‏ 1 Peter 2

1Now that you have done with all malice, all deceitfulness, insincerity, jealous feelings, and all back-biting, 2like newly born infants, crave pure spiritual milk, so that you may be enabled by it to grow till you attain Salvation — 3since ‘you have found by experience that the Lord is kind.’ 4Come to him, then, as to a living stone, rejected, indeed, by men, but in God’s eyes choice and precious; 5and, as living stones, form yourselves into a spiritual House, to be a consecrated Priesthood, for the offering of spiritual sacrifices that will be acceptable to God through Jesus Christ. 6For there is a passage of Scripture that runs —
‘See, I am placing in Zion a choice and precious corner-stone;
And he who believes in him shall have no cause for shame.’
7It is to you, then, who believe in him that he is precious, but to those who do not believe he is ‘a stone which, though rejected by the builders, has now itself become the corner-stone,’ 8and ‘a stumbling-block, and a rock which shall prove a hindrance.’ They stumble because they do not accept the Message. This was the fate destined for them. 9But you are ‘a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a consecrated nation, God’s own People,’ entrusted with the proclamation of the goodness of him who called you out of Darkness into his wonderful Light. 10Once you were ‘not a people,’ but now you are ‘God’s People’; once you ‘had not found mercy,’ but now you ‘have found mercy.’

Practical Exhortations in view of the Dangers of the Times.

11Dear friends, I urge you, as pilgrims and strangers upon earth, to refrain from indulging the cravings of your earthly nature, for they make war upon the soul. 12Let your daily life among the Gentiles be so upright, that, whenever they malign you as evil-doers, they may learn, as they watch, from the uprightness of your conduct, to praise God ‘at the time when he shall visit them.’

13Submit to all human institutions for the Lord’s sake, alike to the emperor as the supreme authority, 14and to governors as the men sent by him to punish evil-doers and to commend those who do right. 15For God’s will is this — that you should silence the ignorance of foolish people by doing what is right. 16Act as free men, yet not using your freedom as those do who make it a cloak for wickedness, but as Servants of God. 17Show honour to every one, Love the Brotherhood, ‘revere God, honour the emperor.’

18Those of you who are domestic servants should always be submissive and respectful to their masters, not only to those who are good and considerate, but also to those who are arbitrary. 19For this wins God’s approval when, because conscious of God’s presence, a man who is suffering unjustly bears his troubles patiently. 20What credit can you claim when, after doing wrong, you take your punishment for it patiently? But, on the other hand, if, after doing right, you take your sufferings patiently, that does win the approval of God. 21For it was to this that you were called! For Christ, too, suffered — on your behalf — and left you an example, that you should follow in his steps. 22He ‘never sinned, nor was anything deceitful ever heard from his lips.’ 23He was abused, but he did not answer with abuse; he suffered, but he did not threaten; he entrusted himself to him whose judgments are just. 24And he ‘himself carried our sins’ in his own body to the cross, so that we might die to our sins, and live for righteousness. ‘His bruising was your healing.’ Once you were straying like sheep, but now you have returned to the Shepherd and Guardian of your souls.

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