Bible Verses:
Rom 9:21, Rom 12:2, 2 Cor 3:18, 1 Pet
2:5, Eph 4:23
TRANSFORMED
INTO LIVING STONES
In verse 5
Peter indicates that the believers are
living stones. We, the believers in Christ,
are living stones, like Christ, through
regeneration and transformation. We were
created of clay (Rom. 9:21). But at
regeneration we received the seed of the
divine life, which by its growth in us
transforms us into living stones. At Peter’s
conversion the Lord gave him a new name,
Peter—a stone (John 1:42). When Peter
received the revelation concerning Christ,
the Lord revealed further that He also was
the rock—a stone (Matt. 16:16-18). Peter was
impressed by these two incidents that both
Christ and His believers are stones for
God’s building.
By our natural
birth we are clay, not stones. Do you
realize that you were made of clay? Genesis
2:7 says that man was made from the dust of
the ground. Romans 9 reveals that we are
vessels of clay. How, then, can we become
stones? We become stones through the process
of transformation.
When Peter
first met the Lord Jesus, the Lord changed
his name from Simon to Peter. Referring to
the Lord Jesus and Peter, John 1:42 says,
“Looking at him, Jesus said, You are Simon
the son of John; you shall be called Cephas
(which translated means a stone).” According
to biblical principle, whatever the Lord
speaks will be. Therefore, when the Lord
called Peter a stone, that meant that he
would certainly become a stone. Whatever the
Lord says to us will be fulfilled. If He
says, “You are gold,” then you will be
golden. The Lord knew that when He changed
Simon’s name to Peter, a stone, he would
become a stone.
In John 1:42
Peter was told that he was a stone. Then
sometime later, in Caesarea Philippi, in
answer to the Lord’s question, “Who do you
say that I am,” Peter, receiving the
revelation from the Father, said, “You are
the Christ, the Son of the living God.” To
this the Lord Jesus replied, “And I also say
to you that you are Peter, and on this rock
I will build My church...” (Matt. 16:18).
Here the Lord indicates that He is the rock
upon which the church is built and that
Peter is a stone.
No doubt,
these two incidents, the one recorded in
John 1 and the other in Matthew 16, were
deeply impressed into Peter’s being. He
could never forget those events. It must
have been from these experiences that Peter
obtained the concept of living stones for
the building of the spiritual house, which
is the church. When Peter wrote this portion
of 1 Peter, he wrote it according to the
impression these events made upon him.
First Peter
2:5 says that we, as living stones, are
being built up a spiritual house. However,
we all are clay. How can we be built up? In
order to be built up a spiritual house, we
need to become stones. But how can we
actually become living stones? We become
living stones by coming to Christ as the
living stone (v. 4).
We may use
petrified wood as an illustration of
transformation. In Arizona there is a place
called the petrified forest, an area that
contains much petrified wood. Petrified wood
is wood that has been changed into stone.
Over a long period of time, water has been
flowing over wood and through it. By means
of this flow of water, the substance of the
wood is changed into stone. On the one hand,
the element of wood is carried away; on the
other hand, the element of stone is brought
in to replace the element of wood. In this
way the wood becomes stone.
The principle
is the same with our experience of
transformation. If we long for the milk of
the word, this milk will be like a current
of living water flowing within us. As we
stay in this flow, the current will carry
away our natural substance and replace it
with heavenly, divine minerals. These
minerals are actually Christ. Gradually,
over a period of time, we shall be
transformed or “petrified”; that is, we
shall become precious stones.
If we would be
transformed, every day we need to come to
the Lord as milk. We have pointed out that
the way to come to Christ as the living
stone is to drink the guileless milk of the
word. This means that we come to Christ by
drinking Him. As we daily drink in the milk
of the word, we shall be transformed.
Transformation
cannot take place overnight. The petrified
wood in Arizona required a very long time to
be changed from wood into stone. If the
petrified wood could speak, it might say,
“It has taken me a long time of being in the
current of water to be transformed from mere
wood into petrified wood.” As one who has
been in the Lord for more than fifty years,
I can testify that transformation takes
time. I assure you that you cannot be
transformed in a few months or even in a few
years.
When some hear
a word concerning how long transformation
takes, they may say, “I can’t wait so long.
I quit.” Actually, this is not up to you,
for it is your destiny to be transformed.
Wood that is in the process of being
petrified cannot stop the process. It is the
destiny of this wood to be changed into
petrified wood. We need to remember that,
according to chapter one of 1 Peter, we were
chosen according to the foreknowledge of God
before the foundation of the world. God has
chosen us. Also, in our experience, we have
been “caught” by Him, and we cannot escape,
no matter how hard we may try. Therefore,
instead of trying to escape, we should
simply rest in the flow of living water and
allow this water to pass through us so that
we may be transformed.
If others ask
us what is happening in the Lord’s recovery,
we should say, “We are simply allowing the
water of life to flow through us. Daily we
are drinking the milk of the word so that we
may be transformed.” Let us allow this
process of petrification, of transformation,
to take place for forty or fifty years and
then see what the outcome will be. It is by
this process of transformation that clay
becomes living stones.
According to
2:5, as living stones we are being built up
a spiritual house. Although the nourishing
milk of the word is for the soul through the
mind, it eventually nourishes our spirit.
Instead of making us soulish, it makes us
spiritual, suitable for building up a
spiritual house for God.
God’s goal in
the believers is to have a house built up
with living stones. He does not want
separated and scattered stones, nor even a
pile of stones merely gathered together. He
wants stones built up with one another.
The spiritual
house into which we are being built is God’s
building. Eventually, this building will
consummate in the New Jerusalem. In the New
Jerusalem there will not be any clay, for
all the clay will have been transformed into
precious stone. This means that the New
Jerusalem is built with precious stones. We
are becoming the precious stones that will
be built up into the New Jerusalem.
Hallelujah, the building work is now going
on! How is this work going on? It is being
carried out by the process of petrification,
transformation. This happens as we daily,
even hourly, come to Christ as milk and
drink Him in. Then we shall have the flow,
the current, that transforms us from clay
into stone for God’s building.