Peter is aware of his impending death. He knows it will be coming soon, and so his
first and only priority is to put the early church into remembrance of the
truth and power of the Gospel. In our
prior study we note how Peter relays once again his own eye witness testimony
of the glory and majesty of Jesus Christ.
Peter recalls hearing the voice of God the Father stating plainly for
James, John, and himself in the holy mount that Jesus was his only son, in whom
the Father was well pleased. Scripture
pointed unerringly to the fulfillment of the Messianic prophecies in Jesus
Christ. And lastly, Peter adds to all of
these arguments the sure word of prophecy, which when inspired by God has only
one target, only one fulfillment, that which is in Jesus Christ. These things taken together are meant to be a
proof, a surety of the gospel message.
This is not meant to validate Peter for his own sake, but to put the
early church in remembrance that the transforming love of Jesus Christ impacts
the life in the here and now. The power
of the Gospel is found in the removing our sins, not in allowing us to linger
in them. Forgiveness is not the ultimate
goal. It is a step on the path to
reform, to re-creation, to a different nature that is not bound in the slavery
of self-love, but made free to love others.
This is the key distinction about the Gospel message that
Peter wishes for the early church to keep front and center in their thoughts …
the love of Christ is transformative. Through
our daily submission of our will and our desires to Jesus Christ, He remakes
the core of “who” we are into someone else.
The changes in our desires, lead us to behave differently. Because we “want” different things, we begin
to act in concert with our “new” desires, and find ourselves loving others as a
natural state of being, instead of a forced one. This transformation is the “evidence” of God
being alive within us, and of our having “accepted” the Gospel message of hope
against hope. That I could be saved from
who I am, is nearly beyond my comprehension.
That I could no longer even “want” to sin, is nearly beyond my greatest
hope. That this process is something
Jesus Christ does for me, with only my consent to it, is a gift beyond my
wildest dreams. My deepest fear becomes
allowing my arrogance or my pride or my stubborn will to interfere with it, or
to fall from it. Peter too, worried
about the influence of self, in the process of salvation. He knew that when any potential spiritual
leader allowed “self” to enter the thinking of salvation, the entire process
would be perverted.
So Peter begins in the last few verses of chapter one of his
second letter to the church outlining counsel meant to keep believers from this
error, as he begins in verse 20 saying … “Knowing this first, that no prophecy
of the scripture is of any private interpretation.” The great temptation of those who study
scripture is to believe that “they alone” have discovered some truth that
no-one else is aware of. It then becomes
“their burden” to preach and relay this message to others, as ONLY they
can. But this is nothing more than a
submission to pride. The intent of God
in the revelations contained throughout ALL scripture, was to communicate with
His people, with ALL of His people. God
does not purposefully cloud the meaning of scripture in order that only one
reader “gets it”. If He needed to speak
to only one person, He would do so. What
the inspired text of God is intended for, is a revelation of Himself to ALL the
people who might pick up that text and read.
That is not to say there is only one truth in a given passage or
story. But that is to say, that any real
truth, will be discernable by more than one reader.
In our day, there are many who argue that scripture is not
complete as we know it. They argue that
there are more volumes of works that “should” be a part of our Bibles; things
like the gospel of Judas, or of Mary Magdalene.
Some of these additional works may disagree with the bulk of the Bible
as it exists today. Some may be entirely
counterfeit. It is hard to know if the
book of Enoch should be included in our canon, as Jesus appears to make
reference to it in one of his talks. Yet
for a book of Enoch to have endured, it would have had to be carried and
transcribed by Noah through the flood – or perhaps re-written by Moses much
later through prophetic revelation. The
intent of all this study about the completeness of the scripture is to cause
doubt about what is written within it.
If the Bible is not complete, perhaps it is not accurate either. But this misses the point Peter is here
trying to make. The Bible is not about
limited understandings unique to a single person. It is about general communications with
enough information and truth so that any and every reader can know about the
one and only true God, and His Son Jesus Christ, and their united desire to
save mankind from himself and the evil that lies within him from loving
himself.
If our God did not allow us to see enough of Himself in
scripture, then none of us could ever make a truly informed decision of whether
we wanted His love or not. If scripture
is inaccurate or incomplete then we do not have enough truth to make a real
decision, and the entire plan of salvation becomes moot. To think that Jesus Christ would come to this
world, live and die for us, loving us to the maximum amount possible, showing
what the true definition of loving others means; only then to have the record
of Himself and His Father be distorted by omission or in-accuracy is senseless. We may not have a record of every single
event that has transpired throughout the history of God attempting to save
mankind. But we certainly have more than
enough to see His Truth and make a decision based upon what we have read and
experienced in our own lives. The point
of trusting God is doing so despite what we may lack in our lives. To know we will be saved by Christ, in spite
of the fact that we have been completely unable to save ourselves, takes
trust. Scripture provides enough
information for us to make this choice, but it still remains a choice for us to
make.
Peter is here telling the early church not to worry about
some obscure text is some mountain cave, that only one person ever sees. Instead the church should be able to rely on
scriptures that are already in wide circulation, that are NOT intended to be
hidden and used for private gain, but intended to be shared widely so that all
might gain from them. He continues in
verse 21 … “For the prophecy came not in old time by the will of man: but holy
men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost.” Peter reminds everyone that the Holy Spirit
has been alive and working towards our salvation since long ago. It is not just since the day of Pentecost
that the Holy Spirit has been working in concert to save us. He has been inspiring men to write down truth
long before, and since, the days of Peter.
He will continue to inspire until the work is completed. He acts as a mechanism in the transformation
of men from our base selves to the holy versions we were intended to be. He interacts with our will. He transforms our prayers so that they might
present before a perfect God better than our feeble words and selfish
intentions would otherwise display.
Peter in this passage is not just affirming the truth of
scripture past. He is also affirming the
mechanism for prophecy that is current in his own day. John’s revelations of Jesus Christ are
inspired and relayed to him through the mechanism of the Holy Spirit. Peter’s own foreknowledge of his impending
death is relayed to him through the Holy Spirit. The purpose behind this knowledge was not to
scare or frighten, but as revealed in this letter, it was to focus his
priorities with the time he has left on the most important thing in his life …
reaching the early church with the truth.
Peter is here affirming once again that any true prophecy, or prophet is
moved by the Holy Spirit.
But Peter was equally aware that for every truth, Satan must
introduce a counterfeit. He continues
his thoughts in chapter two of his first letter beginning in verse one saying …
“But there were false prophets also among the people, even as there shall be
false teachers among you, who privily shall bring in damnable heresies, even
denying the Lord that bought them, and bring upon themselves swift destruction.” Here is where the danger and perversion of
introducing “self” into the process of salvation reaps its harvest. The damnable heresies introduced by false
teachers fall into a single line of thinking … a denial of the transformation
the Lord is responsible for. Instead
these false teachers begin to teach concepts like “balance”, and “doing your
best”, and “just say no to sin”. Any
concept that teaches us that “we” have some measure of “control” in the process
of our salvation denies that the Lord does all the work for us. In so doing, we take away from God, the work
He is supposed to perform, and put that burden on our own failing shoulders,
with results that should have been predictable.
The swift destruction that follows is certain and completely
predictable, though when it comes, it always seems to surprise its
victims. As we embrace the evil of
self-love, we cause pain, destruction, and death to ourselves, to those who
love us, to those who encounter us. We
send out ripples of pain that travel uninterrupted through our lives and those
we encounter. It is unavoidable when
self-love is embraced. When we rely upon
self in any way for our own salvation and transformation we fail. There is no “balance” in our salvation and
re-creation, it is entirely a one-way street.
The work of saving us is done by Jesus Christ and He alone. We do nothing but get out of His way. We allow Him to save us, and trust that He
will save us. When we attempt to take
the reins and fix some “slight” problem in ourselves by force of will, or
self-denial, we only delay the transformation that would otherwise completely
eliminate even the desire for that thing.
It is the introduction of self into our process of salvation that is the
common denominator in false teachers who arise in the church.
It is the subtle doctrine of Satan they introduce into the
heart of Christianity itself … to rely upon our common sense, and will to
decide our salvation and fate. To
introduce the idea that “we” have some measure of control which we must exert,
and then wait for God to make up the difference, is the heresy that acts
against a real transformative experience that would have us living salvation
instead of theorizing about it. The
introduction of self into our thinking about salvation, quickly begins to
infect our ideas about worship as well.
The “worship service” becomes something we intend to provide “us” a
blessing. We tailor the music, format,
and content to “feed us”. We intend to reap
emotional highs, and good feelings from our worship services. In so doing we completely forget that true
worship is offering service “to others”.
We forget that we most resemble our God when we are “loving others”, or
meeting their needs, or getting out of our confining buildings and confining
wardrobes of finery, in order to REALLY minister to someone in need, often in
dirty places, that are not so attractive as church pews, in air-conditioned
buildings, only once a week for a few hours.
Inserting “self” into Christianity denies us our real focus
of reaching others, ministering to their needs ahead of our own, sacrificing
what we have because the needs of someone else means more to US than we
do. Inserting “self” into Christianity
denies us our ideas of family. We
restrict our notions of family to those who relate by blood, or marital
contract. After this the line is drawn
in the sand, all others become strangers.
If we removed the notion of self from salvation, we would see that each
and every other life is as precious, beautiful and meaningful as our own. Our notions of family would extend freely to
those in the church pews beside us, but would grow within us, until the
homeless person becomes so important to us, that we can pass them by no longer. This is what it means to be transformed to
love others like Christ loved others.
Can you imagine Jesus passing by the homeless man, simply because he is
mentally ill, and homeless? No the Lord
of Love does not pass by those in need, He meets their needs, offering healing,
and hope. As His representatives, can we
do any less? It is the introduction of
the perversion of “self” into our salvation that would allow us to remain
apathetic.
Peter continues in verse 2 … “And many shall follow their
pernicious ways; by reason of whom the way of truth shall be evil spoken of. [verse
3] And through covetousness shall they with feigned words make merchandise of
you: whose judgment now of a long time lingereth not, and their damnation
slumbereth not.” When once the notion of
self is embraced, a degenerative addiction is the unavoidable path it must
travel. It begins with the idea that we
alone understand the scripture. It ends
with indulging ourselves to the point where we would think nothing of taking
offerings from other believers and expending them on ourselves. I can drive the Rolls Royce, and live in my
mansion here on earth, because I have figured out how to profit from running a
“ministry”. But the destruction to my
soul from embracing self-love is guaranteed, and it will not linger long. I will indulge myself in what I consume, how
I live, and my choices will impact and degrade my health. I will make enemies as my need to please me,
exceeds my desire to see anything of value come to you. My enemies will rejoice when I fall, and take
pleasure in my destruction. They will
judge me rightly that I am no real servant of the Most High, but instead
through the introduction of self into my salvation, I am become a servant of
filthy lucre, and the father of lies behind it.
This is the fate of those who would deny the Lord purchases their
salvation for them.
Peter concludes these ideas of false teachers beginning in
verse 4 … “For if God spared not the angels that sinned, but cast them down to
hell, and delivered them into chains of darkness, to be reserved unto judgment;
[verse 5] And spared not the old world, but saved Noah the eighth person, a
preacher of righteousness, bringing in the flood upon the world of the ungodly;
[verse 6] And turning the cities of Sodom and Gomorrha into ashes condemned
them with an overthrow, making them an ensample unto those that after should
live ungodly; [verse 7] And delivered just Lot, vexed with the filthy
conversation of the wicked: [verse 8] (For that righteous man dwelling among
them, in seeing and hearing, vexed his righteous soul from day to day with
their unlawful deeds;) [verse 9] The Lord knoweth how to deliver the godly out
of temptations, and to reserve the unjust unto the day of judgment to be
punished:”.
The destiny of those who would save themselves is enumerated
above. When once trust was broken with
God in heaven, when the angels decided to trust themselves and their own common
sense above the word of the Most High, they embarked upon a path of
self-destruction and self-addiction and were cast out of heaven above. The “hell” of separation from God was to be
their continued fate, cut off from the source of all love. When the old world had reached its zenith in
embracing self-love, only Noah would be willing to be saved. When Sodom and Gomorrah had reached their
zenith in self-love, only Lot would continue to be grieved at the level of
their corruption, and would be willing to be saved. Even his wife would turn back to the evil
that had captured her heart and lose her life becoming a pillar of salt. Only those who would trust in God instead of
themselves would be saved. Those who
refused to trust in God would not be spared.
The essential issue that was founded in the conflict in
heaven has not lost any urgency here on earth even 4,000+ years later in the
time of Peter, or 6,000+ years in our own day.
Do we rely upon self? Do we trust
in ourselves, and in our will, and in our common sense? Or do we trust in God, despite what we
“know”, or what we “see”, or what we “believe” to be true? The destiny of false prophets of old, was to
be the same as false teachers who were already entering the early Christian
church. When once the ideas of “self”
are introduced into the process of salvation, they pervert it until it consumes
them in evil. The power of the gospel is
found in the absence of self. The power
of transformative love of Jesus Christ, is that re-creates in us “new” desires
to love others instead of loving ourselves.
It is this transformation that carries weight and meaning in our day to
day lives, not in some distant future one.
This is what Peter would have the early church remember. This is what he would spend what little time
left he had on planet earth worried about accomplishing. Peter had the foreknowledge of the ending of
his life, and it was in these passage he chose to spend his time and energies.
To discern truth from error was important to Peter. To keep the church engaged in the
transformation that Jesus Christ brings was the most important thing in his
mind, and with his time left. Might we
take his example and begin to understand why it meant so much to him? And the counsel of Peter was far from over …
No comments:
Post a Comment