Thursday, April 02, 2020

Dial Daily Bread: What Are the "Exceedingly Great and Precious Promises"?

Dear Friends of "Dial Daily Bread,"

It's all very good to believe what Peter says about receiving and believing the "exceedingly great and precious promises" (2 Peter 1:4), but what are the "promises" themselves? They must be understood and received into the heart; then they go to work and deliver the most sinful, polluted, selfish worldly heart so that we become actual "partakers of the divine nature."

Well, let's start with John 3:16: Believe, appreciate, comprehend, the love of the Father when He gave Christ to us forever. "Whoever believes in Him" will not commit spiritual and material suicide (that word "perish" is in the middle voice of the Greek verb!). New Covenant!

Then look at the seven grand promises God made to Abraham under the New Covenant (Gen. 12:2, 3). You are His child by faith (Gal. 3:9). Therefore they are all promises God makes to you.Believethem. (Someone will tell you that you must work hard in order for them to come true; let subtle Old Covenant thinking become New Covenant: the love [agape] of Christ will "constrain" you to work hard with no thought of reaping your reward [2 Cor. 5:14].)

Then take a look at the Lord's Prayer (Matt. 6:9-13). Jesus invites anyone in the world, even the most terrible sinner, to pray that prayer. The New Covenant goes to work because the one who will "cry out, Abba, Father!" receives "the Spirit of adoption" (Rom. 8:15). You can't pray "our Father" without your heart being melted!

Then read the 23rd Psalm. Anybody in the world, even the most hardened sinner, can pray sincerely, "The Lord is my Shepherd," and his stony heart will be broken in contrition. The New Covenant Psalm "works." The word itself has power (Rom. 1:16).

--Robert J. Wieland

From the "Dial Daily Bread" Archive: March 12, 2006.
Copyright © 2020 by "Dial Daily Bread."