Commentaries and Other Bible Study Helps - Prayer Tents - Prayer Tents

1:3-11 God's Grace in Christ Is the Source of Godly Living. In this first main section of his letter, Peter emphasizes that God's grace results in godliness.
1:3-4 God's Power Exercised on Our Behalf. God has provided blessing for the Christian in all things pertaining to life.
1:3 divine power. God himself has acted in his infinite power to accomplish salvation, something only he could accomplish and what human ability could not accomplish. He has called us to his own glory and excellence. Believers are called to live in harmony with God's own moral character. On God's "glory," see notes on John 1:14; Acts 6:15; cf. Rev. 21:23. The word "excellence" (Gk. aretē, "virtue, excellence") was used by Greek writers to describe the sum of all desirable character qualities.
1:4 God has granted believers his precious and great promises. It is through these promises that they become partakers (Gk. koinōnos, "sharer, partaker") of the divine nature. They never become part of God, but amazingly they share in his nature as they become increasingly like him. The "great promises" include the promises Peter identifies in his Pentecost sermon in Acts 2:14-41, especially the outpouring of the Holy Spirit in new power. But they also include other promises such as likeness to God (2 Pet. 1:4; cf. 1 John 3:2), Christ's return (2 Pet. 3:4), eternal life in heaven (1 Pet. 1:4), and more broadly, all the promises of Scripture that relate to the gift of new life. "Divine nature" uses terms familiar to Peter's Hellenistic readership to help them understand the idea of transformation into the image of Christ. Peter emphasizes the moral focus of the believer's transformed life. At conversion, Christians are delivered from the corruption of this world, which is rooted in sinful desire.