THE SECOND PART: A BIRD’S-EYE VIEW OF THE NEW TESTAMENT
The Ministry of Peter
Message Three—Partaking of the Divine Nature
Scripture Reading: 2 Pet. 1:1, 3-11; 3:18
I. As those who have received equally precious faith, we, the believers in Christ, should be partakers of the divine nature—2 Pet. 1:4: (2007 WT, msg. 10)
A. The divine nature refers to what God is, that is, the riches, the elements, and the constituents of God’s being—John 4:24; 1 John 1:5; 4:8, 16. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
B. The divine life and the divine nature are inseparable; the divine nature is the substance of the divine life and is within the divine life—1:1-2; 5:11-13. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
C. As the children of God, we are God-men, born of God, possessing the life and nature of God, and belonging to the species of God—3:1; John 1:12-13: (2007 WT, msg. 10)
1. At our regeneration, another nature was imparted into us; this is the nature of God, the divine nature—2 Pet. 1:4. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
2. Because the divine nature is in the divine life, the divine life with which we were born again has the divine nature within it—John 3:3, 5-6, 15. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
3. Whoever believes into the Son of God is born of God and has the right to become a child of God; thus, a believer has the right to partake of, to enjoy, the nature of God—1:12-13. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
D. A partaker of the divine nature is one who enjoys the divine nature and participates in the divine nature—2 Pet. 1:4: (2007 WT, msg. 10)
1. To partake of the divine nature is to enjoy what God is; to be a partaker of the divine nature is to be a partaker of the riches, the elements, and the constituents of God’s being—1 Pet. 1:8. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
2. If we would be partakers of the divine nature, we need to live by the divine life within which is the divine nature—John 1:4; 10:10; 11:25; 6:57b. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
E. We enjoy the riches of the divine nature through God’s precious and exceedingly great promises—e.g., 2 Cor. 12:9; Matt. 28:20b; Eph. 3:20. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
F. Being a partaker of the divine nature has a condition—that we escape the corruption which is in the world by lust; we need to live in the cycle of escaping and partaking and of partaking and escaping—2 Pet. 1:4. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
G. If we enjoy God and partake of the riches of His being, we will be constituted with the divine nature, becoming the same as God in life and nature but not in the Godhead and expressing Him in all that we are and do—v. 3. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
H. As we partake of the divine nature, enjoying all that God is, the riches of the divine nature will be fully developed, as described in verses 5 through 7. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
II. We need to experience the development of the divine life and the divine nature contained in the divine seed that has been sown into us so that we may have a rich entrance into the eternal kingdom—vv. 1, 4-11: (2007 WT, msg. 10)
A. We have been allotted the wonderful equally precious faith, and this faith is an all-inclusive seed—v. 1: (2007 WT, msg. 10)
1. All the divine riches are in this seed, but we must be diligent to develop them; to grow to maturity is to develop what we already have—vv. 1-8; 3:18. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
2. By developing these virtues, we grow in life, and eventually we will reach maturity, be full of Christ and be qualified and equipped to be kings in the coming kingdom—Eph. 4:13-15; Col. 2:19; 2 Pet. 1:11. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
3. We need to have the full development and maturity from the seed of faith, through the roots of virtue and knowledge, the trunk of self-control, and the branches of endurance and godliness, to the blossom and fruit of brotherly love and love—vv. 5-7. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
B. To supply virtue in faith is to develop virtue—the energy of the divine life issuing in vigorous action—in the exercise of the equally precious faith; this faith needs to be exercised so that the virtue of the divine life may be developed in the succeeding steps and reach maturity—v. 5a. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
C. Virtue needs the bountiful supply of the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord; the knowledge which we should develop in our virtue includes the knowledge of God and of our Savior, the knowledge of God’s economy, the knowledge of what faith is, and the knowledge of the divine power, glory, virtue, nature, and life—v. 5b. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
D. Self-control is the exercise of control and restraint over one’s self in its passions, desires, and habits; such self-control needs to be exercised in knowledge for the proper growth in life—v. 6a. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
E. To exercise endurance is to bear with others and with circumstances—v. 6b. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
F. Godliness is a living that is like God and that expresses God—v. 6c. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
G. Brotherly love (philadelphia) is brotherly affection, a love characterized by delight and pleasure; in godliness, which is the expression of God, this love needs to be supplied for the brotherhood, for our testimony to the world, and for the bearing of fruit—v. 7a; 1 Pet. 2:17; 3:8; Gal. 6:10; John 13:34-35; 15:16-17. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
H. The ultimate development of the divine nature within us is love—agape, the Greek word used in the New Testament for the divine love, which God is in His nature—2 Pet. 1:7b; 1 John 4:8, 16: (2007 WT, msg. 10)
1. Our brotherly love needs to be developed further into a nobler and higher love—2 Pet. 1:7b. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
2. In our enjoyment of the divine nature, we need to let the divine seed of the allotted faith develop to its consummation in the divine and nobler love—vv. 5-7. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
3. When we partake of the divine nature to the uttermost, we are filled with God as love, and we become persons of love, even love itself—Eph. 3:19. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
I. To develop the spiritual virtues in the divine life and thus to advance in the growth of the divine life makes God’s calling and selection of us firm—2 Pet. 1:10. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
J. We should be diligent to pursue the growth and development of the divine life and divine nature for a rich entrance into the eternal kingdom—vv. 10-11: (2007 WT, msg. 10)
1. The bountiful supply that we enjoy in the development of the divine life and divine nature (vv. 3-7) will bountifully supply us a rich entrance into the eternal kingdom of our Lord. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
2. This supply will enable and qualify us to enter into the coming kingdom by all the riches of the divine life and divine nature as our excellent virtues (energy) unto the splendid glory of God—v. 3; 1 Pet. 5:10. (2007 WT, msg. 10)
3. Apparently, it is we who enter into the eternal kingdom; actually, the entrance into the eternal kingdom is supplied to us richly through our growth in life and through the development of the divine life within us. (2007 WT, msg. 10)