Am I in the right place?
Tim Vasby-Burnie
'What am I doing here?' 'Are we in the right place?' These could be the questions of a Christian in the public sector, trying to tread delicately but truthfully during Pride month. Or the Christian minister in a church that is resistant to Biblical truth. Or Christians in a village in India actively hostile to the precariously small Christian community.
Peter’s first letter is addressed to 'God’s elect, exiles scattered'. It seems almost a contradiction. To be God’s elect may bring to your mind associations with honour, glory, status, privilege. Exile has associations with shame, suffering, being overlooked or looked down upon. Peter brings both together throughout the letter, right the way to 5:15 where greetings are sent from 'she who is in Babylon, chosen together with you'. Exiled in Babylon, yet chosen, elect.
Four ways union with Christ changes everything
During a wedding, a groom will say to his bride: “All that I am I give to you, and all that I have I share with you.” As a result of these words, and being united together, the bride shares in any titles or wealth that her now-husband had before the service started.
Similarly, in chapter 2 of his first letter, Peter writes “As you come to him, the living Stone – rejected by humans but chosen by God and precious to him – you also like living stones….” and goes on to describe wonderful truths about the church. From this, let's consider the wonderful ways that we inherit certain “properties” from Jesus, because we are enclosed in Him and united to Him.