1 Peter 2: The Cornerstone

Today’s reading is 1 Peter 2.

Both Paul and Peter liken Christ’s church to the temple. Paul does so in Ephesians 2:19-22. Peter in our current reading. Both call Jesus the cornerstone of the whole building. Paul in Ephesians 2:20. Peter here in 1 Peter 2:6-7.

Jesus is, according to 1 Peter 2:4, a chosen and precious stone. Both words translate terms lifted from the Septuagint version of Isaiah 28:16, quoted in 1 Peter 2:6. He is chosen or elect, just as the recipients of this letter were according to 1 Peter 1:1. He is precious, costly. That is, Jesus is valuable. However, He is valuable to God. Men rejected Him. They didn’t see His value.

Peter pulls together three passages from Isaiah and Psalms to make his point. In Isaiah 28:16, God will build a foundation in Zion with a chosen and precious cornerstone. In Isaiah 28:14-22, God rebuked the Judeans for claiming a covenant with death and Sheol to protect them from the passing storm. By contrast, God built a foundation. That is, a sure place to shelter in contrast with the flimsy covenant with death. Whoever puts their faith in the foundation built on God’s cornerstone will not be put to shame or disgraced. Those who trust in lies will be overcome by the storm of judgment. In other words, Jesus is the shelter against death and judgment for those who believe and obey.

In Psalm 118, the psalmist recounts his distress at the hands of the nations. They surrounded him and pressed in on him. But the Lord cut them off. The psalmist took refuge in the Lord, not in princes. In vs. 22, he describes himself as the stone rejected by the builders which the Lord has used as His cornerstone. In vs. 18, the psalmist said, “The LORD has disciplined me severely, but he has not given me over to death” (ESV). That’s Jesus. Yes, He died. But He was not given over to it. On the third day, God demonstrated His election of this precious cornerstone by raising Him from the dead.

In Isaiah 8, God had Isaiah foretell the coming of Assyria against Israel because they would not drink from the waters God provided but rejoiced in foreign waters. That is, in foreign gods and kings. In the wake of this promise, God told Isaiah not to fear what the people feared. Instead, he was to fear God. If he did, God would become a sanctuary of protection for Isaiah, but would become a stone of offense and rock of stumbling for both Israel and Judah. They would stumble on Him. Those who will not believe on and trust in the stone that is God, will stumble, fall, and be broken.

Each of these passages and Peter’s point overall is quite simple. For those who believe and obey, Jesus is a stone of refuge, protection, and shelter. for those who do not believe, but reject and disobey, He is a stone which will trip them up and cause them to stumble.

Peter says they were destined to this. His point is not that they were destined to disbelieve and disobey. Rather, those who disbelieve, reject, and disobey are destined to stumble. Interestingly, this is a play on words. The word translated “destined” in 1 Peter 2:8 (ESV) is the same word translated “laying” in 1 Peter 2:6 (ESV). Jesus was laid, established, appointed, destined to be this important stone. In like manner, those who disbelieve, reject, and disobey the stone are not built into the temple but are laid, established, appointed, destined to stumble over the cornerstone.

The choice is ours. Will we take refuge in Jesus the cornerstone or will we stumble over Him?

Tomorrow’s reading is 1 Peter 2.

PODCAST!!!

Click here to take about 15 minutes to listen to the Text Talk conversation between Andrew Roberts and Edwin Crozier.

PATHS:
Discuss Today’s Meditation with Your Family

How does 1 Peter 2 admonish you?

Psalm 118: The Rejected Stone

Today’s reading is Psalm 118.

The Way God Works

Do you recall whom God used to deliver Israel from the famine in the days of Jacob and his sons? Joseph. You know, the brother the others rejected and sold into slavery.

Do you recall whom God used to deliver Israel from Egyptian bondage? Moses. You know, the one the Israelites rejected when he tried to deliver them the first time.

Do you recall whom God used to be the king after His own heart? David. You know, the one whose father and brothers were so sure couldn’t be the one Samuel was looking for they left him out with the sheep. You know, the one Eliab ridiculed just because he was asking about Goliath. You know, the one Saul chased out into the wilderness.

Do you recall whom God used to intercede for his friends after they spent days arguing? Job. You know, the one whose friends rejected as a horrible sinner.

Do you recall whom God used to intercede on behalf of Israel to be released from Babylonian captivity? Daniel. You know, the one whose co-workers hated him and got him thrown in a lion’s den.

God has a penchant for using the very ones everyone else rejects to accomplish His greatest plans of intercessions, salvation, and deliverance.

Is it any wonder the one against whom the people shouted, “Crucify! Crucify!” ends up being the very cornerstone of the Lord’s kingdom? God always chooses the stone the builders reject in order to build His plans.

Praise the Lord!

Do you know whom God can use to accomplish great things in His kingdom today? He’s always been able to use the least, the last, the lowest. Wherever you think you rank on the scale of usability, God can use you to do amazing things. Turn to Him as a living stone fitted together into a house of praise and be amazed at how God can use even you, even at your weakest. Especially at your weakest.

Praise the Lord!

Next week’s reading is in Psalm 119.

PODCAST!!!

Click here to take about 15 minutes to listen to the Text Talk conversation between Andrew Roberts and Edwin Crozier.

PATHS:
Discuss Today’s Meditation with Your Family

What do you want to share with others from Psalm 118?

Psalm 87: The City of the King

Today’s reading is Psalm 87

God founded His city on His holy mountain, Mount Zion. Of course, we’ve heard of Mount Zion many times before. This is the fifteenth psalm to mention Zion. Do you recall the first one?

That’s right!

“As for me, I have set my King
on Zion, my holy hill.”

Psalm 2:6 (ESV)

God founded His city on His holy hill just as He set His King on His holy hill.

Notice what comes together in Isaiah 28:16:

Therefore thus says the Lord GOD,
“Behold, I am the one who has laid as a foundation in Zion,
a stone, a tested stone,
a precious cornerstone, of a sure foundation:
‘Whoever believes will not be in haste’ (ESV)”

When the Lord founded His city on His holy hill, the foundation was not actually bricks and mortar. This passage is quoted in Romans 9:33 and 1 Peter 2:6. That cornerstone is Jesus, the King (see also Psalm 118:22; Matthew 21:42; Ephesians 2:20).

As Hebrews 12:22-24 says, when we come to the church, to Mount Zion, to the heavenly Jerusalem, we come to Jesus the mediator of a new covenant. We come to One whose blood speaks better things than Abel’s blood which cried out to the Lord.

Thus, as the author of Hebrews goes on to say in Hebrews 12:25-29, don’t neglect the one who is speaking. Glorious things are said of Zion, Christ’s church. It’s a kingdom that cannot be shaken. Get in it. Stay in it. Hang on to it. It may be a rough ride, but in the end, this kingdom, this city wins.

Praise the Lord!

Next week’s reading is Psalm 88.

PODCAST!!!

Click here to take about 15 minutes to listen to the Text Talk conversation between Andrew Roberts and Edwin Crozier sparked by this post.

PATHS:
Discuss Today’s Meditation with Your Family

What do you want to share with others from Psalm 87?

Psalm 87: The City Whose Builder is God

Today’s reading is Psalm 87.

“On the holy mount stands the city he founded…”

Psalm 87:1 (ESV)

Jerusalem on Mt. Zion is the city whose foundations were laid, not by men, but by God. Oh, sure, a geo-political city was on that mountain before Israel came into the promised land. Melchizedek was a priest there. The Jebusites lived there. However, as far as Israel is concerned, it was one of those cities they didn’t have to build. God provided it for them. However, Jerusalem on Zion was something more than a geo-political entity. It was the dwelling place of God. This was God’s city. David didn’t make it that. Solomon didn’t make it that. God made it that.

But the ears of Christians everywhere should perk up as we read the first line of this psalm.

By faith Abraham obeyed when he was called to go out to a place that he was to receive as an inheritance. And he went out, not knowing where he was going. By faith he went to live in the land of promise, as in a foreign land, living in tents with Isaac and Jacob, heirs with him of the same promise. For he was looking forward to the city that has foundations, whose designer and builder is God.

Hebrews 11:8-10 (ESV)

When the author of Hebrews says this about Abraham, on the one hand, he is definitely looking back to this historical notion of God’s city (See also Isaiah 14:32; 28:16). However, when we keep reading in Hebrews, we discover that city was actually pointing to another one.

But you have come to Mount Zion and to the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem and to innumerable angles in festal gathering and to the assembly of the firstborn who are enrolled in heaven, and to God, the judge of all, and to the spirits of the righteous made perfect, and to Jesus, the mediator of a new covenant, and to the sprinkled blood that speaks a better word than the blood of Abel.

Hebrews 12:22-24 (ESV)

When we come to Jesus Christ and to the assembly or church of the firstborn enrolled in heaven, we have come to Mt. Zion and the city of the living God. We have come to the heavenly Jerusalem. We have come to the city which literally was built completely by God. The foundation is Jesus Christ Himself and the apostles of Jesus (see Ephesians 2:20). The bricks and mortar are the people God has saved.

Yesterday we highlighted we have to be in God’s city if we want to be on the winning side. And now we know how to do that. We don’t have to travel to Israel. We need to come to Jesus and His church.

Are you in Christ’s church? Can we help you get there? Let us know in the comments below.

Tomorrow’s reading is Psalm 87.

PODCAST!!!

Click here to take about 15 minutes to listen to the Text Talk conversation between Andrew Roberts and Edwin Crozier sparked by this post.

PATHS:
Discuss Today’s Meditation with Your Family

How does Psalm 87 admonish you?