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Building a Forever Faith - 2 Peter 1:1-11

Taught on | Topic: Spiritual Growth | Keywords: faith, spiritual growth, maturity, power, God's promises, sanctification, works, fruit, heaven, foundation

To build a home or a commercial building requires having the right people and the right materials in place. There is a critical path for the work to follow. And there are blueprints and building codes for the builders to follow. It's the same when it comes to building a spiritual life. As Peter began his second letter, he spoke to the need of spiritual growth. To build a "forever faith," Peter shared four important principles to build successfully.

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10/12/2014
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Building a Forever Faith
2 Peter 1:1-11
Skip Heitzig
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To build a home or a commercial building requires having the right people and the right materials in place. There is a critical path for the work to follow. And there are blueprints and building codes for the builders to follow. It's the same when it comes to building a spiritual life. As Peter began his second letter, he spoke to the need of spiritual growth. To build a "forever faith," Peter shared four important principles to build successfully.
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60 1 & 2 Peter - Rock Solid - 2013

60 1 & 2 Peter - Rock Solid - 2013

When Jesus asked his disciples. "Who do men say that I, the Son of Man, am?" Peter responded "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God." Jesus promised Peter that upon the Rock of that confession He would build His church.

The truth of who Jesus is empowers common man to speak the message that opens the doors of heaven to sinners. Join us to learn strong principles for godly living and reach new heights in our faith as we work our way through Peter's epistles—writings which evangelize the lost and instruct the church. Pastor Skip Heitzig guides us through First and Second Peter in the series Rock Solid.

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Outline

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  1. Get the Right Investor (vv. 3-4)

  2. Follow the Building Code (vv. 5-7)

  3. Build with Growth in Mind (vv. 8-10)

  4. Plan for the Move (v. 11)

Study Guide

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Built in Italy in 1173, the Leaning Tower of Pisa sinks one-twentieth of an inch on one side every year and is now seventeen feet out of plumb. The only reason it is uniquely famous is because it leans, and experts say that it is eventually going to fall. Does your life resemble a freaky tourist attraction or a rock solid structure built on faith---helpful, permanent, and worth following? From 2 Peter 1:1-11, Pastor Skip gave four prerequisites for every Christian to build a forever faith.

To start, we need the right investor---God---for two reasons. First, He has "divine power" (v. 3) that created the heavens and the earth, gives life, and raises the dead. Because of this, whatever God expects you to attempt He enables you to achieve by His power. Second, our investor has made "great and precious promises" (v. 3). An investor in a project is the one who writes the checks, and God's promises are the checks He writes. We can take heart that God has promised we can escape the old life and that He will give us all materials necessary to build a new one if we believe.

Next, we must follow the building code in order to experience spiritual development and growth (see vv. 5-7). This is our part in the building project; God provides the power and the promises, and we follow up by cooperating in these ways. We are to be "giving all diligence" (v. 5), exerting every ounce of our effort to this process. Salvation is a free gift, but sanctification is teamwork with God that requires us to add to our faith a lavish supply of the following supplements: virtue---moral excellence with which to fulfill your purpose; knowledge---intimate knowledge of God; self-control---to hold onto one's self, as a disciplined athlete controls his body; perseverance---to bear up under the load, to hang in there; godliness---literally God-likeness, worshiping well; brotherly kindness---affection, friendship love; love---agape, self-sacrificial love. These are progressive steps that build upon one another.

Furthermore, build with growth in mind (see v. 8). Growth is productive: Peter used the word abound, referring to one who keeps getting more until they are overflowing. If you grow until your life is overflowing, then you will never be barren, idle, or unproductive. Bearing fruit is the goal of the Christian life, and the idea of fruit is growing to the point that other people are being blessed. Do not be content to just be a gulper---only taking in---but be a gusher, flowing outwardly toward other people. Growth is also preventative, because it cures spiritual blindness. The idea in verse 9 is that of a person squinting to the point that they lose sight of where they came from and cannot see where they are going. Instead of that, be wide-eyed and know where you are going, because a growing believer is a steady and stable believer.

Lastly, plan for the move (see v. 11). Always build and grow with the ultimate endgame of heaven in mind. There's a difference between just getting into heaven and having an abundant entrance, as when a hometown hero returns. Paul said that our works will be tested; some will receive an abundant entrance and others will enter smelling like smoke (see 1 Corinthians 3:15). But when you stand in heaven and look back at your life, you will not regret any of the sacrifices you made for the Lord---not one of them. The gains of heaven will more than compensate for your sacrifices on earth.

The Leaning Tower was recently recalibrated to stand until the year 2300, but experts say one day it will collapse because it wasn't built on the right foundation; Pisa means marshy ground. Is your life built on the solid rock of Jesus with the endgame in mind, or on shifting sand?

Adapted from Pastor Skip's Teachings

Things to Ponder and Discussion Questions
  • A growing believer is a steady and stable believer. As we begin our weekly studies from 2 Peter, the core of this first chapter is about making progress spiritually. Are you growing up and growing strong, or are you just growing old?

  • Consider two overarching principles of spiritual growth: 1) Spiritual growth has nothing to do with age. 2) You can grow as much as you want to grow. With these in mind, have you grown as much as you should have thus far in 2014? What changes can you make so that you grow more, starting now and continuing through 2015?

  • Spiritual maturity is measured by your cooperation with God's operation. God's promises are not ornaments to be amused by, but they are implements to grow by. If all you do is underline God's promises, that is not enough---you must act on them in order to benefit from them. What is keeping you from cooperating with God and, by faith, "cashing God's checks"?

  • Which of these describes your faith? Faulty: the general belief of the unsaved, shared by the demons, who "believe---and tremble" (James 2:19).Firm: the faith of the saved person who is spiritually growing and developing. Flowing: the believer who stays so connected to God that their life is constantly overflowing and blessing those around them. Salvation moves you from faulty to firm, but how does practicing the supplements Skip mentioned (see vv. 5-7) help you move from firm to flowing?

  • Are you squinting to the point that you have lost sight of what you were saved from and cannot see where you are going? What is God's cure for such blindness?

Detailed Notes

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  1. Introduction
    1. Do you want your life to resemble some freaky tourist attraction that leans like the Leaning Tower of Pisa, or something solid, helpful, and permanent?
    2. 2 Peter is different than 1 Peter
      1. In 1 Peter, Peter was concerned about dangers from the outside: persecution, oppression
      2. In 2 Peter, Peter was more concerned about dangers from the inside: deception, false teaching
      3. At the core of 2 Peter 1 is spiritual growth
    3. Are you growing up, or are you just growing old?
    4. Growth is a normal part of life
      1. The Christian life begins with birth (see John 3:3)
      2. It continues with growth, development, and maturity
    5. Overarching principles about spiritual growth
      1. Your spiritual growth has nothing to do with your physical age
        1. "Many men are seventy years old, and are nevertheless little children in grace; and, on the other hand, there are a few who at twenty are as solid, and profound, and spiritual, as veterans of eighty" —C.H. Spurgeon
        2. Physical age and spiritual maturity aren't necessarily equal
      2. You can grow spiritually as much as you want to grow; the secret is using what God has provided
    6. There are four prerequisites you need to build a forever faith
  2. Get the Right Investor (vv. 3-4)
    1. It all begins with God
    2. He has power
      1. Divine power can create the universe, sustain all natural forces, heal the sick, raise the dead
      2. Matthew 28:18
      3. You can grow as much as you want because you have access to God's power
      4. God has invested His power in your spiritual growth
        1. Philippians 4:13
        2. Strengthens means puts His power into me
      5. What God expects you to attempt He also enables you to achieve by His power
    3. He has promises
      1. An investor writes checks, which will do you no good unless you cash them
      2. The money in the bank is the power; the check that is written is the promise
      3. A promise is only as good as the one who makes the promise
      4. God has promised we can escape from our old life and go in a new direction
        1. But you have to cash the check
        2. You have to take and apply that promise to your life
      5. You can tell how mature a Christian is by how that person treats God's promises
      6. His promises are great because they're from a great God and they lead to a great life
      7. When you are born again, the life of God gets attached to your life
  3. Follow the Building Code (vv. 5-7)
    1. This is your part
    2. This seems contradictory, paradoxical; how can you add anything to everything?
    3. It requires cooperation
      1. You must have cooperation with God's operation
      2. Giving all diligence (v. 5) literally means make every possible effort or intensively exert yourself
        1. This is not speaking about salvation; salvation is a gift (see v. 1)
        2. Sanctification is teamwork
      3. Spiritual growth is never accidental; it is always intentional
        1. Philippians 2:12-13
        2. God gives you the power and makes the promise, but you must work out your own salvation
    4. It requires supplementation
      1. He's given the power, and He makes the promises, but we add the perks, and He'll give you everything you need to pull that off
      2. Virtue
        1. Moral excellence
        2. Something that fulfills the purpose for which it was made
      3. Knowledge
        1. Greek gnósis, which means an expert, full knowledge; the ultimate knowledge
        2. A growing, personal, authentic knowledge
      4. Self-control
        1. Self-control bridges the gap between what we know and what we do
        2. Greek word meaning to hold one's self together; speaks of a training athlete
      5. Perseverance
        1. To bear up under the trial
        2. "Hang in there"
      6. Godliness
        1. Literally, God-likeness
        2. Speaks of being right with God and therefore right with other people
      7. Brotherly kindness; philadelphia
      8. Love; agape, sacrificial love
      9. One will lead to another
  4. Build with Growth in Mind (vv. 8-10)
    1. You should build with future growth in mind, not plateau
    2. Abound (v. 8) means to have so much you overflow
    3. Building with growth in mind is productive
      1. Barren means idle, unproductive; literally something that has stopped working
      2. Fruit is an ever-expanding life that blesses other people
      3. Matthew 13:8; Mark 4:8
      4. John 15:4
      5. Fruit refreshes other people
    4. Three different kinds of faith
      1. Faulty, fake; James 2:19
      2. Firm: genuine, saving faith
      3. Flowing
        1. It is productive, and others get the benefit of that fruit
        2. Genesis 49:22
        3. John 7:37-38
    5. Don't be a gulper; be a gusher
    6. Someone who is always adding and growing can see where they've come from and where they're going
      1. Maybe you've forgotten you are engaged to Christ
      2. 2 Corinthians 11:2
      3. A growing believer will be a steady believer
  5. Plan for the Move (v. 11)
    1. All that you're building now is for the next place you're going to be; build now with that move in mind
    2. Greeks used the term abundant entrance to describe an athlete who won in the Olympics and was greeted back home
    3. In heaven, you will never regret the hours you spent doing the Lord's work
    4. You are to build and plan for the move
    5. Some will get a more glorious entrance into heaven than others
      1. 1 Corinthians 3:13-15
      2. How are you going to arrive?
      3. The gains of heaven will more than compensate for all the losses of earth
  6. Closing
    1. If you build on marshy ground, the tower is going to fall, so you need to build on a solid foundation
    2. Make sure your life is built on the right foundation

Figures referenced: C.H. Spurgeon

Greek words: gnósis, philadelphia, agape

Cross references: Genesis 49:22; Matthew 13:8; 28:18; Mark 4:8; John 3:3; 7:37-38; 15:4; 1 Corinthians 3:13-15; 2 Corinthians 11:2; Philippians 2:12-13; 4:13; James 2:19; 1 Peter; 2 Peter 1:1-11

Transcript

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Introduction: Hello and welcome to this podcast with Pastor Skip Heitzig of Calvary Albuquerque. Skip's messages are shared globally and we're encouraged when we hear how lives are being transformed. If this message strengthens you spiritually, tell us. Email us at mystory@calvaryabq.org. And if you'd like to support this ministry financially, you can give online securely at calvaryabq.org/giving. In this series titled Rock Solid we learn strong principles for godly living as we study through the book of Second Peter. To build a spiritual life it's critical to follow the path that God has laid out for us. In this message called "Building a Forever Faith" Skip explores four key principles on how to build successfully. Let's turn to Second Peter, chapter 1, as he begins.

Skip Heitzig: And let's pray. Father, thank you that you brought us together. I'm honored to be with brothers and sisters in this atmosphere of faith and love, and, Lord, honoring your name, that's such a positive and such a rewarding venue and place and time to be together. Father, we in praying make a declaration of our dependence upon you. We're declaring that we need your help to understand and to put into practice that which is in your Word that you provided for us. Help us to do that, in Jesus' name, amen.

My dad was a builder. I use to watch him go to empty lots and tell me what is going to go there. And I couldn't see it. He could see it. He had the vision for it. And even when he would build a cement foundation and I would stand upon it, and he would say, "Now, this room will be there, and this office will be there," and even standing on such a solid foundation, I still didn't see what he saw. But I thought about him some years later when I was at a very interesting architectural place in Italy called the Leaning Tower of Pisa. And I saw that thing leaning and I thought, "My dad never would have built that structure. He couldn't have. It wouldn't look like that." And I remember looking at that interesting piece of architecture, and the reason, by the way, it is so famous isn't because it's height. It's only 179 feet tall.

And it's not because of its Romanesque architecture, though it's a great piece of that and it's a great study in that. That's not why it's famous. It is famous for one reason---because it leans. That's it. It leans. Now you know it's going to fall. The experts tell us that it should have fallen in 2007, but it didn't and I'll they will you why before the study is over. But they say it's going to fall because it started leaning from almost the time it was constructed in 1173, I believe. And it falls at the rate of one-twentieth of an inch every single year. It is presently seventeen feet out of plumb. I have a question for you: Do you want your life to resemble some freaky tourist attraction that's leaning, or something solid and helpful and permanent?

Those are the thoughts that are in Peter's mind as he pens Second Peter. It's all about growth. It's all about the audience taking what he teaches and developing from that. Now, Second Peter is a little bit different than First Peter. In First Peter he was concerned about the dangers from the outside like persecution and oppression, but in Second Peter he's more concerned about dangers from the inside in terms of deception, false teaching. But at the very core, at the very core of this whole beginning introduction chapter, this section, it's all about spiritual growth. Let's look at it together, Second Peter, chapter 1, beginning in verse 1:

Simon Peter, a bondservant and apostle of Jesus Christ,

To those who have obtained like precious faith with us by the righteousness of our God and Savior Jesus Christ:

Grace and peace be multiplied to you in the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord, as his divine power has given to us all things that pertain to life and godliness, through the knowledge of him who called us by glory and virtue, by which have been given to us exceedingly great and precious promises, that through these you may be partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust.

But also for this very reason, giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue, and to virtue knowledge, and to knowledge self-control, and to self-control perseverance, to perseverance godliness, to godliness brotherly kindness, and to brotherly kindness love. For if these things are yours and abound, you will be neither barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. For he who lacks these things is shortsighted, even to blindness, and has forgotten that he was cleansed from his old sins.

Therefore, brethren, be even more diligent to make your call and election sure, for if you do these things you will never stumble; for so an entrance will be supplied to you abundantly into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

Are you growing up or are you just growing old? It's a good question to ask yourself from time to time. We're all growing older. But are you growing up and growing strong or are you just growing old? Because we all know that growth is a normal part of life. Whenever there's birth, there is growth, and that's what we expect. When we have children, we are willing to put up with the noise and with the messes and all that happens in babyhood, because we are aiming for that child maturing into a responsible adult. And we mark that growth and we get excited when there's a birthday. The favorite door of my old house was our pantry door where we would mark every year how high Nate was getting and what that date was. And we'd write right on the door just to keep a marker of that kind of progress.

Well, with the Christian life it begins with birth. "You must be born again," Jesus said. But it continues with growth, with development, with a blossoming, with maturity. And we want to talk about that and look at that in this section that we just read. Now, before we begin---and I'm going to give you four prerequisites to building a forever faith. I'll talk about that in a moment. Let me begin by giving you two overarching principles about growth that you need to know, two principles that are general, overarching principles about spiritual growth. Number one, your spiritual growth has knowing to do with your physical age. You can be an older person, but a spiritual infant.

Charles Spurgeon said, "There are children in the church of God who are seventy years old," but he also said, "on the other hand, there are wise and instructed and stable folk who are relatively young." So physical age and spiritual maturity aren't necessarily equal; that's the first principle. Second principle: you can grow spiritually as much as you want to grow. You can grow as much as you want to grow. And that brings us to the central theme of what Peter is getting at. The secret is using what God has provided. Once you have the faith that he gives you, you "obtain like precious faith," verse 1 and 2, then you must grow in that faith, verse 3 through 11. So here's what we're going to do. We're going to look at our life, your life, the Christian life as building a structure, building a forever faith.

And there are four prerequisites that you need to build it. Number one, you gotta get the right investor. You gotta find somebody who's going to bankroll this project, and we have God as the investor. It all begins with God. He gives the gift of salvation. But he also has two things that are important: he has power and he has promises. He has power and he has promises. Look at verse three, here's the power: "As his divine power has given to us all things that pertain to life and godliness, through the knowledge of him who called us by glory and virtue." Have you ever thought what divine power can do? Let's see, divine power can create the universe. Divine power can sustain all the natural forces of our natural world. Divine power can heal the sick. Divine power can raise the dead.

Jesus said, "All power in heaven and earth is given to me"---"all power." So here's the deal: you can grow as much as you want, because you have access to God's power. Can you imagine having a battery that never goes out? This summer I'd decided I'd start my motorcycle, I think for the first time in months. It had been sitting in the garage for the winter. And I went to start it and it did this: ggsha-blghh-blghhh. [laughter] I had forgotten to take that trickle charger that I should have kept for the winter applied to the bike. But imagine having a power source that never runs out. God has invested his power in your spiritual growth. That's why Paul the apostle said this, and you know it: "I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me." The word "strengthen" means puts his power into me.

So you gotta find the right investor, and he has to have the power, and our Investor does. What God expects you to attempt, he also enables you to achieve by his power. There's a second qualification as being the right investor: promises. Our Investor has made some promises. Verse 4, "By which have been given to us exceedingly great and precious promises, that through these you may be partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust." Now, if you're building a project and you have an investor, he's going to write the checks. Now checks are just promises; that's all they are. You really can't do anything with a check until you go to the bank and cash it. A check has the person's name on it. He fills in the amount, but it will do you no good until you cash the check.

So, the money in the bank, that's the power. The check that is written, those are the promises. Our God has the power and he also has the promises. But a promise is only as good as the one who makes the promise. You can make a promise, but if you have no power to back it up, so what. So, after church I could write you a personal check for a million dollars. The problem will be when you go to the bank to cash it. They're going to say to you, "Nice try. This guy doesn't have near the money required for you to cash this check." It wouldn't work. I can make you the promise, but I don't have the power. But I do know some people who could actually write you that check, and you could cash it. I will not give you their names. [laughter] But they have the power behind the promise.

God has promised that we can escape from our old life and we can go in a whole new direction. But you---you have to cash the check. You have to actually take that promise and say, "I'm going to apply that promise to my life." That's cashing the check. You can always tell how mature a Christian is by how that person treats God's promises, always. How do they treat the promises of God? For example, a fearful, panicked believer speaks volumes of one who doesn't really believe in God's promises. But a calm believer, a confident believer speaks of somebody who believes the promise, who thinks this way: "If God has written the check, I can cash it. I can take that promise to the bank. There's power behind the promise." So, if you're going to build anything of eternal value, you need the right investor.

And our Investor has power and promises and they're great promises. He says, "Great and precious promises." You know why they're great? Because they're from a great God and they lead to a great life. And what is the promise, at least in part? That "you would be partakers of the divine nature." Now think about this: the kind of life that you have in you right now as born-again believers is the life of God. You are a partner with that life. When you are born again, that's what happens---the life of God gets attached to your life. So that means here's the way to live: you can face your future with the kind of confidence that says, "No matter what comes my way, God's power will be there and his promises to meet all those hardships or potential problems along the way."

So you need the right investor; that's the first prerequisite. The second prerequisite to building a forever faith is you gotta follow the building code. And God has outlined through Peter what that is. Look at verse 5, "But also for this very reason, giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue, to virtue knowledge, to knowledge self-control, to self-control perseverance, to perseverance godliness, to godliness brotherly kindness, to brotherly kindness love." Now this, folks, is your part. God's part we've already talked about. Those are the previous verses. God's given you the power and the promises. This is your part. Now, I know some of you are reading this critically, and that's good to read the Bible that way, but it seems contradictory.

It almost seems paradoxical, because it says, "God gives you everything you need," and then he says, "Now add to that . . . ." So you wonder, "How could you add anything to everything?" And here's the answer: growth takes cooperation. Growth always takes cooperation. I must have a cooperation with God's operation. I am involved in this process. You know, if you or I were to have written this, we might've said, "God has given you everything you need to grow and be godly; therefore, let go and let God. Just veg in the Spirit, just lounge in the Spirit, and just take it easy, and watch the whole thing go up." No. But he says it takes cooperation. Look at the language: "giving all diligence." Literally means make every possible effort or intensively exert yourself. Don't misunderstand me; we're not speaking about salvation.

You don't work hard to get saved. It's a gift. That's verse 1 and 2. You have "obtained like precious faith." You have received faith. That's a gift. But sanctification, ah, that's teamwork. That's teamwork. You just don't sit back and watch it happen; you are involved in the process. Spiritual growth is never accidental; it is always intentional. I can tell you how Paul wrote the same thought but different words. Paul the apostle in Philippians chapter 2 verse 12 says this, and you'll recall it what when I quote it: "Therefore, brethren, work out your own salvation with fear and trembling." Ever read that verse? Ever puzzled by it? "Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling," but it's followed by this: "for it is God's who works in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure"---same thought.

God works in you. He gives you the power, he makes the promise, but you must work out your own salvation. You say, "I still don't quite get how it works." So I'll give you an example, an analogy: a composer sits down to write a musical score, in doing so he provides everything that is needed. He's writing the melody, because he's writing the notes. He's writing the timing down, the cadence of it, if it picks up or if it slows down. So he gives everything that is needed for the production. However, it still takes a musician to work that out and to play that score and to give what is written down, all that is provided, a voice. Or here's another analogy: you go to the doctor, the doctor says, "I've examined you. It doesn't look good. Here is the diagnosis: you require surgery.

"I'll perform the surgery and then afterwards I'm going to give you some medications postop that will help in the healing." So the doctor has done it all. He has diagnosed, he performs the surgery, and gives the medication. You don't help in that process, so far. You don't help the doctor do surgery---"Doctor, I'll work on is this side, you work on that side. Here, give me a scalpel." You're not going to do that. That'd be foolish. But though he provides everything that you need, you still postop have to work that out by taking the medication and by following his instructions. That's following the building code. So it requires cooperation and it requires supplementation. Please notice: "Therefore, giving all diligence," or making maximum effort, "add to your faith . . . ," and then seven supplements are listed.

We here in New Mexico know something about supplements. When we eat food, it is not complete until we have our supplements. So you might be from the Midwest and a meal to you is meat and potatoes. It's good enough. Not here. Not gonna fly here. If we're going to have meat and potatoes, we need our supplements, and they're either red or green those supplements. [laughter] You know what I'm talking about. We need chile with it. And I have just so become accustomed to it, that a meal isn't complete without the supplements that go with it. It has to have a little [sizzling] to it. [laughter] Well, if we were to think about it in building terms, a building analogy, this is the building code. "Here are seven things I want you," God says, "to add to the house that you are building.

"And they're going to spice things up and there are going to be supplements that make your house a killer house. So, for example, I know you gotta put in a sink, but don't put in the little metal sink; I want you to put in the marble farm sink. Or, yeah, I know you need to cook your food, but you're not going to put in that hot plate that you're picking out; you're going to put in a Viking Stove. Or not Formica, we're not going to put that on the countertop; you're going to put marble in. We want this thing to last." So, so far this is what we've learned: he's giving the power, and he makes the promises, but we add the perks. And he'll give you everything you need to pull that off. And what are the supplements? Well, look at the first one: virtue. "Virtue" means moral excellence. "Add that to your faith, a moral excellence."

One way to look at excellence is something that fulfills the purpose for which it was made. When you do that, you've added something special, some excellence to your faith. Then he said add to that "knowledge." Now, this is a different word for "knowledge" than what is typically a New Testament word. This word is epignósis, which means an expert knowledge, a full knowledge, the ultimate knowledge, a growing, personal, authentic knowledge, one that is practical. And then add to that self-control. Add "to knowledge self-control." You know, sometimes there's a huge gap between what we know (our knowledge), and what we do (our actions). You know what will bridge that gap? Self-control. "Add to what you know about God and know God with self-control."

"Self-control" is a word that was a Greek word that means to hold oneself together. It spoke of an athlete who would say no to eating certain kinds of food and yes to certain kinds of training because he wanted to win a race. Look at what's next: perseverance. It means to bear up under the trial, or the hardship, the difficult circumstance. We would say to somebody, "Hang in there." That's perseverance. "Hang in there." And then add to that "godliness," literally godlikeness. It's a word that speaks of being right with God, and therefore right with other people. You've got the vertical and horizontal axis just right. And then add to that "brotherly kindness." You know the word: philadelphia. And then add to that "love," which is higher than brother love, higher than philadelphia.

Agape love is the love of the cross. It is sacrificial love. So those are the seven chiles that you're to add to the meal, the seven perks to the building that he gives you the power and promises to pull off. But I don't want you to think of these as some list of promises where---"We'll, I'll pick a couple of those, but I'm really not good that, so I'm just going to leave that laying around there." Look at this this way: one will lead to the other. So if you have faith that will produce a life of virtue. And if you have a moral excellent life, that will lead to knowing God better. And when you know God better, you'll become more self-controlled. And when you're more self-controlled, you'll be able to persevere under the load better. And when you do that, you'll become more godly.

And that leads to genuine care for people and sacrificial love. That's growth. One leads to the other. So get the right investor and follow the building code. Here's a third prerequisite to building a forever faith: build with growth in mind. Now listen to me. If you were thinking this morning, "Okay, okay, you know, I've been a Christian, sort of been on the sideline. I have believing faith, but you're kind of jarring me a little bit here, so I think I'm going to add a couple of these things and then---and then I'm going to stop." Well, you've got it wrong, because the idea here is when you build your life and you add and you exert, you are always building for future growth in mind. You never plateau. You never stop. Look at the word "abound," verse 8.

The word "abound" means "I have so much that it overflows. I keep getting it and its overflowing." That's the idea. If you ever travel to San Jose, California, and you have an extra afternoon, visit what's called the Winchester Mystery House. Ever been there? The Winchester Mystery House has 160 rooms. It was built by Sarah Winchester of the Winchester rifle fame. She was told by a medium if she just keeps building onto her house, she'll never die, but have eternal life. Well, she's dead, but her house remains. [laughter] And it remains as a testimony to the belief that "as long as I'm here, I am always expanding in my life." That's the idea of the text.

Look at verse 8, it says so: "For if these things are yours and abound," that's the word, overflow, "you will be neither barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. For he who lacks these things is shortsighted, even to blindness, and has forgotten he was cleansed from his old sins. Therefore, brethren, be even more diligent [hard working, exert] to make your call an election sure, for if you do these things you will never stumble." When you build with growth in mind, when you do that, it's very productive. Notice it says, "You'll never be barren." You know what that means? Means idol or unproductive or literally something that has stopped working. I have a clock at home. It doesn't work. It's still there, and one day I'll fix it, but right now it's inoperative. It doesn't work.

If you build with growth in mind, you will never be the kind of a person---and I know you know the ones I'm talking about---who say this: "Well, I tried Jesus Christ, but it just doesn't work for me." You'll never say that. You'll never be able to say that. The truth is, it's not that it didn't work, you didn't work. You stopped operating. You stopped adding. You'll never be barren. You'll never be unfruitful, is the next word. Now "fruit", it's one of those things that the New Testament speaks about. Jesus spoke about bearing fruit. You know that's an analogy of an ever-expanding life that blesses other people. That's fruit. Jesus spoke about the people who hear his words and they take it to heart and they produce fruit, some thirty, some sixty, some a hundredfold, right?

And then he told his disciples---and Peter was there when he said it. He said, "Here's the secret to getting fruit: abide in me. Abide in me. Stay close to me. Remain in me." So that just like a branch to the vine is receiving nourishment from the vine, it will then give the nourishment to the fruit, so that other people will be refreshed. That's what fruit does. It refreshes other people. So the idea is that the life of Christ is flowing into you and then overflowing from you. Basically, there are three different kinds of faith. I wonder which one you have. The first kind of faith, let's call it faulty faith, fake faith. There's people who say, "I believe. I believe in God. I'm a believer." Well, you know what James says, that "Even the devils believe---and"---what do they do?---"they tremble!"

Every demon in hell believes in Christ and believes in God. So you're not in great company if you just say, "I'm a believer, generally, in God." So does the devil. That's, that's faulty faith. There's a second kind, and maybe some of you fit in this category, probably most all of you do: firm faith. This is genuine faith. This is saving faith. This is where you are built on the firm foundation of the finished work of Jesus Christ on the cross for you. You've been justified by faith. You are saved. That's firm faith. But, you know, there's a third faith. I'm going to call it flowing faith. It's so firm that it receives the benefit of the life of Christ through abiding, but it's so good that it is productive and others get the benefit of that fruit. Joseph in the Old Testament, it says, "His branches go over the wall."

That's the picture of a fruitful life. So, which is it, faulty faith, firm faith, or are you in that third category, flowing faith, firm but flowing? You remember Jesus said at the Feast of Tabernacles, which is what is being celebrated right now. Jesus stood up at that feast and said, "If any man thirsts, let him come to me and drink." And then he said, "Out of his heart [his innermost being] will flow rivers of living water." Don't be a gulper, be a gusher. Maybe you go, "Well, I really need to get refreshed today. I need living water," gulp, gulp, gulp, gulp, gulp. Good, good, good, do, but gulp in order that you might gush. Don't have your salvation experience some stagnant pond, but make sure that the water that you receive is the water that blesses other people. That's flowing faith.

So you'll be productive. Look at verse 9 now. "But he who lacks these things is shortsighted [myopic], even to blindness; he has forgotten that he was cleansed from his old sins. Therefore, brethren, be even more diligent to make your call and election sure, for if you do these things, you will never stumble." You ever seen a kid watch a scary movie? The scary part, what does he do? [laughter] Or he squints and just opens his eyes a little bit. My wife can't watch those surgery shows. I love them. I thrive on it. She squints and then she'll look, "Ohh!" And then she'll, "Ttssss." Now picture somebody walking down a road while they're squinting. That's the picture that Peter is painting: somebody trying to make progress while they're squinting. Eventually, you're going to stumble. You're going to fall. You're going to fall.

But someone who is ever-growing, ever-expanding, adding, and never contented with stopping, can see where he's come from and where he's going. True story, I read it in this newspaper about a couple that they had just gotten married and they went on a honeymoon. And they got back from the honeymoon and it was the day after the honeymoon. It was a first day back in the office for this young man, this young newlywed. He leaves his office, but he's late for dinner three hours. By the time he gets home, his wife is just burning up. The meal is burnt as well, but she's mad that he missed it. You know what happened? He had forgotten momentarily. It was the first day back at work. He went to his mom's house instead of his new home, because that was just the pattern that he followed every single day.

And he was absentminded on that day and went to her house, mom's house, instead of wife's house. By the way, he never made that mistake ever again. [laughter] It only takes one time. It's a lesson you'll never lose. Maybe you have forgotten that you are engaged to Christ, as Paul said, "I have espoused you, I've engaged you to one person"; and that is, Jesus Christ. You've forgotten about the repentance part and the turning part. But a growing believer will be a steady believer. That's a forever faith. He will never stumble. There's a fourth and we'll close on this. Get the right investor, follow the building code, build with growth in mind, and fourth prerequisite: plan for the move. All that you're building for now is for the next place you're going to be in, and that's in verse 11.

"For so an entrance will be supplied to you abundantly in the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ." That's where you're going. Build now with that move in mind later. Build with the move in mind. An abundant entrance, look at it: "An entrance will be supplied abundantly." Let me tell you this: the Greeks used this term "an abundant entrance" to describe an Olympic athlete who won in the Olympics, and came back home, and he would be greeted with an "abundant entrance" they called it. The town would show up. There would be songs that were sung, and cheers that went up, and he received an abundant welcome. I read about a man who decided to go across the Atlantic Ocean. A lot of people have tried to sail that and have done it.

But what made this remarkable, it was the smallest boat ever to go across the Atlantic Ocean. It was only thirteen feet long. Can you imagine? That's like a surfboard, thirteen feet long. He called it Tinkerbelle. His name was Robert Manry. Took him seventy-eight days. He said his rudder broke several times. He was washed overboard several times. And sometimes in the shipping lanes it was so bad, he said, "I could not sleep. I had to stay awake for several days, because it was too dangerous." He took the rope and bound himself to the boat so he'd stay on it. Seventy-eight days later he could see the shores of England. The only thing that went through his mind is, "I need a hotel room, I need a shower, and I need to sleep for like a week or so." He was just so discouraged, so tired.

But as he's nearing the shore, there were three hundred other boats there to welcome him to shore. And when he got to shore, there were 40,000 people in a crowd cheering him on for making the journey successfully. At that moment he didn't think about how tired he was. He didn't think about how discouraged he was. He didn't think about a shower. It felt so good. When you stand in heaven and that crown goes on your head, you will never regret the hours you spent in Bible study or prayer or sharing your faith or helping another person grow or working hard to build up somebody else. You never will. You are to build and plan for the move---an abundant entrance in heaven. You're all going to get there. If you know Christ, if you've been born again, if you've received faith, you will get there in heaven one day.

But do you know and have you ever thought about this: some will get a more glorious entrance than others. Do you know that? First Corinthians 3, Paul says, "There will be a time of testing at the judgment day to see what kind of work each builder has done. Some will receive a reward," that's an abundant entrance, "but others will be saved, but like somebody escaping through a wall of flames." How are you going to arrive? Will there be an abundant entrance? Will all the angels and saints say, "Yes! It's our joy to have you." Or will there be somebody kind of going, "Whew! I didn't know if you'd make it, man. [laughter] I'm glad you're here, but, you know, Peter and I, we were taking bets." [laughter] You're going to get there because you believe in Christ. That's sufficient.

But what will the entrance be like, as well as the stay, the rewards that will be garnered. The gains of heaven will more than compensate for all the losses of earth. Well, back to that Leaning Tower of Pisa. I said it was going to fall, right? It doesn't fall in 2007. You know why? Because they knew it was going to fall into the restaurant that it's facing. Interesting lunch. [laughter] So what they did is they moved it back. They moved it back to its 1838 position. Now the experts say it's going to fall in the year 2300, 2300. So we have some time. You could eat at that restaurant safely. However, what they want you to know is it's going to fall. I just wonder something: if the builders who build it shouldn't have researched what the name Pisa means in its origin.

The word "Pisa," Leaning Tower of Pisa and the town of Pisa, the word "Pisa" means marshy ground. Yeah, if you build on marshy ground, the tower is going to fall, so you need to build on a solid foundation. "On Christ the solid Rock I stand, all other ground is sinking sand," marshy ground. So make sure that your life is, first of all, built on the right foundation. Let's pray. Father, we just thank you for Peter's simple, clear words. These are the words of a fisherman who just understood what was important, and he gives it to us straight up, and makes it so easy for us to grasp. Lord, I pray first of all that everyone hearing this would have a firm foundation underneath them, and the kind of faith that they're relying on would be the faith that is given as a gift, cannot be added to in terms of salvation.

But once received, I pray you'd convince the rest of us of our need to build and add and exert and work and always expand, because we're planning for a move. I pray if somebody doesn't know you today, that right now that would change. And if you are here and you don't know Jesus personally, you've never made a personal commitment, a simple commitment and trust, would you just in your heart say right now to him: Lord, I know I'm a sinner. I pray that you would forgive me. I turn from my past. I know where I've come from. And I turn to you in the present, because I'm thinking of the future. I believe Jesus died for me on a cross and rose again from the dead. And I commit my life to you, because you have given your life to me, and everything I need to build this life. Help me, help me, Lord, to just live for you, in Jesus' name, amen.

Closing: God has enabled us with his power and promises, so we can build our faith and lives completely on him. Has this message inspired you to follow Christ more passionately? Let us know, email mystory@calvaryabq.org. And just a reminder: you can give financially to this work at calvaryabq.org/giving. Thank you for joining us for the Calvary Albuquerque with Skip Heitzig podcast.

Additional Messages in this Series

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9/1/2013
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A Pebble, a Boulder & a Solid Foundation
1 Peter 1:1
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Peter is the most famous of the apostles, even though he only wrote two short epistles in the New Testament. But of all the early followers of Christ, Peter is perhaps the most relatable to us since he demonstrates all the weaknesses and failures we see in ourselves. But Peter's personal life and his writings become a composite model of "strength through trust." Any weak, wobbly, failure-ridden person can become Rock Solid through Christ.
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9/8/2013
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The Underpinnings of a Rock-Solid Life
1 Peter 1:2
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Peter skillfully lays the foundational basis for the Christian life to his readers in a single verse. We've been picked by God, placed in His family, and promised future benefits. For anyone who has ever struggled with a weak faith, these truths can be transforming. In this introduction to Peter's letter, let's unpack the meaning of these encouraging realities.
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9/15/2013
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Stepping Stones of the New Birth
1 Peter 1:3-5
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"Born again" wasn't a term invented by the popular press or religious fundamentalists. It was something Jesus told Nicodemus must happen for anyone to enter heaven (see John 3:3). Peter certainly heard that term from Jesus and speaks of it here (as well as in 1 Peter 1:23). It's a term synonymous with being saved and having eternal life. What does this new birth provide? In a word—solidity! Coming to Christ brings hope, inheritance, and power.
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9/22/2013
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Why We Hate Trials (And Why We Love Them)
1 Peter 1:6-7
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If the trials of life could only exist by popular demand, we would have voted them away long ago. People, by and large, hate suffering of any kind. Here in the Western world, we have made it our aim to mitigate against any form of it by a multitude of distractions and experiences. There is even a theology that seeks to say God never wants us to suffer—ever. Let's look at five reasons why we hate (and love) trials, and consider how they can be used to make us better people.
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9/29/2013
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Rock Solid Relationship or Relationship on the Rocks?
1 Peter 1:8-9
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Why do we insist that having a relationship with God is not the same as being a religious person? How is a relationship with Him even possible, since He is GOD and thus is unique from all other creatures? Today, the answer to that will be made simple as we consider the simplest components of any relationship, including a relationship with God.
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10/6/2013
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Our Bedrock Salvation
1 Peter 1:10-12
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God has always planned on saving you. You were never an afterthought or a last-minute consideration. Not only have you been chosen before time began (1 Peter 1:2), but throughout the ages your salvation has been expected and planned for. The spokesmen of the Old Testament wrote about Jesus’ coming and the new covenant of grace, which you are now a part of. All this makes our salvation more secure than ever, built on the bedrock of His promises.
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10/20/2013
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How to Walk in the Dark
1 Peter 1:13-18
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Holiness is an uncomfortable subject for most believers. We have no problem assigning holiness to God as we sing, “You Are Holy, Oh Lord!” But our minds get muddled when we think of our own holiness because we don’t want to appear holier than thou. So what does it mean to be holy? And how can we live holy lives around unholy people? In short, how can we be “children of light” (Ephesians 5:8) while walking in a dark world?
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11/3/2013
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Where You Fit in God's Plan
1 Peter 1:18-21
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God's plan always involves people, and you are one of those people. God's plan includes you. Just think of it. God had you in mind when He put His plan together for the whole world. So where do you fit in that plan? When did this plan have its beginning? How much did this plan cost, and what is your part in it? Today we make that discovery by noting five vital truths:
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11/10/2013
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Rock Solid Love
1 Peter 1:22-2:3
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Peter's love for his Friend and Lord, Jesus Christ, was at one time on shaky ground when he denied that he even knew Jesus. His love would even get questioned by Christ later on (John 21:15-17). But now Peter knows that love for Christ and love for His people is all part of the same package. A relationship with God includes an affection for God's people. Four components of a rock-solid love are given by the very man who learned what true love is.
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11/17/2013
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Got Milk?
1 Peter 2:1-3
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Babies need milk to survive and to thrive. And newborn babies need and crave it a lot. So too, those who have been spiritually born-again need spiritual milk so that they can grow and be mature. As believers grow, they will begin to enjoy more solid spiritual food. But here Peter is addressing our appetites?those things we desire and crave. He gives us a three-part instruction that will curb and train our appetites in such a way that maximum growth will be achieved.
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11/24/2013
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This Old House
1 Peter 2:4-10
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God has been building His "house" since He first made the world. This is not a physical home nor a temple of worship as much as an assembly of peoples whom He has gathered to Himself. The stones He chooses are human beings in relationship to Christ, the cornerstone foundation. Let's consider God's site-plan for this construction project today.
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12/8/2013
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Maximum Impact
1 Peter 2:11-12
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How can Christ-followers make the most meaningful impact on the unbelieving world? That was in Peter's mind when he wrote this letter to scattered believers facing hostility from their neighbors. Four principles that transcend time stand out here; these will encourage us and empower us as we seek to influence our world for Christ and leave a lasting impression.
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1/12/2014
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The World's Hardest Activity
1 Peter 2:13-17
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Some people are just gifted at music or naturally talented with their hands. Others find that sports come easy, while others can perform math functions with total ease. But there is something that practically everyone finds difficult and that is submission. To abdicate our will to that of another, even for the sake of order and peace, is extremely tough. But there are higher goals and loftier purposes for believers to live submissive lives.
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1/19/2014
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Take This Job and Love It
1 Peter 2:18-21
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I want to make you a promise today: If you can learn and master the four principles in our text, your job will never be the same. The tedium, tension, and labor will give way to a higher motive that will bring authentic joy and deep satisfaction. As Peter addresses slaves in the ancient Roman world, let?s apply it to a much more modern and humane situation?your place of employment.
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1/26/2014
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You Remind Me of Someone!
1 Peter 2:21-25
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Whom do you remind people of? At work or in society at large, is it evident that you are a Christ-follower? Jesus is always our supreme example for how to live a godly life in an ungodly world. Peter told us that we should submit to government as well as to management, and now he tells us why we should—because Jesus did and He's the one we follow.
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2/2/2014
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The Irresistible Beauty of a Tender Heart
1 Peter 3:1-6
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The most attractive people in the world are those who display depth of character and pleasant personalities. Solomon insisted that “[outward] beauty is passing” (Proverbs 31:30). As Peter speaks to a common issue in the early church (Christian wives married to unbelieving husbands), he also gives us three marks of a tenderhearted woman: in her actions, attitudes, and admiration.
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2/9/2014
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The Four-Sided Fortress of a Husband's Love
1 Peter 3:7
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If life is to be rock solid, then family relationships—especially marriage—must be rock solid. No wonder Peter speaks to husbands after addressing wives. In his directive toward submission, he addresses citizens (and not government officials); he addresses servants (and not their masters). But when it comes to the home, he addresses both wives and husbands. Let's consider how a husband's love can make a woman feel firmly secure.
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2/16/2014
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How to Attract Flies
1 Peter 3:8-12
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The old saying "You catch more flies with honey than you do with vinegar" fits perfectly with Peter's letter. He's been telling Christians how to live in plain view of the unbelieving world. Now he goes into the church and tells us how to treat each other. It's his hope that an exhibition of real, Christian love will provide a base of satisfying fellowship for us and attract unbelievers. But how?
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2/23/2014
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When Holiness Meets Hostility
1 Peter 3:13-17
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Faith is not neutral. It’s a powerful and dynamic force that changes behavior (if it is genuine faith). Unbelief is also a powerful force, and when believers try to live out their faith in an unbelieving environment, there are some predictable and unavoidable results. Let’s consider four truths from Peter’s pen that will be helpful when God’s holy people meet up with a hostile world.
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3/2/2014
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A Reason for Every "Ouch!"
1 Peter 3:18-22
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Perhaps the most common word in our language is the tiny word, "Ouch!" Every day, it's repeatedly expressed in variant forms around the world. It's a word that conveys pain and suffering. Peter’s audience knew all about suffering, but they didn't always know how it could actually be used for anything good. Christ's own sufferings provide the best example of both the power and usefulness of suffering.
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3/9/2014
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The Invisible War
1 Peter 3:18-22
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In every war, strategy plays a role. Each side plans and makes movements in accordance to what it learns about the other side’s tactics. If information is leaked, a counteroffensive can be launched. This can be seen in the grand and most profound war of the universe: The Invisible War. In this battle, Satan and his minions wage war against God, His angels, and His people. We’ll consider it by looking again at one of the most enigmatic texts in the New Testament. Let’s unravel it.
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3/16/2014
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Should I Get Soaking Wet?
1 Peter 3:20-21
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So what's the deal with baptism? Why do Christians practice it? What does it have to do with my relationship to God? Peter raised the issue of baptism in this letter, but he tied it into what happened during the time of Noah and the great flood. What on earth could one have to do with the other? Let's unravel these verses and then relate them to our current understanding of Christian baptism. Does this really save a person?
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3/23/2014
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Just Counting Time or Making Time Count?
1 Peter 4:1-6
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There is a certain amount of time allotted to us all, and we all decide how we are going to spend it. But none of us knows exactly how much of it we have left. So a huge question for all of us is: What will you do with the time you have left? Some never face that issue honestly, thinking that they'll always have plenty of time. Today, let's consider four solid principles that will make the time you have left really count.
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5/4/2014
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Living Like There's No Tomorrow
1 Peter 4:7-11
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People have been predicting the end of the world since the beginning of the world. But Scripture declares there will be an end. For some, their world could end this week or this year when death pays them a visit. But with whatever time we have left, we should live with a sense of imminence and anticipation that God's kingdom is around the corner. What elements can make our lives stronger as we await the end of the age?
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5/11/2014
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The Dos and Don'ts of Suffering
1 Peter 4:12-19
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Pain and suffering dominate our world. To some, that poses an insurmountable roadblock to faith in a good and loving God. How can a loving God let such unlovely things happen all around the globe every day for millennia? Not only is this a deal breaker for unbelievers, but it presents a quandary for believers who want to make sense out of everything in life. The apostle Peter weighed in on these issues in a very personal way to his fellow Christians.
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5/18/2014
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Profile of a Good Shepherd
1 Peter 5:1-4
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"The church needs leaders who serve and servants who lead." So said one notable pastor. Peter doesn't address just the suffering flock of believers in this letter; he also has encouragement for the leaders of the flock—the pastors. What are the characteristics of a shepherd who serves among God's flock? What are his responsibilities, and how can a church flourish under such leadership? Here, Peter places himself and fellow shepherds under the microscope.
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5/25/2014
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The Upright Walk of a Bowed-Down Man
1 Peter 5:5-7
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One website I came across recently stated that "the more in control you are of your life, the more assured and confident you'll become." The same website warned readers to not trust others. That is, unfortunately, the by-product of our proud world. But walking among others means we sometimes need to bend low in humility for the sake of solidarity and unity. Peter's words on this are timeless.
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6/1/2014
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Lion Alert!
1 Peter 5:8-9
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Just think what would happen if a lion from our local zoo escaped and was wandering around the park, looking for a fresh kill. Can you imagine the pandemonium that would erupt if such a misfortune occurred? Imagine no more! Our Enemy is far more dangerous and formidable and is on the prowl to destroy the spiritual lives of the residents of planet Earth, especially those who belong to Christ. Let's consider the battle and the potential outcome.
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6/29/2014
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A Rock-Solid Finish
1 Peter 5:10-14
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Peter ended his letter with a few nuggets of distilled truth. In just a couple of verses, he concentrated everything he had already said. To his suffering audience, Peter offered assurance of God’s perfect plan that began when they trusted in Christ and wouldn’t end until they were firmly secure in the glories of heaven. Though pain is part of the process of perfection, the finish line is worth it!
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10/19/2014
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How to Live and Die Well
2 Peter 1:12-15
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Peter lived his life knowing the brevity of it. Here, he wrote as an older man in his seventies. Realizing there was more road behind him than ahead of him, he gave a model for us. Essentially we have here an excellent example of how to live well and how to die well. Let's answer the question How can I live and die well? by considering four keys passed along by Peter himself.
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10/26/2014
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Is It True? How Can I Know?
2 Peter 1:16-21
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Truth is a slippery word. Definitions get assigned to it that are contradictory, purely individual, and without any validation. Peter wanted his readers to know things. He was giving them truth that was both personally familiar and prophetically verifiable. How can we today know that what we believe in and hope for is actually true?
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11/2/2014
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Watch Out for Fakes!
2 Peter 2:1-14
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Counterfeiting has become a multibillion-dollar industry that extends all around the world. Fake jewelry, fake purses, fake paintings, and, yes, even fake medicines are sold as if they’re the genuine articles, when they are cheap (though amazingly real-looking) imitations. It’s the same when it comes to truth. What makes a false teacher of false teaching? Peter gave three recommendations in dealing with such counterfeits.
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11/9/2014
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Caution: Ruts Ahead!
2 Peter 2:15-22
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The quality, comfort, and success of a journey depend largely on the conditions of the road, the company you keep, and the destination you’re heading for. False teachers and their devotees guarantee a perilous voyage and a bad finish! Today we are challenged to live cautiously as we make progress in our journey of faith and to watch out for ruts.
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11/16/2014
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Look, Jesus Is Coming!
2 Peter 3:1-10
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The second coming of Jesus Christ will be the greatest day in humankind’s history. The promise of His return to rule the world He created has been what believers have longed for the last 2,000 years. Jesus’ return will be the solution to every social, moral, political, and spiritual issue and problem. But what do other people (besides Christian believers) think about such a notion? And, as we wait for His return, what should we look for, and where ought we to be looking?
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11/23/2014
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Breaking Up Camp and Moving On
2 Peter 3:10-18
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We have studied both letters of Peter and have seen how anyone whose life would otherwise be weak, wobbly, and failure ridden can become Rock Solid through Christ. This is vital since life in this world is dynamic, shifting, and transitory. This world is passing; its glory is fading. Thus, anyone who places all their energy and hope in this life alone will be disappointed. Today, as we end our series, we consider where we are eventually headed and how to arrive safely.
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There are 35 additional messages in this series.
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