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Weekly Word

Entries in Cornerstone (3)

Wednesday
Jan072026

The First Letter of Peter- 7

Subtitle: A New Spiritual People- part 4

1 Peter 2:4-8. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on Sunday, January 4, 2026.

We continue in this section where Peter admonishes us to be a part of the new spiritual people that Jesus is making.  He has been doing this through a series of imperatives (commands) that have other admonitions attached to them.

As we pick up today’s portion of Scripture, Peter moves into another section that is not couched in the language of command.

Let’s get into our passage.

You are being built into a spiritual house (v. 4-8)

Peter switches from the image of a baby growing up in the family and needing the milk of the word.  This image now is that of a stone building.  We could describe these as an organic image and an inorganic image.  However, notice that the stones in this section are described as living.  This is not just a dead building.  This is a living building made of living stones.  However, I don’t want to get ahead of myself here.

Though there is no explicit command, there is an implicit one.  If this is what God is doing, then we need to cooperate with Him and keep it in mind in all that we do.

One last thing before going into verse 4.  The imagery of a spiritual house is very rich in the Old Testament.  First, a house was a way of referring to a family.  The building itself draws its importance from its aid in the growth of a family.  In Ruth 4:11, Rachel and Leah are described as having built the “house of Israel.”  This is not about a literal house.  They gave birth to the sons of Israel who themselves are the house of Israel. 

In fact, Christians enter into and become a part of the House of Messiah Jesus, the family that he is making.  This is not a family that is birthed in the natural, thus it is called a “spiritual” house.  We are not born into the Family of God by our natural birth but by a spiritual birth when we put our faith in Jesus.  This is a real work of the Holy Spirit.

The second image of a house is by further extension a reference to a dynasty.  The house of David can refer to his family, but it can also refer to the successive generations of kings that descended from him.

Thirdly, the temple in Israel was called a house.  We see an interesting word play on these images in 2 Samuel 7.  There, David wants to build God a temple, a house.  Up until then, the sacrifices happened at the tent structure called the tabernacle.  The presence of God was there above the ark of the covenant.  God questions David.  “Do you want to build me a house?  When did I ask you to do that?”  God then goes on to tell David that He would make David a house (a dynasty) and that one of His sons (Seed) would build Him a house (temple) for His Name.  Furthermore, God would establish the throne of this Son’s house forever.  Clearly, Solomon was not the fulfillment of this prophecy.  Instead, Solomon gives us a glimpse that falls short of one who would come and be the Greater Solomon (or the One Greater than Solomon).

Peter is picking up on this prophecy and its imagery.  Jesus was and is now building a spiritual temple out of God’s spiritual people.  We are individually and corporately a place where His Presence dwells.

Because every house, family, grows through the offspring (the Seed), we can also see the connection to the many prophecies of the Seed of the Woman who would crush the serpent’s head, the Seed of Abraham who would bless the nations, the Seed of David who would build a temple for God and rule forever, etc.

A Jewish person in the first century who heard these things would be troubled.  How could Messiah build a spiritual temple and let the natural temple Jerusalem be destroyed? 

Now, let’s look at our passage.  Peter describes believers as “coming” to Jesus as to a Living Stone.  So, before we even get to the building of this spiritual house, we see that Jesus is a Living Stone.  This is the merging of the two images surrounding a house, that of the Son of the Father and yet a foundational Stone to God’s spiritual temple.  Jesus is a spiritual stone that is not just alive, but full of the Life of God.  God’s source of life is within this Living Stone.

Peter then details that this Living Stone was rejected by men.  Of course, he is thinking of the rulers and elders of Israel as a group (some of them did believe) and also the larger group of society that followed them, though some did believe.  Jesus was essentially rejected by Israel as a nation. 

Peter then reminds them of how God saw that Living Stone.  God does not reject him. Rather, to God this Living Stone (Jesus) is choice and precious in His sight!  The idea that Jesus is choice is the idea of chosen by God.  He is what God has chosen.  The fact that he is precious refers to how much God valued him.  He is highly valued by God.

This is reminiscent of Psalm 2. There we have the rulers and nations of the earth complaining that they will not have God’s Messiah ruling over them.  However, God laughs.  “I have installed My King upon Zion, My holy mountain.”  He is not going to change His mind.  He has chosen this One.  This One is highly valued by Him.

So, we are coming to this Chosen, Highly Valued Stone (Messiah), which makes us living stones as well.  Of course, we are not a living stone in the same way that Jesus is.  It is his life flowing into and through us.  It is His Life taking up residence within us.  Like the branches connected to the vine in John 15, we need to be connected to Him in order to live and have life.

Verse 5 then speaks of the fact that we are being built into a spiritual house as living stones who are in connection to The Living Stone.  This “coming to” and “being built up as” is harkening back to when Solomon’s temple was built or when the 2nd Temple was built.  Stones would be brought to the master builder on the temple mount and placed in the appropriate place.  Of course, Jesus as a Master Builder places us among his family who are both individually and corporately a spiritual temple of God.  This is what Paul is talking about in 1 Corinthians 3:16. Don’t you know that you are the temple of God?

So, what is great about the temple?  It is not how great the stones are.  Rather, it is great because this is the place that God has chosen to place His Presence.  The Presence of God is there!  Why is His Presence there?  He is there to shine the light of God to the ends of the earth!

In keeping with us being a spiritual house (temple of God) we are also a holy priesthood offering up spiritual sacrifices to God that are holy and acceptable to Him.  Our sacrifices are no longer sheep and calves, but rather, they are the sacrifice of praise to Jesus.  They are the sacrifice of the desires of our flesh and the pride of life for the sake of God’s purposes.  They are the sacrifice of enduring persecution and mockery for His Name’s sake.  It is ultimately a whole life worship in sacrificing our whole life for the sake of His purpose.

What makes us holy and acceptable to God?  It is clearly not our perfection.  Rather, it is the perfection of Jesus and our faith in him that makes us acceptable.  Our service to the world as priests of God’s Messiah, Jesus, is not always accepted by man, but it is choice and precious in the eyes of God because it is done by faith in His Choice and Precious Living Stone.

In verse 6, Peter turns to make a case from Scripture for this.  He is not just making this up.  It is what the Scriptures foretold.  It was God’s plan all along to make a new spiritual people serving as His spiritual temple on earth out of the Jews and Gentiles becoming one people by faith in the One Living Stone.

He first quotes Isaiah 28:16. In that passage, God is rebuking the leaders of Judah.  Verse 14 says, “Hear the word of the LORD, O scoffers, who rule this people who are in Jerusalem!”  He goes on to declare that He is going to lay down, i.e., establish or set in place, a tested and precious cornerstone in Zion.  Those who believe on this cornerstone will not be put to shame.  I know that the KJV uses the phrase “shall not make haste.”  The idea is that they will not be put to flight (shame) by enemies or by judgment from God.

The leaders were refusing to trust in God’s ways, so He would send a foundation cornerstone.  This sets up a situation in which everyone will need to choose.  Will I believe on this stone or not?  It doesn’t matter what man says or does.  What matters is what God says and does.  He will always have the final word.

Then, in verse 7, Peter stops to comment.  This stone is not just precious to God.  He is precious to us who believe in him.  The Messiah Stone has been given by the Father to His people.  Of course, when you give a precious gift, you hope for the recipients to understand and to treat it with the proper value it deserves.

This would not have been a surprise to any of the Jews.  What was a surprise is that there would be some who do not believe, who do not see it as choice and precious.

In verse 7b, Peter quotes from Psalm 118:22. This prophesied cornerstone shows up again.  We are told there that the builders would reject a stone, but that it would become the Cornerstone.  That is, they would be overruled by the Master Builder Himself, God the Father.  The builders would refuse to set, to install, Him in His proper place, but God would do it.

Peter then quotes from another passage, Isaiah 8:14. It starts by stating that Messiah will become a sanctuary, which is connected to the Temple.  However, to both houses of Israel, he would be a stone of stumbling and a stone of falling away.  Peter stops there, but let me take us further.

“14 Then He shall become a sanctuary; but to both the houses of Israel, a stone to strike and a rock to stumble over, and a snare and a trap for the inhabitants of Jerusalem.  15 “Many will stumble over them, then they will fall and be broken; they will even be snared and caught.”

This is what Simeon was referencing when he described the baby Jesus in the temple.  “This Child is destined for the fall and rising of many in Israel, and for a sign which will be spoken against.” (Luke 2:34).

The warning is given by the prophet Isaiah so that people would believe and be ready.   Simeon and Anna were of those who believed the Word of God and were ready when Messiah appeared.  Jesus said, “Blessed are those who do not fall away because of me.”  He spoke this to the disciples of John the Baptist.

This brings us to our last point.

Peter explains in verse 8 that they stumble at Jesus the Messiah Stone because they are disobedient to the Word.  God warned them, told them in advance.  They have no excuse.  We shouldn’t blame God when we fail the tests that He told us we would have.

When it says that they were appointed to this stumbling, we should not read this as if they had no choice.  It is not as if they wanted to serve Messiah, but God wouldn’t let them.  Rather, they are appointed to stumble because they refuse to listen to the teaching of God.  We can choose to reject God’s Word, but we do not get to choose where that takes us.  Of course, one who stumbles can recognize their error and get back on track.  Saul of Tarsus is one such person.  But if we refuse to acknowledge our error, then the Stone of Stumbling becomes a Stone of Falling Away.

Ask yourself this.  Is Jesus no longer a Stone of Stumbling?  As Christians, we can fool ourselves into thinking that this was only for the Jews.  Yet, Hosea 14:9 is still true today.  “The ways of the LORD are right; the righteous walk in them, but the rebellious stumble in them.  It is not enough to be in the right group, saying the right things, and headed in the right direction.  The Word of the Lord is given as a litmus test.  Do you trust Him, or do you trust yourself more?  The Pharisees would have said that they were embracing God’s Word and doing it.  Yet, those same Scriptures were given to prepare them for Messiah.  We cannot co-opt God’s word for our purposes and think that He will be okay with that.  Our challenge is not to do the same thing as the Pharisees.  Our challenge is to believe the Word of God and respond to the goading of the Holy Spirit with faith.  Otherwise, we will just be another group exalting the traditions of our fathers over the top of God’s Word.

New Spiritual People 4 audio

Monday
Aug152022

The Acts of the Apostles 13

Subtitle: Arrested for Jesus

Acts 4:1-12.  This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on August 14, 2022.

If Jesus asked you to be arrested and thrown into jail for his sake, would you submit and serve him through it?  Or, if he just allowed it to happen, since he has told us in advance that this world would persecute his disciples, would you even then hold the faith?

In the audio, Evangelist Joe Pyott tells a story about a time when he was arrested for preaching on the street.

Mark 8:38 says, “For whoever is ashamed of me and my words in this adulterous and sinful generation, of him will the Son of Man also be ashamed when he comes in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.”  What if you came to church and found out that your pastor had been arrested?  Some might say that they always knew he was no good.  Others might say that he could not have done anything wrong and is just being persecuted.  Others would be on the fence.  In all of this, God knows the truth.

Peter and John will be arrested for simply doing what God had told him to do.  They are still on the Temple Mount preaching to the crowds under Solomon’s Colonnade when we come to Acts 4:1.

Let’s get into our passage.

Peter and John are arrested.  (vs. 1-4)

While they are still preaching, a group approaches to take them into custody.  No doubt, the healing of the lame man, the gathering of the crowd around Peter and John, and their teaching had sent some witnesses scurrying to let the authorities know what was going on.

The problem here is not authority, or the person calling the authorities.  The problem is always whether both of these are done in honor of God and for His purposes.  Peter and John are serving the purposes of the King of kings, and the authorities here are not.  Thus, they were never authorized by God to thwart His purposes, and so their authority is null and void, in the eyes of God.

We are told who it is who arrests Peter and John.  The Sadducees is the larger group that is led by the High Priest and has many rich nobles of Jerusalem also in the group.  The priests are a subclass of the Sadducees, as most priests were, and were those serving in the temple that day.  Lastly, the captain of the temple is referring to a Jewish guard that kept the peace on the temple mount.  Of course, if things became too out of control, the Roman soldiers would make an appearance.

The terminology has a sudden connotation to it.  They come upon them and laid hands on them quickly.  There doesn’t seem to be much discussion.  They just move in, arrest them, and take them to a holding place.  It is evening by this time, so they will be held over night for a hearing in the morning.  They came to the temple around 3:00 PM, so they had been preaching for quite a long time by the time they were arrested.

What were they being arrested for?  Verse two tells us that they were arrested for teaching the people, and teaching in Jesus, resurrection from the dead.  There doesn’t seem to be any declaration of this by the captain of the temple guard.  Rather, Luke is telling us in advance.

These disciples teaching on the temple grounds was probably reminiscent of Jesus just 2 months ago.  The week leading up to his crucifixion was spent teaching in the courts of the temple.  These men were not “official teachers.”  We have to be careful that our systems and institutions do not lose connection to God and become an obstacle to what He is doing.  In fact, that care starts within each of our hearts.  Have I become an obstacle to what God is doing?  Have I come to play a wicked part in His plan, all the while thinking that I am doing good?

The second part mentions teaching resurrection in the name of Jesus.  They were definitely promoting that Jesus rose from the dead.  It is not clear that they were also teaching about the general Resurrection of the Righteous at the end of the age, but the Sadducees rejected this teaching as well.  Regardless, resurrection was a debated topic between the Sadducees and the Pharisees.  This could hardly be an arrestable offense, but such is power in the hands of people that are unworthy of it.

In verse 4, Luke gives us another commentary on the event.  Though they were trying to shut down the effectiveness of Peter and John’s teaching, another large group of people believe in Jesus.  The new number is 5,000 men as opposed to the 3,000 souls on the Day of Pentecost.  The first number most likely included women- “souls” is very general.  In this passage, we have the traditional counting method.  There are now 5,000 men who are believers in Jesus.  These men would represent wives and families. 

It is not just a sexist thing.  Numbers can hide the underlying dynamics.  The 5,000 number was not inflated by large families counting children, etc.  It would be like a politician saying that they have raised over a million dollars and presenting that as a mandate for their positions.  However, when you look under the number, you might find that there were only 4 people who gave and one of them gave a million dollars.  Or, conversely, you might find that they had 50,000 $20 donations.  This number is intended to hammer home the point that many people were taking this seriously and the total number of believers in Jesus at this time was most likely more than 20,000.

These are large numbers, but compared to Jerusalem and all of Israel, it is still just a remnant.  There is a mystery behind when people put their trust in Jesus.  There will be more people joining the believers over the years ahead, but at some point, they will not continue to see thousands joining them each time Peter preached.

Let’s now look at the hearing on the next morning before the leaders of Israel.

Peter and John defend themselves to the Sanhedrin.  (vs. 5-12)

These two fishermen from the sticks of Galilee are put in front of the highest human powers and authorities in Israel, not counting Jesus.  Think of how intimidating it is to be drug in front of amazing buildings created with the people’s money, and made to face those who have the power to quash you like a bug.

The examination begins with their main question.  “By what power or by what name have you done this?

There are several different words for power.  The one used here refers to inherent power such as strength.  It is dunamis power in the Greek, and in this case, refers to the powerful miracle.  With what power did they effect this man’s healing?

They also ask by what name did they do this.  Remember from last week that a name represents more than a person’s reputation.  It includes their position, authority, and power.  Thus, the question is essentially, by whose authority are you doing these things?  Who said you can do them?  Of course, these leaders would see themselves as the ones who could authorize Peter and John to be teaching at the temple.  However, the temple belongs to Yahweh, and He is the true authority, not to mention that He had never said that only priests could teach in the temple courts.  They would simply be responsible to make sure that heretical things were not being taught.

We again see Peter doing the speaking.  It is not that John can’t speak.  However, some believe that Peter is the older one between the two.  Regardless, Peter’s earlier impetuous mouth, is being put to sanctified use by the Holy Spirit.  Peter is now a man filled with the Holy Spirit.  Let us be careful to guard our hearts and seek God each day for the filling of the Holy Spirit.  Jesus had promised them that the Holy Spirit would help them know what to say in such intimidating situations (Luke 12:12).  This promise still holds true for us today.  The Holy Spirit can give us the words to say when we are put on the spot by the powerful of this world.

The question they are asked is a bit vague.  The power part, the dunamis, would say that the healing is the main issue.  The name part would say that their teaching is the main issue.  Peter touches on the surreal aspect of the examination by using the conditional “if,” which begs the question.  Have we really been arrested for a good deed done to a helpless man?  Is this what the great priesthood of Israel has been reduced to?  If that is the problem, then Peter has an answer for them.  He will let them know exactly what power, and what authority, led to this man being healed.

This man was healed by Jesus, Messiah of Nazareth.  These leaders hear this answer, but Peter emphasizes that all Israel needs to hear this answer.  It was the power and authority of Jesus.  It is too easy for us to hear the words Jesus Christ and simply think of Christ as his last name.  Rather, Peter is declaring that Jesus is the Messiah of God who was prophesied to come.  Lastly, he mentions Nazareth so that they will definitely understand that he is speaking of the man they executed months ago.

Just as Peter had been contrasting the actions of the crowd earlier to the actions of God the Father, so he does here with the rulers.  You crucified Jesus, Messiah of Nazareth, but God raised him from the dead.

Do you understand that no power on earth, or in the heavens, can thwart what God has determined in heaven?  Our country is trying to continue forward without Jesus, and without the word of God.  It is trying to take the blessings of those who trusted in Jesus, and dare God to try and stop them.  No matter what powerful acts the great powers of this earth, and the great powers of hell, can accomplish, they can do nothing without the decision of Jesus allowing it to go forward.  He is God’s anointed King, Lord of heaven and earth.  All power and authority have been given unto him.

Peter then quotes from Psalm 118.  It is the psalm that starts out with “Oh, give thanks to the LORD, for He is good!  For, His mercy endures forever!  It then has these antiphonal phrases where a worship leader would say, “Let Israel now say…,” and then they would respond, “His mercy endures forever!”  “Let the house of Aaron now say…His mercy endures forever!”  “Let those who fear Yahweh now say…His mercy endures forever!”  Can you hear it today?  Let the Church now say…His mercy endures forever.  Let the house of Jesus now say…His mercy endures forever.  Let those who fear the LORD now say…His mercy endures forever!

This is a spiritual battle psalm.  There in verses 21-22, the psalmist prophesies that God “will become” our salvation as a stone that the builders reject, but whom God makes the chief cornerstone.  It is the most important stone of the whole building.  You can’t keep building without this stone.  It won’t work.  If you do, it will fall apart in the end.  Ask yourself today, what am I building, and with what materials?  They may have rejected the stone, but they can repent, change their mind, and turn back to faith in Jesus.  We can have a foundational stone that can hold up all of humanity if they would simply put their faith in him instead of in themselves.

In verse twelve, Peter brings the message home that they can’t have their cake and eat it too.  They must make a decision.  They can no longer remain in the positions of leadership in Israel and stand in the way of God’s plan.  They will either repent and be saved or not and lose their place.  Jesus is the only name, the only power and authority, by which we must be saved.  He emphasizes the necessity of salvation, and the exclusivity of the person of Jesus.  There is salvation in no other power or authority, no other person, only Jesus!

Listen, salvation is life.  Yes, it is eternal life, but it is also eternal life in this present life.  We have already begun eternity because we have the eternal life of God dwelling in us (that is if we have put our faith in Jesus).  Friend, in these days ahead, you will be tested more and more.  It is a grace of God that will help you to get rid of what He is not building, and to build what He wants.  We must boldly and humbly proclaim the truth that Jesus is Lord, and he has become our salvation!

Arrested audio

Tuesday
Oct232012

Hungry For God’s Word

Today we return to our study of 1 Peter, starting in Chapter 2.  Unfortunately we are unable to supply the audio for this sermon.

You may not connect being hungry with the Bible.  However, this is a metaphor that is employed throughout the scriptures.  Like bread is to the body, so God’s Word is to our spirit.  Just as some foods are not as good for us as others, so certain thoughts and ideas are not as good for us either.  What do you hunger to eat spiritually?  If it isn’t God’s Word then you might be in spiritual danger.  Let’s look at 1 Peter chapter 2.

We Need To Desire God’s Word

Peter ended chapter 1 with a powerful reminder of the place that God’s Word had in their salvation.  It was through the Gospel that was preached to them that they believed and were born again by the Holy Spirit.  However, the Word is not just powerful in making us spiritually alive.  It is not just something that we need to get started and then can go on without.  We need it every day.

Peter instructs them to have a desire or yearning for God’s Word.  It is not the Bible’s fault if I don’t desire it.  It is “good food.”  It is exactly what my spirit needs to grow and be alive in this world.  So, if I do not desire it then the problem is in me.  That is why Peter commands them to desire God’s Word.  Change your mind, change your actions and your heart will follow. 

Laying aside the old nature is a necessary component to approaching God’s Word.  In fact much of God’s Word reminds us of this need and explains why it is necessary.  Laying aside is a picture of taking off things that are hindrances.  Putting on the proper attire for dinner with your spouse also involves taking of the dirty clothes of the day.  When we approach the Word we are approaching a very intimate thing that God provided for us. This is clearly not an exhaustive list.  However, lets walk quickly through the five things mentioned.   Malice is any ill-will or evil inclination we might have towards others.  Deceit involves craftiness and hidden motives that are generally for the benefit of self.  Hypocrisy is a form of deceit in which we pretend or act differently than we really are.  Envy is a step beyond jealousy.  It doesn’t just wish it had what you have, but desires to take what you have and despises the benefit.  Lastly, evil speaking is a very broad category.  It can spoken behind another’s back or spoken to their face.  Either way it involves saying bad things with our mouth that hurt others.

This brings us to the analogy of a little baby.  All babies need to grow and all babies yearn for milk.  Our spirit has been born again by the Word and we need it to spiritually grow.  Thus we need to yearn for it.  Growth is not just about size.  A baby can grow in size and still remain a “baby” in mind.  Thus spiritual growth is not just a matter of a certain number of years reading Scripture.  Just as a baby takes in food, digests it, and draws life from it, so we too must spiritually take in God’s Word, digest it, and draw life from it.  Notice that food only gives a baby the strength to grow physically and mentally.  However, choices are made along the way.

The word translated “pure” in reference to the milk of the Word is closer to the idea of sincere.  It literally is “not deceitful.”  God’s Word does not have any hidden motives for its own ends.  It is the sincere Word of God.  To embrace it we are going to need to “un-embrace” those philosophies and ideas of the world that are deceitful.

Do you think that you can spiritually grow to the point that you are like Jesus?  God is able to do that which is impossible.  However, we must want it.  We are going to have to go after it by hungering for his Word.  When we receive God’s Word like a child it will yield spiritual growth.  But if we approach it as an adult who has it all figured out, our own deceived nature will blind us to the Truth and keep us from new birth and life.  In verse 3, Peter seems to be alluding to Psalm 34:8.  “O, taste and see that the LORD is good; blessed is the man who trusts in Him!”  Taste points to an intimate experience.  I haven’t just observed the LORD.  Rather, I have fed upon his Word.  I have taken it in and found his ways to be good.  That doesn’t mean nothing bad happens.  It is good in that it is helpful and beneficial and righteous.  Peter is not so much questioning their experience as he is emphasizing the “oughtness” of their needed desire.  If you’ve found the LORD to be good then you “ought” to desire his Word.

We Are Being Built By God

Next Peter uses two metaphors that come directly from the Temple in Jerusalem.  The first has to do with the temple building itself.  We are living stones in a new temple that God is building.  This building is a spiritual temple that is made of people instead of stones.  Thus, before God allowed the 2nd Temple to be destroyed, he first had his faithful, Son Jesus lay a foundation for a new one.  The temple in some ways is finished in that it is spiritually functional and the Spirit of God dwells in it.  However, in another way it is still being built as new believers are added to its coursework every day.  Notice that these stones are rejected by the world but chosen by God.  He doesn’t choose us because we are perfect, but because we are shapeable.  Many great stones of this world will not allow God to shape them.  Many great builders of this world have no place for Jesus himself.  They reject him as an unfit stone.  When you embrace Jesus you are no longer a part of those who “fit” in this world.  But worry not.  God fits you into his spiritual temple.  You have a place in his temple given by him.  No one can take it from you and you have every bit as much right as any other stone to be a part of God’s temple.

There is a personal and a corporate sense to this.  In a personal sense, God works on you to make you into his temple.  It is a work that goes the length of our life.  All along, though, His Spirit dwells within us and communes with us.  On a corporate level, we have been placed in his temple.  We are already shaped and fitted into place.  Don’t ever let anyone tell you that you do not have a place in God’s people.  That is a work that God does by His Spirit through His Word.

The next metaphor is the priests who worked in the temple.  We are holy priests in His new temple. Israel was used to priesthood being defined by biology or genetics.  You had to be a levite.  However, all believers in Jesus become priests in God’s new temple.  Not just priests but holy priests.  God is holy so we need to minister before him in holiness.  How can I do this?  Clearly I must first be “clothed” with the holiness of Christ through faith in him.  But I also need to pursue personal holiness by repenting of sin and removing it from my life.  This is part of my spiritual act of worship.  When I lay sinful thoughts, desires, and actions on the altar, I am allowing them to be destroyed in honor of God.  I also minister to God through prayers, praise and self-denying acts of loving service in Jesus name.  Lastly we minister by mediating between God and the lost of this world.

Peter uses Scriptures from Isaiah and Psalms to point out that Jesus was rejected.  He was the chief cornerstone of the new temple, but the builders rejected him.  The builders also rejected those who believed on Jesus and followed him.  We must not reject God’s Word, but rather desire and yearn for it.  That is how God builds us up into his holy temple and his holy priests.  You cannot receive Jesus AND reject his word.  How often people try to say something like this, “I believe in Jesus, but I can’t accept this verse here….”  Or they say, “Jesus never said what the Old Testament says.  So I believe in him but reject it.”  Those who say such things are deluded.  Jesus is the Word and the Word is speaking of Jesus from Genesis 1:1 all the way to Revelation22:21.  None of the Scriptures are in contradiction to Jesus and Jesus is not in contradiction to the Scriptures.

In verses  9-10 Peter ends with reminding them that they had become the people of God.  Israel had been identified for so long as the people of God.  But in Jesus God is doing a new thing.  For “whosoever will” of Israel that would join themselves to him, he took a remnant and put it together with people from every tribe, race, and tongue on earth to be the people of God.  Jew and Gentile alike in one body that belongs to the Lord, we have been chosen by God, made royal through our adoption into his family, made holy by Jesus, and special to him.  Special is literally the idea of purchased.  God “paid good money for us.”  We are special not just because we cost so much, but because God was willing to pay so much.  In fact, it is he who makes you special.  Don’t look at yourself trying to find something special.  You look to Him.  He is the special one who makes us rejected ones special.

Food For Thought

The enemy knows that his only hope is to get us to reject or ignore God’s Word.  That way we will not only fail to grow, but we will also spiritually die.  He hates what you have and what you stand to gain.  He will do anything in his power to convince you to throw away the best thing you could ever have.  Don’t be deceived by this world.  Let God fit you into his people and shape you into his temple that he loves to dwell within.