The First Letter of Peter- 8
Pastor Marty
Tuesday, January 13, 2026 at 8:52PM Subtitle: A New Spiritual People- part 5
1 Peter 2:9-10. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on Sunday, January 11, 2026.
This section will finish the description of this new spiritual people that Jesus is making out of Jews and non-Jews (those of all the nations).
It is not enough to know the content of these descriptions and commands that Peter has given in 1 Peter 1:13 to 2:10. We must believe them and trust God’s work in them. We must grow in walking out a life of faith in Jesus as the Messiah of God who is leading us in glorifying God the Father.
We need to be the new spiritual people that God is making us to be. We can complain that it’s to hard, and God can’t expect us to do this. However, God doesn’t expect you to do it. He expects you to do it with the Help of His Holy Spirit and by the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ!
Let’s look at our passage.
But you who believe are… (v. 9)
When Peter quotes Psalm 118:22 (the stone the builders rejected) in verse 7 and then quotes Isaiah 8:14 (a stone of stumbling and a rock of offense) in verse 8, he is giving us the Scriptural support for understanding this as always being God’s plan. He ended verse 8 with the point that those who did not believe were disobedient to the Word, and this caused them to stumble over Jesus the Messiah.
However, God had appointed them to this stumbling. This is not in the sense that they had no choice. However, having become hard-hearted towards the prophecies about Messiah and his suffering, God sent Jesus at just the right time. He would be rejected by those who were supposed to point the world towards the Messiah that would come. God sent them a test that He knew they would fail. Yet, their failure would lead to the salvation of anyone who would believe in this Messiah, even if they were involved in putting him to death!
In verse 9, Peter now turns to those who didn’t reject Jesus or, at least, didn’t continue in rejecting him. “But you are…” Both Jews and Gentiles ended up in this place of faith in Jesus by different ways. Those Jews who believed the Scriptures embraced Jesus as Messiah when he was revealed. Simeon and Anna are examples of this in Luke 2:25-38. Saul of Tarsus would be an example of someone who rejected Jesus at first but then changed his mind as God confronted him with his errors.
The Gentiles did not have the Scriptures unless they had interacted with some Jews. They are hearing the Gospel without a foundation of the Scriptures. Yet, some of them believed. By the way, we should always recognize that though Gentiles were embracing Jesus as the Messiah, many of them were also rejecting the Messiah. It was only a remnant of Israel and a remnant of the nations that were believing.
Peter is going to use language from Exodus 19:5-6 and Deuteronomy 7:6 to describe this new spiritual people in the same way that Israel had been described there.
The first one is that they are a Chosen Race. The word translated as “race” in the NASB has the idea of offspring. Thus, it can emphasize a family, or larger nation of people. Using race is almost too specific since the Church is made up of people from every nation. If anything, we are spiritually connected to Jesus not biologically. We are offspring of the spiritual work that he has done. I think that some better translations are Chosen People (NIV) or Chosen Generation (KJV/NKJV).
The key point of this phrase is that we are Chosen by God (and generated by His Spirit). Lots of people are born again by the Spirit of God to join this chosen people. This first phrase is not specifically used in Exodus 19, but it is there in concept. This phrase is used of Israel in Deuteronomy 7:6.
“For you are a holy people to the Lord your God; the Lord your God has chosen you to be a people for His own possession out of all the peoples who are on the face of the earth.”
Of course, we see Israel using this of themselves in places like Psalm 105:6. Yet, we must be careful of letting God’s choice of us go to our head. For what are we chosen? Why did God choose us? It was not because we were better than anybody else. Both Israel and the Church did not exist when God purposed to make them.
We should also recognize that the Church is chosen because of its connection to Jesus who is the Chosen One of God.
Isaiah 42:1, “Behold, My Servant, whom I uphold; My chosen one in whom My soul delights.
I have put My Spirit upon Him; He will bring forth justice to the nations.”
This comes from the Servant passages of Isaiah in which God describes a perfect servant in contrast to the imperfect service of Israel as a nation. Those who believe in the Chosen One are spiritually birthed into a new spiritual people who work with Christ for His Chosen purpose. We become chosen ones. Our purpose is to call all people to join this chosen people and live a life that demonstrates the love of Christ.
Second, Peter tells them that they are a Royal Priesthood. In Israel, the kingship and the priesthood were to be kept separate which makes these two terms stick out. Only Messiah could rightly be both king and high priest. Yet, this idea is used in Exodus 19:5-6.
“5 Now then, if you will indeed obey My voice and keep My covenant, then you shall be My own possession among all the peoples, for all the earth is Mine; 6 and you shall be to Me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.’ These are the words that you shall speak to the sons of Israel.”
The Hebrew of this phrase is made of two nouns in a construction similar to “Kingdom Priests.” When this was translated into Greek (c. 250 BC), they used a Greek phrase that is exactly what Peter uses in our passage. In light of this, I am not sure why translators of the NASB chose “kingdom of priests” in Exodus 19 but chose “royal priesthood” in 1 Peter 2:9. The testimony from at least two centuries before Christ is that this Greek phrase is the closest equivalent to the underlying Hebrew in the Old Testament.
All of that said, I believe the emphasis is that they are priests that belong to a particular King and His Kingdom. For Christians, this King is Messiah and his kingdom.
Even in the Old Testament, it is clear that God is not talking about the Levitical priesthood. He is describing the whole nation of Israel as priests of God’s kingdom. Israel could be a kingdom of priests in the sense that they would be the mediator between God and the other nations. The other nations would know the word of God through them, and they would learn how to have sins covered by them.
The Church is in a similar position, although it is of global scope and the empowering of the Holy Spirit makes it a stronger work. Peter is not talking about a particular priestly group within Christianity. He is talking about all Christians together operating as mediators between God and lost humanity. This is what the Protestant reformers meant by the priesthood of all believers.
We can even see this principle in a smaller scope. Moms and dads are to be priests in their home for the sake of their children. Churches are to be priests for the sake of their cities. All of us together are to operate as priests between God and the lost of every nation.
Let me also just add that the royal part is not so much about us right now. Jesus suffered in doing the will of God as the Great High Priest of all humanity. He is now exalted into his kingly role seated at the right hand of the Father. The Church that is on the earth right now is destined to reign with Jesus as kings, but we must first follow his lead. We serve as priests to our God embracing the suffering that comes with pointing sinners to Christ. Thus, the royal part is mainly about Jesus. We are priests for the King of kings, and we will one day reign with him. But, for now, we focus on being priests for the King.
Next, he calls us a Holy Nation. Though the non-Jews are a part of the nations, they become a part of a spiritual nation made up of believers from all nations including Israel. It is not about geography in the natural. However, we are tied to the spiritual geography of Christ ruling from the heavens. The followers of Christ are a new nation, or people, that God is using to speak to all the nations. Thus, we are holy, set apart for His purpose. We see this concept used of Israel in Exodus 19:6.
“6 and you shall be to Me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.’ These are the words that you shall speak to the sons of Israel.”
Finally, Peter calls them a People for God’s Own Possession. The KJV has translated this as a “peculiar people.” The word peculiar is generally used today to refer to something strange or odd. However, its Latin origin only meant something that was “one’s own thing.” A possession was peculiar to a particular person. It belonged to a specific person. We are a people peculiar to God. We are His own special possession.
Of course, all the nations belong to God, the whole earth is His. Yet, after the tower of Babel, God had disowned the nations, turning to make a nation out of the man Abraham. The Church is not so much trying to take over the nations as it is making a people from out of all the nations into a possession that especially belongs to Him and for His holy purposes.
This is why 1 Peter 4:4 talks about the nations thinking it is strange that Christians do not run with them after the things of the flesh that are an excess of wickedness. If you trust in Christ, then you will live a life that is contrary to the world around you. You can’t hold on to the world and God. It will eventually pull you apart spiritually. You will eventually hate one and love the other.
We see this described in similar language in Exodus 19:5. “5 Now then, if you will indeed obey My voice and keep My covenant, then you shall be My own possession among all the peoples, for all the earth is Mine…”
The Church just as Israel is not a special possession of God because we were smarter, richer, more powerful, etc. We are His special possession because we have believed upon Jesus as His Savior for the world.
Before and After, Then and Now (v. 10)
Peter has two more descriptions that come from the book of Hosea. It has a before and after (then versus now) aspect to it. He essentially gives two parallel statements saying, “This is what you were before, but you are now this!”
The book of Hosea opens with God speaking to Hosea. He is to marry a woman who will become an adulterer. The children from these illicit affairs were to be given symbolic names. Two in particular are Lo Ammi, which means “not my people,” and Lo Ruhamah, which means “no mercy” or “no compassion.” In that book, God is telling Israel that they have been like an adulterous wife to God. The generation of Hosea’s day were the offspring of this spiritual adultery. God was going to unmake them as a people and show them no mercy. Yet, the passage ends with a promise that God would reverse this condition. “Where it was said of them ‘not my people,’ it shall be said of them ‘You are sons of the Living God!’” (Hosea 1:10).
Peter sees this as not only a restoration of Israel’s fortunes through the remnant, but also the reversal of the fortunes of a remnant of the Gentiles. If God could reverse the spiritual adultery of Israel, then why not do so for the spiritual adultery of the Gentiles since the Tower of Babel? Of course, this was God’s plan all along. He has done it in such a way as to demonstrate the wisdom of His mercy. The Church is made up of both Jews and Gentiles who were cast off (not my people). However, in Jesus, they are now His people again.
Peter then describes the same thing but focusing on the mercy, or compassion, of God. You who had not received mercy have now received the mercy of God! Mercy involves help from one who doesn’t owe it to another who needs it due to an affliction they suffer.
If there is no mercy from God, then it is because we keep choosing our sins and rejecting His Word to us. Yet, in embracing Jesus, we step into a place of God’s help for our affliction under sin (ours and others).
You might ask how you can live up to those great statements? You can’t by yourself. However, if you ask the Holy Spirit to help you, and you listen to God’s Word and follow the leading of the Holy Spirit, you will find that God does these things through us.
The next time you think that you are not important in God’s purpose, just remember that you are a part of His special people. You belong to Him. He has mercy for you, and He has purpose for you!
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