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      • The book of 1st Peter is a General Epistle (Apostolic Letter). It was written to all believers in general. The author is Peter who wrote it about 60 A.D. The key personalities are the Apostle Peter, Silas, and Mark. Its purpose was to encourage suffering Christians and to call them to personal holiness; Peter’s central focus is persecution.
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  1. 1 Peter has four parts. Chapter 1 begins with a greeting and a poem. Chapters 1 b-2a focus on our new identity in Jesus. Chapters 2 b-4a explore suffering as a way to bear witness to Jesus. And chapters 4 b-5 describe the future hope for Jesus’ return.

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  3. First Peter focuses on the importance of believers bearing up under unjust suffering yet continuing to live well (1 Peter 2:20). In this way, 1 Peter might be called the Job of the New Testament, providing encouragement for the true believer to continue on in the way that Jesus has laid out for all His followers.

  4. Jan 4, 2022 · Purpose of Writing: 1 Peter is a letter from Peter to the believers who had been dispersed throughout the ancient world and were under intense persecution. If anyone understood persecution, it was Peter. He was beaten, threatened, punished, and jailed for preaching the Word of God.

  5. Summary. The book of 1st Peter is a General Epistle (Apostolic Letter). It was written to all believers in general. The author is Peter who wrote it about 60 A.D. The key personalities are the Apostle Peter, Silas, and Mark.

    • A Living Hope. Peter starts by addressing the elect exiles and praises God for giving us a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
    • The Living Stone and A Chosen People. Peter encourages the believers to rid themselves of malice, deceit, hypocrisy, and slander. He speaks of Jesus as the living stone, chosen by God but rejected by men.
    • Wives, Husbands, and Suffering for Righteousness. Peter gives instructions to wives to be submissive to their husbands and to focus on inner beauty.
    • Living for God. Peter urges the believers to live for the will of God and no longer for human desires. He speaks about being alert and sober-minded for prayer and encourages them to love each other deeply.
  6. Aug 4, 2013 · Peter begins his letter by calling Christians “aliens,” or residential foreigners to the Roman Empire (1 Pe 1:1, 17). He then goes on to explain the relationship between suffering and salvation: suffering lasts now, but it proves our faith so that joy and glory can come later.

  7. Peter wished to impress on his readers that by living an obedient, victorious life under duress, a Christian can actually evangelize his hostile world (cf. 1:14; 2:1, 12, 15; 3:1–6, 13–17; 4:2; 5:8, 9). Believers are constantly exposed to a world system energized by Satan and his demons.

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