If you’ve ever wrestled with what it really means to follow Jesus, 1 Peter 4:1–4 pulls no punches. This isn’t surface-level stuff. Peter doesn’t say, “Try to be better.” He says, “Arm yourself.” Not with excuses. Not with comfort. With a mindset that mirrors Christ—one that’s willing to suffer if that’s what it takes to obey.
“Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves likewise with the same mind…”
That’s not a metaphor. That’s a call to war. You’re told to adopt the same thinking Jesus had when He faced the Cross. He embraced pain so you could be free. Now you’re called to embrace pain—temptation, rejection, discipline, whatever comes your way—so you can live free from sin.
That kind of surrender doesn’t come from casual religion. It comes from a heart that’s done playing games with sin.
You used to live like the world.
Peter doesn’t sugarcoat that, either. He names it:
- Lasciviousness
- Lust
- Drunkenness
- Wild parties
- Idolatry
And then he says what too many are afraid to admit—you’ve already wasted enough time there. The time past of your life may suffice. In other words, you’ve given sin more than it deserves. More than enough. So why pretend it still belongs in your future?
That’s the line.
The difference between pretending to follow Christ and actually following Him is that line—the one between who you were and who you are now.
Pretending is easier. You can polish your image, clean up your speech, drop a few churchy phrases, Post a lot of “religous stuff” online and fool everyone, even yourself.
But there’s no death to self in that. No cross. No change.
Drawing the line means choosing obedience over popularity. Holiness over comfort. Conviction over compromise. And that decision will cost you.
You’ll feel it.
Old temptations don’t die quietly. Old friends may laugh or mock or pull away. You’ll hear it: “You’ve changed.” “Don’t be so radical.” “Lighten up.”
And when that happens, remember what Peter said:
“Wherein they think it strange that ye run not with them to the same excess of riot, speaking evil of you.”
They’ll talk. But don’t flinch. Because you’re not just avoiding sin—you’re chasing the will of God. You’re not just surviving—you’re overcoming.
And you’re not alone. You’ve armed yourself with the same mind that was in Christ Jesus. That’s the power of a life that’s truly been changed.
So ask yourself honestly:
Have you drawn the line?
Are you done with the old life—or just dressing it up in Christian clothes?
Because if there’s no real difference between who you were and who you are, then maybe you’re not following Jesus… maybe you’re just pretending.
But the beauty of grace is this—you don’t have to pretend. You can repent. You can draw the line today. You can say, “No more,” and mean it. You can suffer in the flesh rather than live in sin. And in doing so, you’ll find out what real freedom feels like.
Jesus suffered for you—so you could live for Him.
He bore your sin—so you could bear the cost of obedience.
And if the world doesn’t understand you, it just means you’re finally living like you don’t belong to it anymore.
Draw the line. Then walk on.