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Holy Cravings (1 Peter 2:1-3)

Wisdom for the Heart / Dr. Stephen Davey
The Truth Network Radio
April 8, 2026 12:00 am

Holy Cravings (1 Peter 2:1-3)

Wisdom for the Heart / Dr. Stephen Davey

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April 8, 2026 12:00 am

Developing holy craving for God's word is essential for spiritual growth and maturity. Christians must put aside sinful attitudes like malice, deceit, envy, and slander to cultivate a deep longing for the pure milk of God's word, which brings about growth in faith and salvation.

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Hello and welcome to Wisdom for the Heart. Stephen has just released a new book entitled In Pursuit of Holiness. Our behavior cannot save us, but God does expect those who follow Him to live holy lives. How can we do that?

Well, Stephen teaches you how in this brand new resource. This book is on sale right now, and I've put a link in the show notes. Get your copy of In Pursuit of Holiness Today.

Now, here's Stephen with today's message. The Bible is uncontaminated, it's unmixed. It's the idea, it doesn't sour.

So long. for this book. This is the key imperative. Long for it. Long to long for it.

And so you end up with that wonderful prayer request. Written by a Puritan a long time ago who prayed, God, give me a longing. To long for your word. How long can you go without it? Take your copy of the Apostle Peter's first letter.

We've been studying as a family together. We're now in chapter two. begins of course the first Word of this new chapter with the word therefore, that is, and that ties it back to the previous paragraph, that is, in light of the fact that you have. You've been born again into a new family. That's verse 23 of chapter 1.

In light of the fact that you are now under a new authority. That's the remaining part of chapter one. Therefore, in light of all that now, putting aside all malice, And all deceit and hypocrisy and envy and all slander, like newborn babies, long for the pure milk of the word, so that by it you may grow in respect of salvation, if you have tasted the kindness of the Lord.

Now once again, these verses constitute one original sentence. One long sentence. Evidently, the ability to write long sentences was an apostolic gift because Paul does it, and now Peter does it too often. And one important thing for me to point out for you grammatically, though, is that this entire sentence. centers around one verb.

One command. And it's there in verse 2. You'll notice it, you might want to circle it. It's the verb to long for. You could render it to crave.

to crave after. The pursuit, in the larger context, the pursuit of holy living happens to involve developing holy craving.

Now, before Peter gets to the specifics of that holy craving He's going to mention five attitudes. That in this context immediately are going to spoil your appetite. In other words, in order to really crave what you ought to crave, There are five attitudes you're going to need to give up. And I want you to notice the first attitude. To give up or to cast aside in verse 1 is malice.

Peter writes, casting or putting aside, casting off all Maois. If your pencil's still out, you might want to circle that little word which repeats itself three times in verse one. It's the word all. In the pursuit of holiness, there is no allowance. There is no sinful exception.

Well, I'm pursuing holiness in every area but this one over here. I'll just kind of keep that off to the side. in this pursuit. All means all. And first of all, put aside all malice.

You could render that maliciousness. That's the idea. We understand that well in the English language. Malice is a Greek word that. refers in general to bad behavior, sort of a categorical term.

Um for a A hateful spirit. Uh desire to hurt.

Someone else with your hateful spirit. And you'd think, well, surely Christians aren't going to do that.

Well, evidently, they did in the first century because Peter's telling them to stop it. Put it aside. He's writing to people who have been born again. They're in a new family, they're under a new authority. And he's wanting them to demonstrate the new status they have in their royalty.

Live up to it. Paul wrote, in fact, almost the same command to the believers in Ephesus. With these words, let all bitterness and all wrath and anger and clamor and slander be put away from you with all malice. Ephesians 4.31.

Now, this isn't a little escape clause, okay, Stephen, just because it's been a 2,000-year-old problem, I guess we get a free pass. No, that's. Not the point. In fact, for 2,000 years now, believers have been struggling with this, a willingness to cast malice aside. And it's going to be that which distinguishes The believer who is in pursuit of holiness and craving the right thing.

With those who aren't. Believers who are growing Up. in their faith rather than just growing older. There's a big difference between the two. We'll see that emphasized in a moment.

So Peter is referring here to a believer making continual, deliberate decisions without the smallest sliver of their lives, sort of let off the hook. He's referring to continual deliberate choices of Behavior, putting aside or malice that just has continual Implications in the life of the believer, literally throwing malice. You could even understand that word in the sense of taking off old or dirty, soiled. Clothing. In fact, it's the same word that's used in that context after Peter.

The early deacon of the first century church in Jerusalem, he preached his only.

Well, at least there's only public sermon that we know of, and then they stoned him afterward to death. And it says, Luke records, that these individuals who are throwing rocks at Stephen, they first laid aside their robes. Same word used here. Act 758. They took off their robes so they could throw those rocks even harder.

This is the same word used by Paul as he exhorted the believers to put aside. To lay aside the deeds of darkness and put on the armor of light. Romans. 13 verse 12. The Christian in pursuit of holiness then is daily, sometimes moment by moment.

Deliberately choosing to take off The soiled robes of that old flesh that wants to cling to you like a magnet to your refrigerator. And instead put on the robes that reflect your royalty.

So that the crown will win. The Christian who is growing In holiness comes to hate all the more that old clothing. Can you imagine for a moment Lazarus being raised from the dead? At the command of Jesus Christ and coming out of that tomb where he's been for four days, saying, You know, I'd really like to hang on to these grave clothes, I just like this stuff. I think I'll keep them.

No, casting aside. And then craving, as we'll see, putting off and then putting on is part of the daily conflict between the old you and the new you. Throwaway. Malice. Don't be malicious.

You might have reason. To think that you can respond in kind. Don't do it. Be gracious, not malicious. But Peter adds another attitude he casts off, putting aside all malice and notice all Deceit.

So it it really asks the question, how committed to honesty are we? Is there any exception? Like a final exam or an expense report or taxes. How committed are we? to honesty.

Jalen Blair revealed an interesting occasion in the life of Abraham Lincoln. And if you enjoy the man as much as I do, you've probably read several biographies. And he pointed up this: he said, Lincoln would not accept a case if he didn't believe justice was on his side. If you didn't believe the person was really innocent. It's probably one of the reasons he was so poor as an attorney.

But at any rate, he, on one occasion, a man came to employ him as an attorney and. And as the man is giving him the facts, Blair writes that Lincoln is sitting in his chair, leaning back, and he's sort of looking up at the ceiling. Listening intently, As the man delivers to Lincoln all the reasons he believes he's innocent and It isn't long before Lincoln knows he's blown smoke, so to speak. And he finally abruptly kind of wheels this chair around and he looks at this man and he says to him. You have a good case in terms of technicalities.

But a bad case in light of equity. and justice.

So, you will have to get someone else to try or defend you in this case. And the man protested. Lincoln said, I will not do it. And he said, because all the time while pleading your case before the jury, I'll be thinking to myself, Lincoln? You're a liar.

And I might even forget where I am and say it out loud. Back to the text. Peter goes on. Thirdly, it says to cast off or put aside hypocrisy.

Now, we discussed at length this last Words Day. Peter uses it. It shows up in the word sincerity. No hypocrisy, no mask. He adds next.

Putting aside Envy. No envy. is the resentment of somebody else's prosperity or In the church, giftedness or blessing. Envy wants to have what somebody else has. And it can start at a very young age.

That old flesh revealing itself at a very young age. One author by the name of Joseph Epstein wrote a book, he simply entitled it, Envy. Published by Oxford University Press a few years ago. And he admitted what we as parents, if you're a parent, Or a grandparent, you can often overlook and sort of coddle instead of dealing with it. He confessed very openly that in his childhood as a little boy, His life was filled with envy.

He said this, I envied boys with wealthier parents. I envied kids who were smarter. More popular than me. I envied boys more attractive to girls, guys who were better athletes. I envied those who seemed more at ease in their world.

I was quick to detect those friends that had more freedoms. More spending money. Cooler parents. He says, as a child, I lived in a faint Cloud Of envy. I have news for you.

According to the Apostle Peter, becoming a Christian doesn't automatically remove, clear away the cloud. of envy. You have within you the empowering ministry of the Holy Spirit. But you must, according to these commands, cooperate with the Holy Spirit to make deliberate. And definitive and daily choices to chase that cloud away.

About the time you think you've chased it away, here it comes again. And Christmas is such an easy time to chase the cloud away, isn't it? I've noticed that. Have you, how many commercials? During football games, Play on the envy of people for what their neighbors bring home.

Hey, I got this.

Well, I got this. And you can just see the fla the face clouded. See that drives Madison Avenue. This cloud. of envy.

The world is wrapped up in it. These old garments that never satisfy. Peter saying. cast them aside. Daily make the decision.

Why? Because you want the crown. To win. There's another one he adds. Notice the fifth attitude is to cast aside, putting aside all malice and deceit and envy.

All slander. The word for slander Doesn't really need any exposition. It means what we know it means. Gossiping. A rumor spreading, an attempt to destroy someone else's testimony.

or reputation. or credibility. It's as if Peter says to them, look, that's what the world is saying about you. That's how they treat you. And all these rumors we've explored together: you're cannibals, you're eating flesh and drinking blood.

The rumors spread in the first century. You're involved in secret orgies of immorality. You have these love feasts and you're giving each other holy kisses. We all know what that means. All those rumors.

As if Peter says, That's how the world is treating you. Why in the world would you want to treat each other the same way? Give each other the benefit of the doubt. Think the best. of one another.

Be slow to repeat anything. About anybody. Unless you have all of the facts and then don't even repeat it, unless you're part of the problem. or part of the solution. Take off the soiled garments the world loves to wear.

Put away. Slander. Peter's mine. It isn't enough to be casting these things aside, is it? There's something we need to be craving after.

at the same time. As if to say, these five attitudes are going to spoil your appetite for something you really ought to be. Feasting on.

Now go to verse 2. Like newborn Babies long for the pure milk of the word, so that by it you may grow in respect to salvation.

Now, in this second half of this very long sentence, Peter is going to give us a command, an illustration, a goal, and a reminder. Let's start with the command. This is the key verb. Long For the pure milk of the word crave after The pure milk. of spiritual truth.

The word for pure here means without deceit. It's used in Peter's day for farm products or things that you would purchase to eat. It's a reference to wheat that doesn't have a lot of chaff stuck in there to make you think you're getting more than you get. It's what they do with potato chip bags. Have you noticed?

It's full of air, and you open it up, and you got that much in there. Notice that. This past week was disappointing. The Bible is uncontaminated. It's unmixed.

It isn't trying to pull your leg. Yeah. There are no imperfections. There are no flaws. It isn't diluted.

It isn't. Mixed with error. It's the idea, it it doesn't sour. It's pure. Clean milk.

So long. for this book. This is the key imperative. Long for it. Long to long for it.

And so you end up with that wonderful prayer request. Written by a Puritan a long time ago who prayed, God, give me a longing to long. for your word. How long can you go without it? What's your appetite like?

For it. Let's go back to his illustration. Verse 2. Long for the pure milk of the word. How, Peter, like newborns.

Babies. And how do newborn babies long for milk? Quietly. Graciously. diplomatically.

No, unrelentingly. Unforgivingly. Piercingly. And if you've been in that position, you felt the nudge in your ribs, it's 4 o'clock in the morning, and your wife gives you that tragic message. It's your turn.

So you stagger out of bed and you head to the kitchen and you find the bottle and you put it in the pot and you boil some water. Unless she's going back to sleep, you slip it in the microwave, but I'm not telling you to do that. But at any rate, you boil it, and then it's dark, but you just follow the noise. And you plug up the noise. Right?

And then you pray, they'll go to sleep. After they've eaten that's And appetite. that he's talking about.

Now, don't misunderstand, Peter's not suggesting here that these believers are immature. or new believers. And you think in your mind, because you who are older in the faith, think of meat and milk. That's not what he's doing here, he's not talking about that. He's commending this.

to every believer. No matter where you are in the spectrum, Of Christian maturity. He's simply making the point that a believer should never outgrow his craving for the pure, refreshing, nourishing. Life-giving. Milk.

of God's word. This is the pure, unmixed word from our Heavenly Father, who, by the way, never begrudges. Us, no matter what hour, no matter when, how much. He comes along and he knows just when and how and. and where to plug up the noise.

from our unsatisfied souls. And feed us. But you notice The goal for such longing after the word Make sure we get this right so that by it you may grow up and respect the salvation. He uses a passive verb, which is important to understand. You're not making yourself grow up.

In the faith. The word of God is bringing about the growth. In your Christian experience, you don't grow up. In your Christian walk, Any more by yourself than you would as a fifth grader standing in front of the mirror saying, I really want to be an inch taller. Man, did I reuse to pray that?

I mean, I could no more grow an inch by me deciding. Or even me longing? Or wanting Now something's going on internally. independently of my conscious thinking.

Now, as long as I'm eating and drinking. And I have nourishment.

somewhere between the fifth grade and And for me, it was the 10th grade when I finally grew the inch. And it was no longer the shortest guy in the class. That's the idea here. Peter's saying, when you feed on the word, The word of God causes you to to grow up. There's something internally taking place.

Obviously, under the direction of the Holy Spirit, who's your teacher of this truth. You can literally translate this phrase, long for the pure milk of the word, so that it may grow you up. Spiritual life. Is not demonstrated externally without the nourishing milk of the word at work internally. Do you want the crown to win?

Okay?

Well then, the word has to be at work privately. If you ever hope to experience victory, Publicly. We're like sponges. When you squeeze a sponge, what comes out is what is on the inside. Whatever's on the inside comes out.

under pressure. The goal of getting into the Bible, as one man wrote then. It's so that the Bible can get into you. Which is why Martin Luther Would write 500 years ago, the Bible is alive, it speaks to me, it has hands, it lays hold of me. It has feet.

It runs after me. And I long for that. And give me greater longing, right? Then here's the reminder as Peter completes his sentence. He writes, If you have tasted the kindness of the Lord, The word if.

It's a first-class conditional participle, which simply means and is understood to mean if and since this is true. Peter's concluding. You have this longing because you have indeed already tasted the kindness of God.

So Get another taste. Sample it some more. And maybe you're like me. This is what you do in an ice cream store. My wife and I Annually.

Head up to Scroon Lake, New York. We were invited to a Bible conference where I get to speak at Word of Life. there and whenever we go Typically, at least one evening out of the week, we'll join another staff couple and they take us to this little hole in the wall in Scroon Lake. You never go there on your own. But you go in there and it's the best homemade ice cream on the planet.

And you stand there and like I do, I look at all the tubs. Behind that counter and that counter is a good 20 feet long. Names of ice cream like A creamy fudge almond. Peanut butter puddles. Chocolate cherry cheesecake.

And I look at them all and I can't decide.

So finally I asked the lady behind the counter, to give me a sample. And then after 17 samples. I don't need to buy anything. No, I'm teasing. I know which one I want.

Now I want two scoops of that one. After I've had a little sample. That's the idea behind the tasting. It isn't a little Sample is actually two scoops. Go for it.

Peter reminds them and us, remember these samples of God's kindness. To us, can you remember? That'll play into your appetite. You remember? Verse You saw plight in your life.

Do you remember? God's answer to some specific prayer. Do you remember? something happening and you knew only God could Pull that off and Remember And then I think it's interesting that he does a little shift here because. He's wanting us to see the kindness of Not the written word, but the living word.

God.

So it isn't just the word we're coming to know, it's the author. of the word. You see the ultimate The aim of Bible study is not to master the content. But to come to know the Master and be mastered. By your Lord and Savior.

Jesus Christ.

So Peter writes, you've already tasted His kindness, you've already tasted His goodness. Isn't it satisfying?

Now go back for more. That was Stephen Davey, and this is Wisdom for the Heart, a production of Wisdom International. Learn more at wisdomonline. org

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