A Sheep Strolls Through 1 Peter 2:11-12

Living the Good Life

Dear friend,

As you open your heart to the Lord today, hear these tender words from the apostle Peter:

Dear friends, I urge you, as foreigners and exiles, to abstain from sinful desires, which wage war against your soul. Live such good lives among the pagans that, though they accuse you of doing wrong, they may see your good deeds and glorify God on the day he visits us.”
— 1 Peter 2:11-12 (NIV)

Peter writes to believers who felt out of place in the world around them—and he writes to us too. He doesn’t scold us; he urges us with love. He reminds us of who we truly are: foreigners and exiles. This world is not our final home. Our citizenship is in heaven, and our hearts are meant to long for our true country.

Because we belong to another Kingdom, Peter gives us two beautiful invitations.

First, he calls us to abstain from sinful desires. These longings are not harmless—they are actively “waging war against your soul.” They promise satisfaction but deliver emptiness, distraction, and distance from God. Yet Peter doesn’t leave us discouraged. He simply reminds us that we have the power, through the Holy Spirit, to say no to what would harm us. Every time we turn away from sin, we are choosing life for our souls.

Second, he invites us to live such good lives that even those who don’t know Jesus will notice. The word “good” here carries the idea of beautiful, attractive, excellent living. Not perfect living—none of us can manage that—but lives marked by kindness, integrity, patience, generosity, and quiet faithfulness. When people watch us and cannot explain our peace or our love, something beautiful happens: they catch a glimpse of the God we serve. Our lives become living invitations for others to glorify Him.

This is the heart of Christian witness—not loud arguments, but quiet, consistent goodness that points people to Jesus.


Personal Reflection Questions

Take a few quiet moments with the Lord and gently ask yourself:

  1. In what areas of my life do I most feel like a “foreigner and exile” right now? How does remembering my true home help me in those places?
  2. What sinful desires are currently “waging war” against my soul? (Be honest and specific.) What would it look like to bring those desires to Jesus today and ask for His help to abstain?
  3. If someone watched my life for a week with no knowledge of my faith, what “good deeds” would they see? Are there any areas where my life might actually confuse or hinder others from seeing Jesus?
  4. Is there someone in my sphere (a coworker, neighbor, family member, or friend) who has accused or misunderstood me? How might God be inviting me to respond with consistent goodness instead of defensiveness?
  5. What is one simple, practical way I can “live a good life” this week that could quietly point someone toward the goodness of God?

A Closing Prayer

Lord Jesus, thank You that I am not a stranger to You. Though I am a foreigner here, I am deeply loved and fully known by You. Help me to walk away from anything that wars against my soul. Give me the grace to live a beautiful life—not for my own glory, but so that others might see You and be drawn to Your light. May my ordinary days become quiet testimonies of Your goodness. I love You, Lord. Amen.

You are not alone in this journey, dear friend. The same Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead lives in you and will help you live well for Him today.

Walk gently, and keep your eyes on Jesus.

A Sheep’s Journey Through Psalms -137

When Home Feels Far Away

Hello my dear friends,

Have you ever found yourself in a season where everything familiar felt stripped away? Maybe a move, a loss, a heartbreak, or just a long stretch of life that left you aching for “how things used to be”? If so, you’re in good company with God’s people. Psalm 137 is raw, honest, and deeply human. It’s a lament written from the banks of foreign rivers during one of Israel’s darkest times.

The Setting (Historical Context)

In 586 BC, Babylon destroyed Jerusalem, burned the temple, and carried God’s people into exile. They sat by the rivers of Babylon—probably the Euphrates and its canals—far from home, surrounded by a pagan culture that mocked their faith. The psalm captures the grief, anger, and fierce loyalty of a displaced people.

Psalm 137:1–4 (ESV)
By the rivers of Babylon we sat and wept when we remembered Zion. There on the willows we hung our harps, for there our captors asked us for songs, our tormentors demanded songs of joy; they said, ‘Sing us one of the songs of Zion!’ How can we sing the songs of the Lord while in a foreign land?”

The exiles had every reason to stop singing. Their temple—the place where God’s presence dwelled—was in ruins. Their city was rubble. Their enemies were taunting them: “Come on, worshippers of Yahweh—entertain us!” The musicians hung their harps on the willow trees like funeral wreaths. Sometimes silence is the most honest response to deep pain.

Fierce Loyalty (vv. 5–6)

If I forget you, Jerusalem, may my right hand forget its skill. May my tongue cling to the roof of my mouth if I do not remember you, if I do not consider Jerusalem my highest joy.

This is a solemn vow. The psalmist says, “I would rather lose my ability to play music or speak than forget where I belong.” Jerusalem wasn’t just a city—it represented God’s covenant, His promises, and their identity. In exile, they chose remembrance over assimilation.

Justice and the Hard Words (vv. 7–9)

The psalm ends with a cry for God to remember the violence done to them—especially by the Edomites who cheered the destruction—and a shocking blessing on anyone who would bring Babylon down.These verses feel harsh to modern ears, and they are. Yet they reveal something important: the exiles handed their desire for revenge over to God instead of taking it into their own hands. They trusted that the Judge of all the earth would do right.

Christian Reflection: Finding Ourselves in the Psalm

As followers of Jesus, we are not in physical Babylonian exile, but we often feel the ache of living “in a strange land.” This world is not our ultimate home (Hebrews 11:13–16; Philippians 3:20). We experience seasons when God feels distant, when worship is hard, when culture pressures us to perform faith on demand or water it down.Yet Psalm 137 reminds us of three beautiful truths:

  1. God welcomes our honest grief. You don’t have to fake joy when your heart is breaking. Hanging up your harp for a season can be part of genuine lament.
  2. Remembering our true home keeps us faithful. Just as the exiles clung to Jerusalem, we fix our eyes on the New Jerusalem and our crucified, risen, and returning King. Jesus is our highest joy.
  3. We can entrust our pain and anger to God. The imprecatory (judgment) ending shows us we don’t have to pretend everything is fine. We can pour out our rawest feelings to a God who is perfectly just—and who has already absorbed the ultimate judgment on the cross.

Personal Reflection Questions

Take a few quiet moments with the Lord and journal or pray through these:

  • What “rivers of Babylon” are you sitting by right now? Where do you feel far from home, misunderstood, or grieved?
  • What has God asked you to remember about Himself and His promises during this season? Are you tempted to “forget Jerusalem” by lowering your standards or losing hope?
  • When have you found it hard to “sing the Lord’s song” in a difficult place? How might honest lament actually lead you back to authentic worship?
  • Who or what has hurt you deeply? Can you, like the psalmist, entrust that pain and the desire for justice into God’s hands today?
  • What would it look like for Jesus to be your “highest joy” this week, even if circumstances don’t change?

A Simple Prayer

Lord Jesus, thank You that You understand exile—You left the joy of heaven for our broken world. When I feel far from home, help me remember who You are and who I am in You. Teach me to lament honestly, to hold fast to Your promises, and to trust You with my deepest hurts. Make my heart’s true home Your presence. Amen.

Friend, even in the exile seasons, God is writing your story with tender care. He who brought His people home from Babylon will one day bring us safely home to be with Him forever. Keep remembering. Keep hoping.Grace and peace to you today.