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THE SECOND EPISTLE GENERAL OF
PETER
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
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
1:3).
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).
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