Archives for June 2016

How HOPE makes you HOLY

Slide18If you’re motivated, you can do amazing things.

What would motivate a person to get out of bed in the middle of the night and read with avid interest, a boring, technical book when he should be sleeping? Every parent of a sick child who has read a medical handbook for baby at 3 a.m. knows the answer!

What would motivate a person to go sit out in an icy wind for two hours on a Saturday morning when there are other pressing things to do? Every loving parent who is a soccer mom or dad has done that very thing. Something motivated them to do what would normally be unnatural.

What would make a college student stay up all night banging away at his computer? Surely his body is crying out for sleep! Surely he’s not so intrigued by his subject that he just can’t quit! He’s motivated by a professor who said, “The term paper will count for 25 percent of your grade. No late work will be accepted. No exceptions!”

So here’s a question: Why don’t we read our Bibles with the consistency and fervency of a college student? Why don’t we pray with the tenacity of an athlete? Why don’t we strive to be holy people in every area of life? Why do our hearts grow lax toward the things of God?

The answer is that, we lack proper motivation. If we can kindle the right motivation, we will be fervent in spirit and all-out for the Lord.

Today we are going to look at the motivation for holiness: Hope makes us holy. In the first section of this chapter, Peter emphasized walking in hope, but now his emphasis is walking in holiness. The question of the first section was, “How can I smile while suffering?” the question in the next is, “How can I live a pure life in a corrupt society?”

One powerful answer is that “hope makes holy.” Holiness and hope go together like peanut butter and jelly, like the Lone Ranger and Tonto, like abbot and Costello, like ice cream and chocolate syrup. But more to the point, hope makes us yearn for holiness like the smell of thanksgiving dinner to a hungry man, like a shining oasis to a parched Bedouin, like a hot fire on the hearth when it’s 10 below zero outside, like a twenty dollar bill when you are flat broke.

Hope motivates us to be holy when it captivates our mind. Those who hope and dream of the soon coming of the Lord are highly motivated to live for Jesus. His coming is alive and vivid to their soul. Those who spend little time pondering the Christian hope of the future have little motivation to be holy. Much hope, much holiness; little hope, little holiness. Cause and effect.

Listen to what Peter said in verse 13: “Therefore gird up the loins of your mind, be sober, and rest your hope fully upon the grace that is to be brought to you at the revelation of Jesus Christ.”

Now listen to what the Apostle John said in his letter; “every man that hath this hope in him purifies himself, even as Jesus is pure” (1 John 3:3). It sounds like Peter and John hung around together, doesn’t it?

Slide3Hope captures the mind – 13

“Gird up the loins of your mind” simply means, “Pull your thoughts together! Keep your mind on Jesus return!” The image of girding up the loins is a little old fashioned. It is Bible time man wearing a robe who needs to run free, so he can be seen tucking his rub up under the belt, so that it won’t trip him up. When you center your thoughts on the return of Christ, you escape the many worldly things that would trap your mind.

Not only should we have a disciplined mind, but we should also have a sober mind. The word sober means “to be calm, steady, controlled; to weigh matters.” Unfortunately some people get worried by prophetic studies and start looking at tribulation rather than Jesus return. The fact that Christ is coming should encourage us to be calm and collected.

The most passionate, stable people I know are the people who are spellbound by Jesus coming. Hope makes them holy. This is why I begin virtually every morning by saying, “Lord, I set apart my mind for You today. I set apart my passion, my eyes, my ears, my lips. I set apart my motivations, my attitudes, my disciplines. I set apart all these things to You.” This kind of simple reminder has kept me moving toward that goal of holiness Peter mentions in 1 Peter 1:15-16. I would urge you to do the same.

Hope delivers from ignorant sin – 14Slide4

“as obedient children, not conforming yourselves to the former lusts, as in your ignorance.”

The argument here is logical and simple. Some people are ignorant of their sin. They think that there is nothing wrong with how they are living. In fact they flaunt it. Sinful ignorance that leads to foolish indulgence. Unsaved people lack spiritual intelligence, and this causes them to justify their sin.

But hope awakens obedience in us, because when we believe, we awaken as a child of God. Children inherit the nature of their parents. A lamb will naturally grow up acting like a sheep. It’s in his nature. And a piglet will wallow like all other pigs. We are children of God! If you have this hope in you, will live a holy life. God is holy; therefore, as His children, we should live holy lives.

Peter reminded his readers that they had also been imitators of the world, “conforming themselves” to the standards and pleasures of the world. Romans 12:2 translates this same word as do not be “conformed to this world.”

Slide5Hope imitates a Holy God -15

15 but as He who called you is holy, you also be holy in all your conduct, 16 because it is written, “Be holy, for I am holy.”

God’s holiness is an essential part of His nature. “God is light, and in him is no darkness at all” (1 John 1:5). Any holiness that we have come from God.

What does it mean for Christians to be “holy”? Ask around and you’ll get a host of answers, most of them erroneous. The term, in its basic sense, means to be set apart, separated for a special, unique purpose. This is why marriage is sometimes called “holy matrimony.” A husband and wife separate from their former family commitments as they commit themselves to each other in a unique and intimate relationship. We also call the Bible “Holy Scripture” because these writings, are set apart from the common writings of the world.

The words “holy,” “holiness,” “saint” and “sanctify” come from a Greek root meaning, “to set apart to God.” The believer in the Lord Jesus Christ is set apart for God by the Holy Spirit, with the obligation of living a holy life (1 Pet. 1:15-16).

A holy person is not an odd person, but a different person. His life has a quality about it that is different. His present “lifestyle” is not only different from his past way of life, but it is different from the “lifestyles” of the unbelievers around him. It involves separation from that which is unclean and complete devotion to God (2 Cor. 6:14—7:1). We are to be holy “in all our behavior,” so that everything we do reflects the holiness of God.

To a believer, there is no such thing as “secular” and “sacred.” All of life is holy as we live to glorify God. Even such ordinary activities as eating and drinking can be done to the glory of God (i Cor. 10:31). If something cannot be done to the glory of God, it should not be done at all!

Slide6Hope results in reverence – 17

17 And if you call on the Father, who without partiality judges according to each one’s work, conduct yourselves throughout the time of your stay here in fear (reverence)

Most people are motivated by appreciation and love. Hope is the highest form of motivation. If you are going to use fear as a motivator, use it sparingly, and when you give a warning, make sure you carry it out, or negative motivation loses its effect.

God also uses negative motivation. “The Father, without partiality judges according to each one’s work.” If I can get you to think deeply about the judgment of God on sinners, you are sure to turn your life over to Jesus. Who wants to eternal judgment?

But this verse is not just about the eternal judgment on unbelievers; this is about the judgment of Christians. Let me paraphrase verse 17. “If you are going to call yourself a Christian, conduct yourself like one, reverently, for God is watching and is going to judge everyone impartially, not just by what comes out of their mouth, but by how they live!”

Now there is no question that the believer’s judgment is different than the unbeliever. The non-Christian receives the sentence of eternal hell for his sin. The Christian received discipline here for misbehavior, and loss at the Judgment seat of Christ for disobedience.

Now there’s some motivation for you. Don’t sin, because sin results in chastisement. Do live for Jesus, for that results in great reward.

Now we come to the concluding verses of this little section, where Peter tells us why hope makes us holy:

Slide7Why Hope makes us Holy: we were redeemed, so we believe!

18 knowing that you were not redeemed with corruptible things, like silver or gold, from your aimless conduct received by tradition from your fathers, 19 but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot. 20 He indeed was foreordained before the foundation of the world, but was manifest in these last times for you 21 who through Him believe in God, who raised Him from the dead and gave Him glory, so that your faith and hope are in God.

Let me explain what this means. All those who don’t know Christ are like the merchandise in the slave market of sin. Whether they realize it or not, they are in bondage to desires, impulses, and ignorance—alienated from God, the one source of true freedom. They live in a condition in which they cannot help or change themselves. Their only hope is help from the outside.

Christ provided that help at the cross, where His own blood paid the penalty for sin—death. He didn’t pay in silver or gold—worthless scrap metal compared to the price of a human soul. No, Christ paid with His blood, breaking the chains, opening the door, and calling the unredeemed to step out of the bondage from which they had been purchased. And the only thing keeping any person from receiving this freedom is his or her own decision to accept the free offer of eternal life, stepping from the darkness of futility into the light of a joyous, meaningful life.

Christ didn’t purchase us with His precious blood to let us drift aimlessly through life. We are meant to be motivated to be Holy. How can we stay motivated? I have four suggestions I would urge you to remember.

First, pay close attention to what you look at. Your eyes are the closest connection to your mind. They capture images that are alluring, attractive, sensual, and pleasurable. Take care what you allow to pass through the gates of your eyes, especially when you are alone.

Second, give greater thought to long-range consequences than to immediate pleasures. You’ll notice that one of the characteristics of the world is that nobody ever mentions the disastrous consequences of lust, or feeding your greed. Walk through the consequences of your actions, thinking through the effects, naming the people whose lives will be harmed, and reminding yourself of the high cost of a ruined reputation.

Third, start each day by renewing your sense of reverence for God. Don’t limit that to the church. Start each1228 hope rising smiling day spending time with the Lord. Sometimes I simply say, “Lord, I’m here. I’m yours. I give You my day. As inadequate and fragile as I am, I need Your help this day.” Start each day by renewing that Father-child relationship.

Fourth, refocus on Christ throughout the day. As people, events, and temptations cross your path, you’ll begin to drift from that original course. Whatever happens, realign your focus upon Christ. Even if it means regularly scheduling short times of prayer or reading your Bible or devotional during breaks or lunch. Take time to focus on Him throughout the day.

 

Why We are Amazed!

amazing
What amazes you?

A gentleman named Agur, who lived during the times of Solomon once wrote: “There are three things that are too amazing for me, four that I do not understand:   the way of an eagle in the sky, the way of a snake on a rock, the way of a ship on the high seas, and the way of a man with a maid.” Proverbs 3:18-19

In our hectic, mile a minute existences, it’s easy to forget just amazing our world truly is.  Let me give you some amazing data that seem more like fiction then fact.

  1. If you drilled a tunnel straight through the Earth and jumped in, and if you fell at the rate that skydivers fall, it would take you exactly 42 minutes and 12 seconds to get to china.
  2. A medium-sized cumulus cloud weighs about the same as 80 elephants.
  3. A single bolt of lightning contains enough energy to cook 100,000 pieces of toast.
  4. In an average lifetime, human skin completely replaces itself 900 times.
  5. A red blood cell can make a complete circuit of your body in 20 seconds.  During the hour and a half that you sit in church, your blood has been running over 150 laps!
  6. According to Amazon, the most highlighted Kindle books are, the Steve Jobs biography, and The Hunger Games, and #1, the Bible

what amazes you?Amazing.  We are still talking about why we smile while suffering.  We smile because we have discovered that where there is Christ, there is hope.  We smile because to God, we are “keepers;” we dance because we are bound for glory.  And today we will be amazed at what God has done for us.  Before we are finished I hope to leave you overwhelmed at how incredible it is that we have so great a salvation.

Let me tell you something.  We all are privileged people.  We live in an incredible time, and I’m not talking about technology.  Let me tell you why you should be overwhelmed with gratitude and why you are so privileged; it is because the best of men in history past, and the best of angels in heaven above, wish that they could see what you have seen, could have what you have.

We among all men and angels are privileged, and it ought to amaze us.

prophets souight it ouitThe Prophets Sought it Out!

Verse 10 notes “Of this salvation the prophets have inquired and searched carefully…”

What the prophets sought, we possess.  Moses sought it, as did Isaiah, as did King David the prophet.  Elijah searched for it, and so did his counterpart Elisha.  Even John the Baptist didn’t get it.  His desire was just to be the least  in the kingdom.  He asked Jesus, “Are you the one we’ve been expecting, or should be look for another?”  (Matthew 11:3).

When Jesus was born, the prophet Simeon prayed; Now Lord, let your servant die in peace, for my eyes have seen your salvation.”  (Luke 2:29)

Many have earnestly longed to see our day, and have not seen it.  We are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, who want to tell us one amazing truth: we are among the most privileged in all of history, for we get to experience so great a salvation!

But it isn’t just prophets who longed to have what we have,

Slide14The Angels Desire to Look into it. 

This is the only place in the Bible where angels and prophets are mentioned together. That’s fascinating because the Bible says a lot about angels and a lot about prophets, but only here do we have them in the same text.

Look at the closing phrase of verse 12.  It says, these are “things which angels desire to look into.“

If I told you that I had a special window that let me look into the realm of the angels, all of us would crowd around to get a glimpse of “the other side.” But who would have thought that the angels long to look at us and understand our salvation.

The words “look into,” Παρακυψαι· speak of one who is stooped down, or stooped over to better glimpse of something.  It is the posture of a sleuth like who Sherlock Holmes is intent on examining important evidence.  It’s the same word used for Peter and John stooping to look inside the empty tomb on Easter Sunday morning.

Someone suggested that this is an allusion here to the cherubim who stood at the ends of the ark of the covenant, in the inner tabernacle, with their eyes turned down towards the mercy-seat in a bending posture, as if looking attentively. Even the holy angels are struck with astonishment at the plan of human redemption.

What do angels what to know?

Did you know that there has never been an angel that has ever been forgiven?  And did you know that there never ever will be even one single angel that will ever experience salvation?  And did you know that God never sent His son Jesus to pay the penalty for their sins.

Here is Peter’s message made plain: God loves you so much, the angels are amazed. They know nothing about grace and mercy and forgiveness. They’ve never experienced new life, the new birth, regeneration, the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, or the wonder of deliverance from sin. That which we have experienced in Jesus Christ, the angels never knew and will never know. We are far more privileged than they.

No wonder Jesus told His disciples, “blessed are your eyes for they see, and your ears for they hear;  for assuredly, I say to you that many prophets and righteous men (and may I say angels) desired to see what you see, and did not see it, and to hear what you hear, and did not hear it.”  Matthew 13:16-17

We among all men and angels are privileged, and it ought to amaze us with gratitude and make us smile.  We know what the prophets never knew, and we experience what the angels wish they knew.

And what is that?  The prophets saw it coming…

Slide15The Prophets Prophesied of it!

Back to verse 10, “Of this salvation the prophets have inquired and searched carefully, who prophesied of the grace that would come to you.”

In one simple sentence, Peter tells us what we should be so amazed about; we should be amazed at Grace – Amazing Grace.  What’s so amazing about grace?  If you don’t know, you need to ask; you need to find out!  Unfortunately, the discussion of grace has become so commonplace to Christians, so every day, that to some of us it is so ho-hum!

It is like the healthy man who doesn’t appreciate walking until he is paralyzed.  It is like the wealthy man who takes abundant food for granted until he is lost and starving in the wilderness.  It is like the wise man who takes his powers of reasoning for granted until dementia begins taking them away.

Grace is even more amazing.  So what is Grace? “It is the undeserving gift of God, in which he offers lost sinners unmerited favor.”  We sinners deserve God’s wrath and instead in Jesus Christ we get love; we deserve punishment and get forgiveness—all because of Jesus’ sacrifice on our behalf.

Read the stories in the Gospels. “I was blind but now I see” (John 9). “[My son] was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found” (Luke 15). “For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son” (John 3:16). The news is spectacularly good, especially when held up against the bleak view of hopelessness that has a stranglehold on our world.

If you don’t have grace, you need it!  If you do have grace, you need to be amazed by it!  It keeps you smiling even if you are suffering.  It is the hope that brings comfort to the needy.

Slide16The Spirit Predicted It

11 searching what, or what manner of time, the Spirit of Christ who was in them was indicating when He testified beforehand the sufferings of Christ and the glories that would follow.

The prophets were the men in the Old Testament whom God chose to be his spokesmen on earth.  The spirit of Christ was in them.  It was the Spirit who moved the prophet to prophecy.  The prophets had two primary jobs: 1) They proclaimed God’s Word, and 2) They predicted future events.   Peter’s concern is with #2, the prophets as predictors of the future.

According to verse eleven, there are four amazing things about prophecy.  #1 Prophecy explains what is going to happen.  #2 Prophecy explains when it would happen – or what manner of time it would occur.  #3 Prophecies main focus is on Christ and his sufferings.  #4 Prophecy details the glories that are yet to follow.

Bible prophecy is one of the most amazing and unique characteristics of the Bible.  It is impossible to find anything like it anywhere else in history.  God has a track record of keeping his promises.  You can hang your hat on that!

The prophets predicted the coming of a Savior who would bring hope to this heartbroken world. Did you know there are over 300 separate prophecies in the Old Testament relating to the coming of Christ? And did you also know that Jesus fulfilled 33 prophecies on the day of his death.

Here are a few of those predictions the prophets made about Jesus:

  1. That he would be born of a virgin—Isaiah 7:14
  2. That he would be born in Bethlehem—Micah 5:2
  3. That he would be born into the tribe of Judah—Genesis 49:10
  4. That his ministry would begin in Galilee—Isaiah 9:1
  5. That he would work miracles—Isaiah 35:5, 6
  6. That he would teach in parables—Psalm 78:2
  7. That he would enter Jerusalem on a donkey—Zechariah 9:9
  8. That he would be betrayed by a friend—Psalm 41:9
  9. That he would be sold for 30 pieces of silver—Zechariah 11:12
  10. That he would be accused by false witnesses—Psalm 35:11
  11. That he would be wounded and bruised—Isaiah 53:5
  12. That his hands and feet would be pierced—Psalm 22:16
  13. That he would be crucified with thieves—Isaiah 53:12
  14. That his garments would be torn apart and lots cast for them—Psalm 22:18
  15. That his bones would not be broken—Psalm 34:20
  16. That his side would be pierced—Zechariah 12:10
  17. That he would be buried in a rich man’s tomb—Isaiah 53:9
  18. That he would rise from the dead—Psalm 16:10

These are only a few of the hundreds of prophecies about Jesus Christ given by the Old Testament prophets.  And let me just say something about Jesus.  Although prophecy predicts many different things; famines, earthquakes, plagues, the antichrist and the coming tribulation, the main purpose of prophecy is to point to Jesus.  Jesus is the spirit of prophecy.

If you want to understand the Bible, look for Jesus!  Better to see him on every page than not to see him at all. The Bible is one book with 66 parts—all pointing to Jesus.

  • He is the Prophet greater than Moses.
  • He is the Priest greater than Aaron.
  • He is the King greater than David.
  • Jesus is the theme of the Bible.
  1. A) Jesus is the meaning of history. History truly is His Story. History is not about men and nations, or the rise and fall of empires. It’s not about building or buying or getting. History is not about who wins the election in November—as important as that is to most of us. History is about Jesus Christ! How do I know this? Because when he was born, he split history in two—into BC and AD! Every time unbelievers say 2016, they unknowingly confess the supremacy of our Lord. History is all about Jesus, and apart from him, history has no meaning.
  2. B) Salvation is the purpose of history. I don’t just mean salvation in the limited sense of you coming to Christ. I mean salvation in the larger sense of all that God intends to do to bring deliverance to this sin-cursed planet. Salvation is the story of the greatest rescue mission in the history of the universe. It’s about God sending his Son to redeem a rebel race, at the cost of his own Son, and then offering forgiveness and freedom to all who will believe in him. That great drama of salvation will come to its appointed culmination when Jesus returns to the earth.  And as I thought about this, my heart raced to the amazing words of the book of Revelation:  even so Lord Jesus come!  Amazing.  And he shall reign forever and ever.  Amazing!

Slide17The Apostles Preached It

12 To them it was revealed that, not to themselves, but to us they were ministering the things which now have been reported to you through those who have preached the gospel to you by the Holy Spirit sent from heaven.

The prophets were not speaking to themselves, the prophets were speaking to us!  The Apostles were not just preaching the gospel to the people of the 1st century, they spoke to men and women of every century.  The Bible is not meant for men of some other nation, or people of some other time; the Gospel is meant for you.

The Bible is God’s love letter to you.  If you doubt that, listen to what God says:

I love you! (John 3:16)  I created you in my image (Genesis 1:27) and I called you “very good” (Genesis 1:31).  I knit you together in your mother’s womb (Psalm 139:13).  I know the number of the hairs on your head (Matthew 10:30) and I am familiar with all your ways (Psalm 139:3).  My precious thoughts of you are as countless as the sand on the seashore (Psalm 139:17-18).

“… I will always love you; …. You are precious to me.”  Jeremiah, 31:3-4),  “… I can’t let you go. I can’t give you up. … My feelings for you are much too strong. Hosea 11:8).  “Could a mother forget her child who nurses?  Even if a mother could forget, I will never forget you.” Isaiah 49:15)

You see I’ve loved you from the beginning, long before you loved me (1 John 4:19).  I sent my son Jesus, the exact representation of myself(Hebrews 1:3), to die on the cross in your place (Romans 5:8), to take upon Himself the punishment that you deserved (Isaiah 53:5), and to take away your sin (John 1:29).  For you the mighty Lion sacrificed his life as an innocent Lamb (Revelation 5:5-6).

Slide18One day soon I Jesus I will return to bring you and all my followers to the heavenly home that I have prepared for you (John 14:2).  I will wipe away your tears and take away your pain forever (Revelation 21:3-4) and I will reward you for all the you’ve done in my name (Revelation 22:12).  Heaven will be more beautiful and wonderful than you can imagine (Revelation 21:10-27).  There we will sing to God with angels (Revelation 7:9-17), feast at banquets (Matthew 22:14), and rule over cities (Luke 19:11-26).  Love, God

Does that not amaze you?  No wonder we smile!  We are the most blessed people in history. We know things the prophets never knew. We experience salvation the angels never experience.