Tag Archives: 2 Peter

December 23, 2024 Bible Study — Eye Witness Accounts, or Fabricated Stories?

Today, I am reading and commenting on 2 Peter 1-3.

Every year when I read this, my first thought is to write about verses five to nine in chapter one:

For this very reason, make every effort to add to your faith goodness; and to goodness, knowledge; and to knowledge, self-control; and to self-control, perseverance; and to perseverance, godliness; and to godliness, mutual affection; and to mutual affection, love.  For if you possess these qualities in increasing measure, they will keep you from being ineffective and unproductive in your knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. But whoever does not have them is nearsighted and blind, forgetting that they have been cleansed from their past sins.

However, as I read today, I came to where Peter writes “For we did not tell you cleverly devised stories…”  then he goes on to tell them that false prophets and false teachers who will use fabricated stories to gain followers and exploit people.  To me, what Peter writes here is both a warning against falling for such false prophets and false teachers and a warning against becoming one of them.  Peter describes them as bold and arrogant.  He also tells us that they despise authority and follow corrupt desire.  In their arrogance they heap abuse on spiritual beings, beings which even angels delivering a message from God do not abuse.  So, while Christ gives us power over such beings, we must remember that it is His power, not our own, and use it with humility and only in such a manner as brings glory to Christ.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

December 23, 2023 Bible Study — Do Not Allow Ourselves to be Exploited by False Teachers

Today, I am reading and commenting on  2 Peter 1-3.

Usually when I read today’s passage I focus on the “virtue escalator” which Peter describes: virtues which build upon each other.  Those virtues are faith, goodness, knowledge, self control, perseverance, godliness, mutual affection, and love.  However, today I want to focus on what Peter says about false teachers.  Before getting into talking about false prophets and false teachers, Peter writes that those who wrote Scripture spoke from God, not from human interpretation.  Then he tells us that false teachers will attempt to exploit people with fabricated stories, some of which deny the sovereignty of Christ.  They will try to hide the ways in which their teachings contradict Scripture by various means.  He writes that we can identify them by their depraved conduct and rejection of all other authority.  They will claim to offer freedom, but will actually enslave themselves to depravity.  Which brings me back to that “virtue escalator” which I mentioned at the beginning.  If we build up our faith with goodness, add knowledge to our goodness, exercise self control in our knowledge, persevere with our self control so that it produces godliness, which will lead us to mutual affection and love, we will not be fooled by false teachers.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

December 23, 2022 Bible Study — God Spoke Through The Prophets In Scripture

Today, I am reading and commenting on  2 Peter 1-3.

I really like the progression which Peter points out at the beginning of this letter: that we should add goodness to our faith, and then add knowledge to goodness, then self-control to knowledge, perseverance to self-control, godliness to perseverance, mutual affection to godliness, and finally love to mutual affection.  However, I want to focus today on what Peter writes about prophetic Scripture (which is this context is ALL Scripture) and false teachers.  First, he writes that Scripture did not come about through the interpretation of those who wrote it.  Even though those who wrote the Scripture were human, their writings which have become Scripture were God speaking through them.  And there are prophets among us today through whom God speaks.  However, we must be careful because there are also false prophets.  Peter gives us two clues to identify which prophets are false.  First, he warns us that they will exercise and encourage depraved conduct which will bring the Gospel into disrepute.  Second, he tells us that they will support their teaching with made up stories.  Further Peter warns us that God will bring destruction up such prophets and the people whom they deceive, just as He brought the flood and destruction upon Sodom and Gomorrah.  However, those who resist their deception and remain faithful will be saved just as God saved Noah and Lot.  Let us live holy and godly lives as we continue to look forward to the Day of God.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

December 23, 2021 Bible Study — Building Ourselves To Live A Holy And Godly Life

Today, I am reading and commenting on  2 Peter 1-3.

Peter starts off this, his second letter, by writing that God has given us everything we need to live a godly life.  If we make use of what God has given us we will escape the corruption created by evil desires.  Then at the end of his letter, he writes that the day of the Lord will come like a thief and everything will be destroyed by fire.  Therefore we should live holy and godly lives.  In between Peter warns us not to be deceived by false teachers who despise authority and follow the corrupt desires of the flesh.  All of this becomes possible by building ourselves up with the things which God gave us.  God gave us faith.  As we exercise that faith, and it does need exercise, we begin to practice goodness.  As we practice goodness, as we do good to those around us, we must seek and study to gain knowledge.  As we gain more knowledge, we must begin to exercise self-control.  As all of the above come together we need to care for those around us.  As we begin to care about those around us, we will start to treat them with love.  And as we move on to each stage, the ones that came before will increase, which should lead us to increase the stages which follow.

As I was writing about the building up which Peter described, I was reminded of the process of becoming a better fencer.  If you are going to be a fencer, you need to start out with a few basic drills that allow you to understand how to place your feet and hold the sword.  However, there is only so far that drills can take you.  At some point you need to start facing opponents on the list field, you need to start fencing others.  As you spend time fencing others, you will realize that you need other drills, more drills.  But eventually, you will need to learn why one thing works better than another, you to need to acquire knowledge.  From there you need to develop the self-discipline to practice regularly and the self-control to hit the target you have chosen with the precise force you need.  Then you need to find more and different opponents to fence against.  You need to start to care about the community of fencers, because if you do not, those other fencers whom you need to polish your skills against will not see any reason to work with you.  This will lead you to recruit others, because you will discover that you need to teach to truly develop your skills beyond a certain point.  This illustration is less than a perfect fit.  However, I hope that it helps you see how each level of what Peter describes is not a once and done thing.  When you reach a certain point, you need to add what comes next, but as you improve upon what comes next, you also build up and improve/increase that which came before.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

December 23, 2019 Bible Study — God Has Given Us Everything We Need to Live a Godly Life

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on 2 Peter 1-3

Peter writes here that God has given us everything we need to live a holy life.  He then goes on to instruct us in how to go about doing so.  I really like the way he gives us a step by step basis for living such a holy life.  Each step is necessary for the next one to build upon, but is incomplete without those which follow.  We cannot have real moral excellence without faith, and faith without moral excellence has no value.  The same thing goes all of the way up the chain.  You will not truly love others if you do not feel brotherly affection for them, and none of these things have any real value if you do not love others.  As Paul wrote in 1 Corinthians 13, love is the capstone of all other gifts we receive from God, the gifts which Peter tells us that God has given us so that we can live a holy life.  And while love is the necessary capstone to make them all function, we also need knowledge and self control and endurance.

 

Peter goes on from writing about how God has given us what we need to be holy to contrasting the Gospel story with the stories told by false teachers.  The account of Jesus’ life upon which all of Peter’s teaching, and the teaching recorded in the New Testament, is based actually happened.  It was not a story cleverly composed to support the things they wished to teach.  On the other hand,, false teachers make up stories and cleverly retell stories to support whatever will allow them to exploit their listeners.  Peter even gives us guidance which helps us recognize these false stories.  These false teachers will will seek to become wealthy from their teachings and/or will lead sexually immoral lives.  Frequently, sexual immorality will be a key part of their teaching.  They will either use their supposed position of authority to gain sexual favors, or will use sexually immoral teachings to attract people to their system.