1. "I was, and I still am, convinced that Jesus is the greatest news the world has ever received. And to make efforts, even cringy efforts, to introduce Jesus to the world, I don't think I want to apologize for that. To introduce people to Jesus is an act of love. But since then, I've learned a few things. And I've learned particularly that the way the good news of Jesus is presented, and how we understand salvation in Jesus, is significant."
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2. "We may need a more nuanced and, dare I say, mature approach to help our neighbors discover the salvation offered by our God in Jesus. So here's the thing. Here's my hope. My hope is that we can discover this deep, robust, nuanced salvation in the letter of 1 Peter. So for the rest of this fall, we plan to anchor these gatherings in a bit of an exegetical study of 1 Peter. This just means we are going to go passage by passage, section by section, unpacking and reflecting on Peter's letter to a hurting and scattered church, and his invitation and encouragement to continue to embody a Christian presence, even in a hostile world."
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3. "To be saved is not just to be released from something, it is to be invited into holy community with a community called Trinity. A quick word on how our triune God marks us. First, the foreknowledge of the Father. From the beginning of time, God has chosen that the church would be his holy people. Now this leads into the quintessential debate, Calvinism and Arminianism. If you're unaware of what I'm talking about, there are two schools of thought attempting to explain God's sovereignty and humanity's responsibility."
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4. "Peter is writing to these Gentile believers using Old Testament metaphors and language to let them know that God has always planned to adopt them into his one large multi-ethnic family. His plan from the beginning was inclusion and welcome to make for himself a family made up of all nations and tongue. So we are the family of God the Father, and we are being shaped by the Spirit. Peter writes of the sanctifying work of the Spirit. Now sanctification is the act of making something or someone holy."
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5. "The Spirit hovers over the chaos of the human heart and brings about a new creation and a new order. The Spirit is at work developing, growing, and sanctifying the people of God for the work of God. For to be holy is to be set apart for someone or something. And in our case, it is to be set apart for God himself. The Spirit shapes us so that we might be obedient to the Son. It's the third member of the Trinity, the sacrifice of the Son. Now, the centerpiece of the Christian faith is what Jesus does on Good Friday and Easter morning."
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6. "Ultimately, what is accomplished by Jesus's sacrifice is victorious, liberating, and cleansing. By his blood poured out for us, we are saved. And the place to begin with salvation is not simply that it is a get-out-of-hell-free card, but that it is an invitation into life with the community of God, a holy community with the foreknowledge of the Father, a shaping spirit, and our sacrificing Savior."
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7. "Holiness is not a call to be better, it's to be fully devoted. And salvation is more than this cosmic self-preservation or a sinner's prayer. It is an invitation to life with a holy God. It is a dynamic and interactive and loving relationship with God Almighty. We're not just saved from something, we are saved to something. Namely, life with the triune community."
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8. "We are new creatures. Peter uses his Jesus's words from 3. Truly, I tell you, no one can see the kingdom of God unless they are born again. This is a theological concept called regeneration. I think that's theological concept number four in today's teaching. Regeneration is this idea of renewal, healing, and restoration of all that has gone wrong in our lives and in our bodies. The salvation Jesus offers is a molecular, biological, and psychological renewal of the whole of our person permeated with the love and grace of our God."
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9. "Peter isn't calling for violent revolution. He is infusing their present circumstances with dignity, love, and hope. Peter is leading a revolution of defiant joy. These Christians, that these Christians, excuse me, might have a joy that subverts whatever suffering they may be experiencing. And that theme of subversiveness is all throughout Peter's letter. What he's doing is working within the boundaries of his first century cultural norms to elevate and empower those without. He's writing a subversive guide to changing the status quo through love, not violence."
[31:00] (42 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

10. "The salvation offered in Jesus is not just good news for you and me, it is good news for the entire world. And this is the dizzying grandeur of what God is doing through Jesus. What he has done for each of us he is planning to do for the whole of the world. Fleming Rutledge again, the first epistle of Peter speaks of this new preaching as the things which have now been announced to you by those who have preached the good news to you things into which the angels long to look."
[36:00] (36 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)