and said, Verily I say unto you, except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven. Whosoever therefore shall humble himself as this little child, the same is greatest in the kingdom of heaven. And whoso shall receive one such little child in my name receiveth me. Matthew 18:3-5 KJV https://bible.com/bible/1/mat.18.3-5.KJV
Heavenly Father, help us to receive your Son with the heart of a child, and the faith of a child. Help us to know that You can and will be there for us forever. Help our unbelief if there be any unbelief within us in our hearts. Help us to know that Jesus, Your Son, is the way, the truth, and the life and that the only way to You is through Him. Thank You for Your Word. Thank You for every blessing large and small. Thank You for the blessings we don’t see, and for those that we do see. Thank You for the life You give to us each day. Thank You for always watching over us, and keeping us from harm. Thank You for all that You have done, doing, and going to do in our life. Most of all, thank You for Your Son, Jesus Christ and what He did for all of us. We are grateful to You for Him. We are thankful that He shed His precious blood for us. Thank You for loving us enough to sacrifice Your Only Son for us to save our sinful souls. There is no one like you, Heavenly Father. All praise, glory, and honor belong to You, in Jesus’s name, Amen.
In exhorting the church to conduct themselves faithfully during a time of intense trial, Peter weaves the themes of humility and suffering together. Humility emphasizes the need for submission to both God-appointed leaders and God Himself in prayer. Suffering emphasizes the need for standing firm. Here’s some help working through these verses from the Bible Knowledge Commentary.
1 Peter 5:5
“In the same way, you who are younger, submit yourselves to your elders. All of you, clothe yourselves with humility toward one another, because, ‘God opposes the proud but shows favor to the humble.”
Young men…be submissive (hypotagete; cf. 3:1) to those who are older. Church leaders were usually older members. The younger members were to place themselves willingly under the authority of those who had been given the responsibility of leadership. Peter exhorted both young and old alike to clothe (enkombosasthe, “clothe or tie on oneself”; an enkomboma was the apron of a slave) yourselves with humility. True humility is attractive dress (cf. 3:8). Peter may have alluded to Christ’s girding Himself with a towel and teaching the disciples that humility is the prerequisite for service and service is the practice of humility (John 13:4-15).
Peter quoted Proverbs 3:34 to emphasize God’s different attitudes toward the proud and the humble. God opposes (lit., “sets Himself against”) the arrogant but grants favor and acceptance to the humble.
1 Peter 5:6-7
“Humble yourselves, therefore, under God’s mighty hand, that he may lift you up in due time. Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you.”
Knowing God’s attitude should cause Christians not only to be subject to others but also to subject themselves deliberately to God’s sovereign rule. The command humble yourselves (tapeinothete) could be translated “allow yourselves to be humbled.” Those who were suffering persecution for Christ’s sake could be encouraged by the fact that the same mighty hand that let them suffer would one day lift (hypsose, “exalt”) them up (cf. James 4:10).
Peter then referred to Christ’s classic words of encouragement in the Sermon on the Mount (Matt. 6:25-32), while quoting Psalm 55:22: “Cast your cares on the Lord and He will sustain you.” All a believer’s anxieties can be cast…on Him. Christ sustains because He cares. A Christian’s confidence rests in the fact that Christ is genuinely concerned for his welfare.
1 Peter 5:8-9
“Be alert and of sober mind. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour. Resist him, standing firm in the faith, because you know that the family of believers throughout the world is undergoing the same kind of sufferings.”
Be self-controlled (nepsate; cf. 1:13; 4:7) and alert (gregoresate; cf. 1 Thes. 5:6, 10). Christians should be constantly alert because the enemy (antidikos, “adversary”), the devil (diabolos, “slanderer”), is always actively seeking an opportunity for a vicious attack. This verse could also be a veiled allusion to the horrors of the Neronian persecution in the Roman Coliseum, in which lions mauled and devoured Christians. Satan desired to do the same thing spiritually, to defeat believers’ testimonies.
The devil can be and should be resisted. Resist (antistete means “withstand,” used also in James 4:7, cf. antidikos, “enemy” in 1 Peter 5:8). It is a term of defense rather than attack. Christians may stand firm against Satan only if they depend wholly on Christ, standing firm in the faith (cf. v. 12; Col. 2:5). Peter also encouraged his readers by reminding them that they were not alone in their suffering. The knowledge that other Christians, your brothers throughout the world, were suffering, would strengthen their resolve to continue to stand firm.
1 Peter 5:10-11
“And the God of all grace, who called you to his eternal glory in Christ, after you have suffered a little while, will himself restore you and make you strong, firm and steadfast. To him be the power for ever and ever. Amen.”
Peter had encouraged his readers to endure suffering in such a way that the grace of God would be made manifest in their lives. Now in a closing word of benediction he committed them to the God of all grace (cf. 4:10). The benediction briefly summarizes Peter’s message of encouragement. Christians’ suffering will last only a little while, while their glory in Christ, to which they were called, will be eternal (cf. Rom. 8:17-18; 2 Cor. 4:16-18). (This is Peter’s last of eight uses of “glory” in this epistle: 1 Peter 1:7, 11, 21, 24; 2:20; 4:14; 5:1, 10.) God Himself would restore them and make them strong (sterixei; cf. 2 Thes. 2:17), firm (sthenosei, used only here in the NT), and steadfast (themeliosei, “established”; cf. Eph. 3:17; Col. 1:23).
To Him be the power (kratos, “might”) forever and ever. Amen. In this benediction, similar to the one in 4:11, Peter praised Christ who has all power for all time (cf. Rom. 11:36; 1 Tim. 6:16). Certainly He has the power to strengthen His own as they undergo persecution.
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When you’re trying out a new restaurant, it’s always good to order something simple to compare with other experiences. For instance, if you love coffee, you may order an espresso or a plain latte at a new shop. Or maybe you rank Mexican-style restaurants on their enchiladas. In the same way, it can be helpful to look at a well-known passage to understand the style and quality of a commentary. For these reasons, we are sharing an excerpt from N.T. Wright’s For Everyone Commentary Series NT on John 1.
Never heard of N.T. Wright? He’s known for bringing biblical scholarship to life with engaging writing and inspiring anecdotes. Once you start reading his commentary, there’s no way you can miss it! In fact, a little teaser of what’s ahead…N.T. Wright starts off his explanation on John 1 with a story!
Get started by reading the passage of Scripture below. Then we’ll share an excerpt!
John 1:1-18
“1 In the beginning was the Word. The Word was close beside God, and the Word was God. 2 In the beginning, he was close beside God.
3All things came into existence through him; nothing that exists came into existence without him. 4 Life was in him, and this life was the light of the human race. 5 The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness didn’t overcome it.
6There was a man called John, who was sent from God. 7 He came as evidence, to give evidence about the light, so that everyone might believe through him. 8 He was not himself the light, but he came to give evidence about the light.
9The true light, which gives light to every human being, was coming into the world. 10 He was in the world, and the world was made through him, and the world didn’t know him. 11 He came to what was his own, and his own people didn’t accept him. 12 But to anyone who did accept him, he gave the right to become God’s children; yes, to anyone who believed in his name. 13 They were not born from blood, or from physical desire, or from the intention of a man, but from God.
14And the Word became flesh, and lived among us. We gazed upon his glory, glory like that of the father’s only son, full of grace and truth.
15John gave evidence about him, loud and clear. ‘This is the one’, he said, ‘that I was speaking about when I told you,’ ‘The one who comes after me ranks ahead of me, because he was before me.’
16Yes; it’s out of his fullness that we have all received, grace indeed on top of grace. 17 The law, you see, was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus the Messiah. 18 Nobody has ever seen God. The only-begotten God, who is intimately close to the father – he has brought him to light.”
Commentary on John 1:1-18
This content is adapted from the For Everyone Commentary Series by N.T. Wright.
BUT FIRST, A STORY
“‘It’s on the right just beyond the end of the village,’ my friend had said. ‘You’ll see where to turn – it’s got the name on the gate.'”
It sounded straightforward. Here was the village. I drove slowly past the pretty cottages, the small shops and the old church.
To begin with, I thought I must have misheard him. There didn’t seem to be any houses just outside the village. But then I came to the gateway. Tall stone pillars, overhanging trees and an old wooden sign with the right name on it. Inside, a wide gravel drive stretching away, round a corner out of sight. There were daffodils on the grass verge either side, in front of the thick rhododendron bushes.
I turned in to the driveway. He never told me he lived somewhere like this! I drove round the corner; then round another corner, with more daffodils and bushes. Then, as I came round a final bend, I gasped.
There in front of me was the house. Sheltered behind tall trees, surrounded by lawns and shrubbery, with the morning sunlight picking out the color in the old stone. And there was my friend, emerging from between the pillars around the front porch, coming to greet me.
JONH’S GOSPEL: A GRAND, IMPOSING HOUSE
Approaching John’s gospel is a bit like arriving at a grand, imposing house. Many Bible readers know that this gospel is not quite like the others. They may have heard, or begun to discover, that it’s got hidden depths of meaning. According to one well-known saying, this book is like a pool that’s safe for a child to paddle in but deep enough for an elephant to swim in. But, though it’s imposing in its structure and ideas, it’s not meant to scare you off. It makes you welcome. Indeed, millions have found that, as they come closer to this book, the Friend above all friends is coming out to meet them.
JOHN’S INTRODUCTION: THE WINDING DRIVEWAY
Like many a grand house, the book has a driveway, bringing you off the main road, telling you something about the place you’re getting to before you get there.
These opening verses are, in fact, such a complete introduction to the book that by the time you get to the story you know a good deal about what’s coming, and what it means. It’s almost as though the long driveway contained signs with pictures of the various rooms in the house and the people you were going to meet there. This passage has become famous because it’s often read at Christmas carol services – though it isn’t just about the birth of Jesus, but about the full meaning of everything he was, and is, and did. And the more we explore the gospel itself, the more we’ll discover what a complete introduction to it this short passage is.
JOHN’S MOST UNFORGETTABLE WORDS
The gateway to the drive is formed by the unforgettable opening words: ‘In the beginning was the Word.’ At once we know that we are entering a place which is both familiar and strange. ‘In the beginning’ – no Bible reader could see that phrase and not think at once of the start of Genesis, the first book in the Old Testament: ‘In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.’ Whatever else John is going to tell us, he wants us to see his book as the story of God and the world, not just the story of one character in one place and time. This book is about the creator God acting in a new way within his much-loved creation. It is about the way in which the long story which began in Genesis reached the climax the creator had always intended.
THE WORD BECOME ‘FLESH’
When I speak a word, it is, in a sense, part of me. It’s a breath that comes from inside me, making the noise that I give it with my throat, my mouth and my tongue. When people hear it, they assume I intended it. ‘But you said…’, people comment, if our deeds don’t match up to our words. We remain responsible for the words we say.
And yet our words have a life which seems independent of us. When people hear them, words can change the way they think and live. Think of ‘I love you’; or, ‘It’s time to go’; or, ‘You’re fired’. These words create new situations. People respond or act accordingly. The words remain in their memory and go on affecting them.
THE OLD TESTAMENT AND GOD’S WORD
In the Old Testament, God regularly acts by means of his ‘word’. What he says, happens – in Genesis itself, and regularly thereafter. ‘By the word of the Lord’, says the psalm, ‘the heavens were made’ (33:6). God’s word is the one thing that will last, even though people and plants wither and die (Isaiah 40.6-8); God’s word will go out of his mouth and bring life, healing and hope to Israel and the whole creation (Isaiah 55:10-11). That’s part of what lies behind John’s choice of ‘Word’ here, as a way of telling us who Jesus really is.
THE ORIGINAL CONTEXT AND GOD’S WORD
John probably expects some readers to see that this opening passage says, about Jesus himself, what some writers had said about ‘wisdom’. Many Jewish teachers had grappled with the age-old questions:
How can the one true God be both different from the world and active within the world?
How can he be remote, holy and detached, and also intimately present?
Some had already spoken of the ‘word’ and ‘wisdom’ as ways of answering these questions. Some had already combined them within the belief that the one true God had promised to place his own ‘presence’ within the Temple in Jerusalem. Others saw them enshrined in the Jewish law, the Torah. All of this, as we shall see, is present in John’s mind when he writes of God’s ‘Word’.
But the idea of the Word would also make some of his readers think of ideas that pagan philosophers had discussed. Some spoke of the ‘word’ as a kind of principle of rationality, lying deep within the whole cosmos and within all human beings. Get in touch with this principle, they said, and your life will find its true meaning. Well, maybe, John is saying to them; but the Word isn’t an abstract principle, it’s a person. And I’m going to introduce you to him.
INTRODUCING, JESUS
Verses 1–2 and 18 begin and end the passage by stressing that the Word was and is God, and is intimately close to God. John knows perfectly well he’s making language go beyond what’s normally possible, but it’s Jesus that makes him do it; because verse 14 says that the Word became flesh – that is, became human, became one of us. He became, in fact, the human being we know as Jesus. That’s the theme of this gospel: if you want to know who the true God is, look long and hard at Jesus.
The rest of the passage clusters around this central statement. The one we know as Jesus is identical, it seems, with the Word who was there from the very start, the Word through whom all things were made, the one who contained and contains life and light. The Word challenged the darkness before creation and now challenges the darkness that is found, tragically, within creation itself. The Word is bringing into being the new creation, in which God says once more, ‘Let there be light!’
THE CENTRAL PROBLEM IN THE GOSPEL STORY
But when God sends the Word into the world, the world pretends it doesn’t recognize him. Indeed, when he sends the Word specifically to Israel, the chosen people don’t recognize him. This is the central problem which dominates the whole gospel story. Jesus comes to God’s people, and God’s people do what the rest of the world do: they prefer darkness to light. That is why fresh grace is needed, on top of the grace already given (verse 16): the Jewish law, given by Moses, points in the right direction, but, like Moses himself, it doesn’t take us to the promised land. For that, you need the grace and truth that come through Jesus the Messiah, the son of God.
WE ARE A PART OF THE STORY
Perhaps the most exciting thing about this opening passage is that we’re in it too: ‘To anyone who did accept him’ (verse 12) – that means anyone at all, then and now. You don’t have to be born into a particular family or part of the world. God wants people from everywhere to be born in a new way, born into the family which he began through Jesus and which has since spread through the world. Anyone can become a ‘child of God’ in this sense, a sense which goes beyond the fact that all humans are special in God’s sight. Something can happen to people in this life which causes them to become new people, people who (as verse 12 says) ‘believe in his name’. Somehow (John will tell us how, step by step, as we go forward into the great building to which this driveway has led us) the great drama of God and the world, of Jesus and Israel, of the Word who reveals the glory of the unseen God – this great drama is a play in search of actors, and there are parts for everyone, you and me included.
As we make our way up this driveway towards the main building, a figure crosses our path. Is this, perhaps, our friend? The figure turns and looks, but points us on to the house. He isn’t the man we want, but his job is to point us to him. He is, in John’s language, ‘giving evidence about the light.’ If we are to meet the Word of God, all four gospels suggest we do well to begin by considering John (the Baptist).
Continue Learning with N.T. Wright
Check out the For Everyone Commentary Series New Testament (18 Vols.)
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Today, I woke up feeling nostalgic and peaceful. I felt emotional but the tears would not fall. I had a good feeling in the pit of my stomach like something unexpected was going to happen. I didn’t know what to think. We went out and enjoyed ourselves, came back home, and then I heard the UPS truck pull up in front of my house and leave a box on my porch. I went to the door and picked it up, and low and behold, it was my books! Yes, my books arrived today! All I could do was open them slowly until the box was completely open. I reached inside and pulled them out, tears filled my eyes, and I began to weep with tears of joy. I thanked God for blessing me for writing my book. I would have not known last year that this year I would be an author. Everything has come full circle this year so far. I cannot wait to see what the end of the year is going to be like for me. I cannot wait to see what else God has in store for me.
These are my beautiful books. I can hold my dream in my hands. I can feel the emotions that I feel when I look at them, and when I skim through the pages. I see the reality of what I wanted to do since I learned to write at a very young age. I know that my loved ones who have gone before me are celebrating this day with the angels. I know that they are proud of me. I wish my grandfather, grandmother, uncles, and brother were here to share this day with me. I wish my daughters and sons were here to share this day with me. They will see it on social media though.This is me holding my books which arrived August 4,2022 Thursday evening @ 4:40.
You cannot see it, but I have tears of joy in my eyes. I have been waiting for this day for a good while. They came earlier than expected. I was told it would be about three weeks to get here to my address. I am still letting it all sink in. The reality of it all is so very overwhelmingly emotional. I still feel like I am dreaming. I have accomplished something in my life that I thought I never would. I thought it would always be a dream. I often thought that dreams did not come true, because that was all it was just a dream. I have faced a lot in my life, and it is the reason why I wrote my book. I wanted the world to know that there are people who go through things all of their life living in silence, but there is a way to get your story told, it can be written by yourself, or someone else can write it for you while you tell them the story. I am fortunate to be able to write for myself. It was not easy though. I did have rough patches where I would just stop writing for days at a time. I had to gather my thoughts and put things back into perspective so I could focus and keep my mind clear.
Writing is a journey that your mind takes you on. It takes you back to moments in your life that had been long forgotten about. You get the chance to relive moments in time. Moments that made you laugh, moments that made you cry, and moments that made you scream at the top of your lungs. Writing a story makes you think about things that you are going through to the point that if you need to forgive someone for something you will. It has its high points, and it has its low points. Writing is a mystery; you never know what your mind will bring back to memory.
Well, again, thank you all for joining me on this writing journey. There are many more books to come. Working on my second book right now, I will inform everyone when it is completed, published, and when it is posted online to sell. Just in case you have not visited in a while, the price is $8.99 for the soft cover, and the E-book is $3.99. The E-Book is on Kindle. They both are on Amazon, and Barnes & Noble online.
My Life: From the Back Burnerwritten by LA’ Brea Aquaria