It seems like a fantastic idea but it's like a golden thread throughout both 
Old and New Testaments of the Bible: proud, sinful, selfish, lustful, wicked 
human hearts (ours!) are changed by simply believing what the apostle Peter 
says are "exceedingly great and precious promises"!
And they're not man's "promises." They are the Lord's. Can it really be true 
that there is power in something as simple as believing God's promises (that 
appear to be so wild and extravagant)? God virtually promised Abraham the sky. 
And the old man is "the father of us all."

For instance, in the Old Testament we read that He picked up this only 
monotheist He could find in the ancient world, called him into exile to "a land 
that [He] would show him," promised it to him "for an everlasting possession." 
Paul got the idea: it was almost infinitely more than that tiny little strip of 
land known as Canaan; it meant the whole earth! (Rom 4:13). And no way could 
the "possession" be "everlasting" for Abraham unless this "exceedingly great 
and precious promise" included the gift of eternal life, which Abraham couldn't 
enjoy as a genetic inheritance for he was born a sinner under condemnation like 
all of us. And further, no way could he be "the heir of the world" unless it 
became the "new earth." And again, no way could he be "the heir" of such a new 
earth unless he was given the gift of "righteousness," for Peter insists that 
only "righteousness dwelleth" there (2 Peter 3:13).

So, it all ends up full circle: God's "exceeding great and precious promises" 
mean the out and out GIFT of "righteousness by faith." And that was the meaning 
of those seven promises the Lord made to Abraham in Genesis 12:2, 3, and then 
later swore to in chapter 15--staking His very existence and His eternal throne 
on His keeping them.

Now, we return to our question: does it make sense that we, sinful selfish 
people by nature can be changed, converted, purified, transformed, even 
"sanctified," by believing those "promises"? Believe it or not, that is Peter's 
idea: "His divine power has given to us all things that pertain to life and 
godliness, ... exceedingly great and precious promises, that through these you 
may be partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in 
the world through lust" (2 Peter 1:3, 4).

"Escape" is what we desperately need, for we face the second death without it. 
The "corruption" of lust surrounds us and would permeate us. Our modern 
"culture" is steeped in it. I tremble to write it, but it's true: our "escape" 
is only in believing those "promises." Join me in my own heart-felt prayer: 
"Lord, I believe; help my unbelief!" (Mark 9:23, 24). We are told we can never 
perish if we pray that prayer.

--Robert J. Wieland

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