2 Peter 1: Confirm Your Calling

Today’s reading is 2 Peter 1.

Augustine reportedly summarized Christian salvation and growth this way: “Without God, I cannot. Without me, God will not.”

Peter demonstrates this dynamic cooperation as he outlines Christian maturity in 2 Peter 1. Apart from God’s divine power, divine promises, divine call, divine election, we could not possibly grow to maturity by our own efforts no matter how diligent. Some, through the centuries, have taken this notion too far. They have claimed this means our efforts do not matter. They have claimed we actually don’t make any efforts ourselves, but only have effort to the degree God has chosen and predestined us to exert effort. This notion, however, flies in the face of Peter’s letter and his instruction to be diligent in our own effort.

Peter considers the foundation of God’s power, promises, call, election settled. His concern is for Christians to exert their effort. Twice he exhorts his audience to exercise personal effort. He begins his discussion of mature growth by claiming we must bring to bear all diligent effort to add the mature Christian qualities to our faith. Then he concludes this list by claiming we must give all diligent effort to make our calling and election firm, sure, certain.

Peter does not mean our calling and election depends on us. He does not mean we are to earn our way into the kingdom. If so, then it would be based on our power. But it is not. It is based on God’s power. Yet, he tells us to exert our power.

No doubt, this seems like double talk and becomes confusing. Allow me to share an illustration to clear up the point. Consider the Israelites standing at the edge of the Promised Land after they had been delivered from Egyptian bondage. By their own effort, they could not conquer the Promised Land. They didn’t have the skill, the acumen, the strength, the power. Yet, God told them to go take the land. They could take it, not because they had the ability, but because God has the power and God was with them. The question for them was not if they believed they were strong enough to take the land, but did they believe God was strong enough to take the land using them. Sadly, the first generation didn’t try and fail. Rather, they failed to take the land because they failed to act on God’s promises and power. The second generation did not succeed because they exerted perfect effort. They failed in multiple ways. They succeeded because they made the effort God directed.

Israel’s initial failure and later success helps us see the question we must ask ourselves as we hear Peter’s double exhortation to make every effort. Not do we believe we are strong enough to mature? Not do we believe we have the capacity to make our calling and election certain? But do we believe God has the power to grow us, establish us, and confirm us? If we believe God is strong enough, then we will make the effort because we know our effort is not alone but is anchored in God, multiplied by God, made effective through God.

God richly provided an entrance for ancient Israel into the Promised Land not because they were strong enough, but because He was. But He did so only when they believed His promises enough to make the effort to take the land. In like manner, we will only grow to maturity and partake of the divine nature when we believe God is so powerful that He can mature us as we make the effort to conquer sin and corrupt desire in our own lives. That belief, that faith, that trust, that allegiance is not demonstrated in words and statements. It is demonstrated in action and effort. Often flawed and faltering action. Often failed and fumbling efforts. But we keep making our effort, weak though they may be, not because we think we’ll finally accomplish something, but because we know God will accomplish something through us when we make the effort.

Will you make the effort? What quality will you diligently work on today? How will you work on it? Let us know in the comments section below.

Tomorrow’s reading is 2 Peter 1.

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 2 Peter 1 prompt or improve your trust in God?

1 Peter 2: Living Stones

Today’s reading is 1 Peter 2.

As we learned yesterday, Christ’s church is likened to the temple. Jesus is the cornerstone. If we will believe and obey, He will be our cornerstone of refuge, shelter, and protection. If not, He will be the rock of offense on which we will stumble and fall.

Peter takes the metaphor further. We aren’t merely people standing on the foundation which is Jesus. We ourselves are like Him. He is a living stone. We are living stones. We are being built up into the spiritual house for the dwelling place of God (see also Ephesians 2:19-22).

But Peter’s point is not simply to provide a neat metaphor. His metaphor demonstrates a purpose. We are being built into this house in order to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ. No, we won’t be sacrificing animals. But we will offer the sacrifices of praise and worship to God and service and sharing to one another (see Hebrews 13:15-16).

Our purpose is now to proclaim His excellencies. He has called us out of darkness into marvelous light. He has given us mercy. We are a “chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his own possession” (1 Peter 2:9, ESV).

We do not simply proclaim His excellencies when we are assembled to worship. We proclaim His excellencies all the time. That is our job. That is our purpose. That is why God has built us into His house.

But, of course, be aware the subtle message. If Jesus, the living stone, was rejected by men, we as living stones will be rejected by men. Yet, we can hang on to Jesus and we will be chosen, precious stones in God’s eyes. Men may belittle us, but God will value us and choose us for His household.

Praise the Lord!

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 prompt or improve your trust in God?

1 Peter 1: Father, Son, and Spirit

Today’s reading is 1 Peter 1.

The Holy God, in the persons of Father, Son, and Spirit, is completely and fully involved in our salvation and election. He does not leave us on our own. Praise the Lord!

The Father

We are elect according to the Father’s foreknowledge. Note this carefully. We are not foreknown according to the Father’s election as John Calvin would claim. But the other way around. He chooses and elects based on something He foreknows about us. He doesn’t foreknow everything about us because He elected us to behave in a certain way. Paul says the same thing in Romans 8:29-30.

The Spirit

We are the elect exiles in the Holy Spirit’s sanctification. That is, we who are foreknown by the Father are sanctified by the Holy Spirit. We don’t become elect and then pull ourselves up by our bootstraps and clean ourselves up. While we must, no doubt, cooperate with the work of the Spirit, we must not think we are growing spiritually because we are just so good at growing spiritually. The Holy Spirit is working in us, on us, and through us to set us apart for God’s good works. Paul says the same thing in Titus 3:3-7.

The Christ

Our connection to Jesus, the Christ, drives home the cooperative nature of our relationship to God. Taken in reverse order, we must recognize we are elect unto the sprinkled blood of Jesus Christ. In the same way Moses took the blood of sacrificed calves and goats to purify the tent, the worship vessels, and the people to sanctify them–set them apart for God’s service–Jesus sprinkles us with His blood of the covenant that we might be set apart and useful to Him. But this election based on foreknowledge and in sanctification is to produce something in us: obedience. As elect exiles, we obey. We don’t follow our own will, we have been saved to walk in a new life of submission and surrender to our King, the anointed Jesus. Paul says the same thing in Romans 6:1-4.

We are not alone. Father, Son, and Spirit are all working on our behalf. Let us rely on them and give our allegiance to our King, Jesus.

Praise the Lord!

Tomorrow’s reading is 1 Peter 1.

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 1 prompt or improve your praise of God?

2 John: Love Rejoices with the Truth

Today’s reading is 2 John 1.

While some question exists regarding the recipients of this letter, John most likely wrote to a particular congregation. The “elect lady” referred to the congregation as a whole, “her children” to the individual members. John loved this congregation. Apparently, he had a specific interaction with some of the members of it and was further impressed by their walk. He declares:

I rejoiced greatly to find some of your children walking in the truth, just as we were commanded by the Father.

2 John 4

This makes me ask myself, “What makes me rejoice in others?” Do I rejoice at their business success, their educational accomplishments, their community achievements? Certainly, it is right to rejoice with our brothers and sisters who rejoice whatever the cause for their joy. But notice what really needs to be at the top of our list: walking in truth. John’s greatest joy came from seeing these brothers and sisters walk in truth.

That makes perfect sense. After all, Paul explained in 1 Corinthians 13:6, love “rejoices with the truth.” When people walk with Jesus, the Way, the Truth, the Life, we rejoice. As we learned in 1 John, we aren’t waiting until folks walk in sinless perfection. If they even claim they have no sin, they aren’t walking in the light. But seeing folks walk with Jesus, hang on to Jesus, express faith in Jesus, love like Jesus should give us the greatest joy.

In fact, we might even say it makes our joy full. Praise the Lord!

Tomorrow’s reading is 2 John 1.

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 2 John prompt or improve your praise of God?