“Living In The Last Days”
(II Peter 3:10-12)


I.        Introduction.

       A.        Among the things made clear in the Bible, is that Christ is
               coming again.  Jesus, Himself, promised this, and New
               Testament writers repeatedly confirmed this.

               1.        John 14:3:  “. . . if I go and prepare a place for you,
                       I will come again and receive you to Myself; . . .”

               2.        Acts 1:10-11:  “And while they [the apostles]
                       looked steadfastly toward heaven as He [Jesus]
                       went up, behold, two men stood by them in white
                       apparel, who also said, ‘Men of Galilee, why do you
                       stand gazing up into heaven?  This same Jesus, who
                       was taken up from you into heaven, will so come in
                       like manner as you saw Him go into heaven’”.

               3.        I Thessalonians 4:16:  “For the Lord Himself will
                       descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of
                       an archangel, and with the trumpet of God. . .”

               4.        Revelation 1:7-8:  “Behold, He is coming with
                       clouds, and every eye will see Him, even they who
                       pierced Him.  And all the tribes of the earth will
                       mourn because of Him.  Even so.  Amen.  ‘I am the
                       Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End,’
                       says the Lord, ‘who is and was and who is to come,
                       the Almighty.’”

       B.        The fact of Christ’s certain return, or our certain death
               before that moment of time, has a bearing on our daily
               living.  We are all on “death row”; one way or another we
               are all “living in the last days.”  So, Peter says:  “. . . what
               manner of persons ought you to be in holy conduct and
               godliness.”  (verse 11).


-2-


               1.        As always, people have to speak in terms they are
                       familiar with.  So Peter does in these verses.  He
                       presents the New Testament doctrine of the Second
                       Coming of Christ, but describes it in terms of the
                       Old Testament concept of the “Day of the Lord.”

               2.        This idea runs all through the prophetic books of
                       Old Testament.  All existence is divided into two
                       periods:  “this present age” and, “the age to come.”
                       The Jews saw the change from the first to the
                       second as happening only by the direct action and
                       intervention of God.  The time of this transition,
                       they called “The Day of the Lord.”

                       a.        It was to come suddenly and without
                               warning.  It was a time of complete change –
                               the world itself would be shaken to its
                               foundations.

                       b.        It was to be a time of judgment and, for
                               sinners, a time of terror.

               3.        Peter, by inspiration, takes this Old Testament idea
                       of change and, now, applies it to the New
                       Testament doctrine of the “Parousia”  
                       (pah-roo-SEE-ah) – of Christ’s return, and the end
                       of the physical world.

       C.        A day comes when every life must end.  When that day
               comes, we must be prepared.  This preparation involves
               attitudes and actions, and this becomes Peter’s emphasis
               as he talks about Christ’s return.

               1.        “Living in the Last Days” means living with the end
                       in view, either the end of our lives or the end of the
                       world.

               
-3-


               2.        “Living in the Last Days” means showing an
                       attitude of responsibility, of alertness, and of
                       confident hope.  It means taking our discipleship
                       seriously:  I Peter 4:7-10  READ.

II.        “Last Days Living.”

       A.        The fact that the “end” will come should challenge us to
               serve – not to abandon service.  It should challenge us to
               maintain a closer relationship to God – not separate
               ourselves from Him and His love.  It should challenge us to
               be responsible people.

               1.        What motivates responsible discipleship?  Peter’s
                       answer:  love (I Peter 4:8; RE-READ).

               2.        Responsible discipleship may begin out of a
                       sense of duty and obligation.  But, it should
                       progress to a sense of love – love for what has
                       happened to us (salvation by grace) and love for
                       what has been done for us (Christ – our substitute
                       in death.)

               3.        Responsible discipleship is love in action.  

               4.        In another scripture, Paul gives us, in one brief
                       phrase, the goal of responsible discipleship:

                       II Corinthians 5:9 – “Therefore we make it our
                       aim, . . . to be well pleasing to Him [God].”).

               5.        In that same letter of II Corinthians, Paul also
                       writes of the basic motivation for responsible
                       discipleship – (READ II Corinthians 5:14-15).

                       a.        The “love of Christ”, which now directs
                               Paul’s life and work, is the reason for
                               discipleship and the purpose for his life.
-4-


                       b.        Christ showed the ultimate in love and
                               responsibility by dying for everyone
                               (verse 15:  “. . . He died for all, . . .”.
                               Responsible disciples, “. . .live no longer
                               for themselves, but for Him who died for
                               them and rose again.”

       B.        Beyond responsibility, the second attitude is one of
               “alertness.”

               1.        Today, there is a real emphasis on “alertness” in this
                       nation.  We are very conscious of the reality of a
                       potential terrorist attack.

               2.        In our homes we maintain fire-alarm systems and
                       security-alarm systems to guard against surprise,
                       being taken unaware.  We watch, and listen, to
                       weather reports to keep up with potentially
                       dangerous storms.

               3.        We’re good at being alert to these dangers.  But, are
                       we alert to what really matters?

                       a.        Jesus once chastised some people for this
                               very thing:  He told the Pharisees and
                               Sadducees they were good at reading the
                               “signs” of physical change, but could not, or
                               would not, see the sign of spiritual change
                               He represented.

                       b.        Our alertness about spiritual matters must be
                               as acute as our alertness regarding matters of
                               the world.

               4.        The second coming of Christ, or our own physical
                       death, means we must be alert to these realities.

               
-5-


                       a.        READ I Thessalonians 5:1-6.

                       b.        Alertness is not anxiety - it’s not concern
                               out of control.  Rather, its expectant and
                               hopeful (e.g. plea of early Christians
                               “MARANTHA” – which means “Our Lord
                               comes”, or simply “Come!”  (I Cor. 16:22:
                               “O Lord, come!”).

               5.        Discipleship requires us to be “on alert” – as part of
                       an active force in the world.  There are no
                       “associate memberships” in the Lord’s church.  All
                       disciples are on “active duty” for Christ and His
                       Cause.

               6.        Being on alert means recognizing the truth of what
                       God’s Word tells us about Christ’s return.

                       (Illust.)

                       Albert Speer, the Minister of Armaments in Nazi
                       Germany, writes in his memoirs about the
                       atmosphere of the “Fuhrerbunker” in Berlin in the
                       last days of World War II.  Above ground, the city
                       lay in total ruin.  The Russian and Allied armies had
                       pounded the Third Reich into submission and were
                       about to complete its defeat and conquest.  But,
                       below ground, in the bunkers, a fantasy atmosphere
                       prevailed.  Hitler poured over maps and made
                       decisions about the movement of armies that no
                       longer existed, and counterstrikes by air forces long
                       since destroyed or made ineffective.  He raved of         
                       “super weapons” that would win the war for
                       Germany, and that the Allies would fight one
                       another, or the Western Powers join with him to
                       turn on Russia.  Speer found such irrationality both
                       amazing and disgusting.

-6-


               7.        What the Bible teaches us about Christ’s return
                       doesn’t permit us to live in a theological
                       fantasyland.  Being alert means knowing what’s
                       going on “outside the bunker” and seeing things
                       clearly, not through the fog of peoples’
                       speculations and theories.

       C.        In addition to our attitudes of responsibility and alertness,
               we must have an attitude of confident hope.

               1.        A Christian need not await Christ’s return, nor his         
                       or her own death, with fear.  In either case, the
                       spiritually-secure soul experiences gain, not loss.

               2.        There are three (3) things the end of physical life
                       doesn’t do to the Christian:

                       a.        It doesn’t threaten a Christian’s interests.

                       b.        It doesn’t destroy a Christian’s purpose
                               (go back to II Corinthians 5:9:  “Therefore,
                               we make it our aim, whether present or
                               absent, to be well pleasing to [God]”).

                       c.        It doesn’t take away a Christian’s reward.

               3.        For every disciple who’s been saddened by the
                       injustices of life, puzzled by the successes of evil,
                       disheartened by the difficulties of living
                       righteously, shed tears of frustration at suffering or
                       tears of mourning at death, there is one great hope
                       and comfort.

               4.        Christ’s return means a vindication of right – the
                       end of tears and sorrow – a release from decay and
                       death.  We, too, might say “MARANTHA”, “Lord,
                       come.”

-7-


III.        Conclusion.

       A.        How do you see Christianity?  Is it a spiritual obstacle
               course with God as a hard, demanding “drill instructor”
               who’s aim is to eliminate as “many “recruits” as he can?

       B.        Just the opposite is true:  God wants us to make it!  He
               wants us to be spiritually secure and to live forever.

               1.        The hope of the Bible is not wishful thinking.
                       Rather, it’s certainty and expectation.
                       (I Peter 1:3-4:  “Blessed be the God and Father of
                       our Lord Jesus Christ who, according to His
                       abundant mercy has begotten us again to a living
                       hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from
                       the dead, to an inheritance incorruptible and
                       undefiled and that does not fade away, reserved in
                       heaven for you.”).

               2.        One who is spiritually prepared, alert, confident can
                       handle the present and anticipate the future.

       C.        When the Lord returns, or when we die, becomes an
               academic question.  Because we’re ready, watching, and
               waiting.

Back To Top