Living As Citizens of Heaven 1 Peter 1:1
This is part of a series on 1 Peter
Summary
Michael Easley begins this series on 1 Peter by introducing the letter as a guide for believers who face suffering because of their faith. While most Christians in America do not experience direct persecution, Peter’s message offers timeless encouragement for anyone walking through hardship. The central call of the letter is simple: stand firm.
This sermon explores the historical setting of 1 Peter, written during growing hostility toward Christians under Roman rule. Peter reminds believers that they are strangers in this world, chosen by God and living with a greater hope than their present circumstances.
Michael highlights five major themes running throughout the book: the Trinity, God’s work in salvation, the Old Testament as a Christian story pointing to Christ, the necessity of Christian obedience, and faithful endurance through suffering. He also unpacks 1 Peter 3:18, showing how Christ’s once-for-all sacrifice secured salvation through His substitutionary death, bringing sinners into a restored relationship with God.
Finally, the introduction reminds believers that this world is not their home. Christians are scattered throughout the world for God’s purposes while longing for their true citizenship in heaven. No matter the trial, Peter’s opening message is one of confidence and hope: God chose His people, God sustains His people, and God will bring them safely home.
Takeaways
- 1 Peter was written to encourage believers to stand firm while suffering for the sake of Christ.
- Salvation begins with God’s initiative, reminding Christians that they are chosen entirely by His grace.
- The Old Testament consistently points forward to Christ and finds its fulfillment in the gospel.
- Genuine faith is demonstrated through holy obedience, not merely intellectual belief.
- Christ’s once-for-all sacrifice completely accomplished what the Old Testament sacrificial system never could.
- Christians are temporary residents on earth, living with hope because their true citizenship is in heaven.
To read 1 Peter, click here.
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