Monday Re:Vlog – 9/29/25

Re:Verse passage – 2 Peter 1:16-21 (day one)

Join us as Senior Pastor Chris Johnson, Associate Pastor Aaron Hufty, and Associate Pastor Bryan Richardson walk us through 2 Peter 1:16-21 in our Fall Re:Verse Series: “2 Peter – Standing Firm in the Faith.”

Wins Above Replacement

Re:Verse passage – 2 Peter 1:12-15 (day seven)

And I will also be diligent that at any time after my departure you will be able to call these things to mind. vs 15

In modern baseball there is an advanced metric that is being used to grade individual player’s success: WAR- Wins Above Replacement. This metric is gauged by a player’s success compared to a replacement level player in the same position. Essentially, you want other players to not succeed so that you have a higher WAR score. You want your team to realize that you are irreplaceable. You don’t want the person backing you up to take your place.

This is how I have lived most of my life. I have wanted those around me to be so dependent on me that they would see me as irreplaceable. It started with sports, but that mentality carried over to other areas, including my profession… which is ministry. Why would I want my ministry to fail if I departed?

The answer is in the question. It isn’t my ministry, it is God’s. I am not playing a game for individual success. I am a part of a much bigger team that God is using to reach this generation. My job is to work myself out of a job. I should be investing and discipling in such a way that my departure does not bring about a cessation of progress. Rather, when I depart, ministry should continue to flourish because I discipled well.

What about you? Are you living in such a way that your legacy will continue to be carried on when you are gone, or are you living to not be replaced?

Shepherd

Re:Verse passage – 2 Peter 1:12-15 (day six)

“Therefore, I will always remind you about these things—even though you already know them and are standing firm in the truth you have been taught. And it is only right that I should keep on reminding you as long as I live. For our Lord Jesus Christ has shown me that I must soon leave this earthly life, so I will work hard to make sure you always remember these things after I am gone.  –  2 Peter 1:12–15

Peter understood his role. Jesus had told him, after all, “Feed my sheep.” Peter went from a fisherman to a shepherd, tasked with caring for God’s flock and protecting them from those who would “steal, kill, and destroy.” Until the very end of his life, Peter embraced this responsibility with courage, reminding and encouraging these young churches to remain faithful.

Who are you responsible for? Who has God placed in your life to remind, encourage, and protect? The same God who works in you always intends to work through you—for the good of others and for the glory of His Son.

Be a good shepherd.

Wake-up

Re:Verse passage – 2 Peter 1:12-15 (day five)
Saturday was my favorite day of the week. Why?  That was the day I most likely could sleep late. I could (in theory) wake up whenever I wanted or needed. Monday thru Friday was an early morning wake-up for school. And Sunday was the consistent wake-up for church. What I remember and want to point out, is that there was always a reason and activity for the “wake-up” announcement- school, church, trip, vacation, sports game, activity. Some were more appealing than others. Yet, there was always purpose and opportunity behind every “wake-up sleepyhead!!”

Same here in the Re:Verse passage. Peter is using the same language. “Stir you up” is the translation for a word used in the context of being woken-up from sleep. And with this wake-up message and action there is good reason.  Peter wants to ensure there is attention, focus, activity, and energy needed and given by his readers to this message of the gospel. A good reminder for me to faithfully and continually wake-up and remember the gospel.

Sink In

Re:Verse passage – 2 Peter 1:12-15 (day four)

Was there something your parents or grandparents would say to you over and over again as you were growing up? Advice or instructions that they repeated, no matter how many times you told them you understood? While that repeated advice might have irritated us when we were young, it certainly sticks with us. As we age, those repeated instructions from loved ones become part of our core memories of them, and we often find their advice did sink in and helped form us into who we are.

Peter says, “I will always remind you of these things, even though you know them…” He doesn’t do this to be patronizing, or to beat them over the head with advice. He does this because he knows that the more he repeats these things, the deeper they will sink into people’s hearts. Peter knew that the aim of the Christian life was to become like Christ, so he repeatedly told those under his care how to do so. His words didn’t just impact the people he wrote and ministered to; it impacted the entire church throughout history. We are being formed by his repeated advice even today. Will you let it sink into your heart and form who you are?

Clear

Re:Verse passage – 2 Peter 1:12-15 (day three)

…the laying aside of my earthly dwelling is imminent, as also our Lord Jesus Christ has made clear to me.

Of all people, Peter knew what “laying aside of my earthly dwelling” means, and what it does not mean. If he intends to tell his readers that he’s tossing aside his body in order to “fly away” and live an incorporeal existence, then the message here is that nothing really matters on earth, and — even more shocking — that being human is a flaw,  not a feature. But as “Jesus Christ has made clear” by his own resurrection, not only does human life matter on earth, God will double down on it.

Remember

Re:Verse passage – 2 Peter 1:12-15 (day two)

And I will also be diligent that at any time after my departure you will be able to call these things to mind. V. 15

Peter has the heart of a teacher. His desire for the church is not to remember the great things that Peter had done, but rather to be equipped to carry on without him. The legacy of faith is not dependent on personality, but on the character of Christ. Peter’s hope is that the believers know how to discern for themselves what is true, good, and beautiful. People may not speak our name the way we speak of the Apostle Peter, but the legacy of faith that we give our children will speak for generations. Giving people in our care the ability to know truth is a gift. May it be the first we give. May we hope for others to remember our lessons of faith long after they remember our names.

Monday Re:Vlog – 9/22/25

Re:Verse passage – 2 Peter 1:12-15 (day one)

Join us as Senior Pastor Chris Johnson, Associate Pastor Aaron Hufty, and Associate Pastor Bryan Richardson walk us through 2 Peter 1:12-15 in our Fall Re:Verse Series: “2 Peter – Standing Firm in the Faith.”

Called and Chosen

Re:Verse passage – 2 Peter 1:8-11  (day seven)

be all the more diligent to make certain about His calling and choosing you. 

Jesus calls us all. In the middle of the storm, in the depths of darkness, the voice of the Lord is continually calling out to guide us to Him. The enemy will use the storms and darkness to muffle the voice of the Lord so that we do not hear Him or to think that we do not need Him; but once that voice penetrates through the void and you hear the sweetest sound, you cannot help but to draw nearer to it. The storm begins to calm and the darkness is flooded with light all because you answered the call.

for as long as you practice these things, you will never stumble.

Were you chosen or were you called? The answer is both. It is by the practice of these things, the gifts and fruit mentioned in last week’s study, that we find ourselves drawing nearer to the Lord and in turn being made into His Image. It is then that we look back and realize that this calling was bigger than us. We were chosen to become Image Bearers and His Ambassadors back into the storm and the darkness, bringing peace and light, so that others might hear His voice and realize they too have been chosen.

Work

Re:Verse passage – 2 Peter 1:8-11  (day six)

“Therefore, brothers and sisters, make every effort to be sure of your calling and election.”2 Peter 1:10

“So then, my dear friends… continue working out your salvation with awe and reverence, for it is God who works in you both to will and to act for his good pleasure.”Philippians 2:12–13

It’s possible to profess faith in Jesus, belong to a church, and yet live with little concern for obeying him. Some even claim faith while choosing a willful, immoral life. This is what troubles Peter.

The faithful don’t stand still or drift—they press on. They take seriously what Jesus has secured for them. Faith is not just a set of hidden ideas; it is a living commitment to a Person. True faith shows itself in action—visible, tangible, unmistakable—just like Jesus himself.