The apostles John, Peter, and Paul all had their final words sent to the ekklesia. Their letters / sermons are passionate and blunt. They’re filled with things that the Holy Spirit can use to highlight our current time and culture. Even then DURING the time they were still alive there were lying prophets and lying religious leaders. That is still the same today. Can you discern by the Holy Spirit which ones they are? Without the counsel and Voice of the Holy Spirit we can easily be led astray. It seems human nature has not changed since the beginning. What is the trap that so many fall into? Power and greed. Why is it that the bigger a system is that it is more susceptible to corruption? Be wary of the big ‘shiny’. Centralized religion is filled with corruption. We aren’t supposed to be about religion but in relationship with our King and Lord Jesus; filled and guided by His Holy Spirit.
(ask the Holy Spirit to enlighten your mind and heart as you read Peter’s words)
But there were also lying prophets among the people then, just as there will be lying religious teachers among you. They’ll smuggle in destructive divisions, pitting you against each other—biting the hand of the One who gave them a chance to have their lives back! They’ve put themselves on a fast downhill slide to destruction, but not before they recruit a crowd of mixed-up followers who can’t tell right from wrong.
They give the way of truth a bad name. They’re only out for themselves. They’ll say anything, anything, that sounds good to exploit you. They won’t, of course, get by with it. They’ll come to a bad end, for God has never just stood by and let that kind of thing go on.
God didn’t let the rebel angels off the hook, but jailed them in hell till Judgment Day. Neither did he let the ancient ungodly world off. He wiped it out with a flood, rescuing only eight people—Noah, the sole voice of righteousness, was one of them.
God decreed destruction for the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah. A mound of ashes was all that was left—grim warning to anyone bent on an ungodly life. But that good man Lot, driven nearly out of his mind by the sexual filth and perversity, was rescued. Surrounded by moral rot day after day after day, that righteous man was in constant torment.
So God knows how to rescue the godly from evil trials. And he knows how to hold the feet of the wicked to the fire until Judgment Day.
God is especially incensed against these “teachers” who live by lust, addicted to a filthy existence. They despise interference from true authority, preferring to indulge in self-rule. Insolent egotists, they don’t hesitate to speak evil against the most splendid of creatures. Even angels, their superiors in every way, wouldn’t think of throwing their weight around like that, trying to slander others before God.
These people are nothing but brute beasts, born in the wild, predators on the prowl. In the very act of bringing down others with their ignorant blasphemies, they themselves will be brought down, losers in the end. Their evil will boomerang on them. They’re so despicable and addicted to pleasure that they indulge in wild parties, carousing in broad daylight. They’re obsessed with adultery, compulsive in sin, seducing every vulnerable soul they come upon. Their specialty is greed, and they’re experts at it. Dead souls!
They’ve left the main road and are directionless, having taken the way of Balaam, son of Beor, the prophet who turned profiteer, a connoisseur of evil. But Balaam was stopped in his wayward tracks: A dumb animal spoke in a human voice and prevented the prophet’s craziness.
There’s nothing to these people—they’re dried-up fountains, storm-scattered clouds, headed for a black hole in hell. They are loudmouths, full of hot air, but still they’re dangerous. Men and women who have recently escaped from a deviant life are most susceptible to their brand of seduction. They promise these newcomers freedom, but they themselves are slaves of corruption, for if they’re addicted to corruption—and they are—they’re enslaved.
If they’ve escaped from the slum of sin by experiencing our Master and Savior, Jesus Christ, and then slid back into that same old life again, they’re worse than if they had never left. Better not to have started out on the straight road to God than to start out and then turn back, repudiating the experience and the holy command. They prove the point of the proverbs, “A dog goes back to its own vomit” and “A scrubbed-up pig heads for the mud.”
2 Peter 2 The Message
2 thoughts on “Peter’s final sermon.”
Yes, nothing new under the sun. Though it sure seems as though it’s intensified. Strong leadership is hard to find.
The best fighters in the Revolutionary and Civil War were not the everyday city guy
They were the rugged independent mountain men. The best spiritual leaders of today I suspect are not the everyday, seminary trained clergy but the independent, “mountain men” of today. Men trained by God in the wilderness of life
Oh that God would raise up more
Amen