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Wayfaring Strangers A Study Of 1 Peter , Part 1 Introduction
Contributed by Randy Edwards on Feb 13, 2018 (message contributor)
Summary: Part one of our 1 Peter study
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Wayfaring Strangers
A study of 1 Peter
Part 1
1 Peter 1:1-2, 6 John 16:33
Introduction
How many of you have been somewhere in your life?
Where you just did not feel comfortable
You did not feel that you belonged there?
Maybe it was a place, a bad situation maybe even a relationship
Maybe it was just that what ever was going on was not what you were into
I can tell you there have been many times in my life
Where I have found myself in this type of situation
I remember a few years ago
Several thousand miles from here
Standing outside
Looking at the Zambian sunset
Surrounded by friends who were there for the same reason I was
Surrounded by almost 2 million citizens of Lusaka
And feeling so alone
Why
Because
I was in a strange land
I did not understand the language
The culture
The customs
Quite frankly
As Deets asked Captain Call
When the rode into Wyoming
“Captain, why are we here- this ain’t our country”
As I stood in Lusaka
Waiting to head out to Chong Whey village
I felt like a wayfaring stranger
A foreigner in a strange land
An alien- not a monster from outer space
Although they did call me “the moon man” in Zambia
But someone who did not belong
This is where I want to go today as we begin a series on the book of 1 Peter
Today we are beginning a journey through I Peter titled” wayfaring strangers”
I encourage you put in a book mark, the little ribbon that comes with your bibles or whatever you use to mark your place
Because we’re going to be here for several months.
We’re going to go through this epistle verse-by-verse so that we can discover what God is saying to us today.
I also encourage you to read and study this little book in your own quiet times
It is my desire to teach you to become students of scripture
Not just readers or listeners of scripture
But it is also my goal to get each of you to be livers of scripture
1 Peter
It’s short
Only 5 chapters
Only 5 pages in a non-study bible
Only 105 verses
I Peter can easily be read in less than an hour by most people and if you are a slow reader
Certainty in a few hours.
I challenge you to read this great book for yourself
Think about it
Study it
And apply it to your life
If you do that
I can promise that you will get much more from this series
Than if you just show up here on Sunday and wait for me to tell you what it says
A Question that is often asked Whenever we start a new series through a book
Is why this book? “why I Peter and not any of the 65 other books in the Bible?”.
Here’s my answer:
We are going through I Peter because it is
Short
It is simple,
and it speaks to us today in this world
Right where we live
Peter wrote to scattered believers Jews and Gentiles to encourage them to live for Christ in a hostile world.
It is both a message of encouragement ---Hold tight- stay hooked
Don’t go back to the gate
And it is a warning that the Christian life is not and will not be easy
And a promise that obedience will be rewarded
In short
It will be hard
But it will be worth it
As I think about our own congregation
As a church, we’re no longer a truly local congregation.
We have members and visitors from Tyler to Emory
From Terrell to Big Sandy
Think about this
In the old days
Most people went to church inn the community that they lived in
Many living within just a few miles of the church
And those people interacted with their church family on a regular basis
In many aspects of life
Work
School
Shopping
Day to day life
That’s no longer true. Today we are a regional church with a congregation drawn from many different towns, cities and communities
Sometimes if you are not going to a church or a church -related event
You can go the whole week without ever seeing another person from Caney Creek
And because of this it’s easy to feel alone and disconnected.
So now simply take that situation and stretch it out to cover hundreds of miles, place it in ancient Asia Minor,
Turn the clock back to the first century
Add the hostile feelings from the non-believing world
Families
Friends
Acquaintances
Co workers
The Romans
The Jews
The pagans
And you can begin to place yourself in the shoes and lives of those who Peter originally wrote to