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THE SECOND EPISTLE GENERAL OF
PETER
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
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
1:5).
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 1:16,18). 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 dollars are as a single penny. God's æonologe (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
1:20,21.
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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