First
we were given all things that pertain to life and godliness through the knowledge
of Him who called us by glory and virtue, then the selfsame One who called us
went on to give us exceedingly great and precious promises.
God
is not stingy when it comes to what He gives His children, and when we realize
the utter uselessness of material things when compared with the eternal things
He has promised us, we come close to understanding just how charitable and
giving God is.
It
is because men who ought never to have been allowed behind a pulpit kept
insisting that the way to gauge God’s blessing upon your life is to see how
much money you had in your bank account that so many believers began feeling
underwhelmed by all of God’s exceedingly great and precious promises.
‘Well,
yeah, I feel the presence of God in my life, and I know what it is to know
Jesus in the fullness of all that He is, but the guy on television says I need
a yacht and a private jet in order to know the full measure of God’s blessing.’
Once
again it comes down to whom we are going to believe, and seeing what we see
either through eyes of flesh, or the eyes of the Spirit.
When
we perceive the promises of God through the eyes of the Spirit we acknowledge
offhand that these promises have nothing to do with the material.
Why
would God make exceedingly great and precious promises for the material toward
us, when the selfsame God said that the earth and everything in it would pass
away?
Would
God not rather promise something of the eternal variety? Would God not rather
make exceedingly great and precious promises for those things that human
ingenuity, human drive, or human intellect could never attain but could only be
attained by being numbered among His children?
When
we lower God to our level, when we demand He think the way we think and act the
way we act, we are demeaning the eternal God of all creation, the One who spoke
the universe into being, and the One who already forewarned us that His ways
are not as our ways and His thoughts are not our thoughts.
“that through
these you may be partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption
that is in the world through lust.”
It
is here, in the tail end of verse four that we are told why we were given all
things that pertain to life and godliness, as well as why exceedingly great and
precious promises were given us. It was so through these things we might be
partakers of the divine nature.
All
of God’s exceedingly great and precious promises are encapsulated and likewise
fulfilled in the person of Jesus Christ. Absent Christ, we could never have
been partakers of the divine nature, absent Christ we would never have been
reconciled unto the Father, and Peter knew this better than most men.
There
is another truth the end of this verse reveals to us, and that is one cannot be
a partaker of the divine nature, all the while practicing the corruption that
is in the world through lust.
It
is an either or proposition with God. Either we become partakers of the divine
nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world, or we remain mired
in the corruption that is in the world, never fully experiencing what it is to
be a partaker of the divine nature.
Any
man who tells you that it is possible to do both simultaneously, to be a
partaker of the divine nature and still be shackled by the corruption of the
world is lying to your face for no other reason than the money you will gladly
be willing to part with because your conscience was soothed and appeased.
It
is only when we have become partakers of the divine nature that we have been
set free, and are become free indeed. Anything before that is just an illusion
of freedom, something perhaps akin to the real thing but not the real thing
itself.
Only
Christ can set us free, only Christ can take off the shackles that bind us and
bring us to that place wherein we have truly escaped the corruption that is in
the world through lust.
Some
may be reading this wondering what lust has to do with the corruption that is
in the world, and the answer to that question is everything.
Although
in our modern age we equate lust with a sexual desire of some sort, lust is
defined as a craving, a longing, or a desire. One can lust after power, one can
lust after prestige, one can lust after possessions, because what we desire,
long for and crave is what we pursue.
Lust
fuels men’s drive to sink deeper into the corruption that is in the world,
thinking that by doing so they will achieve their heart’s desire, realizing
belatedly that what they wanted wasn’t really what they wanted all along.
In
their lust for the things of the world, in their desire and craving for something
they do not possess, men neglect those things they do possess and often take
for granted, and end up sacrificing them on the altar of the selfsame lust that
is consuming them.
This
is why so many marriages fail, this is why so many children refuse to speak to
their parents, this is why so many people are downright miserable and the hopelessness
they are feeling is etched upon their brow. Because they did not escape the corruption
that is in the world through lust, and it consumed them.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea Jr.
2 comments:
Hi Michael,
Jeremiah 9:23,24 came to mind as I read your post.
23 Thus says the Lord:
“Let not the wise man glory in his wisdom,
Let not the mighty man glory in his might,
Nor let the rich man glory in his riches;
24 But let him who glories, glory in this,
That he understands and knows Me,
That I am the Lord, exercising lovingkindness, judgment, and righteousness in the earth.
For in these I delight,” says the Lord.
Thank you for helping us to dig deep into the Word of God.
Suzy
The caranl pastors make the faith seem like a self help guide to earthly success. They pray for healings, tithe to be rich, and try to convince and cajole people into having faith. This leaves you dry, empty and confused. If they were so good at healing, would there really be a need for hospitals? If it was so easy to get rich, why are so many poor? Christ said the poor will always be with us.
Churches are so carnal, they are turning into nightclubs and social gatherings for the power seeking ambitious. The people of real faith and spirituality seem to be outside the church, sometimes in other faiths or maybe even with next to no faith at all.
At least they are not burying the truth of Christ under a rug of manipulation. They are practicing what they think is their best hope in life, and doing it with reverence.
A Christian who hears Christ's words but keeps acting like they have none affect, is basically a liar. He might as well say he is Christian-like instead.
Being a Christian is extremely hard but those who are troubled in spirit are run out of the churches. They are considered the party poopers of the faith. No one wants to hear their struggles or bear their burdens. They want to have happy hour with singing, dancing and back slapping.
If I just wanted to go to a social club, I feel a bar is more authentic.
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