Embracing Our Identity in Christ: Hope and Purpose

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1. "So joining a community group that takes a risk, being willing to step into a relationship and inviting other people to know who you are. And, but I'm telling you, as my own spiritual journey, it's worth the risk. Being willing to be known and to get to know other folks. This is a great place for you to learn and grow in your spiritual journey, corporate worship. But one of the ways that we really become the people that God's called us to be is by doing this in relationship and having people share with you." [30:15] (31 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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2. "And the reason we're studying First Peter right now is because we're wanting to gain an understanding of how do we live with hope in the midst of difficulty. That's the overarching theme. This idea of suffering runs through all of this letter that Peter wrote to this church who themselves were experiencing persecution and suffering and hardship. And he's pointing them to live in hope because of what Jesus has done for them. And so as we're studying and learning about this, we're gaining all this insight into what it means to live as God's elect exiles." [31:29] (31 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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3. "What does it mean that he's describing them as a chosen race? This points us back to Peter's first verse in the whole letter. He says that they are elect exiles. He says chosen sojourners. Peter reminds us that God called a certain family to be his own, the descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, to be his people, a chosen race that he would bless in order that they would be a blessing to the nations, which was the promise to Abraham. And now God's chosen race is a family, not based on a physical heritage determined by a bloodline, but rather a spiritual heritage made possible through the blood of Jesus Christ." [38:00] (42 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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4. "When we know that we've been set apart by a glorious God, it changes who we are. Peter also describes them as a royal priesthood, sometimes described or translated as a kingdom of priests. I touched on this last week as the church is described as a holy priesthood. Here, it's a royal priesthood. Now, priests were really important to God's people, and they facilitated the worship life of the community in the Old Testament. The sons of Levi, one of the 12 tribes of Israel, they were set apart from other families in order to function in, in the temple." [41:37] (42 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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5. "Peter describes them as a nation that is set apart. Holy means to be set apart, perfect and pure. Now, we're not holy because of our work, anything that we've done, but we're holy because of what Jesus has done. This means that we are to live out lives of obedience. Peter touched on this in chapter one, verse 17. He says, be holy just as I am holy, reminding them of the commandment in the Old Testament. This means that we are a spiritual family set apart. And it's not based on an ethnic identity. It's not based on geographical boundaries. Instead, the evidence of our nation, our nationhood, is our allegiance to the heavenly King Jesus." [45:03] (41 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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6. "So as God's people, we know that we've been chosen by the Father. And so our identity is that of a people who are being brought up into Christ, claimed, called, and cared for eternally, and loved by God the Father. And so when we know this, when we allow this truth to resonate and to filter down into our lives, it changes who we are as people. That means that there should be something noticeable in our demeanor, in our attitude, even in our language. Everything of who we are, everything that we have, should be affected by this sense of God's great love for us." [46:57] (37 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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7. "The more we meditate on Jesus, the more we think about our being chosen, the more we think about the greatness and the glory and the goodness of God, the more we lean in, the more we're willing to take steps of obedience to respond to who he is and what he has done. I remember having a conversation with a friend of mine in Memphis, and he was very, very successful. And he spent most of his life trying to live what he understood to be the good life by having amazing experiences, by going on vacations, by having beautiful things." [48:37] (30 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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8. "And so by grace, God has revealed to me over time that his kingdom and his person and the community of faith is more valuable. That doesn't mean that I still don't struggle with those things. But then in increasing measure, as I encounter Jesus, as I work out my faith with fear and trembling, I realize that I value something different. It's more important to me. And that to the world and to him is a peculiar thing. It didn't make sense. He wasn't understanding why I was doing that." [50:23] (35 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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9. "What is the peculiar thing that is attainable and realistic for you that means you're living as a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a peculiar person? People when they ask you about what's going on in your life would go, huh, what are you doing that for? What is that thing? Because it's not going to be go to Africa for most people. But it's going to be something else. If we're really falling in love with Jesus and valuing the kingdom, there's going to be something in our lives that people say, what's up with that?" [52:44] (32 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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10. "So we're living out our lives with our words and our actions what the good news of the gospel is. And then he challenged them to remember in verse 10, once they were not a people, but now they are God's people. Once they had not received mercy, but now they have received mercy. Mercy is not getting what you deserve. Because of our brokenness and because of our sin, what we deserve is judgment and justice. And when we get mercy, we don't get what we deserve. Grace is getting what you don't deserve. Mercy is not getting what you deserve." [57:22] (38 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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