The Bible in Small Steps

1 Peter 4 - Don’t Be Surprised by the Fiery Ordeal

25 min · 15. juni 2026
episode 1 Peter 4 - Don’t Be Surprised by the Fiery Ordeal cover

Beskrivelse

If you knew your time was short — not in a morbid way, but in the clarifying way that makes trivial things fall away — what would you do differently? That’s the energy underneath 1 Peter 4. Peter is writing to people who are suffering specifically because of their faith, and he doesn’t offer a quick resolution. What he offers is a reframe: this is what was expected, this is what it means, and this is the God in whose hands you are safe. Arm yourselves with the same understanding (vv. 1–6) Peter opens with a “therefore” — which means we need to look at what came before. Christ suffered in the flesh, died, rose, and now reigns. Every authority is subject to him. From that foundation, Peter draws a practical conclusion: if you arm yourself with Christ’s way of thinking, you will break decisively with your former orientation toward sin. The Greek word for “arm yourselves” (hoplízo) is a military term — but the weapon Peter has in mind is a posture of mind. The person who accepts suffering rather than compromising to avoid it has crossed a line. They’re no longer living to satisfy human desire; they’re living according to God’s will. The list of former behaviors Peter names — debauchery, drunkenness, idolatry — wasn’t a generic catalogue of potential sins. This was a description of normal civic and religious life in the Greco-Roman world. Temple worship, festival drinking, communal rituals — all of it was inseparable from participation in daily society. His readers had come out of that world, and their former community had noticed. The word Peter uses for the reaction is being shocked as if confronted with something foreign. And because they couldn’t explain it to their satisfaction, they slandered the Christians. Peter’s answer: slander is not the last word. God is. What really matters when time is short (vv. 7–11) Peter’s tightly organized answer to “what matters?” has three parts. First: be alert and sober-minded for prayer — the urgency of the time and the practice of prayer are directly connected. Second: sustained, stretched-out love for one another — the kind of love that doesn’t expose or weaponize the failures of others, but creates conditions for restoration. Third: hospitality without complaining. In the first century, hospitality was a survival mechanism, not a preference. Itinerant teachers had no hotel network; you opened your home. Peter acknowledges it’s costly and inconvenient, and he says anyway: stop the complaining. (I’ll admit this one hit me — I’ve been trying to get my floors refinished before I’d feel comfortable having people over for a Bible study. These people had nothing. The modern version of “I need the house to be ready first” is its own problem.) Spiritual gifts, Peter says, aren’t yours. Whatever you’ve been given was given for others. You are a steward of it — a household manager entrusted with something that belongs to God and meant to be used for the whole. Don’t be surprised by the fiery ordeal (vv. 12–19) This is where everything Peter has been building arrives. Don’t be shocked, he says — using the same word that described how the world was shocked by Christians’ changed behavior. The fiery ordeal (pýrōsis — the smelting process) is not random destruction. It’s refining. And suffering for bearing the name “Christian” (a word that appears only three times in the entire New Testament) carries no shame — quite the opposite. The Spirit of glory rests on the one being ridiculed in Christ’s name. The world sees humiliation; God sees His Spirit at rest on that person. Peter distinguishes carefully between suffering that is deserved (you did something wrong) and suffering that comes from faithfulness (you bore the name). Only one of these carries meaning. And “judgment begins in the house of God” — rooted in Ezekiel and Amos — means God is refining his own people first, producing faith that survives fire. This is not punishment. It is purpose. The chapter closes with one of the most powerful lines in the letter: entrust yourselves to a faithful Creator while doing what is good. The word “entrust” is like a deposit. You hand it over to the one you trust to keep it. Luke uses the same word for what Jesus said from the cross. This posture isn’t passive — it’s an active, ongoing act of trust combined with continued good works in the hands of the God who made them and will not let them go. What I’m meditating on: Suffering surprises us, even though God told us to expect it. The refining process is not abandonment. The Spirit of glory rests on the one being ridiculed. Those two things — the world’s verdict and God’s — are in direct contradiction, and Peter is asking his readers to live from the second one. What I’m praying about: That we would not be ashamed of the suffering that comes from doing right. That we would entrust everything to a faithful God who keeps what is deposited with him. What I want to share with others: If you know someone who’s surprised and disoriented by suffering — especially suffering that came because they were trying to do right — this is the passage to share with them. Peter says: don’t be surprised. It’s not a sign that God has forgotten you. It’s a refining process, and you are in the hands of someone who keeps what is entrusted to him. Download blank templates, schedules here: https://schmern2.notion.site/Downloads-Template-Word-and-Excel-Schedule-67439d14449d4c20bfe00efe069f78b8 [https://schmern2.notion.site/schmern2/The-Bible-in-Small-Steps-b99ab90118b3433bab73c488ef44d4d1] Logos RAMPS Workflow - RAMPS Bible Study - The Bible in Small Steps in Logos Workflows Jill’s Links https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/ [https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/] https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod [https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod] https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod] https://twitter.com/schmern [https://twitter.com/schmern] Email the podcast at [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] jill@startwithsmallsteps.com [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] “Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. The ESV text may not be quoted in any publication made available to the public by a Creative Commons license. The ESV may not be translated in whole or in part into any other language.” Scripture quotations marked CSB have been taken from the Christian Standard Bible®, Copyright © 2017 by Holman Bible Publishers. Used by permission. Christian Standard Bible® and CSB® are federally registered trademarks of Holman Bible Publishers. “The Scriptures quoted are from the NET Bible® http://netbible.com [http://netbible.com/] copyright ©1996, 2019 used with permission from Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. All rights reserved”. Bible Maps and images used with permission from https://www.bible.ca/maps/ [https://www.bible.ca/maps/] or https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/ [https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/] Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software. Free for non-commercial use by individuals or organizations. May be presented before live audiences; may be posted on social media; may be re-distributed. May not be used commercially. May not be modified or included in published works without permission; contact permissions@faithlife.com [permissions@faithlife.com]. Attribute as: “Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software ()”. By choosing to watch this video or listen to this podcast, you acknowledge that you are doing so of your own free will. The content shared here reflects personal study, faith perspective, and opinions and is intended for informational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a licensed pastor, seminary-trained theologian, or biblical scholar. Any scriptural interpretation, commentary, or reflections offered should not be considered a substitute for guidance from your own pastor, church body, or faith community. Theological understanding is a lifelong journey — I encourage you to study alongside your own tradition and trusted spiritual leaders. You are solely responsible for any decisions or actions you take based on this content.

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episode 1 Peter 5 - Cast All Your Anxieties on Him cover

1 Peter 5 - Cast All Your Anxieties on Him

Every letter has to end somewhere. And usually, the way a letter ends tells you something about what the writer most wanted to leave with the reader. Paul tended to close with theology compressed into a benediction and a list of names. James ended with someone going after the one who wandered away. Peter ends with shepherds, humility, a prowling lion, and a reminder that you are not suffering alone. This is the closing of a letter from a pastor who wanted to help his people from the first word until the last. And it contains one of the most quoted verses in all of Scripture. A fellow elder, not an apostle pulling rank (vv. 1–4) Peter opens this closing by addressing the elders — the leaders of the scattered communities across these five Roman provinces. What’s striking is how he identifies himself: not as the apostle, not as the one who was there with Jesus, but as a co-elder, someone alongside them rather than above them. He offers two credentials: witness of Christ’s suffering (the Greek word martis gives us “martyr” — he was there, in the courtyard, by the charcoal fire, denying) and sharer in the glory to be revealed. His call to the elders is structured as a series of contrasts: not reluctantly but willingly, not for shameful gain but eagerly, not lording over the congregation but being an example. The example word is tupos — a mold that presses a shape into what’s formed in it. The elder’s life is meant to leave an impression the congregation takes on. The motivation isn’t an ethical duty: the chief Shepherd, when he appears, will give those who served faithfully an unfading crown of glory. The word for “unfading” (amarantos) refers to a legendary flower that never wilted. Everything the world offers a leader — recognition, status, influence — fades. What the chief Shepherd gives does not. Humble yourselves — and cast everything on him (vv. 5–7) Peter calls the younger members to submit to the elders, using a vivid word for “clothe yourself” — the kind of apron or work garment you tie on before getting to work. Some commentators hear an echo of the upper room, where Jesus tied a towel around his waist to wash feet. Humility, Peter says, isn’t a private attitude you cultivate. It’s something you put on and go to work in. The theological grounding comes from Proverbs 3:34 — the same text James quoted in James 4:6, independently. God opposes the proud and gives grace to the humble. Then comes what may be the most important verse in this entire letter: Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, so that he may exalt you at the proper time, casting all your anxieties on him, because he cares for you. The “mighty hand of God” is a deep Old Testament image — the hand that brought Israel out of Egypt, the hand of sovereign power shaping history. Humble yourself under that. Accept his timing, his purpose, his governance of your situation, even when you can’t see why. The word for “anxieties” (worries, the things that divide and distract the mind) is paired with a word for “casting” that means to fling, to hurl decisively. Not gently set down. Fling. And the reason is not technique — it’s relationship: he cares for you. The Greek here means it matters to him about you. You’re not a burden. You’re not forgotten. You’re not tolerated. Peter is writing this from Rome, under Nero, knowing he is likely near the end of his life. The truth he is offering is the truth he has staked everything on. The prowling lion and the community that resists (vv. 8–9) Be sober and alert. There is an adversary — a legal opponent, someone bringing charges — described as a roaring lion looking for prey. The image in the ancient world was of a lion that has already selected its target and is roaring to drive it into panic. Peter’s response isn’t extraordinary heroics or monastic retreat. It’s firmness. Solid, dense, immovable. Faith has substance that doesn’t collapse under pressure. And the ground of that resistance is solidarity: your brothers and sisters throughout the world are experiencing the same sufferings. You are not an outlier. You are not uniquely targeted. You are not uniquely weak. The whole community of believers, distributed across the Roman Empire, is holding its ground in its own places. When suffering feels isolating — and it does — this reframes everything. The promise and the closing (vv. 10–14) After you have suffered a little while, the God of all grace will restore, establish, strengthen, and support you. Four verbs in rapid succession: restore (mend, set broken bones), establish (make firm, plant solidly), strengthen (invigorate), support (lay a foundation under). God is not waiting for his people to recover on their own. He is actively working to put them back together. “A little while” is relative language — Peter knows that. The suffering doesn’t feel little to the person inside it. But from the vantage point of eternity, even a lifetime of suffering is a little while. He’s not minimizing the suffering. He’s giving it its proper proportion against the backdrop of what is permanent. Silvanus (almost certainly Silas from Acts) carried the letter. Mark — almost certainly John Mark, described as Peter’s son — sends greetings. The man who wrote 1 and 2 Peter is the same man who gave us the Gospel of Mark through his companion. Two genres, one voice. The final blessing is simple and complete: Peace to all of you who are in Christ. Not peace in the absence of trouble. Not peace once Rome stops being cruel. Peace that is available right now, to scattered exiles, because of who holds them. What I’m meditating on: Peter ends exactly the way he began — grace and peace. By the time we reach these closing verses, we understand what grace and peace actually cost and what they rest on. It’s not cheap comfort. It’s the hard-won testimony of a man who watched Jesus die, met him risen, was restored through his own failures, and is now writing from Rome on borrowed time to people he will never meet. When he says “cast all your anxieties on him because he cares for you,” that sentence has survived thousands of years because what it addresses doesn’t change. What I’m praying about: That we would not gently set our anxieties aside but actually fling them — decisively, with intention — onto the God who cares for us. And that we would stop carrying what was never ours to carry. What I want to share: If you know someone carrying a heavy load right now, write out 1 Peter 5:7 and give it to them. Write it on a card. Text it. Say it out loud. The ground is simple: he cares for you. That’s enough. Download blank templates, schedules here: https://schmern2.notion.site/Downloads-Template-Word-and-Excel-Schedule-67439d14449d4c20bfe00efe069f78b8 [https://schmern2.notion.site/schmern2/The-Bible-in-Small-Steps-b99ab90118b3433bab73c488ef44d4d1] Logos RAMPS Workflow - RAMPS Bible Study - The Bible in Small Steps in Logos Workflows Jill’s Links https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/ [https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/] https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod [https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod] https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod] https://twitter.com/schmern [https://twitter.com/schmern] Email the podcast at [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] jill@startwithsmallsteps.com [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] “Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. The ESV text may not be quoted in any publication made available to the public by a Creative Commons license. The ESV may not be translated in whole or in part into any other language.” Scripture quotations marked CSB have been taken from the Christian Standard Bible®, Copyright © 2017 by Holman Bible Publishers. Used by permission. Christian Standard Bible® and CSB® are federally registered trademarks of Holman Bible Publishers. “The Scriptures quoted are from the NET Bible® http://netbible.com [http://netbible.com/] copyright ©1996, 2019 used with permission from Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. All rights reserved”. Bible Maps and images used with permission from https://www.bible.ca/maps/ [https://www.bible.ca/maps/] or https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/ [https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/] Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software. Free for non-commercial use by individuals or organizations. May be presented before live audiences; may be posted on social media; may be re-distributed. May not be used commercially. May not be modified or included in published works without permission; contact permissions@faithlife.com [permissions@faithlife.com]. Attribute as: “Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software ()”. By choosing to watch this video or listen to this podcast, you acknowledge that you are doing so of your own free will. The content shared here reflects personal study, faith perspective, and opinions and is intended for informational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a licensed pastor, seminary-trained theologian, or biblical scholar. Any scriptural interpretation, commentary, or reflections offered should not be considered a substitute for guidance from your own pastor, church body, or faith community. Theological understanding is a lifelong journey — I encourage you to study alongside your own tradition and trusted spiritual leaders. You are solely responsible for any decisions or actions you take based on this content.

17. juni 202622 min
episode 1 Peter 4 - Don’t Be Surprised by the Fiery Ordeal cover

1 Peter 4 - Don’t Be Surprised by the Fiery Ordeal

If you knew your time was short — not in a morbid way, but in the clarifying way that makes trivial things fall away — what would you do differently? That’s the energy underneath 1 Peter 4. Peter is writing to people who are suffering specifically because of their faith, and he doesn’t offer a quick resolution. What he offers is a reframe: this is what was expected, this is what it means, and this is the God in whose hands you are safe. Arm yourselves with the same understanding (vv. 1–6) Peter opens with a “therefore” — which means we need to look at what came before. Christ suffered in the flesh, died, rose, and now reigns. Every authority is subject to him. From that foundation, Peter draws a practical conclusion: if you arm yourself with Christ’s way of thinking, you will break decisively with your former orientation toward sin. The Greek word for “arm yourselves” (hoplízo) is a military term — but the weapon Peter has in mind is a posture of mind. The person who accepts suffering rather than compromising to avoid it has crossed a line. They’re no longer living to satisfy human desire; they’re living according to God’s will. The list of former behaviors Peter names — debauchery, drunkenness, idolatry — wasn’t a generic catalogue of potential sins. This was a description of normal civic and religious life in the Greco-Roman world. Temple worship, festival drinking, communal rituals — all of it was inseparable from participation in daily society. His readers had come out of that world, and their former community had noticed. The word Peter uses for the reaction is being shocked as if confronted with something foreign. And because they couldn’t explain it to their satisfaction, they slandered the Christians. Peter’s answer: slander is not the last word. God is. What really matters when time is short (vv. 7–11) Peter’s tightly organized answer to “what matters?” has three parts. First: be alert and sober-minded for prayer — the urgency of the time and the practice of prayer are directly connected. Second: sustained, stretched-out love for one another — the kind of love that doesn’t expose or weaponize the failures of others, but creates conditions for restoration. Third: hospitality without complaining. In the first century, hospitality was a survival mechanism, not a preference. Itinerant teachers had no hotel network; you opened your home. Peter acknowledges it’s costly and inconvenient, and he says anyway: stop the complaining. (I’ll admit this one hit me — I’ve been trying to get my floors refinished before I’d feel comfortable having people over for a Bible study. These people had nothing. The modern version of “I need the house to be ready first” is its own problem.) Spiritual gifts, Peter says, aren’t yours. Whatever you’ve been given was given for others. You are a steward of it — a household manager entrusted with something that belongs to God and meant to be used for the whole. Don’t be surprised by the fiery ordeal (vv. 12–19) This is where everything Peter has been building arrives. Don’t be shocked, he says — using the same word that described how the world was shocked by Christians’ changed behavior. The fiery ordeal (pýrōsis — the smelting process) is not random destruction. It’s refining. And suffering for bearing the name “Christian” (a word that appears only three times in the entire New Testament) carries no shame — quite the opposite. The Spirit of glory rests on the one being ridiculed in Christ’s name. The world sees humiliation; God sees His Spirit at rest on that person. Peter distinguishes carefully between suffering that is deserved (you did something wrong) and suffering that comes from faithfulness (you bore the name). Only one of these carries meaning. And “judgment begins in the house of God” — rooted in Ezekiel and Amos — means God is refining his own people first, producing faith that survives fire. This is not punishment. It is purpose. The chapter closes with one of the most powerful lines in the letter: entrust yourselves to a faithful Creator while doing what is good. The word “entrust” is like a deposit. You hand it over to the one you trust to keep it. Luke uses the same word for what Jesus said from the cross. This posture isn’t passive — it’s an active, ongoing act of trust combined with continued good works in the hands of the God who made them and will not let them go. What I’m meditating on: Suffering surprises us, even though God told us to expect it. The refining process is not abandonment. The Spirit of glory rests on the one being ridiculed. Those two things — the world’s verdict and God’s — are in direct contradiction, and Peter is asking his readers to live from the second one. What I’m praying about: That we would not be ashamed of the suffering that comes from doing right. That we would entrust everything to a faithful God who keeps what is deposited with him. What I want to share with others: If you know someone who’s surprised and disoriented by suffering — especially suffering that came because they were trying to do right — this is the passage to share with them. Peter says: don’t be surprised. It’s not a sign that God has forgotten you. It’s a refining process, and you are in the hands of someone who keeps what is entrusted to him. Download blank templates, schedules here: https://schmern2.notion.site/Downloads-Template-Word-and-Excel-Schedule-67439d14449d4c20bfe00efe069f78b8 [https://schmern2.notion.site/schmern2/The-Bible-in-Small-Steps-b99ab90118b3433bab73c488ef44d4d1] Logos RAMPS Workflow - RAMPS Bible Study - The Bible in Small Steps in Logos Workflows Jill’s Links https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/ [https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/] https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod [https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod] https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod] https://twitter.com/schmern [https://twitter.com/schmern] Email the podcast at [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] jill@startwithsmallsteps.com [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] “Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. The ESV text may not be quoted in any publication made available to the public by a Creative Commons license. The ESV may not be translated in whole or in part into any other language.” Scripture quotations marked CSB have been taken from the Christian Standard Bible®, Copyright © 2017 by Holman Bible Publishers. Used by permission. Christian Standard Bible® and CSB® are federally registered trademarks of Holman Bible Publishers. “The Scriptures quoted are from the NET Bible® http://netbible.com [http://netbible.com/] copyright ©1996, 2019 used with permission from Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. All rights reserved”. Bible Maps and images used with permission from https://www.bible.ca/maps/ [https://www.bible.ca/maps/] or https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/ [https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/] Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software. Free for non-commercial use by individuals or organizations. May be presented before live audiences; may be posted on social media; may be re-distributed. May not be used commercially. May not be modified or included in published works without permission; contact permissions@faithlife.com [permissions@faithlife.com]. Attribute as: “Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software ()”. By choosing to watch this video or listen to this podcast, you acknowledge that you are doing so of your own free will. The content shared here reflects personal study, faith perspective, and opinions and is intended for informational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a licensed pastor, seminary-trained theologian, or biblical scholar. Any scriptural interpretation, commentary, or reflections offered should not be considered a substitute for guidance from your own pastor, church body, or faith community. Theological understanding is a lifelong journey — I encourage you to study alongside your own tradition and trusted spiritual leaders. You are solely responsible for any decisions or actions you take based on this content.

15. juni 202625 min
episode 1 Peter 3 - When You’re Faithful in a Hard Relationship cover

1 Peter 3 - When You’re Faithful in a Hard Relationship

What does it look like to live faithfully in a relationship that’s hard and that you can’t leave? That’s the question 1 Peter 3 opens with — and it’s not a generic one. Peter is writing to women in first-century marriages where the wife has become a Christian and the husband has not. The social stakes for those women were enormous. And the counsel Peter gives is not what most people expect. Marriage Across the Faith Divide In the first-century Greco-Roman world, wives were expected to take their husband’s religion automatically. For a woman to convert to Christianity without her husband’s consent was to disrupt the household, threaten his social standing, and possibly cost them economically. She might face real hostility at home. Peter writes directly into that situation. His counsel: don’t lead with words. Let him see your conduct — the reverent, pure life of someone who belongs to something he doesn’t yet understand. The gentle and quiet spirit Peter describes is not passivity or timidity. It is the kind of steady, visible faithfulness that Jill says she watched in a college roommate before she was ever a Christian herself. She couldn’t name what it was. She just knew she wanted it. The Sarah Connection and the Husbands Peter holds up Sarah as an example — a woman who trusted God and submitted to her husband — and says these women are her daughters when they walk that path without fear. Then he turns to the husbands. In this section, “weaker partner” doesn’t mean inferior; in context it likely refers to the wife who is not yet a Christian, or to physical difference — but the instruction to the husband is striking either way: treat her as a co-heir of the grace of life. She, too, bears the image of God. She, too, inherits the kingdom. So that your prayers will not be hindered. Suffering as Christ Suffered Peter pivots from marriage to a broader pattern: the shape of faithful life in a hostile world is patterned after Christ himself. When Christ was insulted, he didn’t retaliate. When he suffered, he didn’t threaten. He entrusted himself to the one who judges justly. That is the posture Peter holds before these believers — not passive resignation, but active trust in God’s justice rather than self-protection. The witness of a life lived this way in front of someone who knows what you believe is louder than any argument. Always Be Ready to Give a Reason In the middle of this, Peter drops one of the most important lines in the letter: always be ready to give a reason for the hope that is in you. Peter is assuming something remarkable here — that a believer’s life should be so visibly shaped by unexplainable hope that people ask about it. The witness comes first. The words come second, and when they come, they should be gentle and reverent. Not a debate performance. Not a pre-packaged argument. A genuine answer to a genuine question from someone who has noticed that you have hope you shouldn’t logically have. The Spirits in Prison: Christ’s Cosmic Triumph This is the most debated passage in 1 Peter, and Jill lays out the interpretive options honestly. The text speaks of Christ going and proclaiming to “spirits in prison” — those who were disobedient in the days of Noah. The dominant interpretations are: (1) Christ preaching through Noah to the people of his generation; (2) Christ proclaiming his victory to fallen angelic spirits or demonic powers between his death and resurrection. Peter’s broader point, regardless of which interpretation holds, is unmistakable: the scope of Christ’s victory is total. He has triumphed over every power and authority, including the most ancient and deeply entrenched ones. Whatever was happening in that cosmic moment, the war was won. Baptism and the Noah Parallel Peter connects the flood to baptism in a typological move. Eight people — Noah’s family — were carried safely through waters that judged the rest of the world. Baptism is the fulfillment of that type: not the physical washing of dirt from the body, but an outward pledge of good conscience toward God, made possible through the resurrection. Peter is not teaching that the water itself saves. He is teaching that baptism is the outward expression of the inward turning of a person toward God, sealed in the resurrection of Jesus Christ. The One Who Has Already Won The chapter closes with a statement that is meant to be stabilizing for suffering people: Jesus, having died and risen, has now ascended to the right hand of the Father. All angels, all authorities, all powers are subject to him. Whatever is pressing in on these believers — social anxiety, political power, physical threat, spiritual forces — the one they follow has already conquered it. He went into the enemy’s compound and planted the flag. Death has no final claim. Sin has no final word. Hell itself was not beyond his reach. And if that is true, then the suffering of these exiles — real as it is — is not the last word on anything. Download blank templates, schedules here: https://schmern2.notion.site/Downloads-Template-Word-and-Excel-Schedule-67439d14449d4c20bfe00efe069f78b8 [https://schmern2.notion.site/schmern2/The-Bible-in-Small-Steps-b99ab90118b3433bab73c488ef44d4d1] Logos RAMPS Workflow - RAMPS Bible Study - The Bible in Small Steps in Logos Workflows Jill’s Links https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/ [https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/] https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod [https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod] https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod] https://twitter.com/schmern [https://twitter.com/schmern] Email the podcast at [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] jill@startwithsmallsteps.com [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] “Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. The ESV text may not be quoted in any publication made available to the public by a Creative Commons license. The ESV may not be translated in whole or in part into any other language.” Scripture quotations marked CSB have been taken from the Christian Standard Bible®, Copyright © 2017 by Holman Bible Publishers. Used by permission. Christian Standard Bible® and CSB® are federally registered trademarks of Holman Bible Publishers. “The Scriptures quoted are from the NET Bible® http://netbible.com [http://netbible.com/] copyright ©1996, 2019 used with permission from Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. All rights reserved”. Bible Maps and images used with permission from https://www.bible.ca/maps/ [https://www.bible.ca/maps/] or https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/ [https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/] Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software. Free for non-commercial use by individuals or organizations. May be presented before live audiences; may be posted on social media; may be re-distributed. May not be used commercially. May not be modified or included in published works without permission; contact permissions@faithlife.com [permissions@faithlife.com]. Attribute as: “Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software ()”. By choosing to watch this video or listen to this podcast, you acknowledge that you are doing so of your own free will. The content shared here reflects personal study, faith perspective, and opinions and is intended for informational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a licensed pastor, seminary-trained theologian, or biblical scholar. Any scriptural interpretation, commentary, or reflections offered should not be considered a substitute for guidance from your own pastor, church body, or faith community. Theological understanding is a lifelong journey — I encourage you to study alongside your own tradition and trusted spiritual leaders. You are solely responsible for any decisions or actions you take based on this content.

12. juni 202638 min
episode 1 Peter 2 - Be Built Together as Living Stones cover

1 Peter 2 - Be Built Together as Living Stones

What do you do with the part of yourself that you know needs to change — but changing it feels like you’re losing something? That’s where 1 Peter 2 begins. And it doesn’t begin with a demand. It begins with one of the most organic images in the New Testament for how Christian growth actually works. Strip Off and Crave The chapter opens with a “therefore” — a hinge word that connects everything Peter has just said about the new birth and the imperishable word of God to what comes next. Because of all that, here’s what to do: strip off malice, deceit, hypocrisy, envy, slander. The Greek word Peter uses means to remove a garment — not to white-knuckle your way out of bad behavior, but to take off what no longer belongs to who you are. And once those things are gone, the call is to crave — an intense Greek word for deep yearning — the pure spiritual milk of the word. The goal is growth toward the fullness of salvation: not just a past event, but a continuous movement. If you’ve actually tasted that the Lord is good, craving more is a natural response. You don’t have to manufacture the longing. The Living Stone and the Community Built Around Him This is where 1 Peter 2 becomes one of the richest passages in the letter. Peter draws from three Old Testament texts at once — Isaiah 28:16, Psalm 118:22, and Isaiah 8:14 — and weaves them into a single image: Jesus is the living stone. Not a static cornerstone sitting inert in the ground. A living God, active, present, generating life in those who come to him. He was rejected by the religious establishment, executed by the state, dismissed as a failed Messiah — and God raised him up and placed him as the cornerstone of everything. And here’s the remarkable turn: those who come to him become living stones themselves. The community of believers gathered around Jesus is now the place where heaven and earth meet. The temple is no longer a building. When Peter writes this, the Jerusalem temple is roughly seven years from being torn down stone by stone. The dwelling place of God on earth is now the people. Royal Priesthood, Holy Nation: A New Identity Peter compresses language from Exodus 19 and Isaiah 43 — words originally spoken to Israel — and applies them without hesitation to these scattered Gentile converts. Chosen race. Royal priesthood. Holy nation. A people for God’s possession. This was breathtaking to a Jewish reader and upending for the Gentile one. They had never been part of the covenant story. They were outside the synagogue, outside the Exodus, outside the promised land. But now — that word now is enormous — mercy has found them. They are God’s people. The purpose of this identity is not status. It is proclamation: to declare the magnificent acts of the one who called them out of darkness into his marvelous light. Exiles in the Public Square Because of who they are, Peter calls them to live accordingly in the world that is watching. The sinful desires that war against the soul are not mere inconveniences — the Greek word is military: an organized campaign against the inner life. Abstaining from sin is half the picture. The other half is visible, active good conduct before the watching non-believing world. Peter’s answer to slander is not to argue back. It is to live well enough that the watching world runs out of legitimate accusations. He anticipates something remarkable: the day will come when those observations become an occasion for glorifying God. Submission to Authority — and Its Limits Peter addresses submission to governing authorities in the context of active persecution — Nero’s Rome, where the instinct for a minority would be to withdraw or resist. Peter calls for something harder. Not because the emperor is right or the system is just, but because the believer’s conduct within those structures is itself part of the witness. Submit where you can. But the moment the government asks you to deny Christ or commit sin, that is where the line is drawn. The four closing commands of this section are single words in Greek, balanced: honor everyone, love the brothers and sisters, fear God, honor the emperor. The emperor gets the same word as every other human — honor, not worship. He is a bearer of God’s image. He is not a god. The Suffering Servant and the Atonement Peter closes the chapter by addressing enslaved people — doulos, those legally bound to a master across a wide range of situations in the Roman world — with words that do not endorse slavery but give framework for enduring an unchosen situation with integrity. The model he holds before them is Christ himself: bearing insults without retaliation, suffering without threatening, trusting the one who judges justly. Peter then steps from moral example into atonement theology itself. He himself bore our sins at the tree. The language comes from Isaiah 53 and from the temple sacrificial system. Jesus didn’t mainly model patient suffering. He accomplished something. Having died to sin, we may live in righteousness. By his wounds, you have been healed. The chapter closes with this: you were like sheep going astray — and you have returned to the shepherd, the overseer of your souls. Download blank templates, schedules here: https://schmern2.notion.site/Downloads-Template-Word-and-Excel-Schedule-67439d14449d4c20bfe00efe069f78b8 [https://schmern2.notion.site/schmern2/The-Bible-in-Small-Steps-b99ab90118b3433bab73c488ef44d4d1] Logos RAMPS Workflow - RAMPS Bible Study - The Bible in Small Steps in Logos Workflows Jill’s Links https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/ [https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/] https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod [https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod] https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod] https://twitter.com/schmern [https://twitter.com/schmern] Email the podcast at [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] jill@startwithsmallsteps.com [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] “Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. The ESV text may not be quoted in any publication made available to the public by a Creative Commons license. The ESV may not be translated in whole or in part into any other language.” Scripture quotations marked CSB have been taken from the Christian Standard Bible®, Copyright © 2017 by Holman Bible Publishers. Used by permission. Christian Standard Bible® and CSB® are federally registered trademarks of Holman Bible Publishers. “The Scriptures quoted are from the NET Bible® http://netbible.com [http://netbible.com/] copyright ©1996, 2019 used with permission from Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. All rights reserved”. Bible Maps and images used with permission from https://www.bible.ca/maps/ [https://www.bible.ca/maps/] or https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/ [https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/] Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software. Free for non-commercial use by individuals or organizations. May be presented before live audiences; may be posted on social media; may be re-distributed. May not be used commercially. May not be modified or included in published works without permission; contact permissions@faithlife.com [permissions@faithlife.com]. Attribute as: “Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software ()”. By choosing to watch this video or listen to this podcast, you acknowledge that you are doing so of your own free will. The content shared here reflects personal study, faith perspective, and opinions and is intended for informational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a licensed pastor, seminary-trained theologian, or biblical scholar. Any scriptural interpretation, commentary, or reflections offered should not be considered a substitute for guidance from your own pastor, church body, or faith community. Theological understanding is a lifelong journey — I encourage you to study alongside your own tradition and trusted spiritual leaders. You are solely responsible for any decisions or actions you take based on this content.

10. juni 202635 min
episode 1 Peter 1 - When You Feel Like You Don’t Belong cover

1 Peter 1 - When You Feel Like You Don’t Belong

Have you ever felt like you didn’t quite belong where you were? Like the culture right outside your front door and the values being celebrated there just didn’t line up with who you are or what you believe? Peter had a word for that feeling. He called it exile. And 1 Peter 1 was written for exactly that person. The Letter, the Man, and the Moment Peter writes this letter somewhere around 63–67 AD, just a few years before the Jerusalem temple falls. He’s writing from Rome — where Nero is actively blaming Christians for a fire he almost certainly started himself. The recipients? Scattered believers across five provinces of Asia Minor: Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia Minor, and Bithynia. These are mostly Gentile converts who have left behind their old religious and social world, and paid a real price for it. Peter writes to people who are being socially ostracized, misrepresented, and in some places physically persecuted — people who feel like strangers in their own communities. Chosen and Exiles at the Same Time Right from the opening verse, Peter names his readers two things simultaneously: chosen and exiles. That tension is the whole letter. They are aliens living on the margins of the dominant Greco-Roman culture — and at the same time, they are covenant people, selected by the foreknowledge of God the Father, set apart by the sanctifying work of the Holy Spirit, brought into relationship through the blood of Jesus Christ. Peter wants them to hold both truths at once, from the very first sentence. And tucked inside that greeting: a Trinitarian structure that doesn’t use the word Trinity, but doesn’t need to. The Doxology Before Anything Else Before Peter makes a single demand, he breaks into praise. Borrowed from the Jewish liturgical tradition, this opening doxology is not mere warm-up. It is Peter leading his suffering readers into a posture of gratitude before he calls them to anything. Everything that follows flows from one central fact: Jesus rose from the dead. New birth, living hope, the guarded inheritance — all of it is downstream from the resurrection. Living Hope and the Imperishable Inheritance Peter’s phrase “living hope” is theologically precise. The Stoics of his day treated hope as self-deception — wishful thinking that sets you up for disappointment. Peter doesn’t soften hope. He modifies it with the most important adjective available: living. This hope participates in the same resurrection power that raised Jesus from the dead. It cannot be killed because it is rooted in someone who has already defeated death. And the inheritance he describes is protected by three deliberate negatives: imperishable (cannot decay), undefiled (cannot be corrupted), unfading (never loses its color). Everything the world offers — wealth, reputation, beauty — fails at least one of those tests. This inheritance fails none of them. A Faith Refined by Fire Peter doesn’t pretend that the interval between promise and fulfillment is painless. He acknowledges that these believers are suffering various trials. But the image he reaches for is gold tested in fire. The testing of faith produces something more valuable than refined metal. It produces a proven faith — the kind that prophets longed to see, the kind that angels crane their necks to witness. The readers aren’t on the wrong side of history. They’re standing at the center of something the whole arc of Scripture was pointing toward. Holy Living Grounded in Cost The call to holy conduct in the chapter’s second half is not moralism. Peter doesn’t say “try harder not to be like your old self.” Instead, he names the cost. You were not redeemed with gold or silver. The Passover lamb was examined carefully before sacrifice — spotless, set apart, without defect. Christ is that lamb, known from the foundation of the world. To treat that lightly is not just unwise. Peter names it plainly: it is ingratitude. The motivation for holy living is not fear of punishment. It’s the weight of what was paid. Love That Doesn’t Retract Peter closes with the community that new birth creates. The obedience to truth is not the ground of salvation — it is the fruit of it. And the evidence of genuine transformation is not private piety in isolation. It is a love that is earnest — the Greek word Peter uses means stretched to full extension, the same word Jesus used at Gethsemane. It’s a love that costs something, that does not retract under pressure, from a pure heart, not for performance. The ground of this love is shared: they have all been born again from the same imperishable seed — the word of God that endures forever. Download blank templates, schedules here: https://schmern2.notion.site/Downloads-Template-Word-and-Excel-Schedule-67439d14449d4c20bfe00efe069f78b8 [https://schmern2.notion.site/schmern2/The-Bible-in-Small-Steps-b99ab90118b3433bab73c488ef44d4d1] Logos RAMPS Workflow - RAMPS Bible Study - The Bible in Small Steps in Logos Workflows Jill’s Links https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/ [https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/] https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod [https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod] https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod] https://twitter.com/schmern [https://twitter.com/schmern] Email the podcast at [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] jill@startwithsmallsteps.com [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] “Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. The ESV text may not be quoted in any publication made available to the public by a Creative Commons license. The ESV may not be translated in whole or in part into any other language.” Scripture quotations marked CSB have been taken from the Christian Standard Bible®, Copyright © 2017 by Holman Bible Publishers. Used by permission. Christian Standard Bible® and CSB® are federally registered trademarks of Holman Bible Publishers. “The Scriptures quoted are from the NET Bible® http://netbible.com [http://netbible.com/] copyright ©1996, 2019 used with permission from Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. All rights reserved”. Bible Maps and images used with permission from https://www.bible.ca/maps/ [https://www.bible.ca/maps/] or https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/ [https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/] Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software. Free for non-commercial use by individuals or organizations. May be presented before live audiences; may be posted on social media; may be re-distributed. May not be used commercially. May not be modified or included in published works without permission; contact permissions@faithlife.com [permissions@faithlife.com]. Attribute as: “Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software ()”. By choosing to watch this video or listen to this podcast, you acknowledge that you are doing so of your own free will. The content shared here reflects personal study, faith perspective, and opinions and is intended for informational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a licensed pastor, seminary-trained theologian, or biblical scholar. Any scriptural interpretation, commentary, or reflections offered should not be considered a substitute for guidance from your own pastor, church body, or faith community. Theological understanding is a lifelong journey — I encourage you to study alongside your own tradition and trusted spiritual leaders. You are solely responsible for any decisions or actions you take based on this content.

8. juni 202632 min