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Teks -- 2 Peter 3:1-18 (NET)

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Konteks
The False Teachers’ Denial of the Lord’s Return
3:1 Dear friends, this is already the second letter I have written you, in which I am trying to stir up your pure mind by way of reminder: 3:2 I want you to recall both the predictions foretold by the holy prophets and the commandment of the Lord and Savior through your apostles. 3:3 Above all, understand this: In the last days blatant scoffers will come, being propelled by their own evil urges 3:4 and saying, “Where is his promised return? For ever since our ancestors died, all things have continued as they were from the beginning of creation.” 3:5 For they deliberately suppress this fact, that by the word of God heavens existed long ago and an earth was formed out of water and by means of water. 3:6 Through these things the world existing at that time was destroyed when it was deluged with water. 3:7 But by the same word the present heavens and earth have been reserved for fire, by being kept for the day of judgment and destruction of the ungodly. 3:8 Now, dear friends, do not let this one thing escape your notice, that a single day is like a thousand years with the Lord and a thousand years are like a single day. 3:9 The Lord is not slow concerning his promise, as some regard slowness, but is being patient toward you, because he does not wish for any to perish but for all to come to repentance. 3:10 But the day of the Lord will come like a thief; when it comes, the heavens will disappear with a horrific noise, and the celestial bodies will melt away in a blaze, and the earth and every deed done on it will be laid bare. 3:11 Since all these things are to melt away in this manner, what sort of people must we be, conducting our lives in holiness and godliness, 3:12 while waiting for and hastening the coming of the day of God? Because of this day, the heavens will be burned up and dissolve, and the celestial bodies will melt away in a blaze! 3:13 But, according to his promise, we are waiting for new heavens and a new earth, in which righteousness truly resides.
Exhortation to the Faithful
3:14 Therefore, dear friends, since you are waiting for these things, strive to be found at peace, without spot or blemish, when you come into his presence. 3:15 And regard the patience of our Lord as salvation, just as also our dear brother Paul wrote to you, according to the wisdom given to him, 3:16 speaking of these things in all his letters. Some things in these letters are hard to understand, things the ignorant and unstable twist to their own destruction, as they also do to the rest of the scriptures. 3:17 Therefore, dear friends, since you have been forewarned, be on your guard that you do not get led astray by the error of these unprincipled men and fall from your firm grasp on the truth. 3:18 But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To him be the honor both now and on that eternal day.
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Tafsiran/Catatan -- Catatan Kata/Frasa (per frasa)

Robertson: 2Pe 3:1 - Beloved Beloved ( agapētoi ). With this vocative verbal (four times in this chapter), Peter "turns away from the Libertines and their victims"(Mayor).

Beloved ( agapētoi ).

With this vocative verbal (four times in this chapter), Peter "turns away from the Libertines and their victims"(Mayor).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:1 - This is now the second epistle that I write unto you This is now the second epistle that I write unto you ( tautēn ēdē deuteran humin graphō epistolēn ). Literally, "This already a second epis...

This is now the second epistle that I write unto you ( tautēn ēdē deuteran humin graphō epistolēn ).

Literally, "This already a second epistle I am writing to you."For ēdē see Joh 21:24. It is the predicate use of deuteran epistolēn in apposition with tautēn , not "this second epistle."Reference apparently to 1 Peter.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:1 - And in both of them And in both of them ( en hais ). "In which epistles."

And in both of them ( en hais ).

"In which epistles."

Robertson: 2Pe 3:1 - I stir up I stir up ( diegeirō ). Present active indicative, perhaps conative, "I try to stir up."See 2Pe 1:13.

I stir up ( diegeirō ).

Present active indicative, perhaps conative, "I try to stir up."See 2Pe 1:13.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:1 - Mind Mind ( dianoian ). Understanding (Plato) as in 1Pe 1:13.

Mind ( dianoian ).

Understanding (Plato) as in 1Pe 1:13.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:1 - Sincere Sincere ( eilikrinē ). Old adjective of doubtful etymology (supposed to be heilē , sunlight, and krinō , to judge by it). Plato used it of ethi...

Sincere ( eilikrinē ).

Old adjective of doubtful etymology (supposed to be heilē , sunlight, and krinō , to judge by it). Plato used it of ethical purity (psuchē eilikrinēs ) as here and Phi 1:10, the only N.T. examples.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:1 - By putting you in remembrance By putting you in remembrance ( en hupomnēsei ). As in 2Pe 1:13.

By putting you in remembrance ( en hupomnēsei ).

As in 2Pe 1:13.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:2 - That ye should remember That ye should remember ( mnēsthēnai ). First aorist passive (deponent) infinitive of mimnēskō , to remind. Purpose (indirect command) is her...

That ye should remember ( mnēsthēnai ).

First aorist passive (deponent) infinitive of mimnēskō , to remind. Purpose (indirect command) is here expressed by this infinitive. Imperative in Jud 1:17.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:2 - Spoken before Spoken before ( proeirēmenōn ). Perfect passive participle of proeipon (defective verb). Genitive case rēmatōn after mnēsthēnai .

Spoken before ( proeirēmenōn ).

Perfect passive participle of proeipon (defective verb). Genitive case rēmatōn after mnēsthēnai .

Robertson: 2Pe 3:2 - And the commandment And the commandment ( kai tēs entolēs ). Ablative case with hupo (agency).

And the commandment ( kai tēs entolēs ).

Ablative case with hupo (agency).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:2 - Of the Lord and Saviour through your apostles Of the Lord and Saviour through your apostles ( tōn apostolōn humōn tou kuriou kai sōtēros ). Humōn (your) is correct, not hēmōn ...

Of the Lord and Saviour through your apostles ( tōn apostolōn humōn tou kuriou kai sōtēros ).

Humōn (your) is correct, not hēmōn (our). But the several genitives complicate the sense. If dia (through) occurred before tōn apostolōn , it would be clear. It is held by some that Peter would not thus speak of the twelve apostles, including himself, and that the forger here allows the mask to slip, but Bigg rightly regards this a needless inference. The meaning is that they should remember the teaching of their apostles and not follow the Gnostic libertines.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:3 - Knowing this first Knowing this first ( touto prōton ginōskontes ). Present active participle of ginōskō . See 2Pe 1:20 for this identical phrase. Nominative ab...

Knowing this first ( touto prōton ginōskontes ).

Present active participle of ginōskō . See 2Pe 1:20 for this identical phrase. Nominative absolute here where accusative ginōskontas would be regular. Peter now takes up the parousia (2Pe 1:16) after having discussed the dunamis of Christ.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:3 - In the last days In the last days ( ep' eschatōn tōn hēmerōn ). "Upon the last of the days."Jud 1:18 has it ep' eschatou chronou (upon the last time). In 1P...

In the last days ( ep' eschatōn tōn hēmerōn ).

"Upon the last of the days."Jud 1:18 has it ep' eschatou chronou (upon the last time). In 1Pe 1:5 it is en kairōi eschatōi (in the last time), while 1Pe 1:20 has ep' eschatou tōn chronōn (upon the last of the times). John has usually tēi eschatēi hēmerāi (on the last day, Joh 6:39.). Here eschatōn is a predicate adjective like summus mons (the top of the mountain).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:3 - Mockers with mockery Mockers with mockery ( empaigmoneÌ„i empaiktai ). Note Peter’ s play on words again, both from empaizoÌ„ (Mat 2:16), to trifle with, and neith...

Mockers with mockery ( empaigmonēi empaiktai ).

Note Peter’ s play on words again, both from empaizoÌ„ (Mat 2:16), to trifle with, and neither found elsewhere save empaikteÌ„s in Jud 1:18; Isa 3:4 (playing like children).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:4 - Where is the promise of his coming? Where is the promise of his coming? ( pou estin hē epaggelia tēs parousias autou̱ ). This is the only sample of the questions raised by these mo...

Where is the promise of his coming? ( pou estin hē epaggelia tēs parousias autou̱ ).

This is the only sample of the questions raised by these mockers. Peter had mentioned this subject of the parousia in 2Pe 1:16. Now he faces it squarely. Peter, like Paul (1Th 5:1.; 2Th 2:1.), preached about the second coming (2Pe 1:16; Act 3:20.), as Jesus himself did repeatedly (Mat 24:34) and as the angels promised at the Ascension (Act 1:11). Both Jesus and Paul (2Th 2:1.) were misunderstood on the subject of the time and the parables of Jesus urged readiness and forbade setting dates for his coming, though his language in Mat 24:34 probably led some to believe that he would certainly come while they were alive.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:4 - From the day that From the day that ( aph' hēs ). "From which day."See Luk 7:45.

From the day that ( aph' hēs ).

"From which day."See Luk 7:45.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:4 - Fell asleep Fell asleep ( ekoimēthēsan ). First aorist passive indicative of koimaō , old verb, to put sleep, classic euphemism for death (Joh 11:11) like ...

Fell asleep ( ekoimēthēsan ).

First aorist passive indicative of koimaō , old verb, to put sleep, classic euphemism for death (Joh 11:11) like our cemetery (sleeping-place).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:4 - Continue Continue ( diamenei ). Present active indicative of diamenō , to remain through (Luk 1:22). In statu quo .

Continue ( diamenei ).

Present active indicative of diamenō , to remain through (Luk 1:22). In statu quo .

Robertson: 2Pe 3:4 - As they were As they were ( houtōs ). "Thus."

As they were ( houtōs ).

"Thus."

Robertson: 2Pe 3:4 - From the beginning of creation From the beginning of creation ( ap' archēs ktiseōs ). Precisely so in Mar 10:6, which see.

From the beginning of creation ( ap' archēs ktiseōs ).

Precisely so in Mar 10:6, which see.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:5 - For this they wilfully forget For this they wilfully forget ( lanthanei gar autous touto thelontas ). Literally, "for this escapes them being willing."See this use of lanthanō ...

For this they wilfully forget ( lanthanei gar autous touto thelontas ).

Literally, "for this escapes them being willing."See this use of lanthanō (old verb, to escape notice of, to be hidden from) in Act 26:26. The present active participle thelontas (from thelō , to wish) has almost an adverbial sense here.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:5 - Compacted Compacted ( sunestoÌ„sa ). See Paul’ s sunesteÌ„ken (Col 1:17) "consist."Second perfect active (intransitive) participle of sunisteÌ„mi , femi...

Compacted ( sunestōsa ).

See Paul’ s sunesteÌ„ken (Col 1:17) "consist."Second perfect active (intransitive) participle of sunisteÌ„mi , feminine singular agreeing with geÌ„ (nearest to it) rather than with ouranoi (subject of eÌ„san imperfect plural). There is no need to make Peter mean the Jewish mystical "seven heavens"because of the plural which was used interchangeably with the singular (Mat 5:9.).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:5 - Out of water and amidst water Out of water and amidst water ( ex hudatos kai di' hudatos ). Out of the primeval watery chaos (Gen 1:2), but it is not plain what is meant by di' hu...

Out of water and amidst water ( ex hudatos kai di' hudatos ).

Out of the primeval watery chaos (Gen 1:2), but it is not plain what is meant by di' hudatos , which naturally means "by means of water,"though dia with the genitive is used for a condition or state (Heb 12:1). The reference may be to Gen 1:9, the gathering together of the waters.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:5 - By the word of God By the word of God ( tōi tou theou logōi ). Instrumental case logōi , "by the fiat of God"(Gen 1:3; Heb 11:3 rēmati theou ).

By the word of God ( tōi tou theou logōi ).

Instrumental case logōi , "by the fiat of God"(Gen 1:3; Heb 11:3 rēmati theou ).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:6 - By which means By which means ( di' hōn ). The two waters above or the water and the word of God. Mayor against the MSS. reads di' hou (singular) and refers it ...

By which means ( di' hōn ).

The two waters above or the water and the word of God. Mayor against the MSS. reads di' hou (singular) and refers it to logōi alone.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:6 - Being overshadowed Being overshadowed ( kataklustheis ). First aorist passive participle of katakluzō , old compound, here only in N.T., but see kataklusmos in 2Pe ...

Being overshadowed ( kataklustheis ).

First aorist passive participle of katakluzō , old compound, here only in N.T., but see kataklusmos in 2Pe 2:5.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:6 - With water With water ( hudati ). Instrumental case of hudōr .

With water ( hudati ).

Instrumental case of hudōr .

Robertson: 2Pe 3:6 - Perished Perished ( apōleto ). Second aorist middle indicative of apollumi .

Perished ( apōleto ).

Second aorist middle indicative of apollumi .

Robertson: 2Pe 3:7 - That now are That now are ( nun ). "The now heavens"over against "the then world"(ho tote kosmos 2Pe 3:6).

That now are ( nun ).

"The now heavens"over against "the then world"(ho tote kosmos 2Pe 3:6).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:7 - By the same word By the same word ( tōi autōi logōi ). Instrumental case again referring to logōi in 2Pe 3:6.

By the same word ( tōi autōi logōi ).

Instrumental case again referring to logōi in 2Pe 3:6.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:7 - Have been stored up Have been stored up ( tethēsaurismenoi eisin ). Perfect passive indicative of thēsaurizō , for which verb see Mat 6:19; Luk 12:21.

Have been stored up ( tethēsaurismenoi eisin ).

Perfect passive indicative of thēsaurizō , for which verb see Mat 6:19; Luk 12:21.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:7 - For fire For fire ( puri ). Dative case of pur , not with fire (instrumental case). The destruction of the world by fire is here pictured as in Joe 2:30.; Psa...

For fire ( puri ).

Dative case of pur , not with fire (instrumental case). The destruction of the world by fire is here pictured as in Joe 2:30.; Psa 50:3.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:7 - Being reserved Being reserved ( tēroumenoi ). Present passive participle of tēreō , for which see 2Pe 2:4.

Being reserved ( tēroumenoi ).

Present passive participle of tēreō , for which see 2Pe 2:4.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:7 - Against Against ( eis ). Unto. As in 2Pe 2:4, 2Pe 2:9 and see 1Pe 1:4 for the inheritance reserved for the saints of God.

Against ( eis ).

Unto. As in 2Pe 2:4, 2Pe 2:9 and see 1Pe 1:4 for the inheritance reserved for the saints of God.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:8 - Forget not this one thing Forget not this one thing ( hen touto mē lanthanetō humas ). Rather, "let not this one thing escape you."For lanthanetō (present active imper...

Forget not this one thing ( hen touto mē lanthanetō humas ).

Rather, "let not this one thing escape you."For lanthanetoÌ„ (present active imperative of lanthanoÌ„ ) see 2Pe 3:5. The "one thing"(hen ) is explained by the hoti (that) clause following. Peter applies the language of Psa 90:4 about the eternity of God and shortness of human life to "the impatience of human expectations"(Bigg) about the second coming of Christ. "The day of judgment is at hand (1Pe 4:7). It may come tomorrow; but what is tomorrow? What does God mean by a day? It may be a thousand years"(Bigg). Precisely the same argument applies to those who argue for a literal interpretation of the thousand years in Rev 20:4-6. It may be a day or a day may be a thousand years. God’ s clock (para kurioÌ„i , beside the Lord) does not run by our timepieces. The scoffers scoff ignorantly.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:9 - Is not slack concerning his promise Is not slack concerning his promise ( ou bradunei tēs epaggelias ). Ablative case epaggelias after bradunei (present active indicative of bradu...

Is not slack concerning his promise ( ou bradunei tēs epaggelias ).

Ablative case epaggelias after bradunei (present active indicative of bradunō , from bradus , slow), old verb, to be slow in, to fall short of (like leipetai sophias in Jam 1:5), here and 1Ti 3:15 only in N.T.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:9 - Slackness Slackness ( bradutēta ). Old substantive from bradus (Jam 1:19), here only in N.T. God is not impotent nor unwilling to execute his promise.

Slackness ( bradutēta ).

Old substantive from bradus (Jam 1:19), here only in N.T. God is not impotent nor unwilling to execute his promise.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:9 - To youward To youward ( eis humas ). Pros rather than eis after makrothumei in 1Th 5:14 and epi in Jam 5:7, etc.

To youward ( eis humas ).

Pros rather than eis after makrothumei in 1Th 5:14 and epi in Jam 5:7, etc.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:9 - Not wishing Not wishing ( meÌ„ boulomenos ). Present middle participle of boulomai . Some will perish (2Pe 3:7), but that is not God’ s desire. Any (tinas ...

Not wishing ( mē boulomenos ).

Present middle participle of boulomai . Some will perish (2Pe 3:7), but that is not God’ s desire. Any (tinas ). Rather than "some"(tines ) above. Accusative with the infinitive apolesthai (second aorist middle of apollumi . God wishes "all"(pantas ) to come (choÌ„reÌ„sai first aorist active infinitive of choÌ„reoÌ„ , old verb, to make room). See Act 17:30; Rom 11:32; 1Ti 2:4; Heb 2:9 for God’ s provision of grace for all who will repent.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:10 - The day of the Lord The day of the Lord ( hēmera kuriou ). So Peter in Act 2:20 (from Joe 3:4) and Paul in 1Th 5:2, 1Th 5:4; 2Th 2:2; 1Co 5:5; and day of Christ in Phi...

The day of the Lord ( hēmera kuriou ).

So Peter in Act 2:20 (from Joe 3:4) and Paul in 1Th 5:2, 1Th 5:4; 2Th 2:2; 1Co 5:5; and day of Christ in Phi 2:16 and day of God in 2Pe 2:12 and day of judgment already in 2Pe 2:9; 2Pe 3:7. This great day will certainly come (heÌ„xei ). Future active of heÌ„koÌ„ , old verb, to arrive, but in God’ s own time.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:10 - As a thief As a thief ( hōs kleptēs ). That is suddenly, without notice. This very metaphor Jesus had used (Luk 12:39; Mat 24:43) and Paul after him (1Th 5:...

As a thief ( hōs kleptēs ).

That is suddenly, without notice. This very metaphor Jesus had used (Luk 12:39; Mat 24:43) and Paul after him (1Th 5:2) and John will quote it also (Rev 3:3; Rev 16:15).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:10 - In the which In the which ( en hēi ). The day when the Lord comes.

In the which ( en hēi ).

The day when the Lord comes.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:10 - Shall pass away Shall pass away ( pareleusontai ). Future middle of parerchomai , old verb, to pass by.

Shall pass away ( pareleusontai ).

Future middle of parerchomai , old verb, to pass by.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:10 - With a great noise With a great noise ( roizēdon ). Late and rare adverb (from roizeō , roizos ) - Lycophron, Nicander, here only in N.T., onomatopoetic, whizzin...

With a great noise ( roizēdon ).

Late and rare adverb (from roizeō , roizos ) - Lycophron, Nicander, here only in N.T., onomatopoetic, whizzing sound of rapid motion through the air like the flight of a bird, thunder, fierce flame.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:10 - The elements The elements ( ta stoicheia ). Old word (from stoichos a row), in Plato in this sense, in other senses also in N.T. as the alphabet, ceremonial reg...

The elements ( ta stoicheia ).

Old word (from stoichos a row), in Plato in this sense, in other senses also in N.T. as the alphabet, ceremonial regulations (Heb 5:12; Gal 4:3; Gal 5:1; Col 2:8).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:10 - Shall be dissolved Shall be dissolved ( luthēsetai ). Future passive of luō , to loosen, singular because stoicheia is neuter plural.

Shall be dissolved ( luthēsetai ).

Future passive of luō , to loosen, singular because stoicheia is neuter plural.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:10 - With fervent heat With fervent heat ( kausoumena ). Present passive participle of kausoō , late verb (from kausos , usually medical term for fever) and nearly always...

With fervent heat ( kausoumena ).

Present passive participle of kausoō , late verb (from kausos , usually medical term for fever) and nearly always employed for fever temperature. Mayor suggests a conflagration from internal heat. Bigg thinks it merely a vernacular (Doric) future for kausomena (from kaiō , to burn).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:10 - Shall be burned up Shall be burned up ( katakaēsetai ). Repeated in 2Pe 3:12. Second future passive of the compound verb katakaiō , to burn down (up), according to ...

Shall be burned up ( katakaēsetai ).

Repeated in 2Pe 3:12. Second future passive of the compound verb katakaiō , to burn down (up), according to A L. But Aleph B K P read heurethēsetai (future passive of heuriskō , to find) "shall be found."There are various other readings here. The text seems corrupt.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:11 - To be dissolved To be dissolved ( luomenōn ). Present passive participle (genitive absolute with toutōn pantōn , these things all) of luō , either the futuri...

To be dissolved ( luomenōn ).

Present passive participle (genitive absolute with toutōn pantōn , these things all) of luō , either the futuristic present or the process of dissolution presented.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:11 - What manner of persons What manner of persons ( potapous ). Late qualitative interrogative pronoun for the older podapos as in Mat 8:27, accusative case with dei huparche...

What manner of persons ( potapous ).

Late qualitative interrogative pronoun for the older podapos as in Mat 8:27, accusative case with dei huparchein agreeing with humās (you). See 2Pe 1:8 for huparchō .

Robertson: 2Pe 3:11 - In all holy living and godliness In all holy living and godliness ( en hagiais anastrophais kai eusebeiais ). "In holy behaviours and pieties"(Alford). Plural of neither word elsewhe...

In all holy living and godliness ( en hagiais anastrophais kai eusebeiais ).

"In holy behaviours and pieties"(Alford). Plural of neither word elsewhere in N.T., but a practical plural in pāsa anastrophē in 1Pe 1:15.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:12 - Looking for Looking for ( prosdokōntas ). Present active participle of prosdokaō (Mat 11:3) agreeing in case (accusative plural) with humās .

Looking for ( prosdokōntas ).

Present active participle of prosdokaō (Mat 11:3) agreeing in case (accusative plural) with humās .

Robertson: 2Pe 3:12 - Earnestly desiring Earnestly desiring ( speudontas ). Present active participle, accusative also, of speudō , old verb, to hasten (like our speed) as in Luk 2:16, but...

Earnestly desiring ( speudontas ).

Present active participle, accusative also, of speudō , old verb, to hasten (like our speed) as in Luk 2:16, but it is sometimes transitive as here either (preferably so) to "hasten on the parousia"by holy living (cf. 1Pe 2:12), with which idea compare Mat 6:10; Act 3:19., or to desire earnestly (Isa 16:5).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:12 - Being on fire Being on fire ( puroumenoi ). Present passive participle of puroō , old verb (from pur), same idea as in 2Pe 3:10.

Being on fire ( puroumenoi ).

Present passive participle of puroō , old verb (from pur), same idea as in 2Pe 3:10.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:12 - Shall melt Shall melt ( tēketai ). Futuristic present passive indicative of tēkō , old verb, to make liquid, here only in N.T. Hort suggests tēxetai (...

Shall melt ( tēketai ).

Futuristic present passive indicative of tēkō , old verb, to make liquid, here only in N.T. Hort suggests tēxetai (future middle), though Isa 34:4 has takēsontai (second future passive). The repetitions here make "an effective refrain"(Mayor).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:13 - Promise Promise ( epaggelma ). As in 2Pe 1:4. The reference is to Isa 65:17.; Isa 66:22. See also Rev 21:1. For kainos (new) see note on Mat 26:29. For the...

Promise ( epaggelma ).

As in 2Pe 1:4. The reference is to Isa 65:17.; Isa 66:22. See also Rev 21:1. For kainos (new) see note on Mat 26:29. For the expectant attitude in prosdokōmen (we look for) repeated from 2Pe 3:12 and again in 2Pe 3:14, see apekdechometha (we eagerly look for) in Phi 3:20.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:13 - Wherein Wherein ( en hois ). The new heavens and earth.

Wherein ( en hois ).

The new heavens and earth.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:13 - Dwelleth Dwelleth ( katoikei ). Has its home (oikos ). Certainly "righteousness"(dikaiosunē ) is not at home in this present world either in individuals, ...

Dwelleth ( katoikei ).

Has its home (oikos ). Certainly "righteousness"(dikaiosunē ) is not at home in this present world either in individuals, families, or nations.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:14 - Wherefore Wherefore ( dio ). As in 2Pe 1:10, 2Pe 1:12.

Wherefore ( dio ).

As in 2Pe 1:10, 2Pe 1:12.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:14 - Give diligence Give diligence ( spoudasate ). As in 2Pe 1:10.

Give diligence ( spoudasate ).

As in 2Pe 1:10.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:14 - That ye may be found That ye may be found ( heurethēnai ). First aorist passive infinitive (cf. heurethēsetai in 2Pe 3:10). For this use of heuriskō about the e...

That ye may be found ( heurethēnai ).

First aorist passive infinitive (cf. heurethēsetai in 2Pe 3:10). For this use of heuriskō about the end see 2Co 5:3; Phi 3:9; 1Pe 1:7.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:14 - Without spot and blameless Without spot and blameless ( aspiloi kai amōmētoi ). Predicate nominative after heurethēnai . See 2Pe 2:13 for position words spiloi kai mōmo...

Without spot and blameless ( aspiloi kai amōmētoi ).

Predicate nominative after heurethēnai . See 2Pe 2:13 for position words spiloi kai mōmoi and 1Pe 1:19 for amōmos (so Jud 1:24) kai aspilos (so Jam 1:27). Amōmētos (old verbal of mōmaomai ) only here in N.T. save some MSS. in Phi 2:15.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:15 - In his sight In his sight ( autōi ). Ethical dative. Referring to Christ.

In his sight ( autōi ).

Ethical dative. Referring to Christ.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:15 - Is salvation Is salvation ( sōtērian ). Predicate accusative after hēgeisthe in apposition with makrothumian (long-suffering), an opportunity for repent...

Is salvation ( sōtērian ).

Predicate accusative after hēgeisthe in apposition with makrothumian (long-suffering), an opportunity for repentance (cf. 1Pe 3:20). The Lord here is Christ.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:15 - Our beloved brother Paul Our beloved brother Paul ( ho agapētos adelphos Paulos ). Paul applies the verbal agapētos (beloved) to Epaphras (Col 1:7), Onesimus (Col 4:9; ...

Our beloved brother Paul ( ho agapētos adelphos Paulos ).

Paul applies the verbal agapētos (beloved) to Epaphras (Col 1:7), Onesimus (Col 4:9; Phm 1:16), to Tychicus (Col 4:7; Eph 6:21), and to four brethren in Rom 16 (Epainetus Rom 16:5, Ampliatus Rom 16:8, Stachys Rom 16:9, Persis Rom 16:12). It is not surprising for Peter to use it of Paul in view of Gal 2:9., in spite of Gal 2:11-14.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:15 - Given to him Given to him ( dotheisan autōi ). First aorist passive participle of didōmi with dative case. Peter claimed wisdom for himself, but recognises ...

Given to him ( dotheisan autōi ).

First aorist passive participle of didōmi with dative case. Peter claimed wisdom for himself, but recognises that Paul had the gift also. His language here may have caution in it as well as commendation. "St. Peter speaks of him with affection and respect, yet maintains the right to criticise"(Bigg).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:16 - As also in all his epistles As also in all his epistles ( hōs kai en pasais epistolais ). We do not know to how many Peter here refers. There is no difficulty in supposing tha...

As also in all his epistles ( hōs kai en pasais epistolais ).

We do not know to how many Peter here refers. There is no difficulty in supposing that Peter "received every one of St. Paul’ s Epistles within a month or two of its publication"(Bigg). And yet Peter does not here assert the formation of a canon of Paul’ s Epistles.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:16 - Speaking in them of these things Speaking in them of these things ( lalōn en autais peri toutōn ). Present active participle of laleō . That is to say, Paul also wrote about th...

Speaking in them of these things ( lalōn en autais peri toutōn ).

Present active participle of laleō . That is to say, Paul also wrote about the second coming of Christ, as is obviously true.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:16 - Hard to be understood Hard to be understood ( dusnoēta ). Late verbal from dus and noeō (in Aristotle, Lucian, Diog. Laert.), here only in N.T. We know that the Th...

Hard to be understood ( dusnoēta ).

Late verbal from dus and noeoÌ„ (in Aristotle, Lucian, Diog. Laert.), here only in N.T. We know that the Thessalonians persisted in misrepresenting Paul on this very subject of the second coming as Hymenaeus and Philetus did about the resurrection (2Ti 2:17) and Spitta holds that Paul’ s teaching about grace was twisted to mean moral laxity like Gal 3:10; Rom 3:20, Rom 3:28; Rom 5:20 (with which cf. Rom 6:1 as a case in point), etc. Peter does not say that he himself did not understand Paul on the subject of faith and freedom.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:16 - Unlearned Unlearned ( amatheis ). Old word (alpha privative and manthanō to learn), ignorant, here only in N.T.

Unlearned ( amatheis ).

Old word (alpha privative and manthanō to learn), ignorant, here only in N.T.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:16 - Unsteadfast Unsteadfast ( astēriktoi ). See note on 2Pe 2:14.

Unsteadfast ( astēriktoi ).

See note on 2Pe 2:14.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:16 - Wrest Wrest ( streblousin ). Present active indicative of strebloō , old verb (from streblos twisted, strephō , to turn), here only in N.T.

Wrest ( streblousin ).

Present active indicative of strebloō , old verb (from streblos twisted, strephō , to turn), here only in N.T.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:16 - The other scriptures The other scriptures ( tas loipas graphas ). There is no doubt that the apostles claimed to speak by the help of the Holy Spirit (1Th 5:27; Col 4:16)...

The other scriptures ( tas loipas graphas ).

There is no doubt that the apostles claimed to speak by the help of the Holy Spirit (1Th 5:27; Col 4:16) just as the prophets of old did (2Pe 1:20.). Note loipas (rest) here rather than allas (other). Peter thus puts Paul’ s Epistles on the same plane with the O.T., which was also misused (Matt 5:21-44; Mat 15:3-6; Mat 19:3-10).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:17 - Knowing these things beforehand Knowing these things beforehand ( proginōskontes ). Present active participle of proginōskō as in 1Pe 1:20. Cf. prōton ginōskō (2Pe 1...

Knowing these things beforehand ( proginōskontes ).

Present active participle of proginōskō as in 1Pe 1:20. Cf. prōton ginōskō (2Pe 1:20; 2Pe 3:1). Hence they are without excuse for misunderstanding Peter or Paul on this subject.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:17 - Beware Beware ( phulassesthe ). Present middle imperative of phulassō , common verb, to guard.

Beware ( phulassesthe ).

Present middle imperative of phulassō , common verb, to guard.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:17 - Lest Lest ( hina mē ). Negative purpose, "that not."

Lest ( hina mē ).

Negative purpose, "that not."

Robertson: 2Pe 3:17 - Being carried away Being carried away ( sunapachthentes ). First aorist passive participle of sunapagō , old verb double compound, to carry away together with, in N.T...

Being carried away ( sunapachthentes ).

First aorist passive participle of sunapagō , old verb double compound, to carry away together with, in N.T. only here and Gal 2:13.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:17 - With the error With the error ( tēi planēi ). Instrumental case, "by the error"(the wandering).

With the error ( tēi planēi ).

Instrumental case, "by the error"(the wandering).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:17 - Of the wicked Of the wicked ( tōn athesmōn ). See note on 2Pe 2:7.

Of the wicked ( tōn athesmōn ).

See note on 2Pe 2:7.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:17 - Ye fall from Ye fall from ( ekpesēte ). Second aorist active subjunctive with hina mē of ekpiptō , old verb, to fall out of, with the ablative here (stē...

Ye fall from ( ekpesēte ).

Second aorist active subjunctive with hina mē of ekpiptō , old verb, to fall out of, with the ablative here (stērigmou , steadfastness, late word from stērizō , here alone in N.T.) as in Gal 5:4 (tēs charitos exepesate , ye fell out of grace).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:18 - But grow But grow ( auxanete de ). Present active imperative of auxanō , in contrast with such a fate pictured in 2Pe 3:17, "but keep on growing."

But grow ( auxanete de ).

Present active imperative of auxanō , in contrast with such a fate pictured in 2Pe 3:17, "but keep on growing."

Robertson: 2Pe 3:18 - In the grace and knowledge In the grace and knowledge ( en chariti kai gnōsei ). Locative case with en . Grow in both. Keep it up. See note on 2Pe 1:1 for the idiomatic use o...

In the grace and knowledge ( en chariti kai gnōsei ).

Locative case with en . Grow in both. Keep it up. See note on 2Pe 1:1 for the idiomatic use of the single article (tou ) here, "of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ."

Robertson: 2Pe 3:18 - To him To him ( autōi ). To Christ.

To him ( autōi ).

To Christ.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:18 - For ever For ever ( eis hēmeran aiōnos ). "Unto the day of eternity."So Sirach 18:9f. One of the various ways of expressing eternity by the use of aiōn ...

For ever ( eis hēmeran aiōnos ).

"Unto the day of eternity."So Sirach 18:9f. One of the various ways of expressing eternity by the use of aiōn . So eis ton aiōna in Joh 6:5; Joh 12:34.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:1 - Beloved Beloved Occurring four times in this chapter.

Beloved

Occurring four times in this chapter.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:1 - Second - I write Second - I write An incidental testimony to the authorship of the second epistle.

Second - I write

An incidental testimony to the authorship of the second epistle.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:1 - Pure minds Pure minds ( εἰλικÏινῆ διαÌνοιαν ) The latter word is singular, not plural. Hence, as Rev., mind. The word rendered pure...

Pure minds ( εἰλικÏινῆ διαÌνοιαν )

The latter word is singular, not plural. Hence, as Rev., mind. The word rendered pure is often explained tested by the sunlight; but this is very doubtful, since εἱÌλη , to which this meaning is traced, means the heat, and not the light of the sun. Others derive it from the root of the verb εἱλιÌσσω , to roll, and explain it as that which is separated or sifted by rolling, as in a sieve. In favor of this etymology is its association in classical Greek with different words meaning unmixed. The word occurs only here and Phi 1:10. The kindred noun εἰλικÏιÌνεια , sincerity, is found 1Co 5:8; 2Co 1:12; 2Co 2:17. Rev., here, sincere.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:1 - Mind Mind ( διαÌνοιαν ) Compare 1Pe 1:13; and see on Mar 12:30.

Mind ( διαÌνοιαν )

Compare 1Pe 1:13; and see on Mar 12:30.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:3 - Scoffers walking Scoffers walking ( ἐμπαῖκται ποÏευοÌμενοι ) This is the reading followed by A. V. But the later texts have added ἐμÏ...

Scoffers walking ( ἐμπαῖκται ποÏευοÌμενοι )

This is the reading followed by A. V. But the later texts have added ἐμπαιγμονῇ , in mockery, occurring only here, though a kindred word for mockings (ἐμπαιγμῶν ) is found Heb 11:36. This addition gives a play upon the words; and so Rev., " Mockers shall come with mockery, walking," etc.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:4 - From the beginning of the creation From the beginning of the creation ( ἀπ ' ἀÏχῆς κτιÌσεως ) Not a common phrase. It occurs only Mar 10:6; Mar 13:19; Rev 3:14...

From the beginning of the creation ( ἀπ ' ἀÏχῆς κτιÌσεως )

Not a common phrase. It occurs only Mar 10:6; Mar 13:19; Rev 3:14.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:4 - Fell asleep Fell asleep ( ἐκοιμηÌθησαν ) A literal and correct translation of the word, which occurs frequently in the New Testament, but only ...

Fell asleep ( ἐκοιμηÌθησαν )

A literal and correct translation of the word, which occurs frequently in the New Testament, but only here in Peter. Some have supposed that the peculiarly Christian sense of the word is emphasized ironically by these mockers. It is used, however, in classical Greek to denote death. The difference between the pagan and the Christian usage lies in the fact that, in the latter, it was defined by the hope of the resurrection, and therefore was used literally of a sleep, which, though long, was to have an awaking. See on Act 7:60.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:5 - This they willingly are ignorant of This they willingly are ignorant of ( λανθαÌνει αὐτους τοῦτο θεÌλοντας ) Lit., this escapes them of their own w...

This they willingly are ignorant of ( λανθαÌνει αὐτους τοῦτο θεÌλοντας )

Lit., this escapes them of their own will. Rev., this they wilfully forget.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:5 - The heavens were The heavens were But the Greek has no article. Render, there were heavens. So, too, not the earth, but an earth, as Rev.

The heavens were

But the Greek has no article. Render, there were heavens. So, too, not the earth, but an earth, as Rev.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:5 - Standing Standing ( συνεστῶσα ) Incorrect; for the word is, literally, standing together; i.e., compacted or formed. Compare Col 1:17, c...

Standing ( συνεστῶσα )

Incorrect; for the word is, literally, standing together; i.e., compacted or formed. Compare Col 1:17, consist. Rev., compacted.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:5 - Out of the water Out of the water Again no article. Render out of water; denoting not the position of the earth, but the material or mediating element in th...

Out of the water

Again no article. Render out of water; denoting not the position of the earth, but the material or mediating element in the creation; the waters being gathered together in one place, and the dry land appearing. Or, possibly, with reference to the original liquid condition of the earth - without form and void.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:5 - In the water In the water ( δὶ Ï…Ì”Ìδατος ) Omit the article. Î”Î¹Î±Ì has its usual sense here, not as Rev., amidst, but by means of. Bengel: ...

In the water ( δὶ Ï…Ì”Ìδατος )

Omit the article. Î”Î¹Î±Ì has its usual sense here, not as Rev., amidst, but by means of. Bengel: " The water served that the earth should consist." Expositors are much divided as to the meaning. This is the view of Huther, Salmond, and, substantially, Alford.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:6 - The world that then was The world that then was ( ὁ τοÌτε κοÌσμος ) Lit., the then world. The word for world is literally order, and denotes the per...

The world that then was ( ὁ τοÌτε κοÌσμος )

Lit., the then world. The word for world is literally order, and denotes the perfect system of the material universe.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:6 - Being overflowed Being overflowed ( κατακλυσθεὶς ) Only here in New Testament. Cataclysm is derived from it.

Being overflowed ( κατακλυσθεὶς )

Only here in New Testament. Cataclysm is derived from it.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:7 - The heavens - which now are The heavens - which now are ( οἱ νῦν οὐÏανοὶ ) A construction similar to the then world (2Pe 3:6). The now heavens, or th...

The heavens - which now are ( οἱ νῦν οὐÏανοὶ )

A construction similar to the then world (2Pe 3:6). The now heavens, or the present heavens.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:7 - Kept in store Kept in store ( τεθησαυÏισμεÌνοι ) Rev., stored up. Lit., treasured up. The same word which is used in Luk 12:21, layeth up ...

Kept in store ( τεθησαυÏισμεÌνοι )

Rev., stored up. Lit., treasured up. The same word which is used in Luk 12:21, layeth up treasure. Sometimes with the kindred noun θησαυÏοὺς , treasures, as Mat 6:19; lit., treasure treasures.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:7 - Unto fire Unto fire Some construe this with treasured up; as Rev., stored up for fire; others with reserved, as A. V.; others again give the sense s...

Unto fire

Some construe this with treasured up; as Rev., stored up for fire; others with reserved, as A. V.; others again give the sense stored with fire, indicating that the agent for the final destruction is already prepared.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:9 - Is not slack Is not slack ( οὐ βÏαδυÌνει ) Only here and 1Ti 3:15. The word is literally to delay or loiter. So Septuagint, Genesis 43:10, " ...

Is not slack ( οὐ βÏαδυÌνει )

Only here and 1Ti 3:15. The word is literally to delay or loiter. So Septuagint, Genesis 43:10, " except we had lingered. " Alford's rendering, is not tardy, would be an improvement. The word implies, besides delay, the idea of lateness with reference to an appointed time.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:9 - Come Come ( χωÏῆσαι ) Move on, or advance to.

Come ( χωÏῆσαι )

Move on, or advance to.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:10 - The day of the Lord The day of the Lord Compare the same phrase in Peter's sermon, Act 2:20. It occurs only in these two passages and 1Th 5:2. See 1Co 1:8; 2Co 1:14.

The day of the Lord

Compare the same phrase in Peter's sermon, Act 2:20. It occurs only in these two passages and 1Th 5:2. See 1Co 1:8; 2Co 1:14.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:10 - As a thief As a thief Omit in the night. Compare Mat 24:43; 1Th 5:2, 1Th 5:4; Rev 3:3; Rev 16:15.

As a thief

Omit in the night. Compare Mat 24:43; 1Th 5:2, 1Th 5:4; Rev 3:3; Rev 16:15.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:10 - With a great noise With a great noise ( Ï̔οιζηδὸν ) An adverb peculiar to Peter, and occurring only here. It is a word in which the sound suggests the se...

With a great noise ( Ï̔οιζηδὸν )

An adverb peculiar to Peter, and occurring only here. It is a word in which the sound suggests the sense (rhoizedon ) ; and the kindred noun, Ï̔οῖζος , is used in classical Greek of the whistling of an arrow; the sound of a shepherd's pipe; the rush of wings; the plash of water; the hissing of a serpent; and the sound of filing.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:10 - The elements The elements ( στοιχεῖα ) Derived from στοῖχος , a row, and meaning originally one of a row or series; hence a component...

The elements ( στοιχεῖα )

Derived from στοῖχος , a row, and meaning originally one of a row or series; hence a component or element. The name for the letters of the alphabet, as being set in rows. Applied to the four elements - fire, air, earth, water; and in later times to the planets and signs of the zodiac. It is used in all ethical sense in other passages; as in Gal 4:3, " elements or rudiments of the world." Also of elementary teaching, such as the law, which was fitted for an earlier stage in the world's history; and of the first principles of religious knowledge among men. In Col 2:8, of formal ordinances. Compare Heb 5:12. The kindred verb στοιχεÌω , to walk, carries the idea of keeping in line, according to the radical sense. Thus, walk according to rule (Gal 6:16); walkest orderly (Act 21:24). So, too, the compound συστοιχεÌω , only in Gal 4:25, answereth to, lit., belongs to the same row or column with. The Greek grammarians called the categories of letters arranged according to the organs of speech συστοιχιÌαι . Here the word is of course used in a physical sense, meaning the parts of which this system of things is composed. Some take it as meaning the heavenly bodies, but the term is too late and technical in that sense. Compare Mat 24:29, the powers of the heaven.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:10 - Shall melt Shall melt ( λυθηÌσονται ) More literally, as Rev., shall be dissolved.

Shall melt ( λυθηÌσονται )

More literally, as Rev., shall be dissolved.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:10 - With fervent heat With fervent heat ( καυσουÌμενα ) Lit., being scorched up.

With fervent heat ( καυσουÌμενα )

Lit., being scorched up.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:11 - To be dissolved To be dissolved ( λυομεÌνων ) So Rev. But the participle is present; and the idea is rather, are in process of dissolution. The world ...

To be dissolved ( λυομεÌνων )

So Rev. But the participle is present; and the idea is rather, are in process of dissolution. The world and all therein is essentially transitory.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:11 - Ought ye to be Ought ye to be ( ὑπαÌÏχειν ) See on 2Pe 1:8.

Ought ye to be ( ὑπαÌÏχειν )

See on 2Pe 1:8.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:11 - Conversation Conversation ( ἀναστÏοφαῖς ) See on 1Pe 1:15. Rev., living .

Conversation ( ἀναστÏοφαῖς )

See on 1Pe 1:15. Rev., living .

Vincent: 2Pe 3:11 - Godliness Godliness ( εὐσεβειÌαις ) See on 2Pe 1:3. Both words are plural; holy livings and godlinesses.

Godliness ( εὐσεβειÌαις )

See on 2Pe 1:3. Both words are plural; holy livings and godlinesses.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:12 - Looking for Looking for ( Ï€Ïοσδοκῶντας ) The same verb as in Luk 1:21, of waiting for Zacharias. Cornelius waited (Act 10:24); the cripple ...

Looking for ( Ï€Ïοσδοκῶντας )

The same verb as in Luk 1:21, of waiting for Zacharias. Cornelius waited (Act 10:24); the cripple expecting to receive something (Act 3:5).

Vincent: 2Pe 3:12 - Hasting unto Hasting unto ( σπευÌδοντας ) Wrong. Rev., earnestly desiring, for which there is authority. I am inclined to adopt, with Alford, Hut...

Hasting unto ( σπευÌδοντας )

Wrong. Rev., earnestly desiring, for which there is authority. I am inclined to adopt, with Alford, Huther, Salmond, and Trench, the transitive meaning, hastening on; i.e., " causing the day of the Lord to come more quickly by helping to fulfil those conditions without which it cannot come; that day being no day inexorably fixed, but one the arrival of which it is free to the church to hasten on by faith and by prayer" (Trench, on " The Authorized Version of the New Testament" ). See Mat 24:14 : the gospel shall be preached in the whole world, " and then shall the end come." Compare the words of Peter, Act 3:19 : " Repent and be converted," etc., " that so there may come seasons of refreshing" (so Rev., rightly); and the prayer," Thy kingdom come." Salmond quotes a rabbinical saying, " If thou keepest this precept thou hastenest the day of Messiah." This meaning is given in margin of Rev.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:12 - Wherein Wherein ( δι ' ἣν ) Wrong. Rev., correctly, by reason of which .

Wherein ( δι ' ἣν )

Wrong. Rev., correctly, by reason of which .

Vincent: 2Pe 3:12 - Melt Melt ( τηÌκεται ) Literal. Stronger than the word in 2Pe 3:10, 2Pe 3:11. Not only the resolving, but the wasting away of nature. Only...

Melt ( τηÌκεται )

Literal. Stronger than the word in 2Pe 3:10, 2Pe 3:11. Not only the resolving, but the wasting away of nature. Only here in New Testament.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:13 - We look for We look for The same verb as in 2Pe 3:12. It occurs three times in 2Pe 3:12-14.

We look for

The same verb as in 2Pe 3:12. It occurs three times in 2Pe 3:12-14.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:13 - New New ( καινοὺς ) See on Mat 26:29.

New ( καινοὺς )

See on Mat 26:29.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:14 - Without spot and blameless Without spot and blameless See on 2Pe 2:13.

Without spot and blameless

See on 2Pe 2:13.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:16 - Hard to be understood Hard to be understood ( δυσνοÌητα ) Only here in New Testament.

Hard to be understood ( δυσνοÌητα )

Only here in New Testament.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:16 - They that are unlearned and unstable They that are unlearned and unstable ( οἱ ἀμαθεῖς καὶ ἀστηÌÏικτοι ) Both words are peculiar to Peter. On the lat...

They that are unlearned and unstable ( οἱ ἀμαθεῖς καὶ ἀστηÌÏικτοι )

Both words are peculiar to Peter. On the latter, see on 2Pe 2:14.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:16 - Wrest Wrest ( στÏεβλοῦσιν ) Only here in New Testament. Meaning, originally, to hoist with a windlass or screw; to twist or dislocate th...

Wrest ( στÏεβλοῦσιν )

Only here in New Testament. Meaning, originally, to hoist with a windlass or screw; to twist or dislocate the limbs on a rack. It is a singularly graphic word applied to the perversion of scripture.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:16 - The other scriptures The other scriptures ( τὰς λοιπὰς γÏαφὰς ) Showing that Paul's epistles were ranked as scripture. See on Mar 12:10.

The other scriptures ( τὰς λοιπὰς γÏαφὰς )

Showing that Paul's epistles were ranked as scripture. See on Mar 12:10.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:17 - Being led away Being led away ( συναπαχθεÌντες ) Better, Rev., carried away. It is the word used by Paul of Barnabas, when he dissembled with Pe...

Being led away ( συναπαχθεÌντες )

Better, Rev., carried away. It is the word used by Paul of Barnabas, when he dissembled with Peter at Antioch. " Barnabas was carried away with their dissimulation" (Gal 2:13).

Vincent: 2Pe 3:17 - Of the wicked Of the wicked ( ἀθεÌσμων ) See on 2Pe 2:7.

Of the wicked ( ἀθεÌσμων )

See on 2Pe 2:7.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:17 - Fall from Fall from ( ἐκπεÌσητε ) Lit., " fall out of ." Compare Gal 5:4.

Fall from ( ἐκπεÌσητε )

Lit., " fall out of ." Compare Gal 5:4.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:17 - Steadfastness Steadfastness ( στηÏιγμοῦ ) Only here in New Testament. See on 2Pe 1:12.

Steadfastness ( στηÏιγμοῦ )

Only here in New Testament. See on 2Pe 1:12.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:2-3 - Be the more mindful thereof, because ye know scoffers will come first Before the Lord comes.

Before the Lord comes.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:2-3 - Walking after their own evil desires Here is the origin of the error, the root of libertinism. Do we not see this eminently fulfilled?

Here is the origin of the error, the root of libertinism. Do we not see this eminently fulfilled?

Wesley: 2Pe 3:4 - Saying, Where is the promise of his coming To judgment (They do not even deign to name him.) We see no sign of any such thing.

To judgment (They do not even deign to name him.) We see no sign of any such thing.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:4 - For ever since the fathers Our first ancestors. Fell asleep, all things - Heaven. water, earth.

Our first ancestors. Fell asleep, all things - Heaven. water, earth.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:4 - Continue as they were from the beginning of the creation Without any such material change as might make us believe they will ever end.

Without any such material change as might make us believe they will ever end.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:5 - For this they are willingly ignorant of They do not care to know or consider.

They do not care to know or consider.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:5 - That by the almighty word of God Which bounds the duration of all things, so that it cannot be either longer or shorter.

Which bounds the duration of all things, so that it cannot be either longer or shorter.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:5 - Of old Before the flood. The aerial heavens were, and the earth - Not as it is now, but standing out of the water and in the water - Perhaps the interior glo...

Before the flood. The aerial heavens were, and the earth - Not as it is now, but standing out of the water and in the water - Perhaps the interior globe of earth was fixed in the midst of the great deep, the abyss of water; the shell or exterior globe standing out of the water, covering the great deep. This, or some other great and manifest difference between the original and present constitution of the terraqueous globe, seems then to have been so generally known, that St. Peter charges their ignorance of it totally upon their wilfulness.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:6 - Through which Heaven and earth, the windows of heaven being opened, and the fountains of the great deep broken up.

Heaven and earth, the windows of heaven being opened, and the fountains of the great deep broken up.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:6 - The world that then was The whole antediluvian race. Being overflowed with water, perished - And the heavens and earth themselves, though they did not perish, yet underwent a...

The whole antediluvian race. Being overflowed with water, perished - And the heavens and earth themselves, though they did not perish, yet underwent a great change. So little ground have these scoffers for saying that all things continue as they were from the creation.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:7 - But the heavens and the earth, that are now Since the flood. Are reserved unto fire at the day wherein God will judge the world, and punish the ungodly with everlasting destruction.

Since the flood. Are reserved unto fire at the day wherein God will judge the world, and punish the ungodly with everlasting destruction.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:8 - But be not ye ignorant Whatever they are.

Whatever they are.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:8 - Of this one thing Which casts much light on the point in hand. That one day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day - Moses had said, Psa ...

Which casts much light on the point in hand. That one day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day - Moses had said, Psa 90:4, "A thousand years in thy sight are as one day;" which St. Peter applies with regard to the last day, so as to denote both his eternity, whereby he exceeds all measure of time in his essence and in his operation; his knowledge, to which all things past or to come are present every moment; his power, which needs no long delay, in order to bring its work to perfection; and his longsuffering, which excludes all impatience of expectation, and desire of making haste.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:8 - One day is with the Lord as a thousand years That is, in one day, in one moment he can do the work of a thousand years. Therefore he "is not slow:" he is always equally ready to fulfil his promis...

That is, in one day, in one moment he can do the work of a thousand years. Therefore he "is not slow:" he is always equally ready to fulfil his promise.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:8 - And a thousand years are as one day That is, no delay is long to God. A thousand years are as one day to the eternal God. Therefore "he is longsuffering:" he gives us space for repentanc...

That is, no delay is long to God. A thousand years are as one day to the eternal God. Therefore "he is longsuffering:" he gives us space for repentance, without any inconvenience to himself. In a word, with God time passes neither slower nor swifter than is suitable to him and his economy; nor can there be any reason why it should be necessary for him either to delay or hasten the end of all things. How can we comprehend this? If we could comprehend it, St. Peter needed not to have added, with the Lord.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:9 - The Lord is not slow As if the time fixed for it were past.

As if the time fixed for it were past.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:9 - Concerning his promise Which shall surely be fulfilled in its season.

Which shall surely be fulfilled in its season.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:9 - But is longsuffering towards us Children of men. Not willing that any soul, which he hath made should perish.

Children of men. Not willing that any soul, which he hath made should perish.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:10 - But the day of the Lord will come as a thief Suddenly, unexpectedly.

Suddenly, unexpectedly.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:10 - In which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise Surprisingly expressed by the very sound of the original word.

Surprisingly expressed by the very sound of the original word.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:10 - The elements shall melt with fervent heat The elements seem to mean, the sun, moon, and stars; not the four, commonly so called; for air and water cannot melt, and the earth is mentioned immed...

The elements seem to mean, the sun, moon, and stars; not the four, commonly so called; for air and water cannot melt, and the earth is mentioned immediately after.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:10 - The earth and all the works Whether of nature or art.

Whether of nature or art.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:10 - That are therein shall be burned up And has not God already abundantly provided for this? 1. By the stores of subterranean fire which are so frequently bursting out at Aetna, Vesuvius, H...

And has not God already abundantly provided for this? 1. By the stores of subterranean fire which are so frequently bursting out at Aetna, Vesuvius, Hecla, and many other burning mountains. 2. By the ethereal (vulgarly called electrical) fire, diffused through the whole globe; which, if the secret chain that now binds it up were loosed, would immediately dissolve the whole frame of nature. 3. By comets, one of which, if it touch the earth in its course toward the sun, must needs strike it into that abyss of fire; if in its return from the sun, when it is heated, as a great man computes, two thousand times hotter than a red - hot cannonball, it must destroy all vegetables and animals long before their contact, and soon after burn it up.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:11 - Seeing then that all these things are dissolved To the eye of faith it appears as done already.

To the eye of faith it appears as done already.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:11 - All these things Mentioned before; all that are included in that scriptural expression, "the heavens and the earth;" that is, the universe. On the fourth day God made ...

Mentioned before; all that are included in that scriptural expression, "the heavens and the earth;" that is, the universe. On the fourth day God made the stars, Gen 1:16, which will be dissolved together with the earth. They are deceived, therefore, who restrain either the history of the creation, or this description of the destruction, of the world to the earth and lower heavens; imagining the stars to be more ancient than the earth, and to survive it. Both the dissolution and renovation are ascribed, not to the one heaven which surrounds the earth, but to the heavens in general, 2Pe 3:10, 2Pe 3:13, without any restriction or limitation.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:11 - What persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation With men.

With men.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:11 - And godliness Toward your Creator.

Toward your Creator.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:12 - Hastening on As it were by your earnest desires and fervent prayers.

As it were by your earnest desires and fervent prayers.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:12 - The coming of the day of God Many myriads of days he grants to men: one, the last, is the day of God himself.

Many myriads of days he grants to men: one, the last, is the day of God himself.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:13 - We look for new heavens and a new earth Raised as it were out of the ashes of the old; we look for an entire new state of things.

Raised as it were out of the ashes of the old; we look for an entire new state of things.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:13 - Wherein dwelleth righteousness Only righteous spirits. How great a mystery!

Only righteous spirits. How great a mystery!

Wesley: 2Pe 3:14 - Labour that whenever he cometh ye may be found in peace May meet him without terror, being sprinkled with his blood, and sanctified by his Spirit, so as to be without spot and blameless. Isa 65:17; Isa 66:2...

May meet him without terror, being sprinkled with his blood, and sanctified by his Spirit, so as to be without spot and blameless. Isa 65:17; Isa 66:22.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:15 - And account the longsuffering of the Lord salvation Not only designed to lead men to repentance, but actually conducing thereto: a precious means of saving many more souls.

Not only designed to lead men to repentance, but actually conducing thereto: a precious means of saving many more souls.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:15 - As our beloved brother Paul also hath written to you This refers not only to the single sentence preceding, but to all that went before. St. Paul had written to the same effect concerning the end of the ...

This refers not only to the single sentence preceding, but to all that went before. St. Paul had written to the same effect concerning the end of the world, in several parts of his epistles, and particularly in his Epistle to the Hebrews. Rom 2:4.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:16 - As also in all his epistles St. Peter wrote this a little before his own and St. Paul's martyrdom. St. Paul therefore had now written all his epistles; and even from this express...

St. Peter wrote this a little before his own and St. Paul's martyrdom. St. Paul therefore had now written all his epistles; and even from this expression we may learn that St. Peter had read them all, perhaps sent to him by St. Paul himself. Nor was he at all disgusted by what St. Paul had written concerning him in the Epistle to the Galatians.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:16 - Speaking of these things Namely, of the coming of our Lord, delayed through his longsuffering, and of the circumstances preceding and accompanying it.

Namely, of the coming of our Lord, delayed through his longsuffering, and of the circumstances preceding and accompanying it.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:16 - Which things the unlearned They who are not taught of God.

They who are not taught of God.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:16 - And the unstable Wavering, double - minded, unsettled men.

Wavering, double - minded, unsettled men.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:16 - Wrest As though Christ would not come.

As though Christ would not come.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:16 - As they do also the other scriptures Therefore St Paul's writings were now part of the scriptures.

Therefore St Paul's writings were now part of the scriptures.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:16 - To their own destruction But that some use the scriptures ill, is no reason why others should not use them at all.

But that some use the scriptures ill, is no reason why others should not use them at all.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:18 - But grow in grace That is, in every Christian temper. There may be, for a time, grace without growth; as there may be natural life without growth. But such sickly life,...

That is, in every Christian temper. There may be, for a time, grace without growth; as there may be natural life without growth. But such sickly life, of soul or body, will end in death, and every day draw nigher to it. Health is the means of both natural and spiritual growth. If the remaining evil of our fallen nature be not daily mortified, it will, like an evil humour in the body, destroy the whole man. But "if ye through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body," (only so far as we do this,) "ye shall live" the life of faith, holiness, happiness. The end and design of grace being purchased and bestowed on us, is to destroy the image of the earthy, and restore us to that of the heavenly. And so far as it does this, it truly profits us; and also makes way for more of the heavenly gift, that we may at last be filled with all the fulness of God.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:18 - The strength and well being of a Christian depend on what his soul feeds on, as the health of the body depends on whatever we make our daily food. If we feed on what is acc...

being of a Christian depend on what his soul feeds on, as the health of the body depends on whatever we make our daily food. If we feed on what is according to our nature, we grow; if not, we pine away and die. The soul is of the nature of God, and nothing but what is according to his holiness can agree with it. Sin, of every kind, starves the soul, and makes it consume away. Let us not try to invert the order of God in his new creation: we shall only deceive ourselves. It is easy to forsake the will of God, and follow our own; but this will bring leanness into the soul. It is easy to satisfy ourselves without being possessed of the holiness and happiness of the gospel. It is easy to call these frames and feelings, and then to oppose faith to one and Christ to the other. Frames (allowing the expression) are no other than heavenly tempers, "the mind that was in Christ." Feelings are the divine consolations of the Holy Ghost shed abroad in the heart of him that truly believes. And wherever faith is, and wherever Christ is, there are these blessed frames and feelings. If they are not in us, it is a sure sign that though the wilderness became a pool, the pool is become a wilderness again.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:18 - And in the knowledge of Christ That is, in faith, the root of all.

That is, in faith, the root of all.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:18 - To him be the glory to the day of eternity An expression naturally flowing from that sense which the apostle had felt in his soul throughout this whole chapter. Eternity is a day without night,...

An expression naturally flowing from that sense which the apostle had felt in his soul throughout this whole chapter. Eternity is a day without night, without interruption, without end.

JFB: 2Pe 3:1 - 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 ...

"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].

JFB: 2Pe 3:1 - 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.

The Second Epistle, though more general in its address, yet included especially the same persons as the First Epistle was particularly addressed to.

JFB: 2Pe 3:1 - pure Literally, "pure when examined by sunlight"; "sincere." Adulterated with no error. Opposite to "having the understanding darkened." ALFORD explains, T...

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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:1 - 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 (Jud 1:5).

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 (Jud 1:5).

JFB: 2Pe 3:2 - prophets Of the Old Testament.

Of the Old Testament.

JFB: 2Pe 3:2 - 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," R...

The oldest manuscripts and Vulgate read, "And of the commandment of the Lord and Saviour (declared) by YOUR apostles" (so "apostle of the Gentiles," Rom 11:13) --the apostles who live among you in the present time, in contrast to the Old Testament "prophets."

JFB: 2Pe 3:3 - Knowing this first From the word of the apostles.

From the word of the apostles.

JFB: 2Pe 3:3 - shall come Their very scoffing shall confirm the truth of the prediction.

Their very scoffing shall confirm the truth of the prediction.

JFB: 2Pe 3:3 - scoffers The oldest manuscripts and Vulgate add, "(scoffers) in (that is, 'with') scoffing." As Rev 14:2, "harping with harps."

The oldest manuscripts and Vulgate add, "(scoffers) in (that is, 'with') scoffing." As Rev 14:2, "harping with harps."

JFB: 2Pe 3:3 - walking after their own lusts (2Pe 2:10; Jud 1:16, Jud 1:18). Their own pleasure is their sole law, unrestrained by reverence for God.

(2Pe 2:10; Jud 1:16, Jud 1:18). Their own pleasure is their sole law, unrestrained by reverence for God.

JFB: 2Pe 3:4 - -- (Compare Psa 10:11; Psa 73:11.) Presumptuous skepticism and lawless lust, setting nature and its so-called laws above the God of nature and revelation...

(Compare Psa 10:11; Psa 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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:4 - Where Implying that it ought to have taken place before this, if ever it was to take place, but that it never will.

Implying that it ought to have taken place before this, if ever it was to take place, but that it never will.

JFB: 2Pe 3:4 - 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?

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?

JFB: 2Pe 3:4 - his Christ's; the subject of prophecy from the earliest days.

Christ's; the subject of prophecy from the earliest days.

JFB: 2Pe 3:4 - the fathers To whom the promise was made, and who rested all their hopes on it.

To whom the promise was made, and who rested all their hopes on it.

JFB: 2Pe 3:4 - all things In the natural world; skeptics look not beyond this.

In the natural world; skeptics look not beyond this.

JFB: 2Pe 3:4 - 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 ...

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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:5 - -- Refutation of their scoffing from Scripture history.

Refutation of their scoffing from Scripture history.

JFB: 2Pe 3:5 - willingly Wilfully; they do not wish to know. Their ignorance is voluntary.

Wilfully; they do not wish to know. Their ignorance is voluntary.

JFB: 2Pe 3:5 - 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 the...

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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:5 - by the word of God Not by a fortuitous concurrence of atoms [ALFORD].

Not by a fortuitous concurrence of atoms [ALFORD].

JFB: 2Pe 3:5 - 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 O...

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).

JFB: 2Pe 3:5 - 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 ...

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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:5 - 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 tog...

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].

JFB: 2Pe 3:6 - 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 (th...

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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:7 - -- (Compare Job 28:5, end).

(Compare Job 28:5, end).

JFB: 2Pe 3:7 - which are now "the postdiluvian visible world." In contrast to "that then was," 2Pe 3:6.

"the postdiluvian visible world." In contrast to "that then was," 2Pe 3:6.

JFB: 2Pe 3:7 - the same Other oldest manuscripts read, "His" (God's).

Other oldest manuscripts read, "His" (God's).

JFB: 2Pe 3:7 - kept in store Greek, "treasured up."

Greek, "treasured up."

JFB: 2Pe 3:7 - reserved "kept." It is only God's constantly watchful providence which holds together the present state of things till His time for ending it.

"kept." It is only God's constantly watchful providence which holds together the present state of things till His time for ending it.

JFB: 2Pe 3:8 - 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...

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."

JFB: 2Pe 3:8 - this one thing As the consideration of chief importance (Luk 10:42).

As the consideration of chief importance (Luk 10:42).

JFB: 2Pe 3:8 - one day . . . thousand years (Psa 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 ...

(Psa 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."

JFB: 2Pe 3:8 - thousand years as one day No delay which occurs is long to God: as to a man of countless riches, a thousand guineas are as a single penny. God's Å“onologe (eternal-ages measure...

No delay which occurs is long to God: as to a man of countless riches, a thousand guineas are as a single penny. God's Å“onologe (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" (Psa 90:4, "In Thy sight"), silence all man's objections on the ground of his incapability of understanding this [BENGEL].

JFB: 2Pe 3:9 - slack Slow, tardy, late; exceeding the due time, as though that time were already come. Heb 10:37, "will not tarry."

Slow, tardy, late; exceeding the due time, as though that time were already come. Heb 10:37, "will not tarry."

JFB: 2Pe 3:9 - 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).

Which the scoffers cavil at. 2Pe 3:4, "Where is the promise?" It shall be surely fulfilled "according to His promise" (2Pe 3:13).

JFB: 2Pe 3:9 - some The "scoffers."

The "scoffers."

JFB: 2Pe 3:9 - count His promise to be the result of "slackness" (tardiness).

His promise to be the result of "slackness" (tardiness).

JFB: 2Pe 3:9 - long-suffering Waiting until the full number of those appointed to "salvation" (2Pe 3:15) shall be completed.

Waiting until the full number of those appointed to "salvation" (2Pe 3:15) shall be completed.

JFB: 2Pe 3:9 - to us-ward The oldest manuscripts, Vulgate, Syriac, &c., read, "towards YOU."

The oldest manuscripts, Vulgate, Syriac, &c., read, "towards YOU."

JFB: 2Pe 3:9 - 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.

Not desiring that any, yea, even that the scoffers, should perish, which would be the result if He did not give space for repentance.

JFB: 2Pe 3:9 - come Go and be received to repentance: the Greek implies there is room for their being received to repentance (compare Greek, Mar 2:2; Joh 8:37).

Go and be received to repentance: the Greek implies there is room for their being received to repentance (compare Greek, Mar 2:2; Joh 8:37).

JFB: 2Pe 3:10 - -- The certainty, suddenness, and concomitant effects, of the coming of the day of the Lord. FABER argues from this that the millennium, &c., must preced...

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).

JFB: 2Pe 3:10 - will Emphatical. But (in spite of the mockers, and notwithstanding the delay) come and be present the day of the Lord SHALL.

Emphatical. But (in spite of the mockers, and notwithstanding the delay) come and be present the day of the Lord SHALL.

JFB: 2Pe 3:10 - as a thief Peter remembers and repeats his Lord's image (Luk 12:39, Luk 12:41) used in the conversation in which he took a part; so also Paul (1Th 5:2) and John ...

Peter remembers and repeats his Lord's image (Luk 12:39, Luk 12:41) used in the conversation in which he took a part; so also Paul (1Th 5:2) and John (Rev 3:3; Rev 16:15).

JFB: 2Pe 3:10 - the heavens Which the scoffers say' shall "continue" as they are (2Pe 3:4; Mat 24:35; Rev 21:1).

Which the scoffers say' shall "continue" as they are (2Pe 3:4; Mat 24:35; Rev 21:1).

JFB: 2Pe 3:10 - with a great noise With a rushing noise, like that of a whizzing arrow, or the crash of a devouring flame.

With a rushing noise, like that of a whizzing arrow, or the crash of a devouring flame.

JFB: 2Pe 3:10 - 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 "eleme...

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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:10 - melt Be dissolved, as in 2Pe 3:11.

Be dissolved, as in 2Pe 3:11.

JFB: 2Pe 3:10 - the works . . . therein Of nature and of art.

Of nature and of art.

JFB: 2Pe 3:11 - -- Your duty, seeing that this is so, is to be ever eagerly expecting the day of God.

Your duty, seeing that this is so, is to be ever eagerly expecting the day of God.

JFB: 2Pe 3:11 - 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," Gree...

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").

JFB: 2Pe 3:11 - 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...

Greek, "are being (in God's appointment, soon to be fulfilled) dissolved"; the present tense implying the certainty as though it were actually present.

JFB: 2Pe 3:11 - what manner of men Exclamatory. How watchful, prayerful, zealous!

Exclamatory. How watchful, prayerful, zealous!

JFB: 2Pe 3:11 - 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]. Wh...

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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:11 - conversation . . . godliness Greek, plural: behaviors (towards men), godlinesses (or pieties towards God) in their manifold modes of manifestation.

Greek, plural: behaviors (towards men), godlinesses (or pieties towards God) in their manifold modes of manifestation.

JFB: 2Pe 3:12 - 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, urgi...

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" (Rev 22:20).

JFB: 2Pe 3:12 - the coming Greek, "presence" of a person: usually, of the Saviour.

Greek, "presence" of a person: usually, of the Saviour.

JFB: 2Pe 3:12 - the day of God God has given many myriads of days to men: one shall be the great "day of God" Himself.

God has given many myriads of days to men: one shall be the great "day of God" Himself.

JFB: 2Pe 3:12 - wherein Rather as Greek, "on account of (or owing to) which" day.

Rather as Greek, "on account of (or owing to) which" day.

JFB: 2Pe 3:12 - heavens The upper and lower regions of the sky.

The upper and lower regions of the sky.

JFB: 2Pe 3:12 - melt Our igneous rocks show that they were once in a liquid state.

Our igneous rocks show that they were once in a liquid state.

JFB: 2Pe 3:13 - 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...

"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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:13 - his promise (Isa 65:17; Isa 66:22). The "we" is not emphatical as in English Version.

(Isa 65:17; Isa 66:22). The "we" is not emphatical as in English Version.

JFB: 2Pe 3:13 - new heavens New atmospheric heavens surrounding the renovated earth.

New atmospheric heavens surrounding the renovated earth.

JFB: 2Pe 3:13 - righteousness Dwelleth in that coming world as its essential feature, all pollutions having been removed.

Dwelleth in that coming world as its essential feature, all pollutions having been removed.

JFB: 2Pe 3:14 - that ye . . . be found of him "in His sight" [ALFORD], at His coming; plainly implying a personal coming.

"in His sight" [ALFORD], at His coming; plainly implying a personal coming.

JFB: 2Pe 3:14 - 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 wedd...

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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:14 - blameless (1Co 1:8; Phi 1:10; 1Th 3:13; 1Th 5:23).

JFB: 2Pe 3:14 - 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...

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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:15 - 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 Lo...

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).

JFB: 2Pe 3:15 - our beloved brother Paul A beautiful instance of love and humility. Peter praises the very Epistles which contain his condemnation.

A beautiful instance of love and humility. Peter praises the very Epistles which contain his condemnation.

JFB: 2Pe 3:15 - 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 wis...

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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:15 - hath written Greek aorist, "wrote," as a thing wholly past: Paul was by this time either dead, or had ceased to minister to them.

Greek aorist, "wrote," as a thing wholly past: Paul was by this time either dead, or had ceased to minister to them.

JFB: 2Pe 3:15 - 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...

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 (Gal 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; Heb 10:25, Heb 10:37, "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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:16 - also in all his epistles Rom 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" seem...

Rom 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; 1Th 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."

JFB: 2Pe 3:16 - in which Epistles. The oldest manuscripts read the feminine relative (hais); not as Received Text (hois), "in which things."

Epistles. The oldest manuscripts read the feminine relative (hais); not as Received Text (hois), "in which things."

JFB: 2Pe 3:16 - 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 there...

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].

JFB: 2Pe 3:16 - 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 ...

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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:16 - 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 Spiri...

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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:16 - wrest Strain and twist (properly with a hand screw) what is straight in itself (for example, 2Ti 2:18).

Strain and twist (properly with a hand screw) what is straight in itself (for example, 2Ti 2:18).

JFB: 2Pe 3:16 - 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 occu...

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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:16 - unto their own destruction Not through Paul's fault (2Pe 2:1).

Not through Paul's fault (2Pe 2:1).

JFB: 2Pe 3:17 - Ye Warned by the case of those "unlearned and unstable" persons (2Pe 3:16).

Warned by the case of those "unlearned and unstable" persons (2Pe 3:16).

JFB: 2Pe 3:17 - knowing . . . before The event.

The event.

JFB: 2Pe 3:17 - 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.

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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:17 - wicked "lawless," as in 2Pe 2:7.

"lawless," as in 2Pe 2:7.

JFB: 2Pe 3:17 - fall from (grace, Gal 5:4 : the true source of) "steadfastness" or stability in contrast with the "unstable" (2Pe 3:16): "established" (2Pe 1:12): all kindred G...

(grace, Gal 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 Jud 1:20-21.

JFB: 2Pe 3:18 - 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."

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."

JFB: 2Pe 3:18 - 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.

"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.

JFB: 2Pe 3:18 - 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.

Greek, "to the day of eternity": the day that has no end: "the day of the Lord," beginning with the Lord's coming.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:1 - This second epistle This second epistle - In order to guard them against the seductions of false teachers, he calls to their remembrance the doctrine of the ancient pro...

This second epistle - In order to guard them against the seductions of false teachers, he calls to their remembrance the doctrine of the ancient prophets, and the commands or instructions of the apostles, all founded on the same basis

He possibly refers to the prophecies of Enoch, as mentioned by Jude, Jud 1:14, Jud 1:15; of David, Psa 1:1, etc.; and of Daniel, Dan 12:2, relative to the coming of our Lord to judgment: and he brings in the instructions of the apostles of Christ, by which they were directed how to prepare to meet their God.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:3 - Knowing this first Knowing this first - Considering this in an especial manner, that those prophets predicted the coming of false teachers: and their being now in the ...

Knowing this first - Considering this in an especial manner, that those prophets predicted the coming of false teachers: and their being now in the Church proved how clearly they were known to God, and showed the Christians at Pontus the necessity of having no intercourse or connection with them

Clarke: 2Pe 3:3 - There shall come - scoffers There shall come - scoffers - Persons who shall endeavor to turn all religion into ridicule, as this is the most likely way to depreciate truth in t...

There shall come - scoffers - Persons who shall endeavor to turn all religion into ridicule, as this is the most likely way to depreciate truth in the sight of the giddy multitude. The scoffers, having no solid argument to produce against revelation, endeavor to make a scaramouch of some parts; and then affect to laugh at it, and get superficial thinkers to laugh with them

Clarke: 2Pe 3:3 - Walking after their own lusts Walking after their own lusts - Here is the true source of all infidelity. The Gospel of Jesus is pure and holy, and requires a holy heart and holy ...

Walking after their own lusts - Here is the true source of all infidelity. The Gospel of Jesus is pure and holy, and requires a holy heart and holy life. They wish to follow their own lusts, and consequently cannot brook the restraints of the Gospel: therefore they labor to prove that it is not true, that they may get rid of its injunctions, and at last succeed in persuading themselves that it is a forgery; and then throw the reins on the neck of their evil propensities. Thus their opposition to revealed truth began and ended in their own lusts

There is a remarkable addition here in almost every MS. and version of note: There shall come in the last days, In Mockery, εν εμπαιγμονῃ, scoffers walking after their own lusts. This is the reading of ABC, eleven others, both the Syriac, all the Arabic, Coptic, Ethiopic, Vulgate, and several of the fathers. They come in mockery; this is their spirit and temper; they have no desire to find out truth; they take up the Bible merely with the design of turning it into ridicule. This reading Griesbach has received into the text

Clarke: 2Pe 3:3 - The last days The last days - Probably refer to the conclusion of the Jewish polity, which was then at hand.

The last days - Probably refer to the conclusion of the Jewish polity, which was then at hand.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:4 - Where is the promise of his coming? Where is the promise of his coming? - Perhaps the false teachers here referred to were such as believed in the eternity of the world: the prophets a...

Where is the promise of his coming? - Perhaps the false teachers here referred to were such as believed in the eternity of the world: the prophets and the apostles had foretold its destruction, and they took it for granted, if this were true, that the terrestrial machine would have begun long ago to have shown some symptoms of decay; but they found that since the patriarchs died all things remained as they were from the foundation of the world; that is, men were propagated by natural generation, one was born and another died, and the course of nature continued regular in the seasons, succession of day and night, generation and corruption of animals and vegetables, etc.; for they did not consider the power of the Almighty, by which the whole can be annihilated in a moment, as well as created. As, therefore, they saw none of these changes, they presumed that there would be none, and they intimated that there never had been any. The apostle combats this notion in the following verse.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:5 - For this they willingly are ignorant of For this they willingly are ignorant of - They shut their eyes against the light, and refuse all evidence; what does not answer their purpose they w...

For this they willingly are ignorant of - They shut their eyes against the light, and refuse all evidence; what does not answer their purpose they will not know. And the apostle refers to a fact that militates against their hypothesis, with which they refused to acquaint themselves; and their ignorance he attributes to their unwillingness to learn the true state of the case

Clarke: 2Pe 3:5 - By the word of God the heavens were of old By the word of God the heavens were of old - I shall set down the Greek text of this extremely difficult clause: ΟυÏανοι ησαν εκπαλ...

By the word of God the heavens were of old - I shall set down the Greek text of this extremely difficult clause: ΟυÏανοι ησαν εκπαλαι, και γη εξ ὑδατος και δι ὑδατος συνεστωσα, τῳ του Θεου λογῳ· translated thus by Mr. Wakefield: "A heaven and an earth formed out of water, and by means of water, by the appointment of God, had continued from old time."By Dr. Macknight thus; "The heavens were anciently, and the earth of water: and through water the earth consists by the word of God."By Kypke thus: "The heavens were of old, and the earth, which is framed, by the word of God, from the waters, and between the waters."However we take the words, they seem to refer to the origin of the earth. It was the opinion of the remotest antiquity that the earth was formed out of water, or a primitive moisture which they termed ὑλη, hule , a first matter or nutriment for all things; but Thales pointedly taught αÏχην δε των παντως Ï…Ì”Î´Ï‰Ï ÎµÎ¹Î½Î±Î¹, that all things derive their existence from water, and this very nearly expresses the sentiment of Peter, and nearly in his own terms too. But is this doctrine true? It must be owned that it appears to be the doctrine of Moses: In the beginning, says he, God made the heavens and the earth; and the earth was without form and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. Now, these heavens and earth which God made in the beginning, and which he says were at first formless and empty, and which he calls the deep, are in the very next verse called waters; from which it is evident that Moses teaches that the earth was made out of some fluid substance, to which the name of water is properly given. And that the earth was at first in a fluid mass is most evident from its form; it is not round, as has been demonstrated by measuring some degrees near the north pole, and under the equator; the result of which proved that the figure of the earth was that of an oblate spheroid, a figure nearly resembling that of an orange. And this is the form that any soft or elastic body would assume if whirled rapidly round a center, as the earth is around its axis. The measurement to which I have referred shows the earth to be flatted at the poles, and raised at the equator. And by this measurement it was demonstrated that the diameter of the earth at the equator was greater by about twenty-five miles than at the poles

Now, considering the earth to be thus formed εξ ὑδατος, of water, we have next to consider what the apostle means by δι ὑδατος, variously translated by out of, by means of, and between, the water

Standing out of the water gives no sense, and should be abandoned. If we translate between the waters, it will bear some resemblance to Gen 1:6, Gen 1:7 : And God said, Let there be a firmament in the midst of, בתוך bethoch , between, the waters; and let it divide the waters from the waters: and God divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament; then it may refer to the whole of the atmosphere, with which the earth is everywhere surrounded, and which contains all the vapours which belong to our globe, and without which we could neither have animal nor vegetative life. Thus then the earth, or terraqueous globe, which was originally formed out of water, subsists by water; and by means of that very water, the water compacted with the earth - the fountains of the great deep, and the waters in the atmosphere - the windows of heaven, Gen 7:11, the antediluvian earth was destroyed, as St. Peter states in the next verse: the terraqueous globe, which was formed originally of water or a fluid substance, the chaos or first matter, and which was suspended in the heavens - the atmosphere, enveloped with water, by means of which water it was preserved; yet, because of the wickedness of its inhabitants, was destroyed by those very same waters out of which it was originally made, and by which it subsisted.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:7 - But the heavens and the earth, which are now But the heavens and the earth, which are now - The present earth and its atmosphere, which are liable to the same destruction, because the same mean...

But the heavens and the earth, which are now - The present earth and its atmosphere, which are liable to the same destruction, because the same means still exist, (for there is still water enough to drown the earth, and there is iniquity enough to induce God to destroy it and its inhabitants), are nevertheless kept in store, τεθησαυÏισμενοι, treasured up, kept in God’ s storehouse, to be destroyed, not by water, but by fire at the day of judgment

From all this it appears that those mockers affected to be ignorant of the Mosaic account of the formation of the earth, and of its destruction by the waters of the deluge; and indeed this is implied in their stating that all things continued as they were from the creation. But St. Peter calls them back to the Mosaic account, to prove that this was false; for the earth, etc., which were then formed, had perished by the flood; and that the present earth, etc., which were formed out of the preceding, should, at the day of judgment, perish by the fire of God’ s wrath.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:8 - Be not ignorant Be not ignorant - Though they are wilfully ignorant, neglect not ye the means of instruction

Be not ignorant - Though they are wilfully ignorant, neglect not ye the means of instruction

Clarke: 2Pe 3:8 - One day is with the Lord as a thousand years One day is with the Lord as a thousand years - That is: All time is as nothing before him, because in the presence as in the nature of God all is et...

One day is with the Lord as a thousand years - That is: All time is as nothing before him, because in the presence as in the nature of God all is eternity; therefore nothing is long, nothing short, before him; no lapse of ages impairs his purposes, nor need he wait to find convenience to execute those purposes. And when the longest period of time has passed by, it is but as a moment or indivisible point in comparison of eternity. This thought is well expressed by Plutarch, Consol. ad Apoll.: "If we compare the time of life with eternity, we shall find no difference between long and short. Τα Î³Î±Ï Ï‡Î¹Î»Î¹Î±, και τα μυÏια ετη, στιγμη τις εστιν αοÏιστος, μαλλον δε μοÏιον τι βÏαχυτατον στιγμης· for a thousand or ten thousand years are but a certain indefinite point, or rather the smallest part of a point."The words of the apostle seem to be a quotation from Psa 90:4.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:9 - The Lord is not slack The Lord is not slack - They probably in their mocking said, "Either God had made no such promise to judge the world, destroy the earth, and send un...

The Lord is not slack - They probably in their mocking said, "Either God had made no such promise to judge the world, destroy the earth, and send ungodly men to perdition; or if he had, he had forgotten to fulfill it, or had not convenient time or leisure."To some such mocking the apostle seems to refer: and he immediately shows the reason why deserved punishment is not inflicted on a guilty world

Clarke: 2Pe 3:9 - But is long-suffering But is long-suffering - It is not slackness, remissness, nor want of due displacence at sin, that induced God to prolong the respite of ungodly men;...

But is long-suffering - It is not slackness, remissness, nor want of due displacence at sin, that induced God to prolong the respite of ungodly men; but his long-suffering, his unwillingness that any should perish: and therefore he spared them, that they might have additional offers of grace, and be led to repentance - to deplore their sins, implore God’ s mercy, and find redemption through the blood of the Lamb

As God is not willing that any should perish, and as he is willing that all should come to repentance, consequently he has never devised nor decreed the damnation of any man, nor has he rendered it impossible for any soul to be saved, either by necessitating him to do evil, that he might die for it, or refusing him the means of recovery, without which he could not be saved.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:10 - The day of the Lord will come The day of the Lord will come - See Mat 24:43, to which the apostle seems to allude

The day of the Lord will come - See Mat 24:43, to which the apostle seems to allude

Clarke: 2Pe 3:10 - The heavens shall pass away with a great noise The heavens shall pass away with a great noise - As the heavens mean here, and in the passages above, the whole atmosphere, in which all the terrest...

The heavens shall pass away with a great noise - As the heavens mean here, and in the passages above, the whole atmosphere, in which all the terrestrial vapours are lodged; and as water itself is composed of two gases, eighty-five parts in weight of oxygen, and fifteen of hydrogen, or two parts in volume of the latter, and one of the former; (for if these quantities be put together, and several electric sparks passed through them, a chemical union takes place, and water is the product; and, vice versa, if the galvanic spark be made to pass through water, a portion of the fluid is immediately decomposed into its two constituent gases, oxygen and hydrogen); and as the electric or ethereal fire is that which, in all likelihood, God will use in the general conflagration; the noise occasioned by the application of this fire to such an immense congeries of aqueous particles as float in the atmosphere, must be terrible in the extreme. Put a drop of water on an anvil, place over it a piece of iron red hot, strike the iron with a hammer on the part above the drop of water, and the report will be as loud as a musket; when, then, the whole strength of those opposite agents is brought together into a state of conflict, the noise, the thunderings, the innumerable explosions, (till every particle of water on the earth and in the atmosphere is, by the action of the fire, reduced into its component gaseous parts), will be frequent, loud, confounding, and terrific, beyond every comprehension but that of God himself

Clarke: 2Pe 3:10 - The elements shalt melt with fervent heat The elements shalt melt with fervent heat - When the fire has conquered and decomposed the water, the elements, στοιχεια, the hydrogen and ...

The elements shalt melt with fervent heat - When the fire has conquered and decomposed the water, the elements, στοιχεια, the hydrogen and oxygen airs or gases, (the former of which is most highly inflammable, and the latter an eminent supporter of all combustion), will occupy distinct regions of the atmosphere, the hydrogen by its very great levity ascending to the top, while the oxygen from its superior specific gravity will keep upon or near the surface of the earth; and thus, if different substances be once ignited, the fire, which is supported in this case, not only by the oxygen which is one of the constituents of atmospheric air, but also by a great additional quantity of oxygen obtained from the decomposition of all aqueous vapours, will rapidly seize on all other substances, on all terrestrial particles, and the whole frame of nature will be necessarily torn in pieces, and thus the earth and its works be burned up.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:11 - All these things shall be dissolved All these things shall be dissolved - They will all be separated, all decomposed; but none of them destroyed. And as they are the original matter ou...

All these things shall be dissolved - They will all be separated, all decomposed; but none of them destroyed. And as they are the original matter out of which God formed the terraqueous globe, consequently they may enter again into the composition of a new system; and therefore the apostle says, 2Pe 3:13 : we look for new heavens and a new earth - the others being decomposed, a new system is to be formed out of their materials. There is a wonderful philosophic propriety in the words of the apostle in describing this most awful event

Clarke: 2Pe 3:11 - What manner of persons ought ye to be What manner of persons ought ye to be - Some put the note of interrogation at the end of this clause, and join the remaining part with the 12th vers...

What manner of persons ought ye to be - Some put the note of interrogation at the end of this clause, and join the remaining part with the 12th verse, thus: Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved, what manner of persons ought ye to be? By holy conversation and godliness, expecting and earnestly desiring the coming of the day of God, etc. Only those who walk in holiness, who live a godly and useful life, can contemplate this most awful time with joy

The word σπευδοντας, which we translate hasting unto, should be tendered earnestly desiring, or wishing for; which is a frequent meaning of the word in the best Greek writers.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:12 - The heavens being on fire The heavens being on fire - See on 2Pe 3:10. (note). It was an ancient opinion among the heathens that the earth should be burnt up with fire; so Ov...

The heavens being on fire - See on 2Pe 3:10. (note). It was an ancient opinion among the heathens that the earth should be burnt up with fire; so Ovid, Met., lib. i. v. 256

Esse quoque in fatis reminiscitur, adfore tempus

Quo mare, quo tellus, correptaque regia coel

Ardeat; et mundi moles operosa laboret

"Remembering in the fates a time when fir

Should to the battlements of heaven aspire

And all his blazing world above should burn

And all the inferior globe to cinders turn.

Dryden

Minucius Felix tells us, xxxiv. 2, that it was a common opinion of the Stoics that, the moisture of the earth being consumed, the whole world would catch fire. The Epicureans held the same sentiment; and indeed it appears in various authors, which proves that a tradition of this kind has pretty generally prevailed in the world. But it is remarkable that none have fancied that it will be destroyed by water. The tradition, founded on the declaration of God, was against this; therefore it was not received.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:13 - We, according to his promise, look for new heavens We, according to his promise, look for new heavens - The promise to which it is supposed the apostle alludes, is found Isa 65:17 : Behold, I create ...

We, according to his promise, look for new heavens - The promise to which it is supposed the apostle alludes, is found Isa 65:17 : Behold, I create new heavens and a new earth; and the former shall not be remembered, nor come into mind; and Isa 66:22 : For as the new heavens and the new earth which I will make shall remain before me, saith the Lord, so shall your seed, etc. Now, although these may be interpreted of the glory of the Gospel dispensation, yet, if St. Peter refer to them, they must have a more extended meaning

It does appear, from these promises, that the apostle says here, and what is said Rev 21:27; Rev 22:14, Rev 22:15, that the present earth, though destined to be burned up, will not be destroyed, but be renewed and refined, purged from all moral and natural imperfection, and made the endless abode of blessed spirits. But this state is certainly to be expected after the day of judgment; for on this the apostle is very express, who says the conflagration and renovation are to take place at the judgment of the great day; see 2Pe 3:7, 2Pe 3:8, 2Pe 3:10, 2Pe 3:12. That such an event may take place is very possible; and, from the terms used by St. Peter, is very probable. And, indeed, it is more reasonable and philosophical to conclude that the earth shall be refined and restored, than finally destroyed. But this has nothing to do with what some call the millennium state; as this shall take place when time, with the present state and order of things, shall be no more.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:14 - Seeing that ye look for such things Seeing that ye look for such things - As ye profess that such a state of things shall take place, and have the expectation of enjoying the blessedne...

Seeing that ye look for such things - As ye profess that such a state of things shall take place, and have the expectation of enjoying the blessedness of it, be diligent in the use of every means and influence of grace, that ye may be found of him - the Lord Jesus, the Judge of quick and dead, without spot - any contagion of sin in your souls, and blameless - being not only holy and innocent, but useful in your lives.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:15 - And account that the long-suffering of our Lord And account that the long-suffering of our Lord - Conclude that God’ s long-suffering with the world is a proof that he designs men to be saved...

And account that the long-suffering of our Lord - Conclude that God’ s long-suffering with the world is a proof that he designs men to be saved; even as our beloved brother Paul. "This epistle being written to those to whom the first epistle was sent, the persons to whom the Apostle Paul wrote concerning the long-suffering of God were the Jewish and Gentile Christians in Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia. Accordingly, we know he wrote to the Ephesians, (Eph 2:3-5), to the Colossians, (Col 1:21), and to Timothy, (1Ti 2:3, 1Ti 2:4), things which imply that God’ s bearing with sinners is intended for their salvation. The persons to whom Peter’ s epistles were sent were, for the most part, Paul’ s converts."- Macknight

Clarke: 2Pe 3:15 - According to the wisdom given unto him According to the wisdom given unto him - That is, according to the measure of the Divine inspiration, by which he was qualified for the Divine work,...

According to the wisdom given unto him - That is, according to the measure of the Divine inspiration, by which he was qualified for the Divine work, and by which he was so capable of entering into the deep things of God. It is worthy of remark that Paul’ s epistles are ranked among the Scriptures; a term applied to those writings which are divinely inspired, and to those only.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:16 - As also in all his epistles, speaking in them of these things As also in all his epistles, speaking in them of these things - Paul, in all his epistles, says Dr. Macknight, has spoken of the things written by P...

As also in all his epistles, speaking in them of these things - Paul, in all his epistles, says Dr. Macknight, has spoken of the things written by Peter in this letter. For example, he has spoken of Christ’ s coming to judgment; 1Th 3:13; 1Th 4:14-18; 2Th 1:7-10; Tit 2:13. And of the resurrection of the dead, 1Co 15:22; Phi 3:20, Phi 3:21. And of the burning of the earth; 2Th 1:8. And of the heavenly country; 2Co 5:1-10. And of the introduction of the righteous into that country; 1Th 4:17; Heb 4:9; Heb 12:14, Heb 12:18, Heb 12:24. And of the judgment of all mankind by Christ; Rom 14:10

Clarke: 2Pe 3:16 - In which are some things hard to be understood In which are some things hard to be understood - Δυσνοητα τινα· That is, if we retain the common reading εν οἱς, in or among ...

In which are some things hard to be understood - Δυσνοητα τινα· That is, if we retain the common reading εν οἱς, in or among which things, viz., what he says of the day of judgment, the resurrection of the body etc., etc., there are some things difficult to be comprehended, and from which a wrong or false meaning may be taken. But if we take the reading of AB, twelve others, with both the Syriac, all the Arabic, and Theophylact, εν αἱς, the meaning is more general, as εν αἱς must refer to επιστολαις, epistles, for this would intimate that there were difficulties in all the epistles of St. Paul; and indeed in what ancient writings are there not difficulties? But the papists say that the decision of all matters relative to the faith is not to be expected from the Scriptures on this very account, but must be received from the Church; i.e. the Popish or Romish Church

But what evidence have we that that Church can infallibly solve any of those difficulties? We have none! And till we have an express, unequivocal revelation from heaven that an unerring spirit is given to that Church, I say, for example, to the present Church of Rome, with the pope called Pius VII. at its head, we are not to receive its pretensions. Any Church may pretend the same, or any number of equally learned men as there are of cardinals and pope in the conclave; and, after all, it would be but the opinion of so many men, to which no absolute certainty or infallibility could be attached

This verse is also made a pretext to deprive the common people of reading the word of God; because the unlearned and unstable have sometimes wrested this word to their own destruction: but if it be human learning, and stability in any system of doctrine, that qualifies men to judge of these difficult things, then we can find many thousands, even in Europe, that have as much learning and stability as the whole college of cardinals, and perhaps ten thousand times more; for that conclave was never very reputable for the learning of its members: and to other learned bodies we may, with as much propriety, look up as infallible guides, as to this conclave

Besides, as it is only the unlearned and the unestablished (that is, young Christian converts) that are in danger of wresting such portions; the learned, that is, the experienced and the established in the knowledge and life of God, are in no such danger; and to such we may safely go for information: and these abound everywhere, especially in Protestant countries; and by the labors of learned and pious men on the sacred writings there is not one difficulty relative to the things which concern our salvation left unexplained. If the members of the Romish Church have not these advantages, let them go to those who have them; and if their teachers are afraid to trust them to the instruction of the Protestants, then let them who pretend to have infallibly written their exposition of these difficult places, also put them, with a wholesome text in the vulgar language, into the hands of their people, and then the appeal will not lie to Rome, but to the Bible, and those interpretations will be considered according to their worth, being weighed with other scriptures, and the expositions of equally learned and equally infallible men

We find, lastly, that those who wrest such portions, are those who wrest the other scriptures to their destruction; therefore they are no patterns, nor can such form any precedent for withholding the Scriptures from the common people, most of whom, instead of wresting them to their destruction, would become wise unto salvation by reading them. We may defy the Romish Church to adduce a single instance of any soul that was perverted, destroyed, or damned, by reading of the Bible; and the insinuation that they may is blasphemous. I may just add that the verb στÏεβλοω, which the apostle uses here, signifies to distort, to put to the rack, to torture, to overstretch and dislocate the limbs; and hence the persons here intended are those who proceed according to no fair plan of interpretation, but force unnatural and sophistical meanings on the word of God: a practice which the common simple Christian is in no danger of following. I could illustrate this by a multitude of interpretations from popish writers.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:17 - Seeing ye know - before Seeing ye know - before - Seeing that by prophets and apostles you have been thus forewarned, beware, φυλασσεσθε, keep watch, be on your ...

Seeing ye know - before - Seeing that by prophets and apostles you have been thus forewarned, beware, φυλασσεσθε, keep watch, be on your guard; cleave to God and the word of his grace, lest ye be led away from the truth delivered by the prophets and apostles, by the error of the wicked, αθεσμων, of the lawless - those who wrest the Scriptures to make them countenance their lusts, exorbitant exactions, and lawless practices

Clarke: 2Pe 3:17 - Fall from your own steadfastness Fall from your own steadfastness - From that faith in Christ which has put you in possession of that grace which establishes the heart.

Fall from your own steadfastness - From that faith in Christ which has put you in possession of that grace which establishes the heart.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:18 - But grow in grace But grow in grace - Increase in the image and favor of God; every grace and Divine influence which ye have received is a seed, a heavenly seed, whic...

But grow in grace - Increase in the image and favor of God; every grace and Divine influence which ye have received is a seed, a heavenly seed, which, if it be watered with the dew of heaven from above, will endlessly increase and multiply itself. He who continues to believe, love, and obey, will grow in grace, and continually increase in the knowledge of Jesus Christ, as his sacrifice, sanctifier, counsellor, preserver, and final Savior. The life of a Christian is a growth; he is at first born of God, and is a little child; becomes a young man, and a father in Christ. Every father was once an infant; and had he not grown, he would have never been a man. Those who content themselves with the grace they received when converted to God, are, at best, in a continual state of infancy: but we find, in the order of nature, that the infant that does not grow, and grow daily, too, is sickly and soon dies; so, in the order of grace, those who do not grow up into Jesus Christ are sickly, and will soon die, die to all sense and influence of heavenly things

There are many who boast of the grace of their conversion; persons who were never more than babes, and have long since lost even that grace, because they did not grow in it. Let him that readeth understand

Clarke: 2Pe 3:18 - To him To him - The Lord Jesus, be glory - all honor and excellency attributed, both now - in this present state, and for ever, εις ἡμεÏαν αι...

To him - The Lord Jesus, be glory - all honor and excellency attributed, both now - in this present state, and for ever, εις ἡμεÏαν αιωνος, to the day of eternity - that in which death, and misery, and trial, and darkness, and change, and time itself, are to the righteous for ever at an end: it is eternity; and this eternity is one unalterable, interminable, unclouded, and unchangeable Day

Clarke: 2Pe 3:18 - Amen Amen - So let it be! and so it shall be! Though this word is wanting in some reputable MSS., get it should be retained, as it has here more than usu...

Amen - So let it be! and so it shall be! Though this word is wanting in some reputable MSS., get it should be retained, as it has here more than usual authority in its support

Subscriptions to this epistle in the Versions

The end of the Second Epistle of Peter the apostle. - Syriac

The Second Epistle of Peter the apostle is ended. - Syriac Philoxenian

Nothing in the printed Vulgate

The end of the epistles of blessed Peter the apostle, the rock of the faith. - Arabic

The Second Epistle of Peter is ended; and glory be to God for ever and ever! - Aethiopic

Nothing in the Coptic

The end of the Second catholic Epistle of St. Peter. - Complutensian Polyglot

The end of the Second Epistle of St. Peter. - Bib. Lat., edit. antiq

Subscriptions in the Manuscripts

Of the second of Peter. - Codex Alexandrius, and Codex Vaticanus

Of the catholic epistle of Peter. - Codex Ephrem

The Second Epistle of the holy Apostle Peter. - Other MSS

We have now passed over all the canonical writings of Peter that are extant; and it is worthy of remark that, in no place of the two epistles already examined, nor in any of this apostle’ s sayings in any other parts of the sacred writings do we find any of the peculiar tenets of the Romish Church: not one word of his or the pope’ s supremacy; not one word of those who affect to be his successors; nothing of the infallibility claimed by those pretended successors; nothing of purgatory, penances, pilgrimages, auricular confession, power of the keys, indulgences, extreme unction, masses, and prayers for the dead; and not one word on the most essential doctrine of the Romish Church, transubstantiation. Now, as all these things have been considered by themselves most essential to the being of that Church; is it not strange that he, from whom they profess to derive all their power, authority, and influence, in spiritual and secular matters, should have said nothing of these most necessary things? Is it not a proof that they are all false and forged; that the holy apostle knew nothing of them; that they are no part of the doctrine of God; and, although they distinguish the Church of Rome, do not belong to the Church of Christ? It is no wonder that the rulers of this Church endeavor to keep the Scriptures from the common people; for, were they permitted to consult these, the imposture would be detected, and the solemn, destructive cheat at once exposed

Calvin: 2Pe 3:1 - NO PHRASE 1. Lest they should be wearied with the Second Epistle as though the first was sufficient, he says that it was not written in vain, because they sto...

1. Lest they should be wearied with the Second Epistle as though the first was sufficient, he says that it was not written in vain, because they stood in need of being often stirred up. To make this more evident, he shews that they could not be beyond danger, except they were well fortified, because they would have to contend with desperate men, who would not only corrupt the purity of the faith, by false opinions, but do what they could to subvert entirely the whole faith.

By saying, I stir up your pure mind, he means the same as though he had said, “I wish to awaken you to a sincerity of mind.†And the words ought to be thus explained, “I stir up your mind that it may be pure and bright.†For the meaning is, that the minds of the godly become dim, and as it were contract rust, when admonitions cease. But we also hence learn, that men even endued with learning, become, in a manner, drowsy, except they are stirred up by constant warnings. 175

It now appears what is the use of admonitions, and how necessary they are; for the sloth of the flesh smothers the truth once received, and renders it inefficient, except the goads of warnings come to its aid. It is not then enough, that men should be taught to know what they ought to be, but there is need of godly teachers, to do this second part, deeply to impress the truth on the memory of their hearers. And as men are, by nature, for the most part, fond of novelty and thus inclined to be fastidious, it is useful for us to bear in mind what Peter says, so that we may not only willingly suffer ourselves to be admonished by others, but that every one may also exercise himself in calling to mind continually the truth, so that our minds may become resplendent with the pure and clear knowledge of it.

Calvin: 2Pe 3:2 - That ye may be mindful 2.That ye may be mindful By these words he intimates that we have enough in the writings of the prophets, and in the gospel, to stir us up, provided ...

2.That ye may be mindful By these words he intimates that we have enough in the writings of the prophets, and in the gospel, to stir us up, provided we be as diligent as it behoves us, in meditating on them; and that our minds sometimes contract a rust, or become bedimmed through darkness, is owing to our sloth. That God may then continually shine upon us, we must devote ourselves to that study: let our faith at the same time acquiesce in witnesses so certain and credible. For when we have the prophets and apostles agreeing with us, nay, as the ministers of our faith, and God as the author, and angels as approvers, there is no reason that the ungodly, all united, should move us from our position. By the commandment of the apostles he means the whole doctrine in which they had instructed the faithful. 176

Calvin: 2Pe 3:3 - Knowing this first 3.Knowing this first The participle knowing may be applied to the Apostle, and in this way, “I labor to stir you up for this reason, because I kn...

3.Knowing this first The participle knowing may be applied to the Apostle, and in this way, “I labor to stir you up for this reason, because I know what and how great is your impending danger from scoffers.†I however prefer this explanation, that the participle is used in place of a verb, as though he had said, “Know ye this especially.†For it was necessary that this should have been foretold, because they might have been shaken, had impious men attacked them suddenly with scoffs of this kind. He therefore wished them to know this, and to feel assured on the subject, that they might be prepared to oppose such men.

But he calls the attention of the faithful again to the doctrine which he touched upon in the second chapter. For by the last days is commonly meant the kingdom of Christ, or the days of his kingdom, according to what Paul says, “Upon whom the ends of the world are come.†(1Co 10:11.) 177 The meaning is, that the more God offers himself by the gospel to the world, and the more he invites men to his kingdom, the more audacious on the other hand will ungodly men vomit forth the poison of their impiety.

He calls those scoffers, according to what is usual in Scripture, who seek to appear witty by shewing contempt to God, and by a blasphemous presumption. It is, moreover, the very extremity of evil, when men allow themselves to treat the awful name of God with scoffs. Thus, Psa 1:1 speaks of the seat of scoffers. So David, in Psa 119:51, complains that he was derided by the proud, because he attended to God’s law. So Isaiah, in Isa 28:14, having referred to them, describes their supine security and insensibility. Let us therefore bear in mind, that there is nothing to be feared more than a contest with scoffers. On this subject we said something while explaining the third chapter of the Epistle to the Galatians. As, however, the Holy Scripture has foretold that they would come, and has also given us a shield by which we may defend ourselves, there is no excuse why we should not boldly resist them whatever devices they may employ.

Calvin: 2Pe 3:4 - Where is the promise 4.Where is the promise It was a dangerous scoff when they insinuated a doubt as to the last resurrection; for when that is taken away, there is no go...

4.Where is the promise It was a dangerous scoff when they insinuated a doubt as to the last resurrection; for when that is taken away, there is no gospel any longer, the power of Christ is brought to nothing, the whole of religion is gone. Then Satan aims directly at the throat of the Church, when he destroys faith in the coming of Christ. For why did Christ die and rise again, except that he may some time gather to himself the redeemed from death, and give them eternal life? All religion is wholly subverted, except faith in the resurrection remains firm and immovable. Hence, on this point Satan assails us most fiercely.

But let us notice what the scoff was. They set the regular course of nature, such as it seems to have been from the beginning, in opposition to the promise of God, as though these things were contrary, or did not harmonize together. Though the faith of the fathers, they said, was the same, yet no change has taken place since their death, and it is known that many ages have passed away. Hence they concluded that what was said of the destruction of the world was a fable; because they conjectured, that as it had lasted so long, it would be perpetual.

Calvin: 2Pe 3:5 - For this they willingly are ignorant of 5.For this they willingly are ignorant of By one argument only he confutes the scoff of the ungodly, even by this, that the world once perished by a ...

5.For this they willingly are ignorant of By one argument only he confutes the scoff of the ungodly, even by this, that the world once perished by a deluge of waters, when yet it consisted of waters. (Gen 1:2.) And as the history of this was well known, he says that they willingly, or of their own accord, erred. For they who infer the perpetuity of the world from its present state, designedly close their eyes, so as not to see so clear a judgment of God. The world no doubt had its origin from waters, for Moses calls the chaos from which the earth emerged, waters; and further, it was sustained by waters; it yet pleased the Lord to use waters for the purpose of destroying it. It hence appears that the power of nature is not sufficient to sustain and preserve the world, but that on the contrary it contains the very element of its own ruin, whenever it may please God to destroy it.

For it ought always to be borne in mind, that the world stands through no other power than that of God's word, and that therefore inferior or secondary causes derive from him their power, and produce different effects as they are directed. Thus through water the world stood, but water could have done nothing of itself, but on the contrary obeyed God's word as an inferior agent or element. As soon then as it pleased God to destroy the earth, the same water obeyed in becoming a ruinous inundation. We now see how egregiously they err, who stop at naked elements, as though there was perpetuity in them, and their nature were not changeable according to the bidding of God.

By these few words the petulance of those is abundantly refuted, who arm themselves with physical reasons to fight against God. For the history of the deluge is an abundantly sufficient witness that the whole order of nature is governed by the sole power of God. (Gen 7:17.)

Calvin: 2Pe 3:6 - NO PHRASE It seems, however, strange that he says that the world perished through the deluge, when he had before mentioned the heaven and the earth. To this I ...

It seems, however, strange that he says that the world perished through the deluge, when he had before mentioned the heaven and the earth. To this I answer, that the heaven was then also submerged, that is, the region of the air, which stood open between the two waters. For the division or separation, mentioned by Moses, was then confounded. (Gen 1:6;) and the word heaven is often taken in this sense. if any wishes for more on this subject, let him read Augustine on the City of God. Lib. 20. 178

Calvin: 2Pe 3:7 - But the heavens and the earth which are now 7.But the heavens and the earth which are now He does not infer this as the consequence; for his purpose was no other than to dissipate the craftines...

7.But the heavens and the earth which are now He does not infer this as the consequence; for his purpose was no other than to dissipate the craftiness of scoffers respecting the perpetual state of nature, and we see many such at this day who being slightly embued with the rudiments of philosophy, only hunt after profane speculations, in order that they may pass themselves off as great philosophers.

But it now appears quite evident from what has been said, that there is nothing unreasonable in the declaration made by the Lord, that the heaven and the earth shall hereafter be consumed by fire, because the reason for the fire is the same as that for the water. For it was a common saying even among the ancients, that from these two chief elements all things have proceeded. But as he had to do with the ungodly, he speaks expressly of their destruction.

Calvin: 2Pe 3:8 - But be not ignorant of this one thing 8.But be not ignorant of this one thing He now turns to speak to the godly; and he reminds them that when the coming of Christ is the subject, they w...

8.But be not ignorant of this one thing He now turns to speak to the godly; and he reminds them that when the coming of Christ is the subject, they were to raise upwards their eyes, for by so doing, they would not limit, by their unreasonable wishes, the time appointed by the Lord. For waiting seems very long on this account, because we have our eyes fixed on the shortness of the present life, and we also increase weariness by computing days, hours, and minutes. But when the eternity of God's kingdom comes to our minds, many ages vanish away like so many moments.

This then is what the Apostle calls our attention to, so that we may know that the day of resurrection does not depend on the present flow of time, but on the hidden purpose of God, as though he had said, “Men wish to anticipate God for this reason, because they measure time according to the judgment of their own flesh; and they are by nature inclined to impatience, so that celerity is even delay to them: do ye then ascend in your minds to heaven, and thus time will be to you neither long nor short.â€

Calvin: 2Pe 3:9 - But the Lord is not slack, // Not willing that any should perish 9.But the Lord is not slack, or, delays not. He checks extreme and unreasonable haste by another reason, that is, that the Lord defers his coming th...

9.But the Lord is not slack, or, delays not. He checks extreme and unreasonable haste by another reason, that is, that the Lord defers his coming that he might invite all mankind to repentance. For our minds are always prurient, and a doubt often creeps in, why he does not come sooner. But when we hear that the Lord, in delaying, shews a concern for our salvation, and that he defers the time because he has a care for us, there is no reason why we should any longer complain of tardiness. He is tardy who allows an occasion to pass by through slothfulness: there is nothing like this in God, who in the best manner regulates time to promote our salvation. And as to the duration of the whole world, we must think exactly the same as of the life of every individual; for God by prolonging time to each, sustains him that he may repent. In the like manner he does not hasten the end of the world, in order to give to all time to repent.

This is a very necessary admonition, so that we may learn to employ time aright, as we shall otherwise suffer a just punishment for our idleness.

Not willing that any should perish So wonderful is his love towards mankind, that he would have them all to be saved, and is of his own self prepared to bestow salvation on the lost. But the order is to be noticed, that God is ready to receive all to repentance, so that none may perish; for in these words the way and manner of obtaining salvation is pointed out. Every one of us, therefore, who is desirous of salvation, must learn to enter in by this way.

But it may be asked, If God wishes none to perish, why is it that so many do perish? To this my answer is, that no mention is here made of the hidden purpose of God, according to which the reprobate are doomed to their own ruin, but only of his will as made known to us in the gospel. For God there stretches forth his hand without a difference to all, but lays hold only of those, to lead them to himself, whom he has chosen before the foundation of the world. 179

But as the verb χωÏὢσαι is often taken passively by the Greeks, no less suitable to this passage is the verb which I have put in the margin, that God would have all, who had been before wandering and scattered, to be gathered or come together to repentance.

Calvin: 2Pe 3:10 - But the day of the Lord will come 10.But the day of the Lord will come This has been added, that the faithful might be always watching, and not promise to-morrow to themselves. For we...

10.But the day of the Lord will come This has been added, that the faithful might be always watching, and not promise to-morrow to themselves. For we all labor under two very different evils — too much haste, and slothfulness. We are seized with impatience for the day of Christ already expected; at the same time we securely regard it as afar off. As, then, the Apostle has before reproved an unreasonable ardor, so he now shakes off our sleepiness, so that we may attentively expect Christ at all times, lest we should become idle and negligent, as it is usually the case. For whence is it that flesh indulges itself except that there is no thought of the near coming of Christ?

What afterwards follows, respecting the burning of heaven and earth, requires no long explanation, if indeed we duly consider what is intended. For it was not his purpose to speak refinedly of fire and storm, and other things, but only that he might introduce an exhortation, which he immediately adds, even that we ought to strive after newness of life. For he thus reasons, that as heaven and earth are to be purged by fire, that they may correspond with the kingdom of Christ, hence the renovation of men is much more necessary. Mischievous, then, are those interpreters who consume much labor on refined speculations, since the Apostle applies his doctrine to godly exhortations.

Calvin: 2Pe 3:11 - NO PHRASE Heaven and earth, he says, shall pass away for our sakes; is it meet, then, for us to be engrossed with the things of earth, and not, on the contrary...

Heaven and earth, he says, shall pass away for our sakes; is it meet, then, for us to be engrossed with the things of earth, and not, on the contrary, to attend to a holy and godly life? The corruptions of heaven and earth will be purged by fire, while yet as the creatures of God they are pure; what then ought to be done by us who are full of so many pollutions? As to the word godlinesses ( pietatibus ,) the plural number is used for the singular, except you take it as meaning the duties of godliness. 180 Of the elements of the world I shall only say this one thing, that they are to be consumed, only that they may be renovated, their substance still remaining the same, as it may be easily gathered from Rom 8:21, and from other passages. 181

Calvin: 2Pe 3:12 - Looking for and hasting unto, 12.Looking for and hasting unto, or, waiting for by hastening; so I render the words, though they are two participles; for what we had before separa...

12.Looking for and hasting unto, or, waiting for by hastening; so I render the words, though they are two participles; for what we had before separately he gathers now into one sentence, that is, that we ought hastily to wait. Now this contrarious hope possesses no small elegance, like the proverb, “Hasten slowly,†( festina lente .) When he says, “Waiting for,†he refers to the endurance of hope; and he sets hastening in opposition to topor; and both are very apposite. For as quietness and waiting are the peculiarities of hope, so we must always take heed lest the security of the flesh should creep in; we ought, therefore, strenuously to labor in good works, and run quickly in the race of our calling. 182 What he before called the day of Christ (as it is everywhere called in Scripture) he now calls the day of God, and that rightly, for Christ will then restore the kingdom to the Father, that God may be all in all.

Calvin: 2Pe 3:14 - Wherefore 14.Wherefore He justly reasons from hope to its effect, or the practice of a godly life; for hope is living and efficacious; therefore it cannot be b...

14.Wherefore He justly reasons from hope to its effect, or the practice of a godly life; for hope is living and efficacious; therefore it cannot be but that it will attract us to itself. He, then, who waits for new heavens, must begin with renewal as to himself, and diligently aspire after it; but they who cleave to their own filth, think nothing, it is certain, of God's kingdom, and have no taste for anything but for this corrupt world.

But we must notice that he says, that we ought to be found blameless by Christ; for by these words he intimates, that while the world engages and engrosses the minds of others, we must cast our eyes on the Lord, and he shews at the same time what is real integrity, even that which is approved by his judgment, and not that which gains the Praise of men. 183

The word peace seems to be taken for a quiet state of conscience, founded on hope and patient waiting. 184 For as so few turn their attention to the judgment of Christ, hence it is, that while they are carried headlong by their importunate lusts, they are at the same time in a state of disquietude. This peace, then, is the quietness of a peaceable soul, which acquiesces in the word of God.

It may be asked, how any one can be found blameless by Christ, when we all labor under so many deficiencies. But Peter here only points out the mark at which the faithful ought all to aim, though they cannot reach it, until having put off their flesh they become wholly united to Christ.

Calvin: 2Pe 3:15 - The long-suffering of our Lord // Even as our beloved brother Paul 15.The long-suffering of our Lord He takes it as granted that Christ defers the day of his coming, because he has a regard for our salvation. He henc...

15.The long-suffering of our Lord He takes it as granted that Christ defers the day of his coming, because he has a regard for our salvation. He hence animates the faithful, because in a longer delay they have an evidence as to their own salvation. Thus, what usually disheartens others through weariness, he wisely turns to a contrary purpose.

Even as our beloved brother Paul We may easily gather from the Epistle to the Galatians, as well as from other places, that unprincipled men, who went about everywhere to disturb the churches, in order to discredit Paul, made use of this pretense, that he did not well agree with the other Apostles. It is then probable that Peter referred to Paul in order to shew their consent; for it was very necessary to take away the occasion for such a calumny. And yet, when I examine all things more narrowly, it seems to me more probable that this Epistle was composed by another according to what Peter communicated, than that it was written by himself, for Peter himself would have never spoken thus. But it is enough for me that we have a witness of his doctrine and of his goodwill, who brought forward nothing contrary to what he would have himself said.

Calvin: 2Pe 3:16 - In which are some things 16.In which are some things The relative which does not refer to epistles, for it is in the neuter gender. 185 The meaning is, that in the things...

16.In which are some things The relative which does not refer to epistles, for it is in the neuter gender. 185 The meaning is, that in the things which he wrote there was sometimes an obscurity, which gave occasion to the unlearned to go astray to their own ruin. We are reminded by these words, to reason soberly on things so high and obscure; and further, we are here strengthened against this kind of offense, lest the foolish or absurd speculations of men should disturb us, by which they entangle and distort simple truth, which ought to serve for edification.

But we must observe, that we are not forbidden to read Paul's Epistles, because they contain some things hard and difficult to be understood, but that, on the contrary, they are commended to us, provided we bring a calm and teachable mind. For Peter condemns men who are trifling and volatile, who strangely turn to their own ruin what is useful to all. Nay, he says that this is commonly done as to all the Scripture: and yet he does not hence conclude, that we are not to read it, but only shews, that those vices ought to be corrected which prevent improvement, and not only so, but render deadly to us what God has appointed for our salvation.

It may, however, be asked, Whence is this obscurity, for the Scripture shines to us like a lamp, and guides our steps? To this I reply, that it is nothing to be wondered at, if Peter ascribed obscurity to the mysteries of Christ's kingdom, and especially if we consider how hidden they are to the perception of the flesh. However the mode of teaching which God has adopted, has been so regulated, that all who refuse not to follow the Holy Spirit as their guide, find in the Scripture a clear light. At the same time, many are blind who stumble at mid-day; others are proud, who, wandering through devious paths, and flying over the roughest places, rush headlong into ruin.

Calvin: 2Pe 3:17 - Ye, therefore, beloved 17.Ye, therefore, beloved After having shewn to the faithful the dangers of which they were to beware, he now concludes by admonishing them to be wis...

17.Ye, therefore, beloved After having shewn to the faithful the dangers of which they were to beware, he now concludes by admonishing them to be wise. But he shews that there was need of being watchful, lest they should be overwhelmed. And, doubtless, the craft of our enemy, the many and various treacheries which he employs against us, the cavils of ungodly men, leave no place for security. Hence, vigilance must be exercised, lest the devices of Satan and of the wicked should succeed in circumventing us. It, however seems that we stand on slippery ground, and the certainty of our salvation is suspended, as it were, on a thread, since he declares to the faithful, that they ought to take heed lest they should fall from their own steadfastness.

What, then, will become of us, if we are exposed to the danger of falling? To this I answer, that this exhortation, and those like it, are by no means intended to shake the firmness of that faith which recumbs on God, but to correct the sloth of our flesh. If any one wishes to see more on this subject, let him read what has been said on the tenth chapter of the First Epistle to the Corinthians.

The meaning is this, that as long as we are in the flesh, our tardiness must be roused, and that this is fitly done by having our weakness, and the variety of dangers which surround us, placed before our eyes; but that the confidence which rests on God's promises ought not to be thereby shaken.

Calvin: 2Pe 3:18 - But grow in grace // To him be glory 18.But grow in grace He also exhorts us to make progress; for it is the only way of persevering, to make continual advances, and not to stand still i...

18.But grow in grace He also exhorts us to make progress; for it is the only way of persevering, to make continual advances, and not to stand still in the middle of our journey; as though he had said, that they only would be safe who labored to make progress daily.

The word grace, I take in a general sense, as meaning those spiritual gifts we obtain through Christ. But as we become partakers of these blessings according to the measure of our faith, knowledge is added to grace; as though he had said, that as faith increases, so would follow the increase of grace. 186

To him be glory This is a remarkable passage to prove the divinity of Christ; for what is said cannot belong to any but to God alone. The adverb of the present time, now, is designed for this end, that we may not rob Christ of his glory, during our warfare in the world. He then adds, for ever, that we may now form some idea of his eternal kingdom, which will make known to us his full and perfect glory.

END OF THE SECOND EPISTLE OF PETER

Defender: 2Pe 3:1 - second epistle This shows that Peter's second epistle was addressed to the same general audience as the first. They, therefore, would already have knowledge of what ...

This shows that Peter's second epistle was addressed to the same general audience as the first. They, therefore, would already have knowledge of what he had written before, but now he was giving them additional instruction in light of the difficult days coming and his own approaching demise. The Lord's return might have been very soon, as far as they knew, for it was always imminent. As we are almost at the end of the twentieth century, surely Peter's message of the first century is even more needed and appropriate today.

Defender: 2Pe 3:1 - pure minds It is vital that Christians in the last days "stir up" their minds and not just their emotions.

It is vital that Christians in the last days "stir up" their minds and not just their emotions.

Defender: 2Pe 3:1 - remembrance It is easy to forget the more important truths when we are being bombarded continuously by the trivial (2Pe 1:13)."

It is easy to forget the more important truths when we are being bombarded continuously by the trivial (2Pe 1:13)."

Defender: 2Pe 3:2 - words which were spoken Peter would remind us here again of the "more sure word of prophecy" to which we should "take heed" (2Pe 1:19). The words "spoken before by the holy p...

Peter would remind us here again of the "more sure word of prophecy" to which we should "take heed" (2Pe 1:19). The words "spoken before by the holy prophets" are simply the Old Testament Scriptures.

Defender: 2Pe 3:2 - commandment of us The teachings of "the apostles of the Lord and Savior" were largely known by verbal transmission to the churches of Peter's day, although they probabl...

The teachings of "the apostles of the Lord and Savior" were largely known by verbal transmission to the churches of Peter's day, although they probably had seen some of Paul's epistles (2Pe 3:15, 2Pe 3:16) and possibly also had access to Mark's gospel account (1Pe 5:13). In any case, all have now been collected and are recognized as the New Testament Scriptures. Peter is, therefore, urging us to stir up our minds by both the Old Testament and New Testament Scriptures, for this will be more and more important as the world's rebellion against God intensifies and the coming of the Lord draws near. This very same theme was emphasized by Paul in his last epistle, just before his death, especially in his own closing exhortations (2 Timothy 2-4)."

Defender: 2Pe 3:3 - first "First" means "first of all" or "of primary importance" (compare 2Pe 1:20). It is vitally important both to understand this key characteristic of the ...

"First" means "first of all" or "of primary importance" (compare 2Pe 1:20). It is vitally important both to understand this key characteristic of the last days (that is, the denial of both creation and consummation) and also to know and practice the divinely inspired Scriptures.

Defender: 2Pe 3:3 - last days The context here is set in the last days. Although we must not set dates, these aspects of the last days are surely more characteristic of our own tim...

The context here is set in the last days. Although we must not set dates, these aspects of the last days are surely more characteristic of our own times than any time before us. At least, we are closer to the last days than anyone has even been before. Thus, Peter's exhortation and analysis surely fits us better than anyone before us.

Defender: 2Pe 3:3 - their own lusts People of the last days, by and large, will be almost entirely motivated by self-interest and will be unconcerned about God's purposes, either for the...

People of the last days, by and large, will be almost entirely motivated by self-interest and will be unconcerned about God's purposes, either for themselves or for the world as a whole. They will mock God's Word. The word "mock" is used thirteen times in the New Testament, twelve of which speak of mocking Christ."

Defender: 2Pe 3:4 - the promise of his coming In Peter's time, the early Christians were really looking for the Lord's return, and there have been sporadic periods of prophetic interest in the nin...

In Peter's time, the early Christians were really looking for the Lord's return, and there have been sporadic periods of prophetic interest in the nineteen long centuries since. The far greater part of the world's population, however, is utterly indifferent to this hope, and even most of those who are working for global change today are working to bring in a world system based on evolutionary humanism rather than looking for God to return to His creation. In fact, most of the world's people do not even believe in a personal Creator God, let alone His divine incarnation in Christ and His great plan of salvation. They are too busy "walking after their own lusts."

Defender: 2Pe 3:4 - beginning of the creation The pseudo-scientific rationale for this indifference to the promised consummation of all things when Christ returns is their belief that there was ne...

The pseudo-scientific rationale for this indifference to the promised consummation of all things when Christ returns is their belief that there was never any real creation of all things in the beginning. The things that continue today, they say, are the things that have always been and, therefore, always will be. This is the so-called principle of uniformity. According to this principle, it is assumed that the processes that govern nature today have always been the same in the past so that the present is the key to the past. Since no creation is occurring today, it never happened in the past either. "All things continue" - not just after creation was finished, but "from the beginning of creation." Thus, what people have called creation was accomplished by the same natural processes that continue to operate today. This means that creation has been proceeding so slowly over long ages as to be quite unobservable in the mere few thousand years of human records. This remarkable belief is evolutionary uniformitarianism, and it completely dominates the scientific and educational establishments of every nation in the world today. It has been made the basic premise of origins and meaning, not only in science and history, but also in the social sciences, the humanities, the fine arts and practically every other discipline of study and practice in the world. This, indeed, is a most remarkable fulfillment of Peter's prophecy, and surely must indicate that these days really are "the last days," unless somehow the Lord brings about a great revival of truth in the world's schools."

Defender: 2Pe 3:5 - willingly are ignorant It is remarkable that such a universally dominating theory of origins, meaning and destiny could be based on absolutely no genuine evidence. There is ...

It is remarkable that such a universally dominating theory of origins, meaning and destiny could be based on absolutely no genuine evidence. There is no scientific or historical evidence that any significant evolutionary changes have ever taken place, and the most basic laws of science (the laws of probability and thermodynamics) prove that genuine macroevolution could not happen at all. As Peter prophesied, this belief would be based on "wilful ignorance." They are "without excuse" (Rom 1:20).

Defender: 2Pe 3:5 - heavens were of old Evolutionists, whether they are atheistic, pantheistic, deistic, or theistic evolutionists, willingly ignore God's testimony that the heavens and the ...

Evolutionists, whether they are atheistic, pantheistic, deistic, or theistic evolutionists, willingly ignore God's testimony that the heavens and the earth did not evolve by continuing natural processes but were called into existence by God's omnipotent Word, fully complete and functioning from the beginning (Genesis 1:1-2:3; Exo 20:8-11; Psa 33:6-9; Heb 4:3, Heb 4:10; Heb 11:3). The only reason God took as long as six natural days to finish the whole creation was to serve as a pattern for man's six-day work week (Exo 20:8-11). The various theories of cosmic evolution, stellar evolution and planetary evolution are all unproven and internally destructive, as are the various theories of chemical evolution, organic evolution, human evolution and cultural evolution. There are now thousands of fully qualified scientists, some from every field of science, who have studied the scientific evidence, pro and con, who have come to the conviction that the Biblical record of earth history is precisely correct and that evolutionary theory is totally false.

Defender: 2Pe 3:5 - in the water In the first stage of creation, after the second day, the primeval earth material was surrounded by vast "waters above the firmament" and suspended in...

In the first stage of creation, after the second day, the primeval earth material was surrounded by vast "waters above the firmament" and suspended in other "waters under the firmament" (Gen 1:7). The waters beneath the "firmament" (the "expanse" of the troposphere) later were either formed into seas or confined in a great deep beneath the earth's crust. This regime apparently continued until the time of the great Flood when they all came together again. Until then the earth was "standing" (Greek sunistemi - that is, being "sustained" in and by the waters). The earth is, in fact, uniquely, the "water planet.""

Defender: 2Pe 3:6 - overflowed The antediluvian world (Greek kosmos, meaning "ordered system") was "overflowed" (Greek katakluzo, a word used only here, but obviously related to kat...

The antediluvian world (Greek kosmos, meaning "ordered system") was "overflowed" (Greek katakluzo, a word used only here, but obviously related to kataklusmos, which was the Noahic cataclysm) with the primeval waters, both above and below the firmament ("the fountains of the deep" and "the windows of heaven" - see notes on Genesis 7) and perished (not annihilated but utterly devastated and transformed).

Defender: 2Pe 3:6 - perished The "perishing" of the "world that then was" is especially evidenced by the vast beds of fossils of plants and animals that have been preserved in the...

The "perishing" of the "world that then was" is especially evidenced by the vast beds of fossils of plants and animals that have been preserved in the sedimentary rocks of the earth's crust. These fossil beds have been misinterpreted by evolutionary scientists as a record of the evolution of life over many ages (despite the ubiquitous absence of any true transitional forms in these billions of fossils). What they really represent is the cataclysmic destruction of life in one age, at the time of the great Flood. Both sedimentary rocks and unhardened sediments have mostly been deposited under water, and they now cover most of the earth's land surface as well as ocean bottom surface. Furthermore, flood traditions somewhat similar to the Flood record in Genesis have been found among almost all nations and tribes of the earth. The genuine facts of science and history thoroughly support the Biblical account of the Flood, while only wilful ignorance can warrant the evolutionary interpretation of these evidences, and Peter said it would be so in the last days. Most important of all, of course, is the divinely inspired record in the Bible itself (Genesis 6-9), confirmed by Christ (Luk 17:26, Luk 17:27; Mat 24:37-39), Peter and others that the Flood, indeed, was a worldwide cataclysm. That being the case, the fossil record (which is the main hope of the evolutionist) is mostly a record of the Flood, not of evolution."

Defender: 2Pe 3:7 - which are now The heavens and the earth which "were of old" (2Pe 3:5) were destroyed by water. "The heavens and earth which are now" (2Pe 3:7) will be destroyed by ...

The heavens and the earth which "were of old" (2Pe 3:5) were destroyed by water. "The heavens and earth which are now" (2Pe 3:7) will be destroyed by fire (2Pe 3:10). Finally, "new heavens and a new earth" (2Pe 3:13) will last forever. In the interim of the present cosmos, processes, indeed, are under the domain of conservation, or even uniformity (Gen 8:22)."

Defender: 2Pe 3:8 - thousand years This verse has been widely misinterpreted as supporting the day/age theory of creation in Genesis 1. In context, however, it has nothing to do with cr...

This verse has been widely misinterpreted as supporting the day/age theory of creation in Genesis 1. In context, however, it has nothing to do with creation week, but rather with the last-days conflict between evolutionary uniformitarianism and Biblical-creationist catastrophism (2Pe 3:3-6). In effect, Peter is not saying that one day means a thousand years but rather that "one day is with the Lord like a thousand years." That is, God's judgment on a wicked world will do as much geological work in one day as could be accomplished by uniform natural processes in a thousand years. It is even intriguing (though probably meaningless) to note that two billion years (which is about the current geological estimate for the time required to deposit the earth's sedimentary rocks, would correspond roughly to six thousand years of Biblical history (during which the earth's sediments have actually been laid down, most of them at the time of the Flood) if those years each represented three hundred sixty-five thousand years (at one thousand years per day)."

Defender: 2Pe 3:9 - slack concerning his promise The Lord has not forgotten His promise to return to Earth, as the scoffers have charged (2Pe 3:3, 2Pe 3:4), but is still waiting for others to "come t...

The Lord has not forgotten His promise to return to Earth, as the scoffers have charged (2Pe 3:3, 2Pe 3:4), but is still waiting for others to "come to repentance" - that is, to "change their minds," turning away from conformity to this world's philosophy (Rom 12:2) and turning to Christ for salvation. But God's promise will, indeed, be fulfilled (2Pe 3:13)."

Defender: 2Pe 3:10 - day of the Lord The very first phase of "the day of the Lord" will be sudden and unexpected when the great rapture of all believers, dead and living will take place (...

The very first phase of "the day of the Lord" will be sudden and unexpected when the great rapture of all believers, dead and living will take place (1Th 4:13-17; 1Co 15:51-53). Then, "the day of the Lord" will continue for the seven-year period of tribulation judgments on Earth (Dan 9:24-27; Matthew 24:15-30; Isa 13:9-11) and the thousand-year millennial reign of Christ on Earth following that (Rev 20:6). Because of this thousand-year "day" of the Lord, many expositors, ancient and modern, have interpreted 2Pe 3:8 to teach there would be just six thousand years of history before the millennium, thus making a total of seven thousand years to conform to the six work days plus one rest day of creation week. The main Biblical problem with this concept, however, is that it amounts to setting the day for Christ's return and would have discouraged any Christians during previous generations from looking for Christ's return, as He had instructed them to do (compare 1Th 5:2).

Defender: 2Pe 3:10 - heavens shall pass away The "day of the Lord" will be terminated at the end of the millennium with the long-awaited renovation of the old earth by fire. The earth will not be...

The "day of the Lord" will be terminated at the end of the millennium with the long-awaited renovation of the old earth by fire. The earth will not be annihilated, any more than it was annihilated at the time of the Flood, but will be completely changed and purified, made new, as it were. All the elements themselves have been under God's curse (Gen 3:17-19), so they must be burned up, along with the vast evidences of decay and death now preserved as fossils in the earth's crust. Possibly this will be a global atomic fission reaction (note the word "dissolved" in 2Pe 3:11), or else simply a vast explosive disintegration involving transformation of the chemical energy of the elements into heat, light and sound energy. What remains after the global fiery disintegration will be other forms of energy so that, although God's principle of conservation still holds, the solid earth will seem to have "fled away" (Rev 20:11)."

Defender: 2Pe 3:12 - hasting unto the coming That is, "hastening the coming." From the human perspective, we can hasten the return of Christ by helping to win converts to Him. The reason why He h...

That is, "hastening the coming." From the human perspective, we can hasten the return of Christ by helping to win converts to Him. The reason why He has not already fulfilled "the promise of His coming" (2Pe 3:4) is because He is waiting for all the elect to "come to repentance" (2Pe 3:9).

Defender: 2Pe 3:12 - heavens being on fire The "heavens" here probably refer only to the atmospheric heavens, whose elements (hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, etc.) must also be "dissolved" (literal...

The "heavens" here probably refer only to the atmospheric heavens, whose elements (hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, etc.) must also be "dissolved" (literally "unloosed"), since they are also presently under "the bondage of corruption" (Rom 8:20-22) and must be cleansed and renewed just as the elements of the earth. It is even possible that the purging will dissolve and cleanse the starry heavens also, since these once were the domain of "the angels that sinned" (2Pe 2:4) and since "the whole creation" (Rom 8:22) is now in bondage to the law of decay.

Defender: 2Pe 3:12 - elements The word "elements" is translated from the Greek stoicheion, meaning "fundamental constituents" and implies an orderly arrangement of these basic enti...

The word "elements" is translated from the Greek stoicheion, meaning "fundamental constituents" and implies an orderly arrangement of these basic entities. Ever since the primeval curse, which affected even "the dust of the ground" (Gen 2:7; Gen 3:17), out of which all things had been made, this orderly arrangement has been deteriorating slowly. The disintegration process will be speeded up and completed in the great "dissolving." However, this will not be annihilation, for God does not uncreate what He created. "Whatsoever God doeth, it shall be forever" (Ecc 3:14). His basic principle of conservation of mass/energy, the most basic and pervasive law known to science, will still hold. Christ will still be "upholding all things by the word of His power" (Heb 1:3)."

Defender: 2Pe 3:13 - his promise All the promises of God, especially including His promise to return and complete His great work of redemption, will be fulfilled, though it seems to u...

All the promises of God, especially including His promise to return and complete His great work of redemption, will be fulfilled, though it seems to us to be long delayed (2Pe 3:4). The old cosmos will have been dissolved, its material elements having been converted temporarily into energy (light, heat, sound, etc.) but will then be made over again as a "new" (Greek kainos, meaning "fresh" rather than "young in age") cosmos, with all the age-long effects of sin and the curse forever removed (with the one exception of the lake of fire and its inhabitants - see note on Rev 20:10).

Defender: 2Pe 3:13 - dwelleth righteousness The new heavens and new earth will no longer harbor any remnants of sin and its effects, so will "remain" forever (Isa 65:17; Isa 66:22; Rev 21:1-5)."

The new heavens and new earth will no longer harbor any remnants of sin and its effects, so will "remain" forever (Isa 65:17; Isa 66:22; Rev 21:1-5)."

Defender: 2Pe 3:14 - found of him Even though Peter knew He would soon die, he still wrote to his "beloved" friends as though they might still be living when Christ returned (compare 1...

Even though Peter knew He would soon die, he still wrote to his "beloved" friends as though they might still be living when Christ returned (compare 1Jo 2:28), urging them to live in the light of His expected, imminent return. This admonition surely applies even more to us today. Incidentally, Peter interjects this appellation of endearment, "beloved," no less than six times in this short epistle, more than in any other New Testament book except Romans."

Defender: 2Pe 3:15 - hath written unto you Evidently, Peter's readers in the churches of Asia had already read one or more of Paul's earlier epistles and had accepted them as inspired and autho...

Evidently, Peter's readers in the churches of Asia had already read one or more of Paul's earlier epistles and had accepted them as inspired and authoritative. In his very first (or possibly second) epistle, Paul also had written about the imminent coming of the Lord, urging his readers to live in light of that fact (1 Thessalonians 5:4-24)."

Defender: 2Pe 3:16 - wrest It is dangerous to "wrest," or distort, the Scriptures, but, even today, this is commonly done by professing Christians who seek to justify their own ...

It is dangerous to "wrest," or distort, the Scriptures, but, even today, this is commonly done by professing Christians who seek to justify their own compromises with the evolutionary philosophy and humanistic life style of their ungodly associates.

Defender: 2Pe 3:16 - other scriptures It is significant that here Peter recognizes Paul's epistles as comparable to "the other Scriptures." When he notes that Paul had "written unto you" (...

It is significant that here Peter recognizes Paul's epistles as comparable to "the other Scriptures." When he notes that Paul had "written unto you" (2Pe 3:15), it seems possible, at least, that he was referring to the book of Hebrews - in particular to Heb 10:36-38. Peter's epistles, also, had been especially addressed to Jewish Christians (1Pe 1:1; 2Pe 3:1). This reference may be an incidental confirmation of the Pauline authorship of Hebrews."

Defender: 2Pe 3:17 - wicked The term "wicked" here means "unsettled" or "lawless." These men were "unlearned and unstable" (2Pe 3:16) in the Scriptures and so were leading others...

The term "wicked" here means "unsettled" or "lawless." These men were "unlearned and unstable" (2Pe 3:16) in the Scriptures and so were leading others astray with their twisting of God's Word to fit their own opinions. There are many such teachers today as well so "beware.""

Defender: 2Pe 3:18 - grow in grace Peter had referred to "newborn babes" (1Pe 2:2, 1Pe 2:3) after first indicating that "we" (all believers) have been born spiritually (begotten again) ...

Peter had referred to "newborn babes" (1Pe 2:2, 1Pe 2:3) after first indicating that "we" (all believers) have been born spiritually (begotten again) by Christ and His resurrection to an eternal inheritance and are being "kept ... through faith" (1Pe 1:3-5). He concludes his two epistles by urging us not to remain babes in Christ but to "grow." Our growth should be both in doctrine and practice, each being inadequate by itself. His first epistle emphasizes "grace" (with eight occurrences) and the second, "knowledge" (with six occurrences) (Eph 4:15)."

TSK: 2Pe 3:1 - second epistle // I stir // pure // way second epistle : 2Co 13:2; 1Pe 1:1, 1Pe 1:2 I stir : 2Pe 1:13-15; 2Ti 1:6 pure : Psa 24:4, Psa 73:1; Mat 5:8; 1Ti 5:22; 1Pe 1:22 way : 2Pe 1:12

second epistle : 2Co 13:2; 1Pe 1:1, 1Pe 1:2

I stir : 2Pe 1:13-15; 2Ti 1:6

pure : Psa 24:4, Psa 73:1; Mat 5:8; 1Ti 5:22; 1Pe 1:22

way : 2Pe 1:12

TSK: 2Pe 3:2 - ye may // and of ye may : 2Pe 1:19-21; Luk 1:70, Luk 24:27, Luk 24:44; Act 3:18, Act 3:24-26, Act 10:43, Act 28:23; 1Pe 1:10-12; Rev 19:10 and of : 2Pe 3:15, 2Pe 2:21;...

TSK: 2Pe 3:3 - that there // scoffers // walking that there : 1Ti 4:1, 1Ti 4:2; 2Ti 3:1; 1Jo 2:18; Jud 1:18 scoffers : Pro 1:22, Pro 3:34, Pro 14:6; Isa 5:19, Isa 28:14, Isa 29:20; Hos 7:5 walking : ...

TSK: 2Pe 3:4 - where // from the beginning where : Gen 19:14; Ecc 1:9, Ecc 8:11; Isa 5:18, Isa 5:19; Jer 5:12, Jer 5:13, Jer 17:15; Eze 12:22-27; Mal 2:17; Mat 24:28; Luk 12:45 from the beginni...

TSK: 2Pe 3:5 - they willingly // by the word // standing they willingly : Pro 17:16; Joh 3:19, Joh 3:20; Rom 1:28; 2Th 2:10-12 by the word : Gen 1:6, Gen 1:9; Psa 24:2, Psa 33:6, Psa 136:6; Heb 11:3 standing...

they willingly : Pro 17:16; Joh 3:19, Joh 3:20; Rom 1:28; 2Th 2:10-12

by the word : Gen 1:6, Gen 1:9; Psa 24:2, Psa 33:6, Psa 136:6; Heb 11:3

standing : Gr. consisting, Col 1:17

TSK: 2Pe 3:6 - -- 2Pe 2:5; Gen 7:10-23, Gen 9:15; Job 12:15; Mat 24:38, Mat 24:39; Luk 17:27

TSK: 2Pe 3:7 - the heavens // against // and perdition the heavens : 2Pe 3:10; Psa 50:3, Psa 102:26; Isa 51:6; Zep 3:8; Mat 24:35, Mat 25:41; 2Th 1:8; Rev 20:11, Rev 21:1 against : 2Pe 2:9; Mat 10:15, Mat ...

TSK: 2Pe 3:8 - be not // that one be not : Rom 11:25; 1Co 10:1, 1Co 12:1 that one : Psa 90:4

be not : Rom 11:25; 1Co 10:1, 1Co 12:1

that one : Psa 90:4

TSK: 2Pe 3:9 - is not // but is // not willing // but that is not : Isa 46:13; Hab 2:3; Luk 18:7, Luk 18:8; Heb 10:37 but is : 2Pe 3:15; Exo 34:6; Psa 86:15; Isa 30:18; Rom 9:22; 1Ti 1:16; 1Pe 3:20 not willing...

TSK: 2Pe 3:10 - the day // as a // in the which // the elements // melt // the earth the day : Isa 2:12; Joe 1:15, Joe 2:1, Joe 2:31, Joe 3:14; Mal 4:5; 1Co 5:5; 2Co 1:14; Jud 1:6 as a : Mat 24:42, Mat 24:43; Luk 12:39; 1Th 5:2; Rev 3:...

TSK: 2Pe 3:11 - all these // what // in all // godliness all these : 2Pe 3:12; Psa 75:3; Isa 14:31, Isa 24:19, Isa 34:4 what : Mat 8:27; 1Th 1:5; Jam 1:24 in all : Psa 37:14, Psa 50:23; 2Co 1:12; Phi 1:27, P...

TSK: 2Pe 3:12 - Looking // hasting unto the coming // the heavens // melt Looking : 1Co 1:7; Tit 2:13; Jud 1:21 hasting unto the coming : or, hasting the coming, 2Pe 3:10; 1Co 1:8; Phi 1:6 the heavens : 2Pe 3:10; Psa 50:3; I...

Looking : 1Co 1:7; Tit 2:13; Jud 1:21

hasting unto the coming : or, hasting the coming, 2Pe 3:10; 1Co 1:8; Phi 1:6

the heavens : 2Pe 3:10; Psa 50:3; Isa 34:4; Rev 6:13, Rev 6:14

melt : 2Pe 3:10; Isa. 2:1-22, Isa 64:1-12; Mic 1:4

TSK: 2Pe 3:13 - according according : Isa 65:17, Isa 66:22; Rev 21:1, Rev 21:27

TSK: 2Pe 3:14 - seeing // be diligent // in peace seeing : Phi 3:20; Heb 9:28 be diligent : 2Pe 1:5-10; 1Jo 3:3 in peace : Mat 24:26; Luk 2:29, Luk 12:43; 1Co 1:8, 1Co 15:58; Phi 1:10; 1Th 3:13, 1Th 5...

TSK: 2Pe 3:15 - account // our beloved // according account : 2Pe 3:9; Rom 2:4; 1Ti 1:16; 1Pe 3:20 our beloved : Act 15:25 according : Exo 31:3, Exo 31:6, Exo 35:31, Exo 35:35; 1Ki 3:12, 1Ki 3:28, 1Ki 4...

TSK: 2Pe 3:16 - in all // speaking // hard // unstable // wrest // the other // unto their own in all : 1Pe 1:1 speaking : Rom. 8:1-39; 1Cor. 15:1-58; 1Thes. 4:1-5:28; 2Kings 1:1-18 hard : 1Ki 10:1; Heb 5:11 unstable : 2Pe 2:14; Gen 49:4; 2Ti 3:...

in all : 1Pe 1:1

speaking : Rom. 8:1-39; 1Cor. 15:1-58; 1Thes. 4:1-5:28; 2Kings 1:1-18

hard : 1Ki 10:1; Heb 5:11

unstable : 2Pe 2:14; Gen 49:4; 2Ti 3:5-7; Jam 1:8

wrest : Exo 23:2, Exo 23:6; Deu 16:19; Psa 56:5; Hab 1:4

the other : Jer 23:36; Mat 15:3, Mat 15:6, Mat 22:29

unto their own : 2Pe 2:1; Phi 3:19; 1Pe 2:8; Jud 1:4

TSK: 2Pe 3:17 - seeing // beware // being // from seeing : 2Pe 1:12; Pro 1:17; Mat 24:24, Mat 24:25; Mar 13:23; Joh 16:4 beware : Mat 7:15, Mat 16:6, Mat 16:11; Phi 3:2; Col 2:8; 2Ti 4:15 being : 2Pe ...

TSK: 2Pe 3:18 - grow // knowledge // To him // Amen grow : Psa 92:12; Hos 14:5; Mal 4:2; Eph 4:15; Col 1:10; 2Th 1:3; 1Pe 2:2 knowledge : 2Pe 1:3, 2Pe 1:8, 2Pe 2:20; Joh 17:3; 2Co 4:6; Eph 1:17; Phi 3:8...

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Poole: 2Pe 3:1 - This second epistle // I stir up your pure minds // By way of remembrance 2Pe 3:1-7 The apostle declareth it to be the design of both his Epistles to remind the brethren of Christ’ s coming to judgment, in opposition...

2Pe 3:1-7 The apostle declareth it to be the design of both his

Epistles to remind the brethren of Christ’ s coming

to judgment, in opposition to scoffers.

2Pe 3:8,9 No argument can be drawn against it from the delay,

which is designed to leave men room for repentance.

2Pe 3:10-14 He describeth the day of the Lord, and exhorteth to

holiness of life in expectation of it.

2Pe 3:15,16 He showeth that Paul had taught the like in his Epistles,

2Pe 3:17,18 and concludeth with advice to beware of seduction,

and to grow in Christian grace and knowledge.

This second epistle: this confirms what has been said, that this Epistle was written by Peter, as well as the former.

I stir up your pure minds or, sincere minds: the sense is either:

1. I stir up your minds, that they may be pure and sincere; and then he doth not so much commend them for what they were, as direct and exhort them to what they should be, that they might receive benefit by what he wrote, there being nothing that contributes more to the fruitful entertaining of the word, than sincerity and honesty of heart, when men lay aside those things which are contrary to it, and might hinder its efficacy, 1Pe 2:1,2 . Or:

2. I stir up your minds, though pure and sincere, to continuance and constancy in that pure doctrine ye have received.

By way of remembrance: see 2Pe 1:13 .

Poole: 2Pe 3:2 - The words which were spoken before by the holy prophets // And of the commandment of us // The apostles of the Lord and Saviour The words which were spoken before by the holy prophets the word of prophecy, 2Pe 1:19 : he joins the prophets and apostles together, as concurring ...

The words which were spoken before by the holy prophets the word of prophecy, 2Pe 1:19 : he joins the prophets and apostles together, as concurring in their doctrine, and so useth it as an argument to persuade them to constancy in the faith of the gospel, that what the apostles preached to them was confirmed by what the prophets under the Old Testament had taught before, Act 26:22 Eph 2:20 .

And of the commandment of us by this he means the whole doctrine of the gospel preached by him and the other apostles: see 2Pe 2:21 1Jo 3:23 .

The apostles of the Lord and Saviour who was the author of this commandment, and the principal in giving it, and from whom the apostles received it, who were but ministers and instruments in delivering it to others.

Poole: 2Pe 3:3 - Knowing this first // In the last days // Scoffers // Walking after their own lusts Knowing this first especially, as being very necessary to be known. The apostle having in the former chapter cautioned these saints against the more ...

Knowing this first especially, as being very necessary to be known. The apostle having in the former chapter cautioned these saints against the more close enemies of the gospel, seducers and false teachers, here he foretells them of more open enemies, profane scoffers.

In the last days: see 1Co 10:11 2Ti 3:1 .

Scoffers profane contemners of God, and deriders of his truth, Psa 1:1 119:51 Isa 28:14,22 .

Walking after their own lusts such as are natural to them; lusts of ungodliness, Jud 1:18 .

Poole: 2Pe 3:4 - And saying, Where is the promise? // Of his coming // His coming // For since the fathers // All things continue as they were from the beginning of the // creation And saying, Where is the promise? Questioning or denying the great truths of the gospel, thereby to encourage themselves in walking after their own l...

And saying, Where is the promise? Questioning or denying the great truths of the gospel, thereby to encourage themselves in walking after their own lusts.

Of his coming viz. Christ’ s, mentioned 2Pe 3:2 . Possibly these scoffers might drop the name of Christ by way of contempt, not vouchsafing to mention it, as the Jews did, Joh 9:29 ; q.d. Where is the promise of his coming whom you expect?

His coming to judge the world; q.d. His promised coming doth not appear, the promise of it is not fulfilled.

For since the fathers who died in the faith of Christ’ s coming, and had the promise of it,

fell asleep i.e. died; the usual phrase of Scripture, which these scoffers seem to speak in derision; q.d. It is so long since the fathers fell asleep, (as you call it), that it were more than time for them to be awakened, whereas we see the contrary.

All things continue as they were from the beginning of the

creation i.e. the world continues to be the same it was, and hath the same parts it had; we see nothing changed, nothing abolished, but still nature keeps its old course. Thus they argue, that because there had been no such great change, therefore there should be none; because Christ was not yet come to judgment, therefore he should not come at all; not considering the power of God, who is as able to destroy the world as to make it, nor the will of God revealed in his word concerning the end of it.

Poole: 2Pe 3:5 - For this they willingly are ignorant of // That by the word of God // The heavens were // Of old // And the earth // Standing out of the water and in the water For this they willingly are ignorant of they will not know what they ought to know, and, if they would search the Scripture, might know. That by the...

For this they willingly are ignorant of they will not know what they ought to know, and, if they would search the Scripture, might know.

That by the word of God the command of God, or word of his power, as it is called, Heb 1:3 : see Gen 1:6,9 Ps 33:6 148:5 .

The heavens were were created, or had a being given them, Gen 1:6 .

Of old from the beginning of the world.

And the earth the globe of the earth, which comprehends likewise the seas and rivers, as parts of the whole.

Standing out of the water and in the water: according to our translation, the sense of these words may be plainly this, that the earth, standing partly out of the water, (as all the dry land doth, whose surface is higher than the water), and partly in the water, (as those parts do which are under it), or in the midst of the water, as being covered and encompassed by seas and rivers. But most expositors follow the marginal reading, and render the Greek word by consisting; and then the meaning may be, either:

1. That the earth consisting of water, as the matter out of which it was formed, (Moses calling the chaos which was that matter, waters, Gen 1:2 ), and by water, from which it hath its compactness and solidity, and without which it would be wholly dry, mere useless dust, unfit for the generation and production of natural things. If we understand the words thus, the argument lies against the scoffers; for the earth thus consists of and by water, yet God made use of the water for the destroying of the world; and so natural causes are not sufficient for its preservation without the power of God sustaining it in its being; and whenever he withdraws that power, in spite of all inferior causes, it must perish. Or:

2. The words may thus be read, the heavens were of old, and the earth (supply from the former clause) was out of the water, and consisting by, or in, the water; and the meaning is, that the earth did emerge, or appear out of, or above, the water, viz. when God gathered the waters together, and made the dry land appear; and doth consist by, or among, or in, the midst of the waters, as was before explained.

Poole: 2Pe 3:6 - Whereby // The world Whereby by which heavens and water, mentioned in the former verse, the fountains of the great deep being broken up, and the windows of heaven opened,...

Whereby by which heavens and water, mentioned in the former verse, the fountains of the great deep being broken up, and the windows of heaven opened, Gen 7:11 . Or, by the word of God, as the principal cause, and the water as the instrumental, which, at his command, was poured out upon the earth both from above and below.

The world the earth, with all the inhabitants of it, eight persons excepted. This the apostle allegeth against the forementioned scoffers, who said that all things continued as they were, when yet the flood had made so great a change in the face of the lower creation.

Poole: 2Pe 3:7 - The heavens // By the same word // Are kept in store // Reserved unto fire // Against the day of judgment // And perdition of ungodly men The heavens the ethereal, or starry heaven, as well as aerial; for, 2Pe 3:10,12 , he distinguisheth the heavens that are to perish by fire, from the ...

The heavens the ethereal, or starry heaven, as well as aerial; for, 2Pe 3:10,12 , he distinguisheth the heavens that are to perish by fire, from the elements; and 2Pe 3:13 , he opposeth a new heaven to that heaven which is to be consumed; but the new heaven is not meant merely of the aerial heaven. And why should not this be meant of the same heavens, which elsewhere in Scripture are said to perish? Job 14:12 Psa 102:26 : All of them wax old, & c.

By the same word the same as 2Pe 3:5 .

Are kept in store are kept safe as in a treasury, and untouched for a time, that they may be destroyed at last.

Reserved unto fire that they may be consumed by it. The destruction of the world by fire at the last day, is opposed to the destruction of it by water in the flood.

Against the day of judgment the general judgment.

And perdition of ungodly men this the apostle speaks with an emphasis, because they were ungodly against whom he here bends his discourse.

Poole: 2Pe 3:8 - Be not ignorant of this one thing // That one day is with the Lord // As a thousand years Be not ignorant of this one thing i.e. be sure of it: the same word is here used as 2Pe 3:5 ; and so he cautions them against the ignorance of scoffe...

Be not ignorant of this one thing i.e. be sure of it: the same word is here used as 2Pe 3:5 ; and so he cautions them against the ignorance of scoffers, and to prevent it, would have them certainly know this one thing, which is extant in the Scripture, which foretells Christ’ s coming.

That one day is with the Lord the Lord Jesus Christ, of whose coming he speaks.

As a thousand years by a synecdoche, a thousand years is put for any, even the longest revolution of time; and the sense is, that though there be great difference of time, long and short, with us, who are subject to time, and are measured by it; yet with Him who is eternal, without succession, to whom nothing is past, nothing future, but all things present, there is no difference of time, none long, none short, but a thousand years, nay, all the time that hath run out since the creation of the world, is but as a day; and we are not to judge of the Lord’ s delay in coming by our own sense, but by God’ s eternity.

Poole: 2Pe 3:9 - The Lord is not slack concerning his promise // As some men count slackness // But is long-suffering to usward // Not willing that any should perish // But that all should come to repentance The Lord is not slack concerning his promise i.e. doth not defer the fulfilling of it beyond the appointed time, Isa 60:22 . As some men count slack...

The Lord is not slack concerning his promise i.e. doth not defer the fulfilling of it beyond the appointed time, Isa 60:22 .

As some men count slackness either the scoffers here mentioned, who, because of Christ’ s not yet coming, questioned whether he would come at all, as if God had changed his purpose, or would not fulfil it: or believers themselves, who, through the weakness of their faith, and greatness of their sufferings, might grow into some degree of impatience, and think Christ slow in coming to avenge their cause, and give them their reward. So much may be gathered from Rev 6:10 .

But is long-suffering to usward to us believers, or us elect.

Not willing that any should perish any that he hath ordained to life, though not yet called.

But that all should come to repentance all whom he hath elected; he would have the whole number of them filled up, and defers the day of judgment till it be so: or this may be meant not of God’ s secret and effectual will, but of his revealed will, whereby he calls all to repentance promiscuously that hear the gospel preached, hath made it their duty, approves of it, hath prescribed it as the way of salvation, commanded them to seek salvation in that way, and is ready to receive and save them upon their repenting: see 1Ti 2:4 .

Poole: 2Pe 3:10 - But the day of the Lord // Will come as a thief in the night // In the which the heavens // Shall pass away // With a great noise // The elements // Shall melt with fervent heat // The earth also // And the works that are therein shall be burned up But the day of the Lord the day of judgment is here called the day of the Lord by way of eminence, as the great day, Jud 1:6 , and the great day ...

But the day of the Lord the day of judgment is here called the day of the Lord by way of eminence, as the great day, Jud 1:6 , and the great day of God Almighty, Rev 16:14 , and the day of the Lord Jesus, 1Co 1:8 5:5 2Co 1:14 Phi 1:6,10 .

Will come as a thief in the night as a thief comes suddenly and unexpectedly, when he thinks all in the house are most secure.

In the which the heavens viz. those that are visible, in distinction from the empyreal heaven, or place of glorified spirits.

Shall pass away either wholly, so as to cease to be; or rather, as to their present being and condition, so as to cease to be what they now are, and to give place to the new heaven, Rev 21:1 . The same word is used, Mat 24:35 Luk 16:17 .

With a great noise either swiftly and violently, or with such a noise as is usually caused by such violent and speedy motions.

The elements in a natural sense, as integral parts of the universe, air, water, earth.

Shall melt with fervent heat so 2Pe 3:12 , where another word is used in the Greek, which properly signifies melting, or being on fire, or burning, shall be dissolved or destroyed. So the word signifies, Joh 2:19 1Jo 3:8 .

The earth also the habitable part of the world. Though the earth, as a part of the world, be included in the elements before mentioned, yet here it may be taken with respect to its inhabitants, and the things contained in it.

And the works that are therein shall be burned up not only artificial, men’ s works, but natural, all that variety of creatures, animate and inanimate, wherewith God hath stored this lower world for the present use of man; and so all those delectable things in which carnal men seek their happiness.

Poole: 2Pe 3:11 - Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved // What manner of persons ought ye to be // In all holy conversation and godliness Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved seeing the coming of the Lord will be so terrible, as to bring with it the consumption of the wo...

Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved seeing the coming of the Lord will be so terrible, as to bring with it the consumption of the world, and the destruction of these things here below, upon which we are so apt to set our affections.

What manner of persons ought ye to be how prudent, accurate, diligent, zealous, and every way excellent persons! The Greek word is often used by way of admiration of some singular excellency in persons or things, Mat 8:27 Mar 13:1 Luk 1:29 .

In all holy conversation and godliness: the words in the Greek are both in the plural number, and may imply not only a continued course of holy walking throughout our whole time, but likewise diligence in the performance of all sorts of duties, and exercise of all those various graces wherewith the Spirit of God furnisheth believers in order thereto.

Poole: 2Pe 3:12 - Looking for // And hasting unto // The coming of the day of God Looking for patiently waiting for, and expecting. And hasting unto by fervent desire of it, and diligent preparation for it. The coming of the day...

Looking for patiently waiting for, and expecting.

And hasting unto by fervent desire of it, and diligent preparation for it.

The coming of the day of God the day of the Lord, 2Pe 3:10 .

Poole: 2Pe 3:13 - Nevertheless we, according to his promise // Look for new heavens and a new earth // Wherein dwelleth // Righteousness Nevertheless we, according to his promise: see Isa 65:17 Isa 66:22 Rev 21:1,27 , to which this text seems to refer, speak of a new state of the churc...

Nevertheless we, according to his promise: see Isa 65:17 Isa 66:22 Rev 21:1,27 , to which this text seems to refer, speak of a new state of the church here in the world, yet by way of allusion to the renovation of the world, which is ultimately there promised, and the perpetuity of the gospel church till then is thereby assured.

Look for new heavens and a new earth instead of the present world, which is to be consumed by fire, 2Pe 3:10,12 , or the first heaven and earth, which pass away, Rev 21:1 . These will be new heavens and a new earth, either as to their substance, or as to their qualities, refined and purified from all defilement, and free from all that vanity to which the creature was made subject by the sin of man, Rom 8:20,21 .

Wherein dwelleth i.e. perpetually abideth, and not only for a time, Rom 8:11 2Co 6:16 2Ti 1:14 .

Righteousness either this may be understood of righteousness in the abstract, that together with the destruction of the world the kingdom of sin shall be destroyed, and God’ s elect, the inhabitants of the new world, shall be filled with righteousness, whereas before sin had dwelt in them: or else the abstract may be put for the concrete, and by righteousness may be meant righteous persons, who only shall be the inhabitants of the new world, the wicked being turned into hell, Rev 21:27 ; and by this way of expressing it may be implied the perfection of the righteousness of such. Not only the new heaven is mentioned, but the new earth, because the whole world will then be the possession and kingdom of the saints, who follow Christ wherever he goes.

Poole: 2Pe 3:14 - Such things // Of him // In peace // Without spot, and blameless Such things Christ’ s coming to judgment; the destruction of this world; a new heaven and a new earth, in which dwells righteousness. Of him C...

Such things Christ’ s coming to judgment; the destruction of this world; a new heaven and a new earth, in which dwells righteousness.

Of him Christ the Judge.

In peace at peace with God, from whence proceeds peace of conscience, and an amicable, peaceable disposition toward others; all which may here be comprehended.

Without spot, and blameless: either:

1. By these words he means absolute perfection; and then he shows what we are to design and aim at in this life, though we attain it not till we come into the other: or:

2. A thorough sanctification through faith in Christ, a being got above fleshly lusts, and the pollutions of the world, and any such carriage as our hearts may reproach us for, 1Ti 6:14 . If it be objected, that such, having sin still in them, cannot be said to be without spot, and blameless, in the sight of God; it may be answered, that though they have sin in them, yet being, through the righteousness of Christ imputed to them, justified in the sight of God, and accepted in the Beloved, Eph 1:6 , he overlooks their infirmities, and imputes no sin to them, sees no spot in them, so as to condemn them for it. The apostle seems here to reflect on the seducers before mentioned, whom, 2Pe 2:13 , he had called spots and blemishes; and he persuades these saints to look to themselves, that they might be found of Christ (not such as the other were, but) without spot, and blameless; or, as it is translated, Eph 5:27 , without blemish, i.e. in a state of sanctification, as well as justification.

Poole: 2Pe 3:15 - And account // The longsuffering of our Lord // Is salvation // Even as our beloved brother Paul // According to the wisdom given unto him // Hath written unto you And account reckon with yourselves, and be confidently persuaded; or take for granted. The longsuffering of our Lord viz. in his not yet coming to ...

And account reckon with yourselves, and be confidently persuaded; or take for granted.

The longsuffering of our Lord viz. in his not yet coming to judgment, and bearing with so much sin in the world without presently punishing it.

Is salvation i.e. tends or conduceth to salvation, in that hereby he gives space for repentance to the elect unconverted, and alloweth time for the building up and perfecting those that are converted, 2Pe 3:9 .

Even as our beloved brother Paul not only brother in Christ, as a saint, but in office, as an apostle.

According to the wisdom given unto him that eminent and profound knowledge in the mysteries of the gospel in which Paul did excel, 1Co 2:6,7 Eph 3:3,4 . Peter makes such honourable mention of Paul:

1. That he might commend to the Jewish Christians the doctrine Paul had preached, though a minister of the uncircumcision;

2. To show that he had nothing the worse thoughts of him for being so sharply reproved by him, Gal 2:1-21 ; and:

3. That he might arm the saints against those heretics that abused Paul’ s writings, and wrested them to their own meaning, probably, to patronize their errors.

Hath written unto you unto you Jewish believers, viz. either:

1. In his Epistle to the Romans, Rom 2:4 , where is a passage very like this: or:

2. In his Epistle to the Hebrews, which, though it were not entitled to the Jews of the dispersion, yet was written to their nation; and in that Epistle several places there are of the same purport with this here; see Heb 9:28 10:23,25,36,37and other Epistle of Paul to the Jews we have none: and in this he shows much of that wisdom God gave him in the mystery of the gospel; and in this likewise are many things hard to be understood.

Poole: 2Pe 3:16 - As also in all his epistles // Speaking in them of these things // In which are some things hard to be understood // Which they that are unlearned // And unstable // Wrest // To their own destruction As also in all his epistles to make the sense complete, we must supply here from the former verse, he hath written. Speaking in them of these thin...

As also in all his epistles to make the sense complete, we must supply here from the former verse, he hath written.

Speaking in them of these things viz. concerning the second coming of Christ, and end of the world, the patience that should be exercised in waiting for it; about avoiding scoffers that deny these truths, and the other instructions contained in these two Epistles, but especially in the two latter chapters of this Second Epistle.

In which are some things hard to be understood in which Epistles, or rather, in which things contained in Paul’ s Epistles, for the Greek relative is of a different gender, and cannot agree with Epistles: q.d. Some of the doctrines delivered by Paul in his Epistles are hard to be understood. And so this doth not prove Paul’ s Epistles, much less the whole Scripture, to be obscure and dark: the style and expression may be as clear as the nature of the things will bear, and yet the things themselves so expressed may be hard to be understood, either by reason of their own obscurity, as prophecies, the excellency and sublimeness of them, as some mysterious doctrines, or the weakness of men’ s minds, and their incapacity of apprehending spiritual things, 1Co 2:14 , compared with 1Co 13:9,10 .

Which they that are unlearned they that are ignorant of the Scripture, unskilful in the word of righteouness, Heb 5:13 ; or indocible, that will not be instructed.

And unstable such as are ill grounded, and therefore unstedfast, and easily deceived, 2Pe 2:14 : see Eph 4:14 .

Wrest pervert the Scripture, and offer violence to it, and, as it were, rack and torture it to make it confess what it never meant.

To their own destruction eternal destruction, viz. while they use the Scriptures to countenance their errors; or stumble at some things in them, which are obscure, thereby taking occasion to deny the truth of God; and so make the Scripture the instrument of their perdition, which God appointed to be the means of salvation.

Poole: 2Pe 3:17 - Seeing ye know these things // Beware lest ye also // Fall from your own stedfastness Seeing ye know these things which I have been now writing to you of, viz. That the Judge will certainly come; or, that heretics, deceivers, and scoff...

Seeing ye know these things which I have been now writing to you of, viz. That the Judge will certainly come; or, that heretics, deceivers, and scoffers will come; or both may be comprehended.

Beware lest ye also as well as others have been.

Fall from your own stedfastness the stedfastness of your faith. This admonition he gives them, not to discourage them with fear of apostacy, but to awaken them to that holy care which would be a means to prevent it; and so to keep them from security, and trust in themselves, not to weaken their faith, and reliance on the promise.

Poole: 2Pe 3:18 - But grow in grace // And in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ // To him be glory both now and for ever But grow in grace in all those spiritual gifts ye have received from Christ, especially sanctifying. And in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jes...

But grow in grace in all those spiritual gifts ye have received from Christ, especially sanctifying.

And in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ in faith, whereby ye are sanctified, and made partakers of that grace.

To him be glory both now and for ever which belongs only to God; and therefore this proves Christ to be God.

PBC: 2Pe 3:1 - -- Throughout 2Pe 2:1-22, Peter made brief mention of the error set forth by the false teachers, while emphatically exposing their self-serving motives a...

Throughout 2Pe 2:1-22, Peter made brief mention of the error set forth by the false teachers, while emphatically exposing their self-serving motives and evil character. In 2Pe 2:1 he mentions that they deny " the Lord that bought them," the only distinct mention of their teaching throughout the second chapter. When we examined that verse, we reviewed the fact that the word translated " Lord" is the Greek root for our English word " despot," not the normal Greek word translated Lord in the New Testament. If Peter intended to assert that the false teachers had been redeemed by Jesus’ blood, he almost certainly would not have used this word. Given the appearance of a different word and the emphatic and repeated points made in the verses that follow in 2Pe 2:1-22, it appears far more likely that Peter intended to contrast the fact that God owns the whole universe and that false teachers who rebel against God in their malicious errors shall surely face severe judgment. God has an inherent right to rule as Sovereign over the whole universe. Therefore, no false teacher has any authority whatever to teach error for selfish gain. Peter makes the point clearly that the error of false teaching is compounded by malicious rebellion against God and His rightful authority over His creation. Otherwise throughout 2Pe 2:1-22 Peter emphasizes the character of the false teachers and the certain judgment that they will face in the final day.

Only as he begins 2Pe 3:1-18 does Peter surface at least one segment of their false teaching, denial of the Second Coming and of God’s inherent authority to rule over His universe. As he implied the similarity between false teachers in the New Testament era and false prophets in the Old Testament dispensation, Peter begins 2Pe 3:1-18 with an appeal to the continuing authenticity of Old Testament teaching for New Testament believers. While we are not bound by the " law" of the Old Testament, we are clearly informed by Old Testament Scripture of the character and work of God that is timeless. Peter stops short of telling us to " obey" the prophets, but he distinctly directs us to " be mindful" of their words. On that premise of authentic Old Testament Scripture Peter directs us to be mindful of the " commandment" of the apostles of the Lord Jesus Christ. You can only be " mindful" of a commandment by obeying it.

Invariably the question surfaces when discussing Old Testament law and New Testament believers. Are we under the law? Or the more specific question arises, " Are we under the Ten Commandments?" Paul twice answers the question in Ro 6:1-23, affirming that we are not under the law. However, the full context of Ro 6:1-23 affirms that we are under no less moral obligation to God than the Old Testament saints. In fact I hold that we are under a far stronger injunction to godly living than the Old Testament believers. Obligation relates to the authority of the one who rules and to the clarity of his instructions. New Testament believers have clearer instructions than Old Testament believers, and we cannot distinguish the divine authority of the law from the direct commandments of the Lord Jesus and of His apostles in the New Testament.

I reject antinomianism as one of the most insidious and destructive errors of Western Christianity in our time. It has invaded almost every segment of Western Christianity, including our own fellowship. If you doubt that this error has invaded believers today, start teaching the clear and emphatic teachings of New Testament obligation to people. If they readily and instantly respond with obedience, you know that they are not infected with antinomianism. If they start making excuses and giving explanations as to why they cannot, or need not, obey New Testament Scripture, make a note. They are antinomian. The two favorite gods of antinomianism are lifestyle and wallet. Call on people to make adjustments in how they manage either of these possessions, and you will quickly see the antinomian virus surface if they are infected.

The conduct specified in New Testament teaching is not simple suggestions or recommendations; it is " commandment." Occasionally in some Christian fellowships people will declare that " God gave me a revelation," followed by anything from a simplistic fact that appears in Scripture to a bizarre idea that contradicts Scripture. The Holy Spirit Who inspired the New Testament is in every sense God and shares in all the attributes of deity, including immutability; He cannot and does not change. Rest assured that when a person claims a " revelation" that contradicts the clear teaching of Scripture; his " revelation" did not come from God! The Holy Spirit never contradicts Himself, so He will never give anyone a revelation that contradicts the Scripture that He directed for our authority and instruction.

We frequently see the problem of disrespect toward authority in adolescents in our culture. Even professing Christian adolescents look around at their peers rather than at authoritative Scripture and feel fully justified in open rebellion against their parents’ authority. We need to come to terms with a more alarming reality. What we see in rebellious adolescents is a rather detailed mirror of what those young people see in the adults around them. Disrespect for authority appears in almost every aspect of our whole culture. It impacts the workplace where employees and employers mutually speak and act disdainfully toward each other. It impacts the neighborhood where friends build fences and fight over insignificant issues. And it happens in homes when parents disrespect each other, and the God Who instituted marriage, by ignoring Scripture and filing for divorce for any trivial issue that displeases them. Jesus described the Old Testament allowance for divorce as permission, not as a " command," due to the hardness of man’s heart. Often couples will remain married, but will openly defy the Biblical teachings regarding the God-honoring relationship between husband and wife. A recent movie casts a wife of a Greek family as boasting about her ability to control her husband, " Yes, he is the head of the family, but I’m the neck, and the neck can turn the head anyway it wishes." Many wives give transparent lip service to the Biblical model of marriage, while openly showing disrespect, if not contempt, for their husbands. Likewise, many husbands claim a near-despot authority over their wives under the guise of demanding that their wives " obey" them according to Eph 5:1-33. While Eph 5:1-33 clearly teaches submission, including but not limited to wives and husbands, there is not a single word in Eph 5:1-33 about husbands demanding submission of their wives. The divine command to the husband is to love his wife as Christ loved his church and gave Himself for her, not browbeat her and demand submission. Rebellion against God is rampant in our culture, and even in the Christian subculture of our society. We will never curb the rebellious problem among adolescents till we curb it in the adults whom they observe as role models. We will not restore respectful obedience to Christ in our Christian subculture till we openly, willingly, and even joyfully begin to live under His clear authority over our lives. In 1Pe 3:15 Peter directs us to be constantly equipped and prepared to respond to people who ask for a reason for our faith. Our primary problem today is not that we are ill prepared to answer the question. It is rather that our lifestyle is so nearly like that of the culture around us that no one ever asks us the question about our faith. We have attempted to create an invisible faith, one that we claim to possess, but that no one can see. When we begin to live our faith so pervasively in every aspect of our lives that people take notice of us, we will begin the process that identifies us as Christian men and women, not as respectable rebels to our God. We may be orthodox and clear in every aspect of our theology, but, if we fail to practice Biblical faith in every aspect of our conduct, we fail the test of robust and authentic Christianity according to the New Testament model.

This question of authority is pervasive. It invades every dimension of our life and thought. Peter devoted a long, and rather difficult, chapter to the fact that false teachers practiced open rebellion against God, barely mentioning the teachings of these people at all. We need to spend long, thoughtful hours in self-examination. Are we submissive and obedient, or are we actually rebels against our God? Our credible testimony stands in the balance. Which way will it finally tilt?

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PBC: 2Pe 3:3 - -- To some extent I need to explore this passage in terms of the contemporary interpretation of extreme preterists, the error examined briefly in the las...

To some extent I need to explore this passage in terms of the contemporary interpretation of extreme preterists, the error examined briefly in the last chapter. Did Peter actually have the local military siege of Jerusalem by the Romans (A. D. 70) in mind when he wrote these words? Or did he have something more universal in mind? Basic hermeneutical skills require us to follow the most natural import of words and sentence structure in our pursuit of the original author’s (and we must not forget the original Author, the Holy Spirit) meaning and intent.

When he wrote these words, Peter focused on three examples of God’s sovereignty, two of which involve His sovereign and holy judgment of sin. The first example deals with God’s creation. God created this universe in the pattern of Ge 1:1-31 and various corroborating Scriptures throughout the Bible. The implication of the scoffers denies creation, so it implies that matter is eternal that it had no beginning, simply a variety of changes over endless past times. Occasionally contemporary extreme preterists also raise this issue and imply their belief against creation. For the sake of this question, it matters not whether the days of Ge 1:1-31 are twenty-four hour days or prolonged logical eras of time. Ge 1:1-31 leaves no doubt that God created the universe. Sincere traditional Christians may debate the length of the days, but no Bible believing Christian can reasonably doubt the primary message of Ge 1:1-31; God created the universe. It had a beginning with God. Heb 11:3 clarifies this teaching in simple words. Faith embraces the fact that God created the material universe so that what we see is not the endless evolutionary cycle of change in form, but in fact the actual appearance of something that had a beginning in the purpose and creative power of God.

Implied in one’s rejection of creation is a deeper rejection of God. In Ro 1:1-32 Paul states that fallen man has no excuse but to believe in God’s power and deity (KJV, "Godhead"). Nature will never reveal redemption, but it undeniably reveals its intelligent and supernatural origin. In order to erode the foundation of the scoffers’ error Peter took the roof off their argument and affirmed that God created this universe. Thus He is not a part of creation, but transcends it and has the Creator’s right to deal with it as He chooses.

The second error in the scoffers’ reasoning is their claim that all natural processes continue as they always have, a uniformitarian view of nature. Everything has always been as it is today. To counter this error Peter raised the fact of the flood. In the flood God judged the increasing blackness and prevalence of sin by sending a flood of water on the earth. Although some professing Christians hold to the idea of a "local flood" only in the Mesopotamian Valley, most Bible believing Christians hold to a wider scope for the flood. There is worldwide evidence of a flood, along with mythological traditions in every ancient culture of a cataclysmic flood that tends strongly to corroborate the Biblical account of the flood as a universal event. In this case Peter’s example accomplishes a number of strategic objectives. First, everything in the material universe has not continued uniformly throughout time. Secondly, Peter’s example affirms God’s personal involvement in human history and His personal judgment against sin and against the sinners who indulged in it. Peter is precisely narrowing the scope of his argument to expose the true nature of the false teaching that he is opposing in this case.

Peter’s final example further narrows his focus so as to give us a rather detailed idea of the false teaching set forth by the false teachers whom he opposes in this letter. "But the heavens and the earth, which are now, by the same word are kept in store, reserved unto fire against the day of judgment and perdition of ungodly men." Forget about creation; forget about the flood; God will yet intervene in human history in an epochal and universal judgment.

This error goes directly to the scoffers’ rejection of the Biblical view of the Second Coming of Christ, the final judgment of mankind, and eternity, either in punishment for sins committed or in celebration of God’s mercy and saving grace in heaven. In a tape recording of a southern California preterist’s radio broadcast that I heard sometime back, the speaker specifically rejected the idea that the Bible, either Old or New Testament, promises resurrection to anyone other than the Lord Jesus Christ. The preposterous claim fails utterly against the multiple New Testament teachings on this doctrine. Wrested hermeneutical principles must be overworked in order to give any credible posture to this claim. Allegorical interpretation, almost to the point of mystical sign language, must be employed to make any case whatever for the claim.

A simple and natural assessment of Peter’s words here rejects outright the idea of local and natural judgment against one city. Had Peter intended such a local and cultural judgment, he would not have employed such universal terms; "But the heavens and the earth, which are now..." "Heavens and earth" hardly depict one city or culture of people. In the context Peter has been dealing with broad epochal events, creation and the flood, likely if not certainly universal. Peter’s readers would view neither event as being local and temporal only. The allegorical interpretation that makes the "heavens and the earth" mystically represent the New Testament church are as unfounded in the context of this lesson as the preterist’s rejection of God’s final and universal judgment of mankind.

What is the most natural interpretation of Peter’s words in the context of his reasoning against false teachers and their scoffing denial of the Christian claim of a future return of Christ and universal judgment of sinners? After all, this is the point they denied in their scoffing attack against Peter and the believers to whom he wrote this letter. God created the natural material earth. In the unfolding processes of human sin Peter gives the example of God’s cataclysmic judgment against sinners that impacted Planet Earth by a flood of water. The earth didn’t become extinct after the flood, but it distinctly changed in appearance because of the flood. The flood was not a superstitious or mythical event for Peter; it was a real event in actual human and earth history.

In the same way Peter affirms that the present earth, still existent after the flood, but altered by that past event of divine judgment, faces yet another cataclysmic event because of human sin. "But the heavens and the earth, which are now, by the same word are kept in store, reserved unto fire against the day of judgment and perdition of ungodly men." The same "word" of God that created the universe-that sent the flood in judgment against sinners-is holding this earth in its control until yet another judgment that shall again destroy it as we know it today. It stands in suspense, waiting for a future day of judgment when God shall reveal His holy judgment against "ungodly men." They will face both "judgment" and "perdition." Peter’s union of these two words implies obvious penal judgment, followed by the imposition of the sentence against those found guilty in the judgment.

In the verses that follow Peter will discuss God’s merciful disposition of the saved and of the material universe. His first task, given the character of the false teachers and the nature of their error, is to deal with God’s sovereign right and intent to remain personally involved in the ultimate disposition of sinners, and of the material world in which they live. The false teachers had obviously rejected these foundational truths. Consequently, they had fallen prey to base and depraved sins of the body, alleging that they were doing nothing wrong in the process, part of the false "liberty" that they promised their hearers. In the second chapter Peter correctly reminds his readers that the false "liberty" to sin is in fact slavery, not liberty. Even the false teachers who promised this freedom to their followers demonstrated their slavery to these sins. Take God and the final judgment that He has revealed in Scripture out of the equation, and you have removed the most significant factor imaginable against immorality and the hedonistic indulgence of sins that were practiced in the first century, as well as in our time and culture. May we never allow this holy event to fade in our memory or our conviction of Biblical and historical truth.

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PBC: 2Pe 3:8 - The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness. // ...longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance. Almost always you will hear 2Pe 3:9 quoted without 2Pe 3:8 or any other portion of the context of the lesson. The typical interpretation placed on 2Pe...

Almost always you will hear 2Pe 3:9 quoted without 2Pe 3:8 or any other portion of the context of the lesson. The typical interpretation placed on 2Pe 3:9 violates the context of the lesson and makes God an inept, incompetent Savior who wishes what He knows and elsewhere acknowledges that He cannot obtain. What happens to this verse when we allow it to stand in its context with relevance to the whole question of false teachers and their denial of God’s right to judge, and of the actual judgment that shall occur at the Second Coming?

A primary question related to this verse is this. Is the will of God certain or not? Peter answers this question for himself. "For it is better, if the will of God be so, that ye suffer for well doing, than for evil doing." {1Pe 3:17} Both for the practical lesson of 1Pe 3:1-22 and for the eschatological question of 2Pe 3:1-18, we should ask the obvious and simple question. Is the will of God so? Peter clearly believes that it is so. If, in fact, God’s will is so, and is certain as Scripture clearly states, we must interpret 2Pe 3:9 so as to harmonize with this truth. We have no rational basis on which to make the will of God so in 1Pe 3:17 and then to whimsically make it tentative or not so at all in 2Pe 3:9. In a rather transparent attempt to justify a false and non-contextual interpretation of this verse some teachers allege that the word translated "willing" merely means that God wishes for all men to come to repentance. Reliable New Testament Greek dictionaries make the word an expression of will, not of wish. Kittel’s Theological Dictionary of the New Testament uses this term for the word translated "willing" in #1Pe 3:9 "...denotes a decision of will based on deliberate resolve..."[i]

Let’s walk through these two verses in their contextual setting. Peter is responding to the scoffers’ and false teachers’, denial of the Second Coming and of God’s final judgment of sinners. They scoffed at the idea because, according to them, everything continues as it always has; sunrise-sunset, people are born-people die, graveyards are filling up, but never emptying. Peter’s point is not that an event would shortly occur in Jerusalem that would refute their cynical attitude. Rather he asserts God’s timeless governance over time. He prepares his readers, including you and me, to expect a long delay before the event occurs. However, he wants us to live in full assurance of the fact; it shall occur according to God’s timeline, not ours.

What is Peter’s point in the time example of "one day as a thousand years-a thousand years as one day"? His point is simple. God is not subject to time. Therefore whether He brings the end today, or a thousand years from now is not of any consequence whatever to Him. He is the Creator of time, not subject to it.

"The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness."

In the mind of some God’s delay is tantamount to failure. If He hasn’t come by now, perhaps we are mistaken. Perhaps He may not be coming at all. Doubting Christians and false teachers have this much in common; both doubt the Second Coming and God’s final judgment. In terms of God’s reference to time in this lesson the whole of the gospel age has barely lasted two days so far. Rather than setting the stage for an imminent fulfilling event (as with the preterist interpretation of the Roman siege of Jerusalem in A. D. 70), Peter is actually doing precisely the opposite. He is setting our expectations that the final prophetic event in human history will actually not occur for a long time yet to come.

If we become too focused on the time element, we are liable to miss the greater truth that Peter wants us to learn; the actual event is certain, regardless of how long the delay. It will occur on schedule according to God’s plan.

Peter punctuates this thought with an explanation of the reason for the delay,

"...longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance."

Most commentators and Bible teachers interpret these words as an empty expression of God’s benevolence. Although all except a few universalists (people who reject the Biblical doctrine of election, and of eternal punishment, believing that every human being who ever lived or ever will live shall be saved) do not believe that all of humanity will be saved, they interpret these words to make God wish or desire what He knows will never happen. If God is not willing that any human being should perish, why did He prepare hell for the wicked? This view either makes God a benevolent ne’er-do-well or an incompetent deity who cannot perform his desires.

God’s longsuffering is focused in this lesson, "to us-ward." We read in other Scriptures of God’s longsuffering in other settings. Here His longsuffering is specifically focused on the elect, on "us." A linguistic case can be made that God’s longsuffering relates to the same people as His intent that none perish but come to repentance. In other words Peter doesn’t shift his focus from God’s longsuffering toward us to a general desire or intent that all of humanity should not perish but come to repentance. Rather the point of God’s longsuffering to "us-ward" is illustrated in the fact that He intentionally delays the Second Coming so that all of those whom He has elected should not perish. Contextually in the setting of the question of the certainty and the long delay of the Second Coming, we should view this perishing in the same light. If God had brought about the Second Coming in 500 A. D., you and I would have perished from God’s purpose in that we would never have been born. We wouldn’t exist. The word translated "come" means to "make room." In defining the various similar words and their distinction Strong offers this unique feature of the word 5562: always emphasises the idea of separation, change of place, and does not, like e.g. 4198, note the external and perceptible motion.[ii]  What is the point? Why did Peter choose this word? It appears that he intended to communicate that God has allowed or made a space of time during which all of His elect shall be born into the material world, and then into the family of God, before He sounds the trumpet announcing the end. In other words there is a divine purpose in the delay. Rather than express God’s empty desire (empty because, above all beings, He who is omniscient knows the eventual outcome of all things) for the wicked and finally lost to repent, though they in fact never will do so, Peter makes reasonable sense of the delay. God has made a space of time that separates first century believers, and us as well, from the actual date of the event. There is purpose in the delay. God’s focused longsuffering allows time to continue till all of His elect, people properly designated as "us-ward" in the verse, come to repentance.

This raises our last question. Will all of God’s elect actually repent? Perhaps we can make a case that, to some extent, they shall. However, we cannot make the case without significant exceptions. God’s elect includes infants who died in their infancy. Did they come to repentance? It is fanciful and esoteric to apply the idea of repentance as we think of it to them. Peter is framing the thought of the Second Coming from our perspective, not God’s. From our perspective we can see repentance in the lives of believers who fall under God’s longsuffering conviction for sin and finally obey. As long as there is a believer who feels the sting of conviction that brings him or her to repentance, there is reason for the delay of the Second Coming. When all of God’s elect have been saved, from our observational perspective, brought to repentance, then God shall sound the trumpet and bring this world as we know it to an end. Until then, we are to patiently wait and live in the certain confidence that the Second Coming, though long delayed, is as certain as if it had already occurred. When our Lord stands before the Father at the head of the redeemed host, "Behold I and the children God hath given me," all of the elect shall appear with Him. None shall be lost for any reason. Celebrate the day as you wait its certain coming.

[i] Theological dictionary of the New Testament. 1964-c1976. Vols. 5-9 edited by Gerhard Friedrich. Vol. 10 compiled by Ronald Pitkin. (G. Kittel, G. W. Bromiley & G. Friedrich, Ed.). Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans.

[ii] Strong, J. (1996). The exhaustive concordance of the Bible: Showing every word of the test of the common English version of the canonical books, and every occurence of each word in regular order. (electronic ed.) (5818). Ontario: Woodside Bible Fellowship.

PBC: 2Pe 3:9 - -- See WebbSr: CHRIST IS COMING

See WebbSr: CHRIST IS COMING

PBC: 2Pe 3:10 - -- 2Pe 3:10  2Pe 3:10 "But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night; in the which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the ...

2Pe 3:10

 2Pe 3:10 "But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night; in the which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burned up."

thief in the night

He is talking about the unregenerate in the world—to the wicked and ungodly it will be as a thief in the night. But to the child of God—to the one who knows Jesus and has the love of God in their heart, they ought to be expecting Him. They ought to be looking for Him every day. When you get up in the morning that ought to be the first thing you look for—wonder if today is the day.

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A burglar, a "thief in the night," does not send you an engraved notice announcing the precise date and time that he will break into your home. He operates on the element of surprise. He can only succeed if he breaks into your home unannounced and unnoticed till he has done his work. Peter doesn’t indicate that believers will know, but others will not know. Peter is writing to believers and tells them that the precise time of the Lord’s return will be a surprise to them as well as to others. No doubt, many informed believers will have a better indication of the Lord’s return based on the state of the world, but many sincere believers over the last twenty one centuries have sincerely believed that the Second Coming was near, only to be disappointed. Now Peter must deal with the element of surprise, along with a brief description of the actual events that will occur as part of the final event in God’s purpose with this world as we know it now.

The basic premise of the "thief in the night" character of the Second Coming urges constant watchfulness among believers. It also puts us on notice to beware of any who claim to have inside information that the event will occur at a precise time. If they tell you that they know when the Lord will return, they contradict the Holy Spirit who directed Peter to tell us that God has not revealed that information, nor shall He. Many sincere people have developed complex interpretations by which they claimed to know the precise date of the Second Coming. With time each one has been proved wrong. False teachers who predict the exact date and time of the Second Coming are the easiest to prove wrong. Just sit quietly by and let the clock tick. If they are right, at the time they predicted, you will hear the trumpet and see the Lord. If they are false teachers, the date will come and go, but you will not see the Lord coming in His glory.

Occasionally people who do not wish to deal with the details that Peter sets forth in this lesson regarding the events that will occur at the Second Coming, nor with the information that Peter gives us about heaven, will interpret this lesson as an allegory, usually representative of the New Testament church. We find nothing in this context that indicates an allegorical interpretation. Peter wrote the whole letter to warn his readers of false teachers. In the first chapter he was quite simple and specific regarding the equipment that we should acquire and become skilled in using to avoid the enticing errors brought forth by false teachers. In the second chapter he deals at length with the diabolical character of the false teachers. Now in the third chapter he deals in equally direct form with the actual teachings of the false teachers that prompted his letter. When confronting error, the best strategy is to be simple and concise. The worst strategy is to present your thoughts in allegorical or other symbolic form.

Peter’s language is too broad and encompassing to be viewed as applicable to only the city of Jerusalem, the interpretation offered by the extreme preterist school of interpretation that I’ve mentioned in earlier chapters. The "heavens," the "elements," the "earth," and the "works" that are in the earth are not localized terms suitable for any reasonable interpreter to apply to Jerusalem, or any city in first century Judah. A reasonable person reading these words with a basic knowledge of language will readily understand that Peter intended to describe a universal and cataclysmic event, not a local holocaust inflicted by Roman soldiers against the city of Jerusalem.

D. A. Carson summarizes this lesson in his typically concise manner. "The argument concerning the certainty of Christ’s coming is rounded off with a further reminder of the fact and its suddenness. Peter then comments on the consequences this will have for the physical world as we know it and the consequences knowledge of this should produce in the life of the believer. Since the new heavens and new earth will be the home of righteousness, we ought to be ‘making ourselves at home’ here and now."[i]   We will deal more extensively with the point in a later chapter, but Carson makes a convincing point in this citation. The Christian’s deep conviction in the reality of the Second Coming and God’s final and universal judgment at the end are frequently used in Scripture to urge faithfulness in present difficulties. If all these prophecies culminated with the devastation of Jerusalem in A. D. 70, there would be no incentive whatever for believers today to live in godly graciousness toward each other. The event might be an interesting lesson in history, even in God’s temporal judgment against a rebellious nation, but it would have no relevance to personal godliness in the present age.

In this theological teaching, as in other areas of Biblical studies, balance is essential to a healthy and mature faith. Although I have dealt rather directly in the last few chapters with the extreme preterist view of eschatology (end times events), I reject with equal conviction the flood of contemporary teaching that, in my view of Biblical teaching, is fully as alien to Scripture as the extreme preterist view. Most contemporary teaching that deals with a secret rapture of believers (for example, the Left Behind series of novels) began with J. N. Darby and the Plymouth Brethren around 1827. For almost the next hundred years leading Christian scholars largely rejected these ideas as wholly alien to Biblical teaching and historical Christian interpretation. In the early twentieth century the ideas resurfaced in the publication of the Scofield study Bible. The Scofield notes launched the Darby theme into mainstream Christianity.

In no passage does the New Testament describe the Lord’s glorious appearance at the end of time as a secret event. Quite to the contrary, "...every eye shall see him". {Re 1:7} Simultaneously this single verse (though not at all standing lonely by itself in New Testament teaching) refutes both extreme preterism and extreme dispensationalism that never saw the light of day prior to 1827. While a more conservative form of millennialism appears quite early in the writings of early church fathers, historical millennialism is significantly different in its content than the contemporary Darby concept. These two views represent two ditches on either side of historical Biblical truth. Extreme dispensationalism relies on a faulty strategy of occasional over-literalizing passages and certain foundational assumptions that are never proved by Scripture itself. Extreme preterism relies on a rather shameless redefinition of Biblical hermeneutics and myopic Olivet Sermon interpretations that are as void of historical support as the dispensational excesses of our time. Both views lack the balance that a rather wide variety of eschatological views have claimed throughout most of Christianity’s history.

The most natural linguistic interpretation of Peter’s teaching in this chapter leads one to a rather simple view of the Second Coming. While its arrival will be as a thief in the night, its actual unfolding, once it begins, will be quite public and universal. In his rebellious sin, beginning at Eden, man brought cataclysmic judgment upon himself and upon the whole of God’s creation. In order to cleanse the universe of sin in every quarter God will melt it all down.

Once a reporter asked atheist philosopher Bertrand Russell what he would do if, after death, he faced God and realized that he had been wrong in his bold assertions for atheism. He responded that he would complain to God for not leaving more evidence of his existence. Interestingly, Paul {Ro 1:18-23} affirms the mirror opposite view. God has given abundant evidence of his existence, and supernatural role in the natural creation of the universe. In his fallenness man willfully ignores the evidence, claiming that it doesn’t exist. If in fact Russell faces God and has any opportunity to protest his claim, God shall declare for all to hear and know that Russell willfully chose to ignore the evidence that God made available. May we seek balance and a more gracious spirit in our eschatological dialogue with other believers.

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[i] Carson, D. A. (1994). New Bible commentary: 21st century edition. Rev. ed. of: The new Bible commentary. 3rd ed. / edited by D. Guthrie, J.A. Motyer. 1970. (4th ed.). {2Pe 3:10} Leicester, England; Downers Grove, Ill., USA: Inter-Varsity Press.

PBC: 2Pe 3:13 - Nevertheless we, according to his promise, look for new heavens and a new earth… Nevertheless we, according to his promise, look for new heavens and a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness. So far in our study of Peter’s des...

Nevertheless we, according to his promise, look for new heavens and a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness.

So far in our study of Peter’s description of the final chapter in the history of this world as we know it, we have seen a total meltdown that will occur in God’s way and at God’s time. Though long delayed and scoffed at by false teachers, Peter moves us confidently forward in our understanding of the certainty, as well as the nature of the final events.

" Nevertheless we, according to his promise, look for new heavens and a new earth…"

We think of something akin to a universal atomic meltdown as being the final event in the history of material things. However, we think as created mortals, not as the Creator. God created the universe by the word of His power; He can melt it down and recreate it as easily as He created it in the first place.

Strong’s enhanced lexicon of New Testament words offers an interesting analysis of two synonyms that are both translated as " new" in the New Testament.

" Kainos [the word that appears in 2Pe 3:13: denotes the new primarily in reference to quality, the fresh, unworn.

" neos: denotes the new primarily in reference to time, the young, recent." [1]

Thus, according to the meaning of the word that Peter selected (by inspiration of the Holy Spirit) Peter refers to something that is fresh in quality, and unworn. The other word that he did not use refers to something that is new in terms of time, of its origin. The material universe will continue to wear down and become more worn and fragile. Then after God melts it down, He will transform it into a new material universe, fresh and vibrant, altogether appropriate for eternity with God and His elect, void of sin and recreated for righteousness alone.

Occasionally we look at various partial passages and plead total ignorance of anything pertinent to eternity with God in heaven other than a sentimental claim of complete satisfaction. No doubt, we shall indeed be satisfied throughout eternity. However, we should not sell Scripture so short in terms of providing us with just enough information to anticipate that day with excitement rather than fearing dreadful boredom. However much we love the words of " Amazing Grace" or one of our other favorite hymns, the idea of singing it and other hymns for all eternity in an unending " eternal church meeting" triggers a fear of boredom. Can we imagine anything so exciting and varied as to please God for all eternity? Not at all; yet this is precisely what He has in store for us. Peter opens a unique door of thought to our minds in terms of a transformed and recreated earth. The Biblical description of our resurrected and glorified bodies suggests a mature, perfectly healthy body, void of any residue of disease or physical trauma. I suggest that it may well also suggest a body void of any of the awful scars of DNA flaws that produce babies with birth defects and other deformities. Imagine the impact of sin and man’s fall on the material universe. Now imagine the whole material universe, transformed as fully as our mortal bodies after the resurrection. That is what Peter presents to our minds in this lesson.

Late first century and subsequent Gnosticism described a deity who was wholly inapproachable by mortals. It also despised the material universe as a colossal mistake by an " underling deity." The true Gnostic deity despised anything material. If Peter correctly described the role of the material universe in our eternity with God, Gnostic error is mirror-opposite from the Biblical view of God and His material universe. The Gnostic deity could never have inspired poets to write, " The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament showeth his handywork…" (Ps 19:1). Can one possibly look at the wonders of Yosemite, of Yellowstone, or of so many other wonders in nature and fail to hear the echoes of their existence that shouts the glory of their Creator God? Scripture consistently directs us to view the created universe as the masterpiece of God, the supreme artwork of the Supreme Artist. Therefore, we should not be at all surprised that God may very well transform this material universe into a suitable declaration of His glory for our eternity with Him.

" Wherefore, beloved, seeing that ye look for such things, be diligent that ye may be found of him in peace, without spot, and blameless ."

As Peter draws us ever deeper into this incredible image of our future eternity with God, he returns again to the practical exhortation that we live in gracious godliness. He singles out three characteristics for our objective.

1. We are to strive for " peace." What kind of peace might he have in mind? Are we to strive for peace with our conscience, with God’s law, divinely imprinted in our deepest inner being? Undoubtedly. Are we to strive for peace with other believers, even those believers who said hurtful things about us, or to us? Yes, we will spend eternity with them, altogether thrilled that both they and we are there by the loving mercy and grace of God, so why not work harder at peace with them now? We claim that we believe in salvation by God’s grace alone. How much of that kind of grace do we consistently extend to those around us? Should we work for peace with God? Jesus accomplished our legal peace with our holy, but offended, God at Calvary. How peaceful are we in heart and mind with God in our routine conduct?

2. " Without spot ." Rather than fostering a slothful take-it-for-granted attitude about our faith, Peter expects that our faith will drive us toward the godly image that we shall wear in eternity. So, you say, we shall never arrive at that perfect man here and now. I agree, but I see no excuse for failure to work at the job, do you? Rather, I see, both reasonably and Biblically, an uncompromising urge that drives concerted action to grow in godly conduct that declares for all who know us to see; that we are citizens of a holy and heavenly country; that we are dedicated to our citizenship now in every way possible.

3. " Blameless." Again we confront the question. Shall we arrive in this life? And we must shamefacedly respond that we shall not. However, we should work to avoid spiritual adolescence that views difficulties immaturely and avoids any effort to grow into spiritual maturity. On one occasion Paul wrote that he " withstood Peter to his face, because he was to be blamed" (Ga 2:11). Neither Paul nor Peter perpetuated the " blame game." Both of them viewed this event as a temporary failure from which Peter recovered, and for which Paul forgave him. Perhaps this momentary confrontation motivated Peter to strive toward a blameless life with greater energy than he had exerted before this event. May we reflect on our own " blameworthy" moments and look for ways to transform them, and our conduct, into a more " blameless" life for out Savior.

This follow-up exhortation should reinforce our conviction to the vital correlation between our realistic expectation of the Second Coming and of our eternity with God and our present discipleship. " Peace, no spot, and no blame;" what a legacy for believers to live out for future generations of believers—and for our beloved God.

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[1]Strong, J. (1996). The exhaustive concordance of the Bible : Showing every word of the test of the common English version of the canonical books, and every occurence of each word in regular order. (electronic ed.) (5852). Ontario: Woodside Bible Fellowship.

PBC: 2Pe 3:15 - -- If you study Ac 15:1-41 from a purely human perspective, you could wonder about residual tension between Paul and the Jerusalem establishment of which...

If you study Ac 15:1-41 from a purely human perspective, you could wonder about residual tension between Paul and the Jerusalem establishment of which Peter was an integral part.  After all, Paul and the Antioch contingency took a problem that had been created by Jerusalem church members in Antioch right back to Jerusalem church for its resolution.  How refreshing.  Further in Ga 2:11-21 Paul records a situation in which he confronted Peter for a significant lapse that Peter committed, possibly also in the Antioch church.  Given our humanity, even the dominant humanity of many who claim to be true believers in Christ, Paul and Peter might have died as archenemies.  Obviously this didn’t happen.  Why?  Whatever the tension of the moment, Paul and Peter worked it out and continued as respected and faithful brothers in the faith.  We have a similar parallel between Paul, Barnabas, and Mark.  Mark disappointed Paul and shook his confidence in the young man.  At the moment Paul refused to invite Mark to join him and others in a fairly strenuous evangelistic work because of Mark’s failure.  Yet later in Paul’s writings we find both Barnabas and Mark mentioned with tender respect.  Apparently the Holy Spirit was quite pleased with Mark, for He chose Mark to write one of the inspired gospels.  In our study verses Peter offers a tender affirmation of his love and respect for Paul in the shadow of his own death.  

This noble example of Christianity at its best serves to shame contemporary Christians, who look for reasons to break fellowship with other believers rather than working hard to preserve it.  Sometimes rather peripheral ideas may be elevated to the stature of an essential, and people who differ part company over their difference.  Trivial practices occasionally follow suit and divide believers.  In these cases the parties grieve their loss and will try to find a way to restore their former fellowship.  However, many who claim to march under the Christian flag live a fractious, self-absorbed life that inevitably isolates them from friend after friend and never think for a moment that they, not their friends, are the problem.  They will speak endlessly of the way others hurt or mistreated them.  Their life is sadly missing the essential elements of grace that we see so prominently in the lives of these New Testament leaders and example-setters in our faith.  A life marked by broken friendships, broken relationships, and an endless complaint of how others disappointed " me," is missing one of the most essential ingredients of authentic New Testament Christianity.  In Joh 17:1-26 Jesus prayed that His followers in this life should be one, even as He and the Father were one.  In Eph 5:13 with a convincing exhortation for personal forgiveness, based not on merit but on the noble example of God for Christ’s sake forgiving us.  In other words God’s forgiveness of us because of Christ serves to direct us to forgive in the same model.  We forgive each other for the sake of Christ.  " I have forgiven, but I haven’t forgotten" is not forgiveness.  Ask yourself a simple question.  If God had supposedly forgiven our sins, but we discovered that He still remembered them, how comfortable would you feel facing God in judgment?  Scripture consistently informs us that God’s forgiveness means that He will no longer remember (Jer 31:34).  In fact spend some time with Jeremiah studying the " remember" passages in that book.  To remember is to hold against and to visit justice upon.  To stop remembering is to forgive.  If we could come to terms with the profound reality of our own forgiveness before God, we would surely live more gently toward other believers in our life.  

How sadly often we defensively offer rationalizations for not forgiving others when confronted with the Biblical directives to forgive for Jesus’ sake.  Anytime we discover this rationalizing attitude we should stop and reflect on our Lord’s personal example toward those who crucified Him, as well as the nearly countless additional examples by which Scripture dictates a gentle and forgiving lifestyle among believers.  

Think of the utter hypocrisy of this fractious, unforgiving lifestyle.  We live before unbelievers in the claim that we believe all of God’s children shall spend eternity together praising God and engaged in a myriad of wondrous activities that suitably honor our God throughout eternity.  We will do all these things " together."  Yet in this life we live in a constant process of putting everyone around us under a magnifying glass to emphasize their faults, real or imagined, so that we may set them at a distance from us.  

This contentious attitude contradicts Jesus’ personal prayer for His followers (Joh 17:1-26).  It violates Paul’s stated result of the gospel in believers’ lives, and it denies that the gospel has had any impact whatever upon us.  By practicing fractious grudge-holding and refusing to forgive those in our life whom we believe offend us, we practice heathenism while claiming holy Christianity.  This contradictory conduct may deceive others for a season, but I dare say that it will not deceive our omniscient God. 

Indeed the New Testament sets an ethical mark for each of us that challenges every aspect of our conduct and interpersonal relationships.  Scripture directs us to work to avoid offending other believers, not nudge the edge of the envelope to see how much we can do before they react against us.  It directs us to live in respectful honor of our brothers and sisters in Christ, even when they and we disagree.  Christian ethics does not appear when we all agree on every point of doctrine and Biblical teaching.  It appears—or its absence is clearly demonstrated—when we deal with differences of perspective.  How do we deal with them?  Do we denigrate those with whom we disagree?  Or do we speak kindly of them, despite our differences?  Do we firmly keep our focus on all the points of common faith despite a few areas of difference?  Or do we ignore the many areas of agreement and shine the spotlight on those few areas of difference?  

Those of us who believe in the doctrines of God’s sovereign and efficacious grace point with a touch of disdain at others who believe in salvation by works or by some form of God-man synergism and at times feel a bit superior.  But do we live by the same grace that we claim for our salvation?  Did Jesus point at those who walked away from Him, rejecting His teaching, with disdain or with grief (Joh 6:67)?  Did He react with scorn against those who crucified Him (Lu 23:34)?  We criticize them for their pride in their works, but do we feel equal pride in our superior doctrinal posture?  Would we not win more converts to our belief by living the grace toward them that God showed toward us when He saved us? 

We marvel at a small group of eleven men with some 112 associates who served to catalyze the beginning of our faith that literally transformed the ancient world.  We look at rampant moral decay in our own world and wonder why we can’t see similar transformation now.  We could.  If we started practicing the gracious Christianity that Peter demonstrates in our passage, the same unbelievers who view us with scorn today might stand up and take notice.  Living God’s grace, not just talking about it; practicing it, not just claiming it for our eternity; these things empower believers with the supernatural magnetism that drove the first generation of believers to " turn the world upside down" (Ac 17:6).  This process begins, not with me demanding that others forgive me or treat me with grace.  It begins with me treating others with undeserved grace.  It begins with me speaking in gracious and respectful tones regarding those with whom I disagree, showing supernatural grace toward people with whom I disagree.  Is there a Paul in your life who withstood you to your face?  A Mark who forsook you in a moment of crisis?  A faithful Barnabas who intensely disagreed with you and would not back down?  How is your relationship with them today?  Have you sought and insisted on practicing the healing grace of God to restore your relationship with them?  Wouldn’t this be a good time to start that process? 

51   

                Over the centuries Paul has seen his controversial days.  Some sects have almost worshipped him rather than his Lord, an act that Paul would have disdained.  Others have rejected his teaching almost entirely.  In either case the balanced and whole of inspired Scripture is altered to suite the fancy of the reader.  Peter doesn’t specifically tell us what Paul wrote that prompted this comment.  Factually, Paul didn’t teach anything that Peter doesn’t affirm, but his emphasis in certain theological issues is different from Peter’s or other New Testament writers.  Paul has always been noted for his emphasis on the theological issues of predestination.  The word translated as the various derivatives of this word appears six times in the New Testament, five of which appear in Paul’s writings.  The word also appears in Ac 4:28 under Luke’s pen.  We should note that Peter didn’t reject Paul’s teaching; rather he accepted it and described it as hard to understand.  

                Often Paul’s related writings in Ro 9:1-33 regarding election are mentioned as unique to Paul’s writings.  Although modern Bible teachers will seldom outright reject Paul’s writings in this chapter, they frequently " wrest" these teachings in an effort to avoid the obvious teachings that appear there.  The most common wresting effort is that Paul was simply writing about God’s choice of the Jews as His national people in the Old Testament, and that this chapter has nothing to say about Gentiles or New Testament Christian teaching.  It almost seems that Paul knew that these teachings would come under just such an attack, for in Ro 9:24 he specifically mentions that God’s electing mercy extends to all whom He has called, " not of the Jews only, but also of the Gentiles."  In light of this verse the teaching that Paul had reference only to Jews is patently false, a clear example of wresting, twisting a bone out of its joint or twisting a Scripture out of its context and intended teaching.  

                We find subtle evidence that this teaching was under attack throughout the Roman letter.  In the third chapter Paul raises a criticism of his adversaries that he taught that we should intentionally do evil that good may come, a wholly perverted idea that Paul rejected.  In the sixth chapter he asks the rhetorical question, not once but twice, " Shall we continue in sin that grace may abound?"  And twice he resoundingly rejected the idea in the strongest possible terms.  

                Rather than guess, why don’t we allow Paul’s writings to define the opponents who wrested his writings?  He confronts these unnamed twisters in the third chapter of Romans with the notation that they falsely and absurdly accused him of advocating that people should sin in order to bring about good.  On occasion when I have talked with people about Paul’s teachings in Ro 9:1-33, saying little beyond Paul’s literal teachings, they have responded with precisely the critic’s Ro 3:1-31 objection.  " Why, if I believed that doctrine, I’d just go out and live in sin, knowing that I’m saved regardless of what I do."  Perhaps these people reveal more about their own moral outlook than about the doctrine.  Do they have any moral conviction beyond fear of retribution, of divine judgment against their sins?  Do they have any sense of right and wrong that compels righteous conduct on the basis of its inherent rightness before God?  Why not avoid sin because it is inherently wrong and destructive?  Because righteous conduct honors God apart from any consequences, positive or negative, to them?  

                While most modern Christian teachers either reject or shamefully misrepresent Paul’s teachings of these doctrines, we should never forget their prominence in historical Christianity.  Although you will likely not hear an Episcopal minister teach on predestination or eternal election, these doctrines are clearly set forth in the Thirty-Nine Articles of the Church of England.  Though you frequently hear Presbyterian ministers sidestep these doctrines, they form an essential part of the Westminster Confession of Faith, the historical statement of what Presbyterians believed and taught.  You will not likely hear a Lutheran minister teach these doctrines in his Sunday sermon, but Martin Luther left no doubt of his belief in his writings on the bondage of the human will and his commentary on the book of Galatians.  Although these doctrines were integral to historical Baptist doctrinal statements, the Founders’ Movement in the Southern Baptist fellowship faces significant hostility for advocating a return to them.  

                Obviously Paul lived a highly moral and spiritual life that avoided sin in every way possible, and that filled his hours with righteous conduct in the service of his God and his fellowman.  Clearly, Paul’s belief regarding election, predestination, or any other doctrine, didn’t diminish his zeal for holy living, nor for evangelism.  Therefore, claiming Paul’s doctrinal teachings as justification for such sinful conduct is a manifest example of Peter’s notation.  They " wrest," twist, Paul’s writings out of joint and out of context to their own destruction. 

                The whole concept of humans earning their salvation with a bit of necessary help from God has perverted much of Christian teaching in our time.  Ask the common Bible teacher or believer to describe their expectations of heaven.  What do you hear?  They will plunge into a near-endless sequence of excited imaginations about how big their eternal crown will be, what they will do to indulge their personal fancies throughout eternity.  Seldom indeed will you hear them immediately and excitedly tell you how they long to be able to praise God with both body and soul throughout eternity without the hindrance of sin.  Praise God?  Glorify Him?  They far prefer walking their pet lion or some other fanciful self-indulgence to spending eternity in praise to God.  Several years ago I heard a popular and nationally known Christian teacher illustrate his view of heaven in a radio program with a lengthy description of how he expected to have a pet lion in eternity and how he looked forward to taking it on daily walks.  

                The abysmal corruption of heaven in people’s minds reveals much of the dreadful depth to which contemporary Christianity has sunken into the quicksand of man-centric religion that has almost no relationship whatever to New Testament Christ-centric, God-honoring Christianity.  For Paul, Peter, John, and all New Testament inspired writers, the walk of faith was not about self-indulgence, but self-denial.  It did not involve egomaniacal anticipation of satisfying personal appetites in heaven, but the wondrous opportunity to glorify God without restraint.  Such self-indulgent ideas fit the Moslem idea of heaven better than the Christian.  

                Rather than wresting Paul’s writings or outright rejecting them, Peter honored his brother Paul for writing " according to the wisdom given unto him."  I wholeheartedly believe Paul’s writings to the extent that I can understand them.  Rather than argue with his conclusions in Ro 8:1-39 and Ro 9:1-33, or Eph 1:1-23, I want to understand them and believe them.  

                For those of us who rather believe than reject Paul’s teachings on these doctrines, I offer a challenge.  Does our life bear credible testimony to our commitment to holy, Christ-centric, and moral living?  Do we by consistent conduct demonstrate that those who believe these doctrines are not anti-evangelical, but in fact are faithfully evangelistic in our efforts to spread our faith wherever we have opportunity?  

                It is somewhat amazing that the major revivals and evangelistic works of historical Christianity were effected under the teachings of godly men who embraced Paul’s teachings of these doctrines.  History rejects the idea that Paul’s teachings of these doctrines will dampen evangelism or weaken a believer’s commitment to godly living.  Those who believe all of Scripture will not neglect Paul’s reminder that if we name the name of Christ, we are obligated to " depart from iniquity" (2Ti 2:19).  Rather than engaging in foolish arguments as to whether or not the " Great Commission" applies to Christians today, they faithfully practice the Lord’s teachings that require those who believe in Him to constantly teach His truth wherever they go, and to go where they wouldn’t otherwise go in order to take that truth to others.  

                Our challenge is clearly set before us.  Hold fast to inspired Scriptural teachings as interpreted by historical believers of many stripes across the centuries.  Believe it and live it.

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PBC: 2Pe 3:18 - -- See WebbSr: GROW IN GRACE See GG: 19,11 March 14, 2004

See WebbSr: GROW IN GRACE

See GG: 19,11 March 14, 2004

Haydock: 2Pe 3:3 - Scoffers Scoffers [1] with deceit, (such as make a jest of all revealed religion) walking according to their own lusts, as if they might indulge themselve...

Scoffers [1] with deceit, (such as make a jest of all revealed religion) walking according to their own lusts, as if they might indulge themselves in every thing which their inclinations prompt them to, saying: where is his promise, or his coming? They have no belief nor regard for what has been revealed concerning the coming of Christ to judge every one, to reward the good, and punish the wicked. Such were the Sadducees, who believe not the immortality of the soul, nor the resurrection; such were at all times those atheistical men, who endeavoured to persuade themselves that all religion is no more than a human and politic invention; of this number are they who some in our days call free-thinkers. St. Peter here gives us the words of these unbelieving libertines, whom he calls scoffers: where, they say, is his promise? those pretended promises of God, those predictions and menaces in the Scriptures? what appearance of Christ's coming to judge the world? for, since the Fathers slept, ever since the death of the patriarchs and prophets, all things continue. (Witham)

===============================

[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

In deceptione illusores; the true reading in the Greek is, as Dr. Wells has restored it, Greek: en empaigmone empaiktai, illusione illudentes.

Haydock: 2Pe 3:5 - For this they are wilfully ignorant of For this they are wilfully ignorant of. The ignorance of these unbelievers is wilful and inexcusable, when they question the existence of a Supreme ...

For this they are wilfully ignorant of. The ignorance of these unbelievers is wilful and inexcusable, when they question the existence of a Supreme Being, of a future state, wherein God will reward the good and punish the wicked; when they laugh at all the miracles, and all the extraordinary effects of God's power and justice, such as was the general flood or deluge, by which God destroyed the wicked by an inundation of waters. And as our blessed Saviour said of those, who would not believe in the days of Noe [Noah], "They were eating and drinking, marrying, and giving in marriage,...and they knew not till the flood came, and took them all away: so shall also the coming of the Son of man be." (Mattew xxiv. 38. 39.) (Witham)

Haydock: 2Pe 3:10 - The heavens The heavens, &c. He puts the faithful in mind not to regard these profane scoffers, but to be convinced of the truths revealed, and that the world s...

The heavens, &c. He puts the faithful in mind not to regard these profane scoffers, but to be convinced of the truths revealed, and that the world shall be destroyed a second time by fire. Reflect that the time of this life, and all the time that this world shall last, is nothing to eternity, which has no parts, no beginning, nor end; so that in the sight of God, who is eternal, a thousand years are no more to be regarded than one day, or one moment. The long time that hath hitherto passed, must not make you think that God is slack as to his promises, or that they shall not infallibly come to pass at the time and moment appointed by his divine providence. God's infinite mercy, and his love for mankind, bears patiently with the provocations of blind and unthinking sinners, not willing that any of them should perish, but that they should return to him by a sincere repentance and true penance, and be saved. But watch always, according to the repeated admonition of our blessed Redeemer. (Mark xiii. 37. &c.) For both the day of your death, and the day of the Lord to judge the world, will come like a thief, &c. (Witham)

Haydock: 2Pe 3:11 - Seeing then that all these things are to be dissolved Seeing then that all these things are to be dissolved, that the world, and all things in the world, shall pass in a short time, set not your affectio...

Seeing then that all these things are to be dissolved, that the world, and all things in the world, shall pass in a short time, set not your affections upon them: let your life and conversation be holy. According to the divine promises, look for new heavens, and a new earth, where justice is to dwell, whither sinners shall not enter, but the just only, in a new state of never-ending happiness. Make it then your endeavour to be found in the sight of God spotless and blameless; and look upon the long forbearance of God, who defers to punish sinners as they deserve, to be an effect of his mercy, and for your salvation. (Witham)

Haydock: 2Pe 3:15-16 - As also our most dear brother, Paul,...hath written to you // In which are some things hard to understand As also our most dear brother, Paul,...hath written to you. He seems to mean in his epistle to the Hebrews or converted Jews, (Chap. x. 37.) where h...

As also our most dear brother, Paul,...hath written to you. He seems to mean in his epistle to the Hebrews or converted Jews, (Chap. x. 37.) where he says: yet a little while,...and he that is to come, will come, and will not delay. ---

In which are some things hard to understand, especially by unlearned, ignorant people, unstable, inconstant, not well grounded in faith, and which they wrest, [2] as they do also the other scriptures, by their private interpretations, to their own perdition. (Witham)

Haydock: 2Pe 3:16 - -- [BIBLIOGRAPHY] Depravant, Greek: streblousin. detorquent. It is a speech, says Mr. Legh, on Greek: strebloo, borrowed from torturers, when the...

[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Depravant, Greek: streblousin. detorquent. It is a speech, says Mr. Legh, on Greek: strebloo, borrowed from torturers, when they put an innocent man on the rack, and make him speak what he never thought. They deal, says he, with the Scriptures as chemists sometimes deal with natural bodies, torturing them to extract out of them what God and nature never put in them.

====================

Haydock: 2Pe 3:17 - -- Being forewarned, therefore, and knowing these things before, take heed not to be led away by the errors of such false and unwise teachers, what...

Being forewarned, therefore, and knowing these things before, take heed not to be led away by the errors of such false and unwise teachers, whatever knowledge they boast of, as did the Gnostics. But make it your serious endeavour to increase in grace by God's assistance, in the true knowledge of our Lord God and Saviour, Jesus Christ, to whom, as being one God with his eternal Father and the Holy Ghost, be glory now, and for all eternity. Amen. (Witham)

Gill: 2Pe 3:1 - This second epistle, beloved, I now write unto you // in both which I stir up your pure minds by way of remembrance This second epistle, beloved, I now write unto you,.... This is a transition to another part of the epistle; for the apostle having largely described ...

This second epistle, beloved, I now write unto you,.... This is a transition to another part of the epistle; for the apostle having largely described false teachers, the secret enemies of the Christian religion under a profession of it, passes on to take notice of the more open adversaries and profane scoffers of it; and from their ridicule of the doctrine of Christ's second coming, he proceeds to treat of that, and of the destruction of the world, and the future happiness of the saints: he calls this epistle his "second epistle", because he had written another before to the same persons; and that the author of this epistle was an apostle, is evident from 2Pe 3:2; and which, compared with 2Pe 1:18 shows him to be the Apostle Peter, whose name it bears, and who was an eyewitness to the transfiguration of Christ on the mount, Mat 17:1, he addresses these saints here, as also in 2Pe 3:8, under the character of "beloved"; because they were the beloved of God, being chosen by him according to his foreknowledge, and regenerated by him, according to his abundant mercy; and were openly his people, and had obtained mercy from him, and like precious faith with the apostles; and were also the beloved of Christ, being redeemed by him, not with gold and silver, but with his precious blood; for whom he suffered, and who were partakers of his sufferings, and the benefits arising from them, and who had all things given them by him, pertaining to life and godliness, and exceeding great and precious promises; and were likewise beloved by the apostle, though strangers, and not merely as Jews, or because they were his countrymen, but because they were the elect of God, the redeemed of Christ, and who were sanctified by the Spirit, and had the same kind of faith he himself had. The Syriac and Arabic versions read, "my beloved"; and the Ethiopic version, "my brethren": his end in writing both this and the former epistle follows;

in both which I stir up your pure minds by way of remembrance; that this was his view both in this and the former epistle, appears from 1Pe 1:13; he calls their minds pure; not that they were so naturally, for the minds and consciences of men are universally defiled with sin; nor are the minds of all men pure who seem to be so in their own eyes, or appear so to others; nor can any man, by his own power or works, make himself pure from sin; only the blood of Christ purges and cleanses from it; and a pure mind is a mind sprinkled with that blood, and which receives the truth as it is in Jesus, in the power and purity of it, and that holds the mystery of the faith in a pure conscience. Some versions, as the Vulgate Latin and Arabic, render the word "sincere", as it is in Phi 1:10; and may design the sincerity of their hearts in the worship of God, in the doctrines of Christ, and to one another, and of the grace of the Spirit of God in them; as that their faith was unfeigned, their hope without hypocrisy, and their love without dissimulation, and their repentance real and genuine; but yet they needed to be stirred up by way of remembrance, both of the truth of the Gospel, and the duties of religion; for saints are apt to be forgetful of the word, both of its doctrines and its exhortations; and it is the business of the ministers of the word to put them in mind of them, either by preaching or by writing; and which shows the necessity and usefulness of the standing ministry of the Gospel: the particulars he put them in mind of next follow.

Gill: 2Pe 3:2 - That ye may be mindful // of the words which were spoken before by the holy prophets // and of the commandment of us the apostles of the Lord and Saviour That ye may be mindful,.... This is an explanation of the above mentioned end of his writing this and the other epistle; which was, that those saints ...

That ye may be mindful,.... This is an explanation of the above mentioned end of his writing this and the other epistle; which was, that those saints might be mindful of two things more especially:

of the words which were spoken before by the holy prophets; that is, the prophets of the Old Testament, who were holy men of God, and therefore their words are to be regarded, and retained in memory; the Gospel itself was spoken by them, and so was Christ, and the things relating to his person and offices, and to his incarnation, sufferings, and death, and the glory that should follow; and indeed the apostles said no other than what they did, only more clearly and expressly; and particularly many things, were said by them concerning the second coming of Christ to judge the world, and destroy it, and to prepare new heavens and a new earth for his people, which is what the apostle has chiefly in view; see Jud 1:14;

and of the commandment of us the apostles of the Lord and Saviour; that is, Jesus Christ, as Jud 1:17 expresses it, and the Ethiopic version adds here; and which likewise, and also the Syriac version, and some ancient copies, read, "our Lord and Saviour", and omit the us before the apostles; by whom are meant the twelve apostles of Christ, of which Peter was one, and therefore says, "us the apostles"; though the Vulgate Latin and Arabic versions, and the Complutensian edition, read "your apostles", and so the Alexandrian copy; but the former is the received reading: now "the commandment" of these intends either the Gospel in general, so called because it was the commandment of our Lord to his apostles to preach it; and therefore the word "commandment", in the original, stands between "us the apostles", and "the Lord and Saviour", as being the commandment of the one to the other; unless it can be thought any regard is had to the new commandment of love, or that of faith, inculcated both by Christ and his apostles; Joh 13:34; or rather, particularly the instructions, directions, and predictions of the apostles concerning the second coming of Christ, and what should go before it, as appears from the following words, and the parallel place in Jud 1:17, the words of the prophets and apostles being here put together, show the agreement there is between them, and what regard is to be had to each of them, and to anything and every thing in which they agree.

Gill: 2Pe 3:3 - Knowing this first // that there shall come in the last days scoffers // walking after their own lusts Knowing this first,.... In the first place, principally, and chiefly, and which might easily be known and observed from the writings of the apostles a...

Knowing this first,.... In the first place, principally, and chiefly, and which might easily be known and observed from the writings of the apostles and prophets; see 1Ti 4:1;

that there shall come in the last days scoffers, or "mockers"; such as would make a mock at sin, make light of it, plead for it, openly commit it, and glory in it; and scoff at all religion, as the prejudice of education, as an engine of state, a piece of civil policy to keep subjects in awe, as cant, enthusiasm, and madness, as a gloomy melancholy thing, depriving men of true pleasure; and throw out their flouts and jeers at those that are the most religious, for the just, upright man, is commonly by such laughed to scorn, and those that depart from evil make themselves a prey; and particularly at the ministers of the word, for a man that has scarcely so much common sense as to preserve him from the character of an idiot, thinks himself a wit of the age, if he can at any rate break a jest upon a Gospel minister: nor do the Scriptures of truth escape the banter and burlesque of these scoffers; the doctrines of it being foolishness to them, and the commands and ordinances in it being grievous and intolerable to them; yea, to such lengths do those proceed, as to scoff at God himself; at his persons, purposes, providences, and promises; at Jehovah the Father, as the God of nature and providence, and especially as the God and Father of Christ, and of all grace in him; at Jehovah the Son, at his person, as being the Son of God, and truly God, at his office, as Mediator, and at his blood, righteousness, and sacrifice, which they trample under foot; and at Jehovah the Spirit, whom they do despite unto, as the spirit of grace, deriding his operations in regeneration and sanctification, as dream and delusion; and, most of all, things to come are the object of their scorn and derision; as the second coming of Christ, the resurrection of the dead, a future judgment, the torments of hell, and the joys of heaven; all which they represent as the trifles and juggles of designing men: such as these, according to the prophets and apostles, were to come in "the last days"; either in the days of the Messiah, in the Gospel dispensation, the times between the first and second coming of Christ; for it is a rule with the Jews s, that wherever the last days are mentioned, the days of the Messiah are intended; see Heb 1:1; when the prophets foretold such scoffers should come; or in the last days of the Jewish state, both civil and religious, called "the ends of the world", 1Co 10:11; a little before the destruction of Jerusalem, when iniquity greatly abounded, Mat 24:11; or "in the last of the days"; as the words may be rendered; and so answer to ב×חרית הימי×, in Isa 2:2, and may regard the latter part of the last times; the times of the apostles were the last days, 1Jo 2:18; they began then, and will continue to Christ's second coming; when some time before that, it will be a remarkable age for scoffers and scorners; and we have lived to see an innumerable company of them, and these predictions fulfilled; from whence it may be concluded, that the coming of Christ is at hand: these scoffers are further described as

walking after their own lusts; either after the carnal reasonings of their minds, admitting of nothing but what they can comprehend by reason, making that the rule, test, and standard of all their principles, and so cast away the law of the Lord, and despise the word of the Holy One of Israel; or rather, after their sinful and fleshly lusts, making them their guides and governors, and giving up themselves entirely to them, to obey and fulfil them; the phrase denotes a continued series of sinning, a progress in it, a desire after it, and pleasure in it, and an obstinate persisting in it; scoffers at religion and revelation are generally libertines; and such as sit in the seat of the scornful, are in the counsel of the ungodly, and way of sinners, Psa 1:1.

Gill: 2Pe 3:4 - And saying, Where is the promise of his coming // for since the fathers fell asleep // all things continue as they were from the beginning of the creation And saying, Where is the promise of his coming?.... That is, of the coming of the Lord and Saviour, 2Pe 3:2; the object of their scorn and derision, a...

And saying, Where is the promise of his coming?.... That is, of the coming of the Lord and Saviour, 2Pe 3:2; the object of their scorn and derision, and whom they name not, through contempt; and the meaning is, what is become of the promise of his coming? where the accomplishment of it? The prophets foretold he would come; he himself said he would come again, Joh 14:3; the angels, at his ascension, declared he would come from heaven in like manner as he went up, Act 1:11; and all his apostles gave out that he would appear a second time to judge both quick and dead, Act 10:42 1Pe 4:5, and that his coming was at hand, Phi 4:5; but where is the fulfilment of all this? he is not come, nor is there any sign or likelihood of it:

for since the fathers fell asleep; or "died": which is the language of the Scriptures, and here sneered at by these men, who believe them so fast asleep as never to be awaked or raised more; and by "the fathers" they mean the first inhabitants of the world, as Adam, Abel, Seth, &c. and all the patriarchs and prophets in all ages; the Ethiopic version renders it, "our first fathers":

all things continue as they were from the beginning of the creation; reasoning from the settled order of things, the constant revolution of the sun, moon, and stars, the permanency of the earth, and the succession of the inhabitants of it, to the future continuance of things, without any alteration; and consequently, that Christ would not come, as was promised, to raise the dead, judge mankind destroy the world, and set up a new state of things: the fallacy of which reasoning is exposed by the apostle in the following words.

Gill: 2Pe 3:5 - For this they willingly are ignorant of // that by the word of God the heavens were of old // and the earth standing out of the water and in the water For this they willingly are ignorant of,.... Namely, what follows; for as these men were such as had professed Christianity, and had the advantage of ...

For this they willingly are ignorant of,.... Namely, what follows; for as these men were such as had professed Christianity, and had the advantage of revelation, and had the opportunity of reading the Scriptures, they might have known that the heavens and the earth were from the beginning; and that they were made by the word of God; and that the earth was originally in such a position and situation as to be overflowed with a flood, and that it did perish by a general inundation; and that the present heavens and earth are kept and reserved for a general burning; and it might be discerned in nature, that there are preparations making for an universal conflagration; but all this they chose not to know, and affected ignorance of: particularly

that by the word of God the heavens were of old: not only in the times of Noah, but "from the beginning"; as the Ethiopic version reads, and which agrees with the account in Gen 1:1; by "the heavens" may be meant both the third heaven, and the starry heavens, and the airy heavens, with all their created inhabitants; and especially the latter, since these were concerned in, and affected with the general deluge; and these were in the beginning of time, out of nothing brought into being, and so were not eternal, and might be destroyed again, or at least undergo a change, even though they were of old, and of long duration: for it was "by the word of God" that they at first existed, and were so long preserved in being; either by the commanding word of God, by his powerful voice, his almighty fiat, who said, Let it be done, and it was done, and who commanded beings to rise up out of nothing, and they did, and stood fast; and so the Arabic version renders it, "by the command of God"; or by his eternal Logos, the essential Word of God, the second Person in the Trinity, who is often in Scripture called the Word, and the Word of God, and, as some think, by the Apostle Peter, 1Pe 1:23, and certain it is that the creation of all things is frequently ascribed to him; see Joh 1:16; wherefore by the same Word they might be dissolved, and made to pass away, as they will:

and the earth standing out of the water and in the water; that is, "by the Word of God"; for this phrase, in the original text, is placed after this clause, and last of all; and refers not only to the being of the heavens of old, but to the rise, standing, and subsistence of the earth, which is here particularly described for the sake of the deluge, the apostle afterwards mentions: and it is said to be "standing out of the water", or "consisting out of it"; it consists of it as a part; the globe of the earth is terraqueous, partly land and partly water; and even the dry land itself has its rise and spring out of water; the first matter that was created is called the deep, and waters in which darkness was, and upon which the Spirit of God moved, Gen 1:2; agreeably to which Thales the Milesian asserted t, that water was the principle of all things; and the Ethiopic version here renders the words thus, "and the Word of God created also the earth out of water, and confirmed it": the account the Jews give of the first formation of the world is this u;

"at first the world was ×ž×™× ×‘×ž×™×, "water in water"; what is the sense (of that passage Gen 1:2;) "and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters?" he returned, and made it snow; he casteth forth his ice like morsels, Psa 147:17; he returned and made it earth; "for to the snow he saith, Be thou earth", Job 37:6, and the earth stood upon the waters; "to him that stretched out the earth above the waters", Psa 136:6;''

however, certain it is, that the earth was first covered with water, when at the word, and by the command of God, the waters fled and hasted away, and were gathered into one place, and the dry land rose up and appeared; and then it was that it "stood out of the water"; see Gen 1:9; moreover, the earth consists, or is kept and held together by water; there is a general humidity or moisture that runs through it, by which it is compacted together, or otherwise it would resolve into dust, and by which it is fit for the production, increase, and preservation of vegetables and other things, which it otherwise would not be: and it is also said to stand "in the water", or by the water; upon it, according to Psa 24:2; or rather in the midst of it, there being waters above the firmament or expanse; in the airy heavens, in the clouds all around the earth, called the windows of heaven; and water below the firmament or expanse, in the earth itself; besides the great sea, a large body of waters is in the midst of the earth, in the very bowels of it, which feed rivers, and form springs, fountains and wells, called "the fountains of the great deep", Gen 7:11; and in this position and situation was the earth of old, and so was prepared in nature for a general deluge, and yet was preserved firm and stable by the word of God, for a long series of time; so the Arabic version renders it, "and the earth out of the water, and in the water, stood stable, by the command of God"; but when it was his pleasure, he brought the flood on the world of the ungodly, of which an account follows.

Gill: 2Pe 3:6 - Whereby the world that then was // being overflowed with water // perished Whereby the world that then was,.... The old world, as it is called in 2Pe 2:5; and as the Ethiopic version here renders it; the world before the floo...

Whereby the world that then was,.... The old world, as it is called in 2Pe 2:5; and as the Ethiopic version here renders it; the world before the flood, that had stood from the creation 1656 years:

being overflowed with water; by the windows of heaven being opened, and the waters over the earth poured down upon it; and by the fountains of the great deep being broken up in it; thus by these waters from above and below, a general inundation was brought upon it; for that the deluge was universal is clear from hence, and from the account by Moses; for as the earth was filled with violence, and all flesh had corrupted its way, God threatened a general destruction, and which was brought by a flood, which overflowed the whole earth; for all the hills that were under the whole heaven were covered with it, and everything that had life in the dry land died, and every living substance was destroyed that was upon the face of the ground; see Gen 6:11; and hence it follows, that hereby the then world

perished; not as to the substance of it, whatever alteration there might be in its form and position; but as to the inhabitants of it; for all creatures, men and cattle, and the creeping things, and fowls of the heaven, were destroyed, excepting Noah and his wife, and his three sons and their wives, and the creatures that were with him in the ark; see Gen 7:23; and by this instance the apostle shows the falsehood of the above assertion, that all things continued as they were from the beginning of the creation; for the earth was covered with water first, and which, by the command of God, was removed, and, after a long series of time, was brought on it again, and by it drowned; and from whence it also appears, that this sort of reasoning used by those scoffers is very fallacious; for though the heavens and the earth may continue for a long time, as they did before the flood, in the same form and situation, it does not follow from thence that they always will, for the contrary is evident from what follows.

Gill: 2Pe 3:7 - But the heavens and the earth which are now // by the same word are kept in store // reserved unto fire // against the day of judgment, and perdition of ungodly men But the heavens and the earth which are now,.... In being, in distinction from, and opposition to the heavens that were of old, and the earth standing...

But the heavens and the earth which are now,.... In being, in distinction from, and opposition to the heavens that were of old, and the earth standing in and out of the water, and the world that then was when the waters of the flood overflowed it:

by the same word are kept in store; that is, by the word of God, as in 2Pe 3:5; and the Syriac, Arabic, and Ethiopic versions read, "by his word"; by the same word that the heavens and the earth were made of old, or in the beginning, are they kept, preserved, and upheld in their being; or "are treasured up"; the heavens and the earth are a rich treasure, they are full of the riches God, as the God of nature and providence; and they are kept with care, as a treasure is, not to be touched or meddled with at present, but must continue in the same position and use; or they are laid up in the stores, and scaled up among the treasures of divine wrath and vengeance, and will be brought out another day, and made use of, to the destruction of the ungodly inhabitants of the world, and to aggravate and increase their misery and ruin: for it is further said of them, that they are

reserved unto fire; for though the world is, and has been preserved a long time without any visible alteration in it, yet it will not be always so preserved: and though it is, and will be kept from being drowned by water again, through the promise and power of God, yet it is kept and reserved for a general conflagration; see 2Pe 3:10. And as the old world was put into a natural situation, so as to be drowned by water, there are now preparations making in nature, in the present world, for the burning of it; witness the fiery meteors, blazing stars, and burning comets in the heavens, and the subterraneous fires in the bowels of the earth, which in some places have already broke out: there are now many volcanos, burning mountains and islands, particularly in Sicily, Italy, and the parts adjacent, the seat of the beast, and where it is very likely the universal conflagration will begin, as Aetna, Vesuvius, Strombilo, and other volcanos; and even in our own island we have some symptoms and appearances of these fires under ground, as fiery eruptions in some places, and the hot waters at the Bath, and elsewhere, show; from all which it is plain that the heavens and earth, that now are, are not as they always were, and will be, but are reserved and prepared for burning; and that things are ripening apace, as men's sins also are, for the general conflagration. Josephus w relates, that Adam foretold that there would be a destruction of all things, once by the force of fire, and once by the power and multitude of water; and it is certain the Jews had knowledge of the destruction of the earth by fire, as by water: they say x,

"that when the law was given to Israel, his (God's) voice went from one end of the world to the other, and trembling laid hold on all the nations of the world in their temples, and they said a song, as it is said, Psa 29:9, "and in his temple doth everyone speak of his glory": all of them gathered together to wicked Balaam, and said to him, what is the voice of the multitude which we hear, perhaps a flood is coming upon the world? he said unto them, "the Lord sitteth upon the flood, yea, the Lord sitteth King for ever", Psa 29:10. Thus hath the Lord swore, that he will not bring a flood upon the world; they replied to him, a flood of water he will not bring, but מבול של ×ש, "a flood of fire" he will bring, as it is said, Isa 66:16, "for by fire will the Lord plead",''

or judge: and hence they speak y of the wicked being judged with two sorts of, judgments, by water, and by fire: and, according to our apostle, the heavens and earth are kept and reserved to fire,

against the day of judgment, and perdition of ungodly men; the time when God will judge the world is fixed, though it is not known; and it is called a "day", because of the evidence and light in which things will appear, and the quick dispatch of business in it; and the "judgment" spoken of is the future judgment, and which is certain, and will be universal, righteous, and eternal, and when wicked and ungodly men will be punished with everlasting destruction: the bodies of those that will be alive at the general conflagration will be burnt in it, though not annihilated, and will be raised again, and both soul and body will be destroyed in hell.

Gill: 2Pe 3:8 - But, beloved, be not ignorant of this one thing // that one day is, with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day But, beloved, be not ignorant of this one thing,.... Here the apostle addresses the saints he writes unto, and for whom he had a tender affection and ...

But, beloved, be not ignorant of this one thing,.... Here the apostle addresses the saints he writes unto, and for whom he had a tender affection and regard, and for whose welfare he was concerned, lest they should be stumbled at the length of time since the promise of the coming of Christ was given, and which these scoffers object; and therefore he would have them know, observe, and consider this one thing, which might be of great use to them to make their minds easy, and keep up their faith and expectation of the coming of Christ:

that one day is, with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day; referring either to Psa 90:4; or to a common saying among the Jews, founded on the same passage, הק בה ×לף ×©× ×™× ×™×•×ž×• של, "the day of the holy blessed God is a thousand years" z; suggesting, that though between thirty and forty years had elapsed since the promise was given out that Christ would come again, and should even a thousand, or two thousand years more, run off, before the coming of Christ, yet this should be no objection to the accomplishment of the promise; for though such a number of years is very considerable among men, ye not "with God", as the Arabic and Ethiopic versions read, with whom a thousand years, and even eternity itself, is but as a day, Isa 43:13. Unless this phrase should be thought to refer, as it is by some, to the day of judgment, and be expressive of the duration of that: it is certain that the Jews interpreted days of millenniums, and reckoned millenniums by days, and used this phrase in confirmation of it. Thus they say a,

"in the time to come, which is in the last days, on the sixth day, which is the sixth millennium, when the Messiah comes, for the day of the holy blessed God is a thousand years.''

And a little after,

""the Lord hath created a new thing in the earth, a woman shall compass a man". This is in the time of the Messiah which is in the sixth day.''

And elsewhere b,

"the sixth degree is called the sixth day, the day of the holy blessed God is a thousand years. And in that day the King Messiah shall come, and it shall be called the feast of gathering, for the holy blessed God will gather in it the captivity of his people.''

So they call the sabbath, or seventh day, the seventh millennium, and interpret c.

""the song for the sabbath day", Psa 92:1 title, for the seventh millennium, for one day of the holy blessed God is a thousand years.''

To which agrees the tradition of Elias, which runs thus d;

"it is the tradition of the house of Elias, that the world shall be six thousand years, two thousand years void (of the law), two thousand years the law, and two thousand years the days of the Messiah;''

for they suppose that the six days of the creation were expressive of the six thousand years in which the world will stand; and that the seventh day prefigures the last millennium, in which will be the day of judgment, and the world to come; for

"the six days of the creation (they say e) is a sign or intimation of these things: on the sixth day man was created; and on the seventh his work was finished; so the kings of the nations of the world (continue) five millenniums, answering to the five days, in which were created the fowls, and the creeping things of the waters, and other things; and the enjoyment of their kingdom is a little in the sixth, answerable to the creation of the beasts, and living creatures created at this time in the beginning of it; and the kingdom of the house of David is in the sixth millennium, answerable to the creation of man, who knew his Creator, and ruled over them all; and in the end of that millennium will be the day of judgment, answerable to man, who was judged in the end of it; and the seventh is the sabbath, and it is the beginning of the world to come.''

Gill: 2Pe 3:9 - The Lord is not slack concerning his promise // as some men count slackness // but is longsuffering to us-ward // not willing that any should perish // But that all should come to repentance The Lord is not slack concerning his promise,.... The Syriac version reads in the plural, "his promises", any of his promises; though the words seem r...

The Lord is not slack concerning his promise,.... The Syriac version reads in the plural, "his promises", any of his promises; though the words seem rather to regard the particular promise of Christ's coming, either to take vengeance on the Jewish nation, of which coming there was a promise made, and is often referred to by Christ, and his apostles; see Mar 9:1 Heb 10:37; and it now being upwards of thirty years since it was given out, some men began to charge God with slackness and dilatoriness; whereas the true reason of the delay of it was, that there might be time for the gathering in of his elect among them by his angels, or apostles and ministers, sent into the several parts of Judea, that so none of them might perish, but be brought to faith and repentance; and thus as the time of Christ's coming was prolonged more than was thought it would, so when the days of afflictions were come, they were shortened also for these elect's sake: or this promise regards the second coming of Christ, to judge the quick and dead at the last day, of which the former was a prelude, presage, and pledge; that Christ would come again, and appear a second time in person, was promised by himself, and often spoken of by his apostles; and many of the primitive Christians thought it would be very soon, and which might be occasioned by the hints that were given of his coming in the other sense. Now this being deferred longer than was expected, the scoffers or mockers take upon them to charge the Lord with slackness in the fulfilment of his promise:

as some men count slackness; as if he had either changed his purpose, or had prolonged it beyond the appointed time, or was unmindful of his promise, and would never fulfil it; whereas he is in one mind, and none can turn him, nor will he delay the fulfilment of his promise beyond the set time; he has fixed a day for his coming, in which he will judge the world in righteousness, and he will keep it: he is not dilatory,

but is longsuffering to us-ward: not to all the individuals of human nature, for the persons intended by us are manifestly distinguished from "some men" in the text, and from scoffers, mocking at the promise of Christ's coming, in the context, 2Pe 3:3; and are expressly called beloved, 2Pe 3:1; and God's longsuffering towards them is their salvation, 2Pe 3:15, nor is it true of all men, that God is not willing that any of them should perish, and that everyone of them should come to repentance, since many of them do perish in their sins, and do not come to repentance, which would not be the case, if his determining will was otherwise; besides, a society or company of men are designed, to which the apostle himself belonged, and of which he was a part; and who are described, in his epistles, as the elect of God, called out of darkness, into marvellous light, and having obtained like precious faith with the apostles; and must be understood either of God's elect among the Jews, for Peter was a Jew, and they were Jews he wrote to; and then the sense is, that the delay of Christ's coming is not owing to any slackness in him, but to his longsuffering to his elect among the Jews, being unwilling that any of that number among them should perish, but that all of them repent of their sins, and believe in him; and therefore he waits till their conversion is over, when a nation shall be born at once, and they that have pierced him look on him and mourn, and so all Israel shall be saved; or rather of the elect in general, whether among Jews or Gentiles, upon whom the Lord waits to be gracious, and whose longsuffering issues in their conversion and salvation. And upon account of these the Lord stays his coming till their number is complete in the effectual calling; and for their sakes he is longsuffering to others, and bears with a wicked world, with the idolatry, superstition, heresy, profaneness, and impiety, with which it abounds; but when the last man that belongs to that number is called, he will quickly descend in flames of fire, and burn the world, and the wicked in it, and take his chosen ones to himself. The Alexandrian copy reads, "for you", or your sakes; and so the Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and Ethiopic versions. A passage somewhat like to this is met with in a book of the Jews f, esteemed by them very ancient.

"God prolongs or defers his anger with men; and one day, which is a thousand years, is fixed, besides the seventy years he delivered to David the king.--And he does not judge man by his evil works which he continually does, for if so, the world would not stand; but the holy blessed God defers his anger with the righteous, and the wicked, that they may return, by perfect repentance, and be established in this world, and in the world to come.''

And it is an observation of theirs g, that when God is said to be "longsuffering", it is not written ×רך ××£, but ×רך ×פי×, intimating, that he is longsuffering both to the righteous and the wicked; but then he bears with the latter, for the sake of the former: compare with this passage Rev 6:9;

not willing that any should perish; not any of the us, whom he has loved with an everlasting love, whom he has chosen in his Son, and given to him, and for whom he has died, and who are brought to believe in him. These, though they were lost in Adam, did not perish; and though in their own apprehensions, when awakened and convinced, are ready to perish; and though their peace, joy, and comfort, may perish for a while, and they may fear a final and total perishing; yet they shall never perish as others do, or be punished with everlasting destruction: and that this is the will of God, appears by his choice of them to salvation; by the provisions of grace for them in an everlasting covenant; by the security of their persons in the hands of Christ; by sending his Son to obtain salvation for them, and his Spirit to apply it to them; and by his keeping them by his power, through faith, unto salvation.

But that all should come to repentance; not legal, but evangelical, without which all must perish; and which all God's elect stand in need of, as well as others, being equally sinners; and which they cannot come to of themselves, and therefore he not only calls them to it, in his word, and by his spirit and grace, but bestows it upon them; he has exalted Christ at his own right hand, to give it to them; and repentance is a grant from him, a free gift of his grace; and the Spirit is sent down into their hearts to work it in them, to take away the stony heart, and give an heart of flesh; without which, whatever time and space may be given, or means afforded, even the most awful judgments, the greatest mercies, and the most powerful ministry, will be of no avail.

Gill: 2Pe 3:10 - But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night // in the which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise // and the elements shall melt with fervent heat // the earth also // and the works that are therein shall be burnt up But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night,.... That is, the Lord will come in that day, which he has fixed, according to his promise, ...

But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night,.... That is, the Lord will come in that day, which he has fixed, according to his promise, than which nothing is more certain; and he will come as a thief in the night: he will come "in the night", which may be literally understood; for as his first coming was in the night; see Luk 2:8; so perhaps his second coming may be in the night season; or figuratively, when it will be a time of great darkness; when there will be little faith in the earth, and both the wise and foolish virgins will be slumbering and sleeping; when it will be a season of great security, as it was in the days of Noah, and at the time of the burning of Sodom and Gomorrah. The Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and Ethiopic versions, leave out the phrase, "in the night": and the Alexandrian copy uses the emphatic article, "in the night": and he will come, "as a thief", in the dark, indiscernibly; it will not be known what hour he will come; he will come suddenly, at an unawares, when he is not expected, to the great surprise of men, and especially of the scoffers; when the following awful things will be done:

in the which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise; not the third heaven, the seat of angels and glorified saints, and even of God himself; but the starry and airy heavens, which shall pass away, not as to their matter and substance, but as to some of their accidents and qualities, and the present use of them; and that with a great noise, like that of a violent storm, or tempest; though the Ethiopic version renders it, "without a noise"; and which is more agreeable to his coming as a thief, which is not with noise, but in as still a manner as possible; and some learned men observe, that the word signifies swiftly, as well as with a noise; and, accordingly, the Syriac version renders it "suddenly"; and the Arabic version "presently", immediately; that is, as soon as Christ shall come, immediately, at once, from his face shall the earth and heavens flee away, as John in a vision saw, Rev 20:11;

and the elements shall melt with fervent heat: not what are commonly called the four elements, earth, air, tire, and water, the first principles of all things: the ancient philosophers distinguished between principles and elements; principles, they say h, are neither generated, nor corrupted; τα τε στοιχεια κατα την εκπυÏωσιν φθειÏεσθαι, "but the elements will be corrupted, or destroyed by the conflagration"; which exactly agrees with what the apostle here says: by the elements seem to be meant the host of heaven, being distinguished from the heavens, as the works of the earth are distinguished from the earth in the next clause; and design the firmament, or expanse, with the sun, moon, and stars in it, which will be purged and purified by this liquefaction by fire;

the earth also will be purged and purified from everything that is noxious, hurtful, unnecessary, and disagreeable; though the matter and substance of it will continue:

and the works that are therein shall be burnt up; all the works of nature, wicked men, cattle, trees, &c. and all the works of men, cities, towns, houses, furniture, utensils, instruments of arts of all sorts, will be burnt by a material fire, breaking out of the earth and descending from heaven, for which the present heavens and earth are reserved: this general conflagration was not only known to the Jews, but to the Heathens, to the poets, and Platonist and Stoic philosophers, who frequently i speak of it in plain terms. Some are of opinion that these words refer to the destruction of Jerusalem; and so the passing away of the heavens may design the removal of their church state and ordinances, Heb 12:26, and the melting of the elements the ceasing of the ceremonial law, called the elements of the world, Gal 4:3, and the burning of the earth the destruction of the land of Judea, expressed in such a manner in Deu 29:23, and particularly of the temple, and the curious works in that, which were all burnt up and destroyed by fire, though Titus endeavoured to prevent it, but could not k: which sense may be included, inasmuch as there was a promise of Christ's coming to destroy the Jewish nation, and was expected; and which destruction was a prelude of the destruction of the world, and is sometimes expressed in such like language as that is; but then this must not take place, to the exclusion of the other sense: and whereas this sense makes the words to he taken partly in a figurative, and partly in a literal way; and seeing the heavens and the earth are in the context only literally taken, the former sense is to be preferred; and to which best agrees the following use to be made of these things.

Gill: 2Pe 3:11 - Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved // what manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and godliness Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved,.... By fire; the heaven with all its host, sun, moon, and stars, clouds, meteors, and fowls of...

Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved,.... By fire; the heaven with all its host, sun, moon, and stars, clouds, meteors, and fowls of the air; the earth, and all that is upon it, whether of nature, or art; and, since nothing is more certain than such a dissolution of all things,

what manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and godliness? not as the scoffers and profane sinners, who put away this evil day far from them, but as men, who have their loins girt, and their lights burning, waiting for their Lord's coming; being continually in the exercise of grace, and in the discharge of their religious duties, watching, praying, hearing, reading; living soberly, righteously, and godly; guarding against intemperance and worldly mindedness, and every worldly and hurtful lust.

Gill: 2Pe 3:12 - Looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God // wherein // the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat Looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God,.... The same with the day of the Lord, 2Pe 3:10, and so the Vulgate Latin and Arabic versio...

Looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God,.... The same with the day of the Lord, 2Pe 3:10, and so the Vulgate Latin and Arabic versions here read; and it intends the day of Christ's second coming to judgment, and so is a proof of the deity of Christ; and is called "the day of God", in distinction from man's day, or human judgment, 1Co 4:3, which is often fallacious; whereas the judgment of God is according to truth; and because in that day Christ will appear most clearly to be truly and properly God, by the manifest display of his omniscience, omnipotence, and other glorious perfections of his; and because it will be, as the day of God is, a thousand years; and also the day in which God will finish all his works, as on the seventh day the works of creation, on this the works of Providence; when all his purposes, promises, and threatenings, relating to the final state of all persons and things, will be fulfilled, and every work be brought to light, and into judgment, and everything will stand in a clear light; for the day will declare it, either respecting God, or men; and there will be a display, as of his grace and mercy, to his church and people; for it will be the day of his open espousals to them, and of the gladness of his heart; so of his wrath and anger towards the wicked: for this great and dreadful day of the Lord shall burn like an oven, and destroy the wicked, root and branch: and it will be the day of Christ's glorious appearing, and of his kingdom, in which he will reign, before his ancients, gloriously; and when it is ended, God, Father, Son and Spirit, will be all in all: now "the coming" of this day saints should be "looking for" by faith; believing that it certainly will come, since the patriarchs, prophets, Christ himself, the angels of heaven, and the apostles of the Lamb, have all declared and asserted the coming of this day; and they should look for it, and love it, as with the strongest affection for it, and most vehement desire of it, since they will then appear with Christ in glory; and they should look out, and keep looking out for it, as what will be quickly; and though it is not as soon as they desire and expect, yet should still look wistly for it, and with patience and cheerfulness wait for it: yea, they should be "hasting unto" it, or "hastening" it; for though the day is fixed for the coming of Christ, nor can it be altered, as his coming will not be longer, it cannot be sooner, yet it becomes the saints to pray earnestly for it, that it may be quickly, and for the accomplishment of all things that go before it, prepare for it, and lead unto it; such as the conversion of the Jews, and the bringing in of the fulness of the Gentiles; and by putting him in mind of, and pleading with him, his promises concerning these things, and giving him no rest till they are accomplished; there seems to be some reference to the prayers of the Jews for the Messiah's coming, which they desire may be במהירה, "in haste"; which will show that they are in haste for the coming of this day; and all which things God will hasten, though it will be in his own time: and moreover, saints should be hasting to it by their readiness for it, having their loins girt, and their lights burning, and their lamps trimmed, and they waiting for their Lord's coming, and going forth in acts of faith and love, and in the duties of religion, to meet him, and not slumber and sleep:

wherein; in which day, as in 2Pe 3:10; or by which; by which coming of Christ, or of the day of God,

the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat; at whose coming and presence, and from whose face the heavens and earth shall flee away, just as the earth shook, and the heavens dropped, and Sinai itself moved, when God appeared upon it; see Rev 20:11. This is a repetition of what is said in 2Pe 3:10, exciting attention to the exhortation given.

Gill: 2Pe 3:13 - Nevertheless we, according to his promise // look for new heavens and a new earth // wherein dwelleth righteousness Nevertheless we, according to his promise,.... Or promises, as the Alexandrian copy, and the Vulgate Latin version; namely those in Isa 65:17; look...

Nevertheless we, according to his promise,.... Or promises, as the Alexandrian copy, and the Vulgate Latin version; namely those in Isa 65:17;

look for new heavens and a new earth; not figuratively, the world to come in distinction from the Jewish world or state; a new church state, the Gospel dispensation, with new ordinances, as baptism and the Lord's supper, all legal ceremonies and ordinances being gone, and everything new; for these things had taken place already, and were not looked for as future: but these phrases are to be understood literally, as the heavens and the earth are in every passage in the context, 2Pe 3:5; and designs not new heavens and earth for substance, but for qualities; the heavens and elements being melted and dissolved, and so purged and purified by fire, and the earth and its works being burnt up with it, and so cleared of everything noxious, needless, and disagreeable, new heavens and a new earth will appear, refined and purged from everything which the curse brought thereon for man's sin: and such heavens and earth the saints look for by faith and hope, and earnest expectation, and with desire and pleasure; and therefore are not distressed, as they have no reason to be, with the burning of the present heavens and earth, as awful as these things will be; and they expect them not upon their own fancies and imaginations, or the vain conjectures and cunningly devised fables of men, but according to the promises of God recorded in the above passages, and in which they may be confirmed by the words of Christ, and by the vision of John, Rev 20:1. The Alexandrian copy reads, "and his promises"; as if it respected other promises the saints looked for besides the new heavens and earth; namely, the resurrection of the dead, eternal life, the in corruptible inheritance, the ultimate glory and happiness:

wherein dwelleth righteousness; meaning not the heavenly felicity, called sometimes the crown of righteousness, and the hope of righteousness, to which righteousness gives a right, and where it will be perfect, for the apostle is not speaking of the ultimate glory of the saints; nor the righteousness of Christ, as dwelling in the saints, as if the sense was this, we in whom righteousness dwells, look for new heavens and a new earth; for though the righteousness of Christ is unto and upon them that believe, yet it is not in them; it is in Christ, and dwells in him, and not in them; it is not inherent in them, but imputed to them: by "righteousness" is meant righteous men; such as are so not in and of themselves, or by the deeds of the law, or by works of righteousness done by them, but who are made righteous by the obedience of Christ, and are righteousness itself in him; see Jer 33:16; now these, and these only, will be the inhabitants of the new heavens and the new earth; there will be no unrighteous persons there, as in the present world, which lies in wickedness, and is full of wicked men; and they will be stocked with inhabitants after this manner; all the elect will now be gathered in, and Christ, when he comes, will bring all his saints with him from heaven, and will raise their bodies, and reunite them to their souls; and those that are alive will be caught up to meet the Lord in the air, and will make up together the general assembly and church of the firstborn, whose names are written in heaven; and whereas, upon the coming of Christ, the present heavens and earth will be burnt or purified by fire, and so made new and fit for the spirits of just men made perfect, who being again embodied, will fill the face of them, and shall inherit the earth, and reign with Christ on it for a thousand years, during which time there will not be a wicked man in them; for the wicked that will be alive at Christ's coming will be burnt with the earth, and the wicked dead shall not rise till the thousand years are ended, and who being raised, will, together with the devils, make the Gog and Magog army; wherefore none but righteous persons can look for these new heavens and earth, for to these only are they promised, and such only shall dwell in them; so the Targum on Jer 23:23 paraphrases the words,

"I God have created the world from the beginning, saith the Lord, I God will "renew the world for the righteous":''

and this will be, the Jews say, for the space of a thousand years;

"it is a tradition (they say l) of the house of Elias, that the righteous, whom the holy blessed God will raise from the dead shall not return to their dust, as is said, Isa 4:3, and it shall come to pass, &c. as the Holy One continues for ever, so they shall continue for ever; and if you should say those years (some editions read, "those thousand years", and so the gloss upon the place) in which the holy blessed God "renews the world": as it is said Isa 2:11, and the Lord alone; &c. what shall they do? the holy blessed God will make them wings as eagles, and they shall fly upon the face of the waters:''

and this renovation of the heavens and the earth, they say, will be in the seventh millennium;

"in the seventh thousand year (they assert m) there will be found new heavens and a new earth;''

which agree with these words of Peter.

Gill: 2Pe 3:14 - Wherefore, beloved, seeing ye look for these things // be diligent that ye may be found of him // in peace // without spot and blemish Wherefore, beloved, seeing ye look for these things,.... For the burning of the heavens and the earth, for the coming of Christ, and for the new heave...

Wherefore, beloved, seeing ye look for these things,.... For the burning of the heavens and the earth, for the coming of Christ, and for the new heavens and new earth,

be diligent that ye may be found of him; Christ, or αυτω, "in him", as in Phi 3:9; for such as are in Christ will have an undoubted right to the new heavens and the new earth, and will certainly dwell in them, because they will be found not in their own righteousness, but in the righteousness of Christ: or "before him", as the Arabic version renders it; before him the Judge of all, at whose tribunal they must stand; but being clothed with his righteousness, and so without spot and blemish, they will not be ashamed before him: or "by him"; Christ first finds his in redemption, and next in the effectual calling, and last of all at his coming, when all the elect will be looked up, gathered in, and presented first to himself, and then to his Father, complete and perfect, not one wanting: and thus to be found in him, and before him, and by him, should be the concern of all that look for the glorious things here spoken of, and particularly that they be found in the following situation and circumstances: in peace; interested in that peace Christ has made by the blood of his cross; for such as are reconciled to God by his death, shall be saved by his life, and live with him in the new heavens and new earth, and for ever in the ultimate glory; and in enjoying that peace of conscience which he himself gives, and which flows from his blood, righteousness, and atonement; so that the day of his coming by death, or at judgment, will not be terrifying to them, but they will look for these things with great delight and satisfaction: or

in peace one with another; for peace makers and keepers are called the children of God, and so heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ; or in happiness and glory, expressed by peace, which is the end of the righteous man, which he enters into at death, and will rest in to all eternity:

without spot and blemish; no man is so in himself, sanctification is imperfect, and many are the slips and falls of the saints, though their desire is to be harmless and inoffensive, and to give no just occasion for blame or scandal; but the saints are so in Christ Jesus, being washed in his blood, and clothed with his righteousness, and will be found so by him when he comes again, when he will present them to himself a glorious church, without spot or wrinkle, and also before the presence of his Father's glory, as faultless, with exceeding joy; and so will they be fit and meet to be the inhabitants of the new heavens and new earth, and reign with him therein, and be with him to all eternity.

Gill: 2Pe 3:15 - And account that the longsuffering of our Lord // salvation // even as our beloved brother Paul also // according to the wisdom given unto him, hath written unto you And account that the longsuffering of our Lord,.... Not his longsuffering towards the wicked, and his forbearance with them, for that is not the mean...

And account that the longsuffering of our Lord,.... Not his longsuffering towards the wicked, and his forbearance with them, for that is not the means of, nor the way to, nor does it issue in, their salvation, but in their sorer punishment and greater damnation, see Rom 2:4; but towards the elect, as in 2Pe 3:9; whom he bears much and long with before conversion, while in their sins, and in a state of unregeneracy, and waits to be gracious to them, as he is in their calling, and to make known and apply his great salvation to them; and as with particular persons, so with the whole body of them, till they are all gathered in, and even with the world for their sakes; and particularly the Lord's longsuffering here intends the deferring of his coming, or his seeming slackness in the performance of his promise: the reason of which is,

salvation: the salvation of all his chosen ones, and in that it issues; he waits, he stays, that none of them might perish, but that they might be all brought to faith and repentance, and so be saved: wherefore the apostle would have the saints consider it in this light, and not imagine and conclude, with the scoffing infidels, that he is slack and dilatory, and will not come, but that his view in it is the salvation of all his people, which by this means is brought about: in confirmation of which, and other things he had delivered, he produces the testimony of the Apostle Paul;

even as our beloved brother Paul also; he calls him a "brother", both on account of his being a believer in Christ, one that belonged to the same family with him, and was of the household of faith, born of the same Father, and related to the same Redeemer, the firstborn among many brethren, and likewise on account of his being a fellow apostle; for though he was not one of the twelve apostles, but his call and mission were later than theirs, yet Peter does not disdain to put him among them, and upon an equal foot with them, nor was he a whit behind the chief of them: he styles him a "beloved" brother; expressing his affection for him, which the relation between them called for, and which he bore to him, notwithstanding his public opposition to him, and sharp reproof of him, Gal 2:11, and perhaps loved him the more for it; see Psa 141:5; and he makes mention of him, and that under these characters, partly to show their agreement and consent in doctrine; and partly to recommend him to the Jews, to whom he writes, who had, upon report of his doctrine and ministry, entertained an ill, at least a mean opinion, of him; as also to set us an example to speak well of one another, both as ministers and private believers:

according to the wisdom given unto him, hath written unto you; meaning not all his epistles, as being written for the general good of all the saints, as well as for those particular churches or men to whom they were sent; for what Peter speaks of is what was particularly written to them, and is distinguished in 2Pe 3:16 from the rest of Paul's epistles; nor does he intend the epistle of Paul to the Romans, for the longsuffering of God spoken of in that, as in Rom 2:4, is his longsuffering to the wicked, which issues in their destruction, and not his longsuffering to his elect, which is salvation, as here; but he seems manifestly to have in view the epistle to the Hebrews, for Peter wrote both his first and second epistles to Jews; wherefore, since none of Paul's epistles but that were written particularly to them, it should seem that that is designed, and serves to confirm his being the author of it; in which he writes to the Hebrews concerning the coming of Christ, and of the deferring of it a little while, and of the need they had of patience to wait for it, Heb 10:36; and in it also are some things difficult to be understood concerning Melchizedek, the old and new covenant, the removing of the Aaronic priesthood, and the abrogation of the whole ceremonial law, &c. things not easily received by that nation; and the whole is written with great wisdom, respecting the person and office of Christ, the nature of his priesthood, and the glory of the Gospel dispensation; and in a most admirable manner is the whole Mosaic economy laid open and explained: he was indeed a wise master builder, and whatever he wrote was "according to wisdom"; not fleshly wisdom, the wisdom of this world, nor with enticing words of men's wisdom, but according to the divine wisdom, under the influence of the spirit of wisdom and revelation; for he had not this of himself naturally, nor did he learn it at Gamaliel's feet, but it was what was "given to him"; it came from above, from God, who gives it liberally; and as he himself always owned it to be a free grace gift of God bestowed on him, and that all his light and knowledge were by the revelation of Christ, so Peter ascribes it to the same, that God might have all the glory, and all boasting in man be stopped.

Gill: 2Pe 3:16 - As also in all his epistles // speaking in them of those things // in which are some things hard to be understood // which they that are unlearned // and unstable // wrest // as they do also the other Scriptures // unto their own destruction As also in all his epistles,.... From whence it appears, that the Apostle Paul had, by this time, wrote several of his epistles, if not all of them; ...

As also in all his epistles,.... From whence it appears, that the Apostle Paul had, by this time, wrote several of his epistles, if not all of them; and they were all written according to the same wisdom, and under the influence of the same spirit, as his epistle to the Hebrews:

speaking in them of those things; of the same things, Peter had been speaking of, of the coming of Christ, as that he should appear a second time to them that look for him, and would come as a thief in the night, and that the fashion, scheme, and form of this world should pass away, and that saints should look and wait for his coming, and love it: something of this kind is said in all his epistles; see Heb 9:28; and also of mockers, scoffers, seducers, and wicked men that would arise in the last days; see 1Ti 4:1,

in which are some things hard to be understood. The phrase, "in which", refers either to the epistles, or the things spoken in them. The Alexandrian manuscript, and three of Robert Stephens's copies, read εν αις, "in which" epistles, but the generality of copies read εν οις, "in", or "among which things", spoken of in them, concerning the subject here treated of, the coming of Christ; as the time of Christ's coming, which is sometimes represented by the apostle, as if it would be while he was living; and the manner of his coming in person with all his saints, and his mighty angels, with a shout, the voice of the archangel, and trump of God, things not easily understood; and the destruction of antichrist at his coming, which will be with the breath of his mouth, and the brightness of his coming; as also the resurrection of the dead, of the saints that will rise first, and that with spiritual bodies; and likewise the change of the living saints, and the rapture both of living and raised saints together, in the, clouds, to meet the Lord in the air; and the standing of them before the judgment seat of Christ, and the account that everyone must give to him, 1Th 4:15 1Co 15:44;

which they that are unlearned; untaught of God, who have never learned of the Father, nor have learned Christ, nor have that anointing which teacheth all things; who, though they may have been in the schools of men, were never in the school of Christ; and though they have been ever learning, yet will never come to the knowledge of the truth; for men may have a large share of human literature, and yet be unlearned men in the sense of the apostle; and very often it is, that such wrest and pervert the Scriptures to the ruin of themselves, and others:

and unstable; unsettled in their principles, who are like children tossed to and fro with every wind of doctrine; the root of the matter is not in them; nor are they rooted and built up in Christ, and so are not established in the faith; they are not upon the foundation Christ, nor do they build upon, and abide by the sure word of God, or form their notions according to it, but according to their own carnal reasonings, and fleshly lusts; and so

wrest the word of God, distort it from its true sense and meaning, and make it speak that which it never designed; dealing with it as innocent persons are sometimes used, put upon a rack, and tortured, and so forced to speak what is contrary to their knowledge and consciences; and so were the words of the Apostle Paul wrested by ill designing men, as about the doctrines of grace and works, so concerning the coming of Christ; see Rom 3:8;

as they do also the other Scriptures; the writings of Moses, and the prophets of the Old Testament, the Gospels, the Acts of the Apostles, and the other epistles of the apostles of the New Testament: and which is eventually

unto their own destruction; for by so doing they either add unto, or detract from the Scriptures, and so bring the curse of God upon them; and they give into doctrines of devils, and into heresies, which are damnable, and bring upon themselves swift destruction, which lingers not, and slumbers not. Now from hence it does not follow, that the Scriptures are not to be read by the common people; for not all the parts of Scripture, and all things in it, are hard to be understood, there are many things very plain and easy, even everything respecting eternal salvation; there is milk for babes, as well as meat for strong men: besides, not the Scriptures in general, but Paul's epistles only, are here spoken of, and not all of them, or anyone whole epistle among them, only some things in them, and these not impossible, only difficult to be understood; and which is no reason why they should be laid aside, but rather why they should be read with greater application and diligence, and be followed with fervent prayer, and frequent meditation; and though unlearned and unstable men may wrest them to their perdition, those that are taught of God, though otherwise illiterate, may read them to great profit and advantage.

Gill: 2Pe 3:17 - Ye therefore, beloved, seeing ye know these things before // beware lest ye also, being led away with the error of the wicked // fall from your own steadfastness Ye therefore, beloved, seeing ye know these things before,.... As that there will be such mockers and scoffers in the last days, and such unlearned a...

Ye therefore, beloved, seeing ye know these things before,.... As that there will be such mockers and scoffers in the last days, and such unlearned and unstable men that will deprave the Scriptures, and wrest them in such a miserable manner:

beware lest ye also, being led away with the error of the wicked; from the simplicity of the Gospel, along with such wicked men, that wax worse and worse, deceivers and being deceived, by giving into any of their errors which respect the grace of God, or the person and offices of Christ, or particularly his second coming; be upon the watch and guard against them, having previous notice of them, for they lie in wait to deceive: lest ye

fall from your own steadfastness; which was proper to them, and which, by the grace of God, they had, and retained, both in the faith of Christ and doctrine of the Gospel; for though the saints can never finally and totally fall into sin, or from the truth, yet they may fall from their steadfastness, both as to the exercise of the grace of faith, and as to their profession of the doctrine of faith; and to be fluctuating, hesitating, and doubting in either respect, must be very uncomfortable and dishonourable.

Gill: 2Pe 3:18 - But grow in grace // and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ // to him be glory, both now, and for ever // Amen But grow in grace,.... In the gifts of grace, which, under a divine blessing, may be increased by using them: gifts neglected decrease, but stirred up...

But grow in grace,.... In the gifts of grace, which, under a divine blessing, may be increased by using them: gifts neglected decrease, but stirred up and used, are improved and increase. And though men are to be thankful for their gifts, and be contented with them, yet they may lawfully desire more, and in the use of means seek an increase of them, which may be a means of preserving themselves, and others, from the error of the wicked. Moreover, by "grace" may be meant internal grace. The work of grace is gradual; it is like a grain of mustard seed, or like seed cast into the earth, which springs up, it is not known how, first the blade, then the ear, then the full corn in the ear; saints are first babes, and from children they grow to young men, and from young men to fathers. There is such a thing as growth in grace, in this sense; every grace, as to its act and exercise, is capable of growing and increasing; faith may grow exceedingly, hope abound, love increase, and patience have its perfect work, and saints may grow more humble, holy, and self-denying: this is indeed God's work, to cause them to grow, and it is owing to his grace; yet saint, should show a concern for this, and make use of means which God owns and blesses for this purpose, such as prayer, attending on the word, and looking over the promises of God, for an increase of faith; recollecting past experiences, and looking to the death and resurrection of Christ for the encouragement of hope, and to the love of God and Christ, for the stirring up of love to both, and to the saints; considering the sufferings of Christ, the desert of sin, and the glories of another world, to promote patience and self-denial, and the pattern of Christ, to excite to humility; though "grace" may also intend the Gospel, the knowledge of which is imperfect, and may be increased in the use of means, and which is a special preservative against error, a growth in which saints should be concerned for:

and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ; of his person, office, and grace, than which nothing is more valuable, and is to be preferred to everything; it is the principal thing in grace, and is the beginning and pledge of eternal life, and will issue in it; for an increase of which, and a growth in it, the word and ordinances are designed; and nothing can be a greater security against error than an experimental growing knowledge of Christ. The Syriac version adds, "and of God the Father"; and so some copies read:

to him be glory, both now, and for ever; or "to the day of eternity"; that is, to Christ, who is truly God, or otherwise such a doxology would not belong to him, be ascribed the glory of deity, of all divine perfections; the glory of all his offices and work as Mediator; the glory of man's salvation; and the glory of all that grace, and the growth of it, together with the knowledge of himself, which saints have from him; and that both in this world, and that which is to come.

Amen; so be it.

buka semua
Tafsiran/Catatan -- Catatan Ayat / Catatan Kaki

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:1 Or “I have stirred up, aroused.” The translation treats the present tense verb as a conative present.

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:2 Holy prophets…apostles. The first chapter demonstrated that the OT prophets were trustworthy guides (1:19-21) and that the NT apostles were also...

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:3 Grk “going according to their own evil urges.”

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:4 Grk “thus,” “in the same manner.”

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:5 Or “land,” “the earth.”

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:6 The antecedent is ambiguous. It could refer to the heavens, the heavens and earth, or the water and the word. If the reference is to the heavens, the ...

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:7 Grk “the ungodly people.”

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:8 The same verb, λανθάνω (lanqanw, “escape”) used in v. 5 is found here (there, translated “suppres...

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:9 Grk “reach to repentance.” Repentance thus seems to be a quantifiable state, or turning point. The verb χωρέω (cw...

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:10 One of the most difficult textual problems in the NT is found in v. 10. The reading εὑρεθήσετα_...

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:11 Grk “in holy conduct and godliness.”

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:12 Grk “being burned up” (see v. 10).

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:13 Grk “dwells.” The verb κατοικέω (katoikew) is an intensive cognate of οἰκέ ...

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:14 “When you come into” is not in Greek. However, the dative pronoun αὐτῷ (autw) does not indicate agency (“by hi...

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:15 Paul wrote to you. That Paul had written to these people indicates that they are most likely Gentiles. Further, that Peter is now writing to them sugg...

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:16 This one incidental line, the rest of the scriptures, links Paul’s writings with scripture. This is thus one of the earliest affirmations of any...

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:17 Grk “fall from your firmness.”

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:18 Grk “day of eternity.”

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:1 This ( 1 ) second epistle, beloved, I now write unto you; in [both] which I stir up your pure minds by way of remembrance: ( 1 ) The remedy against t...

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:3 ( 2 ) Knowing this first, that there shall come in the last days ( a ) scoffers, walking after their own lusts, ( 2 ) He vouches the second coming of...

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:4 ( 3 ) And saying, Where is the promise of his coming? for since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as [they were] from the beginning of the ...

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:5 ( 4 ) For this they willingly are ignorant of, that by the word of God the heavens were of old, and the ( b ) earth standing out of the water and in t...

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:6 ( 5 ) Whereby the world that then was, being overflowed with ( c ) water, perished: ( 5 ) Secondly he sets against them the universal flood, which wa...

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:7 ( 6 ) But the heavens and the earth, which are now, by the same word are kept in store, reserved unto fire against the day of judgment and perdition o...

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:8 ( 7 ) But, beloved, be not ignorant of this one thing, that one day [is] with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day. ( 7 ) Th...

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:9 ( 8 ) The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; ( 9 ) but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should pe...

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:10 ( 10 ) But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night; in the which the heavens shall pass away with a great ( d ) noise, and the elements ...

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:11 ( 11 ) [Seeing] then [that] all these things shall be dissolved, what manner [of persons] ought ye to be in [all] holy conversation and godliness, ( ...

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:12 Looking for and ( e ) hasting unto the coming of the day of God, wherein the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved, and the elements shall melt wit...

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:13 Nevertheless we, according to his promise, look for new heavens and a new earth, ( f ) wherein dwelleth righteousness. ( f ) In which heavens.

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:14 Wherefore, beloved, seeing that ye look for such things, be diligent that ye may be found of him in ( g ) peace, without spot, and blameless. ( g ) t...

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:15 And account [that] the longsuffering of our Lord [is] salvation; ( 12 ) even as our beloved brother Paul also according to the wisdom given unto him h...

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:16 As also in all [his] epistles, speaking in them of these things; ( 13 ) in which are some things hard to be understood, which they that are unlearned ...

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Tafsiran/Catatan -- Catatan Rentang Ayat

Maclaren: 2Pe 3:14 - A Libation To Jehovah Be Diligent "Wherefore, beloved, seeing that ye look for such things, be diligent that ye may be found of Him in peace, without spot, and blameless.'...

Maclaren: 2Pe 3:18 - A Libation To Jehovah Growth But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,'--2 Peter 3:18. THESE are the last words of an old man, written ...

MHCC: 2Pe 3:1-4 - --The purified minds of Christians are to be stirred up, that they may be active and lively in the work of holiness. There will be scoffers in the last ...

MHCC: 2Pe 3:5-10 - --Had these scoffers considered the dreadful vengeance with which God swept away a whole world of ungodly men at once, surely they would not have scoffe...

MHCC: 2Pe 3:11-18 - --From the doctrine of Christ's second coming, we are exhorted to purity and godliness. This is the effect of real knowledge. Very exact and universal h...

Matthew Henry: 2Pe 3:1-2 - -- That the apostle might the better reach his end in writing this epistle, which is to make them steady and constant in a fiducial and practical remem...

Matthew Henry: 2Pe 3:3-7 - -- To quicken and excite us to a serious minding and firm adhering to what God has revealed to us by the prophets and apostles, we are told that there ...

Matthew Henry: 2Pe 3:8 - -- The apostle comes in these words to instruct and establish Christians in the truth of the coming of the Lord, where we may clearly discern the tende...

Matthew Henry: 2Pe 3:9-10 - -- We are here told that the Lord is not slack - he does not delay beyond the appointed time; as God kept the time that he had appointed for the deli...

Matthew Henry: 2Pe 3:11-18 - -- The apostle, having instructed them in the doctrine of Christ's second coming, I. Takes occasion thence to exhort them to purity and godliness in th...

Barclay: 2Pe 3:1-2 - "THE PRINCIPLES OF PREACHING" In this passage we see clearly displayed the principles of preaching which Peter observed. (i) He believed in the value of repetition. He knows that ...

Barclay: 2Pe 3:3-4 - "THE DENIAL OF THE SECOND COMING" The characteristic of the heretics which worried Peter most of all was their denial of the Second Coming of Jesus. Literally, their question was: "...

Barclay: 2Pe 3:5-6 - "DESTRUCTION BY FLOOD" Peter's first argument is that the world is not eternally stable. The point he is making is that the ancient world was destroyed by water, just as t...

Barclay: 2Pe 3:7 - "DESTRUCTION BY FIRE" It is Peter's conviction that, as the ancient world was destroyed by water, the present world will be destroyed by fire. He says that that is state...

Barclay: 2Pe 3:8-9 - "THE MERCY OF GOD'S DELAY" There are in this passage three great truths on which to nourish the mind and rest the heart. (i) Time is not the same to God as it is to man. As the...

Barclay: 2Pe 3:10 - "THE DREADFUL DAY" It inevitably happens that a man has to speak and think in the terms which he knows. That is what Peter is doing here. He is speaking of the New Tes...

Barclay: 2Pe 3:11-14 - "THE MORAL DYNAMIC" The one thing in which Peter is supremely interested is the moral dynamic of the Second Coming. If these things are going to happen and the world is ...

Barclay: 2Pe 3:11-14 - "HASTENING THE DAY" There is in this passage still another great conception. Peter speaks of the Christian as not only eagerly awaiting the Coming of Christ but as actua...

Barclay: 2Pe 3:15-16 - "PERVERTERS OF SCRIPTURE" Peter here cites Paul as teaching the same things as he himself teaches. It may be that he is citing Paul as agreeing that a pious and a holy life is...

Barclay: 2Pe 3:17-18 - "A FIRM FOUNDATION AND A CONTINUAL GROWTH" In conclusion Peter tells us certain things about the Christian life. (i) The Christian is a man who is forewarned. That is to say, he cannot plead ...

Constable: 2Pe 3:1-16 - --V. THE PROSPECT FOR THE CHRISTIAN 3:1-16 Peter turned from a negative warning against false teachers to make a ...

Constable: 2Pe 3:1-2 - --A. The Purpose of This Epistle 3:1-2 3:1 Peter's first letter was most likely 1 Peter. He implied that he wrote this letter soon after the earlier one...

Constable: 2Pe 3:3-6 - --B. Scoffing in the Last Days 3:3-6 Peter warned his readers about the activity of mockers preceding the Lord's return to enable them to deal with this...

Constable: 2Pe 3:7-10 - --C. End-time Events 3:7-10 Next Peter outlined what will surely happen so his readers would understand what will take place. 3:7 God has given orders t...

Constable: 2Pe 3:11-16 - --D. Living in View of the Future 3:11-16 Peter drew application for his readers and focused their attention on how they should live presently in view o...

Constable: 2Pe 3:17-18 - --VI. CONCLUSION 3:17-18 Peter concluded his epistle with a summary of what he had said and a doxology. He did so to condense his teaching for his reade...

College: 2Pe 3:1-18 - --2 PETER 3 C. THE NECESSITY OF BELIEVING IN CHRIST'S RETURN (3:1-13) 1. The False Teaching (3:1-7) 1 Dear friends, this is now my second letter to y...

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Tafsiran/Catatan -- Lainnya

Evidence: 2Pe 3:3 Signs of the end times (combined from Matthew 24; Mark 13; Luke 21; 1 Timothy 4; and 2 Timothy 3): There will be false Christs; wars and rumors of wa...

Evidence: 2Pe 3:6 Peter believed the Genesis account of Noah’s Flood.

Evidence: 2Pe 3:7 Judgment Day: For verses that warn of its reality, see Jud 1:14-15 .

Evidence: 2Pe 3:8 Because God is eternal and outside of the dimension of time, to Him one day is the same as a thousand years. In the same way, a person who is in space...

Evidence: 2Pe 3:9 Salvation is possible for every person. See Joh 3:16-17 . QUESTIONS & OBJECTIONS " Why does God allow evil?" Why does God allow evil men and wom...

Evidence: 2Pe 3:16 Never feel as though you have to be able to explain every Bible verse. Ever Peter admits that some things Paul wrote are hard to understand. In doing ...

Evidence: 2Pe 3:18 " Bless O Lord the whole race of mankind, and let the world be filled with the knowledge of Thee and Thy Son, Jesus Christ." GEORGE WASHINGTON

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Pendahuluan / Garis Besar

Robertson: 2 Peter (Pendahuluan Kitab) THE SECOND EPISTLE OF PETER ABOUT a.d. 66 OR 67 By Way of Introduction Most Doubtful New Testament Book Every book in the New Testament is cha...

JFB: 2 Peter (Pendahuluan Kitab) 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 ...

JFB: 2 Peter (Garis Besar) ADDRESS: EXHORTATION TO ALL GRACES, AS GOD HAS GIVEN US, IN THE KNOWLEDGE OF CHRIST, ALL THINGS PERTAINING TO LIFE: CONFIRMED BY THE TESTIMONY OF APO...

TSK: 2 Peter 3 (Pendahuluan Pasal) Overview 2Pe 3:1, He assures them of the certainty of Christ’s coming to judgment, against those scorners who dispute against it; 2Pe 3:8, warni...

Poole: 2 Peter 3 (Pendahuluan Pasal) PETER CHAPTER 3

MHCC: 2 Peter (Pendahuluan Kitab) This epistle clearly is connected with the former epistle of Peter. The apostle having stated the blessings to which God has called Christians, exhort...

MHCC: 2 Peter 3 (Pendahuluan Pasal) (2Pe 3:1-4) The design here is to remind of Christ's final coming to judgement. (2Pe 3:5-10) He will appear unexpectedly, when the present frame of n...

Matthew Henry: 2 Peter (Pendahuluan Kitab) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Second Epistle General of Peter The penman of this epistle appears plainly to be the same who wrote...

Matthew Henry: 2 Peter 3 (Pendahuluan Pasal) The apostle drawing towards the conclusion of his second epistle, begins this last chapter with repeating the account of his design and scope in wr...

Barclay: 2 Peter (Pendahuluan Kitab) INTRODUCTION TO THE SECOND LETTER OF PETER The Neglected Book And Its Contents Second Peter is one of the neglected books of the New Testament. ...

Barclay: 2 Peter 3 (Pendahuluan Pasal) The Principles Of Preaching (2Pe_3:1-2) The Denial Of The Second Coming (2Pe_3:3-4) Destruction By Flood (2Pe_3:5-6) Destruction By Fire (2Pe_3:7...

Constable: 2 Peter (Pendahuluan Kitab) Introduction Historical Background This epistle claims that the Apostle Peter wrote it...

Constable: 2 Peter (Garis Besar) Outline I. Introduction 1:1-2 II. The condition of the Christian 1:3-11 ...

Constable: 2 Peter 2 Peter Bibliography Alford, Henry. Alford's Greek Testament. 4 vols. New ed. London: Rivingtons, 1884. ...

Haydock: 2 Peter (Pendahuluan Kitab) THE SECOND EPISTLE OF ST. PETER, THE APOSTLE. INTRODUCTION. This epistle, though not at first received [by some Churches] as canonical, was ac...

Gill: 2 Peter (Pendahuluan Kitab) INTRODUCTION TO 2 PETER Though there was, among the ancients, a doubt concerning the authority of this epistle, which is first mentioned by Origen ...

Gill: 2 Peter 3 (Pendahuluan Pasal) INTRODUCTION TO 2 PETER 3 In this chapter the apostle makes mention of the end and design of his writing this second epistle; foretells that there ...

College: 2 Peter (Pendahuluan Kitab) INTRODUCTION ABOUT THIS COMMENTARY This commentary is written for serious students of the Bible, including Bible class teachers, preachers, college ...

College: 2 Peter (Garis Besar) OUTLINE I. INTRODUCTION - 1:1-15 A. Salutation and Greeting - 1:1-2 B. Preface: Exhortation to Godly Living - 1:3-11 C. Occasion: The ...

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