The Day of God
2 Peter 3:11-18
Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved, what manner of persons ought you to be in all holy conversation and godliness,…


Can it be that God has left large tracts of present time to themselves; that He has retreated into some distant future, when He will exert a jurisdiction that does not now belong to Him? Certainly not. This were irreconcileable with any true idea of the Omnipresent and the Eternal. All days most assuredly are His, who is the Lord of time. Each hour, each minute, as it passes by, is passed beneath His eye, or rather within His encompassing presence.

I. BY "THE DAY OF GOD" IS MEANT A DAY WHICH WILL NOT MERELY BE HIS, AS ALL DAYS ARE HIS, BUT WHICH WILL BE FELT TO BE HIS — a day in which His true relation to time and life, which is, in the case of the majority of men, only dimly perceived, will be unreservedly acknowledged; a day which will belong to Him, because in the thoughts of every reasonable creature of His hand, whether it will be for weal or for woe, He will have no rival.

II. "THE DAY OF GOD" MEANS, AGAIN, A TIME WHEN ALL HUMAN THINGS WILL BE RATED AT THEIR TRUE VALUE; when man's life, and all that belongs to it, will be seen in the light of the infinite and the eternal, and therefore in its relative insignificance. "The day of God" thus tacitly implies a contrast; it means that the days of man's earthly life and all that concerns it will have passed away (Isaiah 2:12-17). Most men who have lived until middle life have experienced something that will enable them in part to understand this. You have gone on for years without any shock to the even tenour of life. You may have fallen under the empire of nature and the empire of your bodily senses, and everything belonging to this world may have come to be seen in exaggerated proportions, because you have lost sight of a higher. Now, a state of mind like this is abruptly broken in upon by a great trouble, by a loss of income, by a loss of reputation, by the death of a dearly loved relative, by a break-up of your health. He finds that he has made too much of it, both in detail and as a whole, and he wakes up to see that there is another world beyond it, compared with which, at its very best, it is poor and worthless indeed. This is for him a true "day of the Lord"; and in the light of that day he learns this truth, that "all flesh is grass, and all the goodliness of man as the flower of the field," and that while "the grass withereth, and the flower fadeth, the Word of our God shall abide for ever." And every such experience in life is a preparation for the awful day, when we shall learn, as never before, the insignificance of all that only belongs to time.

III. "THE DAY OF GOD" MEANS THE DAY OF UNIVERSAL JUDGMENT. Certainly God is always judging us. Moment by moment we live beneath His all-seeing eye; He registers each act, each word, each thought, each movement of passion, each truancy of the will, each struggle by His grace to live for Him, each victory over the craft and subtlety of the devil or man. Yes, He is always on His throne of judgment, but this does not prove that no time is coming when He will judge as never before. The predicted day of judgment will differ from the continuous judgment that always is exercised by the Divine Mind as it gazes upon a moral world in two respects — in its method and in its finality. It will be carried out, that last judgment, by the Man Christ Jesus in person. And as the last judgment will be administered by a visible judge, by our dear Lord, who was crucified for us, and who rose from the grave, and who ascended into heaven, so it will be final. There will be no appeal, no rehearing, no reversal possible. Every grace responded to, or neglected, will be taken into account. Every thought, word, act, habit, all that has gone to make up our final self — and everything from the cradle to the dying hour, most assuredly, contributes something — all will be taken fully, unerringly into the reckoning. And thus, in the Epistle to the Hebrews, it is called an "Eternal Judgment," meaning a judgment from which there is no appeal, in the new and everlasting age. We cannot picture to ourselves this judgment; but that does not prove that it will not take place.

(Canon Liddon.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved, what manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and godliness,

WEB: Therefore since all these things will be destroyed like this, what kind of people ought you to be in holy living and godliness,




Immortality and Science
Top of Page
Top of Page