Drive Beyond the Crossing of Hope and Holiness

Image of a road stretching out of view and getting lost in a rolling, grassy hillside

God’s gift of eternal life is worth
celebrating. Our freedom from the leash of sin is better than any other
freedom. The love and adoration we enjoy from our Heavenly Father is comforting
beyond measure. Praise God for His ever-reaching mercy and grace.

But the Christian life is not all fun and
games. God didn’t intend for us to stop at celebration. When we start off on
the road called Hope, we should quickly merge onto the road called Holiness. Do
we Christians and faith communities (and even churches) cruise up and down Hope
and steer away from Holiness? Do we celebrate and thank God for His forgiveness,
glibly excusing our humanness as that part of life God no longer holds
against us?

God expects more.

We’re not only saved because it’s good for us. We’re
also saved to sacrifice for God. Timothy wrote that God “saved us and called us
to a holy life” (2 Timothy 1:5-10). And, of course, we remember Romans 12:1:

…I
urge you…in view of God’s mercy,
to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice,
holy and pleasing to God––
this is your true and proper worship.

God expects much from us. He expects a changed
heart, a changed mind, obedience… And, even though that’s already a lot, He
expects our lives. I’ll be the first to admit, I often take my life back from
Him.

Peter wrote a letter to Christians scattered throughout
the area generally known today as Turkey (1 Peter 1:1-2). It seems these
Christians were happy about their salvation and eternal home, but they needed
direction for living as God expected them to live. They might have praised and
thanked God for giving them much, but maybe they didn’t follow Jesus
further than that. They enjoyed the hope of new life but maybe they didn't pursue holiness.

Even still, life was difficult for them. They were exiles and
faced situations that tested their faith. So, Peter began his letter with what seems
like a recipe for spiritual maturity – a maturity that is expected of each of us.

Here’s how Peter began his letter:

[They were]
chosen according to the foreknowledge of God the Father,
through the sanctifying work of the Spirit,
to be obedient to Jesus Christ…

1 Peter
1:2a

Then he described the Christian journey (“the
sanctifying work of the Spirit”). Our journeys should progress from hope to
holiness and look something like this (which is what we find in 1 Peter1:1-2:10). Of course, it begins with celebration.




1. We celebrate the fact that God blesses us with eternal security 

(1 Peter 1:3-5).

I bet many of us can name the date and circumstances surrounding the
moment we accepted Jesus as our Savior. I was at a church youth group meeting
when I met Jesus, on February 13, 1981 (Friday, the 13th). It is a
moment worth celebrating.

  • Our eternity is secure because God acted on His mercy (1 Peter 1:3,
    Psalm 89:14, 2 Peter 3:8-9).
  • We look forward to Heaven because we acted on
    our faith (1 Peter 1:5). Of course, our faith is a gift from God, so our
    eternal security is entirely from God.

2. We enjoy God’s blessing of maturing hope (and we may not even realize it) (1 Peter 1:6-9).

We celebrate but life is hard sometimes. We eventually realize that
hardship tests our faith, but hardship can’t take the Heaven out of us. We make
it through, and we know we can do it again with God’s help, and we praise Him.
We look back and we celebrate.

We have God’s complete revelation. The prophets heard from God and they
spoke of the spiritual blessings, especially of our salvation, that we can now fully
enjoy. We don’t wonder when Jesus will come. We know He already has.

While we continue to
celebrate, we begin to realize God expects more…

We are so blessed, in more ways than I mentioned above, so we celebrate.
But God also wants us to be holy. Peter urged us to clear our minds and become
ready for action. We have a new way of life:
obedience.



5. We make life choices to honor Jesus because of His sacrifice (1 Peter 1:18-21).

We can never repay the debt of our sinfulness. Jesus paid it entirely
and offers a real and forever relationship with Him. For this, He deserves and
expects our honor.

  • God bore the complete cost of our undeserved freedom (1 Peter 1:18-19).
  • The gospel would elude us if Jesus never came (1 Peter 1:20).
  • We enjoy a solid relationship
    with God because of Christ’s death and resurrection (1 Peter 1:21).

When we obey God – when we truly seek to honor Him – we love people. If
we struggle to love others, we should look inward and consider whether we are
obedient to God.

Now that you have purified yourselves by
obeying the truth
so that you have sincere love for each other,
love one another deeply, from the heart.

1 Peter 1:22

1 Peter 1 describes
3 blessings from God, followed by 3 things God expects of us. In chapter 2, he
seems to cut to the chase in verses 1-10 with 2 more expectations. He said to
rid ourselves of evil, to desire spiritual food, and make sacrifices. He said
to be who he chose us to be: a royal priesthood, a holy nation, people of God.

These two
additional expectations put a capstone on our relationship with God.

7. We become serious about our relationship with God and all that pleases Him (1 Peter 2:1-3).

Do we really shun sin and sinful behavior? I admit, I don’t really hate
all kinds of evil. Sometimes I gratify my sinful tendencies. I find myself in
confession far too often for someone who wants to be remembered as a man of God
who gave his all for Christ and led his family to do the same.

This begs the question: How serious am I really about my relationship
with God?

Answer: Not enough.

But we are all in process, aren’t we? It’s okay to admit that. It’s not
okay to use it as an excuse. We need to get to know God better. We need to
study. We need to learn about Him, learn about ourselves in the process, and
grow in our appreciation of His compassion and sacrifice for us. We need to
reciprocate. We need to think about Him more than ourselves. When we do so, we
will hate evil more today than we did yesterday, and more tomorrow than we do
today.

  • Experiencing God’s blessings produces an aversion to sin (1 Peter 2:1,
    Psalm 34).
  • Experiencing God’s blessings produces a desire to study and grow (1Peter 2:2-3).



8. We make sacrifices because He set us apart for Him (1 Peter 2:4-10).

This is the bottom line of our relationship with God. Are we living up
to our calling? Are we fulfilling the purpose and the reason God chose us to be
His people? If you ever wondered, “What’s the point of being a Christian?,” chew
on this:

You were chosen…that you may declare
the praises of him who called you
out of darkness into his wonderful light.

1 Peter 2:9

We were chosen to tell others about how marvelous God is, and how He
saved us from eternal condemnation. We do this, not by putting our best foot
forward. We do it by making sacrifices – by giving up the right to live our own
lives and following God’s lead instead.

  • God is setting
    us apart as spiritually-minded people (1 Peter 2:4-8).
  • If we are set apart, we
    are set apart for a reason (1 Peter 2:9-10).

Consider this quote from blogger friend Karen Friday:

We must trust who God is…the sum total of His attributes.
Yet, sometimes we only concentrate on the feel-good parts of God’s character.
Such as God is love, merciful, and good.

And all those characteristics are absolutely true
about God. But He is also holy, just, the one true judge, in control, on His
throne, the only God, and sovereign – reigns over all things. Every one of
these aspects are what make God, God.

We deny God’s full Lordship when we only celebrate
one aspect of His character.

So, where are you in your journey as a child of God? What blessing or expectation above speaks to you most today. We might understand and grow in a different order than how it is listed above, and we cycle back through some of the stages at various points in our journeys, so number 1 is not just for young Christians and number 7 doesn’t necessarily describe mature ones. Whichever step we find ourselves in, God is speaking to us about our growth. Feel free to share about it by commenting below.

If you want to know more
about God’s love and how to have a relationship with Him, please email me at
authordlv@att.net.

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