With Gentleness and Respect
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Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus
Christ!
“But in your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being
prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope
that is in you; yet do it with gentleness and respect” (1 Peter 3:15).
Ever since I entered seminary, this verse has been my theme, my
mission statement, my philosophy of ministry, if you will. For almost that
long, it has been the signature on all my emails. I used to focus on the first
part: “always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a
reason for the hope that is in you.” Increasingly, I’ve realized the importance
of focusing on the second part: “do it with gentleness and respect.” At least
as important as being prepared to confess our faith, is the loving way we
witness to the truth.
That’s not to say it’s easy. Even as he encourages his readers to
witness faithfully, the apostle knows they will be called upon to do so in the
face of opposition. Peter writes to encourage Christians who have already begun
to experience persecution for their faith under Nero, but he predicts that
worse ordeals are still to come. Not having the right of citizenship, most of
them could be arrested and imprisoned, held without bail or habeas corpus rights, physically abused,
subjected to seizure of property, exiled, sent to work as slaves in government
mines, and even killed for no other reason than for being Christians.
Peter could understand their bewilderment that God’s people should
undergo this kind of treatment—he himself had once expressed horror at the idea
of Jesus’ suffering and death, and needed to be rebuked as though he were Satan
himself. On Maundy Thursday, Jesus had told him: “Simon, Simon, Satan has asked
to sift you as wheat. But I have prayed for you, Simon, that your faith may not
fail. And when you have turned back, strengthen your brothers” (Luke 22:31-32).
Peter’s experience of failure, repentance, forgiveness, and
restoration uniquely qualified him to write to other struggling Christians.
He’d been there. He wrote his letter to help his brothers and sisters see that
their painful trials were temporary, that hardship would purify their faith,
and that God’s real goal for His children lies beyond this dying world. Peter
wanted them to lay hold of this living hope and to share the reason for that
hope, whatever their circumstances.
Peter undoubtedly had to smile to himself as he wrote these words
about nonviolent passivity. After all, was he not the one who was armed in
Gethsemane? Was he not the one who gave Malchus the earectomy? He was ready to
go down in a bloodbath, thinking that he would thus be honoring God.
Peter could also understand the urge to run and hide. When Jesus
was led away to the high priest’s house, Peter followed at a distance. A
servant girl’s innocent question was all it had taken for him to deny even
knowing the Lord.
But his Master had taught him well. Peter repented and was
reinstated. Here, he issues an inspiring call to personal evangelism even under
the threat of persecution. Christians are not to bash their enemies over the
head, nor are they to cowardly run away when confronted. You are to always be
prepared to make a gentle defense of the faith to anyone who asks you to give a
reason for the hope that is in you. This is the ultimate in loving one’s
enemies—what better way could there be than to seek to share the message of
eternal life with them?
St. Peter begins: “In your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy…” Does this sound obvious? Does
a Christian need to be told this? Of course you do. People hate hypocrisy, and
they can smell religious hypocrisy at 200 yards. And unfortunately, you are
hypocritical. You like other people to think you are better than you really
are. And much of the time, you try to fool yourself, too. You want to believe
you’re doing better than you really are. I know, because I do, too!
The selfish poisons inside of you seep from
your sinful nature, and that Old Adam needs to be rebuked and contained each
day. The Christian self in you needs to reaffirm its faith every day—every day
repenting, every day praying for strength to stand up for the truth, every day
listening to the Savior’s voice through His wonderful Word. And when your own
heart is full of gratitude for being rescued from death and hell, you will be
ready to speak, and your speech will have depth and conviction. You will not sound
phony.
The next step is “always being prepared…” This
is not just a Boy Scout motto. You prepare for other, less important things.
So, why not prepare to share that which is most important to you: “the reason
for the hope that is within you”?
God opens the door for each of us to share the
Gospel. So be prepared. Think about what you might say beforehand. Do it now,
when the pressure does not seem so noticeable. Can you summarize the Christian
faith in a few sentences?
Here is a simple four-keyword summary of the
Bible’s Law-Gospel message that you can keep in mind to help organize all the
Bible facts you know.
The first word is sin. Tell people how we are separated from our Creator at birth,
that no human being can lift himself up to God’s standards of holiness, that
all people by nature are God’s enemies and under His curse.
The second word is grace. Tell people that for Christ’s sake, God loves us anyway. He
sent His Son to live and die in our place and pronounced the world not guilty
because of Jesus.
The third word is faith. Tell people that all of these good things—forgiveness,
peace, spiritual life now, life forever—flow into our lives personally as the
Holy Spirit uses God’s Word to lead us to believe these wonderful promises.
The fourth word is works. Tell people that the Spirit of God comes to live in
believers and enables them to live for God. Believers see God’s ways as a
delight rather than a burden, and find joy in conforming their will to His
will.
Thus prepared, you are ready “to make a
defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you…” The
word translated here as “a defense” is apologia,
a positive testimony and witness to the truth of the Gospel, particularly in
the face of opposition. Christianity is “reasonable.” It stands up to scrutiny
and investigation because it is true. Christians are to be prepared to tell
others about this truth whenever they have the opportunity.
When you talk to people, you don’t have to
argue with them, deliver the perfect sales pitch, try to make God’s ways
logical or reasonable, be clever, or take the burden of converting them on
yourself. Just tell them what you hope for in God through the merits and work
of Christ. Let the Gospel do its work!
As you do so, you must avoid the extremes of
unnecessarily offending others in your Christian witness, or neutering the
message to appease the modern gods of tolerance and political correctness. You
must not unnecessarily antagonize them, nor should you run away from them if
they object. Just speak the truth in love.
St. Peter says, “Do it with gentleness and
respect.” But even such a gentle and respectful approach will not avoid all
criticism or conflict. That’s why he adds: “having a good conscience, so that,
when you are slandered, those who revile your good behavior in Christ may be
put to shame. For it is better to suffer for doing good, if that should be
God’s will, than for doing evil.”
You should not be surprised when you suffer,
not even when you suffer for doing right. You live in a fallen world, where all
of us are subjected to the consequences of sin daily. Since Adam, every human
being has suffered—even Jesus. He suffered more than you or I ever will—and He
was perfectly righteous. That’s why Peter lifts our eyes from our own
circumstances to the objective reality of Christ’s atonement: “For Christ also
suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, that He might bring
us to God, being put to death in the flesh but made alive in the spirit.”
Your sin and guilt are more deserving of suffering than you care to
admit. Even one sin is deserving of God’s temporal and eternal punishment. And
you’ve committed thousands of sins—more than you even realize.
But these words point you to what someone else has done for you, on
your behalf, in your place. It reminds you that your need is severe, but that
the solution is even greater: the suffering and death of the God-man, Jesus
Christ.
Christ also suffered “once for sins.” Although you sin repeatedly,
Christ’s one act of atonement covers
all your sins. This is the Great Exchange: “The righteous for the unrighteous.”
The Father loaded the blame for the sins of the world upon a righteous
substitute and then had Him executed on a cross in our place. He is the Lamb of
God who bears the sin of the world.
Christ did all of this “that He might bring us to God.” You cannot
lift yourself up to God. Christ has lifted you up to God. Christ has reconciled
you to His heavenly Father. Christ—His suffering, death, and resurrection—are
the heart and center of the Bible. This is really the only Good News that you
have to share with a world that is lost and dead in its trespasses. This is the
Gospel that you need to hear again and again and again for it is the only Word
that saves you… that brings you eternal life… that brings you a good
conscience.
This is the reason for the hope that is in
you, no matter what your outward circumstances: “Christ also suffered once for
sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, that He might bring [you] to God.”
Though He was put to death in the flesh, He was raised to life and has ascended
into heaven at the right hand of God. Even so, He is with you always, coming to
you often in His Word and Sacraments, bringing you salvation and eternal life,
bringing you this Good News: You are forgiven of all of your sins.
In the name of the Father and of the Son and
of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture
quotations are from the Holy Bible, English Standard Version, copyright © 2001
by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by
permission. All rights reserved.
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