Don't Be Surprised
"Beloved, do not be surprised at the fiery trial when it comes upon you to test you, as though something strange were happening to you."
Peter writes to Christians scattered across the Roman Empire — believers being insulted, beaten, and in some places killed for their faith. His first word to them is not a strategy. It is a posture.
Don't be surprised.
Many of us were sold a quieter version of the Christian life — one where, once you walk through the door of faith, the trouble stays outside. That is not the Christian life Peter is describing, and it is not the Christian life Jesus described. He told His disciples plainly, *"In the world you will have tribulation."* The road of faith is not a road around suffering. It is a road that passes through it.
The Bible is a book written by suffering people to suffering people. Joseph in Pharaoh's dungeon, falsely accused. Daniel in the lions' den. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego in the furnace. John the Baptist in the executioner's hand. Stephen under the stones. None of them were spared. Each one was sustained.
If you are walking through something hard right now, it is not because your faith is failing. It is not because God has forgotten you. It is because you are in good company, on a well-worn road, with a Savior who has walked it first.
Today — this Memorial Day, of all days — is a fitting time to remember that some have paid the highest price to give the rest of us the right to gather, to worship, to read this small devotional in peace. And remembering them, we remember that suffering does not have the last word. Not for them. Not for us.
Today's reading: 1 Peter 4
Reflect: Where in your life are you experiencing the kind of "fiery trial" Peter describes? What would change if you stopped being surprised by it and started looking for what God might be doing in it?