to take his proposal to the mission committee. I told the committee I'd help in any way they wanted. Twice they asked me to announce the fundraising in worship. They raised the money in three months.

I went to the newspaper and paid for an advertisement. It was worded close to this:

Headline: I HAD NOTHING TO DO WITH ITHeadline: I HAD NOTHING TO DO WITH IT

The congregation has recently raised $50,000 to help the Children's Community build their next dormitory. I hope that other congregations will do the same. The congregation has recently raised $50,000 to help the Children's Community build their next dormitory. I hope that other congregations will do the same.

However, that isn't why I'm paying for this advertisement. I want to announce that I had nothing to do with the idea, the planning, or the raising of the money. The congregation did it from beginning to end. To the congregation: I express to you my awe and congratulations. To the community: If you are looking for a congregation where the lay people (a term I seldom use) do the ministry, this is it; and I am profoundly pleased to be the leader who follows this congregation. However, that isn't why I'm paying for this advertisement. I want to announce that I had nothing to do with the idea, the planning, or the raising of the money. The congregation did it from beginning to end. To the congregation: I express to you my awe and congratulations. To the community: If you are looking for a congregation where the lay people (a term I seldom use) do the ministry, this is it; and I am profoundly pleased to be the leader who follows this congregation.

Nothing in the Bible says a person needs a decade of college in order to share God's love. Training certainly helps, but non-ordained people can be trained, too. A program like Stephen Ministry trains people to care for others one to one. It also frees non-ordained people from the shackles of Christian inferiority in order to serve Christ.

You are all God's people, God's priests. That's God's decision, not yours. If you find a way to win people to Christ with or without your pastor, do it. If you have gifts that build up the church in Christ's love, whether your pastor acknowledges you or not, do it. If you have a vision for how God's grace can operate in this time and place, do your vision. Obey your Lord. You are God's ministers. You don't have to wait for a pastor. If pastors come following along behind you to the kingdom of God, it might mean they've truly done their job; because a pastor's job is to help Christians to recognize their gifts and to enable them to use their gifts for God's glory. That's what Ephesians chapter 4 says. That's how God works through Christ's church, even if for years or for your lifetime the church hasn't operated that way.

Years ago, a husky, healthy pastor retired at 62. He began to draw his pension and Social Security, but he grew restless and began looking for work. He answered an ad from the zoo. The zookeeper said, "We need a gorilla. Ours just died, and do you know how hard it is to get gorillas these days? We skinned our dead gorilla and made a suit with a zipper. It looks like it would fit you just fine."

The retired pastor liked the idea since he spent a lot of time entertaining children, so he gave it a try. He did well and soon was adept at climbing a tree and even swinging a little from the branches. One day he climbed too high and swung too hard and fell over the fence into the den where a lion was sleeping. The pastor leaped up and ran to the fence screaming for help. The lion said, "Oh, shut up. You're not the only retired pastor around here."

Pastors have the consolation that when we make mistakes, like falling into a lion's den or just putting our foot in our mouth, we aren't the only ministers working around here. We're surrounded by God's grace and by all the rest of you priests. Amen.

CSS Publishing, Inc., Sermons for Sundays in Lent and Easter: Toward Easter And Beyond, by David O. Bales