1 Peter 1:12 (b) — Beyond Measure, Part II

Large eyes against a black background.

Even angels long to look into these things.

In yesterday’s post, I started by saying, “Peter is telling us about salvation. Broadly speaking ‘salvation’ in this case refers to several things.” And then I went on to tell you about only one thing. Today I would like to follow up on that thought with another thing related to salvation. 

As we discussed yesterday, the first thing salvation refers to is the restoration of our relationship with God. The second “thing” is that the restoration of this relationship is complicated. Human nature was irreversibly altered by the sin of Adam and Eve. In Genesis 3: 5 the serpent says, 

For God knows that when you eat from it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.”

Continue reading “1 Peter 1:12 (b) — Beyond Measure, Part II”

1 Peter 1:12 (b) — Beyond Measure

Old yardsticks and tape measures.

Even angels long to look into these things.

Every once in awhile a verse seems to jump out of the Bible at me. This is one of those verses.

Peter is telling us about salvation. Broadly speaking “salvation” in this case refers to several things. It begins with God’s plan for redeeming His creation. Remember the story in Genesis where God says, “… you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat from it you will certainly die”?  (Genesis 2: 16-17)

Interestingly, the current version of the NIV is in the minority here. Thirty-eight of fifty-two translations available at Biblegateway.com use some version of “day,” as in “… in the day that you eat of it you shall surely die.” (ESV) As I understand the text, when Adam and Eve eat the forbidden fruit in Genesis 3, God’s word holds true. They “die” from God’s point of view. 

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More Angels

We normally compress a lot of things into what is the traditional Christmas nativity story, yet the timeline of the story itself plays out over several years. Luke begins nine months to a year before the birth of Christ with the angel visiting Zechariah to announce that he would have a son. Then, about nine months before the birth of Jesus (which is three months before John the Baptist is born) the angel Gabriel visits Mary. Sometime later Joseph is visited by an angel and then they receive the news that they need to travel to Bethlehem for the census. Finally, they arrive in Bethlehem just in time to give birth to Jesus. Shortly after that …

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