A litmus test for believers
Three questions that we often hear.
1. How Would You Change Your Life If You Won the Lottery (Assume It’s Millions of Dollars)?
2. How Would You Change Your Life If You Won the Lottery (Assume It’s Millions of Dollars)?
3. If You Only Had 5 Years Left to Live, How Would You Change Your Life Now?
I. Malice
Malice, an attitude similar to hatred, is the desire to inflict pain, harm, or injury on another person. It includes the holding of grudges and acting out of these grudges against others.
II. Deceit
Deceit refers to deliberate dishonesty, to speaking or acting with ulterior motives. Anything less than speaking the full and honest truth from the heart is deceit. This vice is the selfish, two-faced attitude that deceives and hurts others for personal gain.
III. Hypocrisy
Hypocrisy has an intriguing history. It comes from a verb meaning “to answer.” A hypocrite originally was simply a person who answered. Then the word came to mean “an actor,” a person who takes part in a stage drama, specifically the interactive narrative parts of question and answer in the play. From there, this word came to mean a person who is acting out a part and concealing his true motives
IV. Envy
It is a resentful discontent. Envy is “the feeling of displeasure produced by witnessing or hearing of the advantage or prosperity of others”
V. Evil Speaking
Envy often finds expression through slander of every kind—the final behavior attitude that Peter mentions in verse 1. “Slander” (katalaleo) literally means “to speak against someone.” It suggests running others down verbally. It is speech that deliberately assaults the character of other persons. It is any speech that harms another person’s status or reputation.