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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871)
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THE SECOND EPISTLE GENERAL OF
PETER
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1] [2]
[3]
INTRODUCTION
AUTHENTICITY AND GENUINENESS.--If not a gross
imposture, its own internal witness is unequivocal in its favor.
It has Peter's name and apostleship in its heading: not only his
surname, but his original name Simon, or Simeon, he thus,
at the close of his life, reminding his readers who he originally was
before his call. Again, in
2Pe 1:16-18,
he mentions his presence at the Transfiguration, and Christ's
prophecy of his death! and in
2Pe 3:15,
his brotherhood with Paul. Again, in
2Pe 3:1,
the author speaks of himself as author of the former Epistle: it is,
moreover, addressed so as to include (but not to be restricted
to) the same persons as the first, whom he presupposes to be acquainted
with the writings of Paul, by that time recognized as "Scripture"
(2Pe 3:15,
"the long-suffering of God," compare
Ro 2:4).
This necessarily implies a late date, when Paul's Epistles
(including Romans) already had become generally diffused and accepted
as Scripture in the Church. The Church of the fourth century had,
besides the testimony which we have of the doubts of the earlier
Christians, other external evidence which we have not, and which,
doubtless, under God's overruling providence, caused them to accept it.
It is hard to understand how a book palpably false (as it would be if
Peter be not the author) could have been accepted in the Canon as
finally established in the Councils of Laodicea, A.D. 360 (if the fifty-ninth article be genuine), Hippo,
and Carthage in the fourth century (393 and 397). The whole tone and
spirit of the Epistle disprove its being an imposture. He writes as one
not speaking of himself, but moved by the Holy Ghost
(2Pe 1:21).
An attempt at such a fraud in the first ages would have brought only
shame and suffering, alike from Christians and heathen, on the
perpetrator: there was then no temptation to pious frauds as in
later times. That it must have been written in the earliest age is
plain from the wide gulf in style which separates it and the
other New Testament Scriptures from even the earliest and best of the
post-apostolic period. DAILLE well says, "God has
allowed a fosse to be drawn by human weakness around the sacred canon
to protect it from all invasion."
Traces of acquaintance with it appear in the earliest Fathers.
HERMAS [Similitudes, 6.4] (compare
2Pe 2:13),
Greek, "luxury in the day . . . luxuriating
with their own deceivings"; and [Shepherd, Vision 3.7], "They
have left their true way" (compare
2Pe 2:15);
and [Shepherd, Vision 4.3], "Thou hast escaped this world"
(compare
2Pe 2:20).
CLEMENT OF ROME, [Epistle
to the Corinthians, 7.9; 10], as to Noah's preaching and
Lot's deliverance, "the Lord making it known that He does
not abandon those that trust in Him, but appoints those otherwise
inclined to judgment" (compare
2Pe 2:5, 6, 7, 9).
IRENÆUS, A.D. 178 ("the
day of the Lord is as a thousand years"), and
JUSTIN MARTYR seem to allude
to
2Pe 3:8.
HIPPOLYTUS [On Antichrist], seems to refer
to
2Pe 1:21,
"The prophets spake not of their own private (individual)
ability and will, but what was (revealed) to them alone by God."
The difficulty is, neither TERTULLIAN, CYPRIAN, CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA, nor the oldest Syriac
(Peschito) version (the later Syriac has it), nor the
fragment known as Muratori's Canon, mentions it. The first
writer who has expressly named it is ORIGEN, in
the third century (Homily on Joshua; also Homily 4 on
Leviticus, and Homily 13 on Numbers), who names it "Scripture,"
quoting
2Pe 1:4; 2:16;
however (in EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical
History, 6.25]), he mentions that the Second Epistle was doubted by
some. FIRMILIAN, bishop of Cappadocia, in
Epistle to Cyrpian speaks of Peter's Epistles as warning
us to avoid heretics (a monition which occurs in the Second, not
the First Epistle). Now Cappadocia is one of the
countries mentioned (compare
1Pe 1:1
with 2Pe 3:1)
as addressed; and it is striking, that from Cappadocia we get the
earliest decisive testimony. "Internally it claims to be written by
Peter, and this claim is confirmed by the Christians of that very
region in whose custody it ought to have been found" [TREGELLES].
The books disputed (Antilegomena), as distinguished from those
universally recognized (Homologoumena), are Epistles Second
Peter, James, Second and Third John, Jude, the Apocalypse, Epistle to
Hebrews (compare EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical
History, 3.3,25]). The Antilegomena stand in quite a
different class from the Spurious; of these there was no
dispute, they were universally rejected; for example, the
Shepherd of Hermas, the Revelation of Peter, the Epistle of
Barnabas.
CYRIL OF
JERUSALEM
(A.D. 348) enumerates
seven Catholic Epistles, including Second Peter; so also
GREGORY
NAZIANZEN
(A.D. 389), and
EPIPHANIUS (A.D. 367). The oldest Greek
manuscripts extant (of the fourth century) contain the
Antilegomena. JEROME [On Illustrious
Men], conjectured, from a supposed difference of style between the
two Epistles, that Peter, being unable to write Greek, employed
a different translator of his Hebrew dictation in the Second
Epistle, and not the same as translated the First into Greek.
Mark is said to have been his translator in the case of the Gospel
according to Mark; but this is all gratuitous conjecture. Much of the
same views pervade both Epistles. In both alike he looks for the Lord's
coming suddenly, and the end of the world (compare
2Pe 3:8-10
with 1Pe 4:5);
the inspiration of the prophets (compare
1Pe 1:10-12
with 2Pe 1:19-21; 3:2);
the new birth by the divine word a motive to abstinence from worldly
lusts
(1Pe 1:22; 2:2;
compare
2Pe 1:4);
also compare
1Pe 2:9
with 2Pe 1:3,
both containing in the Greek the rare word "virtue"
(1Pe 4:17
with 2Pe 2:3).
It is not strange that distinctive peculiarities of
STYLE should mark each Epistle, the design of both
not being the same. Thus the sufferings of Christ are more
prominent in the First Epistle, the object there being to encourage
thereby Christian sufferers; the glory of the exalted Lord is
more prominent in the Second, the object being to communicate fuller
"knowledge" of Him as the antidote to the false teaching against which
Peter warns his readers. Hence His title of redemption, "Christ," is
the one employed in the First Epistle; but in the Second Epistle, "the
Lord." Hope is characteristic of the First Epistle; full
knowledge, of the Second Epistle. In the First Epistle he puts his
apostolic authority less prominently forward than in the Second,
wherein his design is to warn against false teachers. The same
difference is observable in Paul's Epistles. Contrast
1Th 1:1;
2Th 1:1; Php 1:1,
with Ga 1:1; 1Co 1:1.
The reference to Paul's writings as already existing in numbers, and as
then a recognized part of Scripture
(2Pe 3:15, 16),
implies that this Epistle was written at a late date, just before
Peter's death.
Striking verbal coincidences occur: compare
1Pe 1:19,
end, with
2Pe 3:14, end;
"His own," Greek,
2Pe 1:3,
2Pe 2:16; 3:17
with 1Pe 3:1, 5.
The omission of the Greek article,
1Pe 2:13
with 2Pe 1:21; 2:4, 5, 7.
Moreover, two words occur,
2Pe 1:13,
"tabernacle," that is, the body, and
2Pe 1:15,
"decease," which at once remind us of the transfiguration narrative in
the Gospel. Both Epistles refer to the deluge, and to Noah as the
eighth that was saved. Though the First Epistle abounds in
quotations of the Old Testament, whereas the Second contains
none, yet references to the Old Testament occur often
(2Pe 1:21;
2:5-8, 15; 3:5, 6, 10, 13).
Compare Greek, "putting away,"
1Pe 3:21,
with 2Pe 1:14;
Greek, "pass the time,"
1Pe 1:17,
with 2Pe 2:18;
"walked in,"
1Pe 4:3,
with 2Pe 2:10; 3:3;
"called you,"
1Pe 1:15; 2:9; 5:10,
with 2Pe 1:3.
Moreover, more verbal coincidences with the speeches of Peter in Acts
occur in this Second, than in the First Epistle. Compare
Greek, "obtained,"
2Pe 1:1
with Ac 1:17;
Greek, "godliness,"
2Pe 1:6,
with Ac 3:12,
the only passage where the term occurs, except in the Pastoral
Epistles; and
2Pe 2:9
with Ac 10:2, 7;
"punished,"
2Pe 2:9,
with Ac 4:21,
the only places where the term occurs;
the double genitive,
2Pe 3:2,
with Ac 5:32;
"the day of the Lord,"
2Pe 3:10,
with Ac 2:20,
where only it occurs, except in
1Th 5:2.
The testimony of Jude,
Jude 17, 18,
is strong for its genuineness and inspiration, by adopting its very
words, and by referring to it as received by the churches to which he,
Jude, wrote, "Remember the words which were spoken before of the
apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ; how that they told you
there should be mockers in the last time, who should walk after
their own ungodly lusts." Jude, therefore, must have written
after Second Peter, to which he plainly refers; not before, as
ALFORD thinks. No less than eleven passages of
Jude rest on similar statements of Second Peter.
Jude 2,
compare
2Pe 1:2;
Jude 4,
compare
2Pe 2:1;
Jude 6,
compare
2Pe 2:4;
Jude 7,
compare
2Pe 2:6;
Jude 8,
compare
2Pe 2:10;
Jude 9,
compare
2Pe 2:11;
Jude 11,
compare
2Pe 2:15;
Jude 12,
compare
2Pe 2:17;
Jude 16,
compare
2Pe 2:18;
Jude 18,
compare
2Pe 2:1; 3:3.
Just in the same way Micah,
Mic 4:1-4,
leans on the somewhat earlier prophecy of Isaiah, whose inspiration he
thereby confirms. ALFORD reasons that because
Jude, in many of the passages akin to Second Peter, is fuller than
Second Peter, he must be prior. This by no means follows. It is at
least as likely, if not more so, that the briefer is the earlier,
rather than the fuller. The dignity and energy of the style is quite
consonant to what we should expect from the prompt and ardent foreman
of the apostles. The difference of style between First and Second Peter
accords with the distinctness of the subjects and objects.
THE DATE, from what has been said, would be about
A.D. 68 or 69, about a year after the first, and
shortly before the destruction of Jerusalem, the typical precursor of
the world's end, to which
2Pe 3:10-13
so solemnly calls attention, after Paul's ministry had closed (compare
Greek aorist tense, "wrote," past time,
2Pe 3:15),
just before Peter's own death. It was written to include the
same persons, and perhaps in, or about the same place, as the first.
Being without salutations of individuals, and entrusted to the care of
no one church, or particular churches as the first is, but directed
generally "to them that have obtained like precious faith with us"
(2Pe 1:1),
it took a longer time in being recognized as canonical. Had Rome been
the place of its composition or publication, it could hardly have
failed to have had an early acceptance--an incidental argument against
the tradition of Peter's martyrdom at Rome. The remote scene of
its composition in Babylon, or else in some of the contiguous regions
beyond the borders of the Roman empire, and of its circulation in
Cappadocia, Pontus, &c., will additionally account for its tardy but at
last universal acceptance in the catholic Church. The former Epistle,
through its more definite address, was earlier in its general
acceptance.
OBJECT.--In
2Pe 3:17, 18
the twofold design of the Epistle is set forth; namely, to guard his
readers against "the error" of false teachers, and to exhort them to
grow in experimental "knowledge of our Lord and Saviour"
(2Pe 3:18).
The ground on which this knowledge rests is stated,
2Pe 1:12-21,
namely, the inspired testimony of apostles and prophets. The danger
now, as of old, was about to arise from false teachers, who soon were
to come among them, as Paul also (to whom reference is made,
2Pe 3:15, 16)
testified in the same region. The grand antidote is "the full
knowledge of our Lord and Saviour," through which we know God the
Father, partake of His nature, escape from the pollutions of the world,
and have entrance into Christ's kingdom. The aspect of Christ presented
is not so much that of the past suffering, as of the future
reigning, Saviour, His present power, and future new
kingdom. This aspect is taken as best fitted to counteract the
theories of the false teachers who should "deny" His
Lordship and His coming again, the two very points which,
as an apostle and eye-witness, Peter attests (His "power" and
His "coming"); also, to counteract their evil example in
practice, blaspheming the way of truth, despising governments,
slaves to covetousness and filthy lusts of the flesh, while boasting of
Christian freedom, and, worst of all, apostates from the truth. The
knowledge of Christ, as being the knowledge of "the way of
righteousness," "the right way," is the antidote of their bad practice.
Hence "the preacher" of righteousness, Noah, and "righteous Lot," are
instanced as escaping the destruction which overtook the "unjust" or
"unrighteous"; and Balaam is instanced as exemplifying the awful result
of "unrighteousness" such as characterized the false teachers. Thus the
Epistle forms one connected whole, the parts being closely bound
together by mutual relation, and the end corresponding with the
beginning; compare
2Pe 3:14, 18
with 2Pe 1:2,
in both "grace" and "peace" being connected with "the knowledge" of our
Saviour; compare also
2Pe 3:17
with 2Pe 1:4, 10, 12;
and
2Pe 3:18,
"grow in grace and knowledge," with the fuller
2Pe 1:5-8;
and
2Pe 2:21;
and
2Pe 3:13,
"righteousness," with
2Pe 1:1;
and
2Pe 3:1
with 2Pe 1:13;
and
2Pe 3:2
with 2Pe 1:19.
The germs of Carpocratian and Gnostic heresies already existed,
but the actual manifestation of these heresies is spoken of as
future
(2Pe 2:1, 2,
&c.): another proof that this Epistle was written, as it professes, in
the apostolic age, before the development of the Gnostic
heresies in the end of the first and the beginning of the second
centuries. The description is too general to identify the heresies with
any particular one of the subsequent forms of heresy, but applies
generally to them all.
Though altogether distinct in aim from the First Epistle, yet a
connection may be traced. The neglect of the warnings to circumspection
in the walk led to the evils foretold in the Second Epistle. Compare
the warning against the abuse of Christian freedom,
1Pe 2:16
with 2Pe 2:19,
"While they promise them liberty, they themselves are the
servants of corruption"; also the caution against pride,
1Pe 5:5, 6
with 2Pe 2:18,
"they speak great swelling words of vanity."
CHAPTER 1
2Pe 1:1-21.
ADDRESS:
EXHORTATION TO
ALL
GRACES, AS
GOD
HAS
GIVEN
US, IN THE
KNOWLEDGE OF
CHRIST,
ALL
THINGS
PERTAINING TO
LIFE:
CONFIRMED BY THE
TESTIMONY OF
APOSTLES, AND
ALSO
PROPHETS, TO THE
POWER AND
COMING OF
CHRIST.
1. Simon--the Greek form: in oldest manuscripts, "Symeon"
(Hebrew, that is, "hearing), as in
Ac 15:14.
His mention of his original name accords with the design of this Second
Epistle, which is to warn against the coming false teachers, by setting
forth the true "knowledge" of Christ on the testimony of the
original apostolic eye-witnesses like himself. This was not
required in the First Epistle.
servant--"slave": so Paul,
Ro 1:1.
to them, &c.--He addresses a wider range of readers (all
believers) than in the First Epistle,
2Pe 1:1,
but means to include especially those addressed in the First
Epistle, as
2Pe 3:1
proves.
obtained--by grace. Applied by Peter to the receiving of
the apostleship, literally, "by allotment": as the Greek is,
Lu 1:9;
Joh 19:24.
They did not acquire it for themselves; the divine election is as
independent of man's control, as the lot which is east forth.
like precious--"equally precious" to all: to those who believe,
though not having seen Christ, as well as to Peter and those who have
seen Him. For it lays hold of the same "exceeding great and
precious promises," and the same "righteousness of God our
Saviour." "The common salvation . . . the faith once
delivered unto the saints"
(Jude 3).
with us--apostles and eye-witnesses
(2Pe 1:18).
Though putting forward his apostleship to enforce his
exhortation, he with true humility puts himself, as to "the faith," on
a level with all other believers. The degree of faith varies in
different believers; but in respect to its objects, present
justification, sanctification, and future glorification, it is common
alike to all. Christ is to all believers "made of God wisdom,
righteousness, sanctification, and redemption."
through--Greek, "in." Translate, as the one article to
both nouns requires, "the righteousness of Him who is (at once)
our God and (our) Saviour." Peter, confirming Pau;'s testimony
to the same churches, adopts Paul's inspired phraseology. The Gospel
plan sets forth God's righteousness, which is Christ's
righteousness, in the brightest light. Faith has its sphere IN it as its peculiar element: God is in redemption
"righteous," and at the same time a "Saviour"; compare
Isa 45:21,
"a just God and a Saviour.
2. Grace . . . peace--
(1Pe 1:2).
through--Greek, "in": the sphere
IN which alone grace and peace can
be multiplied.
knowledge--Greek, "full knowledge."
of God, and of Jesus our Lord--The Father is here meant
by "God," but the Son in
2Pe 1:1:
marking how entirely one the Father and Son are
(Joh 14:7-11).
The Vulgate omits "of God and"; but oldest manuscripts support
the words. Still the prominent object of Peter's exhortation is "the
knowledge of Jesus our Lord" (a phrase only in
Ro 4:24),
and, only secondarily, of the Father through Him
(2Pe 1:8;
2Pe 2:20; 3:18).
3. According as, &c.--Seeing that [ALFORD].
"As He hath given us ALL things (needful)
for life and godliness, (so) do you give us ALL
diligence," &c. The oil and flame are given wholly of grace by God, and
"taken" by believers: their part henceforth is to "trim their lamps"
(compare
2Pe 1:3, 4
with 2Pe 1:5,
&c.).
life and godliness--Spiritual life must exist first
before there can be true godliness. Knowledge of God
experimentally is the first step to life
(Joh 17:3).
The child must have vital breath. first, and then cry to, and walk in
the ways of, his father. It is not by godliness that we obtain
life, but by life, godliness. To life stands
opposed corruption; to godliness, lust
(2Pe 1:4).
called us--
(2Pe 1:10);
"calling"
(1Pe 2:9).
to glory and virtue--rather, "through (His) glory." Thus
English Version reads as one oldest manuscript. But other oldest
manuscripts and Vulgate read, "By His own (peculiar)
glory and virtue"; being the explanation of "His divine power";
glory and moral excellency (the same attribute is given
to God in
1Pe 2:9,
"praises," literally, "virtues") characterize God's "power." "Virtue,"
the standing word in heathen ethics, is found only once in Paul
(Php 4:8),
and in Peter in a distinct sense from its classic usage; it (in the
heathen sense) is a term too low and earthly for expressing the gifts
of the Spirit [TRENCH, Greek Synonyms of the
New Testament].
4. Whereby, &c.--By His glory and virtue: His
glory making the "promises" to be exceeding great; His
virtue making them "precious" [BENGEL].
Precious promises are the object of precious faith.
given--The promises themselves are a gift: for
God's promises are as sure as if they were fulfilled.
by these--promises. They are the object of faith, and
even now have a sanctifying effect on the believer, assimilating him to
God. Still more so, when they shall be fulfilled.
might, &c.--Greek, "that ye MAY
become partakers of the divine nature," even now in part; hereafter
perfectly;
1Jo 3:2,
"We shall be like Him."
the divine nature--not God's essence, but His holiness,
including His "glory" and "virtue,"
2Pe 1:3;
the opposite to "corruption through lust." Sanctification is the
imparting to us of God Himself by the Holy Spirit in the soul.
We by faith partake also of the material nature of Jesus
(Eph 5:30).
The "divine power" enables us to be partakers of "the divine
nature."
escaped the corruption--which involves in, and with itself,
destruction at last of soul and body; on "escaped" as from a
condemned cell, compare
2Pe 2:18-20;
Ge 19:17;
Col 1:13.
through--Greek, "in." "The corruption in the world" has
its seat, not so much in the surrounding elements, as in the "lust" or
concupiscence of men's hearts.
5. And beside this--rather, "And for this very reason," namely,
"seeing that His divine power hath given unto us all things that
pertain to life and godliness"
(2Pe 1:3).
giving--literally, "introducing," side by side with God's
gift, on your part "diligence." Compare an instance,
2Pe 1:10;
2Pe 3:14;
2Co 7:11.
all--all possible.
add--literally, "minister additionally," or, abundantly (compare
Greek,
2Co 9:10);
said properly of the one who supplied all the equipments of a
chorus. So accordingly, "there will be ministered abundantly
unto you an entrance into the everlasting kingdom of our Saviour"
(2Pe 1:11).
to--Greek, "in"; "in the possession of your
faith, minister virtue. Their faith (answering to "knowledge
of Him,"
2Pe 1:3)
is presupposed as the gift of God
(2Pe 1:3;
Eph 2:8),
and is not required to be ministered by us; in its
exercise, virtue is to be, moreover, ministered. Each grace
being assumed, becomes the stepping stone to the succeeding grace: and
the latter in turn qualifies and completes the former. Faith
leads the band; love brings up the rear [BENGEL]. The fruits of faith specified are
seven, the perfect number.
virtue--moral excellency; manly, strenuous energy, answering to
the virtue (energetic excellency) of God.
and to--Greek, "in"; "and in (the exercise of) your
virtue knowledge," namely, practical discrimination of good and evil;
intelligent appreciation of what is the will of God in each detail of
practice.
6. Greek, "And in your knowledge self-control." In the
exercise of Christian knowledge or discernment of God's will,
let there be the practical fruit of self-control as to one's
lusts and passions. Incontinence weakens the mind; continence, or
self-control, moves weakness and imparts strength And in your
self-control patient endurance" amidst sufferings, so much dwelt on in
the First Epistle, second, third, and fourth chapters. "And in your
patient endurance godliness"; it is not to be mere stoical endurance,
but united to [and flowing from] God-trusting [ALFORD].
7. "And in your godliness brotherly kindness"; not suffering
your godliness to be moroseness, nor a sullen solitary habit of life,
but kind, generous, and courteous [ALFORD]. Your
natural affection and brotherly kindness are to be sanctified by
godliness. "And in your brotherly kindness love," namely, to
all men, even to enemies, in thought, word, and deed. From
brotherly kindness we are to go forward to love. Compare
1Th 3:12,
"Love one toward another (brotherly kindness), and toward all men
(charity)." So charity completes the choir of graces in
Col 3:14.
In a retrograde order, he who has love will exercise
brotherly kindness; he who has brotherly kindness will
feel godliness needful; the godly will mix nothing
stoical with his patience; to the patient, temperance is
easy; the temperate weighs things well, and so has knowledge;
knowledge guards against sudden impulse carrying away its virtue
[BENGEL].
8. be--Greek, "subsist" that is, supposing these things
to have an actual subsistence in you; "be" would express the
mere matter-of-fact being
(Ac 16:20).
abound--more than in others; so the Greek.
make--"render," "constitute you," habitually, by the very fact
of possessing these graces.
barren--"inactive," and, as a field lying fallow and
unworked (Greek), so barren and useless.
unfruitful in--rather, . . . in respect to,
"The full knowledge (Greek) of Christ" is the goal
towards which all these graces tend. As their subsisting in us
constitutes us not barren or idle, so their abounding in
us constitutes us not unfruitful in respect to it. It is through
doing His will, and so becoming like Him, that we grow in
knowing Him
(Joh 7:17).
9. But--Greek, "For." Confirming the need of these graces
(2Pe 1:5-8)
by the fatal consequences of the want of them.
he that lacketh--Greek, "he to whom these are not
present."
blind--as to the spiritual realities of the unseen world.
and cannot see afar off--explanatory of "blind." He closes
his eyes (Greek) as unable to see distant objects (namely,
heavenly things), and fixes his gaze on present and earthly things
which alone he can see. Perhaps a degree of wilfulness in the
blindness is implied in the Greek, "closing the eyes," which
constitutes its culpability; hating and rebelling against the light
shining around him.
forgotten--Greek, "contracted forgetfulness," wilful and
culpable obliviousness.
that he was purged--The continually present sense of one's sins
having been once for all forgiven, is the strongest stimulus to every
grace
(Ps 130:4).
This once-for-all accomplished cleansing of unbelievers at their
new birth is taught symbolically by Christ,
Joh 13:10,
Greek, "He that has been bathed (once for all) needeth
not save to wash his feet (of the soils contracted in the daily
walk), but is clean every whit (in Christ our righteousness)." "Once
purged (with Christ's blood), we should have no more consciousness of
sin (as condemning us,
Heb 10:2,
because of God's promise)." Baptism is the sacramental pledge of
this.
10. Wherefore--seeking the blessed consequence of having, and
the evil effects of not having, these graces
(2Pe 1:8, 9).
the rather--the more earnestly.
brethren--marking that it is affection for them which constrains
him so earnestly to urge them. Nowhere else does he so address them,
which makes his calling them so here the more emphatical.
give diligence--The Greek aorist implies one lifelong
effect [ALFORD].
to make--Greek middle voice; to make so far as it
depends on you; to do your part towards making. "To make"
absolutely and finally is God's part, and would be in the active.
your calling and election sure--by ministering additionally
in your faith virtue, and in your virtue knowledge, &c. God must
work all these graces in us, yet not so that we should be mere
machines, but willing instruments in His hands in making
His election of us "secure." The ensuring of our election
is spoken of not in respect to God, whose counsel is steadfast and
everlasting, but in respect to our part. There is no uncertainty
on His part, but on ours the only security is our faith in His
promise and the fruits of the Spirit
(2Pe 1:5-7, 11).
Peter subjoins election to calling, because the
calling is the effect and proof of God's election, which
goes before and is the main thing
(Ro 8:28, 30, 33,
where God's "elect" are those "predestinated," and
election is "His purpose," according to which He "called"
them). We know His calling before His election, thereby
calling is put first.
fall--Greek, "stumble" and fall finally
(Ro 11:11).
Metaphor from one stumbling in a race
(1Co 9:24).
11. an entrance--rather as Greek, "the entrance"
which ye look for.
ministered--the same verb as in
2Pe 1:5.
Minister in your faith virtue and the other graces, so shall
there be ministered to you the entrance into that heaven where
these graces shine most brightly. The reward of grace hereafter shall
correspond to the work of grace here.
abundantly--Greek, "richly." It answers to "abound,"
2Pe 1:8.
If these graces abound in you, you shall have your entrance into
heaven not merely "scarcely" (as he had said,
1Pe 4:18),
nor "so as by fire," like one escaping with life after having lost all
his goods, but in triumph without "stumbling and falling."
12. Wherefore--as these graces are so necessary to your abundant
entrance into Christ's kingdom
(2Pe 1:10, 11).
I will not be negligent--The oldest manuscripts read, "I will
be about always to put you in remembrance" (an accumulated future:
I will regard you as always needing to be reminded): compare "I will
endeavor,"
2Pe 1:15.
"I will be sure always to remind you" [ALFORD].
"Always"; implying the reason why he writes the second Epistle so soon
after the first. He feels there is likely to be more and more
need of admonition on account of the increasing corruption
(2Pe 2:1, 2).
in the present truth--the Gospel truth now present with
you: formerly promised to Old Testament believers as about to
be, now in the New Testament actually present with, and in,
believers, so that they are "established" in it as a "present" reality.
Its importance renders frequent monitions never superfluous: compare
Paul's similar apology,
Ro 15:14, 15.
13. Yea--Greek, "But"; though "you know" the truth
(2Pe 1:12).
this tabernacle--soon to be taken down
(2Co 5:1):
I therefore need to make the most of my short time for the good
of Christ's Church. The zeal of Satan against it, the more intense
as his time is short, ought to stimulate Christians on the same
ground.
by--Greek, "in" (compare
2Pe 3:1).
14. shortly I must put off--Greek, "the putting off (as a
garment) of my tabernacle is speedy": implying a soon
approaching, and also a sudden death (as a violent death
is). Christ's words,
Joh 21:18, 19,
"When thou art old," &c., were the ground of his "knowing," now that he
was old, that his foretold martyrdom was near. Compare as to Paul,
2Ti 4:6.
Though a violent death, he calls it a "departure" (Greek for
"decease,"
2Pe 1:15),
compare
Ac 7:60.
15. endeavour--"use my diligence": the same Greek word as
in
2Pe 1:10:
this is the field in which my diligence has scope. Peter thus
fulfils Christ's charge, "Feed My sheep"
(Joh 21:16, 17).
decease--"departure." The very word ("exodus") used in the
Transfiguration, Moses and Elias conversing about Christ's
decease (found nowhere else in the New Testament, but
Heb 11:22,
"the departing of Israel" out of Egypt, to which the saints'
deliverance from the present bondage of corruption answers).
"Tabernacle" is another term found here as well as there
(Lu 9:31, 33):
an undesigned coincidence confirming Peter's authorship of this
Epistle.
that ye may be able--by the help of this written Epistle; and
perhaps also of Mark's Gospel, which Peter superintended.
always--Greek, "on each occasion": as often as occasion
may require.
to have . . . in remembrance--Greek, "to
exercise remembrance of." Not merely "to remember," as sometimes we do,
things we care not about; but "have them in (earnest) remembrance," as
momentous and precious truths.
16. For--reason why he is so earnest that the remembrance of
these things should be continued after his death.
followed--out in detail.
cunningly devised--Greek, "devised by (man's)
wisdom"; as distinguished from what the Holy Ghost
teaches (compare
1Co 3:13).
But compare also
2Pe 2:3,
"feigned words."
fables--as the heathen mythologies, and the subsequent Gnostic
"fables and genealogies," of which the germs already existed in the
junction of Judaism with Oriental philosophy in Asia Minor. A
precautionary protest of the Spirit against the rationalistic theory of
the Gospel history being myth.
when we made known unto you--not that Peter himself had
personally taught the churches in Pontus, Galatia, &c., but he
was one of the apostles whose testimony was borne to them, and to
the Church in general, to whom this Epistle is addressed
(2Pe 1:1,
including, but not restricted, as First Peter, to the
churches in Pontus, &c.).
power--the opposite of "fables"; compare the contrast of "word"
and "power,"
1Co 4:20.
A specimen of His power was given at the Transfiguration also of
His "coming" again, and its attendant glory. The Greek
for "coming" is always used of His second advent. A refutation
of the scoffers
(2Pe 3:4):
I, James and John, saw with our own eyes a mysterious sample of His
coming glory.
were--Greek, "were made."
eye-witnesses--As initiated spectators of mysteries (so the
Greek), we were admitted into His innermost secrets, namely, at
the Transfiguration.
his--emphatical (compare Greek):
"THAT great ONE'S
majesty."
17. received . . . honour--in the voice that
spake to Him.
glory--in the light which shone around Him.
came--Greek, "was borne": the same phrase occurs only in
1Pe 1:13;
one of several instances showing that the argument against the
authenticity of this Second Epistle, from its dissimilarity of style as
compared with First Peter, is not well founded.
such a voice--as he proceeds to describe.
from the excellent glory--rather as Greek, "by (that is,
uttered by) the magnificent glory (that is, by God: as His
glorious manifested presence is often called by the Hebrews "the
Glory," compare "His Excellency,"
De 33:26;
Ps 21:5)."
in whom--Greek, "in regard to whom" (accusative
case); but
Mt 17:5,
"in whom" (dative case) centers and rests My good pleasure. Peter also
omits, as not required by his purpose, "hear Him," showing his
independence in his inspired testimony.
I am--Greek aorist, past time, "My good pleasure
rested from eternity."
18. which came--rather as Greek, "we heard borne from
heaven."
holy mount--as the Transfiguration mount came to be regarded, on
account of the manifestation of Christ's divine glory there.
we--emphatical: we, James and John, as well as myself.
19. We--all believers.
a more sure--rather as Greek, "we have the word of
prophecy more sure (confirmed)." Previously we knew its sureness
by faith, but, through that visible specimen of its hereafter entire
fulfilment, assurance is made doubly sure. Prophecy assures us
that Christ's sufferings, now past, are to be followed by
Christ's glory, still future: the Transfiguration gives us a
pledge to make our faith still stronger, that "the day" of His glory
will "dawn" ere long. He does not mean to say that "the word of
prophecy," or Scripture, is surer than the voice of God heard at
the Transfiguration, as English Version; for this is plainly not
the fact. The fulfilment of prophecy so far in Christ's history
makes us the surer of what is yet to be fulfilled, His
consummated glory. The word was the "lamp (Greek for 'light')
heeded" by Old Testament believers, until a gleam of the "day dawn" was
given at Christ's first coming, and especially in His Transfiguration.
So the word is a lamp to us still, until "the day" burst forth
fully at the second coming of "the Sun of righteousness." The
day, when it dawns upon you, makes sure the fact that you
saw correctly, though indistinctly, the objects revealed by the
lamp.
whereunto--to which word of prophecy, primarily the Old
Testament in Peter's day; but now also in our day the New
Testament, which, though brighter than the Old Testament (compare
1Jo 2:8,
end), is but a lamp even still as compared with the brightness
of the eternal day (compare
2Pe 3:2).
Oral teachings and traditions of ministers are to be tested by the
written word
(Ac 17:11).
dark--The Greek implies squalid, having neither
water nor light: such spiritually is the world without, and the smaller
world (microcosm) within, the heart in its natural state. Compare the
"dry places"
Lu 11:24
(namely, unwatered by the Spirit), through which the unclean spirit
goeth.
dawn--bursting through the darkness.
day star--Greek, the morning star," as
Re 22:16.
The Lord Jesus.
in your hearts--Christ's arising in the heart by His
Spirit giving full assurance, creates spiritually full day in the
heart, the means to which is prayerfully giving heed to the
word. This is associated with the coming of the day of the
Lord, as being the earnest of it. Indeed, even our hearts
shall not fully realize Christ in all His unspeakable glory and
felt presence, until He shall come
(Mal 4:2).
Isa 66:14, 15,
"When you see this, your heart shall rejoice . . .
For, behold, the Lord will come." However, TREGELLES' punctuation is best, "whereunto ye do well to
take heed (as unto a light shining in a dark place, until the day have
dawned and the morning star arisen) in your hearts." For the day has
already dawned in the heart of believers; what they wait for is its
visible manifestation at Christ's coming.
20. "Forasmuch as ye know this"
(1Pe 1:18).
first--the foremost consideration in studying the word of
prophecy. Laying it down as a first principle never to be lost
sight of.
is--Greek, not the simple verb, to be, but to
begin to be, "proves to be," "becometh." No prophecy is found to be
the result of "private (the mere individual writer's uninspired)
interpretation" (solution), and so origination.
The Greek noun epilusis, does not mean in itself
origination; but that which the sacred writer could not always
fully interpret, though being the speaker or writer (as
1Pe 1:10-12
implies), was plainly not of his own, but of God's disclosure,
origination, and inspiration, as Peter proceeds to add, "But
holy men . . . spake (and afterwards wrote)
. . . moved by the Holy Ghost": a reason why ye should "give"
all "heed" to it. The parallelism to
2Pe 1:16
shows that "private interpretation," contrasted with "moved by
the Holy Ghost," here answers to "fables devised by
(human) wisdom," contrasted with "we were eye-witnesses
of His majesty," as attested by the "voice from God." The words
of the prophetical (and so of all) Scripture writers were not mere
words of the individuals, and therefore to be interpreted by
them, but of "the Holy Ghost" by whom they were "moved." "Private"
is explained,
2Pe 1:21,
"by the will of man" (namely, the individual writer). In a secondary
sense the text teaches also, as the word is the Holy Spirit's,
it cannot be interpreted by its readers (any more than by
its writers) by their mere private human powers, but by
the teaching of the Holy Ghost
(Joh 16:14).
"He who is the author of Scripture is its supreme interpreter"
[GERHARD]. ALFORD
translates, "springs not out of human interpretation," that is, is not
a prognostication made by a man knowing what he means when he
utters it, but," &c.
(Joh 11:49-52).
Rightly: except that the verb is rather, doth become, or
prove to be. It not being of private interpretation, you must
"give heed" to it, looking for the Spirit's illumination
"in your hearts" (compare Note, see on
2Pe 1:19).
21. came not in old time--rather, "was never at any time borne"
(to us).
by the will of man--alone.
Jer 23:26,
"prophets of the deceit of their own heart." Compare
2Pe 3:5,
"willingly."
holy--One oldest manuscript has, "men
FROM God": the emissaries from God. "Holy,"
if read, will mean because they had the Holy Spirit.
moved--Greek, "borne" (along) as by a mighty wind:
Ac 2:2,
"rushing (the same Greek) wind": rapt out of themselves:
still not in fanatical excitement
(1Co 14:32).
The Hebrew "nabi," "prophet," meant an announcer
or interpreter of God: he, as God's spokesman, interpreted not
his own "private" will or thought, but God's "Man of the Spirit"
(Ho 9:7,
Margin). "Thou testifiedst by Thy Spirit in Thy prophets."
"Seer," on the other hand, refers to the mode of receiving the
communications from God, rather than to the utterance of them to
others. "Spake" implies that, both in its original oral announcement,
and now even when in writing, it has been always, and is, the living
voice of God speaking to us through His inspired servants.
Greek, "borne (along)" forms a beautiful antithesis to "was
borne." They were passive, rather than active instruments. The Old
Testament prophets primarily, but including also all the
inspired penmen, whether of the New or Old Testament
(2Pe 3:2).
CHAPTER 2
2Pe 2:1-22.
FALSE
TEACHERS TO
ARISE:
THEM
BAD
PRACTICES AND
SURE
DESTRUCTION, FROM
WHICH THE
GODLY
SHALL
BE
DELIVERED, AS
LOT
WAS.
1. But--in contrast to the prophets "moved by the Holy Ghost"
(2Pe 1:21).
also--as well as the true prophets
(2Pe 1:19-21).
Paul had already testified the entrance of false prophets into the same
churches.
among the people--Israel: he is writing to believing
Israelites primarily (see on
1Pe 1:1).
Such a "false prophet" was Balaam
(2Pe 2:15).
there shall be--Already symptoms of the evil were appearing
(2Pe 2:9-22;
Jude 4-13).
false teachers--teachers of falsehood. In contrast to the true
teachers, whom he exhorts his readers to give heed to
(2Pe 3:2).
who--such as (literally, "the which") shall.
privily--not at first openly and directly, but by the
way, bringing in error by the side of the true doctrine (so
the Greek): Rome objects, Protestants cannot point out the exact
date of the beginnings of the false doctrines superadded to the
original truth; we answer, Peter foretells us it would be so, that the
first introduction of them would be stealthy and unobserved
(Jude 4).
damnable--literally, "of destruction"; entailing destruction
(Php 3:19)
on all who follow them.
heresies--self-chosen doctrines, not emanating from God
(compare "will-worship,"
Col 2:23).
even--going even to such a length as to deny both
in teaching and practice. Peter knew, by bitter repentance, what
a fearful thing it is to deny the Lord
(Lu 22:61, 62).
denying--Him whom, above all others, they ought to
confess.
Lord--"Master and Owner" (Greek), compare
Jude 4,
Greek. Whom the true doctrine teaches to be their
OWNER by right of purchase. Literally,
"denying Him who bought them (that He should be thereby), their
Master."
bought them--Even the ungodly were bought by His "precious
blood." It shall be their bitterest self-reproach in hell, that, as far
as Christ's redemption was concerned, they might have been saved. The
denial of His propitiatory sacrifice is included in the meaning
(compare
1Jo 4:3).
bring upon themselves--compare "God bringing in the flood
upon the world,"
2Pe 2:5.
Man brings upon himself the vengeance which God brings upon him.
swift--swiftly descending: as the Lord's coming shall be swift
and sudden. As the ground swallowed up Korah and Dathan, and "they went
down quick into the pit." Compare
Jude 11,
which is akin to this passage.
2. follow--out: so the Greek.
pernicious ways--The oldest manuscripts and Vulgate read,
"licentiousness"
(Jude 4).
False doctrine and immoral practice generally go together
(2Pe 2:18, 19).
by reason of whom--"on account of whom," namely, the followers
of the false teachers.
the way of truth shall be evil spoken of--"blasphemed" by those
without, who shall lay on Christianity itself the blame of its
professors' evil practice. Contrast
1Pe 2:12.
3. through, &c.--Greek, "IN
covetousness" as their element
(2Pe 2:14,
end). Contrast
2Co 11:20; 12:17.
of a long time--in God's eternal purpose. "Before of old
ordained to condemnation"
(Jude 4).
lingereth not--though sinners think it lingers; "is not idle."
damnation--Greek, "destruction" (see on
2Pe 2:1).
Personified.
slumbereth not--though sinners slumber.
4. if--The apodosis or consequent member of the sentence is not
expressed, but is virtually contained in
2Pe 2:9.
If God in past time has punished the ungodly and saved His people, He
will be sure to do so also in our days (compare end of
2Pe 2:3).
angels--the highest of intelligent creatures (compare with this
verse,
Jude 6),
yet not spared when they sinned.
hell--Greek, "Tartarus": nowhere else in New
Testament or the Septuagint: equivalent to the usual
Greek, "Gehenna." Not inconsistent with
1Pe 5:8;
for though their final doom is hell, yet for a time they are
permitted to roam beyond it in "the darkness of this world." Slaves of
Tartarus (called "the abyss," or "deep,"
Lu 8:31;
"the bottomless pit,"
Re 9:11)
may also come upon earth. Step by step they are given to Tartarus,
until at last they shall be wholly bound to it.
delivered--as the judge delivers the condemned prisoner to the
officers
(Re 20:2).
into chains--
(Jude 6).
The oldest manuscripts read, "dens," as ALFORD
translates: the Greek, however, may, in Hellenistic
Greek, mean "chains," as Jude expresses it. They are "reserved"
unto hell's "mist of darkness" as their final "judgment" or doom, and
meanwhile their exclusion from the light of heaven is begun. So the
ungodly were considered as virtually "in prison," though at large on
the earth, from the moment that God's sentence went forth, though not
executed till one hundred twenty years after.
5. eighth--that is, Noah, and seven others. Contrasted with the
densely peopled "world of the ungodly."
preacher--not only "righteous" himself (compare
2Pe 2:8),
but also "a preacher of righteousness": adduced by Peter against the
licentiousness of the false teachers
(2Pe 2:2)
who have no prospect before them but destruction, even as it overtook
the ungodly world in Noah's days.
6. with, &c.--"TO overthrow"
[ALFORD].
ensample--"of (the fate that should befall) those who in
after-time should live ungodly." Compare
Jude 7,
"set forth for an example."
7. just--righteous.
filthy conversation--literally, "behavior in licentiousness"
(Ge 19:5).
the wicked--Greek, "lawless": who set at defiance the
laws of nature, as well as man and God. The Lord reminds us of
Lot's faithfulness, but not of his sin in the cave: so in Rahab's
case.
8. vexed--Greek, "tormented."
9. knoweth how--He is at no loss for means, even when men see no
escape.
out of--not actually from.
temptations--trials.
to be punished--Greek, "being punished": as the fallen
angels
(2Pe 2:4),
actually under sentence, and awaiting its final execution. Sin is
already its own penalty; hell will be its full development.
10. chiefly--They especially will be punished
(Jude 8).
after--following after.
lust of uncleanness--defilement: "hankering after
polluting and unlawful use of the flesh" [ALFORD].
government--Greek, "lordship," "dominion"
(Jude 8).
Presumptuous--Greek, "Darers." Self-will begets
presumption. Presumptuously daring.
are not afraid--though they are so insignificant in might;
Greek, "tremble not"
(Jude 8,
end).
speak evil of--Greek, "blaspheme."
dignities--Greek, "glories."
11. which are--though they are.
greater--than these blasphemers. Jude instances Michael
(Jude 9).
railing accusation--Greek, "blaspheming judgment"
(Jude 9).
against them--against "dignities," as for instance, the fallen
angels: once exalted, and still retaining traces of their former power
and glory.
before the Lord--In the presence of the Lord, the Judge,
in reverence, they abstain from judgment [BENGEL].
Judgment belongs to God, not the angels. How great is the dignity of
the saints who, as Christ's assessors, shall hereafter judge angels!
Meanwhile, railing judgments, though spoken with truth,
against dignities, as being uttered irreverently, are of the
nature of "blasphemies" (Greek,
1Co 4:4, 5).
If superior angels dare not, as being in the presence of God, the
Judge, speak evil even of the bad angels, how awful the presumption of
those who speak evil blasphemously of good "dignities."
2Sa 16:7, 8,
Shimei;
Nu 16:2, 3,
Korah, &c., referred to also in
Jude 11;
Nu 12:8,
"Were ye (Aaron and Miriam) not afraid to speak evil of My
servant Moses?" The angels who sinned still retain the indelible
impress of majesty. Satan is still "a strong man": "prince of this
world"; and under him are "principalities, powers, rulers of the
darkness of this world." We are to avoid irreverence in regard to them,
not on their account, but on account of God. A warning to those who use
Satan's name irreverently and in blasphemy. "When the ungodly curseth
Satan, he curseth his own soul."
12.
(Jude 19).
But--In contrast to the "angels,"
2Pe 2:11.
brute--Greek, "irrational." In contrast to angels
that "excel in strength."
beasts--Greek, "animals" (compare
Ps 49:20).
natural--transposed in the oldest manuscripts, "born natural,"
that is, born naturally so: being in their very nature (that is,
naturally) as such (irrational animals), born to be taken and destroyed
(Greek, "unto capture and destruction," or corruption,
see on
Ga 6:8;
compare end of this verse, "shall perish," literally, "shall be
corrupted," in their own corruption.
Jude 10,
naturally . . . corrupt themselves," and so
destroy themselves; for one and the same Greek word
expresses corruption, the seed, and destruction, the
developed fruit).
speak evil of--Greek, "in the case of things which
they understand not." Compare the same presumption, the parent of
subsequent Gnostic error, producing an opposite, though kindred, error,
the worshipping of good angels":
Col 2:18,
"intruding into those things which he hath not seen."
13. receive--"shall carry off as their due."
reward of--that is, for their "unrighteousness"
[ALFORD]. Perhaps it is implied,
unrighteousness shall be its own reward or punishment.
"Wages of unrighteousness"
(2Pe 2:15)
has a different sense, namely, the earthly gain to be gotten by
"unrighteousness."
in the daytime--Translate as Greek, "counting the luxury
which is in the daytime (not restricted to night, as ordinary
revelling. Or as Vulgate and CALVIN, "the
luxury which is but for a day": so
Heb 11:25,
"the pleasures of sin for a season"; and
Heb 12:16,
Esau) to be pleasure," that is, to be their chief good and highest
enjoyment.
Spots--in themselves.
blemishes--disgraces: bringing blame (so the
Greek) on the Church and on Christianity itself.
sporting themselves--Greek, "luxuriating."
with--Greek, "in."
deceivings--or else passively, "deceits": luxuries gotten by
deceit. Compare
Mt 13:22,
"Deceitfulness of riches";
Eph 4:22,
"Deceitful lusts." While deceiving others, they are deceived
themselves. Compare with English Version,
Php 3:19,
"Whose glory is in their shame." "Their own" stands in opposition to
"you": "While partaking of the love-feast (compare
Jude 12)
with you," they are at the same time "luxuriating in their
own deceivings," or "deceits" (to which latter clause answers
Jude 12,
end: Peter presents the positive side, "they luxuriate in their
own deceivings"; Jude, the negative, "feeding themselves without
fear"). But several of the oldest manuscripts, Vulgate,
Syriac, and Sahidic Versions read (as Jude), "In their own
love-feasts": "their own" will then imply that they pervert the
love-feasts so as to make them subserve their own
self-indulgent purposes.
14. full of adultery--literally, "full of an adulteress," as
though they carried about adulteresses always dwelling in their eyes:
the eye being the avenue of lust [HORNEIUS].
BENGEL makes the adulteress who fills their
eyes, to be "alluring desire."
that cannot cease--"that cannot be made to cease from
sin."
beguiling--"laying baits for."
unstable--not firmly established in faith and piety.
heart--not only the eyes, which are the channel, but the
heart, the fountain head of lust.
Job 31:7,
"Mine heart walked after mine eyes."
covetous practices--The oldest manuscripts read singular,
"covetousness."
cursed children--rather as Greek, "children of curse,"
that is, devoted to the curse. Cursing and covetousness,
as in Balaam's case, often go together: the curse he designed for
Israel fell on Israel's foes and on himself. True believers
bless, and curse not, and so are blessed.
15. have--Some of the seducers are spoken of as already
come, others as yet to come.
following--out: so the Greek.
the way--
(Nu 22:23, 32;
Isa 56:11).
son of Bosor--the same as Beor
(Nu 22:5).
This word was adopted, perhaps, because the kindred word Basar
means flesh; and Balaam is justly termed son of
carnality, as covetous, and the enticer of Israel to lust.
loved the wages of unrighteousness--and therefore wished (in
order to gain them from Balak) to curse Israel whom God had blessed,
and at last gave the hellish counsel that the only way to bring God's
curse on Israel was to entice them to fleshly lust and
idolatry, which often go together.
16. was rebuked--Greek, "had a rebuke," or
conviction; an exposure of his specious wickedness on his
being tested (the root verb of the Greek noun means to
"convict on testing").
his--Greek, "his own": his own beast convicted him of
his own iniquity.
ass--literally, "beast of burden"; the ass was the ordinary
animal used in riding in Palestine.
dumb--Greek, "voiceless-speaking in man's
voice"; marking the marvellous nature of the miracle.
forbade--literally, "hindered." It was not the words of
the ass (for it merely deprecated his beating it), but the
miraculous fact of its speaking at all, which withstood
Balaam's perversity in desiring to go after God had forbidden him in
the first instance. Thus indirectly the ass, and directly the angel,
rebuked his worse than asinine obstinacy; the ass turned
aside at the sight of the angel, but Balaam, after God had plainly
said, Thou shalt not go, persevered in wishing to go for gain; thus the
ass, in act, forbade his madness. How awful a contrast--a
dumb beast forbidding an inspired prophet!
17.
(Jude 12, 13.)
wells--"clouds" in Jude; both promising (compare
2Pe 2:19)
water, but yielding none; so their "great swelling words" are found on
trial to be but "vanity"
(2Pe 2:18).
clouds--The oldest manuscripts and versions read, "mists,"
dark, and not transparent and bright as "clouds" often are,
whence the latter term is applied sometimes to the saints; fit emblem
of the children of darkness. "Clouds" is a transcriber's correction
from
Jude 12,
where it is appropriate, "clouds . . . without water"
(promising what they do not perform); but not here, "mists driven along
by a tempest."
mist--blackness; "the chilling horror accompanying
darkness" [BENGEL].
18. allure--Greek, "lay baits for."
through--Greek, "in"; the lusts of the flesh being
the element IN which they lay their baits.
much wantonness--Greek, "by licentiousness"; the bait
which they lay.
clean escaped--Greek, "really escaped." But the oldest
manuscripts and Vulgate read, "scarcely," or "for but a little
time"; scarcely have they escaped from them who live in error (the
ungodly world), when they are allured by these seducers into sin again
(2Pe 2:20).
19. promise . . . liberty--(Christian)--These promises
are instances of their "great swelling words"
(2Pe 2:18).
The liberty which they propose is such as fears not Satan, nor
loathes the flesh. Pauline language, adopted by Peter here, and
1Pe 2:16;
see on
1Pe 2:16;
(compare
2Pe 3:15;
Ro 6:16-22; 8:15, 21;
Ga 5:1, 13;
compare
Joh 8:34).
corruption--(See on
2Pe 2:12);
"destroyed . . . perish . . . corruption."
of whom--"by whatever . . . by the same," &c.
20. after they--the seducers "themselves" have
escaped
(2Pe 2:19;
see on
Heb 6:4-6).
pollutions--which bring "corruption"
(2Pe 2:19).
through--Greek, "in."
knowledge--Greek, "full and accurate knowledge."
the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ--solemnly expressing in full
the great and gracious One from whom they fall.
latter end is worse . . . than the beginning--Peter
remembers Christ's words. "Worse" stands opposed to "better"
(2Pe 2:21).
21. the way of righteousness--"the way of truth"
(2Pe 2:2).
Christian doctrine, and "the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour."
turn--back again; so the Greek.
from the holy commandment--the Gospel which enjoins
holiness; in opposition to their corruption. "Holy," not
that it makes holy, but because it ought to be kept inviolate
[TITTMANN].
delivered--once for all; admitting no turning back.
22. But--You need not wonder at the event; for dogs and
swine they were before, and dogs and swine they will continue.
They "scarcely"
(2Pe 2:18)
have escaped from their filthy folly, when they again are entangled in
it. Then they seduce others who have in like manner "for a little time
escaped from them that live in error"
(2Pe 2:18).
Peter often quoted Proverbs in his First Epistle
(1Pe 1:7; 2:17; 4:8, 18);
another proof that both Epistles come from the same writer.
CHAPTER 3
2Pe 3:1-18.
SURENESS OF
CHRIST'S
COMING, AND
ITS
ACCOMPANIMENTS,
DECLARED IN
OPPOSITION TO
SCOFFERS ABOUT TO
ARISE.
GOD'S
LONG
SUFFERING A
MOTIVE TO
REPENTANCE, AS
PAUL'S
EPISTLES
SET
FORTH;
CONCLUDING
EXHORTATION TO
GROWTH IN THE
KNOWLEDGE OF
CHRIST.
1. now--"This now a second Epistle I write." Therefore he had
lately written the former Epistle. The seven Catholic Epistles were
written by James, John, and Jude, shortly before their deaths;
previously, while having the prospect of being still for some time
alive, they felt it less necessary to write [BENGEL].
unto you--The Second Epistle, though more general in its
address, yet included especially the same persons as the First
Epistle was particularly addressed to.
pure--literally, "pure when examined by sunlight"; "sincere."
Adulterated with no error. Opposite to "having the understanding
darkened." ALFORD explains, The mind, will,
and affection, in relation to the outer world, being turned to God [the
Sun of the soul], and not obscured by fleshly and selfish
regards.
by way of--Greek, "in," "in putting you in
remembrance"
(2Pe 1:12, 13).
Ye already know
(2Pe 3:3);
it is only needed that I remind you
(Jude 5).
2. prophets--of the Old Testament.
of us--The oldest manuscripts and Vulgate read, "And of
the commandment of the Lord and Saviour (declared) by
YOUR apostles" (so "apostle of the
Gentiles,"
Ro 11:13)
--the apostles who live among you in the present time, in
contrast to the Old Testament "prophets."
3. Knowing this first--from the word of the apostles.
shall come--Their very scoffing shall confirm the truth
of the prediction.
scoffers--The oldest manuscripts and Vulgate add,
"(scoffers) in (that is, 'with') scoffing." As
Re 14:2,
"harping with harps."
walking after their own lusts--
(2Pe 2:10;
Jude 16, 18).
Their own pleasure is their sole law, unrestrained by reverence for
God.
4. (Compare
Ps 10:11; 73:11.)
Presumptuous skepticism and lawless lust, setting nature and its
so-called laws above the God of nature and revelation, and arguing from
the past continuity of nature's phenomena that there can be no future
interruption to them, was the sin of the antediluvians, and shall be
that of the scoffers in the last days.
Where--implying that it ought to have taken place before this,
if ever it was to take place, but that it never will.
the promise--which you, believers, are so continually looking
for the fulfilment of
(2Pe 3:13).
What becomes of the promise which you talk so much of?
his--Christ's; the subject of prophecy from the earliest
days.
the fathers--to whom the promise was made, and who rested
all their hopes on it.
all things--in the natural world; skeptics look not
beyond this.
as they were--continue as they do; as we see them to
continue. From the time of the promise of Christ's coming as Saviour
and King being given to the fathers, down to the present time, all
things continue, and have continued, as they now are, from "the
beginning of creation." The "scoffers" here are not necessarily
atheists, nor do they maintain that the world existed from eternity.
They are willing to recognize a God, but not the God of
revelation. They reason from seeming delay against the fulfilment
of God's word at all.
5. Refutation of their scoffing from Scripture history.
willingly--wilfully; they do not wish to know. Their
ignorance is voluntary.
they . . . are ignorant of--in contrast to
2Pe 3:8,
"Be not ignorant of this." Literally, in both verses, "This escapes
THEIR notice (sagacious philosophers though they
think themselves)"; "let this not escape YOUR
notice." They obstinately shut their eyes to the Scripture record of
the creation and the deluge; the latter is the very parallel to the
coming judgment by fire, which Jesus mentions, as Peter doubtless
remembered.
by the word of God--not by a fortuitous concurrence of atoms
[ALFORD].
of old--Greek, "from of old"; from the first beginning of
all things. A confutation of their objection, "all things continue as
they were FROM THE BEGINNING OF CREATION." Before
the flood, the same objection to the possibility of the flood might
have been urged with the same plausibility: The heavens (sky) and earth
have been FROM OF OLD, how unlikely then that they
should not continue so! But, replies Peter, the flood came in
spite of their reasonings; so will the conflagration of the earth come
in spite of the "scoffers" of the last days, changing the whole order
of things (the present "world," or as Greek means, "order"), and
introducing the new heavens and earth
(2Pe 3:13).
earth standing out of--Greek, "consisting of," that is,
"formed out of the water." The waters under the firmament were at
creation gathered together into one place, and the dry land emerged
out of and above, them.
in, &c.--rather, "by means of the water," as a great
instrument (along with fire) in the changes wrought on the
earth's surface to prepare it for man. Held together BY the water. The earth arose out of the water
by the efficacy of the water itself [TITTMANN].
6. Whereby--Greek, "By which" (plural). By means of
which heavens and earth (in respect to the WATERS which flowed together from both) the
then world perished (that is, in respect to its occupants,
men and animals, and its then existing order: not was
annihilated); for in the flood "the fountains of the great deep
were broken up" from the earth (1) below, and "the windows of
heaven" (2) above "were opened." The earth was deluged by that
water out of which it had originally risen.
7. (Compare
Job 28:5,
end).
which are now--"the postdiluvian visible world." In contrast to
"that then was,"
2Pe 3:6.
the same--Other oldest manuscripts read, "His" (God's).
kept in store--Greek, "treasured up."
reserved--"kept." It is only God's constantly watchful
providence which holds together the present state of things till His
time for ending it.
8. be not ignorant--as those scoffers are
(2Pe 3:5).
Besides the refutation of them
(2Pe 3:5-7)
drawn from the history of the deluge, here he adds another (addressed
more to believers than to the mockers): God's delay in fulfilling His
promise is not, like men's delays, owing to inability or fickleness in
keeping His word, but through "long-suffering."
this one thing--as the consideration of chief importance
(Lu 10:42).
one day . . . thousand years--
(Ps 90:4):
Moses there says, Thy eternity, knowing no distinction between a
thousand years and a day, is the refuge of us creatures
of a day. Peter views God's eternity in relation to the last day: that
day seems to us, short-lived beings, long in coming, but with the
Lord the interval is irrespective of the idea of long or short. His
eternity exceeds all measures of time: to His divine knowledge all
future things are present: His power requires not long delays for the
performance of His work: His long-suffering excludes all impatient
expectation and eager haste, such as we men feel. He is equally blessed
in one day and in a thousand years. He can do the work of a thousand
years in one day: so in
2Pe 3:9
it is said, "He is not slack," that is, "slow": He has always the power
to fulfil His "promise."
thousand years as one day--No delay which occurs is long to God:
as to a man of countless riches, a thousand guineas are as a single
penny. God's œonologe (eternal-ages measurer) differs
wholly from man's horologe (hour-glass). His gnomon
(dial-pointer) shows all the hours at once in the greatest activity and
in perfect repose. To Him the hours pass away, neither more slowly, nor
more quickly, than befits His economy. There is nothing to make Him
need either to hasten or delay the end. The words, "with the Lord"
(Ps 90:4,
"In Thy sight"), silence all man's objections on the ground of his
incapability of understanding this [BENGEL].
9. slack--slow, tardy, late; exceeding the due time, as
though that time were already come.
Heb 10:37,
"will not tarry."
his promise--which the scoffers cavil at.
2Pe 3:4,
"Where is the promise?" It shall be surely fulfilled "according to His
promise"
(2Pe 3:13).
some--the "scoffers."
count--His promise to be the result of "slackness" (tardiness).
long-suffering--waiting until the full number of those appointed
to "salvation"
(2Pe 3:15)
shall be completed.
to us-ward--The oldest manuscripts, Vulgate, Syriac, &c.,
read, "towards YOU."
any--not desiring that any, yea, even that the scoffers, should
perish, which would be the result if He did not give space for
repentance.
come--go and be received to repentance: the Greek
implies there is room for their being received to
repentance (compare Greek,
Mr 2:2;
Joh 8:37).
10. The certainty, suddenness, and concomitant effects, of the
coming of the day of the Lord. FABER argues from
this that the millennium, &c., must precede Christ's literal
coming, not follow it. But "the day of the Lord" comprehends the
whole series of events, beginning with the pre-millennial advent, and
ending with the destruction of the wicked, and final conflagration, and
general judgment (which last intervenes between the conflagration and
the renovation of the earth).
will--emphatical. But (in spite of the mockers, and
notwithstanding the delay) come and be present the day of the
Lord SHALL.
as a thief--Peter remembers and repeats his Lord's image
(Lu 12:39, 41)
used in the conversation in which he took a part; so also Paul
(1Th 5:2)
and John
(Re 3:3; 16:15).
the heavens--which the scoffers say' shall "continue" as they
are
(2Pe 3:4;
Mt 24:35;
Re 21:1).
with a great noise--with a rushing noise, like that of a
whizzing arrow, or the crash of a devouring flame.
elements--the component materials of the world [WAHL]. However, as "the works" in the earth are mentioned
separately from "the earth," so it is likely by "elements," mentioned
after "the heavens," are meant "the works therein," namely, the sun,
moon, and stars (as THEOPHILUS OF ANTIOCH [p. 22, 148, 228]; and JUSTIN MARTYR [Apology,
2.44], use the word "elements"): these, as at creation, so in the
destruction of the world, are mentioned [BENGEL].
But as "elements" is not so used in Scripture Greek, perhaps it
refers to the component materials of "the heavens," including
the heavenly bodies; it clearly belongs to the former clause,
"the heavens," not to the following, "the earth," &c.
melt--be dissolved, as in
2Pe 3:11.
the works . . . therein--of nature and of art.
11. Your duty, seeing that this is so, is to be ever eagerly
expecting the day of God.
then--Some oldest manuscripts substitute "thus" for "then": a
happy refutation of the "thus" of the scoffers,
2Pe 3:4
(English Version, "As they were," Greek, "thus").
shall be--Greek, "are being (in God's appointment,
soon to be fulfilled) dissolved"; the present tense implying the
certainty as though it were actually present.
what manner of men--exclamatory. How watchful, prayerful,
zealous!
to be--not the mere Greek substantive verb of existence
(einai), but (huparchein) denoting a state or
condition in which one is supposed to be [TITTMANN]. What holy men ye ought to be found to be, when
the event comes! This is "the holy commandment" mentioned in
2Pe 3:2.
conversation . . . godliness--Greek, plural:
behaviors (towards men), godlinesses (or pieties
towards God) in their manifold modes of manifestation.
12. hasting unto--with the utmost eagerness desiring
[WAHL], praying for, and contemplating, the coming
Saviour as at hand. The Greek may mean "hastening (that is,
urging onward [ALFORD]) the day of God";
not that God's eternal appointment of the time is changeable, but God
appoints us as instruments of accomplishing those events which
must be first before the day of God can come. By praying for His
coming, furthering the preaching of the Gospel for a witness to all
nations, and bringing in those whom "the long-suffering of God" waits
to save, we hasten the coming of the day of God. The
Greek verb is always in New Testament used as neuter (as
English Version here), not active; but the Septuagint
uses it actively. Christ says, "Surely I come quickly. Amen."
Our part is to speed forward this consummation by
praying, "Even so, come, Lord Jesus"
(Re 22:20).
the coming--Greek, "presence" of a person:
usually, of the Saviour.
the day of God--God has given many myriads of days to
men: one shall be the great "day of God" Himself.
wherein--rather as Greek, "on account of (or owing
to) which" day.
heavens--the upper and lower regions of the sky.
melt--Our igneous rocks show that they were once in a liquid
state.
13. Nevertheless--"But": in contrast to the destructive effects
of the day of God stand its constructive effects. As the flood was the
baptism of the earth, eventuating in a renovated earth, partially
delivered from "the curse," so the baptism with fire shall purify the
earth so as to be the renovated abode of regenerated man, wholly freed
from the curse.
his promise--
(Isa 65:17; 66:22).
The "we" is not emphatical as in English Version.
new heavens--new atmospheric heavens surrounding the renovated
earth.
righteousness--dwelleth in that coming world as its
essential feature, all pollutions having been removed.
14. that ye . . . be found of him--"in His sight"
[ALFORD], at His coming; plainly implying a
personal coming.
without spot--at the coming marriage feast of the Lamb, in
contrast to
2Pe 2:13,
"Spots they are and blemishes while they feast," not having on the
King's pure wedding garment.
blameless--
(1Co 1:8;
Php 1:10;
1Th 3:13; 5:23).
in peace--in all its aspects, towards God, your own consciences,
and your fellow men, and as its consequence eternal blessedness:
"the God of peace" will effect this for you.
15. account . . . the long-suffering . . . is
salvation--is designed for the salvation of those yet to be
gathered into the Church: whereas those scoffers "count it (to be the
result of) slackness" on the Lord's part
(2Pe 3:9).
our beloved brother Paul--a beautiful instance of love and
humility. Peter praises the very Epistles which contain his
condemnation.
according to the wisdom given unto him--adopting Paul's own
language,
1Co 3:10,
"According to the grace of God which is given unto me as
a wise master-builder." Supernatural and inspired wisdom "GIVEN" him, not acquired in human schools of learning.
hath written--Greek aorist, "wrote," as a thing wholly
past: Paul was by this time either dead, or had ceased to
minister to them.
to you--Galatians, Ephesians, Colossians, the same
region as Peter addresses. Compare "in peace,"
2Pe 3:14,
a practical exhibition of which Peter now gives in showing how
perfectly agreeing Paul (who wrote the Epistle to the Galatians)
and he are, notwithstanding the event recorded
(Ga 2:11-14).
Col 3:4
refers to Christ's second coming. The Epistle to the Hebrews,
too (addressed not only to the Palestinian, but also secondarily to the
Hebrew Christians everywhere), may be referred to, as Peter primarily
(though not exclusively) addresses in both Epistles the Hebrew
Christians of the dispersion (see on
1Pe 1:1).
Heb 9:27, 28; 10:25, 37,
"speak of these things"
(2Pe 3:16)
which Peter has been handling, namely, the coming of the day of the
Lord, delayed through His "long-suffering," yet near and sudden.
16. also in all his epistles--
Ro 2:4
is very similar to
2Pe 3:15,
beginning. The Pauline Epistles were by this time become the
common property of all the churches. The "all" seems to imply
they were now completed. The subject of the Lord's coming is handled in
1Th 4:13; 5:11;
compare
2Pe 3:10
with 1Th 5:2.
Still Peter distinguishes Paul's Epistle, or Epistles,
"TO YOU," from "all his (other)
Epistles," showing that certain definite churches, or particular
classes of believers, are meant by "you."
in which--Epistles. The oldest manuscripts read the
feminine relative (hais); not as Received Text (hois),
"in which things."
some things hard to be understood--namely, in reference to
Christ's coming, for example, the statements as to the man of sin and
the apostasy, before Christ's coming. "Paul seemed thereby to delay
Christ's coming to a longer period than the other apostles, whence some
doubted altogether His coming" [BENGEL]. Though
there be some things hard to be understood, there are enough besides,
plain, easy, and sufficient for perfecting the man of God. "There is
scarce anything drawn from the obscure places, but the same in other
places may be found most plain" [AUGUSTINE]. It is
our own prejudice, foolish expectations, and carnal fancies, that make
Scripture difficult [JEREMY TAYLOR].
unlearned--Not those wanting human learning are meant,
but those lacking the learning imparted by the Spirit. The
humanly learned have been often most deficient in spiritual
learning, and have originated many heresies. Compare
2Ti 2:23,
a different Greek word, "unlearned," literally, "untutored."
When religion is studied as a science, nothing is more abstruse; when
studied in order to know our duty and practice it, nothing is easier.
unstable--not yet established in what they have learned; shaken
by every seeming difficulty; who, in perplexing texts, instead of
waiting until God by His Spirit makes them plain in comparing them with
other Scriptures, hastily adopt distorted views.
wrest--strain and twist (properly with a hand screw) what
is straight in itself (for example,
2Ti 2:18).
other scriptures--Paul's Epistles were, therefore, by this time,
recognized in the Church, as "Scripture": a term never applied in any
of the fifty places where it occurs, save to the Old and New Testament
sacred writings. Men in each Church having miraculous discernment of
spirits would have prevented any uninspired writing from being put
on a par with the Old Testament word of God; the apostles' lives also
were providentially prolonged, Paul's and Peter's at least to
thirty-four years after Christ's resurrection, John's to thirty years
later, so that fraud in the canon is out of question. The three first
Gospels and Acts are included in "the other Scriptures," and perhaps
all the New Testament books, save John and Revelation, written later.
unto their own destruction--not through Paul's fault
(2Pe 2:1).
17. Ye--warned by the case of those "unlearned and unstable"
persons
(2Pe 3:16).
knowing . . . before--the event.
led away with--the very term, as Peter remembers, used by Paul
of Barnabas' being "carried," Greek, "led away with" Peter and
the other Jews in their hypocrisy.
wicked--"lawless," as in
2Pe 2:7.
fall from--(grace,
Ga 5:4:
the true source of) "steadfastness" or stability in contrast
with the "unstable"
(2Pe 3:16):
"established"
(2Pe 1:12):
all kindred Greek terms. Compare
Jude 20, 21.
18. grow--Not only do not "fall from"
(2Pe 3:17),
but grow onward: the true secret of not going backward.
Eph 4:15,
"Grow up into Him, the Head, Christ."
grace and . . . knowledge of . . .
Christ--"the grace and knowledge of Christ"
[ALFORD rightly]: the grace of which
Christ is the author, and the knowledge of which
Christ is the object.
for ever--Greek, "to the day of eternity": the day that
has no end: "the day of the Lord," beginning with the Lord's
coming.
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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871)
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