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THE SECOND EPISTLE GENERAL OF
PETER
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
INTRODUCTION
AUTHENTICITY
AND GENUINENESS.--If not a gross
imposture, its own internal witness is unequivocal
in its favor. It has Peter's name and apostleship
in its heading: not only his surname, but his original
name Simon, or Simeon, he thus, at the close
of his life, reminding his readers who he originally was
before his call. Again, in @2Pe
1:16-18, he mentions his presence at the
Transfiguration, and Christ's prophecy of his
death! and in @2Pe
3:15, his brotherhood with Paul. Again, in @2Pe
3:1, the author speaks of himself as author of the
former Epistle: it is, moreover, addressed so as to
include (but not to be restricted to) the same persons
as the first, whom he presupposes to be acquainted with
the writings of Paul, by that time recognized as
"Scripture" (@2Pe
3:15, "the long-suffering of God," compare @Ro
2:4). This necessarily implies a late date,
when Paul's Epistles (including Romans) already had become
generally diffused and accepted as Scripture in the
Church. The Church of the fourth century had, besides the
testimony which we have of the doubts of the
earlier Christians, other external evidence which we have
not, and which, doubtless, under God's overruling
providence, caused them to accept it. It is hard to
understand how a book palpably false (as it would be if
Peter be not the author) could have been accepted in the
Canon as finally established in the Councils of Laodicea,
A.D. 360 (if
the fifty-ninth article be genuine), Hippo, and Carthage
in the fourth century (393 and 397). The whole tone and
spirit of the Epistle disprove its being an imposture. He
writes as one not speaking of himself, but moved by the
Holy Ghost (@2Pe
1:21). An attempt at such a fraud in the first ages
would have brought only shame and suffering, alike from
Christians and heathen, on the perpetrator: there was then
no temptation to pious frauds as in later times.
That it must have been written in the earliest age is
plain from the wide gulf in style which separates
it and the other New Testament Scriptures from even the
earliest and best of the post-apostolic period. DAILLE
well says, "God has allowed a fosse to be drawn by human
weakness around the sacred canon to protect it from all
invasion."
Traces of acquaintance with it
appear in the earliest Fathers. HERMAS
[Similitudes, 6.4] (compare @2Pe
2:13), Greek, "luxury in the day . . .
luxuriating with their own deceivings"; and [Shepherd,
Vision 3.7], "They have left their true way" (compare
@2Pe
2:15); and [Shepherd, Vision 4.3], "Thou hast
escaped this world" (compare @2Pe
2:20). CLEMENT OF
ROME, [Epistle
to the Corinthians, 7.9; 10], as to Noah's
preaching and Lot's deliverance, "the Lord
making it known that He does not abandon those that trust
in Him, but appoints those otherwise inclined to
judgment" (compare @2Pe
2:5,6,7,9). IRENĈUS,
A.D. 178
("the day of the Lord is as a thousand years"), and JUSTIN
MARTYR seem
to allude to @2Pe
3:8. HIPPOLYTUS
[On Antichrist], seems to refer to @2Pe
1:21, "The prophets spake not of their own private
(individual) ability and will, but what was
(revealed) to them alone by God." The difficulty is,
neither TERTULLIAN,
CYPRIAN, CLEMENT
OF ALEXANDRIA,
nor the oldest Syriac (Peschito) version
(the later Syriac has it), nor the fragment known
as Muratori's Canon, mentions it. The first writer
who has expressly named it is ORIGEN,
in the third century (Homily on Joshua; also
Homily 4 on Leviticus, and Homily 13 on
Numbers), who names it "Scripture," quoting @2Pe
1:4 2:16; however (in EUSEBIUS
[Ecclesiastical History, 6.25]), he mentions that
the Second Epistle was doubted by some. FIRMILIAN,
bishop of Cappadocia, in Epistle to Cyrpian speaks
of Peter's Epistles as warning us to avoid heretics
(a monition which occurs in the Second, not the
First Epistle). Now Cappadocia is one of the
countries mentioned (compare @1Pe
1:1 with @2Pe
3:1) as addressed; and it is striking, that from
Cappadocia we get the earliest decisive testimony.
"Internally it claims to be written by Peter, and this
claim is confirmed by the Christians of that very region
in whose custody it ought to have been found" [TREGELLES].
The books disputed (Antilegomena),
as distinguished from those universally recognized (Homologoumena),
are Epistles Second Peter, James, Second and Third John,
Jude, the Apocalypse, Epistle to Hebrews (compare EUSEBIUS
[Ecclesiastical History, 3.3,25]). The
Antilegomena stand in quite a different class from the
Spurious; of these there was no dispute,
they were universally rejected; for example, the
Shepherd of Hermas, the Revelation of Peter, the Epistle
of Barnabas. CYRIL OF
JERUSALEM (A.D.
348) enumerates seven Catholic Epistles, including
Second Peter; so also GREGORY
NAZIANZEN (A.D.
389), and EPIPHANIUS
(A.D. 367). The oldest Greek manuscripts extant (of
the fourth century) contain the Antilegomena. JEROME
[On Illustrious Men], conjectured, from a supposed
difference of style between the two Epistles, that Peter,
being unable to write Greek, employed a different
translator of his Hebrew dictation in the Second
Epistle, and not the same as translated the First into
Greek. Mark is said to have been his translator in the
case of the Gospel according to Mark; but this is all
gratuitous conjecture. Much of the same views pervade both
Epistles. In both alike he looks for the Lord's coming
suddenly, and the end of the world (compare @2Pe
3:8-10 with @1Pe
4:5); the inspiration of the prophets (compare @1Pe
1:10-12 with @2Pe
1:19-21 3:2); the new birth by the divine word a
motive to abstinence from worldly lusts (@1Pe
1:22 2:2; compare @2Pe
1:4); also compare @1Pe
2:9 with @2Pe
1:3, both containing in the Greek the rare word
"virtue" (@1Pe
4:17 with @2Pe
2:3).
It is not strange that
distinctive peculiarities of
STYLE should mark each Epistle, the
design of both not being the same. Thus the sufferings
of Christ are more prominent in the First Epistle, the
object there being to encourage thereby Christian
sufferers; the glory of the exalted Lord is more
prominent in the Second, the object being to communicate
fuller "knowledge" of Him as the antidote to the false
teaching against which Peter warns his readers. Hence His
title of redemption, "Christ," is the one employed in the
First Epistle; but in the Second Epistle, "the Lord."
Hope is characteristic of the First Epistle; full
knowledge, of the Second Epistle. In the First Epistle
he puts his apostolic authority less prominently
forward than in the Second, wherein his design is to warn
against false teachers. The same difference is observable
in Paul's Epistles. Contrast @1Th
1:1 2Th 1:1 Php 1:1, with @Ga
1:1 1Co 1:1. The reference to Paul's writings as
already existing in numbers, and as then a recognized part
of Scripture (@2Pe
3:15,16), implies that this Epistle was written at a
late date, just before Peter's death.
Striking verbal coincidences
occur: compare @1Pe
1:19, end, with @2Pe
3:14, end; @2Pe
1:3, "His own," Greek, @2Pe
2:16 3:17 with @1Pe
3:1,5. The omission of the Greek article, @1Pe
2:13 with @2Pe
1:21,2:4,5,7. Moreover, two words occur, @2Pe
1:13, "tabernacle," that is, the body, and @2Pe
1:15, "decease," which at once remind us of the
transfiguration narrative in the Gospel. Both Epistles
refer to the deluge, and to Noah as the eighth that
was saved. Though the First Epistle abounds in
quotations of the Old Testament, whereas the Second
contains none, yet references to the Old Testament
occur often (@2Pe
1:21 2:5-8,15 3:5,6,10,13). Compare Greek, @1Pe
3:21, "putting away," with @2Pe
1:14; @1Pe
1:17, Greek, "pass the time," with @2Pe
2:18; @1Pe
4:3, "walked in," with @2Pe
2:10 3:3; "called you," @1Pe
1:15 2:9 5:10, with @2Pe
1:3.
Moreover, more verbal coincidences
with the speeches of Peter in Acts occur in this
Second, than in the First Epistle. Compare
Greek, "obtained," @2Pe
1:1 with @Ac
1:17; @2Pe
1:6, Greek, "godliness," with @Ac
3:12, the only passage where the term occurs, except
in the Pastoral Epistles; and @2Pe
2:9 with @Ac
10:2,7; @2Pe
2:9, "punished," with @Ac
4:21, the only places where the term occurs; @2Pe
3:2, the double genitive, with @Ac
5:32; "the day of the Lord," @2Pe
3:10, with @Ac
2:20, where only it occurs, except in @1Th
5:2.
The testimony of Jude, @Jude
1:17,18, is strong for its genuineness and
inspiration, by adopting its very words, and by referring
to it as received by the churches to which he, Jude,
wrote, "Remember the words which were spoken before of the
apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ; how that they
told you there should be mockers in the last time, who
should walk after their own ungodly lusts." Jude,
therefore, must have written after Second Peter, to
which he plainly refers; not before, as ALFORD
thinks. No less than eleven passages of Jude rest on
similar statements of Second Peter. @Jude
1:2, compare @2Pe
1:2; @Jude
1:4, compare @2Pe
2:1; @Jude
1:6, compare @2Pe
2:4; @Jude
1:7, compare @2Pe
2:6; @Jude
1:8, compare @2Pe
2:10; @Jude
1:9, compare @2Pe
2:11; @Jude
1:11, compare @2Pe
2:15; @Jude
1:12, compare @2Pe
2:17; @Jude
1:16, compare @2Pe
2:18; @Jude
1:18, compare @2Pe
2:1 3:3. Just in the same way Micah, @Mic
4:1-4, leans on the somewhat earlier prophecy of
Isaiah, whose inspiration he thereby confirms. ALFORD
reasons that because Jude, in many of the passages akin to
Second Peter, is fuller than Second Peter, he must be
prior. This by no means follows. It is at least as likely,
if not more so, that the briefer is the earlier, rather
than the fuller. The dignity and energy of the style is
quite consonant to what we should expect from the prompt
and ardent foreman of the apostles. The difference of
style between First and Second Peter accords with the
distinctness of the subjects and objects.
THE DATE,
from what has been said, would be about
A.D. 68 or 69, about
a year after the first, and shortly before the destruction
of Jerusalem, the typical precursor of the world's end, to
which @2Pe
3:10-13 so solemnly calls attention, after Paul's
ministry had closed (compare Greek aorist tense,
"wrote," past time, @2Pe
3:15), just before Peter's own death. It was written
to include the same persons, and perhaps in, or
about the same place, as the first. Being without
salutations of individuals, and entrusted to the care of
no one church, or particular churches as the first is, but
directed generally "to them that have obtained like
precious faith with us" (@2Pe
1:1), it took a longer time in being recognized as
canonical. Had Rome been the place of its composition or
publication, it could hardly have failed to have had an
early acceptance--an incidental argument against the
tradition of Peter's martyrdom at Rome. The remote
scene of its composition in Babylon, or else in some of
the contiguous regions beyond the borders of the Roman
empire, and of its circulation in Cappadocia, Pontus, &c.,
will additionally account for its tardy but at last
universal acceptance in the catholic Church. The former
Epistle, through its more definite address, was
earlier in its general acceptance.
OBJECT.--In
@2Pe
3:17,18 the twofold design of the Epistle is set
forth; namely, to guard his readers against "the error" of
false teachers, and to exhort them to grow in experimental
"knowledge of our Lord and Saviour" (@2Pe
3:18). The ground on which this knowledge rests
is stated, @2Pe
1:12-21, namely, the inspired testimony of apostles
and prophets. The danger now, as of old, was about to
arise from false teachers, who soon were to come among
them, as Paul also (to whom reference is made, @2Pe
3:15,16) testified in the same region. The grand
antidote is "the full knowledge of our Lord and
Saviour," through which we know God the Father, partake of
His nature, escape from the pollutions of the world, and
have entrance into Christ's kingdom. The aspect of Christ
presented is not so much that of the past suffering,
as of the future reigning, Saviour, His present
power, and future new kingdom. This aspect is taken as
best fitted to counteract the theories of the false
teachers who should "deny" His Lordship and His
coming again, the two very points which, as an
apostle and eye-witness, Peter attests (His "power"
and His "coming"); also, to counteract their evil
example in practice, blaspheming the way of truth,
despising governments, slaves to covetousness and filthy
lusts of the flesh, while boasting of Christian freedom,
and, worst of all, apostates from the truth. The
knowledge of Christ, as being the knowledge of "the
way of righteousness," "the right way," is the antidote of
their bad practice. Hence "the preacher" of righteousness,
Noah, and "righteous Lot," are instanced as escaping the
destruction which overtook the "unjust" or "unrighteous";
and Balaam is instanced as exemplifying the awful result
of "unrighteousness" such as characterized the false
teachers. Thus the Epistle forms one connected whole, the
parts being closely bound together by mutual relation, and
the end corresponding with the beginning; compare @2Pe
3:14,18 with @2Pe
1:2, in both "grace" and "peace" being connected with
"the knowledge" of our Saviour; compare also @2Pe
3:17 with @2Pe
1:4,10,12; and @2Pe
3:18, "grow in grace and knowledge," with the fuller @2Pe
1:5-8; and @2Pe
2:21; and @2Pe
3:13, "righteousness," with @2Pe
1:1; and @2Pe
3:1 with @2Pe
1:13; and @2Pe
3:2 with @2Pe
1:19.
The germs of Carpocratian
and Gnostic heresies already existed, but the actual
manifestation of these heresies is spoken of as future
(@2Pe
2:1,2, &c.): another proof that this Epistle was
written, as it professes, in the apostolic age, before the
development of the Gnostic heresies in the end of
the first and the beginning of the second centuries. The
description is too general to identify the heresies with
any particular one of the subsequent forms of heresy, but
applies generally to them all.
Though altogether distinct in aim
from the First Epistle, yet a connection may be traced.
The neglect of the warnings to circumspection in the walk
led to the evils foretold in the Second Epistle. Compare
the warning against the abuse of Christian freedom,
@1Pe
2:16 with @2Pe
2:19, "While they promise them liberty, they
themselves are the servants of corruption"; also
the caution against pride, @1Pe
5:5,6 with @2Pe
2:18, "they speak great swellin g words of vanity."
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