Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 2 Peter 3:18
But grow in grace, and [in] the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To him [be] glory both now and forever. Amen.
18. But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ ] The final thought of the Epistle, like that with which it opened, is the growth of the Christian life. Here, as there (chap. 2Pe 1:5), stress is laid on knowledge as an element of growth, partly as essential to completeness in the Christian life, partly also, perhaps, in reference to the “knowledge falsely so called” (1Ti 6:20) of which the false teachers boasted.
To him be glory both now and for ever. Amen ] The word “glory” in the Greek has the article, which makes it include all the glory which men were wont, in their doxologies, to ascribe to God. The Apostle has learnt the full meaning of the words “that all men should honour the Son, even as they honour the Father” (Joh 5:23). The effect of his teaching may be traced in the Churches to which the letter was mainly addressed, in Pliny’s account of the worship of Christians in the Asiatic provinces, as including “a hymn sung to Christ as to God” ( Ep. ad Trajan. 96). The Greek phrase for “for ever” (literally, for the day of the on, or eternity) is a peculiar one, and expresses the thought that “the day” of which the Apostle had spoken in 2Pe 3:10; 2Pe 3:12 would be one which should last through the new on that would then open, and to which no time-limits could be assigned.
The absence of any salutations, like those with which the First Epistle ended, is, perhaps, in part due to the wider and more encyclical character which marks the Second. The Apostle was content that his last words should be on the one hand an earnest entreaty that men should “grow” to completeness in their spiritual life, and, on the other, the ascription of an eternal glory to the Lord and Master whom he loved.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
But grow in grace – Compare Col 1:10. Religion in general is often represented as grace, since every part of it is the result of grace, or of unmerited favor; and to grow in grace is to increase in that which constitutes true religion. Religion is as susceptible of cultivation and of growth as any other virtue of the soul. It is feeble in its beginnings, like the grain of mustard seed, or like the germ or blade of the plant, and it increases as it is cultivated. There is no piety in the world which is not the result of cultivation, and which cannot be measured by the degree of care and attention bestowed upon it. No one becomes eminently pious, any more than one becomes eminently learned or rich, who does not intend to; and ordinarily men in religion are what they design to be. They have about as much religion as they wish, and possess about the character which they intend to possess. When men reach extraordinary elevations in religion, like Baxter, Payson, and Edwards, they have gained only what they meant to gain; and the gay and worldly professors of religion who have little comfort and peace, have in fact the characters which they designed to have. If these things are so, then we may see the propriety of the injunction to grow in grace; and then too we may see the reason why so feeble attainments are made in piety by the great mass of those who profess religion.
And in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ – See the notes at Joh 17:3. Compare the notes at Col 1:10. To know the Lord Jesus Christ – to possess just views of his person, character, and work – is the sum and essence of the Christian religion; and with this injunction, therefore, the apostle appropriately closes this epistle. He who has a saving knowledge of Christ, has in tact all that is essential to his welfare in the life that is, and in that which is to come; he who has not this knowledge, though he may be distinguished in the learning of the schools, and may be profoundly skilled in the sciences, has in reality no knowledge that will avail him in the great matters pertaining to his eternal welfare.
To him be glory … – Compare the Rom 16:27 note; 2Ti 4:18 note. With the desire that honor and glory should be rendered to the Redeemer, all the aspirations of true Christians appropriately close. There is no wish more deeply cherished in their hearts than this; there is nothing that will enter more into their worship in heaven. Compare Rev 1:5-6; Rev 5:12-13.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
2Pe 3:18
But grow in grace.
Religious growth
Almost every created thing seems to have within it the principle of growth. The tree grows from a seed. The bird, fish, beast of field, all come to maturity by growth. The human body grows from feeblest infancy into the strength of manhood. And mind grows as well as matter. The reasoning faculty, the imagination, the memory, expand and strengthen. So, too, the moral and spiritual affections of the soul. Hence religion, which consists of love to God and man, may grow also.
I. Grace, in its strict sense, is the free favour of God to the unworthy. The grace of God toward men produces piety; grace is the cause, piety the effect.
1. To grow in grace is to grow in virtue, faith, meekness, gentleness, patience, a spirit of forgiveness, usefulness.
2. In this growth of all right principles there will be going on at the same time in the soul the weakening and decay of all wrong principles.
II. We may overlook too much the importance of religious growth. We may be in danger of feeling that when one is introduced into the kingdom by conversion and the joining of the Church, the great work is done. Not so our Saviour. How much He laboured to train His disciples.
III. Having life by union with the Saviour, we grow in grace by using the means of grace. There is a law of spiritual growth just as fixed as the law of natural growth. The means of grace, suited to advance us in the Divine life, are daily provided, not only in the house of God, but in every engagement of the world. Every human being you meet may offer you a means of grace, for there is a Christian feeling to be cherished toward all, and a Christian way of treating all.
IV. That we may grow in grace, we need to use the means of grace in their due proportion. Meditation is good, but where it becomes exclusive it is evil. So outward activity, in labouring for the salvation of men, is of the highest importance; but let this absorb the Christian, and the most fruitful piety will wither and die.
V. Nor are we to despise outward forms and symbols as helps in religious growth. It may be asked, What matters the form if I have the spirit? But will you have the spirit as fully without the aid of the form? We are not purely spiritual beings; we are body as well as spirit. And there is an action of the body that harmonises with and helps the spirit. Nor can devotion prosper well without set seasons; we need the aid of habit to assist in the formation of spiritual character.
VI. He who will grow in grace must be ready to suffer. The natural life in us dies not without some species of internal agony. For one Christian God has one form of trial; for another, another form.
VII. Growth demands earnestness. No one grows who does not mean to grow.
VIII. Growth demands exercise. As fast as we learn duty, we must apply it. To him that hath shall be given. Every act of faith increases the principle of faith; as every battle Washington fought for his country only increased his patriotism. (John MacLeod.)
Growth in grace
I. The meaning of the expression itself. Grow in grace. The Christian is not a lifeless machine. He is not to satisfy himself with going through a cold round of duties. Wherein are you improved?
II. The means of growing in grace.
1. Faith, to be strong, must be exercised. Commit your ways to God. Trust Him. Your faith will increase.
2. Another means which may be suggested is prayer. If you will only wrestle with God in prayer as Jacob did, you will succeed.
3. I may specify Scriptural reading.
4. A further and most important means for advancing in our heavenward journey is meditation upon the promises of God.
5. I will only mention one other means of growth in grace, self-examination. Prevention is better than cure; when you know your deficiencies, then you may guard against them; thus mischief may be kept away.
III. We are not to suppose, however, that our course is to be one of continued success. There are many hindrances.
1. I may name, as the chief hindrance, the corruption of our hearts.
2. Connected with this hindrance is that which I may term the weakness of the flesh.
3. I pass on to that indifference to the truth of religious doctrines now so common amongst men. It leads men away from the contemplation of Christ. It makes them afraid to maintain their cause boldly before their fellows. Their minds become less affected with the sense of the preciousness of Jesus.
IV. I will not add any lengthened detail of the encouragements to seek this growth in grace. The certainty of success. Your Father which is in heaven will help you. (H. M. Villiers, M. A.)
Signs of growth in grace and motives inviting to it
I. By the grace of God we understand the favour or love of God; but in the Christian Scriptures it means that especial exertion of His love, which is applied to mankind as sinners, and to the recovery and final salvation of a guilty world.
II. what that is in which our growth in such grace may be discerned.
1. It may be in an especial manner discerned in humility. The virtue required of us is no abjectness of spirit. It is that heart which feels its own infirmities and sins.
2. An abjuration of our favourite sin.
3. A genuine love of virtue for the love of God, and a uniform preparation of heart against the various temptations which may assail us. If the first sparks of evil were quenched, how should they ever break forth into a flame? How shall he kill, who dare not be angry? Be adulterous in act, who does not transgress in desire?
III. Permit me to remind you of the solemnity and grandeur of the doctrines which your knowledge of Jesus Christ comprises. Say, therefore, whether this knowledge of your Lord and Saviour lead you not to those virtues which we have now been discussing, as adapted to your state of grace. Say whether under such a God anything can be so indispensably requisite as humility; whether under such a Saviour anything can be so required as abjuration of sin; whether under such a Comforter anything can be so becoming as firmness of heart; whether under such promise of forgiveness and of glory anything can come so directly from the soul as sorrow for our sin. (G. Mathew, M. A.)
The Christians improvement
I. The several steps and stages of the christians progress.
II. The necessity and advantage of this growth and improvement.
1. That our sincerity in religion can no otherwise be well approved.
2. Our perseverance cannot be ensured whilst we are at a stand.
3. As grace is the seed of glory, that seed must rise by gradual advances to its full maturity.
III. Some of the means whereby we all may be thus built up.
1. Since those habits of virtue which are essential to our improvement are contracted by a frequent repetition of single acts, let us by all means cherish the opportunities of exerting those acts.
2. Therefore we should work up our minds to a full persuasion that religion is the most important business of our lives. (N. Marshall, D. D.)
Growth in grace
I. It will appear to be highly reasonable, yea necessary, that you grow in grace, and that both in respect of yourselves and in respect of God. First, in respect of yourselves, and that upon this fivefold account.
1. Because your present condition which you are now in requireth it. It is true in the first creation of the world all creatures and species of things were made perfect. Trees and plants sprung up to their height at the first. But it is not so since either in nature or grace. Thus our state being imperfect here, and we coming not to a height at once, it is requisite that we increase our strength gradually; that is, that we be every day growing, and that we constantly make accessions to our feeble virtues and graces.
2. A continual growth in grace is very reasonable and necessary, because our duty is so large and comprehensive. The commandments of God are exceeding broad. Christianity especially is a vast work.
3. We cannot show the truth of grace in us unless we daily increase; for this is one great sign of it, and that an inseparable one. The true sons of Sion go from strength to strength (Psa 84:7). It is a sign of insincerity and unsoundness to sit down and rest satisfied with a mean degree of holiness. He was never good indeed, saith St. Bernard, who endeavoureth not to be better.
4. Growth in grace is necessary in order to joy and comfort.
But as growth and increase in grace are requisite in respect of ourselves, so, secondly, in respect of God, and that upon this fourfold account.
1. Because growth in grace is answerable to Gods expectation from us.
2. This is answerable to Christs design, as you read in Joh 15:5.
3. This is answerable to the means appointed by God and Christ, as praying, the Word read and preached, the blessed sacrament of the Lords Supper, the gifts and graces of others, holy conference, meditation, and the like.
4. By our growth in grace God is most signally glorified.
II. How You may examine yourselves as to this weighty matter, that you may know you are of the number of those persons who really grow in grace.
1. He that truly grows in grace hath a greater sense of his defects and failings than ever he had before. First, a greater sense of the shallowness of his understanding. Secondly, of the sinfulness of his life. In the first place, he daily grows more apprehensive of the defect of his knowledge. Again, if we grow in grace, we shall have every day a greater sight and sense of our sins.
2. Profound humility is an undeniable mark of a man that increaseth with the increase of God.
3. If your desires of grace increase, it is an argument that your graces themselves do so. The sharpness of the appetite is some indication of bodily growth and nourishment. If you experience these fervent longings, you may conclude that the graces of the Holy Spirit grow in you.
4. The true growth of a Christian is proportionable and uniform; by which I mean that he is one who grows in all his parts. The new man is not monstrous in its accretion.
5. You may know your growth in grace by the easiness you find in religion. You will certainly perform all duties with facility and dexterity.
6. There will be uneasiness and pain as long as you are hindered from religious exercises and holy duties. Lastly, if your conversation be in heaven, if your thoughts, desires, and longings tend thither, if you ardently wish to depart and to be with Christ, this is a good evidence of your growing in grace and goodness. But yet here great caution is to be used, lest you be mistaken in this important point which I have been treating of.
You must therefore remember these four things–
1. When I say that every true believer grows in grace, it is not meant that he doth so every moment or every hour of his life. As it is in the natural body, there may be some disease or malady that will retard the growth for a time.
2. All Christians have not a like growth.
3. All graces grow not alike in the same person.
4. Remember this also, that grace may grow insensibly sometimes; it may increase, but you may not perceive it.
III. To direct you to the use of those means whereby you may most effectually grow in virtue and godliness. You will certainly make great progress in religion by an uninterrupted exercise of your graces and by a constant performing of your duties. Think not highly of yourselves by reason of any progress you have made. For this may stop you, but it will never promote your farther proceeding. Set before you the examples of the eminent saints and servants of God. It will not be amiss to observe the practices and examples of the wicked. They stand not still, they increase in vice; like crocodiles, they grow as long as they live. Every day adds to their hatred of God and goodness, to their love of sill and vice, and to their dextrous practice of it. Lastly, observe how in all other things men strive who shall make the greatest proficiency, and let this be one help to further your growth in grace. You will find theft Christians are compared in the gospel to merchants, bankers, stewards, who are persons that are busy to increase their own or others estates. This may teach the professors of Christianity what they are to do, viz., to improve what they have. Add to your attainments, be they never so great.
IV. To press this duty won you by some cogent motives. (J. Edwards, D. D.)
Soul education
I. Soul education is growth. This implies–
1. That the soul is a vital existent. That soul education is a growth, implies–
2. That the soul is a vital existent possessing developable powers. There are living things theft have not the power of growth. Some, perhaps, have been created with their nature fully developed. There is no power in them of coming to any higher point. And others have passed through all the stages of development, and are exhausted. It is not so with the soul. Its potentialities are unbounded. Omniscience only knows what greatness of intellect, grandeur of character, splendour of achievements, come within the power of every mind, however humble. That soul education is a growth, implies–
3. That the soul is a vital existent, possessing developable powers, requiring developable conditions. The seed may contain a germinant power capable of covering continents with fields of golden grain; yet if it remains shut up in the granary, or buried under a rock, it will never be anything more than dry dust. It is so with the soul. Soul education, then, is growth. Not the growth of anything imparted to it, but the growth of itself; not the growth of any of its particular faculties, but the growth of its entire self, simultaneously and symmetrically.
II. Soul education is growth in Christ. Grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. These two words represent the two great elements by which alone tile human soul can be educated. Love and truth.
1. Christ is the ideal after which the soul is to grow.
2. Christs character is the element in which alone the soul can grow. His grace and His knowledge furnish the only atmosphere in which the human soul can healthfully live, thrive, and grow. (D. Thomas, D. D.)
Growth in grace
I. What is meant by growing in grace? To grow in grace is to increase in a spirit of conformity to the will of God, and to govern our conduct more and more by the same principles that God does.
II. Some things that are not evidences of growth in grace although they are sometimes supposed to be such.
1. It is not certain evidence that an individual grows in grace because he grows in gifts. We naturally increase in that in which we exercise ourselves. We may pray ever so engagedly, and increase in fluency and apparent pathos, and yet have no grace.
2. Growing in knowledge is not evidence of a growth in grace. In hell no doubt they grow in knowledge, but never in grace.
3. It is not evidence that a person grows in grace because he thinks he is doing so. A person may be favourably impressed with regard to his progress in religion, when it is evident to others that he is in fact declining.
III. Some things that are evidences of a growth in grace.
1. When an individual finds he has more singleness of heart, and more purity of motive in his conduct, it is evidence that he is growing in grace.
2. An individual who grows in grace is more and more actuated by principle, and less and less by emotion or feeling. By principle, in contradistinction from feeling or emotion, I mean a controlling determination in the mind to do right.
3. Another important evidence of growth in grace is more love to God. By this I do not mean that there will be in all cases a conscious increase of emotions of love to God, but that there will be a strengthening of real attachment to Gods character and government. And this increased attachment will evince itself in a growing veneration for all the institutions of religion, and for all the commands of God.
4. Another evidence of growth in grace is when a person increases in love to men as well as love to God.
5. Those who grow in grace feel more and more self-loathing. This is the natural result of having a clear view of God. It makes a person sink down in self-abasement.
6. An increased abhorrence of sin is another mark of growth in grace. When a person feels, day by day, less and less disposed to compromise with any sin, in himself, or in others, it is a sign that he is growing in grace.
7. He who grows in grace has less relish for the world. He has less and less desire for its wealth, its honours, its pleasures.
8. Increasing delight in the fellowship of the saints is another evidence of growth in grace.
9. He who grows in grace finds it more and more easy to exercise a forgiving spirit, and to pray for his enemies.
10. Growing more charitable is an evidence of growth in grace. But he is mere ready to ascribe a persons apparently wrong conduct to mistake, or misapprehension, or some other cause, than to direct evil intention.
11. Having less and less anxiety about worldly things is an evidence of growth in grace.
12. Becoming more ready to bestow property is a sign of growth in grace.
13. He feels less and less as if he had any separate interest. It is a great thing, in regard to growth in grace, to feel that all you have is Christs, and that you have absolutely no separate interest in living, or in dying, or in holding property, or children, or character.
14. It is an evidence of growth in grace when a person becomes more willing to confess faults to men.
15. Growing in grace raises a person more and more above the world. The growing saint regards less and less either the good or ill opinions of men. He feels that it is of little importance, only as it may affect his usefulness.
IV. How to grow in grace.
1. Watch against besetting sins.
(1) Levity.
(2) Censoriousness.
(3) Anger.
(4) Pride.
(5) Selfishness, in all its forms. Here is the great root of all the difficulty. This is the foundation, the fountain, the substance, and sum total, of all the iniquity under heaven. Watch here; look out constantly; see where self comes out in your conduct, and there set a guard.
(6) Sloth.
(7) Envy. If you see others going ahead of you in prosperity, in influence, or in talents, examine your feelings, and see whether you are pleased at it. If the sight give you pain, beware!
(8) Ambition. By this sin angels fell, and it is impossible to grow in grace without suppressing it.
(9) Impure thoughts. It is necessary to make a covenant with our eyes, and with our ears too, and all our senses, or they will prove the inlet of temptation and sin. If you find yourself in danger, turn your thoughts away instantly.
2. Another direction for growing in grace is, take care to exercise all the Christian graces. Exercise yourself especially in those things where you find yourself most deficient. If you are exposed to a particular sin, guard there. If you are deficient in a particular grace, exercise that.
(1) Suppose you are naturally worldly-minded, and in danger of being carried away by the love of the world. Shut down the gate, and determine that you will on no account add to your wealth, or lay field to field.
(2) Suppose you are in danger of being flattered and lifted up with pride. As a reasonable being you are bound to know this, and be on your guard.
(3) If you find that you are reluctant to confess your faults, break right over it, and confess to everybody that you have injured. Practise it on all occasions, till you get the victory.
3. Exercise decision of character. To walk with God a man must walk contrary to the course of this world. He must face public sentiment.
4. To grow in grace, a man must possess great meekness. If a man suffer himself to be fretted by opposition, and thrown into a passion by obstacles that are thrown in his way, he may rest assured that Satan will manage to keep him in such a state of mind that he will by no means grow in grace.
V. Some things that are evidences of declension.
1. The person who grows weary of being asked to give for promoting the kingdom of Christ is evidently declining.
2. Becoming backward to converse on the subject of religion, and particularly to converse on spiritual, and experimental, and heart-searching points, is evidence of declension.
3. When a person is less disposed to engage in the duties of devotion, public, social, or private, it is a sign of declension.
4. Taking more delight in public meetings than in private duties and secret communion with God, is another evidence of a declining state.
5. Feeling less delight in revivals of religion is a sad token of declension.
6. A person that becomes captious about measures used in promoting revivals is in a declining state.
VI. How to escape from a state of declension.
1. You must admit the conviction that you are in a state of declension.
2. Apply to yourself all that God says to backsliders, just as if you were the only individual in the world in that condition.
3. Find out the point where you began to decline. See what was the first cause of your backsliding, and give that up. You will often find this first cause where you did not expect it, in something which you called a little matter, or that you tried to make yourself believe was not a sin.
4. Give up your idols. If it be an article of property, dispose of it in some way; give it away, sell it, burn it, away with it, rather than have it stand between you and God.
5. Be careful to apply afresh to the Lord Jesus Christ for pardon and peace with God.
Remarks:
1. There is no such thing as standing still in religion.
2. The idea that persons grow in grace during seasons of declension is abominable. Their whole progress is the other way.
3. There are but few persons that do grow in grace. How many, instead of setting themselves resolutely to obey God, and setting their faces as a flint against all sin, passively commit themselves to the stream, and expect to be wafted home to glory in this lazy way, without the trouble of a conflict.
4. We see the great fault of ministers. How little pains they take to train up young converts.
5. Unless ministers grow in grace it is impossible for the Church to grow. Like priest like people is a maxim founded on principles of correct philosophy.
6. Great pains should be taken by young ministers to grow in grace.
7. It is just as indispensable in the promotion of a revival, to preach to the Church, and make them grow in grace, as it is to preach to sinners, and make them submit to God. (C. G. Finney.)
Soul culture
The words are suggestive of two thoughts: that growth implies life, and that life requires culture.
I. Life is characterised by receiving. There are four things indispensably requisite to the growth of plants. The elements essential to the growth of spiritual life are analogous.
1. There must be light. The Word of God is to the growth of a soul as necessary as light to vegetation.
2. There must be also heat. Knowledge without life- truth without love–resembles a frosty moonlight. Flowers open to the sun, and hearts open to Christ, when the constraining power of His love is felt as a burning heat. The soul must build its conservatory on the south side of the temple of truth. This will make the soul of the Christian a Divine sunflower.
3. Moisture is essential to the growth of plants. In rain and dew the tree receives those influences without which neither beauty nor fruitfulness can exist. What moisture is to vegetation the Spirit of God is to soul-growth.
4. To the growth and healthiness of vegetation there must be air. Of all common things, air is the most common. No space or place is accessible to us that is not filled with it. It is, of all material wants, that which is most indispensable to our existence. The character of a tree, plant, or flower will be determined by the air of the neighbourhood where it is planted. Impure air will affect the vitality of a plant as truly as it does the lungs of an animal. The life of God in the soul of man cannot thrive save in an atmosphere somewhat congenial with its heavenly character. It must move in an air higher and purer than that of earth. We must know what it is to have fellowship with the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ, and with His saints. To grow in grace we must surround our selves with the elements of a Divine life. The character and complexion of our daily life will be the natural result and outgrowth of the company we keep, the society in which we move, the religious atmosphere we breathe.
II. The second property of life is that of giving. The flower gives its fragrance and loveliness; the plant its nourishment and healing; the tree its shadow and fruit. The animal gives its strength of sinew, bone, and muscle. Man does the same, with the additional contribution of intellectual strength. Without this giving forth there would be no true or perfect development of life. The man that lives for self is a man of stunted growth. A Christian that lives for self is a spiritual dwarf. (A London Suburban Minister.)
A psalm for the New Year
I. A divine injunction with a special direction: Grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Grow in grace. What is this? It must be in the outset implied that we have been quickened by grace. Dead things cannot grow. Growth shall prove your life. Grow in that root-grace, faith. Seek to believe the promises better than ye have done. Let your faith increase in extent, believing more truth; let it increase in firmness, getting a tighter grip of every truth; let it increase in constancy, not being feeble or wavering, nor always tossed about with every wind; let your faith daily increase in simplicity, resting more fully and more completely upon the finished work of our Lord Jesus Christ. See to it that your love also grows. If ye have loved with a spark, pray that the spark may become an all-consuming flame. Ask that your love may become more extended–that ye may have love unto all the saints; more practical, that it may move your every thought, your every word and deed; more intense, that ye may become as burning and shining lights whose flame is to love God and man. Pray that ye may grow in hope, that the eyes of your understanding being enlightened, ye may know what is the hope of His calling, and what the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints; that ye may by hope enter into the joys of heaven while ye are on earth; that hope may give you immortality while you are yet mortal–may give you resurrection before you die. Ask that you may grow in humility, till you can say, I am less than the least of all the saints; that ye may grow in consecration, till ye can cry, For me to live is Christ: to die is gain; that ye may grow in contentment till ye can feel, In whatsoever state I am, I have learned therewith to be content. Advance in likeness to the Lord Jesus, that your very enemies may take knowledge of you that ye have been with Jesus and have learned of Him. Pray that ye may grow downward; that ye may know more of your own vileness, more of your own nothingness; and so be rooted in humility. As ye root downward, seek to grow upward. Send out the topshoot of your love towards heaven. Then pray to grow on either side. Stretch out your branches; let the shadow of your holy influence extend as far as God has given you opportunities. But see to it also that ye grow in fruitfulness, for to increase the bough without adding to the fruit is to diminish the beauty of the tree. We are not compared to trees, but to children. Let us grow as babes do, nourished by unadulterated milk. Steadily, slowly, but surely and certainly. Little each day, but much in years. But do ye inquire why and wherefore we should thus grow in grace? Let us say that if we do not advance in grace it is a sorrowful sign. It is a mark of unhealthiness. It is an unhealthy child that grows not, a cankered tree that sends forth no fresh shoots. More; it may be not only a sign of unhealthiness, but of deformity. If a mans shoulders have come to a certain breadth, and his lower limbs refuse to lift him aloft, we call him a dwarf, and we look upon him with some degree of pity. Now to grow may be, moreover, the sign of death. It may say to us, Inasmuch as thou growest not, thou livest not; inasmuch as thou dost not increase in faith, and love, and grace; and inasmuch as thou dost not ripen towards the harvest, fear and tremble lest thou shouldst only have a name to live and be destitute of life, lest thou shouldst be the painted counterfeit; a lovely flower-picture drawn by the painters skilful hand, but without reality, because without the life-power which should make it bud and germinate and blossom and bring forth fruit. Grow in grace, because to increase in grace is the only pathway to enduring nobility. Oh! would ye not wish to stand with that noble host who have served their Master well, and have entered into their eternal rest? But to grow is not only to be noble–it is to be happy. That man who stays growing refuses to be blessed. Forward is the sunlight! forward is victory! forward is heaven! But here, to stand still is danger; nay, it is death. O Lord, for our happiness sake, bid Thou us advance; and, for our usefulness sake, let us ascend. I have thus explained the Divine exhortation; but you perceive it contains a special injunction, And in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. We must see to it that we ripen in the knowledge of Him–of Him in His Divine nature, and in His human relationship to us; in His finished work, in His death, in His resurrection, in His present glorious intercession, and in His future royal advent. We must study to know more of Christ also in His character–in that Divine compound of every perfection, faith, zeal, deference to His Fathers will, courage, meekness, and love. Above all, let us long to know Christ in His person. This year endeavour to get better acquaintance with the Crucified One. Grow in the knowledge of Christ, then. And do ye ask me why? Oh! if ye have ever known Him you will not ask thai question. He that longs not to know more of Christ, knows nothing of Him yet.
II. A grateful thanksgiving, with a most suggestive termination: To Him be glory both now and for ever. Amen. The apostles very frequently suspended their writing in order to lift up their hearts in praise. Praise is never out of season, and it is no interruption to interrupt any engagement in order to laud and magnify our God. To Him be glory. Yes, to Him, ye atheists, who deny Him; to Him, ye Socinians, who doubt His Deity; to Him, ye kings, who vaunt your splendour, and will not have this man to reign over you; to Him, ye people, who against Him stand up, and ye rulers who against Him take counsel; to Him, the King whom God hath set up upon His holy hill of Zion; to Him be glory. To Him be glory as the Lord: King of kings and Lord of lords; Wonderful, Counsellor, the mighty God, the everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace. To Him be glory as Saviour. He alone hath redeemed us unto God by His blood; He alone hath trodden the wine-press, and cometh from Edom, with dyed garments from Bozrah, glorious in His apparel, travelling in the greatness of His strength. To Him be glory. Church of God respond! Let every pious heart say, To Him be glory. But the apostle adds now–to Him be glory now. Oh, postpone not the day of His triumph; put not off the hour of His coronation. Now, now; for now, to-day, He hath raised us up together, and made us sit in heavenly places with Christ Jesus. And for ever. Never shall we cease our praise. Time! thou shalt grow old and die. Eternity! thine unnumbered years shall speed their everlasting course; but for ever, for ever, for ever, to Him be glory. But, now, there is a conclusion to this of the most suggestive kind–Amen.
1. First, it is the desire of the heart, Behold, I come quickly; Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus. We say Amen at the end of the prayer to signify, Lord, let it be so it is our hearts desire.
2. But it signifies more than this; it means the affirmation of our faith. We only say amen to that which we really believe to be true. We add our affidavit, as it were, to Gods promise, that we believe Him to be faithful and true.
3. But there is yet a third meaning to this amen. It often expresses the joy of the heart. As you see King Jesus sitting upon Mount Zion with death and hell beneath His feet, as to-day you anticipate the glory of His Advent, as to-day you are expecting the time when you shall reign with Him for ever and ever, does not your heart say Amen?
4. But, lastly, amen is sometimes used in Scripture as an amen of resolution. It means, I, in the name of God, solemnly pledge myself that, in His strength, I will seek to make it so; to Him be glory both now and for ever. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Of growth in grace
I. How many ways may a christian be said to grow in Grace?
1. He grows in the exercise of grace; his lamp is burning and shining.
2. He grows in the degree of grace (Psa 84:7).
II. What is the right manner of a Christians growth?
1. To grow less in ones own eyes.
2. To grow proportionably–in one grace as well as another.
3. When a Christian has grace suitable to his several employments and occasions.
III. Whence is it that true grace cannot but grow?
1. It is proper for grace to grow; it is the seed of God.
2. Grace cannot but grow from the sweetness and excellency of it; he that hath grace is never weary of it, but still would have more.
3. Grace cannot but grow from a believers ingrafting into Christ; he who is a scion, ingrafted into this noble, generous stock, cannot but grow.
IV. What motives or incentives are there to make us grow in grace?
1. Growth is the end of the ordinances.
2. The growth of grace is the best evidence of the truth of it.
3. Growth in grace is the beauty of a Christian.
4. The more we grow in grace, the more glory we bring to God.
5. The more we grow in grace, the more will God love us.
6. What need have we to grow in grace? There is still something lacking in our faith. Grace is but in its infancy and minority, and we must still be adding a cubit to our spiritual stature.
7. The growth of grace will hinder the growth of corruption. As some plants have an antipathy, and will not thrive if they grow near together, as the vine and the bay tree: so, where grace grows, sin will not thrive so fast.
8. We cannot grow too much in grace; there is no excess there. The body may grow too great, as in the dropsy; but faith cannot grow too great: your faith groweth exceedingly; here was exceeding, yet not excess. As a man cannot have too much health, so not too much grace.
9. Such as do not grow in grace, decay in grace. Not to advance in the path of life is to return.
10. The more we grow in grace, the more we shall flourish in glory.
V. How shall we know whether we grow in grace?
1. The signs of our not growing in grace, but rather falling into a spiritual consumption.
(1) When we have lost our spiritual appetite.
(2) When we grow more worldly.
(3) When we are less troubled about sin.
2. The signs of our growing in grace.
(1) When we are got beyond ore former measures of grace.
(2) When we are more firmly rooted in religion, rooted in Him, and established: the spreading of the root shows the growth of the tree.
(3) When we have a more spiritual frame of heart. More spiritual in our principles, affections, and performance of duty.
(4) When grace gets ground by opposition. The fire, by an antiperistasis, burns hottest in the coldest season. The martyrs zeal was increased by persecution. Here was grace of the first magnitude.
VI. What shall we do to grow in grace?
1. Take heed of that which will hinder its growth–the love of any sin.
2. Use all means for growth in grace. It is better to grow in grace than gifts; gifts are for ornament; grace is for nourishment, to edify others, to save ourselves.
VII. How may we comfort such as complain they do not grow in grace? They may mistake; they may grow when they think they do not. The sight Christians have of their defects in grace, and their thirst after greater measures of grace, makes them think they do not grow when they do. Let Christians be thankful for the least growth. If you do not grow so much in assurance, bless God if you grow in sincerity; if you do not grow so much in knowledge, bless God if you grow in humility. If a tree grows in the root, it is a true growth; if you grow in the root grace of humility, it is as needful for you as any other growth. (T. Watson.)
Christian growth
The command is that we enlarge ourselves; that we pass up by graduation from one class to another class in the great school of life, of action, of understanding. The injunction pre supposes that we are capable, that we have faculties susceptible of being disciplined and trained. It pre-supposes that we are intelligent and ambitious after good, and desirous of higher attaimnent. The germ idea contained in the word education is that of leading forth the natural capacity of the man. An educated person is a person who has been led forth, or brought out, or developed from what he was into something larger, and fuller, and more complete. Moral education is, there fore, the leading forth of the moral capacity of man. Human nature is a nature of capacity; it is susceptible of great development in any direction and toward any state of being. It can be led out toward the good or toward the bad; can be made to seek its affinities among the high or the low. It can be influenced toward heaven or it can be influenced toward hell. As far as we can see, there is no limit to this development of mans capacity. The whole human machinery impresses one in its every part with the idea of motion, and the assertion that the mind and soul will ever come to a dead standstill, whether here or in the hereafter, is one repugnant to the very genius of their construction. The endless activity of God, according to its capacity to receive it, seems to have been imparted to His last and finest creation, man. Now, this marvellous being, whose capacity of growth is endless, is located in the midst of a thousand incentives of growth. Regard him simply as an animal, and what that he needs does the earth and the air refuse him for food? Look at him, as a student, as an embodiment of mental faculties, and behold how multitudinous are the objects that elicit his inquisition. The earth on which he walks swells with problems that challenge solution; the air he breathes is charged with forces and combinations of elements which provoke him to analysis. Contemplate him as a social being, and see in the midst of what quickening and vital associations he lives. Love, sympathy, tenderness, mercy, pity–each through its own channel sends down its crystal stream to swell the tide of his ever-widening life. Or examine him in his spiritual connections. What capacity of moral discernment do we not find in him? What magnificent equipment of sensibilities is his; what profound depth of life he has; what energy to aspire, what power to feel, what force to execute, what ability to acquire impressions distinguish him? The education of such a being must be, to every thoughtful mind, one of the gravest subjects within the whole range of human inquiry. The worst thing that any man can do is to think of himself as a creature of little value. I care not how ordinary you may be in your own eyes; I care not how little gifted you may be as others might judge, still I beg you to remember that you are of the highest dignity in the eye of your Maker. It is safe to say that there is not a creation of God, there is not a combination permitted by Him, the object of which is not mans education. You are to look upon the whole world in all its growths, in all its ever-revolving changes, as ordained for your instruction and assistance. There is not a tree, there is not a spire of grass, there is not even a daisy-head that you passed this summer in the fields, that was not created and put in growth and bloom for you. Wisdom as to these is wisdom as to God, and he is wisest as regards the Creator who comprehends most clearly all the use and relation of created things. Now, bearing these things which we have suggested in mind, we submit to you, if the appliances for the leading forth of your nature, in all manner of admirable ways, is not a matter of wonder and gratitude. If you will put yourself in connection with all these helps, so bounteously given; if you will only co-operate with the agents and agencies devised in your behalf, how can your natures fail to be daily enlarged by what is about you? Who can say what knowledge a babe gets out of its mother by feeling with its little hands about the mothers face? This we must remember also, that we are not educated along one line or by a single contact with men, but along many lines and by means of association with many. Hence God groups us. Like stars, men are clustered in constellations, and move on in systems, mutually attracting, mutually repelling each other. There is no education equal to that which a man or woman can get in the sweet school of family life. It is the school in which love should be master and mistress. In it the only law known should be that of affection; the highest privilege, that of serving. This family life may be lived in humble circumstances, as men count surroundings; but its influence on your soul may be as precious, and the results as happy, as if you had lived within the sentinel-guarded doors of a palace. As Christianity enlarges the domain of its sovereignty over men, this family principle gets wider and wider application. The ties of blood cease to bound the limits of affectionate regard, and a spiritual brotherhood unites you to a larger circle. Ultimately the whole race will be kin to each member of it. In order that this education of human nature may go forward unto its complete triumph, it is necessary that every organisation, every form of government, and the entire social structure, should be of a pro, per kind. There is no pressure that can be brought to bear upon a man more potent than that of organisation. If the organisation of the family be wrong in its spirit, in its tone and temper, then will each member of the family be wrong in his or her tone and temper. A. family whose government rests on the principle of force, of authority that speaks only by the infliction of punishment, will make children in it cowardly, hypocritical, and brutal. A Church whose organisation rests on a bigoted foundation will make its members bigoted. The influence of its pulpit, and even of its prayers, will educate men and women into narrowness of thought and harshness of opinion. You cannot base a Church of Christ on anything less wide, less liberal, less sympathetic, than the heart of Christ. Education is thus for ever progressive, and the human mind at the dawn of each generation goes in search of the undiscovered as birds go forth from their groves with the coming of every morning to canvass the fields for their food, and feel in the movement of their flight the joy of a fresh experience. Thus you see that education includes the idea of growth. The educated man is the grown man. He has grown out of old forms of thought into new ones. He has left one plane of feeling and been lifted to a higher plane. That which was difficult for him to understand has become plain. He walks as those who walk in the light. Christianity, as measured by its effect on humanity, if properly interpreted and understood, is movement. It builds no permanent encampment for its followers. Its army is for ever on the march, and every night finds them in a new camp-ground. We must remember that we are all school-children in spiritual education. We are not far advanced–we are on the lower benches, and are sitting at the feet of the Master. We are not studying the high sciences of God. We are not able to fathom the deep things of His will. We are only being instructed in the first lessons of good manners. We are only being taught, here and now, how to behave. By and by, when we have learned how to behave, when we have become obedient, cheerful, patient, and good; by and by, when our spiritual senses have become organically so developed as to create a hunger for finer knowledge, and have begun to long to see the things that eye hath not seen, and to hear the things that ears have never heard, God will lift us and honour us with higher seats where the older scholars sit, and we shall begin to be wise as well as good. For this education of which I am talking, this leading out of mans moral faculties, is a thing not of to-day, nor a movement of time as men count time; it is a thing of the ages. It is a movement which rolls itself on into eternity. As to extent, there is no end to it. I close with this word of cheer. The theme suggests it. Whatever your state spiritually may be, you need not remain in it. You can grow out of that state into a better one. You who have failed can grow out of your failure into success. You who are despondent can grow up into the condition of hopefulness. You who are sad God will lift into joy. You who are in the midst of sin can be redeemed out of that sin, and become upright. You who are weak in the structure of your virtue can be braced with the bands of everlasting power. The heavens are full of attractions, and by their sweet might you can be lifted until you stand higher than the stars. (W. H. H. Murray.)
Growth in grace
I. What is it to grow in grace.
1. The Christian should be ambitious to increase in the number of his graces.
2. We should grow in the measure of our graces.
3. We should grow in the use of our graces.
II. Why growth in grace should be sought.
1. Because God has afforded a variety of helps to promote it.
2. As we are otherwise in continual danger of losing what we have already obtained.
3. Our advancement in glory will be in proportion to our present improvement in grace.
III. How growth in grace is to be attained.
1. Ascertain that the good work is really begun.
2. Cherish a lively sense of your imperfections.
3. Carefully avoid whatever would hinder your growing in grace.
4. As you must be diligent in the use of the means of grace, so you must take care not to place any confidence in them. (S. Lavington.)
Growth in grace
I. A sense of insufficiency is an indispensable prerequisite to growth in grace.
II. But a self-renouncing dependence on divine help must not be allowed to supersede or to slacken your own endeavours.
III. Growth in grace is a process which cannot go on without sooner or later manifesting itself by its fruits.
1. A growing reliance on Christ.
2. Increasing power over temptation.
3. The increasing influence of conscience.
4. Increasing disinterestedness of religious feeling.
5. Increased complacency in thinking of death and eternity. (J. M. McCulloch, D. D.)
Grow in grace
1. In growing better, the first thing is to become good; or rather this is preliminary to all improvement. The foundation must be laid before the building can rise. No digging about and enriching, no ever so auspicious alternation of sun and shower can bring forward a plant which has no life in it. Yet in morals this is what some are endeavouring to do; they would feed death and cultivate sterility. The sinner must pass from the state of nature to that of grace before he can grow in grace.
2. Then the soul being born again, the principle of spiritual life being communicated to it, it must have nourishment in order to grow; the principle of spiritual life is not independent of aliment any more than that of animal life. Now truth is the nutriment of the soul, and it must be taken, or the soul will not grow, and in a little while will cease to live. They say it is no matter what a man believes, or whether he believes anything, so he but practises aright, which is as if one would say, it is immaterial what a man eats or whether he eat at all, so he but lives. Can he live without eating, and eating wholesome food? If error is not injurious, poison is not; and if ignorance is not hurtful, starvation is harmless. The man who is indifferent to the interests of truth is also to those of virtue. It is impossible to love the one without loving the other. Truth is the principle and pabulum of virtue. The Word of God must be understood, believed and meditated on, and especially its testimony concerning Christ, otherwise there can be no growth in grace.
3. The exercise of the moral powers and gracious dispositions in you is essentially necessary to their growth and expansion. How can one grow in benevolence or in compassion unless he obeys its dictates? in temperance unless he habitually practises temperance? how increase in humility unless he frequently, humble himself? And as they cannot be exercised without trials and afflictions, hence the necessity of these to the growth of those virtues and the perfection of the human character. God is the author, upholder, and finisher of good in us. No use of means, and no making of exertion are of any avail without His secret, spiritual efficiency; hence a spirit of dependence on God must be cultivated and exercised, and hence is prayer an indispensable means of growth in grace. The Holy Spirit is promised only to them who ask Him.
5. Watchfulness is another important means of growth in grace. The plant of grace requires the most anxious attention and the most constant care. It has many enemies–some that grub the earth, and some that infest the air–and it is exposed to many evil influences. It must be assiduously watched.
6. Christians are members of a mystical body of which Christ is the head, and from Him, in consequence of this connection, they derive strength, grace, nourishment, and every needed good. Now faith is the bond of this union, and the stronger the faith, the closer the bond, and the more free the communication. Hence, if one would grow in grace, he must habitually exercise faith in Christ, and increase in faith.
7. Striving against sin is all-important to growth in grace and holiness.
8. Sensual indulgence is a formidable foe to growth in grace; and, when carried far, is incompatible with its existence. Hence the necessity of abstinence and self-denial.
9. The love of the world is another enemy to holiness. There is a wonderful moral efficiency in the Cross of Christ to destroy this inordinate affection.
10. Finally, the promises exert a sanctifying influence when contemplated and applied (2Pe 1:4). (W. Nevins, D. D.)
Growth
I. There is such a thing as growth in grace. I do not for a moment mean that a believers interest in Christ can grow. I do not mean that he can grow in safety, acceptance with God, or security. I only mean increase in the degree, size, strength, vigour, and power of the graces which the Holy Spirit plants in a believers heart. I hold that every one of those graces admits of growth, progress, and increase. I hold that repentance, faith, hope, love, humility, zeal, courage, and the like, may be little or great, strong or weak, vigorous or feeble, and may vary greatly in the same man at different periods of his life. One principal ground on which I build this doctrine of growth in grace, is the plain language of Scripture. Your faith groweth exceedingly (2Th 1:3). We beseech you that ye increase more and more (1Th 4:10). Increasing in the knowledge of God (Col 1:10). Having hope, when your faith is increased (2Co 10:15). The Lord make you to increase in love (1Th 3:12). That ye may grow up into Him in all things (Eph 4:15). I pray that your love may abound more and more (Php 1:9). We beseech you, as ye have received of us how ye ought to walk and to please God, so ye would abound more and more (1Th 4:1.) Desire the sincere milk of the Word, that ye may grow thereby (1Pe 2:2.) Grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ (2Pe 3:18). The other ground on which I build the doctrine of growth in grace, is the ground of fact and experience. What true Christian would not confess that there is as much difference between the degree of his own faith and knowledge when he was first converted and his present attainments, as there is between a sapling and a full-grown tree? His graces are the same in principle; but they have grown. Let us turn away to a more practical view of the subject before us. I want men to look at growth in grace as a thing of infinite importance to the soul.
1. Growth in grace is the best evidence of spiritual health and prosperity. In a child, or a flower, or a tree, we are all aware that when there is no growth there is something wrong.
2. Growth in grace is one way to be happy in our religion. God has linked together our comfort and our increase in holiness. He has graciously made it our interest to press on and aim high in our Christianity.
3. Growth in grace is one secret of usefulness to others. Our influence on others for good depends greatly on what they see in us.
4. Growth in grace pleases God. The husbandman loves to see the plants on which he has bestowed labour flourishing and bearing fruit. It cannot but disappoint and grieve him to see them stunted and standing still (Joh 15:1; Joh 15:8). The Lord takes pleasure in all His people, but especially in those theft grow.
5. Growth in grace is not only a thing possible, but a thing for which believers are accountable.
II. There are marks by which growth in grace may be known.
1. One mark is increased humility.
2. Another mark is increased faith and love towards our Lord Jesus Christ.
3. Another mark is increased holiness of life and conversation.
4. Another mark is increased spirituality of taste and mind.
5. Another mark is increase of charity.
6. One more mark is increased zeal and diligence in trying to do good to souls.
III. The means that must be used by those who desire to grow in grace.
1. One thing essential to growth in grace is diligence in the use of private means of grace.
2. Another essential is carefulness in the use of public means of grace.
3. Another essential is watchfulness over our conduct in the little matters of every-day life.
4. Another essential is caution about the company we keep and the friendships we form.
5. There is one more thing which is absolutely essential to growth in grace, and that is regular and habitual communion with the Lord Jesus. (Bishop Ryle.)
Christian life a growth
I. The heart must become rooted in living, Christ-like principles.
II. The Christian religion is to be cultivated.
III. Due attention must be given to the law of spiritual development.
IV. The law of growth works its purpose through changing seasons.
V. The growing life will manifest itself. (W. Currrie.)
Growth the test of Christian life
The want of growth is the want, generally speaking, of organisation. Rocks do not grow, soil does not grow. Growth belongs to the higher stages of development, and as things grow, not by accretion, but by definite formation, by their growth we judge of their vitality. When anything ceases to grow its end is near. Any man that has ceased to grow is waiting for his undertaker, and the longer he has to wait the greater is the pity for everybody about him. There are, of course, in so compound a creature as man, several concentric circles of growth. There is bodily growth, but that usually takes care of itself, and needs no exercitation. Then there is physical culture, a growth not in dimensions alone, but in other ways. One may develop strength; it may be increased by his purpose. One may develop activity; one may develop skill of hand or alertness and quickness of foot. This is the lowest form of growth, and yet the lowest growth even of the body is a worthy one, and justifies our endeavour. A healthy and well-developed body is a chariot fit to carry a heros soul. To grow up in good sound health, without violation of the great canons of morality, and with the law of moderation fixed upon every appetite and passion, is itself no insignificant ideal for a young man or woman. But, then, we are familiar, in this land where education is almost an atmosphere and a byword, with growth in intelligence and knowledge. These two things are very different. Intelligence implies a certain condition of the knowing faculties. Knowledge is the fruit of intelligence. There is just as much difference between them as there is between skill and the product of skill, or between husbandry and the harvests that husbandry can produce. A man may have intelligence and scarcely any knowledge. A man may have a good deal of knowledge and hardly any intelligence. But where one has both intelligence and knowledge, and is growing in them both, that is a transcendently noble thing. It is the direct tendency of intelligence and knowledge to produce morality. I declare that education, or the development of the knowing parts of a man, gives him so large a view of the field of life that he is more likely to see that morality is safety than if he were ignorant; and that the general fact stands proved that intelligence and knowledge tend, on the whole, by immense measure, toward goodness, respectability, virtue, and morality. So if we grow in aptitude for intelligence and knowledge we shall make a long stride away from animalism, and from the dangers that beset the passions and appetites of human life. Now, while bodily growth, intellectual growth, and growth in knowledge are to be esteemed, and are not to be thrown into the shade by any misconception of the value of grace and religion, I affirm that the highest growth, because it is the one that carries all these others with it more or less, or blesses them, is growth in grace. Self-sacrifice, that is one element of it. Meekness and humility are other elements of it. Good nature, which is called kindness in the text of Scripture, is another element of it. Easiness to be entreated is one of the elements of growth. In regard to that manhood which springs from the activity of our highest spiritual and moral functions, in regard to this eminent spiritual-mindedness, I must say that it does not belong to the cave nor to the cloister. The serene wisdom of love, and the guidance of Gods presence with a man, will prosper him more, in the long run, in every relation of life, than the turbulent wisdom that springs from vanity, from pride, from avarice, from passion. Men adopt a lower form of power when they undertake to carry out the ends of life by the selfishness that prevails in human society. It requires more skill in the beginning to wield this higher power–to learn the trade, that is, of piety in its application to life. It also requires more time for reaping the fruit. Some harvests are sown in autumn, and the sun leaves them; but they come to ripeness next summer. Some things can be sown in spring and reaped before midsummer. In regard to moral and spiritual elements, it takes more time to develop them and procure their final results in secular wisdom than it does to take the lower and superficial forms and achieve success, but when once they are established they do not go back. A man that fears and loves God, and therefore stands intact under the temptations of life, men will give large premiums to get. It is ripening growth that is demanded. In other words, it is not enough for our religion that we have revivals of it; it is not enough that we have flashes of any or all of these spiritual feelings and experiences. What is wanted is, that they shall become steadily a part of us and abide in us, so that they constitute our character. Then growth in grace amounts indeed to a sure victory. The piety that comes and goes is better than nothing–scarcely more than that; but the higher spiritual qualities of a mans nature that abide with him, and grow stronger, and throw their roots deeper, and take hold on life with more multiplied hands, are the qualities that constitute the true man. When such things shall have been thoroughly developed, the stability and habitualness of the highest Christian experiences will work spontaneity. The minds action in this channel will become automatic. Then, too, there will be harmony. It will not be simply a few feelings that will run in this line, but the whole soul. Like an orchestra well trained, it will be harmonious, and will increase in force from year to year. For while prophecy and teaching and knowledge do not abide, while we are in the childhood of the human race, and know everything only in fragments and parts, there are some things that death itself does not change. We are told that they are faith, hope, and love. These go on ineradicable and unchangeable. Such men walk with God. If you liken human life and development to a dwelling, the lower story is on the ground, and made of clay. How roomy and how full of men that live next to the dirt! Above that, however, is a story of iron. There are men of energy, and of a ruling purpose irresistible, seeking and gaining their ends at all hazards, and this story is populous too. The next story is dressed in velvet and carved wood, and here are they that dwell in their affections, and are brought together by the sympathy of a common gentleness and kindness, but on the lower levels of life. Above that is a room of crystal and of diamonds, and there are but few that dwell in it. From its transparent walls one may behold the heavens and the earth. Out of it men may see the night as well as the day–men who live a life so high, so pure, and so serene that they may be said to dwell at the very threshold of the gate of heaven itself. (H. W. Beecher.)
Growing in grace
It is implied that we are not perfect in grace, that there is wide room for growth. Another thing implied is that we may and can grow if we will. God knows our abilities and our inabilities, our dispositions and indispositions, the moral outflow and the moral recoil, and, knowing all, He says, Grow in grace.
I. Directions. How to grow in grace? We cannot but remember that growth, to be real and healthy, must be free. It may seem, therefore, an impertinent thing to interpose directions at all. But in truth we do not interpose them with any authority. We shall bring them, such as they are, within sight. Use them if they are suitable. If not, find other modes more akin with your spirits life. Only grow.
1. Might not one try this among other things, at least for a little while–say for one week–that one shall take a strong morning thought concerning it.
2. Then, in the next place, let there be an actual arrangement of things, in so far as he has the power–of the employments and circumstances of the day–with express view to the accomplishment of this the supreme purpose.
3. If in the general review and arrangement of the life some things are found, perhaps in the very structure of it, or hanging closely to the structure, which are seen to be hindrances, then let them be laid aside without reserve, without delay. A thing may not be a sin, and yet it may serve the sinful cause as effectually as if it were. If you planted apple trees in your orchard in the hope of feasting your eyes in a while with their wealth of blossom and heaping your baskets with the sweet-smelling fruit, would you hang weights on the branches to see how much they would bear and still grow? Would you gather up the withered branches and hook them on to the fresh green ones? If you did they might not kill them, but would they not mar the beauty, would they not hinder the growth? It may seem to be hardly necessary to say anything regarding the renunciation of sin as such. We have spoken of hindrances both slight and serious. Now let me say that a man should hold himself ready to take all gracious helps for gracious growing. These helps are manifold and very near. It is therefore exceedingly important that the soul should be in a receptive state. Everything about the kingdom of grace is in such a state of readiness that in a moment God can give help if the soul is prepared to take it. Now to be ready does not mean having an assemblage of great thoughts in the mind. It does not mean having the feelings or the frame of the heart in a theological or so-called evangelical state. It means being humble and looking up with desire to God. One more hint. It is this. That we should maintain a constant connection with the fountain-head of grace in God by everything which constitutes prayer. Gods windows are open. Gods fountains are flowing. Gods lights are streaming, and His vital airs are breathing forth, and every prayerful spirit will catch a double measure of those heavenly gifts and treasures as they come.
II. Inducements.
1. The first is the ease with which this growing can be accomplished when we heartily incline to it. If we would but hold ourselves in simplicity in the garden of God, and abide where we are planted, by His rivers of water, the fruit would be in season and the leaf would never wither.
2. Another inducement is found in the principle of necessary growth which belongs to every rational soul. We must grow in something, and if not in grace, you know in what the growth will be. Ye therefore, beloved, beware, lest ye also, being led away with the error of the wicked, fall from your own steadfastness. And now, when you see the danger, how are you to act to avoid it? Grow in grace. That will keep you safe and well in the right faith, in the right practice. If we do not believe the truth and grow in that we shall soon be heretics, holding fallacies, believing lies. If we do not love the Lord Jesus Christ, and grow by that pure and infinite affection, the longing, unportioned heart will soon have another in His place. It will wind itself, like the ivy, around anything that comes, be it no better than mouldering wall or rotting tree, rather than live in vacuity or sink into utter negation. We must grow; then let our growing be in lily-like beauty, in cedar strength, in smell as Lebanon. Every other kind of growth is uncertain, limited, transient. But growth in grace is for ever; there is nothing in grace which indicates, far less necessitates, decay. It is for every place; for land and sea, for earth and heaven. It is for all time, now and evermore. It is for the whole nature of man–body, soul, and spirit. (A. Raleigh, D. D.)
The growth of grace
I. What is meant by their growing in grace.
1. They must exercise grace more constantly.
2. Uniformity as well as constancy is implied. Some shine in one grace and some in another, while very few shine in all the beauties of holiness.
II. Why growth in knowledge is necessary in order to the growth in grace.
1. Knowledge tends to increase their obligations to grow in grace. The knowledge of duty always increases an obligation to do it.
2. Divine knowledge not only increases the obligations of Christians to grow in grace, but actually increases the holiness of all their holy affections. The degree of holiness in every exercise of love to God is always in proportion to the light or knowledge which the person has at the time of exercising that particular grace. A Christian has a much clearer and more extensive view of God at one time than at another, and his love is always virtuous in exact proportion to the degrees of his present knowledge. One exercise of faith is more virtuous than another, because the believer may have much greater knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ at one time than he has at another. The same holds true of submission, joy, gratitude, and every other Christian grace. The celebrated Howard, who spent his property and his life in relieving the objects of charity in Britain and in various other parts of Europe, was a man of benevolence, and his benevolence was in proportion to his knowledge. As he had a far more extensive view of the miseries of mankind than Christians in general, so his exercises of kindness and compassion were much more virtuous than theirs towards similar objects.
III. The importance of their growing in both these respects.
1. The honour of religion requires Christians to grow in knowledge and grace. Though the men of the world are disposed to despise religion, yet they are constrained to respect it in those professors who appear to be both knowing and growing Christians.
2. It is of great importance that Christians should grow both in knowledge and in grace, not only on the account of others, but on their own account.
(1) For, in the first place, their growth in these respects will be the most effectual security against the gross and dangerous errors to which they are continually exposed in their present imperfect state.
(2) Growth in knowledge and grace will happily tend to remove darkness and doubts from the minds of Christians.
(3) Furthermore, growth in knowledge and grace will prepare Christians for the delightful and acceptable performance of every duty.
(4) It is, finally, of great importance that Christians should make continual advances in knowledge and grace to prepare them for the closing scene of life. If they neglect to improve their minds in knowledge and their hearts in holiness they may expect to live in bondage and die in darkness, for Christians commonly die very much as they live.
Improvement.
1. If knowledge be necessary to promote the growth of grace, then the most instructive preaching must be the most profitable.
2. If religious knowledge be conducive to the growth of religious affections, then that religious conversation among Christens is the most useful which is the most instructive.
3. If Divine knowledge has a tendency to promote all the Christian graces and virtues, then growing Christians have an increasing evidence of their good estate. (N. Emmons, D. D.)
Growth
I. I ask, first, into what we are to grow? Now, the Revised Version throws some light upon the connection of the two things specified in my text by a very slight but significant alteration. It reads, grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour. Both are connected with Him; He is the source of the grace; He is the object of the knowledge. Thus we get the thought that all our Christian progress, in its deepest meaning, consists in penetrating more deeply into Christ, and what He has and is. We hear a great deal about progress in these days; and very much of it consists in departure from Jesus Christ. Those of us who know and possess most of Him have but a drop from the great ocean; one sparkle from the star; a pittance from the storehouse. We have an infinite treasure, and our growing wealth consists in our pressing further into its rooms filled with bullion, and taking more and more of Him into ourselves. For, again, the true notion of Christian progress consists in the growing reception of a gift. We advance, not by our own unaided efforts. Reception is growth; and the more we open our hearts to receive, the more we advance in the Christian life. Instead of toilsomely trying to struggle up the steep mountain, we are borne up on wings as eagles. Hence the blessed distinctive mark of Christian progress is that, in the midst of the most strenuous efforts, there may be perpetual calm. To have more of Christ–that is growth. But if we look at the two points which the apostle separates here, a word may be said about each of them. Our reception of Jesus Christ is a growing reception of His grace. Now, grace here seems to mean, not so much His undeserved love to inferiors, as the consequences of that love in His gifts to us. Or, to put it into other words, what is meant by the grace of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ in this connection is the bestowing upon us, in our spirits, that we may work them out and manifest them in our lives, all the excellences and virtues of a Christlike character. And I lay this on your hearts, that growth in grace is not so much the blessedness of private, personal experience, or the welling up of certain emotions in heart and mind, as conduct in the life, aspiring after, and showing in exercise whatsoever things are lovely and of good report. If these things be in you, and grow in you, you are growing in grace. Then consider the other side of this exhortation–grow in the knowledge of Christ. That probably concerns mainly what we call intellectual processes, and yet not altogether. For if it is a Person that is known, then the process of knowing cannot be altogether a mere matter of dry brain-work. It may be enough to begin the Christian life that a man should have but a little acquaintance with Jesus Christ, but there is not enough to keep it up unless that acquaintance is ever growing, becomes tenderer, deeper, quieter, more assured, more impossible to be ever altered. There is no fear of exhausting Christ! But we may look at this exhortation in a slightly different way. Grow in the knowledge of Jesus Christ means not only grow in personal acquaintance with Him, but grow in the perception of the truths which are embodied in His person and work. Now, there is a great deal of so-called progress in Christian knowledge which largely consists in getting away from the initial truths and going out into other regions. That is not growth; that is decay. For the initial truths are the most important truths, and when a man has learned that God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whosoever believeth on Him should not perish, but have everlasting life, he has learned what only needs to be pondered upon and followed out, and above all lived by, in order that it shall open into a boundless universe of truth and wisdom. Progress into Christ is like that of the bee that buries itself more deeply into the flower, and draws honey from its innermost recesses. First Christ may be seen as but a speck, then He is a disc of brightness in the dark, and then he is a flaming sun that lightens all the sky.
II. How are we to grow? My text is a commandment; therefore growth comes through our own efforts. Now, there are many metaphors in the New Testament for this conception of Christian progress. One set of them represents it as being spontaneous, automatic, effortless. As, for instance, when our Lord says, First the blade, then the ear, then the full corn in the ear , there is no effort there. But that is only one side of the truth. Another side to the answer to the question, How we are to grow? is involved, as I have just said, in the fact that we are commanded to do so. So, very characteristically, when the Apostle Paul speaks of this same subject he rarely uses the metaphor of growth. And what are the figures which he prefers? The race, which implies strenuous strain of the muscles, and is not to be won without effort, dust, and sweat. The fight, for there is resistance to be faced and overcome. With these figures my text falls in, and suggests that there can be no growth in the Christian life without strenuous endeavour. No doubt the progress of the Christian life consists mainly in reception, but reception is not passive. If you do not hold the cup out, it will not be filled. What, then, have we to do? First, and mainly, to keep very near to our Lord. Communion with Jesus Christ is the secret of all growth. If we are close by Him, He will pour Himself into our hearts. Food is needed for growth. If a Christian starves his soul by neglecting to feed on the bread which came down from heaven, no wonder that he is stunted. Exercise is essential for growth. Unused muscles atrophy, like the fakirs arm that has been held up for twenty years in one position, and now is stiff and rigid as a bar of iron. Use the grace that you have, and practise the truth that you are sure of, and the grace will grow and other truths will be made clear.
III. Lastly, what happens to us if we do not grow? My text begins with a but, and that throws us back to what goes before. The connection which is thus established is very noteworthy and monitory. Beware lest ye also fall from your own steadfastness; but grow. So, then, the only way to prevent falling is growth; and if you are not growing, you are certainly falling. No weight will stand at rest on an inclined plane. If it is not being hauled up it will be hurtling down. The student who is not advancing in his science will forget what he has learned. Water that stagnates gathers a scum. The talent that is wrapped in a napkin rusts; and the oxidising diminishes its weight and also dims its brightness. I feel ,that all our churches are full of cases of arrested development. Let me put a plain question: Are we more like Jesus Christ than we were a year ago? Let us remember that the process of growth begun here will go on for ever. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Growth
I. The characteristics of growth.
1. The first characteristic of growth that we would notice is its silence. It is of all things the most calm, the most quiet, the most dignified. Whatever else may give rise to agitation and commotion and excitement, it is not spiritual growth. To this the analogy of nature clearly points. This the Great Teacher Himself flatly affirms. The Kingdom of God, He says, cometh not with observation. Silently the Spirit of Truth makes use of the instrumentality of the truth in communicating to our nature that life without which we know not what it is to live. Silently the same Spirit helps us to draw from the storehouse of the truth the nourishment that is needful to sustain and strengthen the life that has been given. Thus it is that the process of spiritual growth begins, and thus it is that it is carried onward and forward toward a higher and fuller development.
2. A second characteristic of growth is, that it is a gradual process. People sometimes feel discouraged by the littleness of their attainments in the Christian life and the tardiness of their spiritual growth, and too often there is cause for humiliation on this score; but, for my part, I would prefer the slowest rate of progress that is compatible with growth to that unnatural rapidity of development that is sure to fall into rapid consumption. If the progress of the cornstalk which comes to maturity in a few months be scarcely measurable at the interval of a week, and if the progress of the oak tree which comes to maturity in a century or more be barely observable in a year, what are we to say of that spiritual growth which shall not be consummated and completed until all the cycles and the aeons of eternity have run their course, and become buried in the bosom of the infinite past? If the interval at which progress may be measured and ascertained is to be lengthened in proportion to the period of growth, how long must that interval be in the case of the Christians advancement in the life divine?
3. There are many other characteristics of growth, but of these we shall mention only one, and that is the tendency of growth whenever found to develop in a definite direction. Nature has a certain model or type to which the growth of the seed must conform. And she keeps that before her, and to the best of her ability she builds up blade and stalk and ear after the fashion of this particular model. So it is with the acorn. It grows after a long lapse of years into an oak. This is the type toward which nature was working all the time. To the filling up of this model the growth of the tree always tended. So it is with everything else in nature. So it is with the Christian. Spiritual growth is in a definite direction. It tends to a perfect type. It advances in the direction of Christ.
II. This brings us naturally to consider in the next place the conditions of growth.
1. There is first the condition of previous life. As well expect a corn seed to grow into an oak as expect the man who is destitute of spiritual life to grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. How does that life become ours? It is not ours by nature. It is ours only in union with Christ.
2. The other condition of growth to which we would refer is the presence of favourable surroundings, or to put it in the language of modern science, the existence of an appropriate environment. Spiritual life is what you might call a hardy plant. It will grow in almost any situation, in castle and cottage, under peasants roof-tree, under monarchs dome, in the shop and the counting-house and the study, in the factory and the market, and the farm. But when all this has been allowed, it must still be admitted that neither soft nor atmosphere in this world is such as to ensure a perfect growth. The perfect type cannot be cultivated in this unsuitable soil and in this unfavourable climate. It needs to be transplanted to another sphere, to a more kindly soil and to a more congenial clime before the perfect ideal can be approached or approximated. Meantime it is our duty and our privilege, by Divine grace, to make the most of the circumstances in which we find ourselves here. But further, we are to grow in the knowledge of Christ. And how do you grow in the knowledge of a person? By associating with him. By attending carefully to the different way in which he reveals himself. If you would know Christ you must make Him your constant companion and counsellor, you must speak with Him, and above all you must hear Him speak with you. (W. J. Lowe, M. A.)
The means of growth in grace
I. The ordinances of the new testament are means of improvement in religion.
1. Divine revelation, by its influence on the understanding, the heart, the will, and the conscience of man, in every condition of life, promotes the Christians growth in holiness, in comfort, and in usefulness.
2. The sacraments are means of improvement in religion.
3. Conversation among private Christians is one of the means of growth in knowledge, in holiness, and in usefulness. It is itself a part of our religious enjoyments; and the means of increasing both the desire and the capacity for more enjoyment.
4. Prayer.
II. Judicious reflections upon our personal concerns, in the light of Divine revelation, have a great influence upon our religious improvement.
1. Let us consider the sinfulness of our disposition and deportment.
2. A due consideration of Gods providence respecting us tends to our personal progress in true religion.
3. Meditations on the love of God are conducive to the improvement of the Christian character.
4. Judicious reflections upon our own mortality, and the future state which we are daily approaching, have a tendency to prepare us for both.
III. Divine influences are required and employed in the progressive improvement of the saints.
1. The Spirit presents to the saints the proper objects of pursuit.
2. The Spirit directs the affections of the heart to spiritual objects.
3. Divine influence strengthens the saints for every duty.
Conclusion:
1. I observe that there are different degrees of gracious attainments, and I urge upon all ranks the duty of further progress–Grow in grace.
2. Be not discouraged although your progress in religion is neither as uniform nor as rapid as you first expected it should actually prove. (A. McLeod, D. D.)
Growth in the grace of Christ
1. Have we not need to grow in the lowliness of Christ?
2. The unselfishness of Christ is brought out by the evangelists in a striking manner.
3. An uncompromising enemy of Pharisaism and all hypocrisy, there was not the slightest taint of cynicism or misanthropy in Christ.
4. Notice one more outstanding feature in the character of Christ–His beautiful enthusiasm in the cause–that is, our cause–which He has espoused. Such an example of joyful self-sacrifice the world never witnessed before, and never will do again. Grow in the grace of Christ, that is, if true Christians, we have the grace of Christ in some germinal measure: but that is not enough, there must be growth in it, and continual growth in it. To a sincere follower of Christ there can be no contentment with partial growth. (W. Skinner.)
Growth in grace by ordinary means
This higher life is attained and maintained chiefly by the diligent and right use of ordinary means–prayer, praise, worship, reading the Word, etc. Extra means may stimulate, but they do not largely feed; hence, those who principally depend on the irregular, the sensational means, are always spiritually poor and feeble. The stimulant is in excess of the nutriment, and is followed by reaction and exhaustion. All Gods highest and best works are accomplished by ordinary means, by light, and heat, and moisture; by regular and orderly growth. The thunder, whirlwind, and flood, though useful at the time, yet contribute but a small share in effecting the grand result of Natures processes. It is so in the spiritual world. The thing most needed is not extra means, but extra diligence in the use of ordinary means. (R. Chew.)
And in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.—
Growth in grace and knowledge
The best persons have need of improvement. The possibility of growing in grace will be readily admitted by the true Christian. But what is meant by growing in the knowledge of Christ?
1. By the knowledge spoken of, first, we may understand the evidences of the Christian religion.
2. But that knowledge in which Christians should grow may be taken to include, or even to consist of, a familiar acquaintance with the contents of the Bible, both historical and prophetical, doctrinal and practical.
3. There is a species of knowledge in its very nature progressive, and which above all other knowledge it concerns us to acquire; I mean self-knowledge. Our growth in this will also cause us to grow in the knowledge of Christ, and show us the need we have of a Redeemer. But there is another branch of self-knowledge equally proper for man to study; I mean not the weakness of his nature, but the strength. As none ever pushed his capacity for intellectual improvement as far as it was able to extend, so in matters of morality, few or none ever exerted their strength as far as it would have carried them in the pursuit of virtue. (A. Gibson, M. A.)
Growing in the knowledge of Christ
I. What it is to grow in the knowledge of Christ.
1. The knowledge of Christ is of the greatest excellency. Other kind of knowledge is like light from the stars; this like beams from the sun. To know Christ assimilates and makes us like Him.
2. The knowledge of Christ is of absolute necessity.
3. The knowledge of Christ is by supernatural revelation.
4. The knowledge of Christ was communicated in a degree under the Old Testament.
5. The revelation of Christ under the New Testament is more clear. Therefore to be ignorant of Him is the more without apology.
6. All true believers in Christ have some knowledge of Him (Rom 10:14).
7. Those who know most of Christ know Him but in part. Therefore are they to be urged to grow in knowledge.
(1) Growing in the knowledge of Christ implies a fuller apprehension of His Godhead.
(2) A clearer sight of His humanity.
(3) A more plain discerning and full persuasion that He was foreordained to be a Redeemer.
(4) A greater insight into His sufferings.
(5) A more fruitful eyeing of His resurrection and going to His Father.
(6) Greater satisfaction about His imputed righteousness.
(7) A more constant and fiducial eyeing of His intercession, and the pity and compassions of Him that intercedes.
(8) Being better acquainted with His great power, and continual presence with His Church which is so nearly related to Him.
(9) A better understanding of Him as Mediator of the New Covenant.
(10) A more earnest looking for His appearing.
II. What properties are required in this knowledge.
1. This knowledge of Christ should grow more and more certain.
2. It should more and more humble the Christian.
3. It should grow more spiritual.
4. It should encourage to a more settled reliance upon Him.
5. It should raise Him higher and higher in Christians estimation.
6. It should have a great aspect upon whatever else is revealed in the Word of God.
7. It should be operative still in a greater measure.
8. It should cause great glorying and joy.
III. How to increase and grow in the knowledge of Jesus Christ.
1. Be sensible of your remaining ignorance.
2. Compare all other knowledge with this, and see the vast difference in point of excellency.
3. You must not lean to your own parts and understandings.
4. Heedfully attend to the word of the truth of the gospel.
5. Look unto Jesus Himself (Col 2:3).
6. Cry for more knowledge, and eye the promise of the Spirit of wisdom and revelation.
7. Take heed of seducing spirits.
8. Abstain from worldly and fleshly lusts.
9. Associate yourselves with those who have a great measure of the knowledge of Christ.
10. Let your end in desiring a greater degree of the knowledge of Christ be right. Not that you may be puffed up in your own minds, or admired of men; but that Christ may be more admired and esteemed by you.
Improvement.
1. TO unbelievers.
(1) Christ is willing to receive the very worst of you, upon you returning and believing.
(2) Christ is willing to give Himself to you.
2. To saints.
(1) Improve the knowledge of Christ with reference to God Himself.
(2) To the law of God.
(3) To sin.
(4) To angels both good and bad.
(5) To this present world.
(6) To duties, grace, and perseverance.
(7) To comfort. (W. Vincent, M. A.)
Growth in the knowledge of God
To increase in the knowledge of God is distinctly commanded, not in this passage alone, but in very many. The progress of the mind in the knowledge of physical truth, scientific truth, depends very much upon the exercise of the senses upon matter; but the growth of knowledge in moral truth depends upon the exercise of moral feelings. While sense is the source of physical or scientific knowledge, disposition is the source of the knowledge of moral truth. Growth in the knowledge of a Divine Being unites both of these.
1. The earliest knowledge which we have of Divine existence is derived, undoubtedly, from teachers And parents. It differs, therefore, in children, according to the instruction which they receive. It is ampler or scantier, it is more wisely or less wisely imparted, according to circumstances. If the notion entertained by children could be analysed, I think it would be found to consist largely of the social and moral qualities which exist in the family, framed and bordered with their imaginations, in which physical qualities largely inhere.
2. I suspect that the next stage of growth consists in clothing these abstract notions, which we gain very early, and which are taught out of catechisms, with the facts of the history of the Lord Jesus Christ as they are narrated by the evangelists. So that it may be said of hundreds of people, that their God is literally, yet entombed in the Bible. They do not use these records as building materials out of which to develop an ever-increasing conception of heavenly excellence.
3. But if one be of a devout nature, and he be earnestly alive to moral growth, then his reading and his childhood instruction, after being subject to reflection, to mental digestion, will carry him forward one step further in the growth in the knowledge of God. His conception of the Divine nature will begin to enlarge and fill out in every direction if only there is a real, active, earnest moral life going on within him. In this work the imagination will be the architect, reason will be the master-builder, and the materials will come largely from experience. Mens minds are magnets. One man going into the Bible, or into the realm of experience, his mind seeks that which shall feed his strongest faculties–his ideality, his self-esteem, his conscience, and his reason; and he draws those elements out, and leaves all the others. He sees those, and feels those, and he is astonished if anybody can resist the evidence which is so irresistible to him. He has a Calvinistic conception of God which is overwhelming to him, and to every other man who is organised just as he is. But here is another man that stands near him whose magnet draws another kind of filings, and who is just as true to himself. He has an inward want of a conception that is all beaming, and genial, and sweet, and tender. He does not disbelieve in righteousness, nor in conscience, nor in law, nor in government; but he is relatively insensitive to these as he is sensitive to those other elements. This mans constitutional endowment draws to him all that goes to make up this partialism, and he is amazed to hear one talk so like a fool as his brother does. He has read the Bible, and he has seen no such evidence as that which his brother professes to have seen. Why, to him it is as clear as noonday that God is all summer. A third man, standing and looking upon these disputants, says, They are fools, both of them. I do not think God cares much about government, or much about this benevolence. It seems to me that God is a lover of things in order, full of taste, full of proportion, and full of harmony. He is all music, and all blossom, and all beauty as I conceive Him. That part of this mans mind which craves these things being most sensitive, he takes just that class of materials. His magnet draws those things and no others.
4. There is a powerful influence at work in the formation and growth of the knowledge of God as derived from experience. If a person lies sick, to him all the world is cut off, all hopes are ended, all life seems sad. He does not turn to the jubilant side of God. He turns to those sides on which God declares that He comforts the sorrowing as a mother comforts her children. Another person is put in circumstances by Gods providence where he needs perpetual nerve and perpetual enterprise. The sterner, the more active elements of the Divine nature, are congenial to his want and to his experience. And so he ponders these most, and comes to these most. Is one discouraged? He looks for something in his God that shall encourage him. Is one sad from remorse and repentance? He looks to the forgiving side of God. Is one set to defend the truth in a period of backsliding and persecution? He instinctively goes after the prophets God.
5. One of the most powerful influences, aside from those which I have mentioned, for the shaping of our conceptions and the development of our knowledge of God, is the necessity or the attempt to employ the Divine nature in the rescue and education of our fellow-men. To bring the Divine nature home to all the phases of character which surround us, to all the conditions of life, and to the subjugation of the strong attributes of the mind; to find men just where they are in all their infinite variations of condition; to find that which arrests their attention; to find that which shall inspire in them some moral reaction; to find that which shall feed them–this is one of the most potential of all influences for developing in you the growth of the Divine idea. For there is no material like human nature, and there is no dignity like working in it, and there is no grandeur like success in thus working. It is declared that he who saves a soul from death shall shine like the stars of the firmament in the future kingdom of God. These are the principal ways that suggest themselves to me in which we grow in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. And if we be living Christians, true men, we are growing. Our conception of the Divine nature never remains at the same stage for any considerable length of time. It is enlarging itself by experience; it is enriching itself by the position and circumstances in which we are placed, so that no man can compass in words what he believes of God. If he believes all things that come through his intensified affections, through his various wants, and through the wants of those round about him, these, methodised by reflection, and vitalised by imagination, constitute an air-filling notion of God, so vast and so continually changing that anybody would say, It is impossible for a man to write what he thinks or to say what he thinks–as we should suppose it would be if God is infinite and is overflowing according to the conception which the thought of infinity inspires. And so every creative mind, every active mind, that is really in union with God, by prayer and affinity, and is working like Him, as well as with Him, and day by day is still augmenting in these various ways his realisations of God, having the Divine spirit in him, and growing evermore up into Him in all things, who is the Head, Jesus Christ–every such man has a growth of which he himself is not conscious, and which he never can and never could represent to others. This view should lead persons to study and consider what their condition is whether they have any living influential conception of God. You have been taught that He is the Ruler, that He is the Governor. Is He your Guide? Is He your Master? Is He your Friend? Is He your Companion? Does He smile on you? Does He converse with you? Is He the Toiler with our toil? Does He rest when you rest, and travel when you travel? Do you live and move and have your being in Him? If so, you have a God, and you have reason for endless congratulation and joy. One evidence that we have a true conception of God is, that it is growing. Why, the whip that stood before my door has become a bush; and the bush has become a large shrub, and the shrub is mounting up into a tree, and the tree shall yet spread its branches wide abroad. And that little germ which first came up, and that vast tree, are the same, although they have differed every year more and more by development and growth. And so does our conception of God grow abroad, multiplying its branches, and sub-dividing them into infinite twigs, but they all cohere in the unity of the original idea of conception. Growth does not imply the abandonment of our former notions, then. It is simply the unfolding, in a line or direction, more, not less, and differing, not by rejecting one element and inserting another, but by making each element that was true yesterday more true to-day by fulness, variety, and application in all directions. And this variety, renewing multiplicity and intensity of conception, is of more benefit to man than are selectness and definiteness of statement. That which you see most in God I am not bound to beat down because I see another quality more than you see it, and do not see the one that you see as much as you see it. Men are the complements of each other. Some men interpret God through beauty. They are my brothers, though I may be deficient in interpreting the Divine nature through this quality. I am your brother, though I may not gain the same conception of God that you do. One stands in Milan Cathedral, under the nave, and looks up into those mysterious depths until he seems as though he would exhale and fly into space. There, in the brooding darkness, the feeling of reverence weighs upon his very soul. And the Milan Cathedral to him is that which it seems to be when the low-lying sun has shot through the window and kindled the whole interior. At the very same moment there stands upon the roof another man, and about him are those three thousand statues carved and standing in their several niches and pinnacles; and everything looks like the bristling frost-work in a forest of icicles; and far above and far on every side swell the lines of beauty. How different is his conception from that of the man who stands in the nave below! But, at the same time, a man stands outside looking at the cathedrals fretted front and its wondrous beauty and diversity; while a fellow-companion and traveller is on the other side looking also at the exterior. Here are four men–one before the structure, one behind it, one on the roof, and one in the interior I and each of them, as he gives his account of the Milan Cathedral, speaks of that which made the strongest impression upon his mind, and that most carried him away. But it takes the concurrent report of these four men to represent that vast work of architecture. Is it so with a man-built cathedral? and shall it not be so with the mighty God who is from eternity to eternity? Is there any man that can take the reed of his understanding and lay it along the line of Gods latitude and longitude as if he were measurable as a city? Is there any man that can cast his plummet into the depths of the Infinite and say, I have sounded God to the bottom? Each man has that conception of God which he is capable of receiving. This is added to the common stock. And it is these concurrent differences, these harmonious separations, that make the symphony of knowledge. We do not want unison: we want harmony. Harmony is made by different parts, and not by the repetition of the same sounds and tones. (H. W. Beecher.)
Growth in the knowledge of Christ
At first sight it would appear as if Peter had inverted the natural order of things when he puts growth in the knowledge of Christ, after and not before, growth in the grace of Christ. How can we grow in the grace of Christ if we do not first possess a knowledge of Him? To know Christ, in the highest sense of that word, we must first seek to grow in the grace which distinguished Him so signally among the children of men. I stand with a great artist before a famous picture. I make bold in my ignorance of art to confess that I can see nothing extraordinary in it at all. What, exclaims my companion, somewhat indignantly but with great enthusiasm, dont you observe the splendid manipulation? and forth he launches into a glowing analysis of the picture before us. While he is explaining I can discern more clearly than I did before what made the picture famous in the eyes of others, but yet at the close I had to exclaim, Well, my friend, I have no doubt I would speak as you have done if I had your eyes, but I confess I dont see what makes you so enthusiastic. I should much like, however, to possess your knowledge and enthusiasm, and shall be glad if you will only show me love. There is only one way of possessing the knowledge, replies my companion; you must begin to learn the first elements of drawing and colouring, and as you progress in the acquisition of the art of painting you will know. Without striving to grow in the graces of the painters pencil, you will never understand the feelings of the painter himself. Turning now to moral qualities we are not infrequently surprised by the strength and the beauty of character which some of our fellow-creatures display. Here is one with a spirit which nothing can ruffle or disturb. To us, so easily provoked, so hasty to resent, so strong in speech not seasoned with salt, that person is a mystery. There is but one way to a knowledge or understanding of this man. We must begin where he began, by curbing the hasty passions of the heart, by continuous efforts to return good for evil, and then, by striving, to grow in his grace, we will be in a position to grow in knowledge of him. So it is with regard to the knowledge of Christ. If any man will do His will, he shall know of the doctrine. Before we can be said to know the spirit, the life, of our Master, or enter upon the full possession of the truths He came to reveal, we must first strive to grow in the grace of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. By knowledge of Christ it will be seen that we mean such an entering into sympathy with the springs and motive forces of His life as shall, by its gradual increase, lead us into the perfection of spiritual life.
1. Those who have had much to do with newly-quickened souls, or those who can recall the first experiences of the Divine life within their own hearts, will bear me out in this, that love to Christ is, at such a time, the one absorbing passion of the soul. The mind seems able only to grasp one truth–and it is a grand one–Jesus so loved me that He gladly endured the shame and agony of the Cross in order to save me. Love is the first beautiful impulse of the heart. It is the root of all the virtues. It may be blind in the first stages of its existence, but it soon attains, at least, to partial vision–vision which will grow from more to more if rightly used. We often love each other impulsively, but there is little harm done if the impulse will but lead up to reason. But the test of growth in the knowledge of Christ is when we love Him for what lie is in Himself, and not so much for what He has done. The latter is not free from a taint of selfishness. Applying this test to Christ, do I love Him most because He is the incarnation of virtue and goodness? Then is my love not altogether worthy of Him. It has, at any rate, lost the alloy of impulse and selfishness, so apt to spoil the most precious ore of the heart.
2. The soul does not long remain under the genuine influence of Christ when it learns that to live like Him is better than simply to love Him, however ardently. It is necessary that the Saviour should be first revealed to the sinner in the first act of salvation, but once this is accomplished the Teacher sent from God leads the soul up from himself, so to speak, to a knowledge of the Holy Ghost and God the Father. When adopted into the family of God, we have many graces lying dormant, and not a few faculties impaired or withered by courses of sin. We need the Holy Ghost to quicken those graces in life, and to put new life into those withered faculties. This fact we will come to recognise only when comparing our lives with that of Christ: we then see our barrenness and emptiness. Love for Him will lead us in that case to desire to be like Him. But to live the life of Christ we need a nature balanced and sustained like His. How shall we reach this most desirable state of life? By the influence of the Holy Spirit alone. He will take the things of Christ and show them unto us. But to live this life, what is it? Simply this. I recognise that God has given me powers and virtues as well as the opportunity to exercise them, and that, therefore, He means me to use them for some purpose. Now, what is that purpose? The answer is found in Christ. Here is a Divinely inspired and quickened life; how is it spent? In making sorrow less, in making joy more to abound. That is the simple philosophy of the life of Christ. This then is to be my life–a continual expenditure of vital forces in order to complete the work which Christ began–the redemption of the whole world from the blight of sin. Can any grander conception of life enter your imagination? Did we but possess more of the spirit of our Master we would gladly suffer a daily crucifixion if thereby we could bless the race. Yes, a true-hearted heroic man will always consider that good service is infinitely better than joy which is selfish, and will therefore look upon life as the vantage ground of Divine service and not of selfish pleasure. This we learn; up to this state we may hope to climb by growing in the knowledge of Christ.
3. Life, then, to us should not, and in fact does not pass like a dream of bliss. No one who has eyes to see can ignore the cruel wrongs, the sickening spectacles of lust and crime with which the world is full. No one with ears to hear can deny that the air is full of discords, and the ear is often stretched and strained in vain to catch the under tone of harmony which some hope and some allege may be heard underneath. The penalty of growth in true life is growth in care, mental perplexity, and pain. The more we know, the more of mystery there is to us, the more Christ-like we are, the more sensitive we become to the desolation which sin has wrought in this beautiful world of ours. Hence we come to recognise the need of another truth which most likely has not hitherto come prominently in view–that for our life to be vigorous and well sustained under all circumstances we must have our faith firmly grounded in the Fatherhood of God. Resting by a firm faith on the omnipotence, the unerring wisdom, the infinite love of God, the heart will bravely face the blinding storm of life, heroically grapple with its mysteries, and hush its doubts and fears with the inspiring whisper, The Father reigneth. (W. Skinner.)
On growth in the knowledge of Christ
I. To give some account of the knowledge of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
1. The knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ is necessary to salvation.
2. The knowledge of Christ is attained by the study of the Holy Scriptures.
3. The saving knowledge of Christ is effectually obtained by the teaching of the Holy Spirit.
4. The knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ is desirable and delightful.
II. What is implied in growing in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ; or what of Christ His disciples should grow in the knowledge of.
1. They should grow in the knowledge of the Person of Christ.
2. Believers should grow in the knowledge of the love of Christ.
3. They should grow in the knowledge of the perfection of the righteousness of Christ.
4. They should grow in the knowledge of the word and way of Christ.
III. To specify some of the evidences that the disciples of Christ are growing in the knowledge of Him.
1. He will be rising higher and higher in the estimation of your souls.
2. You will be growing in a filial dependence on Him.
3. The more you grow in the knowledge of Christ the more you will be assimilated to His glorious image.
4. The more you grow in the knowledge of Christ you will the more cheerfully worship, honour, and obey Him. (John Jardine.)
Increase in the knowledge of Christ
When the Pilgrim Fathers first came to America they did not discover all–the iron, the coal, the natural gas. So with Christ. There are many needs in us of which the young convert dreams not. (D. Watson.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 18. But grow in grace] Increase in the image and favour of God; every grace and Divine influence which ye have received is a seed, a heavenly seed, which, if it be watered with the dew of heaven from above, will endlessly increase and multiply itself. He who continues to believe, love, and obey, will grow in grace, and continually increase in the knowledge of Jesus Christ, as his sacrifice, sanctifier, counsellor, preserver, and final Saviour. The life of a Christian is a growth; he is at first born of God, and is a little child; becomes a young man, and a father in Christ. Every father was once an infant; and had he not grown, he would have never been a man. Those who content themselves with the grace they received when converted to God, are, at best, in a continual state of infancy: but we find, in the order of nature, that the infant that does not grow, and grow daily, too, is sickly and soon dies; so, in the order of grace, those who do not grow up into Jesus Christ are sickly, and will soon die, die to all sense and influence of heavenly things.
There are many who boast of the grace of their conversion; persons who were never more than babes, and have long since lost even that grace, because they did not grow in it. Let him that readeth understand.
To him.] The Lord Jesus, be glory – all honour and excellency attributed, both now – in this present state, and for ever, , to the day of eternity – that in which death, and misery, and trial, and darkness, and change, and time itself, are to the righteous for ever at an end: it is eternity; and this eternity is one unalterable, interminable, unclouded, and unchangeable DAY!
Amen.] So let it be! and so it shall be! Though this word is wanting in some reputable MSS., get it should be retained, as it has here more than usual authority in its support.
Subscriptions to this epistle in the VERSIONS:
The end of the Second Epistle of Peter the apostle. – SYRIAC.
The Second Epistle of Peter the apostle is ended. – SYRIAC PHILOXENIAN.
Nothing in the printed Vulgate.
The end of the epistles of blessed Peter the apostle, the rock of the faith. – ARABIC.
The Second Epistle of Peter is ended; and glory be to God for ever and ever! – AETHIOPIC.
Nothing in the COPTIC.
The end of the Second catholic Epistle of St. Peter. – COMPLUTENSIAN POLYGLOT.
The end of the Second Epistle of St. Peter. – BIB. LAT., edit. antiq.
Subscriptions in the MANUSCRIPTS;
Of the second of Peter. – CODEX ALEXANDRIUS, and CODEX VATICANUS.
Of the catholic epistle of Peter. – CODEX EPHREM.
The Second Epistle of the holy Apostle Peter. – Other MSS.
WE have now passed over all the canonical writings of Peter that are extant; and it is worthy of remark that, in no place of the two epistles already examined, nor in any of this apostle’s sayings in any other parts of the sacred writings do we find any of the peculiar tenets of the Romish Church: not one word of his or the pope’s supremacy; not one word of those who affect to be his successors; nothing of the infallibility claimed by those pretended successors; nothing of purgatory, penances, pilgrimages, auricular confession, power of the keys, indulgences, extreme unction, masses, and prayers for the dead; and not one word on the most essential doctrine of the Romish Church, transubstantiation. Now, as all these things have been considered by themselves most essential to the being of that Church; is it not strange that he, from whom they profess to derive all their power, authority, and influence, in spiritual and secular matters, should have said nothing of these most necessary things? Is it not a proof that they are all false and forged; that the holy apostle knew nothing of them; that they are no part of the doctrine of God; and, although they distinguish the Church of Rome, do not belong to the Church of Christ? It is no wonder that the rulers of this Church endeavour to keep the Scriptures from the common people; for, were they permitted to consult these, the imposture would be detected, and the solemn, destructive cheat at once exposed.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
But grow in grace; in all those spiritual gifts ye have received from Christ, especially sanctifying.
And in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ; in faith, whereby ye are sanctified, and made partakers of that grace.
To him be glory both now and for ever; which belongs only to God; and therefore this proves Christ to be God.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
18. growNot only do not “fallfrom” (2Pe 3:17), but growonward: the true secret of not going backward. Eph4:15, “Grow up into Him, the Head, Christ.”
grace and . . . knowledge of. . . Christ“the grace and knowledge of Christ”[ALFORD rightly]: thegrace of which Christ is the author, and the knowledgeof which Christ is the object.
for everGreek,“to the day of eternity”: the day that has no end: “theday of the Lord,” beginning with the Lord’s coming.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
But grow in grace,…. In the gifts of grace, which, under a divine blessing, may be increased by using them: gifts neglected decrease, but stirred up and used, are improved and increase. And though men are to be thankful for their gifts, and be contented with them, yet they may lawfully desire more, and in the use of means seek an increase of them, which may be a means of preserving themselves, and others, from the error of the wicked. Moreover, by “grace” may be meant internal grace. The work of grace is gradual; it is like a grain of mustard seed, or like seed cast into the earth, which springs up, it is not known how, first the blade, then the ear, then the full corn in the ear; saints are first babes, and from children they grow to young men, and from young men to fathers. There is such a thing as growth in grace, in this sense; every grace, as to its act and exercise, is capable of growing and increasing; faith may grow exceedingly, hope abound, love increase, and patience have its perfect work, and saints may grow more humble, holy, and self-denying: this is indeed God’s work, to cause them to grow, and it is owing to his grace; yet saint, should show a concern for this, and make use of means which God owns and blesses for this purpose, such as prayer, attending on the word, and looking over the promises of God, for an increase of faith; recollecting past experiences, and looking to the death and resurrection of Christ for the encouragement of hope, and to the love of God and Christ, for the stirring up of love to both, and to the saints; considering the sufferings of Christ, the desert of sin, and the glories of another world, to promote patience and self-denial, and the pattern of Christ, to excite to humility; though “grace” may also intend the Gospel, the knowledge of which is imperfect, and may be increased in the use of means, and which is a special preservative against error, a growth in which saints should be concerned for:
and [in] the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ; of his person, office, and grace, than which nothing is more valuable, and is to be preferred to everything; it is the principal thing in grace, and is the beginning and pledge of eternal life, and will issue in it; for an increase of which, and a growth in it, the word and ordinances are designed; and nothing can be a greater security against error than an experimental growing knowledge of Christ. The Syriac version adds, “and of God the Father”; and so some copies read:
to him [be] glory, both now, and for ever; or “to the day of eternity”; that is, to Christ, who is truly God, or otherwise such a doxology would not belong to him, be ascribed the glory of deity, of all divine perfections; the glory of all his offices and work as Mediator; the glory of man’s salvation; and the glory of all that grace, and the growth of it, together with the knowledge of himself, which saints have from him; and that both in this world, and that which is to come.
Amen; so be it.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
But grow ( ). Present active imperative of , in contrast with such a fate pictured in verse 17, “but keep on growing.”
In the grace and knowledge ( ). Locative case with . Grow in both. Keep it up. See on 1:1 for the idiomatic use of the single article () here, “of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.”
To him (). To Christ.
For ever ( ). “Unto the day of eternity.” So Sirach 18:9f. One of the various ways of expressing eternity by the use of . So in John 6:5; John 12:34.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
1) “But grow in grace.” (de auksanete) “But (in contrast with falling) grow ye” (Greek en chariti) “in grace,” the unmerited favor of God given, Rom 11:6.
2) “And in the knowledge.” (kai gnosei) “and knowledge, understanding, or comprehension.” Joh 5:39; Act 17:11.
3) “Of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.” (tou kuriou hemon) “of the Lord or Master of us.” Peter made claim to Jesus Christ as his Lord and his (Greek soteros) “savior or deliverer.” He thus identified himself in a joint, intimate, spiritual affinity with the beloved Asia minor brethren of his addressed letter, the unnamed churches in Asia.
4) “To him be glory.” (auto he dokai) “to Him (is or exists) glory,” (self existent) Luk 2:9; Luk 2:14; Luk 2:30-32.
5) “Both now and forever. Amen.” (kai nun kai eis) “even now and continuing hereafter into” (hemeran aionos) “a forever day of age,” or lasting without cessation — What glory! Rev 5:9-13; Eph 3:21.
GLORY TO HIS NAME
Down at the cross where my Saviour died, Down where for cleansing from sin I cried, There to my heart was the blood applied; Glory to His name.
I am so wondrously saved from sin, Jesus so sweetly abides within, There at the cross where He took me in; Glory to His name.
Oh, precious fountain that saves from sin, I am so glad I have entered in; There Jesus saves me and keeps me clean; Glory to His name.
Come to this fountain so rich and sweet; Cast thy poor soul at the Saviors feet; Plunge in today and be made complete; Glory to His name.
Glory to His name, Glory to His name; There to my heart was the blood applied; Glory to His name.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
18. But grow in grace. He also exhorts us to make progress; for it is the only way of persevering, to make continual advances, and not to stand still in the middle of our journey; as though he had said, that they only would be safe who labored to make progress daily.
The word grace, I take in a general sense, as meaning those spiritual gifts we obtain through Christ. But as we become partakers of these blessings according to the measure of our faith, knowledge is added to grace; as though he had said, that as faith increases, so would follow the increase of grace. (186)
To him be glory. This is a remarkable passage to prove the divinity of Christ; for what is said cannot belong to any but to God alone. The adverb of the present time, now, is designed for this end, that we may not rob Christ of his glory, during our warfare in the world. He then adds, for ever, that we may now form some idea of his eternal kingdom, which will make known to us his full and perfect glory.
END OF THE SECOND EPISTLE OF PETER
(186) “Grace” is the attainment, and “the knowledge” of Christ is the way and means. The chief thing is often mentioned first in Scripture, then that which leads to it: or the cause of it. — Ed.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
2Pe. 3:18 But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. To him be the glory both now and forever. Amen.
Expanded Translation
But rather than falling from your own stedfastness, you must keep on growing (increasing, enlarging) in that way of living which gains the grace (favor, acceptance) and knowledge (understanding) of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. To him be the glory (praise, honor) both now and forever (literally, unto the day of eternity).
But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ
The word grow (auxano) is in the present imperativecontinue growing! Peter wished Gods grace upon them at the beginning (2Pe. 1:2), but he wants it to be increased. He also wants them to grow in knowledge (gnosis), one of those virtues mentioned in the cluster found in 2Pe. 1:5-7, which was to be yours and abound (2Pe. 1:8), Thus Peter is not saying his readers had no grace or knowledge, but that these should and must cause them to increase!
to him be the glory both now and forever
Literally, unto (or for) the day of eternity, i.e., for all time, forever (Thayer). That day shall be a day indeeda day that shall never end!
Fuente: College Press Bible Study Textbook Series
(18) But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord.Or, But grow in the grace and in the knowledge of our Lordi.e., it may mean the grace of our Lord as well as the knowledge of our Lord. But the Greek is not decisive on this point; and the rendering in our version avoids the awkwardness of coupling a subjective and objective genitive together by and. For the grace of our Lord must mean the grace of which He is the giver; while the knowledge of our Lord must mean the knowledge of which He is the object. Rom. 15:4 and 1Pe. 1:2 are not instances of such coupling.
The Apostle ends, as he began, by exhorting them to that sound knowledge which he sets forth as the sure basis of all Christian activity, whether the knowledge be full and mature, as in 2Pe. 1:2-3; 2Pe. 1:8; 2Pe. 2:20 or to be acquired and increased, as in 2Pe. 1:5 and here.
DOXOLOGY.The Epistle comes to a most abrupt conclusion, without any personal remarks or greetings. This is so unlike the First Epistle, so unusual in Apostolic letters generally, that an imitator, and so accomplished an imitator as the writer of this Epistle must have been, would scarcely have omitted so usual and natural an addition. The addition would have been doubly natural here, for the personator (if the writer of the Epistle be such) is personating St. Peter near the end of his life, writing to congregations whom he is not likely either to see or address again. Surely the circumstances would have seemed to him to demand some words of personal greeting and tender farewell; and Act. 20:18-35; 2Ti. 4:6-18, would have supplied him with models. But nothing of the kind is inserted. Assume that St. Peter himself is the writer, and then we can understand how he came to disappoint such natural expectations. His heart is too full of the fatal dangers which threaten the whole Christian community to think of himself and his personal friends. As to his death, which cannot be far off, he knows that it will come swiftly at the last, and his chief fear is lest it should come upon him before he has left on record these words of warning and exhortation (2Pe. 1:13-15). Therefore, at the opening he hurries to his subject at once, and presses on, without pause or break, until it is exhausted; and now that he has unburdened his heart he cares to say no more, but ends at once with a tribute of praise to the Master that bought him.
To him be glory.Better, to Him be the gloryall that His creatures have to render. Whatever may be our view of 2Pe. 3:15, there can be no doubt that in this doxology homage is paid to Jesus Christ as true God. It is, perhaps, the earliest example of that hymn to Christ as God which Pliny tells Trajan the Christians were accustomed to sing before daybreak.
And for ever.Literally, and to the day of eternity. The phrase is used by the LXX. in Sir. 18:10, but is found nowhere else in the New Testament. It means that day which marks the end of time and the beginning of eternity, the day which not only begins but is eternity. The expression is quite in harmony with the general drift of the chapter. Heaven and earth shall pass away, but the day of God shall not pass away.
Amen.Comp. Jud. 1:25. Here the word is of rather doubtful authority. Being usual in doxologies, it would be very likely to be added by a copyist.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
18. Grow Instead of apostatizing.
In grace The opposite of the fickleness, or unstable, of 2Pe 3:16.
The knowledge The opposite of unlearned of 2Pe 3:16.
To him be glory That is, to Christ; an attribute never ascribed in doxology to any creature in scripture.
Forever Greek, , day of perpetuity, perpetual day; a day without end; eternity.
‘But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. To him be the glory both now and for ever. Amen.’
And the way in which they are to ensure their own steadfastness is by ‘growing in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ’. It is by ever learning more and more of Him, both of His gracious and powerful activity on their behalf as their true Saviour, and of His supreme and continual authority as their Lord. This is the true knowledge. And knowing of His power and presence, and the future manifestation of His presence yet to come, as the false teachers had failed to do, they are to have total confidence in Him, and to continually learn more about Him day by day.
For it is in knowing and experiencing Jesus Christ as our Lord and Saviour that we will find the total solution to all our spiritual need. Thus their eyes are to be fixed on the One to Whom will be the glory for ever and ever. None other can share His glory. Amen.
2Pe 3:18. But grow in grace, and in the knowledge, &c. “But to help you against all declensions and revolts, let it be your earnest prayer and endeavour, in the use of all proper means, to be progressive in daily exercises and increases of every Christian grace, as also in an abiding sense of the free love and favour of God, according to the gospel; and in a clear, judicial, practical, and experimental acquaintance with the person and offices, doctrines, promises, and commandments of our divine Lord and all-sufficient Saviour Jesus Christ, and with your own personal interest in him: to whom be ascribed, as is most justly due, all adoration, worship, and honour, henceforth and for ever. May we sincerely add, in testimony of our approbation and assurance of its being so, Amen!”
Inferences.Who is there that can be so sluggish and lethargic as not to be, in some measure, awakened and alarmed by the awful views here given, of the dissolution, as well as the creation of the world, by the word of God! Who must not even tremble, when he turns his eye back to the dreadful ruin brought on it by the universal deluge; when that element, which had been, and is, the means and instrument of life to the whole animal creation, became, at the divine signal, the means and instrument of death! Who can be unaffected, when he seriously reflects on the heavens passing away with a great noise? on the elements melting with fervent heat? on the burning up of the earth, and all things therein? Let scoffers, who walk after their own lusts, madly deride the promise of his coming; let them deliver over their taunts and insults to each other through the succession of a thousand years; were his coming at a distance still more remote, they who have any just impression on their minds of the eternity of God, or of the immortality of the human soul, would discern the important day of final retribution as immediate and present to their view. While they scoff and deride the tremendous reality, let us hear the declaration of its approach with the profoundest attention; and let our souls enter deeply into the alarming and important reflection. If indeed we look for such great things as these, what manner of persons might we to be in all holy conversation and godliness, that we may be found of him in peace, without spot or blemish? And if we desire this blessedness, (as who can fail earnestly to desire it, who has a firm and steady persuasion of its reality?) can we possibly live in tolerable composure, if we have little or no reason to conclude we shall obtain an interest and share in it? Let us be all concerned that we may grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour; by the increasing knowledge of whom every grace will be greatly revived and strengthened. On these lively and important subjects of meditation let our thoughts frequently dwell; and let us endeavour, that the sentiments which result from them, may be wrought in our hearts, and controul our lives. And as for those hard sayings, which occur, either in St. Peter or St. Paul, or any other sacred and inspired writer, let us neither wrest and torture them to our own mischief and destruction, nor be so curiously and sedulously diving into their meaning, as to neglect these and the like plain and serious admonitions, this sincere milk of the word, that we may grow thereby. May all the powers of our souls be exerted in securing their deliverance from the wrath to come, that so the patience of God, and his long-suffering towards us, may indeed prove salvation. And if that be indeed the case, the light of heaven will mightily illustrate those mysteries both of the divine Word and Providence, which our weak and defective organs of vision have not enabled us clearly to discern and unfold; while, by the comparatively fainter, though in itself glorious light of revelation, we are guided through this dark and gloomy valley.
REFLECTIONS.1st, The apostle sets forth his design of writing both these epistles. This second epistle, beloved, I now write unto you; in both which I stir up your pure minds by way of remembrance, that you may be guarded against the arts of deceivers, and that ye may be mindful of the words which were spoken before by the holy prophets, and of the commandment of us the apostles of the Lord and Saviour, who, in perfect conformity with the inspired penmen of the old scriptures, as in other things, so particularly with regard to the coming of the Lord to judgment, have forewarned, and admonished you. Knowing this first, that there shall come in the last days scoffers at revelation, and all its glorious and distinguishing doctrines; walking after their own lusts, given up to sensuality and brutish appetites; and, with daring infidelity, and defiance of the divine declarations, saying, Where is the promise of his coming, so much talked of? when is this Jesus of Nazareth to come and take vengeance on his enemies? for since the fathers fell asleep (say they), during so many hundred years, all things continue as they were from the beginning of the creation. Thus they vainly argue; and, because judgment is not speedily executed upon the workers of iniquity, they would conclude there is nothing to be feared. For, though the scripture assures them that God hath already manifested his righteous wrath by the general destruction of an ungodly world, this they willingly and wilfully are ignorant of, that the heavens were of old created by the almighty Word, and the earth standing out of the water and in the water, rising from the abyss of waters which covered it at the first, moistened still by this element, and compacted together, and surrounded with waters above, and full of water in its bowels; whereby the world that then was, being overflowed with water at the general deluge, perished, and the scoffers of that day met their righteous doom. But the heavens and the earth which are now, by the same almighty word are kept in store as treasures, reserved unto fire against the day of judgment, and perdition of ungodly men. And however scoffers of this day may despise God’s warnings, yet evident marks which still remain of what he hath done by the deluge, are speaking evidences of his power to fulfil a more terrible denunciation, when his fire shall descend, and a general conflagration ensue,a day, which will spread terror and dismay through the ungodly world, and too late convince those infidel mockers, that it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.
2nd, The apostle, having warned them against the scoffers, encourages the saints of God to expect their Lord’s second coming. 2. He will come suddenly. But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night, with such a terrible surprise to an ungodly world; in the which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, when nature in convulsions shall utter her expiring groans, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, dissolved amid the universal conflagration; the earth also, and the works that are therein, shall be burnt up, and not a wreck remain of all its glorious structures.
3. What influence ought such an expectation to have upon us? Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved, what manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and godliness? How dead to the world, how loose to its enjoyments, how patient under the present momentary afflictions, how wholly engrossed with one great concern, to secure a happy part in that eternal world whither the faithful are going, looking for, and hasting unto the coming of the day of God, keeping it abidingly in view, and living in a constant preparation for that solemn hour, wherein the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat? Note; It is the character of a disciple of Jesus, that he is ever looking for his Lord’s return, as the glorious hope which animates him for every duty, and supports him under all his trials.
3rdly, We have, 2. He exhorts them, in the prospect of such an inheritance, (2.) Patiently to persevere, though the time should be distant. And account, that the long-suffering of our Lord is salvation, and that the reason of his delay is, that nothing may be left undone, that is consistent with all his moral perfections and with the moral agency of man, for the salvation of mankind: even as our beloved brother Paul also, according to the wisdom given unto him, hath written unto you; as also in all his epistles, speaking in them of these things, of God’s long-suffering, and the coming of the Lord to judgment; in which doctrines are some things hard to be understood, being of a sublime and spiritual nature, which they that are unlearned and unstable, who are not divinely taught of God, and whose principles are fluctuating and unsettled, wrest and distort from their true meaning, as they do also the other scriptures, unto their own destruction. Note; The more dangerous it is to be ignorant in the scriptures, the more diligently should we search them, and pray God to enlighten our minds that we may be made wise unto salvation.
(3.) To beware of all deceivers. Ye therefore, beloved, seeing ye know these things before, that Christ will surely come and take vengeance of the ungodly, beware lest ye also, being led away with the error of the wicked, by their flatteries and seductions, fall from your own steadfastness, and depart from the purity of that gospel, which you have hitherto so nobly maintained. Note; (1.) When deluding teachers are at work, we need be deeply on our guard. (2.) They who fall into erroneous principles, grow soon unsettled in their practice, and shew the baleful influence of this poison.
(4.) To advance in the divine life. But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, gaining a deeper and more experimental acquaintance with his love, a more unshaken dependance upon him, and an increase of every divine and spiritual disposition in consequence thereof.
3. He concludes with an ascription of praise to the divine Redeemer. To him be glory both now and for ever. May every creature in heaven and earth unite m ceaseless worship, praise, and adoration to the great Immanuel! Amen!
*.* The Reader is referred to the different Authors mentioned often already.
“But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. To him be glory both now and forever. Amen.”
Reader! What is it to grow in grace? Grace is an humbling principle. And what then can a growth in it be, but to be increasing in humbleness. If this growth was formed in any attainment of our own, I fear, that instead of an increase of humility, it would make me proud. Moreover, grace is wholly of God, and not of men. If I grow in grace, it must be growth in the grace, that is in Christ Jesus. As such it is wholly out of myself. Moreover the Lord saith, that in the close of our warfare, we shall remember and be confounded, and never open our mouth anymore because of our shame, when I am pacified toward thee for all that thou hast done, saith the Lord God! Eze 16:63 , I humbly conceive, therefore, that to grow in grace, is to grow more and more humble before the Lord, from this growth in grace bringing the Lord’s people into a deeper acquaintance with the plague of their own heart. Our first discoveries of ourselves, under grace bring us but a little way in our exploring of our own corruption. The Lord doth by us, in the early manifestations of his grace, as he did by Israel when he brought them out of Egypt. It is said, that God led them not through the way of the land of the Philistines, although that was near; for God said, lest peradventure, the people repent when they see war, and return to Egypt. But God led the people about, through the way of the wilderness of the Red Sea. Exo 13:17-18 . So it should seem, for the most part, the Lord doth by his redeemed now, in bringing them out of the spiritual Egypt of sin and death. If the Lord were to bring us through the land of the Philistines, I mean, in bringing us at once to behold the depths of corruption in our fallen nature, what soul could survive the sight? But by little and little, leading us down, with increasing discoveries, to view the pit of our own corruption; how increasingly precious Christ becomes, in every new insight of our sins, and his mercy. Is not this to grow in grace?
But this, according to my view of this sweet scripture, will appear yet more confirmed, when we connect in our apprehension of it, what the Holy Ghost hath connected with it. But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Surely, if by growing in grace, I grow more and more out of love with myself. I shall by that grace in Jesus grow more in love with Jesus. Exactly in the proportion I loath myself for my defilements, shall I love Jesus more for his holiness. As a growth in grace makes me more self-loathing, and self-abhorring, will not my knowledge; of my Lord, and his suitableness to me, render Him more desirable? Suppose Job were to tell the Church about his growth in grace? When were his highest attainments, but when in the view of Christ he lay lower in self-abhorrence than he had ever done before, and cried out in dust and ashes! Job 42:5-6 . Suppose Isaiah were to give in his testimony of his apprehensions of the same subject? When were his thoughts of himself lowest, and of Christ highest? Was it not in that vision, when he cried out, Woe is me, I am undone; I am a man of unclean lips. Mine eyes have seen the king, the Lord of hosts! Isa 6:5 , Let Daniel, holy Daniel, give his evidence. And when was his growth in grace at the highest pitch, but when he declared his comeliness was, turned into corruption? Dan 10:8 . When was Paul’s? Surely, when after more than twenty years had passed from his conversion, he summed up his account of himself, in saying, that in, him, that is, in his flesh, dwelt no good thing. And, under the weight of it, he made that lamentable cry, O wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me from this body of death. Rom 7:18-24 . Reader! let your own heart say, if so be the Lord hath taught your heart, what is a growth in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, but, like Paul, to feel daily more and more the plague of the heart, and therefrom to be more humbled in ourselves; while growing in the knowledge of Christ, and his all-sufficiency, to take increasing joy in him, and, with Paul, say, I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord!
I shall only detain the Reader one moment longer, to observe, that the short but expressive doxology, with which the Apostle closeth his Epistle, I would recommend the Reader not to pass hastily over, and consider it as so many words of course. Certainly, the sacred writers could never intend such things by such praises. To hallow the Lord’s name is the first strain of praise in the Lord’s prayer. And the cause wherefore the holy men of old so often burst forth, in the midst of their writings, and at the beginning and end of them is, because their souls, being full of God’s glory, their mouths in speaking, and their pens in writing, could not refrain to set it forth. It should be our desire, as it is our privilege, to do the same. Both these great Apostles; Peter and Paul, thus unite in praises to God and the Lamb. To Him be glory both now and forever. Amen. Eph 3:21 .
REFLECTIONS
Glory be to God, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, Israel’s God in covenant forever and ever! What praises thy people have now to offer, and what praises to all eternity, for thy love to the Church, in Christ! Praises to the Father’s love, in his choice of the Church, from everlasting! Praises to the Son’s grace, in marrying his Church, and redeeming her from all iniquity to himself; by his blood! And, praises to the Holy Ghost, for his love in regenerating mercy, and all his watchful care over the Church, from grace to glory!
And, Lord, while we praise thee, in thy distinguishing mercy, in founding the Church in Christ, presiding over it as the Almighty Minister, in the appointment of ordinances, and means of grace; and giving the whole scriptures of our God, by inspiration, to make thy people wise unto salvation, through faith, which is in Christ Jesus , we find renewed cause to praise thee, O thou eternal Spirit, for raising up this blessed scripture, by the instrumentality of thy servant Peter, to comfort thy Church with those glorious truths herein contained. Yes! most gracious Lord! it was not only meant to refresh the dying Apostle, in bringing to his recollection Christ’s glory in the Mount; but the record of it was designed, as it hath often proved, still is proving, and will, to the end of time, be proved a blessed testimony to refresh the souls of thousands! Lord! let it frequently refresh my soul also! And, amidst all the scoffers of the present awful day, let thy people be always on their watch-tower, waiting the Lord’s coming. And, in the mean time, growing in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Farewell, Peter, while we bless thy Lord, and our Lord, for thy ministry, we find no less cause to bless the Lord for all the improvements in grace we receive, under divine teaching, for all that is recorded in thine history. The Church of God, in heaven and earth, have profited by it. And, ere long, will all join together in the same song of glory, praise, and power, to God and the Lamb, forevermore. Amen, and Amen.
18 But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. To him be glory both now and for ever. Amen.
Ver. 18. But grow ] In firmness at least, as an apple doth in mellowness; as oaks grow more slowly than willows and bulrushes, yet more solidly, and in the end to a greater bulk and size.
18 .] but (contrast to the fall just predicated as possible) grow (not only do not , but be so firmly rooted as to throw out branches and yield increase. “Hc unica est perseverandi ratio, si assidue progredimur.” Calv.) in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ (the gen., . . . ., belongs to both and , as is sufficiently shewn by the preposition extending over both. The common rendering, “ in grace and in the knowledge of ” would more naturally be . Taken as above, the genitive stands in somewhat different relation to the two datives. As regards , it is a subjective gen., the grace of which Christ is the author and bestower; of which it is said, : as regards , it is an objective genitive, the knowledge of which Christ is the object).
Concluding doxology : “hymnus Christo quasi Deo,” as Pliny’s letter. To Him [be, or is] the glory ( the glory i. e. all glory that is rendered: the sum total of glory) both now and to the day of eternity ( , the day which shall dawn at the end of time, and being eternal, itself know no end: “tota ternitas una dies est,” as Estius. Bengel takes it to mean “dies sine nocte, merus et perpetuus:” and so Calov.: but this idea does not seem so congruous here, as that of mere duration. Grot., Beza take for time . But considering how frequent has been in this chapter, we have no right to seek for an unusual meaning, when the common one suits so well). [ Amen (cf. Jud 1:25 ).]
2Pe 3:18 . , . . . The genitive is to be taken with both words. here means “spiritual instruction,” a knowledge that has its source in Christ Himself, as distinct from , which is personal communion with Christ (see note 2Pe 1:5 ). is the privilege of the “friend” of Christ. Cf. Joh 7:17 ; Joh 15:15 . . Note that the doxology is addressed to Christ, and, therefore, . also refers to Him. : “in the day of eternity”. The meanings of and in later Greek are somewhat interchangable ( cf. Moulton, Proleg. 234 f.). . is a very rare phrase not found elsewhere in N.T. It is found in Sir 18:10 , where the phrase is . The more usual expression is . “ becomes so immediately the ruling phrase that this Petrine doxology cannot have been written alter liturgical expressions had become in any degree stereotyped” (Bigg).
2 Peter
GROWTH
2Pe 3:18 .
These are the last words of an old man, written down as his legacy to us. He was himself a striking example of his own precept. It would be an interesting study to examine these two letters of the Apostle Peter, in order to construct from them a picture of what he became, and to contrast it with his own earlier self when full of self-confidence, rashness, and instability. It took a lifetime for Simon, the son of Jonas, to grow into Peter; but it was done. And the very faults of the character became strength. What he had proved possible in his own case he commands and commends to us, and from the height to which he has reached, he looks upwards to the infinite ascent which he knows he will attain when he puts off this tabernacle; and then downwards to his brethren, bidding them, too, climb and aspire. His last word is like that of the great Roman Catholic apostle to the East Indies: ‘Forward!’ He is like some trumpeter on the battlefield who spends his last breath in sounding an advance. Immortal hope animates his dying injunction: ‘Grow! grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour.’
So I think we may take these words, dear friends, as the starting-point for some very plain remarks about what I am afraid is a neglected duty, the duty of growth in Christian character.
I. I begin, first, with a word or two about the direction which Christian growth ought to take.
Now those of you who use the Revised Version will see in it a very slight, but very valuable alteration. It reads there: ‘Grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour.’ The effect of that alteration being to bring out more clearly that whilst the direction of the growth is twofold, the process is one. And to bring out more clearly, also, that both the grace and the knowledge have connection with Jesus Christ.
He is the Giver and the Author of the grace. He is the Object of the knowledge. The one is more moral and spiritual; the other, if we may so say, more intellectual; but both are realised by one act of progress, and both inhere in, and refer to, and are occupied with, and are derived from, Jesus Christ Himself.
Let us look a little more closely at this double direction, this bifurcation, as it were, of Christian growth. The tree, like some of our forest trees, in its normal progress, diverges into two main branches at a short distance upwards from the root.
First, we have growth in the ‘grace’ of Christ. Grace, of course, means, first, the undeserved love and favour which God in Jesus Christ bears to us sinful and inferior creatures; and then it means the consequence of that love and favour in the manifold spiritual endowments which in us become ‘graces,’ beauties, and excellences of Christian character. So then, if you are a Christian, you ought to be continually realising a deeper and more blessed consciousness of Christ’s love and favour as yours. You ought to be, if I may so say, nestling every day nearer and nearer to His heart, and getting more and more sure, and more and more happily sure, of more and more of His mercy and love to you.
And if you are a Christian you ought not only thus to be realising daily, with increasing certitude and power, the fact of His love, but you ought to be drinking in and deriving more and more every day of the consequences of that love, of the spiritual gifts of which His hands are full. There is open for each of us in Him an inexhaustible store of abundance. And if our Christian life is real and vigorous there ought to be in us a daily increasing capacity, and therefore a daily increasing possession of the gifts of His grace. There ought to be, in other words, also a daily progressive transformation into His likeness. It is ‘the grace of our Lord Jesus,’ not only in the sense that He is the Author and the Bestower of it to each of us, but also in the sense that He Himself possesses and exemplifies it. So that there is nothing mystical and remote from the experience of daily life in this exhortation: ‘Grow in grace’; and it is not growth in some occult theological virtue, or transcendent experience, but a very plain, practical thing, a daily transformation, with growing completeness and precision of resemblance, into the likeness of Jesus Christ; the grace that was in Him being transferred to me, and my character being growingly irradiated and refined, softened and ennobled by the reflection of the lustre of His.
This it is to ‘grow into the grace of our Lord and Saviour’; a deeper consciousness of His love creeping round the roots of my heart every day, and fuller possession of His gifts placed in my opening hand every day; and a continual approximation to the beauty of His likeness, which never halts nor ceases.
‘Grow in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour.’ The knowledge of a person is not the same as the knowledge of a creed or of a thought or of a book. We are to grow in the knowledge of Christ, which includes but is more than the intellectual apprehension of the truths concerning Him. He might turn the injunction into–’Increase your acquaintance with your Saviour.’ Many Christians never get to be any more intimate with Him than they were when they were first introduced to Him. They are on a kind of bowing acquaintance with their Master, and have little more than that. We sometimes begin an acquaintance which we think promises to ripen into a friendship, but are disappointed. Circumstances or some want of congeniality which is discovered prevent its growth. So with not a few professing Christians. They have got no nearer Jesus Christ than when they first knew Him. Their friendship has not grown. It has never reached the stage where all restraints are laid aside and there is perfect confidence. ‘Grow in the knowledge of your Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.’ Get more and more intimate with Him, nearer to Him, and franker and more cordial with Him day by day.
But there is another side to the injunction besides that. We are to grow in the grasp, the intellectual grasp and realisation of the truths which lie wrapped up and enfolded in Him. The first truths that a man learns when he becomes a Christian are the most important. The lesson that the little child learns contains the Omega as well as the Alpha of all truth. There is no word in all the gospel that is an advance on that initial word, the faith of which saves the most ignorant who trusts to it. We begin with the end, if I may say so, and the highest truth is the first truth that we learn. But the aspect which that truth bears to the man when, first of all, it dawns upon him, and he sees in it the end of his fears, the cleansing of his heart, the pardoning of his sins, his acceptance with God, is a very different thing from the aspect that it ought to wear to him, after, say forty years of pondering, of growing up to it, after years of experience have taught him. Life is the best commentary upon the truths of the gospel, and the experience teaches their depths and their power, their far-reaching applications and harmonies. So our growth in the knowledge of Jesus Christ is not a growing away from the earliest lessons, or a leaving them behind, but a growing up to and into them. So as to learn more fully and clearly all their infinite contents of grace and truth. The treasure put into our hands at first is discovered in its true preciousness as life and trial test its metal and its inexhaustibleness. The child’s lesson is the man’s lesson. All our Christian progress in knowledge consists in bringing to light the deep meaning, the far-reaching consequences of the fact of Christ’s incarnation, death, and glory. ‘God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life.’ The same truth which shone at first a star in a far-off sky, through a sinful man’s night of fear and agony, grows in brilliance as we draw nearer to it, until at last it blazes, the central Sun of the Universe, the hearth for all vital warmth, the fountain of all guiding light, the centre of all energy. Christ in His manhood, in His divinity, Christ in His cross, resurrection, and glory, is the object of all knowledge, and we grow in the knowledge of Him by penetrating more deeply into the truths which we have long ago learned, as well as by following them as they lead us into new fields, and disclose unsuspected issues in creed and practice.
That growth will not be one-sided; for grace and knowledge will advance side by side–the moral and spiritual keeping step with the intellectual, the practical with the theoretical. And that growth will have no term. It is growth towards an infinite object of our aspiration, imitation, and affection. So we shall ever approach and never surpass Jesus Christ. Such endless progress is the very salt of life. It keeps us young when physical strength decays. It flames, an immortal hope, to light the darkness of the grave when all other hopes are quenched in night.
II. Now, for a moment, look at another thought, viz., the obligation.
It is a command, that is to say, the will is involved. Growth is to be done by effort, and the fact that it is a command teaches us this, that we are not to take this one metaphor as if it exhausted the whole of the facts of the case in reference to Christian progress.
You would never think of telling a child to grow any more than you would think of telling a plant to grow, but Peter does tell Christian men and women to grow. Why? Because they are not plants, but men with wills, which can resist, and can either further or hinder their progress.
‘Lo! in the middle of the wood,
The folded leaf is wooed from out the bud,
… and there
Grows green and broad, and takes no care.’
But that is not how we grow. ‘In the sweat of thy brow,’ with pain and peril, with effort and toil, and not otherwise, do men grow in everything but stature. And especially is it so in the Christian character. There are other metaphors that need to be taken into consideration as well as this of growth, with all its sweet suggestions of continuous, effortless, spontaneous advance.
The Christian progress is not only growth, it is warfare. The Christian progress is not only growth, it is a race. The Christian progress is not only growth, it is mortifying the old man. The Christian progress is not only growth, it is putting off the old man with his deeds and putting on the new! ‘First the blade, then the ear, after that the full corn in the ear,’ was never meant for a complete account of how the Christian life is perfected.
We are bidden to grow, and that command points to hindrances and resistance, to the need for effort and the governing action of our own wills.
The command is one sorely needed in the present state of our average Christianity. Our churches are full of monsters, specimens of arrested growth, dwarfs, who have scarcely grown since they were babes, infants all their lives. I come to you with a very plain question: Have you any more of Christ’s beauty in your characters, any more of His grace in your hearts, any more of His truth in your minds than you had a year ago, ten years ago, or at that far-off period when some of you greyheaded men first professed to be Christians? Have you experienced so many things in vain? Have the years taught you nothing? Ah, brethren! for how many of us is it true: ‘When for the time ye ought to be teachers ye have need that one teach you which be the first principles of the oracles of God’? ‘Grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour.’
And we need the command because all about us there are hindrances. There is the hindrance of an abuse of the evangelical doctrine of conversion, and the idea that springs up in many hearts that if once a man has ‘passed from death unto life,’ and has managed to get inside the door of the banqueting-hall, that is enough. And there are numbers of people in our Nonconformist communities especially, where that doctrine of conversion is most distinctly preached, whose growth is stopped by the abuse that they make of it in fancying if they have once exercised faith in Jesus Christ they may safely and sinlessly stand still. ‘Conversion’ is turning round. What do we turn round for? Surely, in order that we may travel on in the new direction, not that we may stay where we are. There is also the hindrance of mere indolence, and there is the hindrance arising from absorption in the world and its concerns.
If all your strength is going thither, there is none left to grow with. Many professing Christians take such deep draughts of the intoxicating cup of this world’s pleasures that it stunts their growth. People sometimes give children gin in order to keep them from growing. Some of you do that for your Christian character by the deep draughts that you take of the Circean cup of this world’s pleasures and cares.
And not unfrequently, some one favourite evil, some lust or passion, or weakness, or desire, which you have not the strength to cast out, will kill all aspirations and destroy all possibilities of growth; and will be like an iron band round a little sapling, which will confine it and utterly prevent all expansion. Is that the case with any of us? We all need–and I pray you suffer–the word of exhortation.
III. Now, again, consider the method of growth.
There are two things essential to the growth of animal life. One is food, the other is exercise; and your Christian character will grow by no other means.
Now as to the first. The true means by which we shall grow in Christian grace is by holding continual intercourse and communion with Jesus Christ. It is from Him that all come. He is the Fountain of Life; He gives the life, He nourishes the life, He increases the life. And whilst I have been saying, in an earlier part of this discourse, that we are not to expect an effortless growth, I must here say that we shall very much mistake what Christian progress requires if we suppose that the effort is most profitably directed to the cultivation of specific and single acts of goodness and purity. Our efforts are best when directed to keeping ourselves in union with our Lord. The heart united to Him will certainly be advancing in all things fair and lovely and of good report. Keep yourselves in touch with Christ; and Christ will make you grow. That is to say, occupy heart and mind with Him, let your thoughts go to Him. Do you ever, from morning to night, on a week-day, think about your Master, about His truth, about the principles of His Gospel, about His great love to you? Keep your heart in union with Him, in the midst of the rush and hurry of your daily life. Are your desires turning to Him? Do they go out towards Him and feel after Him? It will take an effort to keep up the union with Him, but without the effort there will be no contact, and without the contact there will be no growth. As soon may you expect a plant, wrenched from the soil and shut out from the sunshine to grow, as expect any Christian progress in the hearts which are disjoined from Jesus Christ. But rooted in that soil, smiled upon by that sun, watered by the perpetual dew from His Heaven, we shall ‘grow like the lily, and cast forth our roots like Lebanon. The secret of real Christian progress and the direction in which the effort of Christian progress can most profitably and effectually be made, is simply in keeping close to our Lord and Master. He is the food of the Spirit. ‘I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.’
Communion with Christ includes prayer. Desire to grow will help our growth. We tend to become what we long to be. Desire which impels to effort will not be in vain if it likewise impels to prayer. We may have the answer to our petition for growth in set ways; we may be but partially conscious of the answer, nor know that our faces shine when we go among men. But certainly if we pray for what is in such accordance with His will as ‘growth in grace’ is, we shall have the petition that we desire. That longing to know Him better and to possess more of His grace, like the tendrils of some climbing plant, will always find the support round which it may twine, and by which it may ascend.
The other condition of growth is exercise. Use the grace which you have, and it increases. Practice the truth which you know, and many things will become clearer. The blacksmith’s muscles are strengthened by wielding the forge-hammer, but unused they waste. The child grows by exercise. To him that hath–truly possesses with that possession which only use secures–shall be given.
Communion with Christ, including prayer, and exercise are the means of growth.
IV. Lastly, observe the solemn alternative to growth.
It is not a question of either growing or not growing, and there an end; but if you will look at the context you will see that the exhortation of my text comes in in a very significant connection. ‘Behold! beware, lest being led away … ye fall from your own steadfastness.’ ‘But grow in grace.’ That is to say, the only preventive of falling away from steadfastness is continual progress. The alternative of advance is retrogression. There is no standing still upon the inclined plane. If you are not going up, gravity begins to act, and down you go. There must either be continual advance or there will be certain decay and corruption. As soon as growth ceases in this physiology disintegration commences. Just as the graces exercised are strengthened, so the graces unexercised decay. The slothful servant wraps his talent in a napkin, and buries it in the ground. He may try to persuade his Master and himself with ‘There Thou hast that is Thine’; but He will not take up what you buried. Rust and verdigris will have done their work upon the coin; the inscription will be obliterated and the image will be marred. You cannot bury your Christian grace in indolence without diminishing it. It will be like a bit of ice wrapped in a cloth and left in the sun, it will all have gone into water when you come to take it out. And the truth that you do not live by, whose relations and large harmonies and controlling power are not being increasingly realised in your lives; that truth is becoming less and less real, more and more shadowy, and ghostlike to you. Truth which is not growing is becoming fossilized. ‘The things most surely believed’ are often the things which have least power. Unquestioned truth too often lies ‘bedridden in the dormitory of the soul side by side with exploded error.’ The sure way to reduce your knowledge of Jesus Christ to that inert condition is to neglect increasing it and applying it to your daily life. There are men, in all churches, and there are some whole communions whose creeds are the most orthodox, and also utterly useless, and as near as possible nonentities, simply because the creed is accepted and shelved. If your belief is to be of any use to you, or to be held by you in the face of temptations to abandon it, you must keep it fresh, and oxygenated, so to say, by continual fresh apprehension of it and closer application of it to conduct. As soon as the stream stands, it stagnates; and the very manna from God will breed worms and stink. And Christian truth unpractised by those who hold it, corrupts itself and corrupts them.
So Peter tells us that the alternative is growth or apostasy. This decay may be most real and unsuspected. There are many, many professing Christians all ignorant that, like the Jewish giant of old, their strength is gone from them, and the Spirit of God departed. My brother, I beseech you, rouse yourself from your contented slothfulness. Do not be satisfied with merely having come within the Temple. Count nothing as won whilst anything remains to be won. There is a whole ocean of boundless grace and truth rolling shoreless there before you. Do not content yourselves with picking up a few shells on the beach, but launch out into the deep, and learn to know more and more of the grace and truth and beauty of your Saviour and your God.
But remember dead things do not grow. You cannot grow unless you are alive, and you are not alive unless you have Jesus Christ.
Have you given yourselves to Him? have you taken Him as yours? given yourselves to Him as His servants, subjects, soldiers? taken Him for yours as your Saviour, Sacrifice, Pattern, Inspirer, Friend? If you have, then you have life which will grow if you keep it in union with Him. Joined to Him, men are like a ‘tree that is planted by the rivers of water,’ which spreads its foliage and bears its fruit, and year after year flings a wider shadow upon the grass, and lifts a sturdier bole to the heavens. Separated from Him they are like the chaff, which has neither root nor life, and which cannot grow.
Which, my friend, are you?
grace. App-184.
knowledge. App-132.
Jesus Christ. App-98.
glory. See p. 1511.
for ever. App-151.
18.] but (contrast to the fall just predicated as possible) grow (not only do not , but be so firmly rooted as to throw out branches and yield increase. Hc unica est perseverandi ratio, si assidue progredimur. Calv.) in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ (the gen., . …, belongs to both and , as is sufficiently shewn by the preposition extending over both. The common rendering, in grace and in the knowledge of would more naturally be . Taken as above, the genitive stands in somewhat different relation to the two datives. As regards , it is a subjective gen.,-the grace of which Christ is the author and bestower; of which it is said, : as regards , it is an objective genitive,-the knowledge of which Christ is the object).
Concluding doxology: hymnus Christo quasi Deo, as Plinys letter. To Him [be, or is] the glory (the glory-i. e. all glory that is rendered: the sum total of glory) both now and to the day of eternity ( , the day which shall dawn at the end of time, and being eternal, itself know no end: tota ternitas una dies est, as Estius. Bengel takes it to mean dies sine nocte, merus et perpetuus: and so Calov.: but this idea does not seem so congruous here, as that of mere duration. Grot., Beza take for time. But considering how frequent has been in this chapter, we have no right to seek for an unusual meaning, when the common one suits so well). [Amen (cf. Jud 1:25).]
2Pe 3:18. , increase) the more; the more they decrease [ , in grace and knowledge) ch. 2Pe 1:3; 2Pe 1:8.-V. g.]- , the day of eternity) This title agrees with that sense, in which the apostle employed it, through the whole of this chapter. Eternity is a day, without night, unmixed and perpetual.[25]
[25] Bengel, J. A. (1866). Vol. 5: Gnomon of the New Testament (M. E. Bengel & J. C. F. Steudel, Ed.) (W. Fletcher, Trans.) (84-110). Edinburgh: T&T Clark.
grace Grace (imparted). Summary (see “Grace,”) (See Scofield “Joh 1:17”) grace is not only dispensationally a method of divine dealing in salvation
(See Scofield “Joh 1:17”) but is also the method of God in the believer’s life and service. As saved, he is “not under the law, but under grace” Rom 6:14. Having by grace brought the believer into the highest conceivable position. Eph 1:6. God ceaselessly works through grace, to impart to, and perfect in him, corresponding graces; Joh 15:4; Joh 15:5; Gal 5:22; Gal 5:23.
Grace, therefore, stands connected with service Rom 12:6; Rom 15:15; Rom 15:16; 1Co 1:3-7; 1Co 3:10; 1Co 15:10; 2Co 12:9; 2Co 12:10; Gal 2:9; Eph 3:7; Eph 3:8; Eph 4:7; Php 1:7; 2Ti 2:1; 2Ti 2:2; 1Pe 4:10 with Christian growth; 2Co 1:12; Eph 4:29; Col 3:16; Col 4:6; 2Th 1:12; Heb 4:16; Heb 12:28; Heb 12:29; Heb 13:9; Jam 4:6; 1Pe 1:2; 1Pe 3:7; 1Pe 5:5; 1Pe 5:10; 2Pe 3:18; Jud 1:4 and with giving; 2Co 4:15; 2Co 8:1; 2Co 8:6; 2Co 8:7; 2Co 8:19; 2Co 9:14
grace Grace (imparted). Rom 6:1; 2Pe 3:18.
Growth
But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.2Pe 3:18.
1. Throughout the New Testament Christian character is regarded as a growth. Sometimes the growth is architecturalthe growth of the building; sometimes it is physiological, Christ being the head, and we growing up into Him in all things; sometimes it is generic growth, as in the case of the vine which brings forth more and more fruit under pruning and culture. The idea of a developing life runs through the whole New Testament, and has every variety of exemplification.
The capacity of growth is that which, more than anything else, distinguishes one mind from another.1 [Note: John Ker, Thoughts for Heart and Life, 27.]
2. Here we are told to grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Now the text does not mean, grow into the grace, or into the knowledge. It means, being in gracegrow; being in knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christgrow. That is clear when we read 2Pe 3:17 as well as 2Pe 3:18. Ye therefore, beloved, knowing these things beforehand, beware lest, being carried away with the error of the wicked, ye fall from your own stedfastness. But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Beware lest ye fall, that is the negative command. The positive command is, Knowing these things grow in the grace and knowledge. You are in the grace, in the knowledge! Grow!
The figure is that of infancy advancing to the full stature of manhood. The gods of the ancients were born full-grown. Minerva is said to have sprung all armed and panoplied from the forehead of Jove. But Christians begin as babes in Christ and advance through certain conditions of normal growth to the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ.
You hold in your hand a corn of wheat, and you know there are in that seed untold possibilities. It is planted, it germinates, rises from the tomb of darkness to the light of day, and steadily advances to golden fruitfulness. There is first the blade, then the ear, then the full corn in the ear. By culture you draw out the mysterious forces of the seed, call to higher energy its potencies of life, and so bring the seed to fuller manifestation of its latent and dormant powers. So the soul is a seed of undeveloped possibilities. There are in it high powers and faculties, mysterious and immeasurable energies of life, that may be developed, but may remain in the germ, may lie unawakened, or may be irregularly or only imperfectly developed. In the soul there are wonderful possibilities of aspiration and humility, of courage and faith, of wisdom and prayerfulness, of holiness and service; and the education of the soul means the calling forth by judicious culture of all these various powers and qualities to their harmonious and effective operation and co-operation. In this way the soul comes to itself, to blessed self-realization.
I
The Kind of Growth Commended
Grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour These are the qualities in which we are to grow. They are the starting-point and goal of the Christian life. They are exhibited in their fulness in Jesus Christ, and if we are vitally united to Him we shall grow into His likeness.
1. What is grace? The root of the Greek word is a verb which means to rejoice, or be glad. Grace is that which makes the heart glad with pure gladness; the grace of God, the grace of Jesus, is the graciousness, the gentleness, the harmony of life in God and in His Son. You speak to a graceful personyou cannot define the grace that is in him; but it is something which gives more than satisfaction, it gives pleasure; you recognize a spiritual thing even when you see it in the human form, yet more when you see it in the gracious acts of one man or one woman towards another. There is harmony between the being of the one and the being of the otherthe recognition by the one of the same nature and the same needs in the other; and the same readiness to be met, to be pleased, or to be hurt; to be sorrowful or glad; the submission of the one nature to the demands of the other naturethat is grace, that is graciousness.
We have, first, the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the undeserved love and favour which God in Jesus Christ bears to us sinful and inferior creatures; and, next, we have the consequence of that love and favour in the manifold spiritual endowments which in us become graces, beauties and excellences of Christian character. So, then, one who is a Christian ought to be continually realizing a deeper and more blessed consciousness of Christs love and favour and manifesting it in his life.
Thus the word grace sums up the manifold Divine gifts, gifts of the grace of Godthe gift of holiness, the gift of love to God and love to man, the gift of spiritual energy. All the blossoming aspirations, all the budding spiritual hopes, all the ripening fruits of holy endeavour are due to the Divine life within, are through the grace of God in Christ. As the sun shines forth in his radiant strength, thaws the frozen earth, and causes the seed to spring up, the leaves and fruit to appear, so when the sun of Gods grace shines upon the soul, then in the soul will increasingly appear those graces that are an image, however faint, of the Divine grace; and holiness and righteousness and love will grow from more to more, manifesting themselves in purer beauty, richer fruitfulness, and nobler power.
By grace Jansen simply meant the birth of a religious sense. This may be strong, or it may be weak; but even its humblest forms are enough to distinguish him who has it from those who have it notto draw all his actions into a new perspective, and put a different colouring on all his thoughts. In other words, it involves a radical change of character; and, as such a change is beyond mans power to effect, grace must descend upon him like a whirlwindas once it descended on Jansens two spiritual heroes, St. Augustine and St. Pauland draw his will irresistibly, unfailingly, victoriously, out of darkness into light.1 [Note: Viscount St. Cyres, Pascal, 84.]
The Rev. Adam Lind, minister of the United Presbyterian Church, Elgin, writes: For some time after coming to Elgin, Brownlow North lived in great retirement, deeply engrossed with his Bible, and abounding in private prayer. I saw him occasionally, and had ample opportunities of observing the workings of his mind; and the mark of true grace which struck me first in his case was the spirit of profound humility, penitence, and adoring gratitude. He seemed like one unable to get out of the region of wonder and amazement at the sovereign kindness of that benignant Being who had borne with him so long in his sin, and such sin, and so much sin; and not only borne with him, but shielded him, and held him back from self-ruin, at length arresting him in his career of folly and wickedness, and bringing him to Himself, a pardoned penitent, a returned prodigal.1 [Note: K. Moody-Stuart, Brownlow North, 38.]
The grace of God in the heart of man very soon betrays its presence. It is the imparting to the soul of the mind of Christ, which desires the welfare of our brother as well as the glory of our God. In its own nature it is expansive and communicative. It is like light, whose property it is to shine; like salt, whose nature it is to communicate to foreign substances its saltness; like seed, which ever seeks to reproduce itself; like water, which, descending from above into an earthly heart, becomes therein a well of water springing up to everlasting life. These are not accidents; they are essential properties of grace wherever found. The soul that was dead, when made alive is made a new centre, source, and spring of life amid a world of death. Christians are this worlds light amid its night, and this worlds salt amid its putrefaction, and this worlds springs of living water in its wastes of barrenness, and the seed which yet shall fill the worlds face with its fruit. Life loves to work, and where there is no work there is no life, or only weak and dying life.2 [Note: Ibid. 49.]
2. What does the knowledge of Christ mean? The knowledge of Christ means such a sympathetic entering into the springs and motive forces of His life as shall, by its gradual increase, lead us into the perfection of spiritual life.
To know more of Jesus is to know more of God and more of life in its relations to Him. Many religions that have not Christ in them have given their followers a caricature of God. The life of Jesus is a reflection of God. And it is by knowing more of Him that we learn what things God approveswhat spirit on our part, and what actions. We cannot make right advancement towards the ideal life, unless we gain more and more knowledge of Him whose character is ideal, and whose gospel is constructive in the highest sense.
To know Christ is thus to know God truly; it is to recognize His hand in all the dispensations of Providence, to know Him in His works, to read His handwriting in the fabric of the earth and the heavens, to feel His love in His dealings with us, to imprint His love upon our hearts by translating it into love for man also; and then in the spirit of this double love to examine ourselves, and learn to understand the intricacies of our own heart; to discover, and without weariness to combat, its selfishness and lurking pride; day by day, and hour after hour, to labour without ceasing for the expulsion of its envyings, jealousies, and sensual lusts; to get the mastery over the tongue, the eyes, the ears; to subdue sloth, peevishness, and anger; in forgetfulness of self, to serve our neighbour with real interest and ardour; and finally to order all our domestic concerns and cares with painstaking devotion to Gods holy will.
I stand with a great artist before a famous picture. I make bold, in my ignorance of art, to confess that I can see nothing extraordinary in it at all. What, exclaims my companion, somewhat indignantly but with great enthusiasm, dont you observe the splendid manipulation, and he launches forth into a glowing analysis of the picture before us. While he is explaining I can discern more clearly than I did before what made the picture famous in the eyes of others, but yet at the close I have to exclaim, Well, my friend, I have no doubt I would speak as you have done if I had your eyes, but I confess I dont see what makes you so enthusiastic. I should much like, however, to possess your knowledge and enthusiasm, and shall be glad if you will only show me how. There is only one way of possessing the knowledge, replies my companion; you must begin to learn the first elements of drawing and colouring, and as you make progress in the acquisition of the art of painting you will know. Without striving to grow in the graces of the painters pencil, you will never understand the feelings of the painter himself.1 [Note: W. Skinner.]
II
The Naturalness of Growth
1. Growth is dependent upon life and health. Grant these conditions, and it follows naturally and without effort. If these be absent there can be no growth.
(1) It is dependent on life.We may sometimes use the word somewhat carelessly in relation to matters which are devoid of life, but, strictly speaking, it always indicates the presence of life. Boys at their play in winter-time will take a small snowball, and, rolling it in the snow, will watch it becoming larger and larger, until one boy says, See how it grows! No, it is not growing. That is not growth. That is enlargement by accretion from without. Growth is enlargement by development from within. The principle of life is necessary to growth. When the Apostle charges us in his Epistle to grow in grace he presupposes the presence of life, and it is of the utmost importance that we emphasize that fact. There can be no growth in Christian character save where the Christ-life exists. The man who is born anew can grow in grace. The man who has not received the gift of life cannot grow. Growth in grace is not the result of the imitation of Christ in the power of the human will. It is the result of the propelling force of the Christ-life in the soul.
(2) If growth is dependent on life it is equally dependent upon health.Wherever there is arrest of development in the Christian life it is due to the fact that the life principle of Jesus Christ is not active and dominant. Some part of the lifethe intellect, the emotion, the will, the chamber of the imagination, the palace of the affection, or the seat of thoughtis not wholly handed over to the indwelling Christ, is not answering the call of His life, is not responding to its claims. The tides of that life are excluded from some part of the being, and the result is spiritual disease. The spiritual faculties become atrophied. They cannot work. Then follows arrest of development. But granted the full rushing tide of the Christ-life in all the departments of the believers life, granted the presence and dominance of that life in all the complex mystery of his being, then he is in health, and his growth is steady and sure.
I saw an uncommon instance both of the justice and mercy of God. Abraham Jones, a serious, thinking man, about fifty years of age, was one of the first members of the society in London, and an early witness of the power of God to forgive sins. He then stood as a pillar for several years, and was a blessing to all that were round about him, till growing wise in his own eyes, he saw this and the other person wrong, and was almost continually offended. He then grew colder and colder, till, at length, in order to renew his friendship with the world, he went (which he had refused to do for many years) to a parish feast, and stayed there till midnight. Returning home perfectly sober, just by his own door he fell down and broke his leg. When the surgeon came he found the bone so shattered in pieces that it could not be set. Then it was, when he perceived he could not live, that the terrors of the Lord again came about him. I found him in great darkness of soul, owning the just hand of God. We prayed for him, in full confidence that God would return. And He did in part reveal Himself again; he had many gleams of hope and love, till, in two or three days, his soul was required of him.
So awful a providence was immediately known to all the society, and contributed not a little to the awakening them that slept, and stirring up those that were faint in their mind.1 [Note: The Journal of John Wesley (Standard Edition), iii. 449.]
2. Growth is spontaneous; it does not come by anxiety or effort. A doctor has no prescription for growth. He can tell you how growth may be stunted or impaired, but the process itself is recognized as beyond controlone of the few, and therefore very significant, things which Nature keeps in her own hands. No physician of souls, in like manner, has any prescription for spiritual growth. It is the question he is most often asked and most often answers wrongly. He may prescribe more earnestness, more prayer, more self-denial, or more Christian work. These are prescriptions for something, but not for growth. Not that they may not encourage growth; but the soul grows as the lily grows, without trying, without fretting, without ever thinking.
I remember, ten years ago, when I first set my face to the other side of the sea, my boy, six years of age, said to me as he bade me good-bye, How long shall you be away? I told him two months. He said, I am going to try hard to grow as big as you are before you come back. I am not sure that he tried. I suspect he forgot, as children do so blessedly forget their follies. But if he did try, he did not succeed. No child grows by effort. No man by being anxious can add one cubit to his stature. Growth in Christian stature is never the result of effort. Granted life and holiness, then there will be growth and development.2 [Note: G. Campbell Morgan, The Simple Things of the Christian Life, 58.]
Much work is done on board a ship crossing the Atlantic. Yet none of it is spent on making the ship go. The sailor but harnesses his vessel to the wind. He puts his sail and rudder in position, and lo, the miracle is wrought. So everywhere God creates, man utilizes. All the work of the world is merely a taking advantage of energies already there. God gives the wind, and the water, and the heat; man but puts himself in the way of the wind, fixes his water-wheel in the way of the river, puts his piston in the way of the steam; and so holding himself in position before Gods Spirit, all the energies of Omnipotence course within his soul. He is like a tree planted by a river whose leaf is green and whose fruits fail not.1 [Note: H. Drummond, Natural Law in the Spiritual World, 140.]
3. And yet this growth is commanded. The will is involved. And the fact that it is a command teaches us that we are not to take this one metaphor as if it exhausted the whole of the facts of the case in reference to Christian progress. You would never think of telling a child to grow any more than you would think of telling a plant to grow, but Peter does tell Christian men and women to grow. Why? Because they are not plants, but men with wills which can resist, and can either further or hinder their progress.
Lo! in the middle of the wood,
The folded leaf is wooed from out the bud,
and there
Grows green and broad, and takes no care.
But that is not how we grow. The desire of the soul to be like Christ, the constant longing to imitate Him, the imagination ever picturing Him, the emotions ever clinging to Him, the will ever gladly obedient to Himall this if cherished must naturally and inevitably lead to Christian growth. We can resolve to wish and long for an object until it becomes in us the supreme, uncontrollable desire, a mighty and commanding passion, a passion which, like Aarons rod, shall swallow up all competitors; and when Christ is that objecta living, present Christthen we easily and gladly declare: I do not live, Christ lives in me; I count all things but loss that I may know Him and be like Him. Any man can form the wish and cherish the desire, for the Holy Fire ever waits to kindle each living soul. And we can either try to make the spark burn, or we can put it out, or let it die.
Two children resolved to share the night between them in watching by a mothers sick-bed. The command to each of them was most imperative: whatever else they did they were not to let the fire go out, and not to make the room too heated; life depended on their watchful obedience; ample fuel was close by for each. The first, a thoughtful, loving nature, watched and fed that fire with unsleeping vigilance. The second made the fire up once, and with morning light slept, neglected it, and let it go out, with a fatal issue. Your heart is the hearth, prepared to receive the Holy Fire; the fuel is abundant; the command is imperative that you feed lifes spiritual flame and force. Neglect, want of interest, or unsuitable fuel are the secret of lifes spiritual coldness, poverty, and death.1 [Note: R. H. Lovell, First Types of the Christian Life, 271.]
4. Growth is of course a gradual process. The great change from sin to righteousness is not the work of a day, but the slow and patient process of a lifetime. There may seem to be no progress as measured by the eye; but the soul comes to its maturity as the babe becomes a manfed and furthered by the experience of the moment, and helped by the grace of God to grow.
What does moral perfection begin in? It begins in the disposition, in the will, in the heart. If you are urged to escape from polar winter, with its ice, and snow, and frost, and barrenness, to tropical summer, with its warmth, and flowers, and geniality, and luxuriance, is it meant that you are to accomplish the journey at one long stride, or that it is to be completed step by step, little by little? When a child is required to become perfect as a musician, is it intended that in one day his uncrafty fingers shall liberate the angel-strains that are jailed in the musical instrument? Or is it meant that he shall master the gamut, and grope his way through the scale, and gently touch the unknown notes to ascertain, as if by a whisper, whether they are the strains of which he is in quest, and proceed with all diligence and zeal until the instrument shall tell all its secrets, and shake with many-voiced delight at the touch of his friendly hand? Were you to tell an acorn to become perfect as an oak, would you mean that all the growing was to be completed in a night, or that the development was to proceed gradually, unfolding branch after branch, bud after bud, leaf after leaf, till it became a great cathedral-tree, in which the feathered choristers should pour out their songs in the hearing of God? It is even so with our Saviour. When He tells us to be perfect as our Father in heaven is perfect, He means that we are to grow in grace; we are to press toward the mark; we are to set our faces toward the holy temple.1 [Note: J. Parker.]
While coarse growths are apt to be rapid, all fine growths are apt to be slow, and come up through a long process of ministration and development. The reed grows, as it were, in a day; but the sweetest things in my garden weary me with the tardiness of their maturing. The warmth of many suns must wait on them, and the moisture of many tranquil nights must coax them, before they feel bold enough to expose their inner life to the gaze of sun and stars, or the touch of the gentle winds. So it is with soul life. No one day answers for its growth. No single benefaction, coming with swift and sudden motion, matures it. It groweth after the growth of one that hath all eternity to grow in. The food on which it feeds comes to its mouth, not as by the hand of a special gift, but by the hand of a provision furnished by a benevolence which is general and for ever attentive. My soul takes of Gods ministrations by grace, as my body takes of His administrations by nature. I know that while the body lasts nature will feed it. I know that while my soul endures Gods grace shall supply its every need. I ask no more for my garden than that the sun shall continue to shine.2 [Note: W. H. Murray, The Fruits of the Spirit, 301.]
5. We cannot lay down any fixed and rigid rule for the order of this growth. We may not say, for instance, that in every case the new life begins with contrition, and then passes through faith and assurance of forgiveness to perfect peace. No such rigid and uniform rule as this is laid down in Scripture. We may as well say beforehand in what order the leaves in spring should burst out upon the budding trees. In every true child of God all the phases of spiritual life will surely display themselves, but not all in the same order. In some the new life may begin in tears and agonies of sorrow, and pass on into smiles of joy and peace; in others it may begin in quiet and peaceful trust and happy service, to be disturbed, it may be ere long, with deep contrition for sin, begotten not of fear but of love. It is the height of presumption to attempt to limit the manner of the Spirits working, or to judge of His presence by any other test than the presence of the work of the Spirit, the conformity to the image of Christ. Whereever there is a Christ-like soul, there is Christ and the Spirit of Christ; wherever there is not this likeness, then, be the feeling or emotion ever so strong, or ever so strictly according to the prescribed rule, there Christ is not.
Life claims freedom; true freedom is life true to itself and its source. Every generation of men, like every year in nature, has its own independent characteristics. Every generation likes to hear its own accent; to hold up its own earthen vessel for the blessing which comes from above; to see the truth with its own eyes, and tell the vision in its own way. But the great facts contained in the message, and in those who receive it, are identical from year to yearhuman sin that has to be repented of, and Divine grace that is to be thankfully taken. There is nothing creative in the varying dialectics of the generations. It is faith that, in its essence, cannot alter which brings the power from God. Reason merely sifts and sorts: it has no originality, no creative power. What served Dr. Kidds generation must serve ours. Nature is permanent in its principles and forces, though its aspects vary: so is Grace.1 [Note: J. Stark, Dr. Kidd of Aberdeen, 94.]
No harsh transitions Nature knows,
No dreary spaces intervene;
Her work in silence forward goes,
And rather felt than seen:
For where the watcher, who with eye
Turned eastward, yet could ever say
When the faint glooming in the sky
First lightened into day?
And happy, happy shalt thou be,
If from this hour with just increase
All good things shall grow up in thee,
By such unmarked degrees;
For the full graces of thy prime
Shall, in their weak beginnings, be
Lost in an unremembered time
Of holy infancy.2 [Note: Trench, Poems, 23.]
III
The Requisites of Growth
1. The first requisite of growth is vital force.A plant cannot grow unless it is rooted in its native element. Many plants get all their food from the air, through leaf and branch, and yet if you cut the root the plant withers and dies, not for the want of food, but for want of that living touch with the ground by which it receives its power to live. What that vital force is no one knows; we know some of its conditions and limitations, but the thing itself is mysterious as life. There is a force that makes life beautiful and death repulsive, a force that leaves a mans body when the beating of the heart stops, a force that we cannot see, weigh, or detect, and yet is real and mighty in our being. For want of a more defining term we, in our ignorance, call it vital force. Now, in the plant this vital force seems to find its store or reservoir in the root. The moment the root is disturbed the plant shows less of vitality and beauty, droops, fades, withers. The health of the root is the health of this force.
More than even feeding on Christ, more than appropriating His qualities, is the souls living touch of the living Christ. We are deeply conscious of the force and stimulus of some peoples presence; we can speak better when they are present to listen; we do our best and beyond itwe excel ourselveswhen they praise us; we feel helped to goodness and lowered to badness by some personal associations. But the true Christian man knows that far more than any human presence his spirit is sensitive to Christs personality.
In all soils, earths, and rocks there are certain salts, which are as necessary to the life of the plant as iron is necessary to our blood. To get these salts out of the earth and to get them into the plant is the work the root has to perform. To do this it is furnished with a number of little fine wavy rootlets; these are the subtle tongues of the root, by which it first tastes, and then separates and eats the diet on which its life, and the plants, depends. When these are eaten the root performs another function; it does not always at once send all the nourishment up into the plant; it is eminently a wise and thrifty housekeeper; it stores up the nourishment, as in the bulb of crocus or hyacinth, or as in the radish, or carrot, or potato, and so the root becomes a storehouse or refuge to feed the little plant in its infancy, and to protect it in bad and barren times if they should come. All this work of eating is done, not by the great thick roots, but by the little delicate wavy tips; they choose, they appropriate, they convey, and their choice it is which gives the varied autumn tints to the separate trees.1 [Note: R. H. Lovell, First Types of the Christian life, 260.]
There is a secret down in my heart
That nobodys eye can see;
In the worlds great plan it has no part,
But it makes my world to me.
The stars regardless have onward rolled,
But they owe my secret half their gold.
It lies so low, so low in my breast,
At the foot of all else tis found;
To all other things it is the rest,
And it makes their fruit abound;
By the breath of its native life it lives,
It shines alone by the light it gives.
It fills my heart and it fills my life
With a glory of source unseen,
It makes me calm in the midst of strife,
And in winter my heart is green.
For the birds of promise sing in my tree
When the storm is breaking on land and sea.
2. The second requisite of growth is suitable food.The waste and wear of the Christian life must be constantly repaired. Nor can it be repaired in public assembly or in seasons of religious fervour. Then and there you get the stimulus for repair, advice for repair, but the growth-processes are in quiet, in unseen meditation, and in more delicate and minute operations; they are eminently personal. Faith sometimes loses its force and realness, love loses its fire, our ideals become commonplace, our energy decreases, our enthusiasm wanes, our aspiration becomes dulled, our spiritual taste loses its piquancy, and our appetite becomes cloyed. Now the food necessary to remedy this is simply Christ, and only Christ. He alone can re-inspire ideals, re-create taste, nourish energy, fire love, make faith real, stimulate appetite. The personality and love of the living Christ are the only food of the Spirits more sensitive roots. In a word, we live in Him, and the measure in which He nourishes us is at once the measure of our health, our strength, and our life.
This food never grows stale. The soul drives the spiral of its ascent upward into eternity, not by reason of strength derived from the gross food of the earth, but as that strange bird of which the mystics tell, whose food was grown for it in the air, and on which it feasted as it flew, developing strength for motion, and finding food ever more plentiful to its mouth as it soared. So the soul finds on the crest of every moral altitude it reaches food prepared for its hunger, eats of it, and then moves upward to a loftier heightknowing that, on that farther crest, there too it shall find provision waiting for it.1 [Note: W. H. Murray, The Fruits of the Spirit, 303.]
Where do we find Christ? First and foremost in the Bible. Our staple sustenance is therefore to be derived from the Word of God. No other means of growth can take the place of this. We can no more develop Christian character by service without study of the Word and without prayer than we can make the thundering locomotive run along the track unless we feed its fires. We cannot live by work in the physical realm unless we have proper food. And to feed our soul we must not only read the Word and study the Word, hut yield our whole life to the claim of the Word.
3. But for the souls health there is also needed the vigorous and active use of all our powers.Disuse and decay are as clearly connected in the one as in the other. The grace which we do not exercise, like the limb we never use, or the faculty we never exert, withers and dies at last. The duties that are appointed us are not arbitrarily chosen, they are each of them designed to exercise and strengthen some one or other spiritual faculty. And the neglect of any one of these can never be compensated by any additional activity in the performance of any other; we can never omit any one of these without injuring and weakening some corresponding grace, without making our Christian character one-sided and distorted, and therefore weak and sickly. Every talent is to be accounted for.
It was Jenny Linds intense conviction that her art was a gift of God, to be dedicated to His service. This belief was continually on her lips. I have always put God first, she said, during her last days. It was this which you could feel in her pose, as she stood high-strung and prophetic, to deliver a great theme, such as I know that my Redeemer liveth. It was this which was the key to her superb generosity to the sick and the suffering; she was fulfilling her consecrated office towards them. It was this which sent her voice thrilling along the wards of the Brompton Hospital, where she loved to sing to those for whom she had herself built a whole wing. It was this which kindled all her enthusiasm for Mlle. Janotha, in whom she found a kindred mindJanotha who had said to her (she told me), What is this world of which people speak? I do not know what the world is. I play for Jesus Christ.1 [Note: H. Scott Holland, Personal Studies, 21.]
4. Finally, all growth has its periods of rest.Trees and plants grow downward first, then horizontally for awhile, and then laterally; then the horizontal and lateral periods succeed each other regularly until the fulness is reached. So Christian growth needs silence, obscurity, and regular periods of rest, periods for broadening, for strengthening, for ripening, for shadowing the growths that have already been made. All living things here need sleep, and even our spirits have their periods of rest. This rest is the outcome of trust in God. The active energetic follower of Christ is in danger of becoming irritated and irritating. The remedy is trust.
A letter to S. S., 1861, touches artistic ways and means: As I was going to bed I thought of the straitness of my income, and the wants of the family, and the possibilities of the future; and, for a time, felt faithless and unbelieving. But my mind turned to God, and I thought of the unchangeable love which has led me, and fed me, and delivered me from all evil, and forgiven me, and made me happy; so that in spite of a fearful heart, and an uncertain tenure, and a host of evils within and without, life is really a joyful thing. And what God has done for me, who began life with nothing, not even godliness, He can do for my children. And so I lay down quite light-hearted and free from all anxious care; and with a breeze of thankfulness and praise blowing through the avenues of my soul.2 [Note: James Smetham, 122.]
IV
The Direction of Growth
1. The direction of Christian growth is upward. It is towards Jesus Christ. Unto each one of us was the grace given that we may grow up in all things into him, which is the head, even Christ. Where life from God, through full obedience, is received by a soul, that soul is day by day, hour by hour, yea, moment by moment, growing into the likeness of the Son of God. When, by Gods grace, we reach the perfection of consummation, when we have done with the bud of promise and the blossom of hope, and have come to the fruitage of realization, what will that final glory be? The psalmist had a fore-glimpse of it when he said, I shall be satisfied, when I awake, with thy likeness. The Apostle John saw it even more clearly, Beloved, now are we children of God, and it is not yet made manifest what we shall be. We know that if he shall be manifested, we shall be like him; for we shall see him even as he is. The consummation of Christian character is perfect approximation to the character of Jesus Christ. We shall have reached the fruitage of Christian life when we see Him, and when we are like Him. Growth into His likeness, then, is the line of Christian development.
And so all growth that is not toward God
Is growing to decay. All increase gained
Is but an ugly, earthy, fungous growth.
Tis aspiration as that wick aspires,
Towering above the light it overcomes,
But ever sinking with the dying flame.1 [Note: George MacDonald, Poetical Works, i. 13.]
2. There is a growth downward, that is, growth in the knowledge of our own hearts. Study thyself; for if you would educate the soul, you cannot wisely or efficiently do so unless you not only look but dwell within, and so come to learn what you truly are, and what you may yet become. Says Coleridge: It is the advice of the wise man, dwell at home, or with yourself, though there are very few that do this; yet it is surprising that the greatest part of mankind cannot be prevailed upon at least to visit themselves sometimes.
A man once bought a barometer under a mistaken idea of its purpose, and then complained that he could not see that it had made any improvement in the weather. The spiritual barometer of self-examination may not directly improve the weather, but may show what the spiritual weather is. It helps one to obey the old Delphic oracle, Know thyself.2 [Note: The Treasury, May 1902, p. 82.]
3. There is a growth outward. The man who does something for others does something for himself. If he is freezing and obeys an impulse to keep another man from freezing, the warmth which he generates reacts upon himself. Exercise is not only expenditure but accretion. As the pendulum swings out only to travel back on the same arc, so the force which goes out in exercise comes back in the form of strengthened fibre. So is it also in the realm of intellect and the domain of soul. Expenditure is followed by enrichment. One gives out the treasures of his mind, only to find that clearer perception and more facile diction are the result of his effort, and he can do better the second time because he has been aided by his first attempt. The soul grows by virtue of every effort to do good. And altruism means not only the blessing of mankind but also the evolution of character.
For three months Mrs. Sellar, my husbands mother, lay in her room, her bodily powers gradually failing, but nothing clouding her mind nor weakening her immense power of loving.
Except Robert, the Australian, all her sons were in this country at this time. They all came and went constantly to see her: the best-beloved, Johnnie, came down twice a week from London to be with her. Though she could not eat much, it was a pleasure to him to bring all kinds of little comforts to her. And she who counted that day lost in which she had given nothing, was always touched and surprised by gifts bestowed on herself. Once he brought her down a beautiful soft grey dressing-gown, and the first time she had it on I happened to slip unseen into the room. He was sitting beside her, and she was stroking his hand, saying, My dear Johnnie, my bonnie boy; and then, with a funny little touch of humour she added, Would it be profane to say, Thou hast warmed me, clothed and fed me?1 [Note: Mrs. Sellar, Recollections and Impressions, 234.]
V
The Tests of Growth
1. One test of growth is a warmer and more unselfish love.As our knowledge of Christ becomes more intimate we love Him for what He is in Himself, and not so much for what He has done. The latter is not free from a taint of selfishness. It is one thing for me to be intensely grateful to the man who pulls me out of the fire, but it is another thing to love him as a man, apart from his act. I must be often with him first, and learn what manner of spirit he is of, before I can be said to love him. Applying this test to Christ, do I love Him most because He is the incarnation of virtue and goodness? Then is my love not altogether unworthy of Him. It has, at any rate, lost the alloy of impulse and selfishness, so apt to spoil the most precious ore of the heart.
I believe that if we were like Christ even the wild beasts of our woods and fields would flee to us for refuge and deliverance; and man must be in the world as He was in the world, and then the world will blossom around him with all Gods meanings, and not merely with mens sayings. We shall grow in the graciousness and in the knowledge of the Lord Christ until we ourselves are blessed with the same joy with which Christ was blessed, until we are glad with the eternal gladness of the eternal God. And less than that Christ would not have died for, less than that could be wrought at less expense.1 [Note: George MacDonald.]
2. Another test of growth is what we outgrow.Bring me the coat I wore as a boy at school, and let me try it on; I shall soon discover whether I have grown. Bring me the essays I wrote at eighteen, and let me read them; I shall soon be able to tell you whether my mind has grown. So I like to go back over my older views of God, my ideas and wants as to communion with Him, my previous felt need of Him and joy in Him, and when I know how I think of Him, need Him, talk to Him, walk with Him now, I can soon see if the old spiritual garments of twenty years ago would fit now, or are too small.
In some of our houses there are little faded marks on the walls or door-posts, where the children when they were growing stood to have their height registered; but now that they have done growing the marks are neglected. Is there in your life any experience like this? You used to be anxious about your spiritual condition; are you now, or are these matters only a faded memory? Have you of late grown spiritually? When will you reach the measure of the stature of a perfect man in Christ?2 [Note: R. H. Lovell, First Types of the Christian Life, 281.]
Away in the hills at Candy in Ceylon there is a great artificial lake, round the edge of which palm-trees of a certain kind are planted. Look at the trunk of one of the trees. You see the bark is covered with rings, one above another, from the roots to the very top of the tree. Every ring represents a year; and so from the number of the rings I can tell the age of the tree. Now, it is not quite so easy as that to mark your growth in grace. It is true, however, that very often the face bears traces of the growing goodness within. But when a man grows out of old, doubtful friendships, when he grows out of old habits that were not lovelyhabits of idleness, impatience, exaggeration, spitefulness, deceit, pettishnessthen I know that man is growing in grace.1 [Note: A. A. Cooper, Gods Forget-me-not, 44.]
When passing southward, I may cross the line
Between the Arctic and Atlantic Oceans,
I may now know, by any test of mine,
By any startling signs or strange commotions
Across my track.
But if the days grow sweeter, one by one,
And een the icebergs melt their hardened faces,
And sailors linger, basking in the sun,
I know I must have made the change of places,
Some distance back.
When, answering timidly the Masters call,
I passed the bourne of life in coming to Him,
When in my love for Him I gave up all;
The very moment when I thought I knew Him,
I cannot tell.
But, as unceasingly I feel His love;
As this cold heart is melted to oerflowing,
As now so clear the light comes from above,
I wonder at the change, and pass on, knowing
That all is well.
3. Another test of growth is power to resist temptation.They say that the sea has welded together by its continuous action the stones that form Plymouth Breakwater. When first they were tipped into the ocean, and each was a separate stone, the ocean might have carried them away; but now the waters have compacted them into a solid mass that nothing can move. Change the figure: a newly planted young tree a boy may root up; no man can root up the oak that has grown for fifty years. Growth so roots us and grounds us that storms which would once have caused us terror come only as music.
Principal Rainys son, the late Mr. Rolland Rainy, M.P., once said that he never saw his father out of temper, never even momentarily perturbed during the appalling troubles through which the Free Church was called to pass when the decision of the House of Lords threatened to ruin her. How do you manage to control yourself? he asked the Principal one day; do you know, I never remember seeing you bursting into a passion? My son, was the reply, I once lost my temper atrociously in public, and I made such a fool of myself and did such damage to the cause which I represented that I resolved, for my own souls sake and for Christs sake, never again to commit such folly and sin; and I prayed the Lord to help me to keep my vow. By His grace I have been able to set a watch before the door of my lips.1 [Note: British Weekly.]
4. But there is no test of growth so easily applied as beauty of character.It is a test which we ourselves may not be able to apply; its very existence is dependent on our unconsciousness of its existence. But it is the test beyond every other which others apply to us. And it is the most conclusive.
Some years ago, a member of one of my former congregations, a Christian woman of refinement and of great consecration, went to stay in the home of her sister in the country, where she had not stayed for many years. Her sister was a woman of the world, engrossed in worldly pleasures and interests. When my friend was leaving the home, after a stay of two weeks, her sister, taking her by the hand, and looking into her face, said, I do not understand your religion, but I will tell you one thing; it has made you far easier to live with.2 [Note: G. Campbell Morgan, The Simple Things of the Christian Life, 63.]
Liddon had that which we call distinction. You might agree with him, or not agree; you might criticize and discuss his gifts; but, anyhow, he had the quality of speciality. In any roomful of men, his presence was felt with a distinct and rare impression. If he let himself speak, his voice, manner, style, articulation, arrested you; you wanted to listen to him, whoever else was speaking; his phrases, his expressions, caught your ear. Here was somebody notable; so you knew. He stood out from his fellows; there was a flavour in his company which was unique. And this impression is one which belonged to character; it was not the result of any particular and separate gift, but it made itself known through them all.3 [Note: H. Scott Holland, Personal Studies, 140.]
Growth
Literature
Bruce (J.), Sermons, 238.
Burrell (D. J.), The Spirit of the Age, 163.
Cooper (A. A.), Gods Forget-me-not, 41.
Girdlestone (A. G.), The Way, the Truth, the Life, No. 13.
Hare (A. W.), The Alton Sermons, 31.
Horne (C. S.), The Rock of Ages, 27.
Lovell (R. H.), First Types of the Christian Life, 286.
Maclaren (A.), Creed and Conduct, 192.
Magee (W. C.), Growth in Grace, 1.
Morgan (G. C.), The Simple Things of the Christian Life, 53.
Murray (W. H.), The Fruits of the Spirit, 301.
Pierce (C. C.), The Hunger of the Heart for Faith, 111.
Ryle (J. C.), Holiness.
Spurgeon (C. H.), Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit, viii. (1862) 1.
Stanley (A. P.), Addresses and Sermons in St. Andrews, 136.
Steel (T. H.), Sermons in Harrow Chapel, 117.
Troup (G. E.), Words to Young Christians, 69.
Williams (T. Ll.), Thy Kingdom Come, 42.
Christian World Pulpit, viii. 27 (Beecher); xiii. 116 (Skinner); xxviii. 344 (Macdonald); xxx. 298 (Beecher); xxxiv. 45 (Tymms); xlv. 236 (Stewart).
Church Pulpit Year Book, ix. (1912) 239.
Homiletic Review, li. 222 (Burgwin); liii. 380 (Webb-Peploe).
grow: Psa 92:12, Hos 14:5, Mal 4:2, Eph 4:15, Col 1:10, 2Th 1:3, 1Pe 2:2
knowledge: 2Pe 1:3, 2Pe 1:8, 2Pe 2:20, Joh 17:3, 2Co 4:6, Eph 1:17, Phi 3:8, Col 1:10, Col 3:10
To him: Joh 5:23, 2Ti 4:18, 1Pe 5:10, 1Pe 5:11, Jud 1:25, Rev 1:6, Rev 5:9-14
Amen: Mat 6:13, Mat 28:20
Reciprocal: Exo 33:13 – that I Jos 17:13 – waxen strong Psa 24:7 – King Psa 71:14 – praise Psa 72:15 – daily Psa 84:7 – They Psa 92:13 – shall flourish Psa 104:31 – The glory Pro 4:18 – General Pro 9:9 – General Pro 15:14 – heart Son 4:16 – the spices Isa 43:11 – General Isa 45:15 – O God Isa 53:11 – by his Eze 40:26 – seven Zep 2:3 – seek righteousness Mat 13:23 – some an Mat 13:33 – till Mar 4:27 – and grow Mar 8:25 – and saw Luk 11:36 – the whole Luk 22:32 – strengthen Joh 15:5 – same Act 2:42 – they Act 5:31 – a Saviour Act 11:23 – and exhorted Act 13:23 – raised Act 13:43 – persuaded Act 18:26 – expounded Rom 1:11 – to the Rom 11:36 – to whom Rom 16:27 – God 1Co 1:5 – and in 1Co 14:6 – knowledge 1Co 14:20 – not 1Co 15:58 – be ye 2Co 8:7 – this Gal 1:5 – whom Gal 5:4 – ye Eph 3:19 – to know Eph 3:21 – throughout Eph 4:13 – the knowledge Phi 1:9 – in knowledge Phi 2:12 – work Phi 3:12 – already perfect Col 2:2 – understanding Col 2:5 – and the Col 2:7 – stablished Col 2:19 – increaseth 1Th 3:12 – the Lord 1Th 4:1 – so ye 1Th 4:10 – that ye 1Ti 1:17 – be 2Ti 1:10 – our 2Ti 2:1 – be Tit 1:4 – our Tit 2:13 – our Heb 12:14 – and holiness Heb 13:21 – to whom 2Pe 1:2 – the knowledge 2Pe 1:5 – giving 3Jo 1:2 – even Rev 2:19 – the last
GROWTH IN GRACE AND KNOWLEDGE
But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
2Pe 3:18
The Christian life, like the Christian faith from which it springs, is a great mystery; indeed, it is part of that one great mystery of godliness which that faith reveals, for it, too, is a manifestation of God in the flesh. Every renewed man is a real revelation of God. God dwelleth in him, and he in God, and the indwelling Spirit reveals Himself in and by him to the world. I in them and Thou in Me, that the world may believe that Thou hast sent Me.
This mysterious life presents, though in an infinitely lower degree, that difficulty which the idea of the Incarnation presents, the difficulty of conceiving of any real union of the human and the Divineany union, that is, in which God shall still be perfectly God and man perfectly man. We know how that as men insisted on the truth of our Lords Divinity, they were almost insensibly led into denying, or forgetting, the truth of His humanity; or, as they asserted the reality of His human nature, they were led into denial or forgetfulness of His Divine nature. And as with the idea of the incarnate Word, so with the written Word. Here, too, we have a union of the Divine and human; and, further, as with these two, so also with the idea of the Christian life. In each case the Divine and human element has been distorted by one-sided attempts to bring out either of these ideas to the exclusion of the other.
I. The Divine and supernatural aspect of the Christian life has been dwelt upon by one school of writers so exclusively as to cause its human aspect to disappear until it becomes an utterly unreal state; others have gone beyond all this (to the other extreme), and asserting the human side of Christianity, they have denied the Divine, and, while proclaiming that the Christian life is not unnatural, they have made it no longer supernatural.
Now against both these extreme views, each the exaggeration of a great truth, and each therefore a dangerous error, the Word of God gives its clear and repeated testimony
(a) To the Divine and supernatural aspect of the Christian lifein every word which tells us of our state of spiritual death and absolute need of a new birth, which is described as the work of the quickening Spirit, Who is Lord and Giver of Life; in every word which describes that spiritual life in its irreconcilable opposition to the old nature; in every word which ascribes the awakening of every holy desire to an Almighty Spirit dwelling in our spirit; in every word which describes that new life as not fed by bread alonea progressive life from victory to victory over the world, the flesh, and the devil. A new life to which human nature, unaided and unchanged, could never reach.
(b) To the human and natural aspect of the Christian lifein every word which appeals to our human reason, pleads with our affections; which exhorts us to work out our own salvation with fear and trembling, to give all diligence to add to our faith every needed grace, to watch against all spiritual enemies; in every call to the use of ordinances, and in every warning against their neglect; above all, against resisting, grieving, quenching, that very Spirit of God which works in us; in every such word which makes us in part authors of our own salvation, and altogether authors of our own destruction, does Scripture testify that, though God works in every renewed man, yet that every man works also with God.
II. Such opposite statements are scattered for the most part throughout Scripture separately that we may use them each in turn as we may need them; but there are passages which bring together in one both these views of the Christian life, which express at once both its supernatural and its natural, its human and its Divine, elementsas, e.g., Php 2:12-13; and a twofold statement is given us in the text.
When the Apostle bids us grow in grace, he tells us, on the one hand, that our life is from abovethat to live it we need a grace, a free and gracious gift from God of that thing which by nature we cannot have; but then he bids us grow in grace, intimating that this grace, though miraculous in origin, is yet subject to natural laws in its progress. The analogy here to the growth of the plant or the animal is perfect. The life, the vital principle of any living thing, we cannot give, it has God alone for its author; but once that life is begun, and manifests itself by growth, then we have power over it to shape, direct, and improve, or to distort, dwarf, and destroy. This scriptural analogy gives an answer to those who insist upon the irresistible character of Divine grace, that it is impossible to defeat the purposes of God, or prevent the work of the Holy Spirit once begun in the heart. Those who so speak forget that the same might be said (manifestly falsely) of many another work of God. It is not we who in either case are stronger than God. It is God, Who has in His original design left limits within which our power may be exerted, and with which His Will shall not over-power ours.
III. But if the progress of our spiritual life depends so largely upon ourselves, if we are responsible for our growth or decline in grace, then it is all-important for us to have some standard by which we may measure this growth or decline; where, then, is the perfect life by which to measure our growth or decline?
We know that one such perfect life, and one alone, stands out among all the records of our race, unstained by sin, undimmed by imperfectionthe life of Him Who did no sin, in Whose mouth was no guile; the Beloved Son, in Whom the Father was well pleased. We know that this life is the ideal of our own; it is to this image, faultless and glorious as it is, that we are predestined to be conformed. It doth not yet appear what we shall be, but we know that all the glory of the future life shall consist in its likeness to him. We shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is. Our growth in grace, then, is nothing else than our increasing likeness to Christ.
IV. Of the character of this Divine life the Word of God leaves us in no doubt.That character is sonship. To as many as believed on Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God. The essential principle of this new life, that which makes it altogether new, is that we regain our lost relations to the Father of our spirits, and become once more His children. I will arise, and go to my Father, is the first word of the new life in him who was dead and had been made alive (see 1Jn 3:1). From first to last the spirit of adoption is the characteristic of the new life. Beloved, now are we the sons of Godhere is the beginning; When He shall appear, we shall be like Himhere is the completion; and all that lies between these two is growth in grace.
V. The tests of our growth in grace.
(a) These will not be only, or perhaps chiefly, any great increase of Christian graces, or manifestation of religious fervour, so much as the real consciousness of evil within us, of how far we fall short of our perfect Pattern; the discovery of the weakness of our will, the coldness of our hearts, the sinfulness of our lives; in the grief that we feel, and the earnest desires for more grace. Such are the best proofs that the things belonging to the Spirit are living and growing in us, and that all carnal affections are dying in us.
(b) But to grow in grace we must know the conditions of such growth. As in the natural so in the spiritual life; it has its proper element and food, and deprived of these it perishes. There is the Communion of the Body and Blood of Christ, by which the soul is strengthened and refreshed; the sincere milk of the Word by which the new-born life in us should grow; secret prayer, that opens for us an entrance into the treasury of heaven; the worship of the sanctuary, that brings into the midst of the assembled saints the presence of their Lord; and all those means of grace, which are ours to use or to refuse; to neglect altogether, or, what perhaps is worse, to pick and choose, partly to use, or use amiss. In such cases there can be no growth in grace.
(c) To grow in grace means the due performance of all duties. For the souls health, as for the bodys, there is needed the vigorous use of all its powers. Our appointed duties are designed to exercise and strengthen some one or other spiritual faculty. We may omit none; the duty which we may prefer is often just the one that we least need to practise; the one we neglect is just the one we most need to observe.
An unspeakably solemn and awful thing, as well as a glorious and blessed thing, is this Christian life of oursa life which, in its every circumstance, may, by the power of the Holy Spirit, be made to minister to our growth in grace, and work out for us an eternal and exceeding weight of glory. Especially awful does it appear when we remember that in ourselves lies the power of turning every one of its blessings into a curse.
May God preserve us from the sin of a wasted life! May He grant us all by His holy inspiration to know what things we ought to do, and grace and power faithfully to fulfil the same.
Archbishop Magee.
(SECOND OUTLINE)
CHRISTIAN GROWTH
Every Christian is obliged not only to secure his standing in goodness and virtue, but to go forward and improve in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ, and in all the graces which may adorn and exalt our holy profession.
I. Consider the dangerous condition of the Christian who does not go forward.Mark the corruption of human nature, the temptations of the world, the assaults of the devil, and the viciousness of the age we live in; it is morally impossible without a vigorous resistance, and a constant endeavour to do good, to keep our ground. In the natural world, standing water will stagnate and polluteso in the moral world.
II. We are obliged to grow in grace and improve in goodness, for it is he that endureth to the end who will be saved. Hence the Apostle urges us to go forward (Gal 6:9). The direct intention of his command must suppose that if we do faint and stop in our Christian course, we shall most certainly lose our reward. So also Php 2:12.
III. The necessity of growing in grace is shown by the excellency and usefulness of such high attainment.These attainments in virtue are not only excellent in themselves, but very much admired by the world. A religious heat, a holy zeal, a heart enflamed with love and fear of God, is seen and received with a surprising joy and wonder upon earth.
Illustration
Like our Lord, we should seek that our Christian character should be harmonious and symmetrical. As a rule, we men can only appropriate one part of goodness at the cost of the rest. In our Lord there is no predominating virtue which throws others into the shade. Every excellence is adjusted, balanced, illustrated by other excellences. He is tender without false sentiment, benevolent without a trace of weakness, resolute without passion, without obstinacy. His condescension never degenerates into mere familiarity. His incomparable dignity never touchesit were blasphemy to think itthe confines of pride. He is in His character, as by the terms of His mediatorial office, at once the lamb led forth to sacrifice, and withal the lion of the tribe of Judah.
(THIRD OUTLINE)
MEANS OF GROWTH
Our means of growth are manifold.
I. Study the will of Christ, seeking to gather from all that He said, and from all that He instructed His Apostles to write, what He would have us be and do, so that we may be filled with the knowledge of His will (Col 1:9): the study of the character and the life of Christ.
II. Intercourse.If we have fellowship with Christ, such as He invites us and desires us to have; if we seek Him in the chamber, in the sanctuary, at His Holy Table, we shall, by the assimilating influence of close and loving friendship, become imbued with His Spirit, and we shall live His life.
III. Prayer. We can never be like our Lord and attain to the grace which He came to confer, until we receive a large measure of the direct influence, until we are the subjects of the renewing power of His Holy Spirit. And this we shall have if we ask in earnestness and faith.
These conditions of growth we can fulfil; these sources are open to us all.
Illustration
A young lady once asked me what she could do for Jesus, as she much wanted to do something. I suggested visiting, Sunday-school teaching, etc. Oh, I could not do that; my father and mother are very much against that sort of thing, and all my brothers and sisters look upon your sort of life as nonsense. I said, I am glad to know this. Your work is very plain. Just go home, and live such a holy life that every one of them shall be brought to Jesus. She said she could not do it. Turning to Hosea 14, I pointed out to her the lesson of the olive tree; we prayed and she went away. Some months had passed, and, holding another mission in the same place, all her brothers and sisters, the servants, and father, were brought to Christ, and their testimony wasit was her life at home.
(FOURTH OUTLINE)
THE GRACE OF CHRIST
As the knowledge in which we are exhorted to grow is the knowledge of Christ, so the grace in which we are exhorted to grow is the grace of Christ.
I. Think of the grace which Christ reveals.The word grace is generally used in the New Testament to denote the free, undeserved mercy which God shows towards sinners. This grace of God has been revealed in the gift of His Son. Are you, then, growing in the realisation and apprehension of this Divine love?
II. Think of the grace which Christ imparts.The love of God, when shed abroad within our hearts, exercises its natural influence in subduing the evil of our nature. And again, this love of God, just because it seeks to cleanse and save, sends forth those spiritual influences which are designed to purify us, and subjects us to the discipline which is designed to train us. Thus what we call the graces of character are doubly the fruits of grace. The grace of God is at once the element in which they grow and the source from which they spring. They are the product in us of Christs gospel and Christs Spirit. We are exhorted to grow in the grace which Christ imparts. Has there, then, been anything of this growth in you?
III. Think of the grace which Christ exemplifies.Ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that, though He was rich, yet for your sakes He became poor. Christ was Himself the Exemplar of that mercy which cares for the wretched, the erring, and the fallen. And surely of all graces this is the Divinest. Yet, alas! how often is it the case that as men grow in years they become less generous and gracious! Surely if the passing years can teach us anything at all, they might teach us to be more merciful and tender.
2Pe 3:18. Grow in grace means to grow (or increase) in the favor of the Lord. Note that this exhortation is coupled with the knowledge of Him. Hence our favor with the Lord will increase as our knowledge of Him increases, which we may obtain only by becoming familiar with the Gospel. To hint be glory means that all honor and dignity should be ascribed to the Lord, and that such respect will be due Him for ever. Amen is ascribed as an expression of emphasis; its uses and meaning are explained in the comments at Rom 16:24 in first volume of the New Testament Commentary.
2Pe 3:18. But grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. The R. V. prefers the rendering grow in the grace and knowledge, etc.a rendering which may mean either in the grace and in the knowledge which Christ gives, or in the grace which Christ gives and in the gift of knowing Him. The A. V. keeps clear of this ambiguity, as well as of the special awkwardness of the second construction, by taking the grace as a thing distinct from what follows it. The great duty finally urged is thus the duty of progress, and that in two particular articles, namely, the gracious life or the Christian graces generally, and that special grace of a personal knowledge of Christ which holds so fundamental a place in the Epistle. In this way, too, the writer returns at the close of his letter to the thought with which he started. His opening salutation had been a prayer that grace and peace might be multiplied to them in the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord (chap. 2Pe 1:2). And now, as the conclusion of the whole matter, and as the only effectual preservation from the assaults and seductions of all forms of a science falsely so called, this same blessing of spiritual enlargement, and that through the same means, is laid on their own consciences and hearts as a most solemn obligation (Lillie).
to him he (or, is) the glory both now and for ever. The final Amen, which is retained by the R. V., is of very doubtful authority. The idea of eternity is expressed here by an altogether singular phrase, which means literally unto the day of the eon, and which may be chosen to denote the beginning of the new, the eternal age,the day on which eternity, as contrasted with time, begins (Huther). The doxology is addressed to Christ, and is significant of Peters conception of His Person. It is, as Alford suggests, like one of those hymns which Pliny says were sang by the Christians of his time to Christ as God. It closes the Epistle, too, in its own simple majesty, unaccompanied and undiminished by any statement personal to the writer, or even by any of the usual valedictory salutations to the readers.
Verse 18
A similar doxology occurs before in 2 Peter 3:18; 1 Peter 4:11,5:11, in both which cases it apparently, though not so unquestionably as in this case, stands as an ascription to the Savior. The certainty of the application of it, in this case, goes very far towards removing any doubt which we might feel in those.
Next he added a positive exhortation (cf. 2Pe 1:5-10). Rather than being swept away by error, his audience should keep on growing (present imperative in Greek) in God’s grace. They could do so by consciously depending on His resources (His power and promises, 2Pe 1:3-4) and by growing in the knowledge (Gr. gnosei) of "our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ" (cf. 2Pe 1:11; 2Pe 2:20; 2Pe 3:2). They could do the latter by getting more intimately acquainted with Him day by day (2Pe 1:5-8).
"Christian knowledge fosters fellowship with God and deepens a consciousness of the believer’s obligation to live a life worthy of His grace." [Note: Hiebert, Second Peter . . ., p. 178.]
"The command to grow is an appeal to the will. But growth, in the spiritual as in the physical realm, is not produced by an assertion of the will. Yet the human will plays a decisive part in the experience of spiritual growth. Believers must will to remove the hindrances to growth while actively fostering the conditions which promote growth. When the conditions for spiritual growth are maintained the divinely implanted life will assuredly grow and mature. . . .
"Growing knowledge fosters fellowship with God and deepens the consciousness of one’s obligations to lead a life worthy of His grace." [Note: Idem, "Directives for . . .," p. 338.]
Continuing growth ". . . is the unfailing panacea for all spiritual ills." [Note: H. A. Ironside, Expository Notes on the Epistles of Peter, p. 102.]
"We grow best in a loving family, and this is where the local church comes in. A baby needs a family for protection, provision, and affection. Tests prove that babies who are raised alone, without special love, tend to develop physical and emotional problems very early. The church is God’s ’nursery’ for the care and feeding of Christians, the God-ordained environment that encourages them to grow." [Note: Wiersbe, 2:471.]
The greatest goal for the Christian should be to glorify Jesus Christ (1Co 10:31). Only four epistles end with a doxology, including this one (cf. Rom 16:25-27; Php 4:20; Jude 24-25). Normally doxologies glorify God, but this one and two others glorify Jesus Christ (cf. 2Ti 4:18; Rev 1:5-6). Peter’s final words focused his readers’ attention anew on the ultimate priority of glorifying Christ. The day of eternity is the time when we will be living on the new earth (2Pe 3:13).
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
1. He will surely come. But, beloved, be not ignorant of this one thing, that one day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day. Though we measure time by succession, the past, the present, and the future appear, to the eternal God, in one comprehensive view, and as nothing compared with his eternity. The Lord is not slack concerning his promise (as some men count slackness,) too impatient for his appearing, but is long-suffering to us-ward, not willing that any of the human race should perish, but that all should come to repentance, and be saved by grace through faith,the only possible way of salvation. Note; (1.) The great design that God hath in view, is the salvation of all those who will yield to be saved by grace through faith. (Eph 2:8.) (2.) The way in which we can meet the Lord with comfort is, by being converted and turned to him now by faith: the impenitent and unbelieving must assuredly perish.
1. The Christian’s expectations when this heaven and earth shall be dissolved. Nevertheless, we, according to his promise, look for new heavens and a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness, even that blessed abode which the infinite love of God hath prepared for the faithful; where nothing shall ever enter which defileth, and where their bliss and glory will be eternal.
(1.) To be faithful in their holy profession. Wherefore, beloved, seeing that ye look for such things, be diligent in the use of every appointed means of grace, and in all holy watchfulness, that ye may be found of him in peace, possessing a sure interest in his love, without spot of sin, and blameless in his presence, through the Blood of the covenant and the efficacious influences of the Spirit of God.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
Fuente: Expositions Of Holy Scripture by Alexander MacLaren
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes
Fuente: The Great Texts of the Bible
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament
Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)