Peter begins by warning
us that to go through this process
successfully will demand diligence. Paul expresses
the same thing in another way when he
says, “The hardworking farmer must be
first to
partake of the crops” (2 Timothy 2:6).
There can be no real success in
developing Christian character without diligence,
or hard work.
The process Peter
describes could be compared to that by
which an apple seed develops into a mature
apple. The seed is God’s Word
implanted in the heart. This produces
faith, which is the indispensable
starting point. Then out of faith
there follow seven successive stages
of development.
Stage One is variously
translated “virtue” (2 Peter 1:5) or
“moral excellence” (2 Peter 1:5, NAS).
Originally, in secular Greek, the word
was applied to excellence in any area
of life – to
molding a clay pot, steering a boat,
or playing
a flute. Here in the New Testament
also, I believe, its meaning should
not be restricted
solely to moral character. It
covers every possible area of life.
A teacher who comes to
Christ should become an excellent
teacher. A nurse should become an excellent
nurse. A Christian businessman should
excel in his field of business. There
is no room for sloppiness
or laziness in any area of the
Christian life. Very rarely, if ever,
does God call a person out of failure
in a secular
calling to success in a spiritual
calling. He who is unfaithful in the
least (the secular)
will be unfaithful also in the
greatest [the spiritual] (Luke 16:10).
Stage Two of spiritual
development is knowledge. There are,
of course, many different forms of knowledge.
The knowledge extolled in Scripture is
primarily practical, not merely
theoretical. It is knowledge
that works. Coming to Christ out of a
background of speculative philosophy,
this was what
impressed me most about the Bible. It
was so intensely practical!
The scriptural example is
the teaching of Jesus Himself. It did
not come under the category of what we
would call “theology.” He never
propounded complicated, abstract
theories. His teaching was based
on familiar, practical activities:
sowing seed, catching fish, caring for
livestock.
The most essential form
of knowledge in the Christian life is
the knowledge of God’s will as revealed in
Scripture. This, too, is practical. It
demands a regular, systematic study of
the whole Bible.
“All Scripture is given by inspiration
of God, and is profitable for
doctrine, for reproof, for correction,
for instruction in righteousness, that
the man of God may be complete,
thoroughly equipped
for every good work” (2 Timothy
3:16–17).
I have been shocked to
discover how many people who would
claim to be serious Christians have
never once read through the entire
Bible. Such people set limits of their
own making to their spiritual
development.
After knowledge comes
self-control – also
called self-discipline (2 Timothy 1:7,
NIV). This is the stage at which a Christian
must prove himself a genuine disciple
– that
is, a person under discipline – and
not a mere
church member.
This kind of discipline
must be applied in every major area of
our personality – our
emotions, our
attitudes, our appetites, our thought
life. It must govern not only our
actions, but – more importantly
– our
reactions.
Until we have developed
this kind of discipline, we cannot
move up to the next stage – perseverance
– which
implies the ability to overcome the
various tests and trials that will
inevitably expose
any weak, undisciplined areas of our
personality. That pinpoints one major
reason why some
Christians never progress
beyond a certain stage of spiritual
development. They never fulfill these two
requirements of self-control and
endurance. To take an illustration
from the apple tree, their blossoms
are blown away by the winds of
adversity or their young fruit is
killed by the frost of rejection.
The
Three Final Stages
In the three remaining stages of
development, the beauty of a truly
Christian character unfolds. Godliness
is the mark of a person whose life is
centered in God – a
person who has become a vessel of the
presence of God. Wherever such a
person goes, the atmosphere is
permeated by a faint, but unique and
pervasive fragrance. There may not be
any preaching or other religious
activity. Yet people
become strangely aware of eternal
issues.
The late British
evangelist Smith Wigglesworth relates
an incident which illustrates the
impact that
a godly presence can have in a
non-religious atmosphere. After some
moments of private prayer Smith took
his seat in a railway carriage.
Without a word spoken, the man in the
opposite seat – a complete
stranger – blurted
out, “Your presence convicts me of
sin.” Smith was then able to introduce him to
Christ.
The last two stages of
development depict two different kinds
of love. The first – brotherly kindness
– describes
the way that believers in Jesus Christ
should relate to their fellow
believers – that
is, their brothers and sisters in the
Lord.
When I first began to
consider this list of the seven stages
of spiritual development, it surprised me that
“brotherly kindness” – the
kind of love that Christians should
have for one another – should be the last
stage but one. But then I realized
that the Bible is very realistic. It
does not paint a
sentimental, religious picture
of the way that we, as Christians,
relate to one another. Let me say something
which may shock you, but which is
based on more than fifty years of
close association
with Christians of many
different backgrounds: It is not
easy for Christians to love one
another.
This is amply confirmed
by two thousand years of Church
history. Scarcely a century has passed that has
not been marked by bitter strife and
contention – and
even open hatred – between
rival groups
of Christians, all of whom often
claimed to be “the true Church.”
The fact that a person
has repented of his sins and claimed
salvation in Christ does not mean that his whole
character has been instantly
transformed. Certainly a vitally
important process of change has been
set in motion, but it may take many
years for that change to be worked out
in every area of
a person’s character.
When David needed smooth
stones to fit in his sling to slay
Goliath, he went down to the valley – the
lowly place of humility. There in the
brook he found the kind of stones he
needed (1
Samuel 17:40). What had
made them smooth? Two pressures:
first, the water flowing over them;
second, their continual
jostling against one another.
That is a picture of how
Christian character is formed. First,
there is the continual “washing of water by
the word” (Ephesians
5:26). Second, as the stones
jostle one another in personal
relationships, the rough
edges are gradually worn down, until
they become “smooth.”
In parentheses, let me
add that when Jesus needs “living
stones” for His sling, He too goes to the valley
– the
place of humility. There He chooses
stones that have been made “smooth” by
the action
of God’s Word and by the pressures of
regular fellowship with other
believers.
It is a mark of spiritual
maturity to sincerely love our fellow
Christians, not simply for what they are in
themselves, but for what they mean to
Jesus, who shed His lifeblood for each
of them. The
final stage of development – agape
love – represents
the full, ripe fruit of Christian
character. This
is no longer how we relate only to our
fellow believers. It is God’s own love
for the unthankful and the
unholy. It is the love that causes us
to “bless those who curse [us], do
good to those who
hate [us], and pray for those
who spitefully use [us] and persecute
[us]”(Matthew
5:44).
It is the love that
Christ demonstrated on the cross when
He prayed for those who crucified Him,
“Father, forgive them, for they do not
know what they do”(Luke 23:34).
It was the same love that caused Stephen to
pray for those who were stoning him,
“Lord, do not charge them with this
sin” (Acts
7:60). It is the love that
changed Saul the persecutor into Paul
the servant of Christ, who became “all things to
all men, that [he] might by all means
save some” (1
Corinthians 9:22).
For my part, when I
contemplate the Bible’s picture of the
fully developed fruit of the Holy Spirit, I
am both humbled and inspired. Humbled,
because I still have so far to go.
Inspired, because
I have caught a glimpse of
something more beautiful than anything
that this world has to offer. I echo the
words of Paul: “I do not count myself
to have apprehended; but one thing I
do, forgetting
those things which are behind and
reaching forward to those things which
are ahead, I press
toward the goal for the prize of the
upward call of God in Christ Jesus”(Philippians
3:13–14).