Sunday, April 19, 2026

Grace Before Glory 1 Peter 1:13-21

 


    

Grace Before Glory
1 Peter 1.13-21

    https://youtu.be/IbFtr2RuF_Q?si=Qdsg0mOrZpKc5nMB

Introduction

     We human beings naturally desire glory. We want all things to be good, beautiful and heavenly. We want to win, not lose. We want to succeed, not fail. We want love, not hate. We want happiness, not sadness. There are different ways to pursue these goals. Most of them have some good in them. But today we see how faith in the Easter miracle of the resurrection of Jesus from the dead tops them all and will always remain the essential gift of God that gives us ultimate glory. 

Paths to Glory

     What are some common “paths to glory”? Let’s begin with a good work ethic. The Bible says that we should “…aspire to lead a quiet life, to mind (our) own business, and to work with (our) own hands” (1 Thes 4.11). We teach children to make their beds and pick up their toys. We hope this will lead them complete their assignments in school, show up for work when they get a job, and lead a productive life. In this way they can take care of themselves and others. Next, we can add being a good person and following the Golden Rule, “Love your neighbor as yourself,” which is found six times in the Bible (Le 19:18; De 5:14,15; Mt 7:12; Lu 6:31; Ro 13:9; Ga 5:14). A third important path to glory is marriage and family unity. David said, “Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity!” (Ps 133). Marriage and family are the foundations to life. Where these fail, life will fail. A fourth path to glory would be good government. Peter says in the next chapter of this letter that good governments are sent by God “…for the punishment of evildoers and for the praise of those who do good” (2.14). Without good government, the coarse crimes against life would plunge us into chaos and destruction. God commands all these paths to glory, and we should always pray for these paths of glory: Work Ethic, The Golden Rule, Marriage and Family Unity, and Good Government

The Reason These Paths Fail

     Everything I have just said is really common sense. These four paths to glory are commanded in the Bible, but you don’t need the Bible to know them. They are deeply imbedded in nature itself. Benjamin Franklin, one of the founders of our country, wrote about them in his Poor Richard’s Almanac. They are good paths, but by themselves they won’t lead to glory. Why? Because none of them can address and cure the problem of sin that is just as deeply imbedded in our hearts. 

     We may start on the path of good work ethic, but soon laziness and covetousness will tempt us especially when we see others are succeeding more than us. We begin to think we are victims and that life isn’t fair. We may strive to love our neighbors as ourselves, but it becomes all too easy to pick and choose our neighbors. Is it the drug addict that needs our help?  Is it the unborn baby that just wants to live that we need to protect? Is it a starving person in another part of the world? No one wants a troubled marriage or a disordered family. But we get on each other’s nerves and say and do those things that drive us apart. Everyone wants good government, but when sinners govern sinners, there are bound to be problems. We have a temptation to turn away from civic duty in disgust and pass those problems to the next generation. The real problem with these paths of glory is that they are all missing God’s grace. Therefore, they lack the power to get control of sin. 

     The Bible consistently teaches us that sin and separation from God is the cause of all misery and unhappiness in this world. No matter how well you know the paths to glory and pursue them, sin will catch up and pull you back down. Worse than that, much of the world now denies the paths of glory and deliberately. They avoid work but want all its benefits. They redefine the meaning of “good,” so they glorify their base desires. They have practically destroyed marriage and family and deny that it is even necessary. They use government not to commend the good but to defend and promote evil. 

Grace Is the Key to Glory

     Peter was well acquainted with this world as we are. He was a hard-working fisherman, but he could see that hard work and striving for goodness would never lead to glory. The sin within and without would eventually destroy everything. It seemed hopeless. Then one day he met Jesus. It wasn’t Jesus’ intelligence, or wisdom, or power, that impressed Peter the most. It was His holiness. When the fishing wasn’t so good one day, Jesus told Peter to cast his nets on the other side of the boat. The nets were filled, and Peter realized Jesus was different; He was holy. He said, “Depart from me O Lord, for I am a sinful man” (Luke 5.1-11). But Jesus didn’t depart. He stayed. He stayed with Peter and the other disciples. He stayed with this world all the way to the cross so that He could bring the one thing to them and to us that is the key to glory – His divine grace. This is what he was saying in 1 Peter 1.13-25.

Therefore gird up the loins of your mind, be sober, and rest your hope fully upon the grace that is to be brought to you at the revelation of Jesus Christ; as obedient children, not conforming yourselves to the former lusts, as in your ignorance; but as He who called you is holy, you also be holy in all your conduct, because it is written, “Be holy, for I am holy.”

And if you call on the Father, who without partiality judges according to each one’s work, conduct yourselves throughout the time of your stay here in fear; knowing that you were not redeemed with corruptible things, like silver or gold, from your aimless conduct received by tradition from your fathers, but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot. He indeed was foreordained before the foundation of the world, but was manifest in these last times for you who through Him believe in God, who raised Him from the dead and gave Him glory, so that your faith and hope are in God.

          Pastors have rightly said, “GRACE is God’s Riches At Christ’s Expense.” As Easter Christians we now have the true path to glory. We have the grace of the precious blood of Christ for the forgiveness of our sins. This is the hope to which we constantly cling. Every day as we walk those paths to glory, we now have Jesus, the Son of God walking with us. Peter says that we “gird up the loins of our minds.” This means that we prepare ourselves mentally and spiritually for all that we do. Our week begins with Jesus in worship. Each day should begin and end with Jesus in word and prayer.  We don’t just go to work. We don’t just assume we are being good each day. We don’t just get married and have a family. We don’t just vote, advocate, and serve for good government. Our walk is with Jesus, and thus our daily life, is a holy walk. When we work, when we interact with other people, when we live at home with our spouse and children, when we speak to or about our politicians, we are always catching those sinful lusts and desires that crop up like weeds but need to be dug up and thrown out with repentance and faith in Jesus. More than that, our walk with Jesus is always pointed toward Judgment Day. We “conduct (ourselves) throughout the time of (our) stay here in fear.” This is not a fear of being condemned, but it is a serious realization that we have been redeemed by the precious blood of Christ. Therefore, our walk isn’t “aimless” and destined for destruction. Our walk is destined for the glory of the resurrection of Jesus and the resurrection of our own bodies on the last day. 

Conclusion 

     When the Emmaus disciples were walking on the day of Christ’s resurrection, they were sad because they had hoped Jesus would “redeem Israel” (Luke 24.21). They knew those paths of glory since Jesus has spoken of them. But they hadn’t realized the one thing that was necessary for us to walk the paths of glory successfully – that it was necessary for “the Christ to have suffered these things and (then) to enter into His glory?” (Luke 24.26). God’s grace, His redemption through the life and death of Jesus, was the key to His glory and ours. This week, as you go about all your normal activities, remember the hope of God’s grace, His redemption, the gift of forgiveness, and holiness, so that you will live a holy life of faith and realize His glory. Amen. 

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