[Note: This is the prepared text for a sermon given to the United Church of God in the Dalles, Oregon, on Sabbath, June 6, 2026.]
Introduction: The Debate Over the Priesthood of Believers
Few phrases in the history of Christian thought have been repeated as often, or understood as differently, as “the priesthood of believers.” The words sound familiar and even comfortable, but the moment we ask what they actually mean, we discover that earnest people have meant very different things by them, and that the differences matter a great deal for how we understand our calling before God.
For long centuries the prevailing view in much of the Western church was that the priesthood belonged to a special, ordained class. A man became a priest through a particular rite, and once made a priest he stood between God and the people as a mediator, able to do what ordinary believers could not. The people came to God through him. He handled the holy things; they watched. This sacramental priesthood drew a sharp line down the middle of the congregation, with the clergy on one side and the laity on the other.
When the Reformers of the sixteenth century pressed back against that system, they recovered a phrase that had been buried under tradition. Martin Luther argued forcefully that every baptized believer is a priest, that there is no spiritual caste standing between the Christian and his God, and that the ordinary believer may approach God directly through the one Mediator, Jesus Christ. This recovery was a genuine gift, and it sent people back to their Bibles to read what Peter and John had actually written. But almost immediately the phrase began to be pulled in directions that the apostles never intended.
One direction is individualism. In this reading, “the priesthood of believers” means that I am my own priest, accountable to no one, free to interpret Scripture however I please, needing no congregation, no teachers, no shepherds, no order. Each person becomes a sovereign island of private religion. The phrase becomes a banner for spiritual autonomy, a way of saying that no one may instruct me or correct me, because I have my own line to heaven. Whole movements have been built on that misunderstanding, and they tend to fracture endlessly, because a community made of sovereign individuals is not really a community at all.
A second direction is what we might call leveling—the idea that because all believers are priests, there can be no distinction of function, no government, no teaching authority, no ministry within the body. If everyone is a priest, the argument goes, then no one may lead, instruct, or hold office. This too claims the phrase as its warrant.
A third direction quietly empties the phrase of meaning altogether. It becomes a slogan we affirm and then ignore, a doctrine we file away while our actual lives look no different from the world’s.
So the debate is real, and it is not merely academic. It touches how we read the Bible, how we relate to one another, how we understand the ministry, and above all how we understand what God is doing with the people He has called. And the way through the debate is not to argue the slogan back and forth, but to go to the texts where the language was born and trace it through the Scriptures from beginning to end. When we do, we find that the phrase is neither a charter for spiritual loneliness nor an excuse for chaos. It is a covenant calling, given first to a nation and then to the church, and it has always been corporate, always purposeful, and always tied to obedience.
The two passages that anchor this whole subject stand at the head of the two testaments of God’s dealings with His people. The first is Exodus chapter nineteen, where God tells Israel at the foot of Sinai what He has called them to be. The second is the second chapter of First Peter, where the apostle takes the very words God spoke to Israel and lays them upon the church. We will walk through both, beginning with Israel and then turning to the church, and we will let the texts themselves teach us what it means to be a kingdom of priests and a holy nation. Then, at the end, we will see where this calling is headed—what God expects of us as kings and priests both in this present age and in the world to come.
Part One: God Called Israel to Be a Kingdom of Priests
To understand what God expected of the church, we must first understand what He expected of Israel, because the church’s calling is spoken in Israel’s words. So we begin at the mountain.
“while Moses went up to God. The LORD called to him out of the mountain, saying, ‘Thus you shall say to the house of Jacob, and tell the people of Israel: You yourselves have seen what I did to the Egyptians, and how I bore you on eagles’ wings and brought you to myself. Now therefore, if you will indeed obey my voice and keep my covenant, you shall be my treasured possession among all peoples, for all the earth is mine; and you shall be to me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation. These are the words that you shall speak to the people of Israel.'” (Exodus 19:3–6)
Consider where this happens and what has just preceded it. Israel has come out of Egypt. They have seen the plagues, the parted sea, the destruction of Pharaoh’s army, the bread from heaven, the water from the rock. They are camped before Sinai, and before God gives them a single commandment of the law that follows, He tells them who He intends them to be. The order is worth noticing. The calling comes before the commandments. God does not say, “Keep these laws and then perhaps I will make something of you.” He says, “I have already borne you on eagles’ wings and brought you to myself. Now, here is what you are to become.”
Look first at how God describes what He has done. “I bore you on eagles’ wings and brought you to myself.” This is the language of redemption and of relationship. God did not merely free Israel from slavery and leave them to wander; He carried them, and He carried them to Himself. The deliverance had a destination, and the destination was God’s own presence. Every calling to priesthood begins here, with God bringing a people to Himself. A priest, after all, is one who draws near to God on behalf of others. Before Israel could be a kingdom of priests to the nations, they first had to be brought near themselves.
Then comes the great conditional: “if you will indeed obey my voice and keep my covenant.” We must not rush past this little word “if.” The calling is genuine and it is gracious, but it is not unconditional in the sense that Israel could ignore God’s voice and still be what He called them to be. The privilege and the obedience are bound together. To be God’s treasured possession, to be a kingdom of priests, to be a holy nation—all of this hangs upon hearing His voice and keeping His covenant. This is the consistent pattern of the whole Bible: God acts first in mercy, He delivers freely, and then He calls the delivered to walk in obedience. Grace does not cancel obedience; grace makes obedience possible and obligatory. The God who carried them on eagles’ wings now asks them to listen and to keep covenant with Him.
Now consider the three titles God gives. “My treasured possession among all peoples.” The Hebrew word here points to a personal treasure, the special property a king might keep for himself out of all his wealth. God owns everything—”for all the earth is mine,” He says in the same breath—and yet out of all the earth He sets His heart on this one people as His particular treasure. This is the kingly dimension of the calling. They belong to the King in a special way; they are His own.
“A kingdom of priests.” Here is the phrase that becomes the seed of everything that follows. What does it mean for an entire nation to be a kingdom of priests? It does not mean that there would be no distinct priesthood within Israel—as we will see, God soon set apart the line of Aaron for particular service. It means rather that the nation as a whole was to function before the rest of the world the way a priest functions within a nation. A priest stands between God and the people. He represents God to the people and the people to God. He teaches the law, he keeps the sanctuary, he offers the sacrifices, he intercedes, he carries the knowledge of the holy God into the midst of the community. God was telling Israel that this was to be their role among all the nations of the earth. Israel was to be the priestly nation in a world of nations that did not know God. Through Israel, the surrounding peoples were meant to learn who the true God is, what He requires, and how a people may walk with Him. Israel’s whole national life—its worship, its laws, its justice, its Sabbaths, its festivals, its treatment of the poor and the stranger—was to be a standing testimony, a living demonstration of the wisdom of God before the watching world.
We see this purpose stated plainly elsewhere. When Moses rehearses the law to a later generation, he tells them:
“See, I have taught you statutes and rules, as the LORD my God commanded me, that you should do them in the land that you are entering to take possession of it. Keep them and do them, for that will be your wisdom and your understanding in the sight of the peoples, who, when they hear all these statutes, will say, ‘Surely this great nation is a wise and understanding people.'” (Deuteronomy 4:5–6)
This is the priestly vocation in action. The nations were to look at Israel and be drawn toward the God of Israel. The obedience of the people was itself a form of priestly mediation, a way of carrying the light of God to those who sat in darkness.
“And a holy nation.” Holiness means being set apart for God. Israel was not to be like the other nations. Their distinctiveness was not an accident or a matter of mere ethnic separation; it was the point. A priest must be clean to draw near to a holy God, and a priestly nation must be a holy nation. God repeats this throughout the law:
“For you are a people holy to the LORD your God. The LORD your God has chosen you to be a people for his treasured possession, out of all the peoples who are on the face of the earth.” (Deuteronomy 7:6)
The holiness and the treasured-possession and the chosenness all travel together. To be God’s special people meant to be a set-apart people, and to be set apart meant to live differently—to keep His Sabbaths, to eat what He permitted and refuse what He forbade, to deal justly, to worship Him alone and never the gods of the nations around them. The separation was for the sake of the mission. A people indistinguishable from the world has nothing to show the world.
So at Sinai, before the giving of the law, God lays out the grand design. He has redeemed a people to Himself. He intends them to be His treasured possession, a kingdom of priests carrying the knowledge of God to the nations, and a holy nation set apart to live in His ways. The whole calling rests upon hearing His voice and keeping His covenant.
How did Israel respond? In the very next verses, the people answer with one voice, “All that the LORD has spoken we will do” (Exodus 19:8). It was a good answer and a sincere one in the moment. But we know what came after. Within a short time, while Moses was still on the mountain receiving the covenant, the people made a golden calf and worshiped it. The same nation that had pledged obedience broke the first commandment before the law was even in their hands. And from that point forward, the history of Israel becomes a long account of a calling repeatedly affirmed and repeatedly broken.
It is worth pausing here over a sobering detail. After the golden calf, God set apart the tribe of Levi, and within it the house of Aaron, for the priesthood. This was not a withdrawal of the original calling but a provision within it. The nation as a whole had been called to be a kingdom of priests; now, because the people would not bear that holiness corporately, a particular priesthood was instituted to keep the sanctuary, offer the sacrifices, and teach the law on the nation’s behalf. The existence of the Levitical priesthood did not cancel the wider vocation—it served it, holding the place of mediation that the whole nation had been called to fill. The Levites carried the priestly function so that the nation might still, in some measure, be the priestly people God intended.
And the original calling was never forgotten. Centuries later, looking forward to a day of restoration, the prophet Isaiah holds out the same vision to the people:
“but you shall be called the priests of the LORD; they shall speak of you as the ministers of our God; you shall eat the wealth of the nations, and in their glory you shall boast.” (Isaiah 61:6)
Here the priestly calling of the whole people resurfaces. In the day of God’s favor, all His people would be called priests of the LORD, ministers of God, with the nations serving and supporting them. The vocation given at Sinai had not been abandoned; it had been deferred, awaiting a people who would truly hear God’s voice and keep His covenant.
This is the heart of Part One. God called an entire nation to a priestly and kingly identity. The calling was rooted in His redeeming mercy. It carried a real condition: obedience to His voice and faithfulness to His covenant. It had a clear purpose: that through this holy, set-apart, treasured people, all the families of the earth might come to know the true God. And it ran aground, again and again, on the hardness of the human heart. The privilege was offered; the people would not consistently live up to it. The story of Israel leaves us looking for a people who can.
Part Two: This Calling Placed Upon the Church
When we turn to the New Testament, we find that the calling did not die. It was lifted up, carried forward, and laid upon the people God was now gathering through Jesus Christ. And the apostle Peter, writing to scattered believers, reaches back and takes the very words of Sinai into his hands and presses them onto the church. Let us read the passage that anchors this entire teaching.
“But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his own possession, that you may proclaim the excellencies of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light. Once you were not a people, but now you are God’s people; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy.” (1 Peter 2:9–10)
Listen to how thoroughly Peter is quoting Exodus nineteen. “A royal priesthood”—that is the kingdom of priests. “A holy nation”—those are the exact words God spoke at Sinai. “A people for his own possession”—that is the treasured possession. Peter is not inventing a new doctrine; he is announcing that the ancient calling has found its true home. What God said to Israel at the mountain, He now says to the church through the apostle. The vocation that Israel could not fulfill is now placed upon a new people, gathered from many nations, redeemed by the blood of Jesus Christ.
But notice what comes just before these verses, because Peter has been building to this. A few lines earlier he writes:
“As you come to him, a living stone rejected by men but in the sight of God chosen and precious, you yourselves like living stones are being built up as a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.” (1 Peter 2:4–5)
Here we begin to find the answer to the whole debate we started with. Notice carefully what Peter says, because every word pushes against the individualism that has so often hijacked this doctrine. The believers are “living stones.” A single stone is not a building; a stone has its meaning only as part of a structure. Peter says they are “being built up as a spiritual house”—one house, made of many stones, fitted together. And it is this house, this assembled structure, that is “a holy priesthood.” The priesthood Peter describes is not a collection of private priests each tending his own altar in isolation. It is a corporate priesthood, a single temple made of many living stones, joined together upon the cornerstone, who is Jesus Christ.
This is the heart of the matter, and it is where the popular slogan so often goes wrong. When the New Testament speaks of believers as priests, it almost never speaks of the believer as an individual priest standing alone. It speaks of the people, the body, the house, the nation. “You are a royal priesthood.” “You are a holy nation.” The “you” is plural and the calling is collective. The Reformers were entirely right to deny that some special caste stands between the believer and God, and right to insist that every Christian may come boldly to the throne of grace through the one Mediator. But the cure for a false clergy-laity divide is not a thousand isolated priests; it is one priestly people. The priesthood of believers is the priesthood of the whole believing community together, built into a single spiritual house, serving God as one body.
So the doctrine, rightly understood, does not abolish order within the body, and it does not license each person to be a law unto himself. A house has structure. A body has members with different functions. The same Scriptures that call all believers priests also speak of teachers, of elders, of those who labor in the word, of government within the congregation. There is no contradiction. The Levitical priesthood served the priestly nation of old without canceling its calling; in the same way, the ministry serves the priestly people of the new covenant without setting itself above them as a separate caste. Every member is part of the holy priesthood; not every member has the same function within it. The phrase was never meant to make us spiritual islands. It was meant to make us one priestly people, fitted together, serving God in concert.
Now look at what this priesthood does. Peter names two things, and they correspond exactly to the two halves of the priestly office in Israel.
First, the priesthood offers sacrifice. “To offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.” The priests of old offered animals and grain upon the altar. The new priesthood offers spiritual sacrifices. What are these? The Scriptures tell us plainly. The book of Hebrews says:
“Through him then let us continually offer up a sacrifice of praise to God, that is, the fruit of lips that acknowledge his name. Do not neglect to do good and to share what you have, for such sacrifices are pleasing to God.” (Hebrews 13:15–16)
The sacrifice of praise, the open acknowledgment of God’s name, doing good, sharing with those in need—these are the offerings of the new priesthood. And Paul adds the greatest sacrifice of all:
“I appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship.” (Romans 12:1)
The priest of the new covenant lays his own life on the altar. Not a dead animal, but a living body, given over wholly to God, set apart for His service. Our worship, our praise, our obedience, our generosity, our entire consecrated lives—these are the sacrifices we offer. And notice that they are offered “through Jesus Christ.” Our priesthood is never independent of His. He is the great High Priest who has entered the true sanctuary once for all; our priesthood is exercised under His, made acceptable only through Him. We do not approach God on our own merit but through the one Mediator who has opened the way.
Second, the priesthood proclaims. Peter says we are a royal priesthood and a holy nation “that you may proclaim the excellencies of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light.” Here is the missionary heart of the priesthood, and here is the direct echo of Israel’s calling to carry the knowledge of God to the nations. The priestly people exist to declare God’s praises before the world. Just as Israel was to be a light to the nations, the church is called to proclaim the excellencies of the God who called us out of darkness. The priesthood is not turned in upon itself; it faces outward toward a world in darkness, holding up the light. Our holy and set-apart life is itself part of that proclamation, just as Israel’s obedience was meant to make the nations marvel at the wisdom of God.
And do not miss the closing words of the passage, for they reach back even further than Sinai. “Once you were not a people, but now you are God’s people; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy.” Peter is now drawing on the prophet Hosea, who spoke of God taking those who were not His people and making them His people, having mercy on those who had received no mercy. The point is staggering. This priestly nation is gathered out of those who had no claim, no covenant standing, no inheritance—people who were not a people. Pure mercy made them what they are. The same mercy that bore Israel on eagles’ wings out of Egypt has now reached out and gathered a people from every nation and made them God’s own treasured possession. The calling rests entirely on the mercy of God, just as it always did.
Now we must ask whether this priestly calling, like Israel’s, carries a condition of obedience. It does, and the whole letter of First Peter makes it plain. The verses we have read sit in the middle of a sustained appeal to holy living. Just before, Peter writes:
“As obedient children, do not be conformed to the passions of your former ignorance, but as he who called you is holy, you also be holy in all your conduct, since it is written, ‘You shall be holy, for I am holy.'” (1 Peter 1:14–16)
That command—”You shall be holy, for I am holy”—is itself a quotation from the law given to Israel. The holiness required of the holy nation has not been lowered for the church; it has been pressed home with equal force. And just after our central passage, Peter urges the believers to keep their conduct honorable among the nations, so that even those who slander them may, seeing their good works, glorify God. This is precisely the priestly function we saw in Israel—a holy, set-apart life that draws the watching world toward the true God. The condition of obedience that stood over Israel at Sinai stands over the church as well. We are a holy nation only insofar as we live holy lives. We are a royal priesthood only insofar as we offer our bodies as living sacrifices and walk in the ways of God. The privilege and the obedience remain bound together, exactly as they were at the mountain.
There is one more witness we must hear before we leave Part Two, and it carries us toward the conclusion, because it adds the kingly dimension that Peter touches with the word “royal.” The apostle John, in the Revelation, twice describes the people of God in these same terms. At the opening of the book he writes:
“and from Jesus Christ the faithful witness, the firstborn of the dead, and the ruler of kings on earth. To him who loves us and has freed us from our sins by his blood and made us a kingdom, priests to his God and Father, to him be glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.” (Revelation 1:5–6)
There it is once more: a kingdom and priests. The redeemed are made into a kingdom and made priests, by the One who loves us and freed us from our sins by His blood. The kingly and priestly callings, first joined at Sinai in the phrase “kingdom of priests,” are joined again here in the people of the new covenant. We are not only those who draw near to God and offer sacrifice; we are a kingdom, destined to reign.
So the calling of Part One has been taken up entirely into Part Two. The words God spoke to Israel at the mountain—treasured possession, kingdom of priests, holy nation—are now spoken to the church. The same mercy founds it, the same obedience conditions it, the same purpose drives it: that a redeemed and holy people might draw near to God, offer their lives in sacrifice, and proclaim His excellencies to a world in darkness. What Israel was called to be and could not consistently sustain, the church is now called to be through Jesus Christ, the cornerstone and High Priest who makes the whole structure stand.
Conclusion: Kings and Priests Now and in the World to Come
We have traced the calling from Sinai to the church. We have seen that the priesthood of believers, rightly understood, is not the lonely autonomy of a thousand private religions, nor the leveling away of all order, nor a slogan we may safely ignore. It is the corporate calling of a redeemed people to be God’s treasured possession, a kingdom of priests, and a holy nation—the same vocation given to Israel, now placed upon the church through Jesus Christ. Two questions remain, and they belong together. What does this priesthood and kingship mean for us now, in this present age? And what does it mean for the age to come?
Consider first the present. We are priests now. Not in waiting, not merely in name, but in living practice. This means, first of all, that we may draw near to God. The whole point of priesthood is access to the holy presence, and through Jesus Christ that access is open to every member of the body. We do not need a human mediator to carry our prayers; we come ourselves, as a priestly people, to the throne of grace. This is the precious truth the Reformers recovered, and we must hold it fast: no caste of men stands between the believer and his God. Through the one High Priest, the way is open.
But access is given for service, and so being a priest now means offering sacrifice now. Every day lays before us the opportunity to offer the sacrifices Peter and the apostles described—the sacrifice of praise, the open acknowledgment of God’s name, the doing of good, the sharing of what we have, and above all the presenting of our own bodies as living sacrifices, holy and acceptable to God. The priestly life is not lived once a week and forgotten; it is a continual offering. When we praise God in the assembly, we are functioning as priests. When we feed the hungry and care for the afflicted, we are offering sacrifices pleasing to God. When we keep our bodies and our conduct holy, refusing to be conformed to the passions of our former ignorance, we are performing priestly service. The altar is our whole life, and the offering never ends.
Being a priest now also means proclaiming now. We were made a holy nation and a royal priesthood “that we may proclaim the excellencies of him who called us out of darkness into his marvelous light.” This is our missionary calling, the same calling Israel carried before the nations. By our words and by our set-apart lives, we hold up the light of the true God before a world that sits in darkness. The watching world should look at the people of God and, like the nations who marveled at Israel’s wisdom, be drawn toward the God who made them what they are. We are intercessors too, standing before God on behalf of others as priests have always done, lifting up the needs of the world and of the brethren in prayer. All of this is priesthood, and all of it is for now.
And we must add the kingly dimension, for we are called not only priests but a royal priesthood, a kingdom. In this present age our kingship is largely hidden, exercised in the rule we are learning to keep over ourselves. The one who would reign with Christ must first learn to be ruled by Christ—to govern his own spirit, to bring his conduct under the law of God, to overcome the pulls of the flesh. We are kings in training. The dominion we will one day exercise over cities and nations is being prepared for now in the daily, unglamorous work of self-government under the rule of God. The character of a king is forged in the obedience of a servant.
Yet the present is not the whole of it, and it would be a poor reading of Scripture to stop here. The calling to be a kingdom of priests reaches its fullness not in this age but in the age to come. The Revelation, which named us a kingdom and priests, tells us where this is headed. In the great song before the throne we read:
“And they sang a new song, saying, ‘Worthy are you to take the scroll and to open its seals, for you were slain, and by your blood you ransomed people for God from every tribe and language and people and nation, and you have made them a kingdom and priests to our God, and they shall reign on the earth.'” (Revelation 5:9–10)
Mark those last words: “and they shall reign on the earth.” The priesthood and the kingship are not abstractions to be enjoyed only in some vague spiritual realm. They point to a coming reign upon this earth. The people ransomed by the blood of Jesus Christ from every tribe and language are made a kingdom and priests precisely so that they may reign. The calling that began at Sinai, that ran through the prophets, that was laid upon the church by Peter and John, finds its destination in a real and coming kingdom in which the redeemed rule alongside their King.
And John tells us when and how this reign begins:
“Blessed and holy is the one who shares in the first resurrection! Over such the second death has no power, but they will be priests of God and of Christ, and they will reign with him for a thousand years.” (Revelation 20:6)
Here is the climax of the whole matter. Those who share in the first resurrection are pronounced blessed and holy. The second death has no power over them. And what is their destiny? They will be priests of God and of Christ, and they will reign with Him for a thousand years. The two strands of the calling—priest and king—are woven together at the resurrection and carried into the age to come. The priesthood we exercise imperfectly now, offering spiritual sacrifices and drawing near to God, will then be exercised in resurrected glory. The kingship we are only learning now, governing our own hearts, will then be exercised over the nations of the earth in the kingdom of God. The treasured possession, the kingdom of priests, the holy nation—what God said to Israel at the mountain and to the church through the apostles—comes to its full reality when Jesus Christ returns and His people are raised to reign with Him.
Do you see what this means? The same calling that Israel could not sustain, that the church now carries through Jesus Christ, will at last be perfectly realized in the resurrection and in the world to come. There will be a kingdom of priests—a redeemed people, raised from death, serving as priests to God and reigning as kings under Christ over a restored earth. And just as Israel was meant to be a priestly nation carrying the knowledge of God to the surrounding peoples, so the resurrected saints will be a priestly nation carrying the knowledge of God to a world being taught His ways at last. The mission that has run through the whole Bible reaches its fulfillment when the kingdom of priests rules and teaches the nations under the reign of the King of kings.
This casts everything in the present in its true light. The reason we offer spiritual sacrifices now is that we are being prepared to be priests forever. The reason we learn to govern ourselves now is that we are being prepared to reign. The reason we live holy, set-apart lives now is that we are a holy nation in training for the holiness of the kingdom. Our present priesthood is the rehearsal; the coming kingdom is the performance. Our present kingship is the apprenticeship; the thousand years and beyond is the throne. Nothing we do now in faithfulness is wasted, because all of it is forming us for the calling we will exercise in glory.
So let us return one last time to the debate with which we began. What is the priesthood of believers? It is not the autonomy of the isolated individual, free from all instruction and accountability. It is not the abolition of all order and ministry within the body. It is the corporate calling of a redeemed people, built together as one spiritual house upon Jesus Christ the cornerstone, to draw near to God, to offer the sacrifice of our whole lives, to proclaim His excellencies before the world, and at the last to reign with Him as kings and priests forever. It is the calling first spoken to Israel at the mountain, taken up and laid upon the church, and brought to its fullness in the world to come.
That calling rests upon every one of us together. We have received mercy when we deserved none; we were not a people, and now we are God’s people. The privilege is real, and so is the condition that has always accompanied it: hear His voice, keep His covenant, be holy as He is holy. Let us, then, take up the calling with seriousness and joy. Let us offer our bodies as living sacrifices. Let us proclaim the One who called us out of darkness into His marvelous light. Let us govern ourselves under His rule, so that we may be fit to reign under His authority. For we are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for His own possession—and we shall reign on the earth.
May God grant us the grace to be, in this age and the age to come, the kingdom of priests and the holy nation He has called us to be, through Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom be glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.
