“Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks
you to give the reason for the hope that you have.” (1 Pet.3:15)
This advice is given by Peter in his encouragement to the
Christians of his day as they came in contact with people on a day to day
basis. Many read this scripture and experience fear. Fear that they have to
become bible scholars in order to teach someone. Unfortunately, this is a fear that has been
instilled into believers for over 1800 years, when religious leaders told
people like you and me that we could not do this because we were not “professionals,”
or part of what became known as the “Clergy.” This however is NOT biblical
teaching. Paul considered himself a
“brother” and “fellow servant” with Tychicus (Col. 4:7). The same was
true for Paul and Epaphras (Col.1:7). Ephroditus was Paul’s “brother, co-worker
and fellow soldier” (Ph’p.2:25). Paul and Timothy called themselves the
“servants” of the Corinthian church (1 Cor.4:5). Peter viewed Silas as his
“faithful brother” (1 Pet. 5:12). The apostles never talked in terms of “us”
and “them” in the context of serving Christ. They considered themselves to be
fellow laborers with all believers in the church.
The truth is, that everyone you come in contact with needs a
reason for hope. We all want the world
to be a better place, yet, few do anything about it to make it better for
someone other than themselves. That is why Peter states what he does. Christians should be and appear in public to
be people that look beyond life and its drudgery to something better. A happiness in their step, a smile on their
face, an encouragement in their talk. The
hope that best helps people is the hope from somebody who says, “Been there,
done that.”
Most think “give an answer to every man” in Peter’s passage means
they have to explain why Jesus died on the cross, quote Scripture verses from
memory, and know a bunch of Greek or Hebrew. We are not Lawgivers – there is
only one with that authority – Christ (Jas.4:12). We are not Attorneys or Lawyers of the Bible,
again, that role belongs only to Jesus (1 Tim.2:5). It’s not your job to convince people to accept
Christ, and try as you can you cannot convert anyone (1 Cor.3:7). God does
that. So what does this mean? It means simply that you tell others what has
given you hope, a reason to smile, an outlook that today is good even though it
has evil things in it. He wants you to
say, “Pain really got my attention. Let me tell you what I learned. I learned
that God is all I need. You don’t know God is all you need until God is all
you’ve got. I learned that God’s going to hang with me no matter what.” You
simply share what you have learned through your own difficulty and experience.
You tell people what changed you!
We all recognize others that have difficulties by the looks
on their faces, the demeanor they carry – that “aura” that says “I need a
friend right now.” What are the good and bad experiences in your life that God
can use to impart hope with someone else? That’s what God wants you to do.
Can you think of one person in your life that you can share experience
from your life with this week?
Jim
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