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THE FIRST EPISTLE GENERAL OF
PETER
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
CHAPTER 2
@1Pe
2:1-25. EXHORTATIONS.
To guileless feeding on the word
by the sense of their privileges as new-born babes, living
stones in the spiritual temple built on Christ the chief
corner-stone, and royal priests, in contrast to their
former state: also to abstinence from fleshly lusts, and
to walk worthily in all relations of life, so that the
world without which opposes them may be constrained to
glorify God in seeing their good works. Christ, the grand
pattern to follow in patience under suffering for
well-doing.
1. laying aside--once for
all: so the Greek aorist expresses as a garment
put off. The exhortation applies to Christians alone,
for in none else is the new nature existing which, as "the
inward man" (@Eph
3:16) can cast off the old as an outward thing, so
that the Christian, through the continual renewal of his
inward man, can also exhibit himself externally as a new
man. But to unbelievers the demand is addressed, that
inwardly, in regard to the nous (mind), they
must become changed, meta-noeisthai (re-pent)
[STEIGER].
The "therefore" resumes the exhortation begun in @1Pe
1:22. Seeing that ye are born again of an
incorruptible seed, be not again entangled in evil, which
"has no substantial being, but is an acting in contrariety
to the being formed in us" [THEOPHYLACT].
"Malice," &c., are utterly inconsistent with the "love of
the brethren," unto which ye have "purified your souls" (@1Pe
1:22). The vices here are those which offend against
the BROTHERLY LOVE
inculcated above. Each succeeding one springs out of that
which immediately precedes, so as to form a genealogy
of the sins against love. Out of malice springs
guile; out of guile, hypocrises (pretending to
be what we are not, and not showing what we really are;
the opposite of "love unfeigned," and "without
dissimulation"); out of hypocrisies, envies of
those to whom we think ourselves obliged to play the
hypocrite; out of envies, evil-speaking, malicious,
envious detraction of others. Guile is the
permanent disposition; hypocrisies the acts
flowing from it. The guileless knows no envy. Compare @1Pe
2:2, "sincere," Greek, "guileless." "Malice
delights in another's hurt; envy pines at another's
good; guile imparts duplicity to the heart;
hypocrisy (flattery) imparts duplicity to the tongue;
evil-speakings wound the character of another" [AUGUSTINE].
2. new-born babes--altogether
without "guile" (@1Pe
2:1). As long as we are here we are "babes," in a
specially tender relation to God (@Isa
40:11). The childlike spirit is indispensable if we
would enter heaven. "Milk" is here not elementary truths
in contradistinction to more advanced Christian truths, as
in @1Co
3:2 Heb 5:12,13; but in contrast to "guile,
hypocrisies," &c. (@1Pe
2:1); the simplicity of Christian doctrine in
general to the childlike spirit. The same "word of
grace" which is the instrument in regeneration, is the
instrument also of building up. "The mother of the
child is also its natural nurse" [STEIGER].
The babe, instead of chemically analyzing, instinctively
desires and feeds on the milk; so our part is not
self-sufficient rationalizing and questioning, but simply
receiving the truth in the love of it (@Mt
11:25).
desire--Greek, "have a yearning desire
for," or "longing after," a natural impulse to the
regenerate, "for as no one needs to teach new-born babes
what food to take, knowing instinctively that a table is
provided for them in their mother's breast," so the
believer of himself thirsts after the word of God (@Ps
119:1-176). Compare TATIUS'
language as to Achilles.
sincere--Greek, "guileless." Compare @1Pe
2:1, "laying aside guile." IRENÆUS
says of heretics. They mix chalk with the milk. The
article, "the," implies that besides the well-known
pure milk, the Gospel, there is no other pure,
unadulterated doctrine; it alone can make us guileless
(@1Pe
2:1).
of the word--Not as ALFORD,
"spiritual," nor "reasonable," as English Version
in @Ro
12:1. The Greek "logos" in Scripture is
not used of the reason, or mind, but of the
WORD; the preceding context requires that "the word"
should be meant here; the adjective "logikos"
follows the meaning of the noun logos, "word."
@Jas
1:21, "Lay apart all filthiness . . . and
receive with meekness the engrafted
WORD," is exactly
parallel, and confirms English Version here.
grow--The oldest manuscripts and versions
read, "grow unto salvation." Being
BORN again unto
salvation, we are also to grow unto salvation.
The end to which growth leads is perfected salvation.
"Growth is the measure of the fulness of that, not only
rescue from destruction, but positive blessedness, which
is implied in salvation" [ALFORD].
thereby--Greek, "in it"; fed
on it; in its strength (@Ac
11:14). "The word is to be desired with appetite as
the cause of life, to be swallowed in the hearing, to be
chewed as cud is by rumination with the understanding, and
to be digested by faith" [TERTULLIAN].
3. Peter alludes to @Ps
34:8. The first "tastes" of God's goodness are
afterwards followed by fuller and happier experiences. A
taste whets the appetite [BENGEL].
gracious--Greek, "good," benignant,
kind; as God is revealed to us in Christ, "the Lord" (@1Pe
2:4), we who are born again ought so to be good
and kind to the brethren (@1Pe
1:22). "Whosoever has not tasted the word to him it is
not sweet it has not reached the heart; but to them who
have experienced it, who with the heart believe, 'Christ
has been sent for me and is become my own:
my miseries are His, and His life mine,' it tastes
sweet" [LUTHER].
4. coming--drawing near
(same Greek as here, @Heb
10:22) by faith continually; present tense: not having
come once for all at conversion.
stone--Peter (that is, a stone,
named so by Christ) desires that all similarly should be
living stones BUILT ON
CHRIST, THE TRUE FOUNDATION-STONE;
compare his speech in @Ac
4:11. An undesigned coincidence and mark of
genuineness. The Spirit foreseeing the Romanist perversion
of @Mt
16:18 (compare @Mt
16:16, "Son of the LIVING
God," which coincides with his language here, "the
LIVING stone"),
presciently makes Peter himself to refuse it. He herein
confirms Paul's teaching. Omit the as unto of
English Version. Christ is positively termed the
"living stone"; living, as having life in Himself
from the beginning, and as raised from the dead to live
evermore (@Re
1:18) after His rejection by men, and so the source of
life to us. Like no earthly rock, He lives and
gives life. Compare @1Co
10:4, and the type, @Ex
17:6 Nu 20:11.
disallowed--rejected, reprobated; referred to
also by Christ Himself: also by Paul; compare the kindred
prophecies, @Isa
8:14 Lu 2:34.
chosen of God--literally, "with (or 'in
the presence and judgment of') God elect," or, "chosen
out" (@1Pe
2:6). Many are alienated from the Gospel, because it
is not everywhere in favor, but is on the contrary
rejected by most men. Peter answers that, though rejected
by men, Christ is peculiarly the stone of salvation
honored by God, first so designated by Jacob in his
deathbed prophecy.
5. Ye also, as lively stones--partaking
of the name and life which is in "THE
LIVING STONE"
(@1Pe
2:4 1Co 3:11). Many names which belong to Christ in
the singular are assigned to Christians in the plural. He
is "THE SON,"
"High Priest," "King," "Lamb"; they, "sons," "priests,"
"kings," "sheep," "lambs." So the Shulamite called from
Solomon [BENGEL].
are built up--Greek, "are being built
up," as in @Eph
2:22. Not as ALFORD,
"Be ye built up." Peter grounds his exhortations, @1Pe
2:2,11, &c., on their conscious sense of their high
privileges as living stones in the course of being
built up into a spiritual house (that is, "the
habitation of the Spirit").
priesthood--Christians are both the spiritual
temple and the priests of the temple. There
are two Greek words for "temple"; hieron (the
sacred place), the whole building, including.the
courts wherein the sacrifice was killed; and
naos (the dwelling, namely, of God), the inner
shrine wherein God peculiarly manifested Himself, and
where, in the holiest place, the blood of the slain
sacrifice was presented before Him. All believers alike,
and not merely ministers, are now the dwelling of God (and
are called the "naos," Greek, not the
hieron) and priests unto God (@Re
1:6). The minister is not, like the Jewish priest (Greek,
"hiercus"), admitted nearer to God than the people,
but merely for order's sake leads the spiritual services
of the people. Priest is the abbreviation of
presbyter in the Church of England Prayer Book,
not corresponding to the Aaronic priest (hiereus,
who offered literal sacrifices). Christ is the only
literal hiereus-priest in the New Testament through
whom alone we may always draw near to God. Compare @1Pe
2:9, "a royal priesthood," that is, a body of
priest-kings, such as was Melchisedec. The Spirit
never, in New Testament, gives the name hiereus, or
sacerdotal priest, to ministers of the Gospel.
holy--consecrated to God.
spiritual sacrifices--not the literal one of
the mass, as the Romish self-styled disciples of Peter
teach. Compare @Isa
56:7, which compare with "acceptable to God"
here; @Ps
4:5 50:14 51:17,19 Ho 14:2 Php 4:18. "Among spiritual
sacrifices the first place belongs to the general oblation
of ourselves. For never can we offer anything to God until
we have offered ourselves (@2Co
8:5) in sacrifice to Him. There follow afterwards
prayers, giving of thanks, alms deeds, and all exercises
of piety" [CALVIN].
Christian houses of worship are never called temples
because the temple was a place for sacrifice,
which has no place in the Christian dispensation; the
Christian temple is the congregation of spiritual
worshippers. The synagogue (where reading of Scripture and
prayer constituted the worship) was the model of the
Christian house of worship (compare Note, see on
Jas 2:2, Greek, "synagogue"; @Ac
15:21). Our sacrifices are those of prayer, praise,
and self-denying services in the cause of Christ (@1Pe
2:9, end).
by Jesus Christ--as our mediating High Priest
before God. Connect these words with "offer up." Christ is
both precious Himself and makes us accepted
[BENGEL]. As
the temple, so also the priesthood, is built on Christ (@1Pe
2:4,5) [BEZA].
Imperfect as are our services, we are not with unbelieving
timidity, which is close akin to refined
self-righteousness, to doubt their acceptance
THROUGH CHRIST.
After extolling the dignity of Christians he goes back to
CHRIST as the
sole source of it.
6. Wherefore also--The
oldest manuscripts read, "Because that." The statement
above is so "because it is contained in Scripture."
Behold--calling attention to the glorious
announcement of His eternal counsel.
elect--so also believers (@1Pe
2:9, "chosen," Greek, "elect
generation").
precious--in Hebrew, @Isa
28:16, "a corner-stone of preciousness." See on Isa
28:16. So in @1Pe
2:7, Christ is said to be, to believers, "precious,"
Greek, "preciousness."
confounded--same Greek as in @Ro
9:33 (Peter here as elsewhere confirming Paul's
teaching. See Introduction; also @Ro
10:11), "ashamed." In @Isa
28:16, "make haste," that is, flee in sudden panic,
covered with the shame of confounded hopes.
7. Application of the
Scripture just quoted first to the believer, then to the
unbeliever. On the opposite effects of the same Gospel on
different classes, compare @Joh
9:39 2Co 2:15,16.
precious--Greek, "THE
preciousness" (@1Pe
2:6). To you believers belongs the preciousness
of Christ just mentioned.
disobedient--to the faith, and so disobedient
in practice.
the stone which . . . head of . . . corner--(@Ps
118:22). Those who rejected the
STONE were all the
while in spite of themselves unconsciously contributing to
its becoming Head of the corner. The same magnet has two
poles, the one repulsive, the other attractive; so the
Gospel has opposite effects on believers and unbelievers
respectively.
8. stone of stumbling,
&c.--quoted from @Isa
8:14. Not merely they stumbled, in that their
prejudices were offended; but their stumbling implies the
judicial punishment of their reception of Messiah;
they hurt themselves in stumbling over the corner-stone,
as "stumble" means in @Jer
13:16 Da 11:19.
at the word--rather, join "being disobedient
to the word"; so @1Pe
3:1 4:17.
whereunto--to penal stumbling; to the
judicial punishment of their unbelief. See above.
also--an additional thought; God's
ordination; not that God ordains or appoints them
to sin, but they are given up to "the fruit of
their own ways" according to the eternal counsel of
God. The moral ordering of the world is altogether of God.
God appoints the ungodly to be given up unto sin,
and a reprobate mind, and its necessary penalty.
"Were appointed," Greek, "set," answers to "I
lay," Greek, "set," @1Pe
2:6. God, in the active, is said to appoint
Christ and the elect (directly). Unbelievers, in the
passive, are said to be appointed (God acting less
directly in the appointment of the sinner's awful course)
[BENGEL]. God
ordains the wicked to punishment, not to crime [J. CAPPEL].
"Appointed" or "set" (not here "FORE-ordained") refers,
not to the eternal counsel so directly, as to the penal
justice of God. Through the same Christ whom sinners
rejected, they shall be rejected; unlike believers, they
are by God appointed unto wrath as
FITTED for it. The
lost shall lay all the blame of their ruin on their own
sinful perversity, not on God's decree; the saved shall
ascribe all the merit of their salvation to God's electing
love and grace.
9. Contrast in the
privileges and destinies of believers. Compare the similar
contrast with the preceding context.
chosen--"elect" of God, even as Christ your
Lord is.
generation--implying the unity of spiritual
origin and kindred of believers as a class distinct from
the world.
royal--kingly. Believers, like Christ, the
antitypical Melchisedec, are at once kings and
priests. Israel, in a spiritual sense, was designed to
be the same among the nations of the earth. The full
realization on earth of this, both to the literal and the
spiritual Israel, is as yet future.
holy nation--antitypical to Israel.
peculiar people--literally, "a people for
an acquisition," that is, whom God chose to be
peculiarly His: @Ac
20:28, "purchased," literally, "acquired." God's "peculiar
treasure" above others.
show forth--publish abroad. Not
their own praises but His. They have no reason
to magnify themselves above others for once they had been
in the same darkness, and only through God's grace had
been brought to the light which they must henceforth
show forth to others.
praises--Greek, "virtues,"
"excellencies": His glory, mercy (@1Pe
2:10), goodness (Greek, @1Pe
2:3 Nu 14:17,18 Isa 63:7). The same term is applied to
believers, @2Pe
1:5.
of him who hath called you--(@2Pe
1:3).
out of darkness--of heathen and even Jewish
ignorance, sin, and misery, and so out of the dominion of
the prince of darkness.
marvellous--Peter still has in mind @Ps
118:23.
light--It is called "His," that is, God's.
Only the (spiritual) light is created by God, not
darkness. In @Isa
45:7, it is physical darkness and evil, not moral,
that God is said to create, the punishment of sin,
not sin itself. Peter, with characteristic boldness,
brands as darkness what all the world calls
light; reason, without the Holy Spirit, in spite of
its vaunted power, is spiritual darkness. "It cannot
apprehend what faith is: there it is stark blind; it
gropes as one that is without eyesight, stumbling from one
thing to another, and knows not what it does" [LUTHER].
10. Adapted from @Ho
1:9,10 2:23. Peter plainly confirms Paul, who quotes
the passage as implying the call of the Gentiles to become
spiritually that which Israel had been literally, "the
people of God." Primarily, the prophecy refers to literal
Israel, hereafter to be fully that which in their best
days they were only partially, God's people.
not obtained mercy--literally, "who were men
not compassionated." Implying that it was God's pure
mercy, not their merits, which made the blessed change
in their state; a thought which ought to kindle their
lively gratitude, to be shown with their life, as
well as their lips.
11. As heretofore he
exhorted them to walk worthily of their calling, in
contradistinction to their own former walk, so now he
exhorts them to glorify God before unbelievers.
Dearly beloved--He gains their attention to
his exhortation by assuring them of his love.
strangers and pilgrims--(@1Pe
1:17). Sojourners, literally, settlers having a
house in a city without being citizens in
respect to the rights of citizenship; a picture of the
Christian's position on earth; and pilgrims,
staying for a time in a foreign land. FLACIUS
thus analyzes the exhortation: (1) Purify your souls (a)
as strangers on earth who must not allow yourselves
to be kept back by earthly lusts, and (b) because these
lusts war against the soul's salvation. (2) Walk piously
among unbelievers (a) so that they may cease to calumniate
Christians, and (b) may themselves be converted to Christ.
fleshly lusts--enumerated in @Ga
5:19, &c. Not only the gross appetites which we have
in common with the brutes, but all the thoughts of the
unrenewed mind.
which--Greek, "the which," that
is, inasmuch as being such as "war." &c. Not only do they
impede, but they assail [BENGEL].
the soul--that is, against the regenerated
soul; such as were those now addressed. The regenerated
soul is besieged by sinful lusts. Like Samson in the lap
of Delilah, the believer, the moment that he gives way to
fleshly lusts, has the locks of his strength shorn, and
ceases to maintain that spiritual separation from the
world and the flesh of which the Nazarite vow was the
type.
12. conversation--"behavior";
"conduct." There are two things in which "strangers and
pilgrims" ought to bear themselves well: (1) the
conversation or conduct, as subjects (@1Pe
2:13), servants (@1Pe
2:18), wives (@1Pe
3:1), husbands (@1Pe
3:7), all persons under all circumstances (@1Pe
2:8); (2) confession of the faith (@1Pe
3:15,16). Each of the two is derived from the will
of God. Our conversation should correspond to our
Saviour's condition; this is in heaven, so ought that to
be.
honest--honorable, becoming, proper (@1Pe
3:16). Contrast "vain conversation," @1Pe
1:18. A good walk does not make us pious, but we must
first be pious and believe before we attempt to lead a
good course. Faith first receives from God, then love
gives to our neighbor [LUTHER].
whereas they speak against you--now (@1Pe
2:15), that they may, nevertheless, at some time or
other hereafter glorify God. The Greek may
be rendered, "Wherein they speak against you . . .
that (herein) they may, by your good works, which
on a closer inspection they shall behold, glorify
God." The very works "which on more careful consideration,
must move the heathen to praise God, are at first the
object of hatred and raillery" [STEIGER].
evildoers--Because as Christians they could
not conform to heathenish customs, they were accused of
disobedience to all legal authority; in order to rebut
this charge, they are told to submit to every ordinance
of man (not sinful in itself).
by--owing to.
they shall behold--Greek, "they shall
be eye-witnesses of"; "shall behold on close
inspection"; as opposed to their "ignorance" (@1Pe
2:15) of the true character of Christians and
Christianity, by judging on mere hearsay. The same
Greek verb occurs in a similar sense in @1Pe
3:2. "Other men narrowly look at (so the
Greek implies) the actions of the righteous" [BENGEL].
TERTULLIAN
contrasts the early Christians and the heathen: these
delighted in the bloody gladiatorial spectacles of the
amphitheater, whereas a Christian was excommunicated if he
went to it at all. No Christian was found in prison for
crime, but only for the faith. The heathen excluded slaves
from some of their religious services, whereas Christians
had some of their presbyters of the class of slaves.
Slavery silently and gradually disappeared by the power of
the Christian law of love, "Whatsoever ye would that men
should do to you, do ye even so to them." When the pagans
deserted their nearest relatives in a plague, Christians
ministered to the sick and dying. When the Gentiles left
their dead unburied after a battle and cast their wounded
into the streets, the disciples hastened to relieve the
suffering.
glorify--forming a high estimate of the God
whom Christians worship, from the exemplary conduct of
Christians themselves. We must do good, not with a view to
our own glory, but to the glory of God.
the day of visitation--of God's grace; when
God shall visit them in
mercy.
13. every ordinance of man--"every
human institution" [ALFORD],
literally, "every human creation." For though of
divine appointment, yet in the mode of nomination and in
the exercise of their authority, earthly governors are but
human institutions, being of men, and in
relation to men. The apostle speaks as one raised
above all human things. But lest they should think
themselves so ennobled by faith as to be raised above
subordination to human authorities, he tells them to
submit themselves for the sake of Christ, who desires
you to be subject, and who once was subject to earthly
rulers Himself, though having all things subject to Him,
and whose honor is at stake in you as His earthly
representatives. Compare @Ro
13:5, "Be subject for conscience' sake."
king--The Roman emperor was "supreme" in the
Roman provinces to which this Epistle was addressed. The
Jewish zealots refused obedience. The distinction between
"the king as supreme" and "governors sent by him" implies
that "if the king command one thing, and the subordinate
magistrate another, we ought rather to obey the superior"
[AUGUSTINE in
GROTIUS].
Scripture prescribes nothing upon the form of government,
but simply subjects Christians to that everywhere
subsisting, without entering into the question of the
right of the rulers (thus the Roman emperors had by
force seized supreme authority, and Rome had, by
unjustifiable means, made herself mistress of Asia),
because the de facto governors have not been made
by chance, but by the providence of God.
14. governors--subordinate
to the emperor, "sent," or delegated by Cæsar to preside
over the provinces.
for the punishment--No tyranny ever has been
so unprincipled as that some appearance of equity was not
maintained in it; however corrupt a government be, God
never suffers it to be so much so as not to be better than
anarchy [CALVIN].
Although bad kings often oppress the good, yet that is
scarcely ever done by public authority (and it is of what
is done by public authority that Peter speaks), save under
the mask of right. Tyranny harasses many, but anarchy
overwhelms the whole state [HORNEIUS].
The only justifiable exception is in cases where obedience
to the earthly king plainly involves disobedience to the
express command of the King of kings.
praise of them that do well--Every government
recognizes the excellence of truly Christian subjects.
Thus PLINY,
in his letter to the Emperor Trajan, acknowledges, "I have
found in them nothing else save a perverse and extravagant
superstition." The recognition in the long run mitigates
persecution (@1Pe
3:13).
15. Ground of his directing
them to submit themselves (@1Pe
2:13).
put to silence--literally, "to muzzle," "to
stop the mouth."
ignorance--spiritual not having "the
knowledge of God," and therefore ignorant of the children
of God, and misconstruing their acts; influenced by mere
appearances, and ever ready to open their mouths, rather
than their eyes and ears. Their ignorance should
move the believer's pity, not his anger. They judge of
things which they are incapable of judging through
unbelief (compare @1Pe
2:12). Maintain such a walk that they shall have no
charge against you, except touching your faith; and so
their minds shall be favorably disposed towards
Christianity.
16. As free--as "the Lord's
freemen," connected with @1Pe
2:15, doing well as being free.
"Well-doing" (@1Pe
2:15) is the natural fruit of being freemen of
Christ, made free by "the truth" from the bondage of sin.
Duty is enforced on us to guard against licentiousness,
but the way in which it is to be fulfilled, is by
love and the holy instincts of Christian liberty. We are
given principles, not details.
not using--Greek, "not as having
your liberty for a veil (cloak) of badness, but as
the servants of God," and therefore bound to submit to
every ordinance of man (@1Pe
2:13) which is of God's appointment.
17. Honour all men--according
to whatever honor is due in each case. Equals have a
respect due to them. Christ has dignified our humanity by
assuming it; therefore we should not dishonor, but be
considerate to and honor our common humanity, even in the
very humblest. The first "honor" is in the Greek
aorist imperative, implying, "In every case render
promptly every man's due" [ALFORD].
The second is in the present tense, implying,
Habitually and continually honor the king. Thus the
first is the general precept; the three following are its
three great divisions.
Love--present: Habitually love with
the special and congenial affection that you ought to feel
to brethren, besides the general love to all men.
Fear God . . . the king--The king is to be
honored; but God alone, in the highest sense,
feared.
18. Servants--Greek,
"household servants": not here the Greek for
"slaves." Probably including freedmen still
remaining in their master's house. Masters were not
commonly Christians: he therefore mentions only the duties
of the servants. These were then often persecuted
by their unbelieving masters. Peter's special object seems
to be to teach them submission, whatever the
character of the masters might be. Paul not having this as
his prominent design, includes masters in his
monitions.
be subject--Greek, "being subject":
the participle expresses a particular instance of the
general exhortation to good conduct, @1Pe
2:11,12, of which the first particular precept is
given @1Pe
2:13, "Submit yourselves to every ordinance of man for
the Lord's sake." The general exhortation is taken up
again in @1Pe
2:16; and so the participle @1Pe
2:18, "being subject," is joined to the hortatory
imperatives going before, namely, "abstain," "submit
yourselves." "honor all men."
with--Greek, "in."
all--all possible: under all circumstances,
such as are presently detailed.
fear--the awe of one subject: God, however,
is the ultimate object of the "fear": fear "for the
Lord's sake" (@1Pe
2:13), not merely slavish fear of masters.
good--kind.
gentle--indulgent towards errors:
considerate: yielding, not exacting all which justice
might demand.
froward--perverse: harsh. Those bound to obey
must not make the disposition and behavior of the superior
the measure of the fulfilment of their obligations.
19. Reason for subjection
even to froward masters.
thankworthy--(@Lu
6:33). A course out of the common, and especially
praiseworthy in the eyes of God: not as Rome
interprets, earning merit, and so a work of supererogation
(compare @1Pe
2:20).
for conscience toward God--literally,
"consciousness of God": from a conscientious regard to
God, more than to men.
endure--Greek, "patiently bear up
under": as a superimposed burden [ALFORD].
grief--Greek, "griefs."
20. what--Greek,
"what kind of."
glory--what peculiar merit.
buffeted--the punishment of slaves, and
suddenly inflicted [BENGEL].
this is--Some oldest manuscripts read, "for."
Then the translation is, "But if when . . . ye take it
patiently (it is a glory), for this is acceptable."
acceptable--Greek, "thankworthy," as
in @1Pe
2:19.
21. Christ's example a
proof that patient endurance under undeserved sufferings
is acceptable with God.
hereunto--to the patient endurance of
unmerited suffering (@1Pe
3:9). Christ is an example to servants, even as He was
once in "the form of a servant."
called--with a heavenly calling, though
slaves.
for us--His dying for us is the
highest exemplification of "doing well" (@1Pe
2:20). Ye must patiently suffer, being innocent, as
Christ also innocently suffered (not for Himself, but
for us). The oldest manuscripts for "us . . . us,"
read, "you . . . for you." Christ's sufferings, while they
are for an example, were also primarily sufferings "for
us," a consideration which imposes an everlasting
obligation on us to please Him.
leaving--behind: so the Greek:
on His departure to the Father, to His glory.
an example--Greek, "a copy,"
literally, "a writing copy" set by masters for their
pupils. Christ's precepts and sermons were the
transcript of His life. Peter graphically sets
before servants those features especially suited to their
case.
follow--close upon: so the Greek.
his steps--footsteps, namely, of His
patience combined with
innocence.
22. Illustrating Christ's
well-doing (@1Pe
2:20) though suffering.
did--Greek aorist. "Never in a single
instance did" [ALFORD].
Quoted from @Isa
53:9, end, Septuagint.
neither--nor yet: not even [ALFORD].
Sinlessness as to the mouth is a mark of
perfection. Guile is a common fault of servants. "If
any boast of his innocency, Christ surely did not suffer
as an evildoer" [CALVIN],
yet He took it patiently (@1Pe
2:20). On Christ's sinlessness, compare @2Co
5:21 Heb 7:26.
23. Servants are apt to
"answer again" (@Tit
2:9). Threats of divine judgment against
oppressors are often used by those who have no other arms,
as for instance, slaves. Christ, who as Lord could have
threatened with truth, never did so.
committed himself--or His cause,
as man in His suffering. Compare the type, @Jer
11:20. In this Peter seems to have before his mind @Isa
53:8. Compare @Ro
12:19, on our corresponding duty. Leave your case in
His hands, not desiring to make Him executioner of your
revenge, but rather praying for enemies. God's
righteous judgment gives tranquillity and consolation
to the oppressed.
24. his own self--there
being none other but Himself who could have
done it. His voluntary undertaking of the work of
redemption is implied. The Greek puts in
antithetical juxtaposition, OUR,
and His OWN SELF,
to mark the idea of His substitution for us. His
"well-doing" in His sufferings is set forth here as an
example to servants and to us all (@1Pe
2:20).
bare--to sacrifice: carried and offered
up: a sacrificial term. @Isa
53:11,12, "He bare the sin of many": where the
idea of bearing on Himself is the prominent one;
here the offering in sacrifice is combined with
that idea. So the same Greek means in @1Pe
2:5.
our sins--In offering or presenting
in sacrifice (as the Greek for "bare" implies)
His body, Christ offered in it the guilt of our
sins upon the cross, as upon the altar of God, that it
might be expiated in Him, and so taken away from us.
Compare @Isa
53:10, "Thou shalt make His soul an offering for sin."
Peter thus means by "bare" what the Syriac takes
two words to express, to bear and to offer:
(1) He hath borne our sins laid upon Him [namely,
their guilt, curse, and punishment]; (2) He hath so borne
them that He offered them along with Himself on the
altar. He refers to the animals upon which sins were first
laid, and which were then offered thus laden [VITRINGA].
Sin or guilt among the Semitic nations is considered as a
burden lying heavily upon the sinner [GESENIUS].
on the tree--the cross, the proper place for
One on whom the curse was laid: this curse stuck to
Him until it was legally (through His death as the
guilt-bearer) destroyed in His body: thus the handwriting
of the bond against us is cancelled by His death.
that we being dead to sins--the effect of His
death to "sin" in the aggregate, and to all particular
"sins," namely, that we should be as entirely delivered
from them, as a slave that is dead is delivered
from service to his master. This is our spiritful
standing through faith by virtue of Christ's death:
our actual mortification of particular sins is in
proportion to the degree of our effectually being made
conformable to His death. "That we should die to the
sins whose collected guilt Christ carried away in His
death, and so LIVE TO THE
RIGHTEOUSNESS (compare @Isa
53:11. 'My righteous servant shall justify
many'), the gracious relation to God which He has brought
in" [STEIGER].
by whose stripes--Greek, "stripe."
ye were healed--a paradox, yet true. "Ye
servants (compare 'buffeted,' 'the tree,' @1Pe
2:20,24) often bear the strife; but it is not
more than your Lord Himself bore; learn from Him patience
in wrongful sufferings.
25. (@Isa
53:6.)
For--Assigning their natural need of
healing (@1Pe
2:24).
now--Now that the atonement for all has been
made, the foundation is laid for individual conversion:
so "ye are returned," or "have become
converted to," &c.
Shepherd and Bishop--The designation of the
pastors and elders of the Church belongs in
its fullest sense to the great Head of the Church, "the
good Shepherd." As the "bishop" oversees (as
the Greek term means), so "the eyes of the Lord
are over the righteous" (@1Pe
3:12). He gives us His spirit and feeds and guides us
by His word. "Shepherd," Hebrew, "Parnas,"
is often applied to kings, and enters into the
composition of names, as "Pharnabazus."
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