Books of the Book: Peter

The Power Of The Word Of God

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

Program transcript

Participants: Tom Shepherd & Deyvy Rodriguez

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Series Code: PBOTB

Program Code: PBOTB000006B


00:01 Welcome back.
00:02 Dr. Shepherd, you were saying that
00:04 grace must have a practical implication
00:06 of a saving relationship with Christ.
00:08 Right, in other words, our life,
00:11 a saving relationship with Christ
00:12 must show itself in actions towards other people.
00:16 People who are saved by grace need to be really the--
00:18 the most loving, kind people in the world.
00:22 It starts really with our families.
00:24 You can think of this, if--if our children see us
00:26 acting one way in church and a different way at home,
00:30 that's not gonna sit well with them.
00:31 They're not gonna understand.
00:33 They're gonna think we're hypocrites.
00:35 And so our experience must show itself,
00:39 our love for Christ must show itself
00:40 and love to other people and kindness towards others.
00:43 And why the focus on good behavior?
00:46 This becomes quite a theme throughout the book.
00:49 He--over and over again he emphasizes this good behavior
00:52 and staying away from bad things,
00:55 doing the right things.
00:56 And there are kind of two prongs to this.
00:59 One prong is that you,
01:03 you know, stay away from the evil
01:05 that the old path has taken you--
01:08 would take you down, you know.
01:09 You--you stay away from those kind of things.
01:12 The other concept though is actually that
01:14 you attract people to Christian faith
01:16 by living this gracious life in front of them.
01:21 You put them to shame.
01:23 You silence the fools who are trying to make you look bad.
01:26 So this kind of a two pronged approach
01:28 to this good behavior kind of emphasis of the book.
01:33 Well, shall we continue?
01:34 Last time we left up-- we left off on--
01:36 we finished off verse 25.
01:38 Yeah, we still have to talk some more about verses 22-25
01:42 because this is that second pair of metaphors, okay?
01:45 So the first pair of metaphors was the metaphor of redemption.
01:50 The slave market metaphor combined
01:52 with a sacrificial metaphor, Christ as the Lamb.
01:55 Now in this passage he talks about having--
01:59 he says in verse 23,
02:01 "Since you have been born again."
02:03 That's the whole thing
02:04 that he's been talking about all along.
02:07 Let me just reemphasize
02:08 that he has been describing who the Christians are.
02:13 He's been taking pains to explain
02:16 what it means to be a Christian.
02:18 Recall that this is because the world
02:21 around them is pushing in on them,
02:23 trying to destroy their faith,
02:25 draw them back into paganism or--
02:28 and either to entice them into paganism
02:30 or to persecute them back in the paganism.
02:33 So over and over and over he explains
02:37 what it means to be a Christian.
02:38 He unpacks this Christian box.
02:41 And shows you, here's the present of grace
02:43 and here's the present of this,
02:44 you know, he-- he has all these different--
02:46 I mean, I think in our world today,
02:50 where Christian faith is under so much attack
02:53 that the Book of 1st Peter is an incredible mine of truth
03:00 with various metaphors, various concepts
03:04 that could and should strengthen our churches
03:07 to understand what it means
03:08 to resist the world's drag and pull.
03:12 We don't see open persecutions so much these days.
03:16 But there still is the kind of verbal abuse
03:19 that happens from time to time,
03:20 but there sure is the big pull of the culture, isn't there?
03:24 Trying to drag us away from living a Christian life,
03:27 trying to make it seem as though it's not appropriate.
03:29 So here he puts together again two metaphors.
03:33 And they're found here in verse 23,"
03:35 Since you have been born again,
03:37 not of perishable seed but of imperishable,
03:41 through the living and abiding word of God
03:43 for all flesh is like grass,
03:45 and all its glory like the flower of grass.
03:47 The grass withers, and all-- and the flower falls.
03:49 But the word of the Lord remains forever.
03:51 And this is word is the good news that was preached to you."
03:54 Can you identify what the two metaphors are here?
03:58 Well, he's using a seed. Yes.
04:01 Using nature, some seen farming.
04:03 Farming? There's certainly a farming metaphor here. Exactly.
04:07 This idea of the seed. And what is the seed?
04:11 The word of God.
04:12 The seed is the word of God, okay?
04:14 And when you plant seeds,
04:16 you know, the seed is just tiny little,
04:19 you know, if it's an acorn, if it's a piece of weed,
04:22 if it's a piece of corn or something,
04:24 it's a dry, little, withered thing, you know?
04:28 And you're like, what can that be--
04:30 what can that do?
04:32 But you put it down on the ground,
04:33 need to get warmed up, you know?
04:35 It gets rain, gets some fertilizer or something.
04:38 And lo and behold, this thing sprouts out,
04:40 that just grows right out of it.
04:41 This plant comes up and bears more seed, okay?
04:44 So you have this farming metaphor.
04:46 And the seed is the word of God.
04:47 We think of Jesus' parable. Yeah.
04:49 Of the parable of the sower, sowing the seed.
04:53 And it grows on the good ground
04:54 and it produces 30, 60, 100 fold.
04:57 See now, again another one of those ties
04:59 to the teachings of Jesus, you know.
05:01 Of course, he's quoting from the Old Testament here,
05:03 from-- from Isaiah.
05:05 But there's another metaphor that's kind of hidden here
05:09 and if we read just quickly we might pass over it.
05:13 And that you notice in verse 23.
05:15 The first thing he said was,
05:17 "Since you have been born again,
05:21 not of perishable seed but of imperishable."
05:25 Now when you speak of being born and you speak of seed,
05:32 you think of procreation.
05:34 It's a procreation kind of a metaphor.
05:36 So you're mixing a procreation metaphor
05:41 with a farming metaphor.
05:44 And in fact, the word he uses for seed
05:47 in the Greek is "spora."
05:50 And we get the word spores, you know?
05:52 Spores that go and, you know,
05:53 plant themselves and things like that.
05:56 There's another Greek word that also means seed, "sperma,"
05:59 which is in procreation that we have that term, you see.
06:02 So he uses the word "spora," but he speaks of new birth.
06:05 So he's mixing metaphors again, you know.
06:07 So he has this idea of new birth,
06:10 rebirth that he talked about at the beginning of the book.
06:12 So he ties back to that, but now he ties it into farming
06:16 because he wants to quote from Isaiah.
06:19 Isaiah 40:6-8--why don't we go over to Isaiah 40:6-8.
06:24 Isaiah 40:6-8. And why don't you read that for us?
06:30 "The voice said, 'Cry out.' And he said, 'What shall I cry?
06:35 All flesh is grass,
06:37 and all its loveliness is like the flower of the field.
06:40 The grass withers, the flower fades,
06:43 because the breath of the Lord blows upon it.
06:46 Surely the people are grass.
06:48 The grass withers, the flower fades,
06:50 but the word of our God stands forever.'"
06:53 All right, so here we have two things facing us.
06:56 One that he emphasizes over and over and over again
07:00 is this concept of the perishability of all flesh.
07:08 All flesh is as the grass, is like the flower that fade--
07:11 I mean, the Book of James says
07:13 the same kind of a thing, you know?
07:14 Fall-- flower falls off
07:15 and withers away and that kind of thing.
07:17 But there's something that he refers to that abides forever.
07:20 What's that? The word of the Lord.
07:22 The word of God. The word of God abides forever.
07:27 So the human is perishable, but that which is divine,
07:32 the word of God, goes on for ever, abides for ever.
07:35 It cares for us. It takes care of us.
07:37 It's that which produces new life in the soul.
07:42 And he says, if just in case you weren't clear
07:45 what this word is, he says in verse 25.
07:48 "And this word is the good news that was preached to you."
07:53 Who preached it?
07:54 It was those evangelists back there,
07:56 a little earlier in the chapter, okay?
07:58 So this 1st chapter of the book puts together
08:02 this incredible message of all of these metaphors,
08:06 all of these concepts of this covenant with God,
08:09 its implications, you know, holy life
08:11 and all these reasons why you're supposed to live a holy life.
08:14 I mean, if all we had was 1st Peter 1,
08:18 we would have a treasure, an incredible treasure.
08:21 But we're only in the 1st chapter
08:23 and we have four more to go, you know?
08:26 So now let's read verses-- chapter 2:1-3
08:29 because this is the third pair of metaphors.
08:32 "Therefore, laying aside all malice,
08:34 all deceit, hypocrisy, envy, and all evil speaking,
08:39 as newborn babes, desire the pure milk of the word
08:43 that you may grow thereby.
08:45 If indeed you have-- If indeed you have tasted
08:48 that the Lord is gracious."
08:50 Uh-huh, okay.
08:52 Now what kind of metaphor would you say you have here?
08:57 Babies. Babies.
09:00 So from farming to babies and-- he's very good at the--
09:03 Yeah, now let's-- let's see the whole chain.
09:05 We started from the slave market.
09:07 We went to the sacrifice,
09:09 the sacrificial animals to a temple service.
09:12 Then we came to a seed which was procreation.
09:20 Then we moved to a farming metaphor.
09:22 And now you're talking about babies.
09:24 But there's one more metaphor before that, before the babies.
09:27 And that's in the very first verse.
09:29 It's a little hard to see if you don't read it in Greek.
09:35 But it's the first--mine says to put away all malice.
09:38 What does your say?
09:39 Laying aside. Laying aside.
09:41 That's a good way to put it.
09:42 So is there another Greek word here?
09:43 Yeah, it's a terminology for taking clothes off.
09:47 Laying aside. You take off the--
09:49 you take off the garment and you lay it aside. Okay.
09:53 So it's a clothing metaphor.
09:56 You remove this and then he mixes it
09:59 with like new born babies, you know.
10:03 It's interesting how his mind moves
10:05 from idea to ideas, isn't it?
10:07 And he goes-- but he has--
10:09 it's almost as though he really planned this out
10:11 with three pairs of mixed metaphors that,
10:15 you know, you could-- you could kind of see
10:17 how each of them had their particular idea.
10:20 The last one is very interesting,
10:21 this one about the babies
10:23 because the babies are supposed to long
10:25 for the pure spiritual milk, okay?
10:28 And of course, that--but you can grow up into salvation.
10:32 That's a--that's a metaphor of the word of God again.
10:35 And then he says,
10:37 "If indeed you have tasted that the Lord is good."
10:39 Now he's quoting from Psalm 33 in this case.
10:42 And this metaphor is interesting in the sense
10:46 that he talks about tasting.
10:49 Well, of course that's what a baby is doing
10:50 with the spiritual milk, isn't it?
10:52 He's drinking his mother's milk.
10:55 So this is actually using
10:57 a feminine metaphor to refer to God.
11:00 You've tasted that the Lord is good.
11:03 You are feeding at His breast, so to speak, you know?
11:06 Now God has no gender.
11:07 He's neither male nor female.
11:09 And most of the metaphors in scripture
11:11 that speak of God are male in character.
11:14 But we do have a number that are female
11:16 and this is one of those times where it describes it.
11:18 Now so we can ask the question, well, how does--
11:22 how does this all fit together, you know?
11:26 Well, we may have to delve into this
11:28 yet a little bit more in our next time
11:30 'cause we're running a little short now.
11:31 But let me just try to put together
11:33 the pairs of this metaphor.
11:35 In the first pair of metaphors,
11:37 the futile way of life handed down by the Father
11:39 stands in contrast with redemption
11:42 through the blood of the Lamb.
11:44 In the second pair, human frailty stands in contrast
11:49 with the eternal word of God.
11:51 In the third pair, vices of the past
11:54 and in contrast
11:56 with the dependable word of the Lord
11:57 that nurtures and grows up
11:59 the Christian into salvation.
12:01 Taking these together along with God's motivations
12:05 and actions we have discussed in previous chapters,
12:08 we can see a progression that moves from the past
12:11 to the future in the following manner. Okay?
12:16 Now we'll look at--I wonder if we can just put up
12:19 the Circle of Salvation graphic.
12:22 Okay, so you see in this circle,
12:23 it starts with the idea of witness.
12:26 Here as a believer that is talking to somebody else
12:30 and they become a believer now
12:32 through the witness of the evangelist who came to them.
12:35 That leads to this holy life.
12:37 The pagan observes that
12:40 and that witness now brings them back
12:42 into this circle so that they also can become believers.
12:47 It's this wonderful concept of sharing
12:50 and the word of God going around in a circle
12:52 continuing to bring people to Christ
12:54 and to grow them as Christians.
12:56 So there really is no end in growing in Christ.
12:59 Yeah. That's an--
13:00 And sharing with other people,
13:02 you see, so that it continues as a circle.
13:03 All right, well, Dr. Shepherd, I want to thank you again
13:05 for joining us in this study of 1st Peter.
13:08 And we also want to thank our listening audience
13:11 in joining us in "Books of the Book."
13:13 We are studying 1st Peter. We have so much to cover.
13:15 And I hope that you've been blessed just as I have.
13:18 And we'll see you next time. God bless.


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Revised 2024-02-27