Although
it would be easy for me to get sidetracked and go into the various attributes
of love, distinguishing between true love and feigned love, we will table that
discussion for another time and continue with our journey through Peter’s
inspired admonition toward all believers.
One
need only understand the time and place of Peter’s upbringing as well as his
chosen profession to likewise understand that the words he penned were not his
own, but were from another source, one which flowed through him rather than
being inherently his.
Peter
was a fisherman. He knew how to cast nets, bring the nets in, fill his boat and
go sell the fish he happened to catch on a given day in the marketplace. He was
not singled out for being a deep thinker like Paul, nor an educated man like
Luke, but simply as one who knew how to labor with his hands and do what he
must to feed his family.
If
the words he penned in his first and second epistle would have been attributed
to one such as Paul, they would be no great surprise. He was after all the most
educated of the men who followed after Christ and wrote epistles. Coming from
Peter however, from the calloused hands of a laborer who had no formal training
in the ways of philosophy or introspective thought, it is something worth
pondering and acknowledging as having been divine in origin.
2 Peter 1:8,
“For if these things are yours and abound, you will be neither barren nor
unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
At
first glance this verse seems relatively innocuous. When we begin to ponder
what the verse actually implies, we begin to see a depth heretofore unexpected.
The
first thing we notice is the conditionality of the verse. Whenever we see the
word ‘if’ in the Bible, it implies conditionality. I realize the notion of
conditionality is one many believers have a difficult time with, but God will
not change His Word to spare our feelings, nor will He compromise Himself in
order to come in line with our way of thinking.
If
men attempting to will their doctrines upon the mind of God were not so tragic
it would be outright laughable. We have lost sight of whom God is, who we are,
and what our relationship with Him ought to be, and because of this we
continually attempt to pressure God into lowering His standard, changing His
stance, or compromising His Word, all the while diluting ourselves into
believing this is possible.
God
is not a Calvinist, nor is He a Wesleyan, nor is He a Lutheran, nor is He a
Baptist, Pentecostal, or Methodist. God is God, and He will not be neatly fit
into our denominational boxes, quietly bidding His time until Christ’s return, reward
in hand.
God
is unchanging. He identified Himself as unchanging, or as being the same
yesterday, today, and forevermore. Either we submit ourselves to His authority,
align ourselves with His Word, and obey His commandments, or we are calling Him
a liar to His face all the while expecting His bountiful blessings to be poured
upon us.
God
demands obedience and He will settle for nothing less.
I
know we’re supposed to consider ourselves the most special generation amidst
the most special nation to have ever graced the planet, but that is only due to
the arrogance and the self-importance we shower ourselves with. In reality God
is no respecter of persons, He does not see Americans, Romanians, Italians, or
Puerto Ricans, He sees His creation and whether or not His creation is clothed
in the blood, righteousness, and holiness of His Son Jesus.
In
attempting to widen the path, in attempting to make salvation as pain free and
absent of sacrifice as starting a new checking account, we’ve endeavored to
remove conditionality from the Word of God, deride those who insist it is still
included therein, and pretend as though God didn’t say what He said, nor meant
what He meant.
If
these things abound in us, if we possess faith and godliness, knowledge and
self-control, love and brotherly kindness, and the other things Peter outlined,
it is only then that we will be neither barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge
of the Lord Jesus.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea Jr.
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