2 Peter 2 Bible Study

This is a Bible Study of 2 Peter 2 that I led for a small group. 

When I lead Bible Studies I try to ensure that there is plenty of room for open discussion.  I firmly believe that all Christians in a gathering around God’s Word have a word to contribute for the mutual benefit of all, just as 1 Corinthians 14 indicates.  Our group’s discussion exploded on the Matrix question.

This study has blanks and questions for that.  If you want to comment and give your feedback, I’d love to read your input.

2 Peter 2 Study

Progressive Revelation – God is continually revealing himself – getting closer and closer to us in relationship.  In the Old Testament he was very physical in his interaction with his people.  Now, he has become more and more spiritual.

Read 1 Peter 2:4-12.  What are the Old Testament, physical interactions, that parallel the spiritual interactions of the New Testament?  It’s almost as if God was using object lessons with Israel to bring them closer to Him – we are physical people, so God who is Spirit, comes to us in physical means to teach us and to grow with us in intimate relationship.

Old Testament – Physical Relationship/Interaction

New Testament – Spiritual Relationship/Interaction

 

Spiritual House

 

Spiritual Sacrifices

 

Chosen People – Born of God

 

Royal Priesthood

 

Holy Nation – Kingdom of God

 

Aliens and Strangers in the World

   

 

  1.  What are Spiritual Sacrifices?  How are we priests?  Read Romans 12:1-2
  2. What are the parallels with Romans 12:1-2 and the passage from 1 Peter 2?
  3. Any connections to the Matrix in 1 Peter 2?  Also read 2 Cor. 4:4

What the Bible Teaches About Capitalism by Aryeh Spero

The Wall Street Journal.

January 30, 2012

What the Bible Teaches About Capitalism

As the Ten Commandments instruct, envy is corrosive to the individual and to those societies that embrace it.

By ARYEH SPERO

Who would have expected that in a Republican primary campaign the single biggest complaint among candidates would be that the front-runner has taken capitalism too far? As if his success and achievement were evidence of something unethical and immoral? President Obama and other redistributionists must be rejoicing that their assumptions about rugged capitalism and the 1% have been given such legitimacy.

More than any other nation, the United States was founded on broad themes of morality rooted in a specific religious perspective. We call this the Judeo-Christian ethos, and within it resides a ringing endorsement of capitalism as a moral endeavor.

Regarding mankind, no theme is more salient in the Bible than the morality of personal responsibility, for it is through this that man cultivates the inner development leading to his own growth, good citizenship and happiness. The entitlement/welfare state is a paradigm that undermines that noble goal.

The Bible’s proclamation that “Six days shall ye work” is its recognition that on a day-to-day basis work is the engine that brings about man’s inner state of personal responsibility. Work develops the qualities of accountability and urgency, including the need for comity with others as a means for the accomplishment of tasks. With work, he becomes imbued with the knowledge that he is to be productive and that his well-being is not an entitlement. And work keeps him away from the idleness that Proverbs warns leads inevitably to actions and attitudes injurious to himself and those around him.

Yet capitalism is not content with people only being laborers and holders of jobs, indistinguishable members of the masses punching in and out of mammoth factories or functioning as service employees in government agencies. Nor is the Bible. Unlike socialism, mired as it is in the static reproduction of things already invented, capitalism is dynamic and energetic. It cheerfully fosters and encourages creativity, unspoken possibilities, and dreams of the individual. Because the Hebrew Bible sees us not simply as “workers” and members of the masses but, rather, as individuals, it heralds that characteristic which endows us with individuality: our creativity.

At the opening bell, Genesis announces: “Man is created in the image of God”—in other words, like Him, with individuality and creative intelligence. Unlike animals, the human being is not only a hunter and gatherer but a creative dreamer with the potential of unlocking all the hidden treasures implanted by God in our universe. The mechanism of capitalism, as manifest through investment and reasoned speculation, helps facilitate our partnership with God by bringing to the surface that which the Almighty embedded in nature for our eventual extraction and activation.

Capitalism makes possible entrepreneurship, which is the realization of an idea birthed in human creativity. Whereas statism demands that citizens think small and bow to a top-down conformity, capitalism, as has been practiced in the U.S., maximizes human potential. It provides a home for aspiration, referred to in the Bible as “the spirit of life.”

The Bible speaks positively of payment and profit: “For why else should a man so labor but to receive reward?” Thus do laborers get paid wages for their hours of work and investors receive profit for their investment and risk.

The Bible is not a business-school manual. While it is comfortable with wealth creation and the need for speculation in economic markets, it has nothing to say about financial instruments and models such as private equity, hedge funds or other forms of monetary capitalization. What it does demand is honesty, fair weights and measures, respect for a borrower’s collateral, timely payments of wages, resisting usury, and empathy for those injured by life’s misfortunes and charity.

It also demands transparency and honesty regarding one’s intentions. The command, “Thou shalt not place a stumbling block in front of the blind man” also means that you should not act deceitfully or obscure the truth from those whose choice depends upon the information you give them. There’s nothing to indicate that Mitt Romney breached this biblical code of ethics, and his wealth and success should not be seen as automatic causes for suspicion.

No country has achieved such broad-based prosperity as has America, or invented as many useful things, or seen as many people achieve personal promise. This is not an accident. It is the direct result of centuries lived by the free-market ethos embodied in the Judeo-Christian outlook.

Furthermore, only a prosperous nation can protect itself from outside threats, for without prosperity the funds to support a robust military are unavailable. Having radically enlarged the welfare state and hoping to further expand it, President Obama is attempting to justify his cuts to our military by asserting that defense needs must give way to domestic programs.

Both history and the Bible show the way that leads. Countries that were once economic powerhouses atrophied and declined, like England after World War II, once they began adopting socialism. Even King Solomon’s thriving kingdom crashed once his son decided to impose onerous taxes.

At the end of Genesis, we hear how after years of famine the people in Egypt gave all their property to the government in return for the promise of food. The architect of this plan was Joseph, son of Jacob, who had risen to become the pharaoh’s top official, thus: “Joseph exchanged all the land of Egypt for pharaoh and the land became pharaoh’s.” The result was that Egyptians became indentured to the ruler and state, and Joseph’s descendants ended up enslaved to the state.

Many on the religious left criticize capitalism because all do not end up monetarily equal—or, as Churchill quipped, “all equally miserable.” But the Bible’s prescription of equality means equality under the law, as in Deuteronomy’s saying that “Judges and officers . . . shall judge the people with a just judgment: Do not . . . favor one over the other.” Nowhere does the Bible refer to a utopian equality that is contrary to human nature and has never been achieved.

The motive of capitalism’s detractors is a quest for their own power and an envy of those who have more money. But envy is a cardinal sin and something that ought not to be.

God begins the Ten Commandments with “I am the Lord your God” and concludes with “Thou shalt not envy your neighbor, not for his wife, nor his house, nor for any of his holdings.” Envy is corrosive to the individual and to those societies that embrace it. Nations that throw over capitalism for socialism have made an immoral choice.

Rabbi Spero has led congregations in Ohio and New York and is president of Caucus for America.

 

Colossians 1:28 – Proclaim Jesus through Warning/Admonishing and Teaching

“We proclaim him, admonishing and teaching everyone with all wisdom, so that we may present everyone perfect in Christ.” – Colossians 1:28 NIV

The New International Version of Colossians 1:28 says we are to proclaim Jesus through admonishing and teaching with all wisdom.  Some translations use the word, warn instead of admonish.

If Christians proclaimed was God loves you, you are perfect just as you are, there would be zero conflict with Christians and the world.  That’s not the case, that wouldn’t be proclaiming Jesus with all wisdom, because we are not perfect just as we are.  On our own we are far from perfect, and God is not just loving, but he is also just and righteous.  He cannot overlook sin (lawlessness).  This means that there must be a warning, and admonishment, that accompanies the proclamation of Jesus Christ.  We must first be cut to the heart concerning our sins against God, and turn to him in repentance.  Jesus has fulfilled all righteousness on our behalf and paid the penalty for our sins on the cross.  Our sins must be proclaimed with the Good News of Christ’s saving work.  The warnings, the admonishments, are not always received with welcome, but they are necessary to be spoken.  It can be fearful for Christians to not only teach, but also warn.  The good news in the following verse is “To this end I labor, struggling with all his energy, which so powerfully works in me” (Colossians 1:29).  The end result is that people will come to salvation and be presented as perfect before the Lord and not receive the eternal condemnation we all deserve.  The struggle is not through our own energy; it is through God’s powerful work in us.  When we lean upon our own understanding and abilities, then we are fearful, but God has not given us a Spirit of timidity, but of boldness.

May we not be fearful of the world, but in love, in a winsome manner, proclaim, through warnings and teachings the Gospel message which has the power to save all who believe in it.  It is the message that makes us wise unto salvation, although the message appears as foolishness to the wisdom of man.

“It’s the end of America as we know it.” – Nothing new. God is our resort.

I’ve heard numerous times lately from very conservative friends that it’s time to start stockpiling food and water as we face the end of America as we know it.  I’ve heard of FEMA concentration camps being built, drone bases being established to spy on and take out American citizens, the UN’s Agenda 21 and the plan to confiscate all citizen owned guns, censorship of the Internet, and numerous other government led preparations to crackdown against civil unrest.  I’ve been told that I need to stock up on guns; because it’s about to come the time to need them, and that anyone who stands for freedom will be labeled a terrorist in this new age of government control in the America to come.  Is it just paranoia, or is it real?

Today in church the sermon text came from Daniel 4.  King Nebuchadnezzar had a dream and the interpretation of the dream that the Lord gave to Daniel was the ruin of the king.  He was told by Daniel, “You will be driven away from people and will live with the wild animals; you will eat grass like cattle and be drenched with the dew of heaven.  Seven times will pass by for you until you acknowledge that the Most High is sovereign over the kingdoms of men and gives them to anyone he wishes”  (Daniel 4:25).  King Nebuchadnezzar was told that if he confessed his sins and repented unto the Lord that maybe his prosperity would continue.

Instead of confessing Nebuchadnezzar was boastful saying, “Is not this the great Babylon built as the royal residence, by my mighty power and for the glory of my majesty?”  Yep, that’s not a confession of sin, that is boast in self, and the prophesy of the interpretation of the dream was fulfilled.  Nebuchadnezzar was “driven away from people and ate grass like cattle.  His body was drenched with the dew of heaven until his hair grew like the feathers of an eagle and his nails like the claws of a bird” (Daniel 4:33).  He was brought to repentance and praised the Lord and he was restored.

King Nebuchadnezzar
An artist’s depiction of King Nebuchadnezzar facing the fulfillment of Daniel’s prophecy.

This story made me think about the “end of America as we know it” prophecies.  What if they are true?  What kingdom of man has ever stood the test of time?  Greek fell and Rome fell.  The Great British Empire fell to a ragtag bunch of hillbillies in the American colonies.  Who would have guessed that?  We must remember what Scripture teaches – God is the potter and we are the clay, at anytime if he wants to raise up a nation he can, and if a nation doesn’t stay in his hands he can bring it down as quickly as he brought it up!  That’s from Jeremiah 18!  Romans 13 teaches that God has placed all authority in place – that’s all rulers and all governors. Christians are called to submit to the authorities, since they are God’s servants.  Of course, Acts 5:29, Peter says, “We must obey God rather than men!”  If a government or authority figure orders us to disobey one of God’s moral laws, we must obey God rather than men, but we must also anticipate and expect the due penalty.

The points of the sermon were:

1.  God should not be our last resort.  He is our only resort.  I shouldn’t place my trust in the government, but in God.  The government will fail, even the best of them, but God is faithful.

2.  Speak the hard things and listen to the hard things.  Namely, speak the Gospel of Jesus Christ.  That’s hard to speak – it’s divisive after all.  It brings contradictions – either Christ is Lord of all, or He is nothing at all.  He is either to bowed to as Lord, or shut up as a fool or liar!  Knowing that a rejection of his message will bring persecution, or separation, even amongst family, makes it hard to proclaim.  It’s hard to also proclaim that someone is wrong, that repentance is needed.  Daniel made the proclamation though to the King.  He denied it at first, but he came to accept the need to confess. It was worth the proclamation.

3.  We should confess ourselves.  To build upon our own rock is silly.  To boast at our own works is futile.  What have we done apart from the Lord?  What can we do apart from him?  Nothing at all.  To avoid boasting and self-reliance, confession is needed to bring us into the refuge that is Christ Jesus our Lord.

Nebuchadnezzar in Pop Culture
In pop culture, the name Nebuchadnezzar was used in the movie the Matrix for the name of Morpheus’ ship.