
2 Peter 3:16-17
16 as he does in all his letters when he speaks in them of these matters. There are some things in them that are hard to understand, which the ignorant and unstable twist to their own destruction, as they do the other Scriptures.
17 You therefore, beloved, knowing this beforehand, take care that you are not carried away with the error of lawless people and lose your own stability.
Stability. Quite the concept for the Apostle Peter to bring up, and yet it is fitting, for he is writing as one who had obtained a faith of equal standing with those to whom he wrote. He was intimately knowledgeable of instability, of how the Lord had brought him back from having denied his Master.
As Peter is closing his last epistle to his brethren, he describes the patience of the Lord, and commends Paul’s writings, that were hard to understand. Even for Peter?
Nevertheless, Peter describes Paul’s writings as Scripture, and that there are some ignorant and unstable readers twist the scripture to their destruction.
Twist or distort. The term “twist” has the connotation of to be tortured, to twist or pervert. In my thoughts (which are worth less than the wind), I imagine these ignorant and unstable readers taking a truth from Paul’s writings and forcing it to say something it never was meant to convey. Can you imagine the picture Peter is trying to form in his readers mind. A truth provided by an apostle being tortured until a different message is understood!
This speaks of the willingness of our hearts to accept what the text says, after comparing with other texts within the Word. Is there something in the Word that you have to explain away in order to feel comfortable? Can you hear the text being tortured?
It is good to remember that the text is sometimes offensive, difficult to understand, upsetting to our sensibilities, even disturbing at times.
Peter is careful to describe those ignorant and unstable as twisting the text to their own destruction. Now I can hear many say that these ignorant and unstable are not believers, for their end is destruction, and I would have nothing to argue with you on this point.
The issue is that Peter is warning his people, believers who had obtained a faith of equal standing with Peter (verse 1) of the message the ignorant and unstable were providing, the error of the lawless people. The message they tortured out of the text was bringing about their destruction. Is Peter warning his people of their own destruction? He certainly is warning them of staying away from the wrong message and thereby avoiding the same end the ignorant and unstable will experience.
And what is the cure, what is Peter’s last message for the church?
2 Peter 3:18 But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To him be the glory both now and to the day of eternity. Amen.
Instead of listening to those who torture the text, or to your thoughts when they are wanting to hear something instead of the truth, seek after the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, to increase in His knowledge and grace, to come to understand who He is and what He has done.
Focus on Him and the truth provided through the Word. Stay away from the ignorant and unstable, for they produce a destroying message! (Note that the ignorant and unstable will often make glorious claims of deep or new understandings in order to “justify” their tortured message!)
Just let the Word speak without torture!
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