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Adding Goodness to Faith

2/27/2026

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Memory – 2 Peter 1.5-8 For this very reason, make every effort to supplement your faith with goodness, and goodness with knowledge, and knowledge with self-control, and self-control with perseverance, and with perseverance with godliness, and godliness with brotherly affection], and brotherly affection with love.
God does not intend for his children to ever be satiated with his grace. No matter how full your cup, He desires to overfill it. Peter wants his reader to understand that the normative Christian life is one where spiritual grace is always increasing. The child of God is encouraged to “make every effort” to add goodness, or moral excellence, to their faith. This exhortation rests on a profound theological foundation: God’s grace is not static, nor is the Christian life meant to plateau. God does not intend His children to become complacent with grace. Rather, the normal Christian life is one of continual increase. Because God’s resources are inexhaustible, believers may continually ask for more, confident that He both supplies grace and enlarges their capacity to receive it. As John writes, Christians receive “grace upon grace” from Christ’s fullness.

The promises of God are the foundation of spiritual maturity. God is the rock of salvation and the source of every spiritual blessing. Christ mediates for believers, and through union with Him—abiding in the vine—they share in His life. The God who calls you also completes His work, conforming you to his likeness so you will increase in goodness (moral excellence). Your salvation originates entirely with God: His calling, His glory, His goodness. Faith itself is His gift, and justification comes not through human merit but through grace alone. The believer’s ongoing maturity likewise depends on the promised Holy Spirit, who enables you to escape from the corruption of worldly desires.

Yet while salvation is wholly of grace, Peter commands believers to act. Christianity is not irrational; it is grounded in the reasonable acknowledgment of God’s existence and self-revelation. Scripture declares that while reason may point to God’s existence, only divine revelation provides hope of fellowship and salvation. That salvation is found exclusively in Jesus Christ and received by faith apart from works. Still, those saved by grace are not passive. They become participants in God’s ongoing work, cooperating with the Spirit who energizes your obedience.

Peter’s command to add goodness to faith is entirely fitting. If God has granted “very great and precious promises,” enabling believers to share in the divine nature and escape corruption, the most natural response is gratitude expressed in holy living. Scripture consistently affirms that genuine knowledge of God manifests itself in obedience. To claim fellowship with Him while disregarding His commands is self-deception. Just as earthly parents desire their children to be good and upright, God desires His children to reflect His character—indeed, to be conformed to the image of His Son.

Faith is the foundation. It is supplied by God and is uncontaminated by human merit. No good works can secure divine favor because all human effort is tainted by sin. However, once justified by faith and reconciled to God, the believer stands in a new position of peace and access. From that secure standing flows the call to moral excellence. Goodness is not the basis of salvation but a necessary expression of it.

Throughout the Bible we read stories about how a right relationship with God produces right behavior; the two are inseparable. The law, the Sermon on the Mount, and apostolic teaching all emphasize moral discernment and righteous conduct. Christian maturity is marked by the trained ability to distinguish good from evil and to act accordingly. Conversely, the biblical “fool” denies God in order to justify immoral behavior. Ultimately, we are morally accountable to God.

Peter’s exhortation to add goodness to faith reflects the dynamic nature of grace. Salvation is entirely God’s work, yet it produces a transformed life characterized by moral excellence. The believer grows not to earn God’s favor but because he already possesses it. Grace initiates, empowers, and sustains; effort responds. Thus, the Christian life is both gift and calling—a life in which faith naturally flowers into goodness. 

You may profit from reflecting on 2 Peter 3.10-13.

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    In the liturgrical tradition the compline is the last office of prayer and reflection for the day and it tends to be a contemplative devotion  that emphasizes spiritual peace. 

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