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Realizing the presence, promise, and power of the Kingdom of God.
The Scriptorium

Kept for an Inheritance

1 Peter 1.4, 5

4…to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that does not fade away, reserved in heaven for you, 5who are kept by the power of God through faith for salvation ready to be revealed in the last time.

The Story: It is characteristic of those who exercise leadership in God’s covenant people to try to draw them through their present circumstances into the future by holding out the precious and very great promises of God (2 Pet. 1.4). God, Peter reminds his readers, is keeping an inheritance for them in heaven. It is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading. This is not some lascivious promise of vestal virgins awaiting our every pleasure. This is the promise of God Himself (Ps. 16; Jn. 17.3). What God is keeping in heaven for us is none other than Himself! Moreover, He is guarding His children, as they look to Him in faith, for that day when He will fully reveal Himself to them (1 Jn. 3.2) and their joy will be complete. Peter encourages His readers not only to remember who they are but also to dwell on what’s laid up for them. If they can glimpse the beauty, glory, holiness, and presence of God, beyond the horizon of their present sufferings, they will be able to bear up until the day that God makes His saving glory fully and completely known.

The Structure: What Edwards and others referred to as the “beatific vision” is an important component in the life of faith. We will forfeit real Christian joy if we focus only on our temporal circumstances or present condition of life. The Christian’s hope is to know the glory of God, and we pursue this hope, here and now, every day. But the fullness of that hope lies beyond all time and history in the new heavens and new earth where righteousness dwells. “There and then” we will have no more sorrows and no more tears and unending bliss in the uninterrupted presence of our Savior and God. The challenge for these “last days” is to learn how to live the “there and then,” here and now. Crucial to this is focusing beyond our temporal horizons to what God has laid up for us.

Could you summarize your vision of our blessed hope? In other words, if someone should ask about the hope that is within you, what would you say?

Each week’s studies in our
Scriptorium column are available in a free PDF form, suitable for personal or group use. For this week’s study, “Suffering and Beyond: 1 Peter 1.1-11,” simply click here.

T. M. Moore

Scripture taken from the New King James Version. © Copyright 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

T.M. Moore

T. M. Moore is principal of The Fellowship of Ailbe, a spiritual fellowship in the Celtic Christian tradition. He and his wife, Susie, make their home in the Champlain Valley of Vermont.
Books by T. M. Moore

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