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Will you please turn in your
Bibles with me to 1 Peter chapter 2. Well the sermon is going to come
from 1 Peter chapter 2 verses 1 through 3. We're actually going
to read 1 Peter chapter 1 beginning at verse 22 through chapter 2
verse 3. If you're using the provided
New King James Pew Bibles, you can find that on page 1076. 1
Peter chapter 2, we'll start the reading at chapter 1 verse
22. Hear now God's perfect word. Since you have purified your
souls in obeying the truth through the spirit, insincere love of
the brethren, love one another fervently with a pure heart,
having been born again, not of corruptible seed, but incorruptible,
through the word of God, which lives and abides forever. Because
all flesh is as grass, and all the glory of man as the flower
of the grass. The grass withers, and its flower
falls away, but the word of the Lord endures forever. Now this is the word which by
the gospel was preached to you. Therefore, laying aside all malice,
all deceit, hypocrisy, envy, and evil speaking, as newborn
babes, desire the pure milk of the word, that you may grow thereby,
if indeed you have tasted that the Lord is gracious. Thus ends this portion of the
reading of God's word. Let's pray. Oh Father, you have given us
Your Word, You've given us faith. Lord,
now we pray that our faith might increase and be even more firm
and strong. Lord, we pray that Your Holy
Spirit would please bring light to our eyes, understanding to
our minds, hope to our hearts. Lord, we pray that as we have
the preaching of Your Word, that Your Spirit would be working
in us Lord, we confess to you that it's very easy to get distracted. We confess to you that it's easy
to have heard words like this before and get bored or think
it doesn't apply to us. Father, we pray that your Holy
Spirit would please teach us, give us doctrine, Lord, from
your Word. We pray that your Spirit would please use it to
correct us where we are erring, rebuke us where we are sinning,
But Father, we also pray that your spirit would use this word. Lord, that we would be equipped
for every good work. Lord, thank you for the work
of your spirit. In his name we pray, amen. I was talking to a lady one time
and she was expressing to me why she didn't go to a certain
Bible study anymore. I was somewhat surprised and
curious by her reasoning. You know, she had gone, then
she wasn't going, and I just kind of asked her why she wasn't
going anymore. And I'm not, don't go into speculation
here, right? But the point is, the person
was telling me that what had started off what was good, what
started off with wanting fellowship and spiritual milk, What started
off as encouragement and edification ended up becoming a pool of toxicity
and gossip, slander, and tearing other people down, all under
the guise of prayer requests. And that has stuck with me for
years and years and years now that even sometimes Christians
can take something that's supposed to be good and starts good and
then kind of whitewash it with religious intent. And that's really what Peter
is getting at here in verses one through three of chapter
two. He's urging the Christians, commanding the Christians to
put away very specific sins because they have been born again in
Jesus. That these sins don't belong
in their mouths or in their hearts anymore. Because they aren't
loving to one another, they aren't building up of the community
in love. But instead, to rejoice in God's
graciousness and in the word that is pure that he's given
us. And so that's what this is calling us to do, is to cast
aside those things that taint our souls, to hunger for the
pure milk of God's Word, and to savor the sweetness of our
God's goodness. So first, let's look together
at verse 1. Therefore, laying aside all malice, all deceit,
hypocrisy, envy, and All evil speaking. Peter is not using
an exhaustive list here, but he's pointing out five areas
or categories of sin, both of the mouth and of the heart, that
if you don't get rid of these, you won't be doing what chapter
one had said, right? We have had our hearts purified
by obeying the truth through the spirit. So now what do we
do? Insincere love of the brethren. We love one another fervently
with a pure heart. If you are habitually or regularly
committing these five sins he lists in verse one, you will
not be loving each other fervently. We will not be caring for one
another in the way in which Jesus Christ has called us to love
one another and has shown us by his spirit we are to love
one another. And so what are these five different
vices that will destroy Christian community and our antithetical
to biblical love? Well the first that Peter lists
here is malice. Malice is an ill will or a desire
to harm another person. The idea behind this is almost
like King Saul, when he was so mad at Jonathan, because he knew
that Jonathan covenanted himself with David, that David was going
to be the next king. And so what does Saul purpose
in his heart to do? Kill David. Didn't matter if
his son got in the way, just get him out of the way. This
ill will or malice is what this is talking about. This desire
to harm others. This is the same way, and often
these sins are overlapping and mixed with each other. We can
also say that's part of envy and jealousy. But another way
in which we look at church history and we see is what Nero did to
the early church. He wanted power and he wanted
authority. He starts a fire in Rome. And what does he do because
he wants to rid the Christians out of the kingdom? He blames
the fire on the Christians. So he can torture them and expel
them wholesale. He had malice against the Christians. So my question to you is, do
you look at your brothers and sisters and do you pray for their
well-being? Or do you hope for their ill-will?
How do you think about other Christians in the church? How
do you think about other Christians in your life? How do you treat
them? Wanting to love them fervently,
or do you desire their downfall and their harm? The second of
these five sins that are antithetical is deceit. And deceit is a good
translation here. The Greek word is dolon, and
this idea of decitos is also cunning and crafty, treachery. It's deliberately distorting
the truth so you can be gained. This is what happened in the
Bible when you have Jacob. And Jacob purposely deceives
his father Isaac so he can steal the blessing from his brother
Esau. He goes through great pains to do this. Remember the hair
on his arms and putting on the clothing of his brother. He's
purposely trying to deceive even his own father. And we're no strangers to this
deceit in our American political system. We don't have to go back
too many decades to remember the Watergate scandal and purposely
trying to cover up the spying on a political adversary and
trying to hide it and deny it until finally the truth comes
out and the whole thing falls apart. This purposeful deception
to try to get personal gain, that will ruin a congregation. It will ruin a family. It will
ruin our love for one another. We must put away deceit. The
next is hypocrisy. Hypocrisy, this is one that we
throw around all the time, but this is pretending to be someone
we're not. In Greek theater, there was a
person called the hypocrite. It would be the person who would
stand there and they were to play act, but they had two different
masks. As they played one character,
they would put on a mask and speak the lines of that one character.
But then as a scene went on, they would take away that mask
and put on a second mask, and they would behave and act another
way in this scene. And this is the word picture
that God uses here. Who are you? Are you someone
different when you walk in church than where you are in your workplace? Do you just put on a church face
with your church clothes? Or are you a person of integrity
when nobody else is looking, when nobody else is watching?
Are you the same person in private as you are in public? Pretending to be something we're
not is exactly what the Pharisees were doing with their outward
shows of piety, their outward religion, but in their heart
they didn't have a true love for God or for their neighbors.
And Jesus calls them, you hypocrites. You hypocrites. This is not lost
on us. You can smell hypocrisy in culture
and in the church or in a family a thousand miles away. This is
exactly what we know when we see some climate activists like
Bill Gates saying, we've got to get rid of CO2 emissions.
And you see how many miles he flies on his private jet. And
you think, oh, so the rules don't apply to you, huh? Are you a
hypocrite when it comes to your children? Do you have a standard
for yourself, but a different standard for your kids? Do you
have a standard for yourself by which you judge yourself,
but then when you go and you think about other people in the
church, do you have a different standard for how you judge them? Often
we will like to judge ourselves with a much lighter standard,
and those people out there with a much firmer standard. It's hypocrisy. And the Lord's telling us here,
put away that hypocrisy. The fourth that the Lord tells
us here to put away that's the opposite of biblical fervent
love is this resentment of others' blessings leading to discontentment,
jealousy, or envy. Jealousy or envy. This is Joseph's
brothers. mad at him and angry that somehow
he gets this coat of many colors and he gets these visions and
somehow we're going to bow down to you. Yeah, right. Fat chance,
Joseph. Let's kill him. You see envy
and jealousy and malice put together there. It's just put that type
of sin away from you. And act like that doesn't happen
in the church. I was just talking to some Indian pastors the other
week. And we're being honest with each other about this one
specific sin, even in pastors. There are many, many pastors
in the country today who are not content with the ministry
God gave them. So instead, they're always looking
for the bigger and better church, going to the next place, wanting
more people, more money, more prestige, all the while forgetting
that they were called to love the people who are right in front
of them. So much so that they're even willing to poach members
out of other churches. You know there's actually this
thing that some churches will do where they'll say, oh there's
this church over here and we will do what's called geo-fencing.
For advertising we will put a map around that other church and
we will advertise our church to the people in that church.
So we can get them to come to our church instead. It's that
ministry envy. And this happens all over the
time. And again, we can sniff it out, we can taste it, we can
smell it, and it's, ugh. But it's antithetical, it's opposite,
it's breaking down of this fervent Christian love for one another.
And God says, get that out of you. Put it away. Lay it aside. The last of these that Peter
mentions here is all evil speaking. Some of your translations might
have it something like slander. This is a speaking ill or an
evil of other people, often falsely. But why? Why would you speak
these evils against someone? Because you want their downfall.
You want their harm. This is exactly, again, what
happened in Jesus' own life. Jesus never stole from anyone.
Jesus never hurt anyone. Jesus never did anything wrong.
And yet, what did the Pharisees do? He must be casting out those
demons by the power of Beelzebub. Oh, he's trying to tear down
the temple. Oh, he's trying to, he's doing, etc., etc., etc.
Bringing all sorts of false accusations against him, even at his trial. It's the opposite of fervent
love. And it's a cancer in our hearts. On the back of your bulletins,
I've listed 12 diagnostic questions. I'm not going to read each of
them to you today because, well, I'm not and that would take too
much time, but I'm gonna challenge you or dare you to go home and
ask these questions, not to yourself. Don't go home and read and be
like, oh yeah, I'm good, check, check, check. I'm gonna challenge
you to do it with somebody who will tell you the truth. Maybe
ask your spouse, ask your brother or sister, ask your parents,
ask one of your children. Does this sound like me? Are
you the type of person who shows bitterness, harshness and unkind
attitudes? Are there times in your life
when you're not fully honest with people or transparent? Are you the type of person who
reflects love and encouragement? Or are you the type of person
who likes to tear other people down with your words and with
your attitude and your actions? Honestly, ask someone who knows
you well. Do you see growth in my spiritual maturity and character?
You can go through those by yourself and see, do these sins that Peter
has here still have a root in your heart? Notice the extent
of this laying aside as well. Did you notice that? Therefore,
laying aside all malice, all deceit, all evil speaking, all,
all, all, these have no place in the Christian life. You need
to treat these sins like cancer. Right? You don't go to the doctor
and the doctor tells you, oh yeah, hey, I got good news. You
only have 50% of the cancer from last time. What do you want? You want the eradication. You
want to know that you're in remission. Right? Do not Stop until it's
absolute warfare against these sins. Put them to death. Lay
them aside. Don't entertain them as pet sins. But if you found yourself entangled
in these sins, this is the exact point of the gospel. That Jesus
Christ knew that sin in your heart, knew the depths of the
corruption of the fall in your soul, and still died for you
while you were still a sinner. He's not waiting for you to become
good enough when you finally lay aside all these perfectly.
Then He'll finally be your Savior. No, now! Now He's your Savior. Notice, it's the therefore. Therefore,
since you have been born again, you do these things. It's not
once you have done these things, then you're born again. It's
no, you have been born again, you are the beloved of God, you've
been given His Word, so now be the children that He's called
you to be. Take away that malice, and replace it with love, prayer,
and care for others. Take away, put away that deceit
and become the type of person who tells the truth and who's
a person of integrity. Take off your two masks and be
a person who walks the walk, who lives a consistent life and
judges consistently. Put away your envy and learn
the secret jewel of contentment and the gift of generosity. and
grace and gratitude. Put away evil speaking. I don't
know if that means you gotta start being like a little kid
again and when you say those nasty words or those words that
are meant to tear other people down. I wonder what it would
look like for us adults if we actually went to the bathroom
and got a bar of soap and scrubbed our tongue, if we would keep
doing this. But if you're feeling overwhelmed
by this malice or the struggle with envy, take courage because
God is greater than these sins. The Holy Spirit can incrementally,
gradually turn you away from those sins and turn towards life.
The good news of Jesus is that His blood has made us free from
being slaves to these sins. They don't need to mark your
identity. When people think of you, they do not have to think
of you as, oh, that's that hypocrite over there. People do not have
to think of you as a liar, or a slanderer, or someone who's
motivated by your envy and jealousy. That's what the blood of Jesus
does. He's redeemed you from that yoke of slavery. From those
sins. And so look to Christ with the
new heart He's given you. So if you're going to put off
those things, What do you do? Verse 2. Instead, as newborn
babes, desire the pure milk of the Word, that you may grow thereby. Desire the pure milk of the Word. We have a baby in the house,
and I don't care what's going on, that kid is rude. When he
wants to eat, he lets it known. Give it 20 years, and that kid's
going to look back at this and go, Dad, you were so embarrassing,
right? But the point is, right now, it doesn't matter if we're
sitting with friends. If he wants to eat, he's going
to start crying. And if Olivia's sleeping, it doesn't matter.
He's going to wake up, and he's going to cry. And if we're out
in the car, and we're driving, and it's a long road trip, it
doesn't matter. If Judah needs to eat, Judah
has to eat. And He lets everyone know it.
Because He desires what's going to nourish Him. Do you desire
the Gospel that way? Does the Word of God, is it so
meaningful and essential to your life? That when things are going
wrong in your life, and you feel your spiritual blood sugar go
down, you know, there's something wrong. I've got to get to the
Bible. I've got to go remind myself of the Gospel. And get
first priorities right again. This is the picture that God
gives us through the Apostle Peter. We must be like newborn
babies desiring the pure milk of the Word. This is a sad thing. We often end up in this place
of legalism again. Because, okay, I'm going to desire
the pure milk of God's Word. I'm going to bake that into a
system. I'm going to do my breeding plan. And that's how I'm going
to desire it. And then it's March and your breeding plan is a month
behind. And you feel bad. because you tried to bake it
into a legalistic system rather than being honest with the Lord.
Rather than just saying, Lord, I'm not that good of a reader.
Help me to find a way to be still fed by your word. We bake it
in and we end up actually dumping right back into the first one,
right? Where we will speak evil about other people. We just can't
seem to get their Bible reading plans done. Or those Christians
are so immature, they just keep not reading their Bible, we've
become prideful even of our own bible reading plans. That's not
what this is about. This is about a true spirit-wrought
desire from the new creation that is intensely yearning to
be fed by the Lord. Now there are two other times
in the bible and specifically in the New Testament, where I've
gotten an objection before when I've said, you need to be like
a newborn baby desiring to buy one of these. And people say,
well, but Paul also said that we need to be, we need to grow
out of that spiritual milk and we need to go to meat. Right? First Corinthians chapter three
or Hebrews chapter five. One that's a different context.
The point of those contexts is you're not supposed to stay spiritually
immature your whole life. That's what the point of those
contexts are. But my fear with that is, my fear, and this is
just as I have observed this, is one, I don't think we get
it out of this one. When you're spiritually mature
enough to no longer desire the pure, unadulterated Word of God,
That's the point at which you can, with an honest heart and
integrity, look at me in the face and say, I love my brother
and sister perfectly. I no longer have any hypocrisy.
I no longer speak evil ever of anybody at any time in any way.
I'm sorry, when it says that we are to do these things all,
all, all, all, all, it seems to me like this is going to be
all my life, needing to desire God's word. And just an observation
of these, normally it's men, and they're manly men, and they
want to grow up, and I'm encouraged by that. They want to be masculine
Christians. Sadly, the observation I've made
of people who will say, well, that's like babies, and we need
to grow up. Well, yeah. But the observation I have, and
I'm going to read this, because I want to be very careful in
how I say it. There are some, especially men, who will even
scorn this passage as if it were speaking for baby Christians.
But sadly, many of these men I've talked to have proven themselves
to be those who rule their homes and their lives with a sense
of pride and coarse speech that actually betray their hypocrisy,
the deceit of their own hearts, and the warped self-evaluation
of their own sanctification. These men often desire hearty
meat, thick doctrines, and yet seemingly have little love for
the gospel, show little fruits of the spirit, and seem to have
little desire to cultivate the passive fruits of the spirit,
especially in gentleness, patience, and meekness. I warn you, if you think that
you are one of those who's so masculine, so bold, so strong,
that you don't need the milk of the God's word anymore, your
heart's deceiving you. Because we need the gospel every
day. We need to be reminded of God's word every single day. So I need to ask you, evaluate your life. Where do you get your daily bread? Man cannot live on bread alone,
but on every word which proceeds from the mouth of God. So are
you going to God's word for your daily bread, or do you go to
the daily wire? Where do you spend more time to try to see
the world and see yourself? Do you go to CNN to see your
sin? You're not going to find it there. Do you spend more time reading
1 and 2 Peter, listening to his words, or do you listen more
to Jordan Peterson? Do you spend more time watching sitcoms and
syndicated television than dealing with your need for sanctification?
Where do you go? What are you feeding yourself?
How are you building up your spiritual walk with the Lord?
You know it in your hearts. I come to your houses and I do
shepherding visits with the elders and we're able to say, how are
you doing in your spiritual walk? And this happens time and time
and time again. People say, I feel like I'm not
doing very well. I feel like I'm far from the
Lord and I don't like it. I wish I spent more time reading
the Bible. You know it. If you're in Christ, you know
that desire and that longing for more of His spiritual food. So, open your Bible. I'm not
trying to give you legalism here. I'm telling you, there's a place
you can go for the nourishment of your souls. And you can even
bring it along in the pocket computer that you have. Pull
out your iPhone or your Droid, whatever you have, open it up
and download the Bible app. One of my favorite things to
do while I'm reading is I hit the play button. And when I'm
driving, I just listen to it talking to me. I'll tell you
what, it's even worse sometimes when I'm listening to Jeremiah
and it's just like conviction, conviction, conviction, conviction,
conviction, and I can't press stop because I'm too busy driving. Do you feed yourself with God's
Word? Are you consuming the pure word of God or are you filling
yourself with the junk of this world? Does your Bible have dust
on it or do you have a place where you know that you go and
that's where you read the Bible, where you get God's word? Do
you have a time or a system set in place so you actually feed
yourself what you need? Because this is the point of
all of it. Look with me at verse three. if indeed you have tasted that
the Lord is gracious. A few things to point out here.
One, this is directly alluding to Psalm 34 that John read early
for us. Taste and see that the Lord is
good. This is a cry of the hearts of God's people ever since the
Old Testament. We can taste and see experientially
that the Lord is good. But there's this play on words
here that happens. We lose it in the English. If
indeed you have tasted that the Lord is Christos. Christos is
the word for gracious or goodness. But there's only one vowel difference
between Christos and Christos. Christ and goodness. It's the
difference between an iota and an ita. It's one vowel difference
between the two. The point is, the Lord is so
good, the Lord is so gracious that he even gave us his own
son. While we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. That is how
God has demonstrated his love and the only place that you will
find that redemption story is in God's word. We need reminded
all the time as we get into his word that God is gracious to
us. This isn't just an intellectual
knowledge. I'm not telling you to just go to God's words or
you end up being really good at Bible trivia night. What's
the point of reading the scriptures? Can you say in your own heart,
I've tasted and I've seen that the Lord is good. The Lord has
been gracious to me. Is Jesus your own? Do you cling
on to Him when you hear the gospel that God has loved you so much
that He sent His only begotten Son to die? Do you say, yes,
and that's for me? When you read 1 Peter, that you
have been redeemed not by silver or gold, but by the precious
blood of Jesus Christ, do you say, yes, I know that that's
for me, and it gives joy to my soul because I know that God
is that good to me. When you read Philippians chapter
2, and it speaks of Jesus not counting equality with God, something
to be grasped, but humbled himself, emptied himself into the form
and likeness of the man, was under the whole law, and died
for us. Do you say, yes, and I know that
he died for me. Jesus did that for me. Do you
experience it? Do you know it? Is it the core
of your heart? Is it the heart song? Is it the
joy that no one could ever take from you? Is it what you could
honestly say that Jesus is your only hope in life and death? Have you tasted and seen that
the Lord is good? That's why in the early church,
often that passage would be read during the Lord's Supper. That
this isn't a figment of someone's imagination or a fairytale or
a fable, but Jesus Christ really did come, and his body was broken
like that bread, and his blood was poured out like that wine
to be a sacrifice for our sins, for our malice, for our envy,
For our discontentment and evil speaking, Jesus went to the cross
knowing those described us and still died for us. Jesus hung on that tree for my
malice. He was nailed to that cross for
our deceit. He died on that tree for our
hypocrisy. He suffered the full wrath of
God to pay for our envy and jealousy. He loved you so much that he
died to pay for your evil words. Brothers, taste and see that
the Lord is good. His mercies are new every morning. Purpose
in your heart. If you are indeed in Christ,
if you are a new creation, to lay aside those sins that Jesus
died to save you from. Endeavor after new obedience. As we hunger for God's word and
we cast off sins, our lives serves as witnesses to those around
us that we truly are those who have tasted and seen that the
Lord is good. Is it true for you? To wrap things up here, the whole
Christian life is marked by these. A joy that the Lord truly is gracious. And from that joy, having tasted
in the seed that the Lord is good, turning away from those
sins that we know caused Jesus to die upon that cross for us. and a new endeavoring to love
one another with a fervent, pure love. So you who have been born again
in Christ, lay aside those sins that so easily ensnare you. Go
to his word, remember the good news of Jesus Christ. Taste and see that the Lord is
indeed gracious. Let's pray. God, we pray that you would give
us truly from your spirit a hunger for your word. Forgive us how
easy it is to get distracted and sidetracked with the things
of this world. Lord, please remind us of our
hope and our joy. Please, Lord, give us your spirit
to strengthen us, to put away these sins. Some of us have been
struggling with them for decades upon decades. Lord, please renew
us. Father, we plead with you that
you would give us fresh experiences of the goodness that you have
poured out for us in your son. Lord, I pray for the children
today. that they would learn the ways of holiness from an
early age. Father, I pray for us adults, that you would enable
us to see past what this culture teaches us and what our natural
desires long for, and that you would turn us towards what is
good and pure and right and just. Lord, we pray for those in the
congregation who are parents and grandparents, that we would
be faithful models and disciples of the children that you have
entrusted to us. Lord, I pray for those who are
seniors in the faith, that you would not let them grow tired
or weary, but as the years go on, that their joy would increase
more and more, and that they would finish their race as well,
still desiring your word as newborn babes, and being freed, even
now in their elderly age, from sins that have so easily ensnared
them. Lord, please, only Your Spirit can do this. Renew our
joy and give us a desire for Your Word and turn us from our
sins. We pray all these things in Jesus'
name.
Taste - the LORD is Gracious
Series 1 Peter Semons
In this passage in 1 Peter 2, we are called to put aside the sins that hinder our spiritual growth and love for one another, and instead, to desire the pure milk of God's Word so that we can grow spiritually. Peter urges us, as believers, to lay aside malice, deceit, hypocrisy, envy, and evil speaking because these sins disrupt Christian community and are incompatible with our identity in Christ. Just as newborn babies crave milk, we must intensely desire God's Word – not out of legalism, but from a genuine hunger to be nourished by the truth. When we have tasted the goodness of the Lord, it transforms our hearts and compels us to grow in love and holiness. Are we feeding on His Word daily?
| Sermon ID | 92924194537988 |
| Duration | 35:59 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | 1 Peter 2:1-3 |
| Language | English |
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