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Holiness is not a personality type, and it is not a private hobby for the overly serious. Peter calls it warfare. When 1 Peter warns Christians to abstain from fleshly lusts, it is admitting something we all feel but rarely say out loud: the battle is not only “out there,” it is inside us, and it does not take days off.
We walk through 1 Peter 2:11–12 with a simple framework you can actually remember. First, holiness starts with who you are: God’s beloved, yet also an alien and stranger here, posted as an ambassador. That identity keeps you from trying to earn love through performance, and it keeps you from hiding in a safe bubble that avoids unbelievers.
Second, we get painfully practical about what you avoid. Abstaining is ongoing, and Peter describes the flesh as running a strategic campaign against your soul. We talk about “guarding the gates” of your senses, what it looks like to stop handing your eyes and ears to temptation, and why “lightening up” is the wrong move when Scripture says wake up.
Third, holiness becomes visible. Excellent behavior and good deeds are not about polishing a reputation, they are about building a bridge so someone can finally ask why you live the way you do. If you care about Christian living, spiritual warfare, sanctification, and everyday evangelism that feels natural, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with the biggest takeaway you want to live out this week.
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