ConCafe logo by Eradio Valverde, Jr.
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13 Who is going to harm you if you are eager to do good? 14 But even if you should suffer for what is right, you are blessed. “Do not fear their threats ; do not be frightened.” 15 But in your hearts revere Christ as Lord. Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect, 16 keeping a clear conscience, so that those who speak maliciously against your good behavior in Christ may be ashamed of their slander.17 For it is better, if it is God’s will, to suffer for doing good than for doing evil. 18 For Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, to bring you to God. He was put to death in the body but made alive in the Spirit. 19 After being made alive, he went and made proclamation to the imprisoned spirits— 20 to those who were disobedient long ago when God waited patiently in the days of Noah while the ark was being built. In it only a few people, eight in all, were saved through water, 21 and this water symbolizes baptism that now saves you also—not the removal of dirt from the body but the pledge of a clear conscience toward God. It saves you by the resurrection of Jesus Christ, 22 who has gone into heaven and is at God’s right hand—with angels, authorities and powers in submission to him.(1 Peter 3:13-22 NIV)
We have it made here in the USA when it comes to being Christians. We are free to go to whatever church we want or to stay home if we want. We're free to buy a Bible whenever we want and tear pages out of it if we want. And, thank God, no one will knock on our door and arrest us for our beliefs. It is not a crime to be a Christian, and you gotta love the old question; if it were, would there be enough evidence to convict? We are reading a passage written in the dark period of being Christian. Peter lovingly wants those believers who are reading his letter to be safe and sure about their faith.
Peter was writing to communities of believers scattered across Asia Minor — people who were strangers and exiles in their own world, facing social pressure, suspicion, and in some cases outright hostility simply because of their allegiance to a crucified and risen Lord.
This was not abstract theology. These were real people navigating real danger. And yet the letter breathes with a strange, undeniable confidence — not the confidence of people who have been spared suffering, but the confidence of people who know what suffering cannot touch.
We are in the season of Easter. The alleluias are still fresh. But the world we return to on Monday morning is the same one Peter’s readers inhabited — one where faith costs something, where doing good does not always go rewarded, and where the resurrection can feel, on hard days, more like a creed than a lived reality.
This passage speaks precisely into that gap. It tells us what to do with our hope when the world pushes back. And it anchors everything — absolutely everything — in the risen Christ.
Peter opens with a question that sounds almost optimistic: “Who is going to harm you if you are eager to do good?” But he does not linger there long, because he knows the answer is not always “no one.” He pivots almost immediately: “But even if you should suffer for what is right, you are blessed.”
This is one of the more countercultural claims in the New Testament, and we should sit with it rather than rush past it. Peter is not promising that goodness will protect you from harm. He is promising something far stranger: that harm sustained in the cause of goodness is not a sign of God’s absence. It is, he says, a mark of blessedness.
We hear echoes of the Beatitudes here — Jesus on the mountainside, telling the poor in spirit and the persecuted that the kingdom belongs to them. The world’s ledger and God’s ledger do not always balance the same way. What the world counts as loss, the kingdom sometimes counts as gain.
In Eastertide, this truth takes on even sharper edges. The resurrection is the ultimate proof that God’s arithmetic is different from ours. The cross looked, by every human measure, like the end. It was not. Death, which appeared to have the final word, turned out to be a comma. And if God can do that with crucifixion, then suffering for doing good is not something to be feared — it is something to be endured with open eyes and a quiet heart.
Peter even borrows the words of Isaiah: “Do not fear their threats; do not be frightened.” The risen Christ has dethroned the thing that fear is ultimately about. If death is not the end, then the threats that trade on the fear of death have lost much of their power.
Now comes the verse that has anchored Christian witness for two thousand years: “But in your hearts revere Christ as Lord. Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect.”
We sometimes call this the great apologetics text — the verse that sends people to seminaries and debate podiums and philosophy classrooms, armed with arguments for the faith. And those endeavors have their place. But notice what Peter actually says. He does not say, “Be ready to prove your faith.” He says, “Be ready to give the reason for the hope that you have.” The question he is imagining is not primarily an intellectual challenge. It is a human one. Someone looks at your life and asks: “How do you keep going? Where does that come from?”
The implication is striking: the lives of these early Christians were so visibly, tangibly different — marked by a quality of hope that did not wilt under pressure — that people around them were asking questions. Their witness was not primarily an argument. It was a life.
And here is the Eastertide connection: what makes that life possible? What is the source of hope that holds steady when circumstances say it should not? It is not optimism, not resilience, not positive thinking. It is something that happened in history, to a specific person, on a specific morning.
Peter also tells us how to give this answer: with gentleness and respect. The tone of our witness is not incidental to its content. A faith that has been reshaped by a crucified and risen Lord ought to look different — more patient, less combative, less anxious about winning. We speak from a position of security, not threat. We do not need to be aggressive, because the truth we carry does not depend on our performance of it.
Peter now reaches the theological heart of the passage: “For Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, to bring you to God.”
This is one of the most compressed and powerful statements of the gospel in all of Scripture. Let us unfold it slowly.
“Christ also suffered.” The word also is doing significant work here. Peter has just been talking about the suffering his readers are enduring, and he says: Christ suffered too. Your suffering is not a place where Christ is absent. It is a place where Christ has already been.
“Once for sins.” The word once in Greek is hapax — once, and once only, with permanent effect. The sacrifice of Christ is not repeated. It does not need to be. Its scope is complete. This is why the early church spoke so insistently about the once-for-all nature of the atonement: it is finished. The ledger is closed on the debt side.
“The righteous for the unrighteous.” This is the great exchange at the center of the gospel. The one who owed nothing paid the debt of those who owed everything. And the purpose? “To bring you to God.” Not merely to rescue us from consequences, but to restore us to relationship. The goal of the cross is not simply a cleared conscience — it is a face-to-face, unobstructed, permanent access to the Father.
Then come eight words that contain all of Easter: “He was put to death in the body but made alive in the Spirit.” The cross was real. The tomb was real. And the resurrection was real. The same body that was put to death was made alive — not resuscitated, not spiritualized away, but raised. This is the foundation on which everything Peter says rests. If Christ is not raised, the suffering of these scattered believers is pointless. If Christ is raised, then their suffering is held within the orbit of a victory that cannot be undone.
Peter then moves into territory that has puzzled readers for centuries — the proclamation to imprisoned spirits, the days of Noah, the ark, and baptism. A full treatment of these verses belongs in a longer study, and scholars have debated their precise meaning since the earliest centuries of the church. But let us notice what Peter seems most interested in, because that is where the devotional weight falls.
Whatever the precise nature of Christ’s proclamation to the imprisoned spirits, the point Peter is driving toward is this: the victory of Christ is cosmic in scope. It reaches beyond the visible world, beyond the boundaries of our immediate experience, into dimensions we cannot fully see. The risen Christ is not merely a personal Savior in a private sense — he is Lord over every authority and power, every principality and dominion.
The reference to Noah reinforces this sweep. In the days of the flood, a tiny remnant — eight people — were carried through the waters of judgment into new life on the other side. Peter sees in this a picture of baptism. Not the washing of the body, he is careful to clarify, but “the pledge of a clear conscience toward God.” Baptism is the moment when a person stakes their life on the resurrection — when they go under the water as one thing and come up as another, not because the water has power in itself, but because it is done in the name of the one who went into death and came out the other side.
And then the passage ends with one of the most triumphant images in all of Scripture: “Jesus Christ, who has gone into heaven and is at God’s right hand — with angels, authorities and powers in submission to him.”
This is where the risen Christ is right now. Not distant, not dormant, not waiting for history to catch up to him. He is reigning. The one who suffered is the one who rules. The one who was put to death in the body is the one at whose name every knee will bow. And it is this Christ — reigning, living, present — whom we are called to revere in our hearts as Lord.
For Reflection
There is a thread running through every verse of this passage: the resurrection changes what suffering means.
For Peter’s readers, suffering was not theoretical. It was the texture of daily life — the cold shoulder at the marketplace, the suspicion of neighbors, the possibility of something worse. Peter does not minimize any of it. He does not tell them to pretend it is not happening. He tells them something far more powerful: he tells them who is on the throne.
For us, the pressure may take different shapes. The cost of following Jesus in our context may be social rather than legal, relational rather than physical. But the core question is the same: when it costs something to live as a follower of Christ, does your hope hold?
Peter says it can. Not because we are strong enough, but because the one in whom we hope has already walked through the worst that the world can do — and walked out the other side. Our suffering is not a place where Christ is absent. It is a place where Christ has already been. And the one who was there in the darkness of the tomb is the same one who is now seated at the right hand of the Father, every power subject to him, interceding for us.
That is Eastertide hope. Not optimism. A Person.
PRAYER: Lord Jesus Christ, You suffered once for sins — the righteous for the unrighteous — to bring us to God. We thank you that suffering was not the end of your story, and so it need not be the end of ours. Revive in us this Eastertide the hope that your resurrection makes possible — not a wishful hoping, but a grounded, unshakeable confidence in the one who is seated at the Father’s right hand. Teach us to hold that hope openly, to speak it gently, and to live it boldly in the ordinary days that follow this holy season. To you be glory and dominion, now and forever. Amen.
Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: Think of one person in your life who might look at you and wonder where your hope comes from. Pray for one natural opportunity to tell them — not with an argument, but with a story. The story of why, in spite of everything, you still believe.
I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me. Alleluia. Christ is risen. The Lord is risen indeed. Alleluia.
Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.






