A REMINDER OF PERIL 5:8-14
A.
Vigilance
"Be sober,
be vigilant; because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion,
walketh about, seeking whom he may devour.: (1 Pet. 5:8)
In
verse 7 Peter had given his readers the great assurance that
God cared for themand He cares for us. But that does not mean
that we are without responsibility. He has promised to supply
all our need, but we have the responsibility to work to provide
for our families and ourselves. So we should not be surprised
to find his admonition to vigilance on our part in verse 8.
The
word for sober carries with it the thought of being alert. In
2 Timothy 4:5 it is translated "watch." So we have
a double warning in 1 Peter 5:8. Be sober (watch), be vigilant.
The word vigilant is the same word, which Christ used when he
found Peter, James and John sleeping while he prayed in Gethsemane.
Matt 26:40: "And he cometh unto the disciples, and findeth
them asleep, and saith unto Peter, What, could ye not watch
with me one hour? Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation:
the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak."
How
it must have gripped Peter's heart as he penned these words
under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit! He recalled that bitter
night when he failed to watch as our Lord had asked him to do,
and later denied that he even knew Him. But how he realized
the grace of our Lord in forgiving and restoring him. And now
God has recorded Peter's fall and restoration for the edification
of all who read the record.
In
our day of apostasy, subtle cults, secular humanism and mean-spirited
religions that seek to destroy Christianity, how timely is the
admonition to cast all our care on Him, and yet to be alert
and vigilant!
But
the Spirit also gives us a special reason to be vigilant. "Your
adversary, the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking
whom he may devour." The devil is portrayed as a serpent,
(Revelation 20:2), a roaring lion (1 Peter 5:8) and an angel
of light (2 Corinthians 11:14).
It has been
said that he is to be feared as a roaring lion. This is his
usual mode of action when he stirs up strife among the brethren
and when he causes hatred and wars. He is more to be dreaded
when he comes as a serpentstriking us when we are off guard.
His role here is deception. But he is most to be dreaded when
he comes as an angel of light, wearing a religious garb and
spreading false doctrine. It was the late Dr. Lewis Sperry Chafer
who said that Satan had failed when he broke a man's life and
caused him to be a drunken bum in the gutter of some city street.
Even though he had succeeded in wrecking one person, no one
would pass by a man like that and say, "I'd to be like
that myself. But when Satan stands in a pulpit and proclaims
deadly, false doctrine, he leads many to spiritual destruction.
Be vigilant against the devil in all of his masquerades.
B.
Victimization
"Whom
resist stedfast in the faith, knowing that the same afflictions
are accomplished in your brethren that are in the world."
(1 Pet. 5:9)
Here
Peter admits the fact that Christians must expect afflictions
and persecutions from the devil. But he stresses our responsibility
to be watchful and to resist. This has been referred to as "Christian
Resistance." James used the same word in James 4:7: "Submit
yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee
from you." Peter must have remembered again his failure
to resist the devil when he denied our Lord.
Our
resistance must be in the faith. It must be with the knowledge
that just as other believers have suffered for Christ, we may
expect the same afflictions, but our stand and resistance must
be in "the faith" and not in our own strength.
Dr.
William Barclay expressed it well: "A man's faith must
be like a solid wall against which the attacks of the devil
exhaust themselves in vain. The devil is like any bully and
retreats when he is bravely resisted in the strength of Jesus
Christ." (Daily Study Bible, Westminster Press, ) 1975,
William Barclay)
To
Be Continued...