The Trigger: Diaspora Christians Under Suspicion, Told to Voluntarily Lower Themselves
Peter writes to believers scattered across five Roman provinces in Asia Minor — people he calls "elect exiles" (1:1) and "sojourners" (2:11). These are not ethnic Jews in diaspora but predominantly Gentile converts whose social world has collapsed. Former friends now slander them as evildoers (2:12, 4:4). Roman society viewed new religious movements with deep suspicion: they disrupted household order, threatened civic religion, and destabilized patron-client networks. Christians who refused emperor worship, avoided public festivals, and reorganized household loyalties looked like social anarchists. The immediate trigger is a survival crisis: how do freed people — people liberated from "futile ways inherited from your forefathers" (1:18) — live inside an empire that is already watching them? Peter's answer is counterintuitive. He does not say "lie low." He does not say "resist." He says submit — and he grounds it not in the emperor's legitimacy but in God's purposes. This command lands inside a section (2:11–3:12) that systematically addresses how Christians engage every layer of Roman social structure: government, slavery, marriage. Verses 13-14 open that sequence. They set the theological logic everything else depends on.
The Specific Crisis
The letter's recipients live in Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia — provinces spanning modern Turkey. The dating likely falls in the early-to-mid 60s AD, before Nero's formal persecution but during a period of escalating social hostility toward Christians. Pliny's later correspondence with Trajan (c. 112 AD) about Christians in this same region — Bithynia-Pontus — reveals what was already brewing: Roman officials suspicious of an unauthorized association (collegium) that met secretly, refused to honor the gods, and disrupted social hierarchies.
Peter's audience has been converted out of Greco-Roman paganism. He explicitly references their former "passions of your former ignorance" (1:14), "the futile ways inherited from your forefathers" (1:18), and their past life of "debauchery, passions, drunkenness, orgies, drinking parties, and lawless idolatry" (4:3). These are not Jewish converts. They are Gentiles who have exited the Roman social-religious ecosystem — and their neighbors have noticed. The phrase in 4:4 is devastating: "They are surprised when you do not join them in the same flood of debauchery, and they malign you."
The slander is not generic. Romans accused Christians of being ἄθεοι (atheists — rejecting the gods), practitioners of incest (they called each other "brother" and "sister" and met for love feasts), and cannibals (eating "body" and "blood"). More practically, Christians who refused to participate in trade guild sacrifices lost economic standing. Women who converted independently of their husbands violated household order. Slaves who worshipped a crucified criminal destabilized the master-slave hierarchy.
What Peter Is Trying to Accomplish
Peter is not writing a political treatise. He is solving a missionary and survival problem. The thesis statement for this entire section appears in 2:12: "Keep your conduct among the Gentiles honorable, so that when they speak against you as evildoers, they may see your good deeds and glorify God on the day of visitation." The strategy is: disarm the accusation by living so visibly well within Roman structures that the slander collapses under the weight of observable evidence.
Verses 13-14 open the specific behavioral instructions that execute this strategy. They are not an independent theological unit — they are the first move in a sequence: submit to government (2:13-17), submit within slavery (2:18-25), submit within marriage (3:1-7), and a summary for the whole community (3:8-12). Every instruction in this sequence serves the same telos: make the gospel credible by making Christian behavior incontestable.
What Immediately Precedes
Verses 11-12 set up the entire section. "Beloved, I urge you as sojourners and exiles to abstain from the passions of the flesh, which wage war against your soul. Keep your conduct among the Gentiles honorable..." The metaphor of sojourning is critical. A sojourner (πάροικος) in the ancient world was a resident alien — someone living in a place with limited legal rights, dependent on the goodwill of the host community. Peter has just redefined his audience's fundamental identity: you are not citizens of this empire. You are resident aliens passing through. And resident aliens who cause trouble get expelled.
Common Misreading
The most common misreading treats 2:13-14 as a universal political theology — a timeless divine endorsement of governmental authority. This flattens the passage into a proof-text for unconditional obedience to the state. Peter's argument is far more specific and far more subversive than that. He is telling free people to choose subordination for strategic and theological reasons — and he will limit that subordination sharply when it conflicts with God's commands (cf. Acts 5:29, which Peter himself modeled). The submission is voluntary, purposeful, and bounded — not unconditional, passive, or rooted in the state's inherent legitimacy.