5 Graces
My beloved friends,
As you come to our devotion time together, take some time now to read 1 Peter 3:8-12 slowly. These verses come as a gentle but powerful summary right after Peter has spoken about submission in difficult relationships—wives to husbands, husbands to wives, servants to masters. Now he turns to all of us with a beautiful portrait of what Christian community is meant to look like, even (and especially) when life is hard.
Powerful words aren’t they?
Peter begins with five qualities that are meant to mark every believer’s relationships with one another. These are not optional personality traits—they are the natural overflow of hearts transformed by the gospel.
- Unity of mind (homophrones) speaks of harmony in our thinking and values. We don’t have to agree on everything, but we share the same heart for Christ and His kingdom.
- Sympathy is the beautiful ability to “feel with” one another—to enter into each other’s joys and sorrows without rushing to fix or judge.
- Brotherly love (philadelphia) is warm, family affection. In Christ we are not just acquaintances; we are brothers and sisters.
- A tender heart (eusplanchnos) is deep compassion that moves the inner person—literally, “good bowels,” the seat of strong feeling.
- A humble mind (tapeinophrones) is the opposite of arrogance. It is the quiet willingness to consider others more significant than ourselves (see Philippians 2:3).
These five graces create a safe and beautiful place for God’s people to flourish.
Then Peter moves to the testing ground: how we respond when we are wronged. “Do not repay evil for evil or reviling for reviling, but on the contrary, bless.” This is profoundly countercultural. Our natural instinct is to defend ourselves, to return the insult, to make the other person feel what we felt. But Peter says the Christian’s calling is different. We were called to bless—to speak well of, to pray for, to desire God’s good for those who have hurt us.
Why would we do something so unnatural? Because this is exactly what Jesus did for us. And because there is a promise attached: “for to this you were called, that you may obtain a blessing.” When we bless instead of retaliate, we position ourselves to receive God’s blessing rather than His opposition.
To drive the point home, Peter quotes Psalm 34:12–16. David describes the pathway to a life that is truly worth living:
- Guard your tongue (no evil or deceitful speech).
- Turn from evil and actively do good.
- Seek peace—and not just hope it appears, but pursue it.
This is not passive niceness. It is an intentional, vigorous way of living that reflects the heart of God. And the reason it matters so much is because “the eyes of the Lord are on the righteous, and his ears are open to their prayer.” What comfort! Our Father is not distant or distracted. He watches over His own with tender attention, and He hears every prayer. But His face is set against those who persist in evil. The implication is clear: we do not want to live in the direction of His opposition.
In the context of 1 Peter, these words were written to believers facing misunderstanding, slander, and persecution. Peter is not calling them to a weak or naïve response. He is calling them to a powerful one—the same power Jesus displayed when He entrusted Himself to the One who judges justly (1 Peter 2:23). Blessing our enemies is not weakness; it is a declaration that we trust God more than we trust our own ability to get even.
Personal Reflection Questions
Take a few quiet moments with the Lord and these questions. You may want to journal your answers.
- Of the five qualities in verse 8, which one feels most needed in your closest relationships right now (marriage, family, church, friendships)? What would it look like for the Holy Spirit to grow this grace in you?
- Think of someone who has hurt or offended you recently. In what specific way might God be inviting you to “bless” them instead of rehearsing the offense or returning the slight?
- Peter says we are to “seek peace and pursue it.” Where in your life right now is God calling you to move toward peace rather than simply waiting for conflict to resolve itself?
- How does the truth that “the eyes of the Lord are on the righteous” comfort you? How does it challenge you?
- As you read this passage again slowly, what is one concrete way you sense the Lord inviting you to live it out this week?
May the Lord, who sees you and hears you, strengthen you to walk in these beautiful, Christlike ways. You are not alone—He is with you, and His blessing rests on those who trust Him enough to live His way.