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THE GENERAL EPISTLE OF
JUDE
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
INTRODUCTION
AUTHOR.--He
calls himself in the address "the servant of Jesus Christ,
and brother of James." See Introduction to the
Epistle of James, in proof of James the apostle,
and James the Lord's brother, the bishop of
Jerusalem, being one and the same person. @Ga
1:19 alone seems to me to prove this. Similarly, Jude
the brother of our Lord, and Jude the apostle, seem to be
one and the same. JEROME
[Against Helvidius], rightly maintains that by the
Lord's brethren are meant his cousins, children of Mary
and Cleophas (the same as Alphĉus). From @1Co
9:5 (as "brethren of the Lord" stands between "other
apostles" and "Cephas"), it seems natural to think that
the brethren of the Lord are distinguished from the
apostles only because all his brethren were not
apostles, but only James and Jude. Jude's reason for
calling himself "brother of Jesus," was that James, as
bishop of Jerusalem, was better known than himself. Had he
been, in the strict sense, brother of our Lord, he
probably would have so entitled himself. His omission of
mention of his apostleship is no proof that he was
not an apostle; for so also James omits it in his heading;
and Paul, in his Epistles to the Philippians,
Thessalonians, and Philemon, omits it. Had the writer been
a counterfeiter of the apostle Jude, he would doubtless
have called himself an "apostle." He was called also
Lebbĉus and Thaddeus, probably to distinguish him from
Judas Iscariot, the traitor. Lebbĉus, from Hebrew "leeb,"
"heart," means courageous. Thaddeus is the same as
Theudas, from Hebrew "thad," the "breast."
Luke and John, writing later than Matthew, when there
would be no confusion between him and Judas Iscariot, give
his name Judas. The only circumstance relating to him
recorded in the Gospels occurs in @Joh
14:22, "Judas saith unto Him, not Iscariot, Lord, how
is it that Thou wilt manifest Thyself unto us, and not
unto the world?" JEROME
[Commentary on Matthew] says that he was sent to
Edessa, to Abgarus, king of Osroene, or Edessa, and that
he preached in Syria, Arabia, Mesopotamia, and Persia, in
which last country he suffered martyrdom. The story is
told on EUSEBIUS'
authority, that Abgarus, on his sickbed, having heard of
Jesus' power to heal, sent to beg Him to come and cure
him, to which the Lord replied, praising his faith, that
though he had not seen the Saviour, he yet believed;
adding, "As for what thou hast written, that I should come
to thee, it is necessary that all those things for which I
was sent should be fulfilled by Me in this place, and that
having filled them I should be received up to Him that
sent Me. When, therefore, I shall be received into heaven,
I will send unto thee some one of My disciples who shall
both heal thy distemper and give life to thee and those
with thee." Thomas is accordingly said to have been
inspired to send Thaddeus for the cure and baptism of
Abgarus. The letters are said to have been shown Thaddeus
among the archives of Edessa. It is possible such a
message was verbally sent. and the substance of it
registered in writing afterwards (compare @2Ki
5:1-27; and @Mt
15:22). HEGESIPPUS
(in EUSEBIUS
[Ecclesiastical History, 3.20]) states that when
Domitian inquired after David's posterity, some grandsons
of Jude, called the Lord's brother, were brought into his
presence. Being asked as to their possessions, they said
that they had thirty-nine acres of the value of nine
thousand denarii, out of which they paid him taxes, and
lived by the labor of their hands, a proof of which they
gave by showing the hardness of their hands. Being
interrogated as to Christ and His kingdom, they replied
that it was not of this world, but heavenly; and that it
would be manifested at the end of the world, when He would
come in glory to judge the living and the dead.
AUTHENTICITY.--EUSEBIUS
[Ecclesiastical History, 3.25], reckons it among
the Antilegomena or controverted Scriptures,
"though recognized by the majority." The reference to the
contest of Michael, the archangel, with the devil, for the
body of Moses, not mentioned elsewhere in the Old
Testament, but found in the apocryphal "Book of
Enoch," probably raised doubts as to its authenticity, as
JEROME [On
Illustrious Men, 4] says. Moreover, its not being
addressed to one particular Church, or individual, caused
it not to be so immediately recognized as canonical. A
counterfeiter would have avoided using what did not occur
in the Old Testament, and which might be regarded as
apocryphal.
As to the book of Enoch, if quoted
by Jude, his quotation of a passage from it gives an
inspired sanction only to the truth of that passage,
not to the whole book; just as Paul, by inspiration,
sanctions particular sentiments from ARATUS,
EPIMENIDES,
and MENANDER,
but not all their writings. I think, rather as there is
some slight variation between Jude's statement and that of
the book of Enoch, that Jude, though probably not ignorant
of the book of Enoch, stamps with inspired sanction the
current tradition of the Jews as to Enoch's prophecies;
just as Paul mentions the names of the Egyptian magicians,
"Jannes and Jambres" (@2Ti
3:8), not mentioned in the Old Testament. At all
events, the prophecy ascribed to Enoch by Jude was really
his, being sanctioned as such by this inspired writer. So
also the narration as to the archangel Michael's dispute
with Satan concerning the body of Moses, is by Jude's
inspired authority (@Jude
1:9) declared true. The book of Enoch is quoted by JUSTIN
MARTYR, IRENĈUS,
CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA,
&c. Bruce, the Abyssinian traveller, brought home three
copies of it in Ethiopic, from Alexandria, of which
Archbishop Lawrence, in 1821, gave an English translation.
The Ethiopic was a version from the Greek,
and the Greek doubtless a version from the
Hebrew, as the names of the angels in it show. The
Apostolic Constitutions, ORIGEN
[Against Celsus], JEROME,
and AUGUSTINE,
pronounce it not canonical. Yet it is in the main
edifying, vindicating God's government of the world,
natural and spiritual, and contradicting none of the
Scripture statements. The name Jesus never occurs,
though "Son of man," so often given to Messiah in the
Gospels, is frequent, and terms are used expressive of His
dignity, character, and acts, exceeding the views of
Messiah in any other Jewish book. The writer seems to have
been a Jew who had become thoroughly imbued with the
sacred writings of Daniel. And, though many coincidences
occur between its sentiments and the New Testament, the
Messianic portions are not distinct enough to prove that
the writer knew the New Testament. Rather, he seems to
have immediately preceded Christ's coming, about the time
of Herod the Great, and so gives us a most interesting
view of believing Jews' opinions before the advent of our
Lord. The Trinity is recognized (Enoch 60:13,14). Messiah
is "the elect One" existing from eternity (Enoch
48:2,3,5); "All kings shall fall down before Him, and
worship and fix their hopes on this Son of man" (Enoch
61:10-13). He is the object of worship (Enoch 48:3,4); He
is the supreme Judge (Enoch 60:10,11; 68:38,39). There
shall be a future state of retribution (Enoch 93:8,9;
94:2,4; 95; 96; 99; 103); The eternity of future
punishment (Enoch 103:5). VOLKMAR,
in ALFORD,
thinks the book was written at the time of the sedition of
Barchochebas (A.D.
132), by a follower of Rabbi Akiba, the upholder of that
impostor. This would make the book Antichristian in its
origin. If this date be correct, doubtless it copied some
things from Jude, giving them the Jewish, not the
Christian, coloring.
EUSEBIUS
[Demonstration of the Gospel, 3.5] remarks, it
accords with John's humility that in Second and Third John
he calls himself "the elder." For the same reason James
and Jude call themselves "servants of Jesus Christ." CLEMENT
OF ALEXANDRIA
[Adumbrations, in Epistle of Jude, p. 1007]
says, "Jude, through reverential awe, did not call himself
brother, but servant, of Jesus Christ, and
brother of James."
TERTULLIAN
[On the Apparel of Women, 3] cites the Epistle as
that of the apostle James. CLEMENT
OF ALEXANDRIA
in Miscellanies [3.2.11] quotes @Jude
1:8,17 as Scripture, in The Instructor
[3.8.44], @Jude
1:5. The MURATORI
fragment asserts its canonicity [ROUTH,
Sacred Fragments, 1.306]. ORIGEN
[Commentary on Matthew 13:55] says, "Jude wrote an
Epistle of few lines, but one filled full of the strong
words of heavenly grace." Also, in his Commentary
on Matthew 22:23, ORIGEN
quotes @Jude
1:6; and on Matthew 18:10, he quotes @Jude
1:1. He calls the writer "Jude the apostle," in the
Latin remains of his works (compare DAVIDSON,
Introduction to the New Testament, vol. 3, p. 498).
JEROME [On
Illustrious Men, 4] reckons it among the Scriptures.
Though the oldest manuscripts of the Peschito omit it, EPHREM
THE SYRIAN
recognizes it. WORDSWORTH
reasons for its genuineness thus: Jude, we know, died
before John, that is, before the beginning of the second
century. Now EUSEBIUS
[Ecclesiastical History, 3.32] tells us that James
was succeeded in the bishopric of Jerusalem by Symeon his
brother; and also that Symeon sat in that see till
A.D. 107, when as a
martyr he was crucified in his hundred twentieth year. We
find that the Epistle to Jude was known in the East and
West in the second century; it was therefore circulated in
Symeon's lifetime. It never would have received currency
such as it had, nor would Symeon have permitted a letter
bearing the name of an apostle, his own brother Jude,
brother of his own apostolical predecessor, James, to have
been circulated, if it were not really Jude's.
TO WHOM
ADDRESSED.--The references to Old
Testament history, @Jude
1:5,7, and to Jewish tradition, @Jude
1:14, &c., make it likely that Jewish
Christians are the readers to whom Jude mainly (though
including also all Christians, @Jude
1:1) writes, just as the kindred Epistle, Second
Peter, is addressed primarily to the same class; compare
Introduction to First Peter and Introduction
to Second Peter. The persons stigmatized in it were not
merely libertines (as ALFORD
thinks), though no doubt that was one of their prominent
characteristics, but heretics in doctrine, "denying
the only Lord God, and our Saviour Jesus Christ." Hence he
urges believers "earnestly to contend for the faith
once delivered unto the saints" (@Jude
1:3). Insubordination, self-seeking, and
licentiousness, the fruit of Antinomian teachings, were
the evils against which Jude warns his readers; reminding
them that, to build themselves in their most holy faith,
and to pray in the Holy Ghost, are the only effectual
safeguards. The same evils, along with mocking skepticism,
shall characterize the last days before the final
judgment, even as in the days when Enoch warned the
ungodly of the coming flood. As Peter was in Babylon in
writing @1Pe
5:13, and probably also in writing Second Peter
(compare Introduction to First Peter and
Introduction to Second Peter), Jude addressed his
Epistle primarily to the Jewish Christians in and about
Mesopotamian Babylon (a place of great resort to the
Jews in that day), or else to the Christian Jews
dispersed in Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and
Bithynia (@1Pe
1:1), the persons addressed by Peter. For Jude is
expressly said to have preached in Mesopotamia [JEROME,
Commentary on Matthew], and his Epistle, consisting
of only twenty-five verses, contains in them no less than
eleven passages from Second Peter (see my Introduction
to Second Peter for the list). Probably in @Jude
1:4 he witnesses to the fulfilment of Peter's
prophecy, "There are certain men crept in
unawares, who were before of old ordained (rather as
Greek, "forewritten," that is, announced
beforehand by the apostle Peter's written
prophecy) to this condemnation, ungodly men
denying the only Lord God, and our Lord Jesus Christ."
Compare @2Pe
2:1, "There shall be false teachers among you
who privily shall bring in damnable
heresies, even denying the Lord that bought them,
and bring upon themselves swift destruction." Also
@Jude
1:17,18 plainly refers to the very words of @2Pe
3:3, "Remember the words which were spoken before of
the apostles of our Lord Jesus; how they told you
there should be mockers in the last time who should
walk after their own ungodly lusts." This
proves, in opposition to ALFORD,
that Jude's Epistle is later than Peter's (whose
inspiration he thus confirms, just as Peter confirms
Paul's, @2Pe
3:15,16), not vice versa.
TIME AND
PLACE OF WRITING.--ALFORD
thinks, that, considering Jude was writing to Jews and
citing signal instances of divine vengeance, it is very
unlikely he would have omitted to allude to the
destruction of Jerusalem if he had written after that
event which uprooted the Jewish polity and people. He
conjectures from the tone and references that the writer
lived in Palestine. But as to the former, negative
evidence is doubtful; for neither does John allude in his
Epistles, written after the destruction of Jerusalem, to
that event. MILL
fixes on A.D.
90, after the death of all the apostles save John. I
incline to think from @Jude
1:17,18 that some time had elapsed since the Second
Epistle of Peter (written probably about
A.D. 68 or 69) when
Jude wrote, and, therefore, that the Epistle of Jude was
written after the destruction of Jerusalem.
@Jude
1:1-25. ADDRESS:
GREETING: HIS
OBJECT IN WRITING:
WARNING AGAINST
SEDUCERS IN DOCTRINE
AND PRACTICE
FROM GOD'S
VENGENANCE ON
APOSTATES, ISRAEL,
THE FALLEN
ANGELS, SODOM
AND GOMORRAH.
DESCRIPTION OF
THESE BAD
MEN, IN CONTRAST
TO MICHAEL:
LIKE CAIN,
BALAAM, AND CORE:
ENOCH'S PROPHECY
AS TO THEM:
THE APOSTLES'
FOREWARNING:
CONCLUDING EXHORTATION
AS TO PRESERVING
THEIR OWN
FAITH, AND TRYING
TO SAVE
OTHERS: DOXOLOGY.
1. servant of Jesus Christ--as
His minister and apostle.
brother of James--who was more widely known
as bishop of Jerusalem and "brother of the Lord" (that is,
either cousin, or stepbrother, being son of Joseph
by a former marriage; for ancient traditions universally
agree that Mary, Jesus' mother, continued perpetually a
virgin). Jude therefore calls himself modestly "brother of
James." See my Introduction.
to them . . . sanctified by God the Father--The
oldest manuscripts and versions, ORIGEN,
LUCIFER, and
others read, "beloved" for sanctified. If
English Version be read, compare @Col
1:12 1Pe 1:2. The Greek is not "by," but "in."
God the Father's love is the element IN which they
are "beloved." Thus the conclusion, @Jude
1:21, corresponds, "Keep yourselves in the love
of God." Compare "beloved of the Lord" @2Th
2:13.
preserved in Jesus Christ--"kept." Translate
not "in," but as Greek, "FOR
Jesus Christ." "Kept continually (so the Greek
perfect participle means) by God the Father for Jesus
Christ," against the day of His coming. Jude, beforehand,
mentions the source and guarantee for the final
accomplishment of believers' salvation; lest they should
be disheartened by the dreadful evils which he proceeds to
announce [BENGEL].
and called--predicated of "them that
are beloved in God the Father, and preserved in Jesus
Christ: who are called." God's effectual calling in
the exercise of His divine prerogative, guarantees their
eternal safety.
2. Mercy--in a time of
wretchedness. Therefore mercy stands first; the
mercy of Christ (@Jude
1:21).
peace--in the Holy Ghost (@Jude
1:20).
love--of God (@Jude
1:21). The three answer to the divine Trinity.
be multiplied--in you and towards you.
3. Design of the Epistle
(compare @Jude
1:20,21).
all diligence--(@2Pe
1:5). As the minister is to give all diligence
to admonish, so the people should, in accordance with his
admonition, give all diligence to have all
Christian graces, and to make their calling sure.
the common salvation--wrought by Christ.
Compare Note, see on 2Pe 1:1, "obtained
LIKE precious
faith," This community of faith, and of the object
of faith, salvation, forms the ground of mutual
exhortation by appeals to common hopes and fears.
it was needful for me--rather, "I felt it
necessary to write (now at once; so the Greek
aorist means; the present infinitive 'to write,'
which precedes, expresses merely the general fact of
writing) exhorting you." The reason why he felt it
necessary "to write with exhortation," he states, @Jude
1:4, "For there are certain men crept in," &c. Having
intended to write generally of "the common salvation,"
he found it necessary from the existing evils in the
Church, to write specially that they should contend for
the faith against those evils.
earnestly contend--Compare @Php
1:27, "striving together for the faith of the Gospel."
once, &c.--Greek, "once for all
delivered." No other faith or revelation is to supersede
it. A strong argument for resisting heretical innovators
(@Jude
1:4). Believers, like Nehemiah's workmen (@Ne
4:17), with one hand "build themselves up in their
most holy faith"; with the other they" contend earnestly
for the faith" against its foes.
the saints--all Christians, holy (that
is, consecrated to God) by their calling, and in God's
design.
4. certain men--implying
disparagement.
crept in unawares--stealthily and unlawfully.
See on 2Pe 2:1, "privily shall bring in damnable
heresies."
before . . . ordained--Greek, "forewritten,"
namely, in Peter's prophecy @Jude
1:17,18; and in Paul's before that, @1Ti
4:1 2Ti 3:1; and by implication in the judgments which
overtook the apostate angels. The disobedient Israelites,
Sodom and Gomorrah, Balaam and Core, and which are
written "for an example" (@Jude
1:7, and @Jude
1:5,6,11). God's eternal character as the Punisher of
sin, as set forth in Scripture "of old," is the ground on
which such apostate characters are ordained to
condemnation. Scripture is the reflection of God's book of
life in which believers are "written among the living." "Forewritten"
is applied also in @Ro
15:4 to the things written in Scripture. Scripture
itself reflects God's character from everlasting, which is
the ground of His decrees from everlasting. BENGEL
explains it as an abbreviated phrase for, "They were of
old foretold by Enoch (@Jude
1:14, who did not write his prophecies), and
afterwards marked out by the written word."
to this condemnation--Jude graphically puts
their judgment as it were present before the eyes, "THIS."
Enoch's prophecy comprises the "ungodly men" of the last
days before Christ's coming to judgment, as well as their
forerunners, the "ungodly men" before the flood, the type
of the last judgment (@Mt
24:37-39 2Pe 3:3-7). The disposition and the doom of
both correspond.
the grace of our God--A phrase for the Gospel
especially sweet to believers who appropriate God in
Christ as "our God," and so rendering the more
odious the vile perversity of those who turn the Gospel
state of grace and liberty into a ground of
licentiousness, as if their exemption from the law gave
them a license to sin.
denying the only Lord--The oldest
manuscripts, versions, and Fathers omit "God," which
follows in English Version. Translate as the
Greek, "the only Master"; here used of Jesus
Christ, who is at once Master and "Lord" (a
different Greek word). See on 2Pe 2:1. By virtue of
Christ's perfect oneness with the Father, He, as well as
the Father, is termed "the ONLY"
God and "MASTER."
Greek, "Master," implies God's absolute
ownership to dispose of His creatures as He likes.
5. (@Heb
3:16 4:13.)
therefore--Other oldest manuscripts and
Vulgate read, "But"; in contrast to the ungodly @Jude
1:4.
though ye once--rather, "once for all."
Translate, "I wish to remind you, as knowing
ALL (namely, that
I am referring to; so the oldest manuscripts,
versions, and Fathers) once for all." As
already they know all the facts once for all, he needs
only to "remind" them.
the Lord--The oldest manuscripts and versions
read, "Jesus." So "Christ" is said to have accompanied the
Israelites in the wilderness; so perfectly is Jesus one
with the God of the Israelite theocracy.
saved--brought safely, and into a state of
safety and salvation.
afterward--Greek, "secondly"; in the
next instance "destroyed them that believed not," as
contrasted with His in the first instance having
saved them.
6. (@2Pe
2:4.)
kept not their first estate--Vulgate
translates, "their own principality," which the
fact of angels being elsewhere called "principalities,"
favors: "their own" implies that, instead of being content
with the dignity once for all assigned to them
under the Son of God, they aspired higher. ALFORD
thinks the narrative in @Ge
6:2 is alluded to, not the fall of the devil and his
angels, as he thinks "giving themselves over to
fornication" (@Jude
1:7) proves; compare Greek, "in like manner
to these," namely, to the angels (@Jude
1:6). It seems to me more natural to take "sons of
God" (@Ge
6:2) of the Sethites, than of angels, who, as
"spirits," do not seem capable of carnal connection. The
parallel, @2Pe
2:4, plainly refers to the fall of the apostate
angels. And "in like manner to these," @Jude
1:7, refers to the inhabitants of Sodom and
Gomorrah, "the cities about them" sinning "in like
manner" as "they" did [ESTIUS
and CALVIN].
Even if Greek "these," @Jude
1:7, refer to the angels, the sense of "in like
manner as these" will be, not that the angels carnally
fornicated with the daughters of men, but that their
ambition, whereby their affections went away from
God and they fell, is in God's view a sin of like kind
spiritually as Sodom's going away from God's order
of nature after strange flesh; the sin of the apostate
angels after their kind is analogous to that of the human
Sodomites after their kind. Compare the somewhat similar
spiritual connection of whoremongers and
covetousness. The apocryphal book of Enoch interprets
@Ge
6:2 as ALFORD.
But though Jude accords with it in some particulars, it
does not follow that he accords with it in all. The
Hebrews name the fallen angels Aza and Azael.
left--on their own accord.
their own--Greek, "their proper."
habitation--heaven, all bright and glorious,
as opposed to the "darkness" to which they now are
doomed. Their ambitious designs seem to have had a
peculiar connection with this earth, of which Satan before
his fall may have been God's vicegerent, whence arises his
subsequent connection with it as first the Tempter, then
"the prince of this world."
reserved--As the Greek is the same,
and there is an evident reference to their having "kept
not their first estate," translate, "He hath kept."
Probably what is meant is, He hath kept them in His
purpose; that is their sure doom; moreover, as yet,
Satan and his demons roam at large on the earth. An
earnest of their doom is their having been cast out of
heaven, being already restricted to "the darkness of this
present world," the "air" that surrounds the earth, their
peculiar element now. They lurk in places of gloom and
death, looking forward with agonizing fear to their final
torment in the bottomless pit. He means not literal chains
and darkness, but figurative in this present world where,
with restricted powers and liberties, shut out from
heaven, they, like condemned prisoners, await their doom.
7. Even as--ALFORD
translates, "I wish to remind you (@Jude
1:5) that."
Sodom, &c.--(@2Pe
2:6).
giving themselves over to fornication--following
fornication extraordinarily, that is, out of the
order of nature. On "in like manner to them" (Greek),
compare Note, see on Jude 1:6. Compare on spiritual
fornication, "go a whoring from thee," @Ps
73:27.
going after strange flesh--departing from the
course of nature, and going after that which is unnatural.
In later times the most enlightened heathen nations
indulged in the sin of Sodom without compunction or shame.
are set forth--before our eyes.
suffering--undergoing to this present
time; alluding to the marks of volcanic fire about the
Dead Sea.
the vengeance--Greek, "righteous
retribution."
eternal fire--The lasting marks of the fire
that consumed the cities irreparably, is a type of the
eternal fire to which the inhabitants have been consigned.
BENGEL
translates as the Greek will admit, "Suffering
(the) punishment (which they endure) as an
example or sample of eternal fire (namely, that
which shall consume the wicked)." @Eze
16:53-55 shows that Sodom's punishment, as a nation,
is not eternal. Compare also @2Pe
2:6.
8. also--rather, "In like
manner nevertheless" (notwithstanding these warning
examples) [ALFORD].
these . . . dreamers--The Greek has
not "filthy" of English Version. The clause,
"these men dreaming" (that is, in their dreams), belongs
to all the verbs, "defile," "despise," and "speak evil."
All sinners are spiritually asleep, and their carnal
activity is as it were a dream (@1Th
5:6,7). Their speaking evil of dignities is
because they are dreaming, and know not what
they are speaking evil of (@Jude
1:10). "As a man dreaming seems to himself to be
seeing and nearing many things, so the natural man's lusts
are agitated by joy, distress, fear, and the other
passions. But he is a stranger to self-command. Hence,
though he bring into play all the powers of reason, he
cannot conceive the true liberty which the sons of light,
who are awake and in the daylight; enjoy" [BENGEL].
defile the flesh--(@Jude
1:7).
dominion--"lordship."
dignities--literally, "glories." Earthly and
heavenly dignities.
9. Michael, the archangel--Nowhere
in Scripture is the plural used, "archangels"; but only
ONE,
"archangel." The only other passage in the New Testament
where it occurs, is @1Th
4:16, where Christ is distinguished from the
archangel, with whose voice He shall descend to raise the
dead; they therefore err who confound Christ with Michael.
The name means, Who is like God? In @Da
10:13 he is called "One ('the first,' Margin)
of the chief princes." He is the champion angel of Israel.
In @Re
12:7 the conflict between Michael and Satan is again
alluded to.
about the body of Moses--his literal body.
Satan, as having the power of death, opposed the raising
of it again, on the ground of Moses' sin at Meribah, and
his murder of the Egyptian. That Moses' body was raised,
appears from his presence with Elijah and Jesus (who were
in the body) at the Transfiguration: the sample and
earnest of the coming resurrection kingdom, to be ushered
in by Michael's standing up for God's people. Thus in each
dispensation a sample and pledge of the future
resurrection was given: Enoch in the patriarchal
dispensation, Moses in the Levitical, Elijah in the
prophetical. It is noteworthy that the same rebuke is
recorded here as was used by the Angel of the Lord, or
Jehovah the Second Person, in pleading for Joshua, the
representative of the Jewish Church, against Satan, in @Zec
3:2; whence some have thought that also here "the body
of Moses" means the Jewish Church accused by Satan, before
God, for its filthiness, on which ground he demands that
divine justice should take its course against Israel, but
is rebuked by the Lord who has "chosen Jerusalem": thus,
as "the body of Christ" is the Christian Church, so
"the body of Moses" is the Jewish Church. But the literal
body is evidently here meant (though, secondarily, the
Jewish Church is typified by Moses' body, as it was there
represented by Joshua the high priest); and Michael, whose
connection seems to be so close with Jehovah-Messiah on
the one hand, and with Israel on the other, naturally uses
the same language as his Lord. As Satan (adversary
in court) or the devil (accuser) accuses alike the
Church collectively and "the brethren" individually, so
Christ pleads for us as our Advocate. Israel's, and all
believers' full justification, and the accuser's being
rebuked finally, is yet future. JOSEPHUS
[Antiquities,4.8], states that God hid Moses' body,
lest, if it had been exposed to view, it would have been
made an idol of. Jude, in this account, either adopts it
from the apocryphal "assumption of Moses" (as ORIGEN
[Concerning Principalities, 3.2] thinks), or else
from the ancient tradition on which that work was founded.
Jude, as inspired, could distinguish how much of
the tradition was true, how much false. We have no
such means of distinguishing, and therefore can be sure of
no tradition, save that which is in the written word.
durst not--from reverence for Satan's former
dignity (@Jude
1:8).
railing accusation--Greek, "judgment
of blasphemy," or evil-speaking. Peter said, Angels
do not, in order to avenge themselves, rail at dignities,
though ungodly, when they have to contend with them: Jude
says that the archangel Michael himself did not rail even
at the time when he fought with the devil, the prince of
evil spirits--not from fear of him, but from reverence of
God, whose delegated power in this world Satan once had,
and even in some degree still has. From the word
"disputed," or debated in controversy, it is plain
it was a judicial contest.
10. (@2Pe
2:12.)
those things which--Greek, "all things
whatsoever they understand not," namely, the
things of the spiritual world.
but what . . . naturally--Connect thus, "Whatever
(so the Greek) things naturally (by natural, blind
instinct), as the unreasoning (so the Greek)
animals, they know," &c. The Greek for the former
"know" implies deeper knowledge; the latter "know," the
mere perception of the "animal senses and faculties."
11. Woe--See on 2Pe 2:14, "cursed
children."
Cain--the murderer: the root of whose sin was
hatred and envy of the godly, as it is the sin of these
seducers.
ran greedily--literally, "have been poured
forth" like a torrent that has burst its banks. Reckless
of what it costs, the loss of God's favor and heaven, on
they rush after gain like Balaam.
perished in the gainsaying of Core--(compare
Note, see on Jude 1:12). When we read of Korah
perishing by gainsaying, we read virtually also of these
perishing in like manner through the same: for the same
seed bears the same harvest.
12. spots--So @2Pe
2:13, Greek, "spiloi"; but here the
Greek is spilades, which elsewhere, in secular
writers, means rocks, namely, on which the
Christian love-feasts were in danger of being
shipwrecked. The oldest manuscript prefixes the article
emphatically, "THE
rocks." The reference to "clouds . . . winds . . . waves
of the sea," accords with this image of rocks. Vulgate
seems to have been misled by the similar sounding word to
translate, as English Version, "spots"; compare
however, @Jude
1:23, which favors English Version, if the
Greek will bear it. Two oldest manuscripts, by the
transcriber's effort to make Jude say the same as Peter,
read here "deceivings" for "love-feasts," but the
weightiest manuscript and authorities support English
Version reading. The love-feast accompanied the Lord's
Supper (@1Co
11:17-34, end). Korah the Levite, not satisfied with
his ministry, aspired to the sacrificing
priesthood also: so ministers in the Lord's Supper
have sought to make it a sacrifice, and themselves
the sacrificing priests, usurping the function of
our only Christian sacerdotal Priest, Christ Jesus.
Let them beware of Korah's doom!
feeding themselves--Greek, "pasturing
(tending) themselves." What they look to is the pampering
of themselves, not the feeding of the flock.
without fear--Join these words not as
English Version, but with "feast." Sacred feasts
especially ought to be celebrated with fear.
Feasting is not faulty in itself [BENGEL],
but it needs to be accompanied with fear of
forgetting God, as Job in the case of his sons' feasts.
clouds--from which one would expect
refreshing rains. @2Pe
2:17, "wells without water." Professors without
practice.
carried about--The oldest manuscripts have
"carried aside," that is, out of the right course (compare
@Eph
4:14).
trees whose fruit withereth--rather, "trees
of the late (or waning) autumn," namely, when there
are no longer leaves or fruits on the trees [BENGEL].
without fruit--having no good fruit of
knowledge and practice; sometimes used of what is
positively bad.
twice dead--First when they cast their leaves
in autumn, and seem during winter dead, but revive
again in spring; secondly, when they are "plucked up by
the roots." So these apostates, once dead in unbelief, and
then by profession and baptism raised from the death of
sin to the life of righteousness, but now having become
dead again by apostasy, and so hopelessly dead.
There is a climax. Not only without leaves, like
trees in late autumn, but without fruit: not
only so, but dead twice; and to crown all, "plucked up by
the roots."
13. Raging--wild. Jude has
in mind @Isa
57:20.
shame--plural in Greek, "shames"
(compare @Php
3:19).
wandering stars--instead of moving on in a
regular orbit, as lights to the world, bursting forth on
the world like erratic comets, or rather, meteors of fire,
with a strange glare, and then doomed to fall back again
into the blackness of gloom.
14. See Introduction
on the source whence Jude derived this prophecy of Enoch.
The Holy Spirit, by Jude, has sealed the truth of this
much of the matter contained in the book of Enoch, though
probably that book, as well as Jude, derived it from
tradition (compare Note, see on Jude 1:9). There
are reasons given by some for thinking the book of Enoch
copied from Jude rather than vice versa. It is striking
how, from the first, prophecy hastened towards its
consummation. The earliest prophecies of the Redeemer
dwell on His second coming in glory, rather than His first
coming in lowliness (compare @Ge
3:15 with @Ro
16:20). Enoch, in his translation without death,
illustrated that truth which he all his life preached to
the unbelieving world, the certainty of the Lord's coming,
and the resurrection of the dead, as the only effectual
antidote to their skepticism and self-wise confidence in
nature's permanence.
And Enoch--Greek, "Moreover, also
Enoch," &c.
seventh from Adam--Seven is the sacred
number. In Enoch, freedom from death and the sacred number
are combined: for every seventh object is most highly
valued. Jude thus shows the antiquity of the prophecies.
Compare Note, see on Jude 1:4, "of old." There were
only five fathers between Enoch and Adam. The
seventh from Adam prophesied the things which shall
close the seventh age of the world [BENGEL].
of these--in relation to these. The reference
of his prophecies was not to the antediluvians alone, but
to all the ungodly (@Jude
1:15). His prophecy applied primarily indeed to the
flood, but ultimately to the final judgment.
cometh--literally, "came." Prophecy regards
the future as certain as if it were past.
saints--Holy angels (compare @De
33:2 Da 7:10 Zec 14:5 Mt 25:31 Heb 12:22).
15. This verse and the
beginning of Enoch's prophecy is composed in Hebrew
poetic parallelism, the oldest specimen extant. Some think
Lamech's speech, which is also in poetic parallelism, was
composed in mockery of Enoch's prophecy: as Enoch foretold
Jehovah's coming to judgment, so Lamech presumes on
impunity in polygamy and murder (just as Cain the murderer
seemed to escape with impunity).
convince--convict.
hard speeches--such as are noticed in
@Jude
1:8,10,16 Mal 3:13,14; contrast @Ro
16:17.
ungodly sinners--not merely sinners,
but proud despisers of God: impious.
against him--They who speak against God's
children are regarded by God as speaking
against Himself.
16. murmurers--in secret:
muttering murmurs against God's ordinances and
ministers in Church and state. Compare @Jude
1:8, "speak evil of dignities"; @Jude
1:15, "hard speeches"; against the Lord.
complainers--never satisfied with their lot
(@Nu
11:1; compare the penalty, @De
28:47,48).
walking after their own lusts--(@Jude
1:18). The secret of their murmuring and
complaining is the restless insatiability of their
desires.
great swelling words--(@2Pe
2:18).
men's persons--their mere outward appearance
and rank.
because of advantage--for the sake of what
they may gain from them. While they talk great swelling
words, they are really mean and fawning towards those
of wealth and rank.
17. But; beloved . . . ye--in
contrast to those reprobates, @Jude
1:20, again.
remember--implying that his readers had been
contemporaries of the apostles. For Peter uses the very
same formula in reminding the contemporaries of himself
and the other apostles.
spoken before--spoken already before now.
the apostles--Peter (see on 2Pe 3:2,3), and
Paul before Peter (@Ac
20:29 1Ti 4:1 2Ti 3:1). Jude does not exclude himself
from the number of the apostles here, for in @Jude
1:18, immediately after, he says, "they told You," not
us (rather as Greek, "used to tell you"
implying that Jude's readers were contemporaries of the
apostles, who used to tell them).
18. mockers--In the
parallel, @2Pe
3:3, the same Greek is translated, "scoffers."
The word is found nowhere else in the New Testament. How ALFORD
can deny that @2Pe
3:2,3 is referred to (at least in part), I cannot
imagine, seeing that Jude quotes the very words of
Peter as the words which the apostles used to
speak to his (Jude's) readers.
walk after their own ungodly lusts--literally,
"after (according to) their own lusts of ungodliness."
19. These be they--showing
that their characters are such as Peter and Paul had
foretold.
separate themselves--from Church communion in
its vital, spiritual reality: for outwardly they took part
in Church ordinances (@Jude
1:12). Some oldest manuscripts omit "themselves": then
understand it, "separate," cast out members of the Church
by excommunication (@Isa
65:5 66:5 Lu 6:22 Joh 9:34; compare "casteth them out
of the Church;" @3Jo
1:10). Many, however, understand "themselves," which
indeed is read in some of the oldest manuscripts as
English Version has it. Arrogant setting up of
themselves, as having greater sanctity and a wisdom and
peculiar doctrine, distinct from others, is implied.
sensual--literally, "animal-souled": as
opposed to the spiritual, or "having the Spirit."
It is translated, "the natural man," @1Co
2:14. In the threefold division of man's being,
body, soul, and spirit, the due state in God's design
is, that "the spirit," which is the recipient of the Holy
Spirit uniting man to God, should be first, and should
rule the soul, which stands intermediate between the
body and spirit: but in the animal, or
natural man, the spirit is sunk into subserviency
to the animal soul, which is earthly in its motives and
aims. The "carnal" sink somewhat lower, for in these
the flesh, the lowest element and corrupt side of
man's bodily nature, reigns paramount.
having not the Spirit--In the animal and
natural man the spirit, his higher part, which
ought to be the receiver of the Holy Spirit, is not so;
and therefore, his spirit not being in its normal state,
he is said not to have the spirit (compare @Joh
3:5,6). In the completion of redemption the parts of
redeemed man shall be placed in their due relation:
whereas in the ungodly, the soul severed from
the spirit shall have for ever animal life without
union to God and heaven--a living death.
20. Resuming @Jude
1:17.
building up yourselves--the opposite to the
"separate themselves" (@Jude
1:19):as "in the Holy Ghost" is opposed to "having not
the Spirit."
on--as on a foundation. Building on
THE FAITH is
equivalent to building on Christ, the object of
faith.
praying in the Holy Ghost--(@Ro
8:26 Eph 6:18). The Holy Spirit teaches what we
are to pray for, and how. None can pray aright save
by being in the Spirit, that is, in the element of
His influence. CHRYSOSTOM
states that, among the charisms bestowed at the beginning
of the New Testament dispensation, was the gift of
prayer, bestowed on someone who prayed in the name of
the rest, and taught others to pray. Moreover, their
prayers so conceived and often used, were received and
preserved among Christians, and out of them forms of
prayer were framed. Such is the origin of liturgies [HAMMOND].
21. In @Jude
1:20,21, Jude combines the Father, the Son, and the
Holy Ghost: and faith, hope, and love.
Keep yourselves--not in your own strength,
but "in the love of God," that is, God's love to you
and all His believing children, the only guarantee for
their being kept safe. Man's need of watching is
implied; at the same time he cannot keep himself,
unless God in His love keep him.
looking for--in hope.
the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ--to be
fully manifested at His coming. Mercy is usually
attributed to the Father: here to the Son; so entirely one
are they.
22, 23. None but those who
"keep themselves" are likely to "save" others.
have compassion--So one oldest manuscript
reads. But two oldest manuscripts, Vulgate, &c.,
read, "convict"; "reprove to their conviction"; "confute,
so as to convince."
making a difference--The oldest manuscripts
and versions read the accusative for the nominative, "when
separating themselves" [WAHL],
referring to @Jude
1:19; or "when contending with you," as the Greek
is translated, @Jude
1:9.
23. save with fear--The
oldest manuscripts do not read "with fear" in this
position: but after "snatching them out of the fire" (with
which, compare @Am
4:11 1Co 3:15 Zec 3:2, said of a most narrow escape),
they add the following words, forming a THIRD class, "and
others compassionate with (IN) fear." Three kinds of
patients require three kinds of medical treatment.
Ministers and Christians are said to "save" those whom
they are made the instruments of saving; the Greek
for "save" is present, therefore meaning "try to save."
Jude already (@Jude
1:9) had reference to the same passage (@Zec
3:1-3). The three classes are: (1) those who
contend with you (accusative case in oldest
manuscripts), whom you should convict; (2) those
who are as brands already in the fire, of which hell-fire
is the consummation: these you should try to save by
snatching them out; (3) those who are objects of
compassion, whom accordingly you should
compassionate (and help if occasion should offer), but
at the same time not let pity degenerate into connivance
at their error. Your compassion is to be accompanied "with
fear" of being at all defiled by them.
hating--Even hatred has its legitimate
field of exercise. Sin is the only thing which God hates:
so ought we.
even the garment--a proverbial phrase:
avoiding the most remote contact with sin, and hating that
which borders on it. As garments of the apostles
wrought miracles of good in healing, so the very
garment of sinners metaphorically, that is, anything
brought into contact with their pollution, is to be
avoided. Compare as to lepers and other persons defiled, @Le
13:52-57 15:4-17: the garments were held polluted; and
anyone touching them was excluded, until purified, from
religious and civil communion with the sanctified people
of Israel. Christians who received at baptism the white
garment in token of purity, are not to defile it by any
approach to what is defiled.
24, 25. Concluding
doxology.
Now--Greek, "But."
you--ALFORD,
on inferior authority, reads, "them." You is in
contradistinction to those ungodly men mentioned
above.
keep . . . from falling--rather, "guard . . .
(so as to be) without falling," or stumbling.
faultless--Greek, "blameless."
before the presence of his glory--that is,
before Himself, when He shall be revealed in glory.
with exceeding joy--literally, "with
exultation" as of those who leap for joy.
25. To the only . . . God our
Saviour--The oldest manuscripts add, "through Jesus
Christ our Lord." The transcribers, fancying that "Saviour"
applied to Christ alone, omitted the words. The sense is,
To the only God (the Father) who is our Saviour through
(that is, by the mediation of) Jesus Christ our Lord.
dominion--Greek, "might."
power--authority: legitimate power.
The oldest manuscripts and Vulgate, after "power,"
have "before all the age," that is, before all time as to
the past: "and now," as to the present; "and
to all the ages," that is, for ever, as to the time
to come.
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