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19 For it is commendable if someone bears up under the pain of unjust suffering because they are conscious of God. 20 But how is it to your credit if you receive a beating for doing wrong and endure it? But if you suffer for doing good and you endure it, this is commendable before God. 21 To this you were called, because Christ suffered for you, leaving you an example, that you should follow in his steps. 22 “He committed no sin, and no deceit was found in his mouth.” 23 When they hurled their insults at him, he did not retaliate; when he suffered, he made no threats. Instead, he entrusted himself to him who judges justly. 24 “He himself bore our sins” in his body on the cross, so that we might die to sins and live for righteousness; “by his wounds you have been healed.” 25 For “you were like sheep going astray,” but now you have returned to the Shepherd and Overseer of your souls. (1 Peter 2: 19-25 NIV)
I had two needed operations when I was five. One was to remove my tonsils, the other more private, think religious ritual of an ancient sect. That was until I had a torn tendon mended and that was a major surgery, the wound of which all these months later still hurts. I end my therapy in a couple of weeks but I feel miles from where I'd like to be. My therapy reminds me twice weekly of that pain. The wound on the surface has healed, but inside the surgical cut still smarts. I have faith in God that one day it will go away. My doctor will attest that I am not a fan of any sort of suffering. Not so our Lord, who prophecies of old foretold of all that He would suffer on our behalf. Let me add that I saw the movie The Passion of the Christ, with no desire to ever see it again for its reality hurt me just to see it and to feel within me of what Jesus suffered for me. And you.
Peter is writing to people who know what it is to suffer for doing nothing wrong. His original audience were servants — household workers with little legal standing, subject to the moods and cruelties of masters who were under no particular obligation to be fair. And Peter does not pretend their suffering isn’t real, or that they should simply endure it without noticing. He names it plainly: unjust suffering is painful. It stings precisely because it is undeserved.
But Peter will not let suffering have the last interpretive word. He sets it inside a larger frame: Christ suffered for you. Those three words change everything. They do not explain away the pain or make the injustice disappear. What they do is ensure that unjust suffering is never meaningless for the person who follows Jesus. It has a context. It has a companion. It has a destination.
The Easter season is the right time to sit with this. Good Friday tells us that the Son of God was subjected to the most grotesque injustice in human history — perfect innocence condemned, love itself tortured and killed. And Easter Sunday tells us that God did not let that injustice stand as the final word. The resurrection is God’s ultimate verdict: suffering borne in faithfulness is not wasted, not forgotten, and not permanent.
Peter draws a portrait of Jesus in suffering that is almost unbearably specific. He committed no sin. No deceit was found in his mouth. When they hurled insults, He did not retaliate. When He suffered, He made no threats. Each detail is a quiet rebuke to every natural human instinct toward self-defense, score-keeping, and retaliation. Jesus, in His passion, was the most fully human person who ever lived — and He chose, at every possible juncture, the path of non-retaliation.
Peter calls this an “example” — a word that in the original Greek carries the image of a writing tablet used to teach children to form letters. They trace over the master’s hand until the shape becomes their own. We are invited to trace the life of Christ until His responses begin to feel more natural in us than our own defensive reflexes. This is not passive resignation. It is an active, costly, deeply counter-cultural choice made possible only by the resurrection — because only a person who believes that God will ultimately set things right can afford to release the compulsion to defend themselves at every turn.
The key phrase is this: “he entrusted himself to him who judges justly.” Jesus did not relinquish justice — He relocated it. He placed it in the hands of the One whose judgments are not distorted by power or politics or fear. The risen Christ is the proof that this trust was not misplaced. God vindicated Him. God will vindicate those who follow in His steps.
Peter reaches back to Isaiah 53 with one of the most stunning sentences in the New Testament: “by his wounds you have been healed.” The grammar deserves attention. It is past tense — not “will be healed” or “might be healed,” but have been healed. The healing is accomplished. It was completed at the cross and confirmed at the empty tomb. We do not wait for healing to become available. We receive what has already been secured.
And yet the wounds remain visible. The risen Christ, appearing to His disciples after Easter, still bore the marks of the nails. Thomas was invited to touch them. The resurrection did not erase the wounds of the cross — it transformed them. What had been the marks of defeat became the seals of victory, the credentials of the one who had been to death and back, the visible proof that suffering borne in faithfulness becomes, in God’s hands, the very instrument of healing.
This is the deepest mystery and the greatest hope of the Easter faith. The wounds that the world inflicts do not have to define us or defeat us. In the hands of the God who raises the dead, they can become the very places through which His light shines most clearly. The crack in the vessel, as the old image goes, is where the light gets out. Your suffering, your scars, your unhealed places — none of them are beyond the reach of the One who heals by bearing wounds Himself.
Peter ends this passage with one of the most tender images in all of Scripture: “For you were like sheep going astray, but now you have returned to the Shepherd and Overseer of your souls.” The past tense — “you were” — is quietly triumphant. That is who you used to be. A sheep without direction, wandering toward whatever looked appealing in the moment, drifting further and further from the fold without fully realizing it.
But now you have returned. The Greek word carries the sense of turning back, of reorientation, of a journey reversed. And notice who made this return possible: not the sheep, but the Shepherd. The whole of this passage has been building to this point. Christ suffered for you. He bore your sins in His body on the cross. He died so that you might die to sins and live for righteousness. The return home was purchased at the cross and opened at the resurrection. We did not find our way back. We were found.
The word “Overseer” — the one who watches over, who superintends — is the other side of the Shepherd’s care. He does not merely rescue the lost sheep and then leave it to fend for itself. He watches over the soul. He attends to the inner life, the deep place where the real battles are fought and the real wounds are held. The risen Christ is not only the Shepherd who leads — He is the Overseer who stays. He does not leave us to manage our souls alone. Easter means that the Good Shepherd who laid down His life for the sheep is alive and watching over them still.
PRAYER: Lord Jesus, Shepherd and Overseer of our souls, We confess that we know what it is to stray — to wander from Your voice, to follow our own instincts into places that looked like pasture and turned out to be wilderness. We thank You that You did not wait for us to find our way back. You came for us. You bore in Your body what we deserved. You entrusted Yourself to the Father’s justice so that we might be covered by His mercy. Where we are suffering unjustly, give us the grace to entrust ourselves to the One who judges justly, as You did. Where we are carrying wounds we have not yet allowed You to touch, let the truth of Your own wounded and risen body speak healing into those hidden places. Teach us to follow in Your steps — not the steps of retaliation or self-protection, but the steps of One who knew that love borne faithfully through suffering is the most powerful force in the universe. Keep watching over our souls. We are glad to be home. Amen.
Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: Is there a place in your life where you are carrying an unjust wound — something done to you that was wrong, and that you have been quietly rehearsing in the courtroom of your own heart? This week, take that specific wound to the Shepherd in prayer and practice the act of entrusting it to the One who judges justly. You are not releasing the wrongdoer from accountability. You are releasing yourself from the exhausting work of being your own judge and jury. The Overseer of your soul can be trusted with what you have been carrying alone.
I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God, and you matter to me! By His wounds you have been healed. You were straying. Now you are home.
Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.






