Joy in the
Midst of Suffering .
.
Our New Birth Through the
Resurrection of Jesus Christ Fills
Us with Joy and Hope
(1
Peter
1:3–9)
by Dr.
Daniel A. Keating
The following brief commentary
from the First Letter of Peter, Chapter 1
is excerpted from the book, Catholic
Commentary on Sacred Scripture: 1 Peter,
2 Peter, and Jude, by Dr. Daniel
Keating, published by Baker Academic,
2011. While it was written from a Roman
Catholic perspective, the material can be
beneficial for Christians from other
traditions as well. Dr. Keating explains
the aim of his commentary in the
introduction to 1 Peter: “The First Letter
of Peter is a hidden gem, tucked away
among the catholic epistles, just waiting
to be discovered. Overshadowed by the
longer and weightier letters of Paul, 1
Peter has often been neglected or
undervalued. My aim in this commentary is
to aid the reader in discovering the
riches of this letter, in the hope that he
or she may hear its proclamation of the
gospel anew and follow the call to suffer
joyfully with Christ.” – ed.
Opening blessing and
proclamation
The opening blessing of 1 Peter is one of the
most inspiring passages in the New Testament.
Even in English translation, the powerful
language and dynamic movement of the text are
striking. Just as in verse 2, Peter offers his
blessing in terms of the activity of the Father
(vv. 3–5), the Son (vv. 3, 7–8), and the Spirit
(vv. 10–12). The blessing is at one and the same
time an offering of praise to God for his works
and a proclamation of God’s works. It is both a
prayer and a proclamation, announcing key themes
that Peter will unfold in the remainder of the
letter.
3 Blessed be the God and Father
of our Lord Jesus Christ, who in his
great mercy gave us a new birth to a
living hope through the resurrection of
Jesus Christ from the dead, 4 to an inheritance that is
imperishable, undefiled, and unfading,
kept in heaven for you 5 who by the power of God are
safeguarded through faith, to a
salvation that is ready to be revealed
in the final time. 6 In this you rejoice, although
now for a little while you may have to
suffer through various trials, 7so that the genuineness of
your faith, more precious than gold that
is perishable even though tested by
fire, may prove to be for praise, glory,
and honor at the revelation of Jesus
Christ. 8Although you have not seen him
you love him; even though you do not see
him now yet believe in him, you rejoice
with an indescribable and glorious joy,
9as you attain the goal of
[your] faith, the salvation of your
souls.
OT
references: Exodus 20:6; 34:7;
Proverbs 17:3; Sirach 2:5
NT
references: Matthew 25:21; John
20:29; 2 Cor inthians 4:17
v. 3:
Peter opens with a Jewish prayer form called a
berakah (Hebrew for “blessing”), Blessed
be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ, offering praise to God the
Father, the source of mercy, for the benefits
Christians have received.23
It was precisely God’s mercy that was the
basis for his covenants with Moses and David.24
By speaking of God’s mercy as the basis for
the blessings received in Christ in the New
Covenant, Peter strongly indicates continuity
with the action of God in the Old Covenant.
Peter gives praise to God the Father for two
specific benefits. The first is a new
birth to a living hope through the
resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.
God the Father has given us a new birth25
through the resurrection of Jesus. Why the
link between our new birth and Christ’s
resurrection? Because the resurrection of
Christ is the cause and source of our new
birth into God’s people and household. This is
why baptism was normally celebrated in the
early Church at Easter, the feast of the
resurrection.
Peter speaks of a living hope, a
theme that recurs throughout the letter (1:13,
21; 3:5, 15). This hope refers to the object
of our hope, namely, the full inheritance (v.
4) that we will receive when Jesus Christ
comes again (vv. 5, 7). It is a living hope
because Jesus Christ himself is alive, and we
have come to life in him. As Peter says in
2:2, we are like newborn babes, drinking pure
spiritual milk, so that we “may grow into
salvation”: this is our living hope.
vv. 4–5:
The second benefit is an inheritance that
is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading.
The triad of adjectives powerfully conveys the
security of our inheritance in Christ.26
Whereas all earthly treasure is subject to
decay, Peter assures us that we have an
inheritance – eternal life in heaven – that
cannot perish, that has no stain or defect,
and that will never lose its glory. Why?
Because it is kept in heaven for us by
God himself, where no moth and rust consume
(Matthew 6:20).
Peter gives further assurance that even in
this life we are safeguarded through faith
by the power of God, so we should not be
afraid. It is not only our future inheritance
in heaven that is secure. Even now on earth we
ourselves are safeguarded through our faith in
Christ, safeguarded, that is, for a
salvation that is ready to be revealed.
Peter is referring here to the second coming
of Christ (see v. 7). “Salvation” is the
general term in 1 Peter that sums up all that
we receive in Christ. In some cases it refers
to our present status in Christ that comes
through faith and baptism (3:21), but here it
points to our future destiny that will be ours
when Christ returns (see also 1:9, 10; 2:2).
For Peter, our salvation is both present and
future; it is something that we have already
entered into through faith and baptism but
that will be completed only when Christ comes
again.
The final time refers to Christ’s
return and the end of the world. “Final,” or
“last,” translates the Greek eschatos,
from which we derive eschatology, the account
of the last things that will occur when Christ
comes again. “Time” translates kairos,
a word that often means God’s timely
intervention according to his plan. In 1
Peter, kairos clearly carries this
sense (see 1:11; 4:17; 5:6); it refers to
God’s providential time when he will act. The
“final time,” then, is that moment in human
history when God will intervene decisively
through the return of Christ and bring our
salvation to completion.
Reflection and
application
Peter tells us further (1:23) that we have
been “born anew, not from perishable seed but
from imperishable seed, through the living and
abiding word of God.” What does this mean? The
logic is this. Every kind of seed produces
something of its own kind. Grass seed produces
grass. Human seed produces humans. In an
analogical way, divine seed, the Word of God,
produces a new birth that brings about the
fruits of divine life in us. This rebirth is a
remarkable thing: it is what makes us capable
of being holy, of loving one another, and of
enduring suffering for Christ’s sake. But we
have to nourish and cultivate this seed, so
that it might bear all the fruits of God’s
life in us.
Joy in the midst of
suffering
vv. 6–7:
Peter now introduces a profound paradox: the
presence of inexpressible joy in the midst of
suffering. He says first that we rejoice
in this living hope, which is our
salvation, present and future. Who would not
rejoice? But then he tells us that now
we must be ready to suffer through various
trials, even if only for a little
while. This echoes Paul’s reference to
the “momentary light affliction” that is
preparing us for “an eternal weight of glory”
(2 Corinthians 4:17).
Using a metaphor found frequently in the Old
Testament (Job 23:10; Proverbs 17:3; Wisdom
3:5–7; Zech 13:9), Peter compares the testing
of our faith to the purification of gold
by fire. The sentence structure is
difficult to follow, but the point of the
comparison is perfectly clear. If gold, the
most precious of earthly substances, requires
purification, how much more does our faith –
more precious than any earthly gold – benefit
from the purifying fire of our trials. “For in
fire gold is tested, and worthy men in the
crucible of humiliation” (Sirach 2:5).
The term genuineness is difficult to
capture in one English word. It really means
“the genuine quality produced through
testing.” The point is this: through various
trials faith is made more pure, just as gold
in the fire. When Jesus is revealed in his
coming again, all these trials will result in
praise, glory, and honor for those who
have endured faithfully. They will hear the
Lord say, “Well done, my good and faithful
servant” (Matthew 25:21).
vv. 8–9:
Peter knows that the Christians he is
addressing have not seen Jesus with
their own eyes. Nonetheless, he reminds them
that despite not seeing him, they came to love
him. And though they do not
see him in the present time either, yet
they continue to believe in him. As
Jesus said to Thomas, “Blessed are those who
have not seen and have believed” (John 20:29).
Faith and love are not dependent on seeing the
risen Lord with our eyes.
More than this, Peter says that they rejoice
with an indescribable and glorious joy in
the present time. Despite serious trials, the
living hope they have in Christ brings
profound joy. This is not the stoic, cheerless
attitude sometimes ascribed to Christians, but
rather the deep joy that comes from already
possessing a foretaste of our heavenly
inheritance. And it is joy that has the upper
hand here. Structurally, Peter surrounds the
promise of suffering (vv. 6b–7) with joy on
either side (vv. 6a and 8). Suffering and
trial are fenced in, so to speak, by the
overwhelming reality of the great joy that is
ours even now in Christ.
Even though Christ is not yet seen, they attain
the goal of their faith, which
is the salvation of their souls. The
verb is best rendered by the English present
progressive tense: they are attaining
the goal of their faith, even as they
move toward that final goal. And the goal is
salvation, the full inheritance that will be
ours when Christ returns again. But what does
Peter mean when he says “the salvation of your
souls”? “Soul” here should not be understood
in contrast to the body, as if only the
spiritual part of us will be saved at the last
day. To the contrary, “soul” represents the
inner and essential life of a human being but
does not exclude the body. The salvation of
our souls is the salvation of our entire
lives, including our resurrected bodies.
Reflection and
application
How can joy coexist with suffering? In the
natural order of things, joy and happiness are
equated with the absence of suffering.
When suffering arrives, sadness and grief
naturally follow. Is Peter then being
incoherent when he speaks in one breath of
“indescribable and glorious joy” and the
suffering of “various trials”? No, not if we
take into account the power of the gospel.
Only through the gospel can we experience true
joy in the midst of suffering. Since we have a
“new birth” and a “living hope” within us, the
trials of life need not quench our joy. Saint
Francis of Assisi is a remarkable example of
this. He experienced what he called “perfect
joy” right in the middle of his most intense
trials.
Peter is simply recasting here what Jesus
said to his disciples: “Blessed are you when
people hate you, and when they exclude and
insult you, and denounce your name as evil on
account of the Son of Man. Rejoice and leap
for joy on that day! Behold, your reward will
be great in heaven” (Luke 6:22–23). Knowing
profound joy even in the midst of genuine
suffering is a mark of the disciples of Jesus;
it shows that we possess more than transient
enthusiasm. Even though we haven’t seen the
risen Jesus with our eyes, we do have the Holy
Spirit dwelling in us, and so we can “rejoice
with an indescribable and glorious joy.” As we
experience and display this paradoxical joy in
the midst of trials, we give witness to those
around us that the gospel gives power to
engage and overcome the sufferings of the
world.
Notes
23
The berakah is the standard form for
Jewish blessings. For examples in both the Old
Testament and New Testament, see Gen 14:20; 1
Sam 25:32; Ezra 7:27; Ps 31:21; Dan 3:28; Luke
1:68; 2 Cor 1:3; Eph 1:3.
24
See Exod 20:6; 34:7; Deut 5:10; 2 Sam 7:15; Ps
89:28.
25
The ESV translates this “caused us to be born
again,” whereas the RSV has “we have been born
anew.” The verb here, “to give new birth” (anagennao),
is unique to 1 Peter in the Bible (occurring
here and in 1:23), but it is synonymous with
the phrase in John 3:3, “to be born from
above,” or “to be born again.”
26
In Greek, the three words display a delightful
alliteration: aphtharton, amianton,
amaranton.
Dr.
Daniel A. Keating (Doctor of Philosophy,
University of Oxford) is associate professor
of theology at Sacred Heart Major Seminary
in Detroit, Michigan, USA and an elder of The
Servants of the Word, a lay missionary
brotherhood of men living single for the
Lord. |