Peter and Jude
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Lesson OneOverview of 1 Peter21 Activities|1 Assessment
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Getting Started
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Lesson Text: 1 Peter
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In | Workbook: 1 Peter’s Audience
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In | 1 Peter’s Audience
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In | Hope for a Holy Dispersion
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In | 1 Peter's Outline: Submission
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In | The Submission of Women in 1 Peter
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In | 1 Peter's Outline: Suffering
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In | Workbook: Martyrdom as a Christian Witness
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In | Martyrdom as a Christian Witness
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In | Righteousness and Redemptive Suffering
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In | Workbook: Suffering in 1 Peter and the NT
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In | The Values of Suffering, Part 2
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Behind | Aliens and Sojourners
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Behind | Shepherds and Lions
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Behind | Onsite: Jews in the Theater: View from Miletus
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In Front | Spiritual Aliens and Sojourners
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In Front | Steadfastness in Suffering: Professor Anne Zaki
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In Front | Explaining the Hope: Professor Anne Zaki [Bonus]
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In Front | Shame and Suffering Today: Pastor Amjad
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Wrap-Up
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Getting Started
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Lesson TwoSomething Old, Something New (1 Peter Review)18 Activities
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Getting Started
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Lesson Text: 1 Peter Review
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In | 1 Peter and James
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In | In These Last Days
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In | OT Identity in 1 and 2 Peter
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In | Workbook: Inheritance in the Bible, Part 1
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In | Workbook: Inheritance in the Bible, Part 2
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In | Old Testament in 1 Peter 2:6-10
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In | 1 Peter and "the Servant" of Isaiah
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In | Workbook: 1 Peter and "the Servant" of Isaiah
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In | The Gospels in 1 Peter
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In | Workbook: 1 Peter and the NT
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Behind | Living Stones, Spiritual Sacrifice
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In Front | Ready to Give an Answer
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In Front | Ethics and Apologetics [Bonus]
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In Front | 1 Peter as a Baptismal Formula
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In Front | Onsite: Early Christian Baptism
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Wrap-Up
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Getting Started
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Lesson Three2 Peter16 Activities
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Getting Started
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Lesson Text: 2 Peter
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In | Workbook: Common Language in 1 and 2 Peter
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In | Sharing the Divine Nature
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In | Growing in Grace
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In | God's Word in 2 Peter
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In | Peter on Paul and Scripture
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In | False Teachers and Judgment
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In | Fire and the End of the World
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In | Workbook: Comparing 1 and 2 Peter
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Behind | Authorship of 2 Peter
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Behind | Workbook: Chain of Virtues
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In Front | Sanctification
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In Front | Supernatural Life Within
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In Front | God's Light and Our Weakness
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Wrap-Up
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Getting Started
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Lesson FourJude14 Activities
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Getting Started
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Lesson Text: Jude
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In | Workbook: Themes in Jude
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In | Jude on Judgment and Apostasy
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In | Workbook: Jude and 2 Peter Parallel
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In | 2 Peter and Jude
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In | Workbook: “These People”
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In | Scoffers and Jude’s Dear Friends
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Behind | Jude and Apocryphal Literature
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Behind | Workbook: Jude 5
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Behind | The Authorship of Jude
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In Front | Hating the Sin, Loving the Sinner
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In Front | Doxology
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Wrap-Up
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Getting Started
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Lesson FiveCase Study: Peter (1 and 2 Peter Review)18 Activities
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Getting Started
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Lesson Text: 1 and 2 Peter Review
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In | Workbook: Peter and 1 Peter, Part 1
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In | Workbook: Peter and 1 Peter, Part 2
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In | Peter, 1 Peter and 2 Peter
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In | Workbook: Peter’s Transformation, Part 1
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In | Workbook: Peter’s Transformation, Part 2
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In | Peter's Description of Paul
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In | Romans and 1 Peter
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In | Authorship and Audience
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Behind | The Crucifixion of Peter
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Behind | The Death of Peter in Christian Tradition
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Behind | Onsite: Rome as Babylon
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In Front | Peter Became What Jesus Called Him
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In Front | Peter's Transformation and Ministry
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In Front | 1 Peter and the Church Fathers
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In Front | Workbook: Guiding Questions - 1, 2 Peter and Jude
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Wrap-Up
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Getting Started
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Course Wrap-UpCourse Completion1 Activity|1 Assessment
Participants 8
Behind | The Death of Peter in Christian Tradition
A number of early Christians mention the death of Peter, but one of the most complete accounts comes from the Latin Father Jerome (AD 340-420), in his work called On Illustrious Men:
Simon Peter the son of John, from the village of Bethsaida in the province of Galilee, brother of Andrew the apostle, and himself chief of the apostles, after having been bishop of the church of Antioch and having preached to the Dispersion—the believers in circumcision, in Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia and Bithynia—pushed on to Rome in the second year of Claudius to overthrow Simon Magus, and held the sacerdotal chair there for twenty-five years until the last, that is the fourteenth, year of Nero. At his hands he received the crown of martyrdom being nailed to the cross with his head towards the ground and his feet raised on high, asserting that he was unworthy to be crucified in the same manner as his Lord. He wrote two epistles which are called Catholic, the second of which, on account of its difference from the first in style, is considered by many not to be by him. Then too the Gospel according to Mark, who was his disciple and interpreter, is ascribed to him. On the other hand, the books, of which one is entitled his Acts, another his Gospel, a third his Preaching, a fourth his Revelation, a fifth his Judgment are rejected as apocryphal.
Buried at Rome in the Vatican near the triumphal way he is venerated by the whole world.