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THE SECOND EPISTLE GENERAL OF
PETER
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
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 1:4-13).
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
1:4).
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
1:4, 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
1:11, which is akin to this passage.
2. follow--out: so the
Greek.
pernicious ways--The oldest manuscripts and
Vulgate read, "licentiousness" (@Jude
1:4). 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
1:4).
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
1:6), 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
1:6). 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
1:7, "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
1:8).
after--following after.
lust of uncleanness--defilement:
"hankering after polluting and unlawful use of the flesh"
[ALFORD].
government--Greek, "lordship,"
"dominion" (@Jude
1:8).
Presumptuous--Greek, "Darers."
Self-will begets presumption. Presumptuously
daring.
are not afraid--though they are so
insignificant in might; Greek, "tremble not" (@Jude
1:8, end).
speak evil of--Greek, "blaspheme."
dignities--Greek, "glories."
11. which are--though they
are.
greater--than these blasphemers. Jude
instances Michael (@Jude
1:9).
railing accusation--Greek,
"blaspheming judgment" (@Jude
1:9).
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
1:11 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
1:19).
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
1:10, 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
1:12) with you," they are at the same time
"luxuriating in their own deceivings," or "deceits"
(to which latter clause answers @Jude
1:12, 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
1:12,13.)
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
1:12, 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.
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