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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871) |
INTRODUCTION
ITS GENUINENESS is attested by @2Pe 3:1. On the authority of Second Peter, see the Introduction. Also by POLYCARP (in EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 4.14]), who, in writing to the Philippians, quotes many passages: in the second chapter he quotes @1Pe 1:13,21 3:9; in the fifth chapter, @1Pe 2:11. EUSEBIUS says of PAPIAS [Ecclesiastical History, 3.39] that he, too, quotes Peter's First Epistle. IRENÆUS [Against Heresies, 4.9.2] expressly mentions it; and in [4.16.5], @1Pe 2:16. CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA [Miscellanies, 1.3, p. 544], quotes @1Pe 2:11,12,15,16; and [p. 562], @1Pe 1:21,22; and [4, p. 584], @1Pe 3:14-17; and [p. 585], @1Pe 4:12-14. ORIGEN (in EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 6.25]) mentions this Epistle; in [Homily 7, on Joshua, vol. 2, p. 63], he mentions both Epistles; and [Commentary on Psalm 3 and on John], he mentions @1Pe 3:18-21. TERTULLIAN [Antidote to the Scorpion's Sting, 12], quotes expressly @1Pe 2:20,21; and [Antidote to the Scorpion's Sting, 14], @1Pe 2:13,17. EUSEBIUS states it as the opinion of those before him that this was among the universally acknowledged Epistles. The Peschito Syriac Version contains it. The fragment of the canon called MURATORI'S omits it. Excepting this, and the Paulician heretics, who rejected it, all ancient testimony is on its side. The internal evidence is equally strong. The author calls himself the apostle Peter, @1Pe 1:1, and "a witness of Christ's sufferings," and an "elder," @1Pe 5:1. The energy of the style harmonizes with the warmth of Peter's character; and, as ERASMUS says, this Epistle is full of apostolic dignity and authority and is worthy of the leader among the apostles.
PETER'S PERSONAL HISTORY.--Simon, Or Simeon, was a native of Bethsaida on the Sea of Galilee, son of Jonas or John. With his father and his brother Andrew he carried on trade as a fisherman at Capernaum, his subsequent place of abode. He was a married man, and tradition represents his wife's name as Concordia or Perpetua. CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA says that she suffered martyrdom, her husband encouraging her to be faithful unto death, "Remember, dear, our Lord." His wife's mother was restored from a fever by Christ. He was brought to Jesus by his brother Andrew, who had been a disciple of John the Baptist, but was pointed to the Saviour as "the Lamb of God" by his master (@Joh 1:29). Jesus, on first beholding him, gave him the name by which chiefly he is known, indicative of his subsequent character and work in the Church, "Peter" (Greek) or "Cephas" (Aramaic), a stone (@Mt 4:18). He did not join our Lord finally until a subsequent period. The leading incidents in his apostolic life are well known: his walking on the troubled waters to meet Jesus, but sinking through doubting (@Mt 14:30); his bold and clear acknowledgment of the divine person and office of Jesus (@Mt 16:16 Mr 8:29 Joh 11:27), notwithstanding the difficulties in the way of such belief, whence he was then also designated as the stone, or rock (@Mt 16:18); but his rebuke of his Lord when announcing what was so unpalatable to carnal prejudices, Christ's coming passion and death (@Mt 16:22); his passing from one extreme to the opposite, in reference to Christ's offer to wash his feet (@Joh 13:8,9); his self-confident assertion that he would never forsake his Lord, whatever others might do (@Mt 26:33), followed by his base denial of Christ thrice with curses (@Mt 26:75); his deep penitence; Christ's full forgiveness and prophecy of his faithfulness unto death, after he had received from him a profession of "love" as often repeated as his previous denial (@Joh 21:15-17). These incidents illustrate his character as zealous, pious, and ardently attached to the Lord, but at the same time impulsive in feeling, rather than calmly and continuously steadfast. Prompt in action and ready to avow his convictions boldly, he was hasty in judgment, precipitate, and too self-confident in the assertion of his own steadfastness; the result was that, though he abounded in animal courage, his moral courage was too easily overcome by fear of man's opinion. A wonderful change was wrought in him by his restoration after his fall, through the grace of his risen Lord. His zeal and ardor became sanctified, being chastened by a spirit of unaffected humility. His love to the Lord was, if possible, increased, while his mode of manifesting it now was in doing and suffering for His name, rather than in loud protestations. Thus, when imprisoned and tried before the Sanhedrim for preaching Christ, he boldly avowed his determination to continue to do so. He is well called "the mouth of the apostles." His faithfulness led to his apprehension by Herod Agrippa, with a view to his execution, from which, however, he was delivered by the angel of the Lord.
After the ascension he took the lead in the Church; and on the descent of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, he exercised the designed power of "the keys" of Christ's kingdom, by opening the door of the Church, in preaching, for the admission of thousands of Israelites; and still more so in opening (in obedience to a special revelation) an entrance to the "devout" (that is, Jewish proselyte from heathendom) Gentile, Cornelius: the forerunner of the harvest gathered in from idolatrous Gentiles at Antioch. This explains in what sense Christ used as to him the words, "Upon this rock I will build my Church" (@Mt 16:18), namely, on the preaching of Christ, the true "Rock," by connection with whom only he was given the designation: a title shared in common on the same grounds by the rest of the apostles, as the first founders of the Church on Christ, "the chief corner-stone" (@Eph 2:20). A name is often given in Hebrew, not that the person is actually the thing itself, but has some special relation to it; as Elijah means Mighty Jehovah, so Simon is called Peter "the rock," not that he is so, save by connection with Jesus, the only true Rock (@Isa 28:16 @1Co 3:11). As subsequently he identified himself with "Satan," and is therefore called so (@Mt 16:23), in the same way, by his clear confession of Christ, the Rock, he became identified with Him, and is accordingly so called (@Mt 16:18). It is certain that there is no instance on record of Peter's having ever claimed or exercised supremacy; on the contrary, he is represented as sent by the apostles at Jerusalem to confirm the Samaritans baptized by Philip the deacon; again at the council of Jerusalem, not he, but James the president, or leading bishop in the Church of that city, pronounced the authoritative decision: @Ac 15:19, "My sentence is," &c. A kind of primacy, doubtless (though certainly not supremacy), was given him on the ground of his age, and prominent earnestness, and boldness in taking the lead on many important occasions. Hence he is called "first" in enumerating the apostles. Hence, too, arise the phrases, "Peter and the Eleven," "Peter and the rest of the apostles"; and Paul, in going up to Jerusalem after his conversion, went to see Peter in particular.
Once only he again betrayed the same spirit of vacillation through fear of man's reproach which had caused his denial of his Lord. Though at the Jerusalem council he advocated the exemption of Gentile converts from the ceremonial observances of the law, yet he, after having associated in closest intercourse with the Gentiles at Antioch, withdrew from them, through dread of the prejudices of his Jewish brethren who came from James, and timidly dissembled his conviction of the religious equality of Jew and Gentile; for this Paul openly withstood and rebuked him: a plain refutation of his alleged supremacy and infallibility (except where specially inspired, as in writing his Epistles). In all other cases he showed himself to be, indeed, as Paul calls him, "a pillar" (@Ga 2:9). Subsequently we find him in "Babylon," whence he wrote this First Epistle to the Israelite believers of the dispersion, and the Gentile Christians united in Christ, in Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia.
JEROME [On Illustrious Men, 1] states that "Peter, after having been bishop of Antioch, and after having preached to the believers of the circumcision in Pontus, &c. [plainly inferred from @1Pe 1:1], in the second year of Claudius went to Rome to refute Simon Magus, and for twenty-five years there held the episcopal chair, down to the last year of Nero, that is, the fourteenth, by whom he was crucified with his head downwards, declaring himself unworthy to be crucified as his Lord, and was buried in the Vatican, near the triumphal way." EUSEBIUS [Chronicles, Anno 3], also asserts his episcopate at Antioch; his assertion that Peter founded that Church contradicts @Ac 11:19-22. His journey to Rome to oppose Simon Magus arose from JUSTIN'S story of the statue found at Rome (really the statue of the Sabine god, Semo Sanctus, or Hercules, mistaken as if Simon Magus were worshipped by that name, "Simoni Deo Sancto"; found in the Tiber in 1574, or on an island in the Tiber in 1662), combined with the account in @Ac 8:9-24. The twenty-five years' bishopric is chronologically impossible, as it would make Peter, at the interview with Paul at Antioch, to have been then for some years bishop of Rome! His crucifixion is certain from Christ's prophecy, @Joh 21:18,19. DIONYSIUS OF CORINTH (in EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 2.25]) asserted in an epistle to the Romans, that Paul and Peter planted both the Roman and Corinthian churches, and endured martyrdom in Italy at the same time. So TERTULLIAN [Against Marcion, 4.5, and The Prescription Against Heretics, 36, 38]. Also Caius, the presbyter of Rome, in EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 2.25] asserts that some memorials of their martyrdom were to be seen at Rome on the road to Ostia. So EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 2.25, and Demonstration of the Gospel, 3.116]. So LACTANTIUS [Of the Manner in Which the Persecutors Died, 2]. Many of the details are palpably false; whether the whole be so or not is dubious, considering the tendency to concentrate at Rome events of interest [ALFORD]. What is certain is, that Peter was not there before the writing of the Epistle to the Romans (A.D. 58), otherwise he would have been mentioned in it; nor during Paul's first imprisonment at Rome, otherwise he would have been mentioned in some one of Paul's many other Epistles written from Rome; nor during Paul's second imprisonment, at least when he was writing the Second Epistle to Timothy, just before his martyrdom. He may have gone to Rome after Paul's death, and, as common tradition represents, been imprisoned in the Mamertine dungeon, and crucified on the Janiculum, on the eminence of St. Pietro in Montorio, and his remains deposited under the great altar in the center of the famous basilica of St. Peter. AMBROSE [Epistles, 33 (Edition Paris, 1586), p. 1022] relates that St. Peter, not long before his death, being overcome by the solicitations of his fellow Christians to save himself, was fleeing from Rome when he was met by our Lord, and on asking, "Lord, whither goest Thou?" received the answer, "I go to be crucified afresh." On this he returned and joyfully went to martyrdom. The church called "Domine quo vadis" on the Appian Way, commemorates the legend. It is not unlikely that the whole tradition is built on the connection which existed between Paul and Peter. As Paul, "the apostle of the uncircumcision," wrote Epistles to Galatia, Ephesus, and Colosse, and to Philemon at Colosse, making the Gentile Christians the persons prominently addressed, and the Jewish Christians subordinately so; so, vice versa, Peter, "the apostle of the circumcision," addressed the same churches, the Jewish Christians in them primarily, and the Gentile Christians also, secondarily.
TO WHOM HE ADDRESSES THIS EPISTLE.--The heading, @1Pe 1:1, "to the elect strangers (spiritually pilgrims) of the dispersion" (Greek), clearly marks the Christians of the Jewish dispersion as prominently addressed, but still including also Gentile Christians as grafted into the Christian Jewish stock by adoption and faith, and so being part of the true Israel. @1Pe 1:14 2:9,10 3:6 4:3 clearly prove this. Thus he, the apostle of the circumcision, sought to unite in one Christ Jew and Gentile, promoting thereby the same work and doctrine as Paul the apostle of the uncircumcision. The provinces are named by Peter in the heading in the order proceeding from northeast to south and west. Pontus was the country of the Christian Jew Aquila. To Galatia Paul paid two visits, founding and confirming churches. Crescens, his companion, went there about the time of Paul's last imprisonment, just before his martyrdom. Ancyra was subsequently its ecclesiastical metropolis. Men of Cappadocia, as well as of "Pontus" and "Asia," were among the hearers of Peter's effective sermon on the Pentecost whereon the Spirit decended on the Church; these probably brought home to their native land the first tidings of the Gospel. Proconsular "Asia" included Mysia, Lydia, Caria, Phrygia, Pisidia, and Lyaconia. In Lycaonia were the churches of Iconium, founded by Paul and Barnabas; of Lystra, Timothy's birthplace, where Paul was stoned at the instigation of the Jews; and of Derbe, the birthplace of Gaius, or Caius. In Pisidia was Antioch, where Paul was the instrument of converting many, but was driven out by the Jews. In Caria was Miletus, containing doubtless a Christian Church. In Phrygia, Paul preached both times when visiting Galatia in its neighborhood, and in it were the churches of Laodicea, Hierapolis, and Colosse, of which last Church Philemon and Onesimus were members, and Archippus and Epaphras leaders. In Lydia was the Philadelphian Church, favorably noticed in @Re 3:7, &c.; that of Sardis, the capital, and of Thyatira, and of Ephesus, founded by Paul, and a scene of the labors of Aquila and Priscilla and Apollos, and subsequently of more than two whole years' labor of Paul again, and subsequently censured for falling from its first love in @Re 2:4. Smyrna of Ionia was in the same quarter, and as one of the seven churches receives unqualified praise. In Mysia was Pergamos. Troas, too, is known as the scene of Paul's preaching and raising Eutychus to life (@Ac 20:6-10), and of his subsequently staying for a time with Carpus (@2Ti 4:13). Of "Bithynia," no Church is expressly named in Scripture elsewhere. When Paul at an earlier period "assayed to go into Bithynia" (@Ac 16:7), the Spirit suffered him not. But afterwards, we infer from @1Pe 1:1, the Spirit did impart the Gospel to that country, possibly by Peter's ministry, In government, these several churches, it appears from this Epistle (@1Pe 5:1,2, "Feed," &c.), were much in the same states as when Paul addressed the Ephesian "elders" at Miletus (@Ac 20:17,28, "feed") in very similar language; elders or presbyter-bishops ruled, while the apostles exercised the general superintendence. They were exposed to persecutions, though apparently not systematic, but rather annoyances and reproach arising from their not joining their heathen neighbors in riotous living, into which, however, some of them were in danger of falling. The evils which existed among themselves, and which are therefore reproved, were ambition and lucre-seeking on the part of the presbyters (@1Pe 5:2,3), evil thoughts and words among the members in general, and a want of sympathy and generosity towards one another.
HIS OBJECT seems to be, by the prospect of their heavenly portion and by Christ's example, to afford consolation to the persecuted, and prepare them for a greater approaching ordeal, and to exhort all, husbands, wives, servants, presbyters, and people, to a due discharge of relative duties, so as to give no handle to the enemy to reproach Christianity, but rather to win them to it, and so to establish them in "the true grace of God wherein they stand" (@1Pe 5:12). However, see on 1Pe 5:12, on the oldest reading. ALFORD rightly argues that "exhorting and testifying" there, refer to Peter's exhortations throughout the Epistle grounded on testimony which he bears to the Gospel truth, already well known to his readers by the teaching of Paul in those churches. They were already introduced "into" (so the Greek, @1Pe 5:12) this grace of God as their safe standing-ground. Compare @1Co 15:1, "I declare unto you the Gospel wherein ye stand." Therefore he does not, in this Epistle, set forth a complete statement of this Gospel doctrine of grace, but falls back on it as already known. Compare @1Pe 1:8,18, "ye know"; @1Pe 3:15 2Pe 3:1. Not that Peter servilely copies the style and mode of teaching of Paul, but as an independent witness in his own style attests the same truths. We may divide the Epistle into: (I) The inscription (@1Pe 1:1,2). (II) The stirring-up of a pure feeling in believers as born again of God. By the motive of hope to which God has regenerated us (@1Pe 1:3-12); bringing forth the fruit of faith, considering the costly price paid for our redemption from sin (@1Pe 1:14-21). Being purified by the Spirit unto love of the brethren as begotten of God's eternal word, as spiritual priest-kings, to whom alone Christ is precious (@1Pe 1:22 2:10); after Christ's example in suffering, maintaining a good conversation in every relation (@1Pe 2:10 3:14), and a good profession of faith as having in view Christ's once-offered sacrifice, and His future coming to judgment (@1Pe 3:15 4:11); and exhibiting patience in adversity, as looking for future glorification with Christ, (1) in general as Christians, @1Pe 4:12-19; (2) each in his own sphere, @1Pe 5:1-11. "The title "Beloved" marks the separation of the second part from the first, @1Pe 2:11; and of the third part from the second, @1Pe 4:12" [BENGEL]. (III). The conclusion.
TIME AND PLACE OF WRITING.--It was plainly before the open and systematic persecution of the later years of Nero had begun. That this Epistle was written after Paul's Epistles, even those written during his imprisonment at Rome, ending in A.D. 63, appears from the acquaintance which Peter in this Epistle shows he has with them. Compare @1Pe 2:13 with @1Ti 2:2-4; @1Pe 2:18 with @Eph 6:5; @1Pe 1:2 with @Eph 1:4-7; @1Pe 1:3 with @Eph 1:3; @1Pe 1:14 with @Ro 12:2; @1Pe 2:6-10 with @Ro 9:32,33; @1Pe 2:13 with @Ro 13:1-4; @1Pe 2:16 with @Ga 5:13; @1Pe 2:18 with @Eph 6:5; @1Pe 3:1 with @Eph 5:22; @1Pe 3:9 with @Ro 12:17; @1Pe 4:9 with @Php 2:14 Ro 12:13 @Heb 13:2; @1Pe 4:10 with @Ro 12:6-8; @1Pe 5:1 with @Ro 8:18; @1Pe 5:5 with @Eph 5:21 Php 2:3,5-8; @1Pe 5:8 with @1Th 5:6; @1Pe 5:14 with @1Co 16:20. Moreover, in @1Pe 5:13, Mark is mentioned as with Peter in Babylon. This must have been after @Col 4:10 (A.D. 61-63), when Mark was with Paul at Rome, but intending to go to Asia Minor. Again, in @2Ti 4:11 (A.D. 67 or 68), Mark was in or near Ephesus, in Asia Minor, and Timothy is told to bring him to Rome. So that it is likely it was after this, namely, after Paul's martyrdom, that Mark joined Peter, and consequently that this Epistle was written. It is not likely that Peter would have entrenched on Paul's field of labor, the churches of Asia Minor, during Paul's lifetime. The death of the apostle of the uncircumcision, and the consequent need of someone to follow up his teachings, probably gave occasion to the testimony given by Peter to the same churches, collectively addressed, in behalf of the same truth. The relation in which the Pauline Gentile churches stood towards the apostles at Jerusalem favors this view. Even the Gentile Christians would naturally look to the spiritual fathers of the Church at Jerusalem, the center whence the Gospel had emanated to them, for counsel wherewith to meet the pretensions of Judaizing Christians and heretics; and Peter, always prominent among the apostles in Jerusalem, would even when elsewhere feel a deep interest in them, especially when they were by death bereft of Paul's guidance. BIRKS [Horæ Evangelicæ] suggests that false teachers may have appealed from Paul's doctrine to that of James and Peter. Peter then would naturally write to confirm the doctrines of grace and tacitly show there was no difference between his teaching and Paul's. BIRKS prefers dating the Epistle A.D. 58, after Paul's second visit to Galatia, when Silvanus was with him, and so could not have been with Peter (A.D. 54), and before his imprisonment at Rome, when Mark was with him, and so could not have been with Peter (A.D. 62); perhaps when Paul was detained at Cæsarea, and so debarred from personal intercourse with those churches. I prefer the view previously stated. This sets aside the tradition that Paul and Peter suffered martyrdom together at Rome. ORIGEN'S and EUSEBIUS' statement that Peter visited the churches of Asia in person seems very probable.
The PLACE OF WRITING was doubtless Babylon on the Euphrates (@1Pe 5:13). It is most improbable that in the midst of writing matter-of-fact communications and salutations in a remarkably plain Epistle, the symbolical language of prophecy (namely, "Babylon" for Rome) should be used. JOSEPHUS [Antiquities, 15.2.2; 3.1] states that there was a great multitude of Jews in the Chaldean Babylon; it is therefore likely that "the apostle of the circumcision" (@Ga 2:7,8) would at some time or other visit them. Some have maintained that the Babylon meant was in Egypt because Mark preached in and around Alexandria after Peter's death, and therefore it is likely he did so along with that apostle in the same region previously. But no mention elsewhere in Scripture is made of this Egyptian Babylon, but only of the Chaldean one. And though towards the close of Caligula's reign a persecution drove the Jews thence to Seleucia, and a plague five years after still further thinned their numbers, yet this does not preclude their return and multiplication during the twenty years that elapsed between the plague and the writing of the Epistle. Moreover, the order in which the countries are enumerated, from northeast to south and west, is such as would be adopted by one writing from the Oriental Babylon on the Euphrates, not from Egypt or Rome. Indeed, COSMAS INDICOPLEUSTES, in the sixth century, understood the Babylon meant to be outside the Roman empire. Silvanus, Paul's companion, became subsequently Peter's, and was the carrier of this Epistle.
STYLE.--Fervor and practical truth, rather than logical reasoning, are the characteristics, of this Epistle, as they were of its energetic, warm-hearted writer. His familiarity with Paul's Epistles shown in the language accords with what we should expect from the fact of Paul's having "communicated the Gospel which he preached among the Gentiles" (as revealed specially to him) to Peter among others "of reputation" (@Ga 2:2). Individualities occur, such as baptism, "the answer of a good conscience toward God" (@1Pe 3:21); "consciousness of God" (Greek), @1Pe 2:19, as a motive for enduring sufferings; "living hope" (@1Pe 1:3); "an inheritance incorruptible, undefiled, and that fadeth not away" (@1Pe 1:4); "kiss of charity" (@1Pe 5:14). Christ is viewed less in relation to His past sufferings than as at present exalted and hereafter to be manifested in all His majesty. Glory and hope are prominent features in this Epistle (@1Pe 1:8), so much so that WEISS entitles him "the apostle of hope." The realization of future bliss as near causes him to regard believers as but "strangers" and "sojourners" here. Chastened fervor, deep humility, and ardent love appear, just as we should expect from one who had been so graciously restored after his grievous fall. "Being converted," he truly does "strengthen his brethren." His fervor shows itself in often repeating the same thought in similar words.
In some passages he shows familiarity with the Epistle of James, the apostle of special weight with the Jewish legalizing party, whose inspiration he thus confirms (compare @1Pe 1:6,7 with @Jas 1:2,3; @1Pe 1:24 with @Jas 1:10; @1Pe 2:1 with @Jas 1:21; @1Pe 4:8 with @Jas 5:20, both quoting @Pr 10:12 5:5 with @Jas 4:6, both quoting @Pr 3:34). In most of these cases Old Testament quotations are the common ground of both. "Strong susceptibility to outward impressions, liveliness of feeling, dexterity in handling subjects, dispose natures like that of Peter to repeat afresh the thoughts of others" [STEIGER].
The diction of this Epistle and of his speeches in Acts is very similar: an undesigned coincidence, and so a mark of genuineness (compare @1Pe 2:7 with @Ac 4:11; @1Pe 1:12 with @Ac 5:32; @1Pe 2:24 with @Ac 5:30 10:39; @1Pe 5:1 with @Ac 2:32 3:15; @1Pe 1:10 with @Ac 3:18 10:43; @1Pe 1:21 with @Ac 3:15 10:40; @1Pe 4:5 with @Ac 10:42; @1Pe 2:24 with @Ac 3:19,26).
There is, too, a recurrence to the language of the Lord at the last interview after His resurrection, recorded in @Joh 21:15-23. Compare "the Shepherd . . . of . . . souls," @1Pe 2:25; "Feed the flock of God," "the chief Shepherd," @1Pe 5:2,4, with @Joh 21:15-17; "Feed My lambs . . . sheep"; also "Whom . . . ye love," @1Pe 1:8 2:7, with @Joh 21:15-17; "lovest thou Me?" and @2Pe 1:14, with @Joh 21:18,19. WIESINGER well says, "He who in loving impatience cast himself into the sea to meet the Lord, is also the man who most earnestly testifies to the hope of His return; he who dated his own faith from the sufferings of his Master, is never weary in holding up the suffering form of the Lord before his readers to comfort and stimulate them; he before whom the death of a martyr is in assured expectation, is the man who, in the greatest variety of aspects, sets forth the duty, as well as the consolation, of suffering for Christ; as a rock of the Church he grounds his readers against the storm of present tribulation on the true Rock of ages."
CHAPTER 1
@1Pe 1:1-25. ADDRESS TO THE ELECTED OF THE GODHEAD: THANKSGIVING FOR THE LIVING HOPE TO WHICH WE ARE BEGOTTEN, PRODUCING JOY AMIDST SUFFERINGS: THIS SALVATION AN OBJECT OF DEEPEST INTEREST TO PROPHETS AND TO ANGELS: ITS COSTLY PRICE A MOTIVE TO HOLINESS AND LOVE, AS WE ARE BORN AGAIN OF THE EVER-ABIDING WORD OF GOD.
1. Peter--Greek form of Cephas, man of rock.
an apostle of Jesus Christ--"He who preaches otherwise than as a
messenger of Christ, is not to be heard; if he preach as such, then it
is all one as if thou didst hear Christ speaking in thy presence"
[LUTHER].
to the strangers scattered--literally, "sojourners
of the dispersion"; only in @Joh 7:35 and @Jas 1:1, in New
Testament, and the Septuagint, @Ps 147:2, "the outcasts of
Israel"; the designation peculiarly given to the Jews in their
dispersed state throughout the world ever since the Babylonian
captivity. These he, as the apostle of the circumcision, primarily
addresses, but not in the limited temporal sense only; he regards their
temporal condition as a shadow of their spiritual calling to be
strangers and pilgrims on earth, looking for the heavenly Jerusalem
as their home. So the Gentile Christians, as the spiritual Israel,
are included secondarily, as having the same high calling. He
(@1Pe 1:14 2:10 4:3) plainly refers to Christian Gentiles (compare @1Pe 1:17 1Pe 2:11). Christians, if
they rightly consider
their calling, must never settle themselves here, but feel themselves
travellers. As the Jews in their dispersion diffused through the
nations the knowledge of the one God, preparatory to Christ's first
advent, so Christians, by their dispersion among the unconverted,
diffuse the knowledge of Christ, preparatory to His second advent. "The
children of God scattered abroad" constitute one whole in Christ, who
"gathers them together in one," now partially and in Spirit, hereafter
perfectly and visibly. "Elect," in the Greek order, comes before
"strangers"; elect, in relation to heaven, strangers, in
relation to the earth. The election here is that of individuals to
eternal life by the sovereign grace of God, as the sequel shows. "While
each is certified of his own election by the Spirit, he receives no
assurance concerning others, nor are we to be too inquisitive
[@Joh 21:21,22]; Peter numbers them among the elect, as they
carried the appearance of having been regenerated"
[CALVIN]. He calls
the whole Church by the designation strictly belonging only to the
better portion of them [CALVIN].
The election to hearing, and that
to eternal life, are distinct. Realization of our election is a
strong motive to holiness. The minister invites all, yet he does not
hide the truth that in none but the elect will the preaching effect
eternal blessing. As the chief fruit of exhortations, and even of
threatenings, redounds to "the elect"; therefore, at the outset, Peter
addresses them. STEIGER translates, to "the elect pilgrims who form
the dispersion in Pontus.", &c. The order of the provinces is that
in which they would be viewed by one writing from the east from
Babylon (@1Pe 5:13); from northeast southwards to Galatia,
southeast to Cappadocia, then Asia, and back to Bithynia, west of
Pontus. Contrast the order, @Ac 2:9. He now was ministering to
those same peoples as he preached to on Pentecost: "Parthians, Medes,
Elamites, dwellers in Mesopotamia and Judea," that is, the Jews now
subject to the Parthians, whose capital was Babylon, where he
labored in person; "dwellers in Cappadocia, Pontus, Asia, Phrygia,
Bithynia," the Asiatic dispersion derived from Babylon, whom he
ministers to by letter.
2. foreknowledge--foreordaining love (@1Pe 1:20), inseparable
from God's foreknowledge, the origin from which, and pattern
according to which, election takes place. @Ac 2:23, and
@Ro 11:2, prove "foreknowledge" to be foreordination. God's
foreknowledge is not the perception of any ground of action out of
Himself; still in it liberty is comprehended, and all absolute
constraint debarred [ANSELM in
STEIGER]. For so the Son of God was
"foreknown" (so the Greek for "foreordained," @1Pe 1:20) to be
the sacrificial Lamb, not against, or without His will, but His will
rested in the will of the Father; this includes self-conscious action;
nay, even cheerful acquiescense. The Hebrew and Greek "know"
include approval and acknowledging as one's own. The Hebrew marks the oneness of loving and choosing, by having one word for
both, bachar (Greek, "hairetizo," Septuagint). Peter
descends from the eternal "election" of God through the new birth, to the believer's "sanctification," that from this he might again raise
them through the consideration of their new birth to a "living hope"
of the heavenly "inheritance" [HEIDEGGER]. The divine three are
introduced in their respective functions in redemption.
through--Greek, "in"; the element in which we are elected. The
"election" of God realized and manifested itself "IN" their
sanctification. Believers are "sanctified through the offering of Christ
once for all" (@Heb 10:10). "Thou must believe and know that thou
art holy; not, however, through thine own piety, but through the blood
of Christ" [LUTHER]. This is the true sanctification of the Spirit, to
obey the Gospel, to trust in Christ [BULLINGER].
sanctification--the Spirit's setting apart of the saint as consecrated
to God. The execution of God's choice (@Ga 1:4). God the Father
gives us salvation by gratuitous election; the Son earns it by His
blood-shedding; the Holy Spirit applies the merit of the Son to the soul
by the Gospel word [CALVIN].
Compare @Nu 6:24-26, the Old Testament
triple blessing.
unto obedience--the result or end aimed at by God as respects us,
the obedience which consists in faith, and that which flows from
faith; "obeying the truth through the Spirit" (@1Pe 1:22).
@Ro 1:5, "obedience to the faith," and obedience the fruit of faith.
sprinkling, &c.--not in justification through the atonement once
for all, which is expressed in the previous clauses, but (as the order
proves) the daily being sprinkled by Christ's blood, and so cleansed from all sin, which is the privilege of one already justified and
"walking in the light."
Grace--the source of "peace."
be multiplied--still further than already. @Da 4:1, "Ye have now
peace and grace, but still not in perfection; therefore, ye must go on
increasing until the old Adam be dead" [LUTHER].
3. He begins, like Paul, in opening his Epistles with giving thanks
to God for the greatness of the salvation; herein he looks forward (1)
into the future (@1Pe 1:3-9); (2) backward into the past
(@1Pe 1:10-12) [ALFORD].
Blessed--A distinct Greek word (eulogetos,
"Blessed BE") is used of God, from that used of man
(eulogemenos, "Blessed IS").
Father--This whole Epistle accords with the Lord's prayer; "Father,"
@1Pe 1:3,14,17,23 2:2; "Our," @1Pe 1:4, end; "In heaven,"
@1Pe 1:4; "Hallowed be Thy name," @1Pe 1:15,16 3:15; "Thy
kingdom come," @1Pe 2:9; "Thy will be done,"
@1Pe 2:15 3:17 4:2,19; "daily bread," @1Pe 5:7; "forgiveness of
sins," @1Pe 4:8,1; "temptation," @1Pe 4:12; "deliverance,"
@1Pe 4:18 [BENGEL]; Compare @1Pe 3:7 4:7, for allusions to
prayer. "Barak," Hebrew "bless," is literally "kneel." God,
as the original source of blessing, must be blessed through all His
works.
abundant--Greek, "much," "full." That God's "mercy" should reach
us, guilty and enemies, proves its fulness. "Mercy" met our
misery; "grace," our guilt.
begotten us again--of the Spirit by the word (@1Pe 1:23);
whereas we were children of wrath naturally, and dead in sins.
unto--so that we have.
lively--Greek, "living." It has life in itself, gives life, and
looks for life as its object [DE
WETTE]. Living is a favorite
expression of Peter (@1Pe 1:23 1Pe 2:4,5). He delights in
contemplating life overcoming death in the believer. Faith and
love follow hope (@1Pe 1:8,21,22). "(Unto) a lively hope"
is further explained by "(To) an inheritance incorruptible . . . fadeth
not away," and "(unto) salvation . . . ready to be revealed in the last
time." I prefer with BENGEL and
STEIGER to join as in Greek, "Unto a
hope living (possessing life and vitality) through the
resurrection of Jesus Christ." Faith, the subjective means of the
spiritual resurrection of the soul, is wrought by the same power whereby
Christ was raised from the dead. Baptism is an objective means
(@1Pe 3:21). Its moral fruit is a new life. The connection of our
sonship with the resurrection appears also in @Lu 20:36 Ac 13:33.
Christ's resurrection is the cause of ours, (1) as an efficient cause
(@1Co 15:22); (2) as an exemplary cause, all the saints being about
to rise after the similitude of His resurrection. Our "hope" is, Christ
rising from the dead hath ordained the power, and is become the pattern
of the believer's resurrection. The soul, born again from its natural
state into the life of grace, is after that born again unto the life of
glory. @Mt 19:28, "regeneration, when the Son of man shall sit in
the throne of His glory"; the resurrection of our bodies is a kind of
coming out of the womb of the earth and entering upon immortality, a
nativity into another life [BISHOP
PEARSON]. The four causes of our
salvation are; (1) the primary cause, God's mercy; (2) the proximate
cause, Christ's death and resurrection; (3) the formal cause, our
regeneration; (4) the final cause, our eternal bliss. As John is the
disciple of love, so Paul of faith, and Peter of hope. Hence, Peter, most of all the apostles, urges the resurrection of
Christ; an undesigned coincidence between the history and the Epistle,
and so a proof of genuineness. Christ's resurrection was the occasion
of his own restoration by Christ after his fall.
4. To an inheritance--the object of our "hope" (@1Pe 1:3), which
is therefore not a dead, but a "living" hope. The inheritance is
the believer's already by title, being actually assigned to him; the
entrance on its possession is future, and hoped for as a certainty.
Being "begotten again" as a "son," he is an "heir," as earthly fathers
beget children who shall inherit their goods. The inheritance is "salvation" (@1Pe 1:5,9); "the grace to be brought at the
revelation of Christ" (@1Pe 1:13); "a crown of glory that fadeth not
away."
incorruptible--not having within the germs of death. Negations of
the imperfections which meet us on every side here are the chief means
of conveying to our minds a conception of the heavenly things which
"have not entered into the heart of man," and which we have not
faculties now capable of fully knowing. Peter, sanguine, impulsive, and
highly susceptible of outward impressions, was the more likely to feel
painfully the deep-seated corruption which, lurking under the
outward splendor of the loveliest of earthly things, dooms them soon to
rottenness and decay.
undefiled--not stained as earthly goods by sin, either in the
acquiring, or in the using of them; unsusceptible of any stain. "The
rich man is either a dishonest man himself, or the heir of a dishonest
man" [JEROME]. Even Israel's inheritance was defiled by the
people's sins. Defilement intrudes even on our holy things now, whereas
God's service ought to be undefiled.
that fadeth not away--Contrast @1Pe 1:24. Even the most delicate
part of the heavenly inheritance, its bloom, continues unfading. "In
substance incorruptible; in purity undefiled; in beauty unfading"
[ALFORD].
reserved--kept up (@Col 1:5, "laid up for you in heaven,"
@2Ti 4:8); Greek perfect, expressing a fixed and abiding state, "which has been and is reserved." The inheritance is in security, beyond
risk, out of the reach of Satan, though we for whom it is reserved are
still in the midst of dangers. Still, if we be believers, we too, as
well as the inheritance. are "kept" (the same Greek, @Joh 17:12)
by Jesus safely (@1Pe 1:5).
in heaven--Greek, "in the heavens," where it can neither be
destroyed nor plundered. It does not follow that, because it is now laid up in heaven, it shall not hereafter be on earth also.
for you--It is secure not only in itself from all misfortune, but
also from all alienation, so that no other can receive it in your stead.
He had said us (@1Pe 1:3); he now turns his address to the elect in
order to encourage and exhort them.
5. kept--Greek, "who are being guarded." He answers the objection,
Of what use is it that salvation is "reserved" for us in heaven, as in a
calm secure haven, when we are tossed in the world as on a troubled sea
in the midst of a thousand wrecks? [CALVIN]. As the inheritance is
"kept" (@1Pe 1:4) safely for the far distant "heirs," so must they
be "guarded" in their persons so as to be sure of reaching it. Neither
shall it be wanting to them, nor they to it. "We are
guarded in the world as our inheritance is kept in heaven."
This defines the "you" of @1Pe 1:4. The inheritance, remember,
belongs only to those who "endure unto the end," being "guarded" by, or
IN "the power of God, through faith." Contrast @Lu 8:13. God
Himself is our sole guarding power. "It is His power which
saves us from our enemies. It is His long-suffering which saves us
from ourselves" [BENGEL]. @Jude 1:1, "preserved in Christ Jesus";
@Php 1:6 4:7, "keep"; Greek, "guard," as here. This guarding is
effected, on the part of God, by His "power," the efficient cause; on
the part of man, "through faith," the effective means.
by--Greek, "in." The believer lives spiritually in God, and
in virtue of His power, and God lives in him. "In" marks that the cause
is inherent in the means, working organically through them with living
influence, so that the means, in so far as the cause works organically
through them, exist also in the cause. The power of God which guards the
believer is no external force working upon him from without with
mechanical necessity, but the spiritual power of God in which he lives,
and with whose Spirit he is clothed. It comes down on, and then dwells
in him, even as he is in it [STEIGER]. Let none flatter himself he is
being guarded by the power of God unto salvation, if he be not walking
by faith. Neither speculative knowledge and reason, nor works of
seeming charity, will avail, severed from faith. It is through faith
that salvation is both received and kept.
unto salvation--the final end of the new birth. "Salvation," not
merely accomplished for us in title by Christ, and made over to us on
our believing, but actually manifested, and finally completed.
ready to be revealed--When Christ shall be revealed, it shall be
revealed. The preparations for it are being made now, and began when
Christ came: "All things are now ready"; the salvation is already
accomplished, and only waits the Lord's time to be manifested: He "is
ready to judge."
last time--the last day, closing the day of grace; the day of
judgment, of redemption, of the restitution of all things, and of
perdition of the ungodly.
6. Wherein--in which prospect of final salvation.
greatly rejoice--"exult with joy": "are exuberantly glad."
Salvation is realized by faith (@1Pe 1:9) as a thing so actually
present as to cause exulting joy in spite of existing afflictions.
for a season--Greek, "for a little time."
if need be--"if it be God's will that it should be so"
[ALFORD], for
not all believers are afflicted. One need not invite or lay a cross on
himself, but only "take up" the cross which God imposes ("his cross");
@2Ti 3:12 is not to be pressed too far. Not every believer, nor
every sinner, is tried with afflictions
[THEOPHYLACT]. Some falsely
think that notwithstanding our forgiveness in Christ, a kind of
atonement, or expiation by suffering, is needed.
ye are in heaviness--Greek, "ye were grieved." The "grieved" is
regarded as past, the "exulting joy" present. Because the realized
joy of the coming salvation makes the present grief seem as a thing
of the past. At the first shock of affliction ye were grieved, but now by anticipation ye rejoice, regarding the present grief as
past.
through--Greek, "IN": the element in which the
grief has place.
manifold--many and of various kinds (@1Pe 4:12,13).
temptations--"trials" testing your faith.
7. Aim of the "temptations."
trial--testing, proving. That your faith so proved "may be found
(aorist; once for all, as the result of its being proved on the
judgment-day) unto
(eventuating in) praise," &c. namely, the praise to be bestowed by the Judge.
than that of gold--rather, "than gold."
though--"which perisheth, YET is tried with fire." If gold, though
perishing (@1Pe 1:18), is yet tried with fire in order to remove
dross and test its genuineness, how much more does your faith, which
shall never perish, need to pass through a fiery trial to remove
whatever is defective, and to test its genuineness and full value?
glory--"Honor" is not so strong as "glory." As "praise" is in
words, so "honor" is in deeds: honorary reward.
appearing--Translate as in @1Pe 1:13, "revelation." At Christ's
revelation shall take place also the revelation of the sons of God
(@Ro 8:19, "manifestation," Greek, "revelation"; @1Jo 3:2,
Greek, "manifested . . . manifested," for "appear . . . appear").
8. not having seen, ye love--though in other cases it is knowledge of the person that produces love to him. They are more "blessed that
have not seen and yet have believed," than they who believed because
they have seen. On Peter's own love to Jesus, compare @Joh 21:15-17.
Though the apostles had seen Him, they now ceased to know Him merely
after the flesh.
in whom--connected with "believing": the result of which is "ye
rejoice" (Greek, "exult").
now--in the present state, as contrasted with the future state when believers "shall see His face."
unspeakable--(@1Co 2:9).
full of glory--Greek, "glorified." A joy now already
encompassed with glory. The "glory" is partly in present possession,
through the presence of Christ, "the Lord of glory," in the soul; partly
in assured anticipation. "The Christian's joy is bound up with
love to Jesus: its ground is faith; it is not therefore either
self-seeking or self-sufficient" [STEIGER].
9. Receiving--in sure anticipation; "the end of your faith," that is,
its crowning consummation, finally completed "salvation" (Peter here
confirms Paul's teaching as to justification by faith): also receiving
now the title to it and the first-fruits of it. In @1Pe 1:10 the
"salvation" is represented as already present, whereas "the prophets"
had it not as yet present. It must, therefore, in this verse, refer to
the present: Deliverance now from a state of wrath: believers even
now "receive salvation," though its full "revelation" is future.
of . . . souls--The immortal soul was what was lost, so "salvation"
primarily concerns the soul; the body shall share in redemption
hereafter; the soul of the believer is saved already: an additional
proof that "receiving . . . salvation" is here a thing present.
10. The magnitude of this "salvation" is proved by the earnestness
with which "prophets" and even "angels" searched into it. Even from the
beginning of the world this salvation has been testified to by the Holy
Spirit.
prophets--Though there is no Greek article, yet English Version is right, "the prophets" generally (including all the Old Testament
inspired authors), as "the angels" similarly refer to them in
general.
inquired--perseveringly: so the Greek. Much more is manifested
to us than by diligent inquiry and search the prophets attained. Still
it is not said, they searched after it, but concerning (so the
Greek for "of") it. They were already certain of the redemption
being about to come. They did not like us fully see, but they
desired to see the one and the same Christ whom we fully see in
spirit. "As Simeon was anxiously desiring previously, and tranquil in
peace only when he had seen Christ, so all the Old Testament saints saw
Christ only hidden, and as it were absent--absent not in power and
grace, but inasmuch as He was not yet manifested in the flesh"
[CALVIN]. The prophets, as private individuals, had to reflect on
the hidden and far-reaching sense of their own prophecies; because their
words, as prophets, in their public function, were not so much their
own as the Spirit's, speaking by and in them: thus Caiaphas. A striking
testimony to verbal inspiration; the words which the inspired
authors wrote are God's words expressing the mind of the Spirit, which
the writers themselves searched into, to fathom the deep and precious
meaning, even as the believing readers did. "Searched" implies that they
had determinate marks to go by in their search.
the grace that should come unto you--namely, the grace of the New
Testament: an earnest of "the grace" of perfected "salvation . . . to be
brought at the (second) revelation of Christ." Old Testament believers
also possessed the grace of God; they were children of God, but it was
as children in their nonage, so as to be like servants; whereas we enjoy
the full privileges of adult sons.
11. what--Greek, "In reference to what, or what manner of
time." What expresses the time absolutely: what was to be the
era of Messiah's coming; what manner of time; what events and
features should characterize the time of His coming. The "or" implies
that some of the prophets, if they could not as individuals discover the
exact time, searched into its characteristic features and events.
The Greek for "time" is the season, the epoch, the fit time in
God's purposes.
Spirit of Christ . . . in them--(@Ac 16:7, in oldest manuscripts,
"the Spirit of Jesus"; @Re 19:10). So JUSTIN
MARTYR says, "Jesus
was He who appeared and communed with Moses, Abraham, and the other
patriarchs." CLEMENT OF
ALEXANDRIA calls Him "the Prophet of prophets,
and Lord of all the prophetical spirit."
did signify--"did give intimation."
of--Greek, "the sufferers (appointed) unto Christ," or
foretold in regard to Christ. "Christ," the anointed Mediator,
whose sufferings are the price of our "salvation" (@1Pe 1:9,10),
and who is the channel of "the grace that should come unto you."
the glory--Greek, "glories," namely, of His resurrection, of His
ascension, of His judgment and coming kingdom, the necessary consequence
of the sufferings.
that should follow--Greek, "after these (sufferings),"
@1Pe 3:18-22 5:1. Since "the Spirit of Christ" is the Spirit of
God, Christ is God. It is only because the Son of God was to become our
Christ that He manifested Himself and the Father through Him in the Old
Testament, and by the Holy Spirit, eternally proceeding from the Father
and Himself, spake in the prophets.
12. Not only was the future revealed to them, but this also, that
these revelations of the future were given them not for themselves, but
for our good in Gospel times. This, so far from disheartening, only
quickened them in unselfishly testifying in the Spirit for the partial
good of their own generation (only of believers), and for the full
benefit of posterity. Contrast in Gospel times, @Re 22:10. Not that
their prophecies were unattended with spiritual instruction as to the
Redeemer to their own generation, but the full light was not to be given
till Messiah should come; it was well that they should have this
"revealed" to them, lest they should be disheartened in not clearly
discovering with all their inquiry and search the full particulars
of the coming "salvation." To Daniel (@Da 9:25,26) the "time" was
revealed. Our immense privileges are thus brought forth by contrast
with theirs, notwithstanding that they had the great honor of Christ's
Spirit speaking in them; and this, as an incentive to still greater
earnestness on our part than even they manifested (@1Pe 1:13, &c.).
us--The oldest manuscripts read "you," as in @1Pe 1:10. This
verse implies that we, Christians, may understand the prophecies by
the Spirit's aid in their most important part, namely, so far as they
have been already fulfilled.
with the Holy Ghost sent down--on Pentecost. The oldest manuscripts
omit Greek preposition en, that is, "in"; then translate, "by."
The Evangelists speaking by the Holy Spirit were infallible witnesses.
"The Spirit of Christ" was in the prophets also (@1Pe 1:11), but not
manifestly, as in the case of the Christian Church and its first
preachers, "SENT down from heaven." How favored are we in being
ministered to, as to "salvation," by prophets and apostles alike, the
latter now announcing the same things as actually fulfilled which the
former foretold.
which things--"the things now reported unto you" by the evangelistic
preachers "Christ's sufferings and the glory that should follow"
(@1Pe 1:11,12).
angels--still higher than "the prophets" (@1Pe 1:10). Angels do not
any more than ourselves possess an INTUITIVE knowledge of redemption.
"To look into" in Greek is literally, "to bend over so as to look
deeply into and see to the bottom of a thing."
See on Jas 1:25,
on same word. As the cherubim stood bending over the mercy seat, the
emblem of redemption, in the holiest place, so the angels intently gaze
upon and desire to fathom the depths of "the great mystery of godliness,
God manifest in the flesh, justified in the Spirit, seen of angels"
(@1Ti 3:16). Their "ministry to the heirs of salvation" naturally
disposes them to wish to penetrate this mystery as reflecting such glory
on the love, justice, wisdom, and power of their and our God and Lord.
They can know it only through its manifestation in the Church, as they
personally have not the direct share in it that we have. "Angels have
only the contrast between good and evil, without the power of conversion
from sin to righteousness: witnessing such conversion in the Church,
they long to penetrate the knowledge of the means whereby it is brought
about" [HOFMAN in
ALFORD].
13. Wherefore--Seeing that the prophets ministered unto you in these
high Gospel privileges which they did not themselves fully share in,
though "searching" into them, and seeing that even angels "desire to
look into" them, how earnest you ought to be and watchful in respect to
them!
gird up . . . loins--referring to Christ's own words, @Lu 12:35;
an image taken from the way in which the Israelites ate the passover
with the loose outer robe girded up about the waist with a girdle, as
ready for a journey. Workmen, pilgrims, runners, wrestlers, and warriors
(all of whom are types of the Christians), so gird themselves up, both
to shorten the garment so as not to impede motion, and to gird up the
body itself so as to be braced for action. The believer is to have his
mind (mental powers) collected and always ready for Christ's coming.
"Gather in the strength of your spirit" [HENSLER].
Sobriety, that
is, spiritual self-restraint, lest one be overcome by the
allurements of the world and of sense, and patient hopeful waiting
for Christ's revelation, are the true ways of "girding up the loins of
the mind."
to the end--rather, "perfectly," so that there may be nothing deficient
in your hope, no casting away of your confidence. Still, there may
be an allusion to the "end" mentioned in @1Pe 1:9. Hope so perfectly
(Greek, "teleios") as to reach unto the end (telos) of
your faith and hope, namely, "the grace that is being brought unto you
in (so the Greek) the revelation of Christ." As grace shall then
be perfected, so you ought to hope perfectly. "Hope" is repeated
from @1Pe 1:3. The two appearances are but different stages of the
ONE great revelation of Christ, comprising the New Testament from the
beginning to the end.
14. From sobriety of spirit and endurance of hope Peter passes
to obedience, holiness, and reverential fear.
As--marking their present actual character as "born again"
(@1Pe 1:3,22).
obedient children--Greek, "children of obedience": children to
whom obedience is their characteristic and ruling nature, as a child
is of the same nature as the mother and father. Contrast @Eph 5:6,
"the children of disobedience." Compare @1Pe 1:17, "obeying the
Father" whose "children" ye are. Having the obedience of faith (compare @1Pe 1:22) and so of practice (compare @1Pe
1:16,18).
"Faith is the highest obedience, because discharged to the highest
command" [LUTHER].
fashioning--The outward fashion (Greek, "schema") is
fleeting, and merely on the surface. The "form," or conformation in
the New Testament, is something deeper and more perfect and essential.
the former lusts in--which were characteristic of your state of
ignorance of God: true of both Jews and Gentiles. The sanctification is
first described negatively (@1Pe 1:14, "not fashioning yourselves,"
&c.; the putting off the old man, even in the outward fashion, as
well as in the inward conformation), then positively
(@1Pe 1:15, putting on the new man, compare
@Eph 4:22,24). "Lusts" flow from the
original birth-sin (inherited from our first parents, who by self-willed
desire brought sin into the world), the lust which, ever since man
has been alienated from God, seeks to fill up with earthly things the
emptiness of his being; the manifold forms which the mother-lust assumes
are called in the plural lusts. In the regenerate, as far as the
new man is concerned, which constitutes his truest self, "sin" no
longer exists; but in the flesh or old man it does. Hence arises the
conflict, uninterruptedly maintained through life, wherein the new man
in the main prevails, and at last completely. But the natural man knows
only the combat of his lusts with one another, or with the law, without
power to conquer them.
15. Literally, "But (rather) after the pattern of Him who hath called
you (whose characteristic is that He is) holy, be (Greek, 'become')
ye yourselves also holy." God is our grand model. God's calling is a
frequently urged motive in Peter's Epistles. Every one that begets,
begets an offspring resembling himself [EPIPHANIUS]. "Let the acts of
the offspring indicate similarity to the Father" [AUGUSTINE].
conversation--deportment, course of life: one's way of going about,
as distinguished from one's internal nature, to which it must outwardly
correspond. Christians are already holy unto God by consecration; they
must be so also in their outward walk and behavior in all respects. The
outward must correspond to the inward man.
16. Scripture is the true source of all authority in questions
of doctrine and practice.
Be ye . . . for I am--It is I with whom ye have to do. Ye are mine.
Therefore abstain from Gentile pollutions. We are too prone to have
respect unto men [CALVIN]. As I am the fountain of holiness, being holy
in My essence, be ye therefore zealous to be partakers of
holiness, that ye may be as I also am [DIDYMUS]. God is essentially
holy: the creature is holy in so far as it is sanctified by God. God, in
giving the command, is willing to give also the power to obey it,
namely, through the sanctifying of the Spirit (@1Pe 1:2).
17. if ye call on--that is, "seeing that ye call on," for all
the regenerate pray as children of God, "Our Father who art in
heaven" (@Mt 6:9 Lu 11:2).
the Father--rather, "Call upon as Father Him who without
acceptance of persons (@Ac 10:34 Ro 2:11 Jas 2:1, not accepting the
Jew above the Gentile, @2Ch 19:7 Lu 20:21; properly said of a judge
not biassed in judgment by respect of persons) judgeth," &c. The
Father judgeth by His Son, His Representative, exercising His delegated
authority (@Joh 5:22). This marks the harmonious and complete unity
of the Trinity.
work--Each man's work is one complete whole, whether good or
bad. The particular works of each are manifestations of the general
character of his lifework, whether it was of faith and love whereby
alone we can please God and escape condemnation.
pass--Greek, "conduct yourselves during."
sojourning--The outward state of the Jews in their dispersion is
an emblem of the sojourner-like state of all believers in this
world, away from our true Fatherland.
fear--reverential, not slavish. He who is your Father, is also your
Judge--a thought which may well inspire reverential fear.
THEOPHYLACT
observes, A double fear is mentioned in Scripture: (1) elementary, causing one to become serious; (2) perfective: the latter is here
the motive by which Peter urges them as sons of God to be obedient.
Fear is not here opposed to assurance, but to carnal
security: fear producing vigilant caution lest we offend God and
backslide. "Fear and hope flow from the same fountain:
fear prevents us from falling away from hope"
[BENGEL]. Though love
has no fear IN it, yet in our present state of imperfect love, it
needs to have fear going ALONG WITH
It as a subordinate principle. This
fear drowns all other fears. The believer fears God, and so has none
else to fear. Not to fear God is the greatest baseness and folly. The
martyrs' more than mere human courage flowed from this.
18. Another motive to reverential, vigilant fear (@1Pe 1:17)
of displeasing God, the consideration of the costly price of our
redemption from sin. Observe, it is we who are bought by the blood
of Christ, not heaven. The blood of Christ is not in Scripture said to
buy heaven for us: heaven is the "inheritance" (@1Pe 1: 4) given to
us as sons, by the promise of God.
corruptible--Compare @1Pe 1:7, "gold that perisheth,"
@1Pe 1:23.
silver and gold--Greek, "or." Compare Peter's own words,
@Ac 3:6: an undesigned coincidence.
redeemed--Gold and silver being liable to corruption themselves, can
free no one from spiritual and bodily death; they are therefore of too
little value. Contrast @1Pe 1:19, Christ's "precious blood."
The Israelites were ransomed with half a shekel each, which went towards
purchasing the lamb for the daily sacrifice (@Ex 30:12-16;
compare @Nu 3:44-51). But the Lamb who redeems the spiritual
Israelites does so "without money or price." Devoted by sin to the
justice of God, the Church of the first-born is redeemed from sin and
the curse with Christ's precious blood
(@Mt 20:28 1Ti 2:6 Tit 2:14 Re 5:9). In all these passages there is
the idea of substitution, the giving of one for another by way of a
ransom or equivalent. Man is "sold under sin" as a slave; shut up under
condemnation and the curse. The ransom was, therefore, paid to the
righteously incensed Judge, and was accepted as a vicarious satisfaction
for our sin by God, inasmuch as it was His own love as well as
righteousness which appointed it. An Israelite sold as a bond-servant
for debt might be redeemed by one of his brethren. As, therefore, we
could not redeem ourselves, Christ assumed our nature in order to become
our nearest of kin and brother, and so our God or Redeemer. Holiness is
the natural fruit of redemption "from our vain conversation"; for He
by whom we are redeemed is also He for whom we are redeemed.
"Without the righteous abolition of the curse, either there could be
found no deliverance, or, what is impossible, the grace and
righteousness of God must have come in collision"
[STEIGER]; but now,
Christ having borne the curse of our sin, frees from it those who are
made God's children by His Spirit.
vain--self-deceiving, unreal, and unprofitable: promising good which
it does not perform. Compare as to the Gentiles,
@Ac 14:15 Ro 1:21 Eph 4:17; as to human philosophers, @1Co 3:20;
as to the disobedient Jews, @Jer 4:14.
conversation--course of life. To know what our sin is we must know
what it cost.
received by tradition from your fathers--The Jews' traditions. "Human
piety is a vain blasphemy, and the greatest sin that a man can commit"
[LUTHER]. There is only one Father to be imitated, @1Pe 1:17;
compare @Mt 23:9, the same antithesis [BENGEL].
19. precious--of inestimable value. The Greek order is, "With precious blood, as of a lamb without blemish (in itself) and without spot (contracted by contact with others), (even the blood) of Christ." Though very man, He remained pure in Himself ("without blemish"), and uninfected by any impression of sin from without ("without spot"), which would have unfitted Him for being our atoning Redeemer: so the passover lamb, and every sacrificial victim; so too, the Church, the Bride, by her union with Him. As Israel's redemption from Egypt required the blood of the paschal lamb, so our redemption from sin and the curse required the blood of Christ; "foreordained" (@1Pe 1:20) from eternity, as the passover lamb was taken up on the tenth day of the month.
20. God's eternal foreordination of Christ's redeeming sacrifice,
and completion of it in these last times for us, are an additional
obligation on us to our maintaining a holy walk, considering how great
things have been thus done for us. Peter's language in the history
corresponds with this here: an undesigned coincidence and mark of
genuineness. Redemption was no afterthought, or remedy of an unforeseen
evil, devised at the time of its arising. God's foreordaining of
the Redeemer refutes the slander that, on the Christian theory, there is
a period of four thousand years of nothing but an incensed God. God
chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world (@Eph 1:4).
manifest--in His incarnation in the fulness of the time. He existed
from eternity before He was manifested.
in these last times[email protected]1Co 10:11, "the ends of the
world." This last dispensation, made up of "times" marked by great
changes, but still retaining a general unity, stretches from Christ's
ascension to His coming to judgment.
21. by him--Compare "the faith which is by Him," @Ac 3:16.
Through Christ: His Spirit, obtained for us in His resurrection and
ascension, enabling us to believe. This verse excludes all who do not
"by Him believe in God," and includes all of every age and clime that
do. Literally, "are believers in God." "To believe IN
(Greek, 'eis') God" expresses an internal trust: "by
believing to love God, going INTO Him, and cleaving to Him, incorporated
into His members. By this faith the ungodly is justified, so that
thenceforth faith itself begins to work by love"
[P. LOMBARD]. To
believe ON
(Greek, "epi," or dative case) God expresses
the confidence, which grounds itself on God, reposing on Him. "Faith
IN (Greek, 'en') His blood" (@Ro 3:25) implies that His
blood is the element IN which faith has its proper and abiding place.
Compare with this verse, @Ac 20:21, "Repentance toward (Greek, 'eis,' 'into,' turning towards and going into) God and faith
toward (Greek, 'eis,' 'into') Christ": where, as there is but
one article to both repentance and faith, the two are
inseparably joined as together forming one truth; where "repentance" is,
there "faith" is; when one knows God the Father spiritually, then he
must know the Son by whom alone we can come to the Father. In Christ we
have life: if we have not the doctrine of Christ, we have not God. The
only living way to God is through Christ and His sacrifice.
that raised him--The raising of Jesus by God is the special ground
of our "believing": (1) because by it God declared openly His acceptance
of Him as our righteous substitute; (2) because by it and His
glorification He received power, namely, the Holy Spirit, to impart to
His elect "faith": the same power enabling us to believe as raised Him
from the dead. Our faith must not only be IN Christ, but
BY and
THROUGH
Christ. "Since in Christ's resurrection and consequent dominion our
safety is grounded, there 'faith' and 'hope' find their stay"
[CALVIN].
that your faith and hope might be in God--the object and effect of
God's raising Christ. He states what was the actual result and fact,
not an exhortation, except indirectly. Your faith flows from His
resurrection; your hope from God's having "given Him glory"
(compare @1Pe 1:11, "glories"). Remember God's having raised and
glorified Jesus as the anchor of your faith and hope in God, and so keep
alive these graces. Apart from Christ we could have only feared, not
believed and hoped in God. Compare @1Pe 1:3,7-9,13, on
hope in connection with faith; love is introduced in
@1Pe 1:22.
22. purified . . . in obeying the truth--Greek, "in
your (or 'the') obedience of
(that is, 'to') the truth
(the Gospel way of salvation)," that is, in the fact of your believing.
Faith purifies the heart as giving it the only pure motive, love to God
(@Ac 15:9 Ro 1:5, "obedience to the faith").
through the Spirit--omitted in the oldest manuscripts. The Holy Spirit
is the purifier by bestowing the obedience of faith
(@1Pe 1:2 1Co 12:3).
unto--with a view to: the proper result of the purifying of your
hearts by faith. "For what end must we lead a chaste life? That we may
thereby be saved? No: but for this, that we may serve our neighbor"
[LUTHER].
unfeigned[email protected]1Pe 2:1,2, "laying aside . . . hypocrisies . . .
sincere."
love of the brethren--that is, of Christians. Brotherly love is
distinct from common love. "The Christian loves primarily those in
Christ; secondarily, all who might be in Christ, namely, all men, as
Christ as man died for all, and as he hopes that they, too, may become
his Christian brethren" [STEIGER].
BENGEL remarks that as here, so in
@2Pe 1:5-7, "brotherly love" is preceded by the purifying graces,
"faith, knowledge, and godliness," &c. Love to the brethren is the
evidence of our regeneration and justification by faith.
love one another--When the
purifying by faith into love of the brethren has formed the
habit, then the act follows, so that the "love" is at once
habit and act.
with a pure heart--The oldest manuscripts read, "(love) from the
heart."
fervently--Greek, "intensely": with all the powers
on the stretch (@1Pe 4:8). "Instantly"
(@Ac 26:7).
23. Christian brotherhood flows from our new birth of an imperishable
seed, the abiding word of God. This is the consideration urged here to
lead us to exercise brotherly love. As natural relationship gives
rise to natural affection, so spiritual relationship gives rise to
spiritual, and therefore abiding love, even as the seed from which
it springs is abiding, not transitory as earthly things.
of . . . of . . . by--"The word of God" is not the material of the
spiritual new birth, but its mean or medium. By means of the word the man receives the incorruptible seed of the Holy Spirit, and so
becomes one "born again": @Joh 3:3-5, "born
of water and the Spirit": as there is but one Greek article to
the two nouns, the close connection of the sign and the grace, or
new birth signified is implied. The word is the remote and anterior
instrument; baptism, the proximate and sacramental instrument. The
word is the instrument in relation to the individual; baptism, in
relation to the Church as a society (@Jas 1:18). We are born again
of the Spirit, yet not without the use of means, but by the word of
God. The word is not the beggeting principle itself, but only that by
which it works: the vehicle of the mysterious.germinating power
[ALFORD].
which liveth and abideth for ever--It is because the Spirit of God
accompanies it that the word carries in it the germ of life. They who
are so born again live and abide for ever, in contrast to those who
sow to the flesh. "The Gospel bears incorruptible fruits, not dead
works, because it is itself incorruptible"
[BENGEL]. The word is an
eternal divine power. For though the voice or speech vanishes, there
still remains the kernel, the truth comprehended in the voice. This
sinks into the heart and is living; yea, it is God Himself. So God to
Moses, @Ex 4:12, "I will be with thy mouth"
[LUTHER]. The life is in
God, yet it is communicated to us through the word. "The
Gospel shall never cease, though its ministry shall"
[CALOVIUS].
The abiding resurrection glory is always connected with our
regeneration by the Spirit. Regeneration beginning with renewing
man's soul at the resurrection, passes on to the body, then to
the whole world of nature.
24. Scripture proof that the word of God lives for ever, in contrast
to man's natural frailty. If ye were born again of flesh, corruptible
seed, ye must also perish again as the grass; but now that from which
you have derived life remains eternally, and so also will render you
eternal.
flesh--man in his mere earthly nature.
as--omitted in some of the oldest manuscripts.
of man--The oldest manuscripts read, "of it" (that is, of the flesh).
"The glory" is the wisdom, strength, riches, learning, honor, beauty,
art, virtue, and righteousness of the NATURAL man
(expressed by "flesh"), which all are transitory
(@Joh 3:6), not OF MAN
(as English Version reads) absolutely, for the glory of
man, in his true ideal realized in the believer, is eternal.
withereth--Greek, aorist: literally, "withered," that is, is
withered as a thing of the past. So also the Greek for "falleth" is
"fell away," that is, is fallen away: it no sooner is than it is
gone.
thereof--omitted in the best manuscripts and versions. "The grass"
is the flesh: "the flower" its glory.
25. (@Ps 119:89.)
this is the word . . . preached unto you--That is eternal which is
born of incorruptible seed (@1Pe 1:24):but ye have received the
incorruptible seed, the word (@1Pe 1:25); therefore ye are born for
eternity, and so are bound now to live for eternity (@1Pe 1:22,23).
Ye have not far to look for the word; it is among you, even the joyful
Gospel message which we preach. Doubt not that the Gospel
preached to you by our brother Paul, and which ye have embraced, is
the eternal truth. Thus the oneness of Paul's and Peter's creed
appears. See my Introduction, showing Peter
addresses some of the same churches as Paul labored among and wrote to.
CHAPTER 2
@1Pe 2:1-25. EXHORTATIONS.
To guileless feeding on the word by the sense of their privileges as new-born babes, living stones in the spiritual temple built on Christ the chief corner-stone, and royal priests, in contrast to their former state: also to abstinence from fleshly lusts, and to walk worthily in all relations of life, so that the world without which opposes them may be constrained to glorify God in seeing their good works. Christ, the grand pattern to follow in patience under suffering for well-doing.
1. laying aside--once for all: so the Greek aorist expresses as a garment put off. The exhortation applies to Christians alone, for in none else is the new nature existing which, as "the inward man" (@Eph 3:16) can cast off the old as an outward thing, so that the Christian, through the continual renewal of his inward man, can also exhibit himself externally as a new man. But to unbelievers the demand is addressed, that inwardly, in regard to the nous (mind), they must become changed, meta-noeisthai (re-pent) [STEIGER]. The "therefore" resumes the exhortation begun in @1Pe 1:22. Seeing that ye are born again of an incorruptible seed, be not again entangled in evil, which "has no substantial being, but is an acting in contrariety to the being formed in us" [THEOPHYLACT]. "Malice," &c., are utterly inconsistent with the "love of the brethren," unto which ye have "purified your souls" (@1Pe 1:22). The vices here are those which offend against the BROTHERLY LOVE inculcated above. Each succeeding one springs out of that which immediately precedes, so as to form a genealogy of the sins against love. Out of malice springs guile; out of guile, hypocrises (pretending to be what we are not, and not showing what we really are; the opposite of "love unfeigned," and "without dissimulation"); out of hypocrisies, envies of those to whom we think ourselves obliged to play the hypocrite; out of envies, evil-speaking, malicious, envious detraction of others. Guile is the permanent disposition; hypocrisies the acts flowing from it. The guileless knows no envy. Compare @1Pe 2:2, "sincere," Greek, "guileless." "Malice delights in another's hurt; envy pines at another's good; guile imparts duplicity to the heart; hypocrisy (flattery) imparts duplicity to the tongue; evil-speakings wound the character of another" [AUGUSTINE].
2. new-born babes--altogether without "guile" (@1Pe 2:1). As
long as we are here we are "babes," in a specially tender relation to
God (@Isa 40:11). The childlike spirit is indispensable if we would
enter heaven. "Milk" is here not elementary truths in contradistinction
to more advanced Christian truths, as in @1Co 3:2 Heb 5:12,13; but
in contrast to "guile, hypocrisies," &c. (@1Pe 2:1); the simplicity
of Christian doctrine in general to the childlike spirit. The same
"word of grace" which is the instrument in regeneration, is the
instrument also of building up. "The mother of the child is also its
natural nurse" [STEIGER]. The babe, instead of chemically analyzing,
instinctively desires and feeds on the milk; so our part is not
self-sufficient rationalizing and questioning, but simply receiving the
truth in the love of it (@Mt 11:25).
desire--Greek, "have a yearning desire for," or "longing after,"
a natural impulse to the regenerate, "for as no one needs to teach
new-born babes what food to take, knowing instinctively that a table is
provided for them in their mother's breast," so the believer of himself
thirsts after the word of God (@Ps 119:1-176). Compare
TATIUS' language as to Achilles.
sincere--Greek, "guileless." Compare @1Pe 2:1, "laying aside
guile." IRENÆUS says of heretics. They mix chalk with the milk.
The article, "the," implies that besides the well-known pure milk, the Gospel, there is no other pure, unadulterated doctrine; it alone
can make us guileless (@1Pe 2:1).
of the word--Not as ALFORD, "spiritual," nor "reasonable," as
English Version in @Ro 12:1. The Greek "logos" in
Scripture is not used of the reason, or mind, but of the WORD;
the preceding context requires that "the word" should be meant here; the
adjective "logikos" follows the meaning of the noun logos, "word." @Jas 1:21, "Lay apart all filthiness . . . and receive
with meekness the engrafted WORD,"
is exactly parallel, and confirms
English Version here.
grow--The oldest manuscripts and versions read, "grow
unto salvation." Being BORN
again unto salvation, we are also to
grow unto salvation. The end to which growth leads is perfected
salvation. "Growth is the measure of the fulness of that, not only
rescue from destruction, but positive blessedness, which is implied in
salvation" [ALFORD].
thereby--Greek, "in it"; fed on it; in its strength (@Ac 11:14). "The word is to be desired with appetite as the cause
of life, to be swallowed in the hearing, to be chewed as cud is by
rumination with the understanding, and to be digested by faith"
[TERTULLIAN].
3. Peter alludes to @Ps 34:8. The first "tastes" of God's goodness
are afterwards followed by fuller and happier experiences. A taste whets
the appetite [BENGEL].
gracious--Greek, "good," benignant, kind; as God is revealed to
us in Christ, "the Lord" (@1Pe 2:4), we who are born again ought so
to be good and kind to the brethren (@1Pe 1:22). "Whosoever
has not tasted the word to him it is not sweet it has not reached the
heart; but to them who have experienced it, who with the heart believe,
'Christ has been sent for me and is become my own: my miseries
are His, and His life mine,' it tastes sweet" [LUTHER].
4. coming--drawing near (same Greek as here, @Heb 10:22)
by faith continually; present tense: not having come once for all at
conversion.
stone--Peter (that is, a stone, named so by Christ) desires
that all similarly should be living stones BUILT ON
CHRIST, THE TRUE FOUNDATION-STONE;
compare his speech in @Ac 4:11. An undesigned
coincidence and mark of genuineness. The Spirit foreseeing the Romanist
perversion of @Mt 16:18 (compare @Mt 16:16,
"Son of the LIVING
God," which coincides with his language here, "the LIVING stone"),
presciently makes Peter himself to refuse it. He herein confirms Paul's
teaching. Omit the as unto of English Version. Christ is
positively termed the "living stone"; living, as having life in
Himself from the beginning, and as raised from the dead to live evermore
(@Re 1:18) after His rejection by men, and so the source of life to
us. Like no earthly rock, He lives and gives life. Compare
@1Co 10:4, and the type, @Ex 17:6 Nu 20:11.
disallowed--rejected, reprobated; referred to also by Christ Himself:
also by Paul; compare the kindred prophecies, @Isa 8:14 Lu 2:34.
chosen of God--literally, "with (or
'in the presence and judgment of') God elect," or, "chosen out"
(@1Pe 2:6). Many are alienated from the Gospel, because it is not
everywhere in favor, but is on the contrary rejected by most men. Peter
answers that, though rejected by men, Christ is peculiarly the
stone of salvation honored by God, first so designated by Jacob in
his deathbed prophecy.
5. Ye also, as lively stones--partaking of the name and life which is
in "THE
LIVING
STONE" (@1Pe 2:4 1Co 3:11). Many names which belong
to Christ in the singular are assigned to Christians in the plural. He
is "THE
SON," "High Priest," "King," "Lamb"; they, "sons," "priests,"
"kings," "sheep," "lambs." So the Shulamite called from Solomon
[BENGEL].
are built up--Greek, "are being built up," as in @Eph 2:22.
Not as ALFORD, "Be ye built up." Peter grounds his exhortations,
@1Pe 2:2,11, &c., on their conscious sense of their high privileges
as
living stones in the course of being built up into a spiritual house (that is, "the habitation of the Spirit").
priesthood--Christians are both the spiritual temple and the
priests of the temple. There are two Greek words for "temple";
hieron (the sacred place), the whole building, including.the
courts wherein the sacrifice was killed; and naos (the dwelling, namely, of God), the inner shrine wherein God
peculiarly manifested Himself, and where, in the holiest place, the
blood of the slain sacrifice was presented before Him. All believers
alike, and not merely ministers, are now the dwelling of God (and are
called the "naos," Greek, not the hieron) and priests unto
God (@Re 1:6). The minister is not, like the Jewish priest
(Greek, "hiercus"), admitted nearer to God than the people, but
merely for order's sake leads the spiritual services of the people.
Priest is the abbreviation of presbyter in the
Church of England Prayer Book, not corresponding to the Aaronic
priest (hiereus, who offered literal sacrifices). Christ is
the only literal hiereus-priest in the New Testament through whom
alone we may always draw near to God. Compare @1Pe 2:9, "a royal
priesthood," that is, a body of priest-kings, such as was
Melchisedec. The Spirit never, in New Testament, gives the name
hiereus, or sacerdotal priest, to ministers of the Gospel.
holy--consecrated to God.
spiritual sacrifices--not the literal one of the mass, as the Romish
self-styled disciples of Peter teach. Compare @Isa 56:7, which
compare with "acceptable to God" here;
@Ps 4:5 50:14 51:17,19 Ho 14:2 Php 4:18. "Among spiritual sacrifices
the first place belongs to the general oblation of ourselves. For never
can we offer anything to God until we have offered ourselves
(@2Co 8:5) in sacrifice to Him. There follow afterwards prayers,
giving of thanks, alms deeds, and all exercises of piety" [CALVIN].
Christian houses of worship are never called temples because the
temple was a place for sacrifice, which has no place in the
Christian dispensation; the Christian temple is the congregation of
spiritual worshippers. The synagogue (where reading of Scripture and
prayer constituted the worship) was the model of the Christian house of
worship (compare Note,
see on Jas 2:2,
Greek, "synagogue"; @Ac 15:21). Our sacrifices are those of prayer, praise,
and self-denying services in the cause of Christ (@1Pe 2:9, end).
by Jesus Christ--as our mediating High Priest before God. Connect
these words with "offer up." Christ is both precious Himself and
makes us accepted
[BENGEL]. As the temple, so also the priesthood,
is built on Christ (@1Pe 2:4,5)
[BEZA]. Imperfect as are our
services, we are not with unbelieving timidity, which is close akin to
refined self-righteousness, to doubt their acceptance
THROUGH
CHRIST.
After extolling the dignity of Christians he goes back to CHRIST
as the sole source of it.
6. Wherefore also--The oldest manuscripts read, "Because that." The
statement above is so "because it is contained in Scripture."
Behold--calling attention to the glorious announcement of His eternal
counsel.
elect--so also believers (@1Pe 2:9, "chosen," Greek, "elect generation").
precious--in Hebrew, @Isa 28:16, "a corner-stone of
preciousness."
See on Isa 28:16. So in
@1Pe 2:7, Christ is said to be, to believers, "precious," Greek, "preciousness."
confounded--same Greek as in @Ro 9:33 (Peter here as elsewhere
confirming Paul's teaching.
See Introduction; also
@Ro 10:11), "ashamed." In @Isa 28:16, "make
haste," that is, flee in sudden panic, covered with the shame of
confounded hopes.
7. Application of the Scripture just quoted first to the believer,
then to the unbeliever. On the opposite effects of the same Gospel on
different classes, compare @Joh 9:39 2Co 2:15,16.
precious--Greek, "THE preciousness"
(@1Pe 2:6). To you believers belongs
the preciousness of Christ just mentioned.
disobedient--to the faith, and so disobedient in practice.
the stone which . . . head of . . .
corner--(@Ps 118:22). Those who rejected the
STONE were all the while in spite of themselves unconsciously
contributing to its becoming Head of the corner. The same magnet has
two poles, the one repulsive, the other attractive; so the Gospel has
opposite effects on believers and unbelievers respectively.
8. stone of stumbling, &c.--quoted from @Isa 8:14. Not merely
they stumbled, in that their prejudices were offended; but their
stumbling implies the judicial punishment of their reception of
Messiah; they hurt themselves in stumbling over the corner-stone, as
"stumble" means in @Jer 13:16 Da 11:19.
at the word--rather, join "being disobedient to the word"; so
@1Pe 3:1 4:17.
whereunto--to penal stumbling; to the judicial punishment of
their unbelief. See above.
also--an additional thought; God's ordination; not that God ordains
or appoints them to sin, but they are given up to "the fruit of
their own ways" according to the eternal counsel of God. The moral
ordering of the world is altogether of God. God appoints the ungodly to
be given up unto sin, and a reprobate mind, and its necessary
penalty. "Were appointed," Greek, "set," answers to "I lay,"
Greek, "set," @1Pe 2:6. God, in the active, is said to appoint Christ and the elect (directly). Unbelievers, in the passive, are said
to be appointed (God acting less directly in the appointment of the
sinner's awful course)
[BENGEL]. God ordains the wicked to punishment,
not to crime [J. CAPPEL]. "Appointed" or "set" (not here
"FORE-ordained") refers, not to the eternal counsel so directly, as to
the penal justice of God. Through the same Christ whom sinners rejected,
they shall be rejected; unlike believers, they are by God
appointed unto wrath as FITTED for it. The lost shall lay all the
blame of their ruin on their own sinful perversity, not on God's decree;
the saved shall ascribe all the merit of their salvation to God's
electing love and grace.
9. Contrast in the privileges and destinies of believers. Compare
the similar contrast with the preceding context.
chosen--"elect" of God, even as Christ your Lord is.
generation--implying the unity of spiritual origin and kindred of
believers as a class distinct from the world.
royal--kingly. Believers, like Christ, the antitypical Melchisedec,
are at once kings and priests. Israel, in a spiritual sense, was
designed to be the same among the nations of the earth. The full
realization on earth of this, both to the literal and the spiritual
Israel, is as yet future.
holy nation--antitypical to Israel.
peculiar people--literally, "a people for an acquisition," that
is, whom God chose to be peculiarly His: @Ac 20:28, "purchased,"
literally, "acquired." God's "peculiar treasure" above others.
show forth--publish abroad. Not their own praises but His. They have no reason to magnify themselves above others for once they had
been in the same darkness, and only through God's grace had been brought
to the light which they must henceforth show forth to others.
praises--Greek, "virtues," "excellencies": His glory, mercy
(@1Pe 2:10), goodness
(Greek, @1Pe 2:3 Nu 14:17,18 Isa 63:7).
The same term is applied to believers, @2Pe 1:5.
of him who hath called you--(@2Pe 1:3).
out of darkness--of heathen and even Jewish ignorance, sin, and misery,
and so out of the dominion of the prince of darkness.
marvellous--Peter still has in mind @Ps 118:23.
light--It is called "His," that is, God's. Only the (spiritual)
light is created by God, not darkness. In @Isa 45:7, it is
physical darkness and evil, not moral, that God is said to create, the punishment of sin, not sin itself. Peter, with characteristic
boldness, brands as darkness what all the world calls light; reason, without the Holy Spirit, in spite of its vaunted power, is
spiritual darkness. "It cannot apprehend what faith is: there it is
stark blind; it gropes as one that is without eyesight, stumbling from
one thing to another, and knows not what it does" [LUTHER].
10. Adapted from @Ho 1:9,10 2:23. Peter plainly confirms Paul,
who quotes the passage as implying the call of the Gentiles to become
spiritually that which Israel had been literally, "the people of God."
Primarily, the prophecy refers to literal Israel, hereafter to be fully
that which in their best days they were only partially, God's people.
not obtained mercy--literally, "who were men not compassionated."
Implying that it was God's pure mercy, not their merits, which made
the blessed change in their state; a thought which ought to kindle their
lively gratitude, to be shown with their life, as well as their
lips.
11. As heretofore he exhorted them to walk worthily of their calling,
in contradistinction to their own former walk, so now he exhorts them to
glorify God before unbelievers.
Dearly beloved--He gains their attention to his exhortation by assuring
them of his love.
strangers and pilgrims--(@1Pe 1:17). Sojourners, literally,
settlers having a house in a city without being citizens in
respect to the rights of citizenship; a picture of the Christian's
position on earth; and pilgrims, staying for a time in a foreign
land. FLACIUS thus analyzes the exhortation: (1) Purify your souls (a)
as strangers on earth who must not allow yourselves to be kept back
by earthly lusts, and (b) because these lusts war against the soul's
salvation. (2) Walk piously among unbelievers (a) so that they may cease
to calumniate Christians, and (b) may themselves be converted to Christ.
fleshly lusts--enumerated in @Ga 5:19, &c. Not only the gross
appetites which we have in common with the brutes, but all the thoughts
of the unrenewed mind.
which--Greek, "the which," that is, inasmuch as
being such as "war." &c. Not only do they impede, but they assail
[BENGEL].
the soul--that is, against the regenerated soul; such as were those
now addressed. The regenerated soul is besieged by sinful lusts. Like
Samson in the lap of Delilah, the believer, the moment that he gives way
to fleshly lusts, has the locks of his strength shorn, and ceases to
maintain that spiritual separation from the world and the flesh of which
the Nazarite vow was the type.
12. conversation--"behavior"; "conduct." There are two things in which
"strangers and pilgrims" ought to bear themselves well: (1) the
conversation or conduct, as subjects (@1Pe 2:13), servants
(@1Pe 2:18), wives (@1Pe 3:1), husbands (@1Pe 3:7), all
persons under all circumstances (@1Pe 2:8); (2) confession of
the faith (@1Pe 3:15,16). Each of the two is derived from
the will of God. Our conversation should correspond to our Saviour's
condition; this is in heaven, so ought that to be.
honest--honorable, becoming, proper (@1Pe 3:16). Contrast "vain
conversation," @1Pe 1:18. A good walk does not make us pious, but
we must first be pious and believe before we attempt to lead a good
course. Faith first receives from God, then love gives to our neighbor
[LUTHER].
whereas they speak against you--now (@1Pe 2:15), that they may,
nevertheless, at some time or other hereafter glorify God. The
Greek may be rendered, "Wherein they speak against you . . . that
(herein) they may, by your good works, which
on a closer inspection they shall behold, glorify God." The very
works "which on more careful consideration, must move the heathen to
praise God, are at first the object of hatred and raillery" [STEIGER].
evildoers--Because as Christians they could not conform to heathenish
customs, they were accused of disobedience to all legal authority; in
order to rebut this charge, they are told to
submit to every ordinance of man (not sinful in itself).
by--owing to.
they shall behold--Greek, "they shall be eye-witnesses of";
"shall behold on close inspection"; as opposed to their "ignorance"
(@1Pe 2:15) of the true character of Christians and Christianity, by
judging on mere hearsay. The same Greek verb occurs in a similar
sense in @1Pe 3:2. "Other men narrowly look at (so the
Greek implies) the actions of the righteous" [BENGEL].
TERTULLIAN
contrasts the early Christians and the heathen: these delighted in the
bloody gladiatorial spectacles of the amphitheater, whereas a Christian
was excommunicated if he went to it at all. No Christian was found in
prison for crime, but only for the faith. The heathen excluded slaves
from some of their religious services, whereas Christians had some of
their presbyters of the class of slaves. Slavery silently and gradually
disappeared by the power of the Christian law of love, "Whatsoever ye
would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them." When the pagans
deserted their nearest relatives in a plague, Christians ministered to
the sick and dying. When the Gentiles left their dead unburied after a
battle and cast their wounded into the streets, the disciples hastened
to relieve the suffering.
glorify--forming a high estimate of the God whom Christians worship,
from the exemplary conduct of Christians themselves. We must do good,
not with a view to our own glory, but to the glory of God.
the day of visitation--of God's grace; when God shall visit them
in mercy.
13. every ordinance of man--"every human institution" [ALFORD],
literally, "every human creation." For though of divine appointment,
yet in the mode of nomination and in the exercise of their authority,
earthly governors are but human institutions, being of men, and
in relation to men. The apostle speaks as one raised above all human
things. But lest they should think themselves so ennobled by faith as to
be raised above subordination to human authorities, he tells them to
submit themselves for the sake of Christ, who desires you to be
subject, and who once was subject to earthly rulers Himself, though
having all things subject to Him, and whose honor is at stake in you as
His earthly representatives. Compare @Ro 13:5, "Be subject for
conscience' sake."
king--The Roman emperor was "supreme" in the Roman provinces to
which this Epistle was addressed. The Jewish zealots refused obedience.
The distinction between "the king as supreme" and "governors sent by
him" implies that "if the king command one thing, and the subordinate
magistrate another, we ought rather to obey the superior"
[AUGUSTINE in
GROTIUS]. Scripture prescribes nothing upon the form of government, but
simply subjects Christians to that everywhere subsisting, without
entering into the question of the right of the rulers (thus the
Roman emperors had by force seized supreme authority, and Rome had, by
unjustifiable means, made herself mistress of Asia), because the
de facto governors have not been made by chance, but by the providence
of God.
14. governors--subordinate to the emperor, "sent," or delegated by
Cæsar to preside over the provinces.
for the punishment--No tyranny ever has been so unprincipled as that
some appearance of equity was not maintained in it; however corrupt a
government be, God never suffers it to be so much so as not to be better
than anarchy [CALVIN]. Although bad kings often oppress the good, yet
that is scarcely ever done by public authority (and it is of what is
done by public authority that Peter speaks), save under the mask of
right. Tyranny harasses many, but anarchy overwhelms the whole state
[HORNEIUS]. The only justifiable exception is in cases where obedience
to the earthly king plainly involves disobedience to the express command
of the King of kings.
praise of them that do well--Every government recognizes the
excellence of truly Christian subjects. Thus
PLINY, in his letter to the
Emperor Trajan, acknowledges, "I have found in them nothing else save a
perverse and extravagant superstition." The recognition in the long run
mitigates persecution (@1Pe 3:13).
15. Ground of his directing them to submit themselves (@1Pe 2:13).
put to silence--literally, "to muzzle," "to stop the mouth."
ignorance--spiritual not having "the knowledge of God," and
therefore ignorant of the children of God, and misconstruing their acts;
influenced by mere appearances, and ever ready to open their mouths,
rather than their eyes and ears. Their ignorance should move the
believer's pity, not his anger. They judge of things which they are
incapable of judging through unbelief (compare @1Pe 2:12). Maintain
such a walk that they shall have no charge against you, except touching
your faith; and so their minds shall be favorably disposed towards
Christianity.
16. As free--as "the Lord's freemen," connected with @1Pe 2:15,
doing well as being free. "Well-doing" (@1Pe 2:15) is the
natural fruit of being freemen of Christ, made free by "the truth"
from the bondage of sin. Duty is enforced on us to guard against
licentiousness, but the way in which it is to be fulfilled, is by
love and the holy instincts of Christian liberty. We are given
principles, not details.
not using--Greek, "not as having your liberty for a veil
(cloak) of badness, but as the servants of God," and therefore bound
to submit to every ordinance of man (@1Pe 2:13) which is of
God's appointment.
17. Honour all men--according to whatever honor is due in each case. Equals have a
respect due to them. Christ has dignified our humanity by assuming it;
therefore we should not dishonor, but be considerate to and honor our
common humanity, even in the very humblest. The first "honor" is in the
Greek aorist imperative, implying, "In every case render promptly
every man's due" [ALFORD]. The second is in the present tense,
implying, Habitually and continually honor the king. Thus the first
is the general precept; the three following are its three great
divisions.
Love--present: Habitually love with the special and congenial
affection that you ought to feel to brethren, besides the general
love to all men.
Fear God . . . the king--The king is to be honored; but God
alone, in the highest sense, feared.
18. Servants--Greek, "household servants": not here the Greek for "slaves." Probably including freedmen still remaining in their
master's house. Masters were not commonly Christians: he therefore
mentions only the duties of the servants. These were then often
persecuted by their unbelieving masters. Peter's special object seems to
be to teach them submission, whatever the character of the masters
might be. Paul not having this as his prominent design, includes
masters in his monitions.
be subject--Greek, "being subject": the participle expresses a
particular instance of the general exhortation to good conduct,
@1Pe 2:11,12, of which the first particular precept is given
@1Pe 2:13, "Submit yourselves to every ordinance of man for the
Lord's sake." The general exhortation is taken up again in @1Pe 2:16;
and so the participle @1Pe 2:18, "being subject," is joined to the
hortatory imperatives going before, namely, "abstain," "submit
yourselves." "honor all men."
with--Greek, "in."
all--all possible: under all circumstances, such as are presently
detailed.
fear--the awe of one subject: God, however, is the ultimate object
of the "fear": fear "for the Lord's sake" (@1Pe 2:13), not merely
slavish fear of masters.
good--kind.
gentle--indulgent towards errors: considerate: yielding, not exacting
all which justice might demand.
froward--perverse: harsh. Those bound to obey must not make the
disposition and behavior of the superior the measure of the fulfilment
of their obligations.
19. Reason for subjection even to froward masters.
thankworthy--(@Lu 6:33). A course out of the common, and especially
praiseworthy in the eyes of God: not as Rome interprets, earning
merit, and so a work of supererogation (compare @1Pe 2:20).
for conscience toward God--literally, "consciousness of God": from a
conscientious regard to God, more than to men.
endure--Greek, "patiently bear up under": as a superimposed
burden [ALFORD].
grief--Greek, "griefs."
20. what--Greek, "what kind of."
glory--what peculiar merit.
buffeted--the punishment of slaves, and suddenly inflicted
[BENGEL].
this is--Some oldest manuscripts read, "for." Then the translation
is, "But if when . . . ye take it patiently (it is a glory), for this is acceptable."
acceptable--Greek, "thankworthy," as in @1Pe 2:19.
21. Christ's example a proof that patient endurance under undeserved
sufferings is acceptable with God.
hereunto--to the patient endurance of unmerited suffering
(@1Pe 3:9). Christ is an example to servants, even as He was once
in "the form of a servant."
called--with a heavenly calling, though slaves.
for us--His dying for us is the highest exemplification of "doing
well" (@1Pe 2:20). Ye must patiently suffer, being innocent, as
Christ also innocently suffered (not for Himself, but for us). The
oldest manuscripts for "us . . . us," read, "you . . . for you."
Christ's sufferings, while they are for an example, were also primarily
sufferings "for us," a consideration which imposes an everlasting
obligation on us to please Him.
leaving--behind: so the Greek: on His departure to the Father,
to His glory.
an example--Greek, "a copy," literally, "a writing copy" set by
masters for their pupils. Christ's precepts and sermons were the
transcript of His life. Peter graphically sets before servants
those features especially suited to their case.
follow--close upon: so the Greek.
his steps--footsteps, namely, of His patience combined with
innocence.
22. Illustrating Christ's well-doing (@1Pe 2:20) though
suffering.
did--Greek aorist. "Never in a single instance did"
[ALFORD].
Quoted from @Isa 53:9, end, Septuagint.
neither--nor yet: not even
[ALFORD]. Sinlessness as to the mouth is a mark of
perfection. Guile is a common fault of servants. "If
any boast of his innocency, Christ surely did not suffer as an evildoer"
[CALVIN], yet He took it patiently (@1Pe 2:20). On Christ's
sinlessness, compare @2Co 5:21 Heb 7:26.
23. Servants are apt to "answer again" (@Tit 2:9).
Threats of divine judgment against oppressors are often used by
those who have no other arms, as for instance, slaves. Christ, who as
Lord could have threatened with truth, never did so.
committed himself--or His cause, as man in His
suffering. Compare the type, @Jer 11:20. In this Peter
seems to have before his mind @Isa 53:8. Compare
@Ro 12:19, on our corresponding duty. Leave your case in
His hands, not desiring to make Him executioner of your revenge, but
rather praying for enemies. God's righteous judgment gives
tranquillity and consolation to the oppressed.
24. his own self--there being none other but Himself who could
have done it. His voluntary undertaking of the work of redemption is
implied. The Greek puts in antithetical juxtaposition,
OUR, and His
OWN SELF, to mark the idea of His substitution for us. His
"well-doing" in His sufferings is set forth here as an example to
servants and to us all (@1Pe 2:20).
bare--to sacrifice: carried and offered up: a sacrificial term.
@Isa 53:11,12, "He bare the sin of many": where the
idea of bearing on Himself is the prominent one; here the
offering in sacrifice is combined with that idea. So the same
Greek means in @1Pe 2:5.
our sins--In offering or presenting in sacrifice (as the
Greek for "bare" implies) His body, Christ offered in it the guilt of our sins upon the cross, as upon the altar of God, that it might be
expiated in Him, and so taken away from us. Compare @Isa 53:10,
"Thou shalt make His soul an offering for sin." Peter thus means by
"bare" what the Syriac takes two words to express, to bear and
to offer: (1) He hath borne our sins laid upon Him [namely,
their guilt, curse, and punishment]; (2) He hath so borne them that He
offered them along with Himself on the altar. He refers to the
animals upon which sins were first laid, and which were then offered thus laden
[VITRINGA]. Sin or guilt among the Semitic nations is
considered as a burden lying heavily upon the sinner [GESENIUS].
on the tree--the cross, the proper place for One on whom the curse was laid: this curse stuck to Him until it was legally (through His
death as the guilt-bearer) destroyed in His body: thus the handwriting
of the bond against us is cancelled by His death.
that we being dead to sins--the effect of His death to "sin" in the
aggregate, and to all particular "sins," namely, that we should be as
entirely delivered from them, as a slave that is dead is
delivered from service to his master. This is our spiritful
standing through faith by virtue of Christ's death: our actual
mortification of particular sins is in proportion to the degree of
our effectually being made conformable to His death. "That we should
die to the sins whose collected guilt Christ carried away in His
death, and so LIVE TO THE RIGHTEOUSNESS
(compare @Isa 53:11. 'My
righteous servant shall justify many'), the gracious relation to
God which He has brought in" [STEIGER].
by whose stripes--Greek, "stripe."
ye were healed--a paradox, yet true. "Ye servants (compare 'buffeted,'
'the tree,' @1Pe 2:20,24) often bear the strife; but it is not
more than your Lord Himself bore; learn from Him patience in wrongful
sufferings.
25. (@Isa 53:6.)
For--Assigning their natural need of healing (@1Pe 2:24).
now--Now that the atonement for all has been made, the foundation
is laid for individual conversion: so "ye are returned,"
or "have become converted to," &c.
Shepherd and Bishop--The designation of the pastors and elders of the Church belongs in its fullest sense to the great Head of the
Church, "the good Shepherd." As the "bishop" oversees (as the
Greek term means), so "the eyes of the Lord are over the
righteous" (@1Pe 3:12). He gives us His spirit and feeds and guides
us by His word. "Shepherd," Hebrew, "Parnas," is often applied
to kings, and enters into the composition of names, as
"Pharnabazus."
CHAPTER 3
@1Pe 3:1-22. RELATIVE DUTIES OF HUSBANDS AND WIVES: EXHORTATIONS TO LOVE AND FORBEARANCE: RIGHT CONDUCT UNDER PERSECUTIONS FOR RIGHTEOUSNESS' SAKE, AFTER CHRIST'S EXAMPLE, WHOSE DEATH RESULTED IN QUICKENING TO US THROUGH HIS BEING QUICKENED AGAIN, OF WHICH BAPTISM IS THE SACRAMENTAL SEAL.
1. Likewise--Greek, "In like manner," as "servants" in their
sphere; compare the reason of the woman's subjection,
@1Co 11:8-10 1Ti 2:11-14.
your own--enforcing the obligation: it is not strangers ye are
required to be subject to. Every time that obedience is enjoined
upon women to their husbands, the Greek, "idios," "one's own
peculiarly," is used, while the wives of men are designated only by
heauton, "of themselves." Feeling the need of leaning on one
stronger than herself, the wife (especially if joined to an
unbeliever) might be tempted, though only spiritually, to enter into
that relation with another in which she ought to stand to "her own
spouse (@1Co 14:34,35, "Let them ask their own [idious]
husbands at home"); an attachment to the person of the teacher might
thus spring up, which, without being in the common sense spiritual
adultery, would still weaken in its spiritual basis the married relation
[STEIGER].
that, if--Greek, "that even if." Even if you have a husband
that obeys not the word (that is, is an unbeliever).
without the word--independently of hearing the word preached, the usual way of faith coming. But
BENGEL, "without word," that is,
without direct Gospel discourse of the wives, "they may (literally, in oldest manuscripts, 'shall,' which marks the almost
objective certainty of the result) be won" indirectly. "Unspoken
acting is more powerful than unperformed speaking"
[ÆCUMENIUS]. "A
soul converted is gained to itself, to the pastor, wife, or husband,
who sought it, and to Jesus Christ; added to His treasury who thought
not His own precious blood too dear to lay out for this gain"
[LEIGHTON]. "The discreet wife would choose first of all to persuade
her husband to share with her in the things which lead to blessedness;
but if this be impossible, let her then alone diligently press after
virtue, in all things obeying him so as to do nothing at any time
against his will, except in such things as are essential to virtue and
salvation" [CLEMENT OF
ALEXANDRIA].
2. behold--on narrowly looking into it, literally, "having closely
observed."
chaste--pure, spotless, free from all impurity.
fear--reverential, towards your husbands. Scrupulously pure, as
opposed to the noisy, ambitious character of worldly women.
3. Literally, "To whom let there belong (namely, as their peculiar
ornament) not the outward adornment
(usual in the sex which first, by the fall, brought in the need of covering,
see on 1Pe 5:5) of," &c.
plaiting--artificial braiding, in order to attract admiration.
wearing--literally, "putting round," namely, the head, as a
diadem--the arm, as a bracelet--the finger, as rings.
apparel--showy and costly. "Have the blush of modesty on thy face
instead of paint, and moral worth and discretion instead of gold and
emeralds" [MELISSA].
4. But--"Rather." The "outward adornment" of jewelry, &c., is
forbidden, in so far as woman loves such things, not in so far as she
uses them from a sense of propriety, and does not abuse them.
Singularity mostly comes from pride and throws needless hindrances to
religion in the way of others. Under costly attire there may be a humble
mind. "Great is he who uses his earthenware as if it were plate; not
less great is he who uses his silver as if it were earthenware"
[SENECA in
ALFORD].
hidden--inner man, which the Christian instinctively hides from public view.
of the heart--consisting in the heart regenerated and adorned by
the Spirit. This "inner man of the heart" is the subject of the verb
"be," @1Pe 3:3, Greek: "Of whom let the inner man be," namely,
the distinction or adornment.
in that--consisting or standing in that as its element.
not corruptible--not transitory, nor tainted with corruption, as all
earthly adornments.
meek and quiet--meek, not creating disturbances: quiet, bearing
with tranquillity the disturbances caused by others. Meek in affections
and feelings; quiet in words, countenance, and actions
[BENGEL].
in the sight of God--who looks to inward, not merely outward things.
of great price--The results of redemption should correspond to its
costly price (@1Pe 1:19).
5. after this manner--with the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit (compare the portrait of the godly wife, @Pr 31:10-31).
trusted--Greek, "hoped." "Holy" is explained by "hoped in (so as
to be 'united to,' Greek) God." Hope in God is the spring of
true holiness [BENGEL].
in subjection--Their ornament consisted in their subordination.
Vanity was forbidden (@1Pe 3:3) as being contrary to female
subjection.
6. Sara--an example of faith.
calling him lord--(@Ge 18:12).
ye are--Greek, "ye have become": "children" of Abraham and Sara
by faith, whereas ye were Gentile aliens from the covenant.
afraid with any amazement--Greek, "fluttering alarm,"
"consternation." Act well, and be not thrown into sudden panic, as
weak females are apt to be, by any opposition from without. BENGEL
translates, "Not afraid OF
any fluttering terror coming from
without" (@1Pe 3:13-16). So the Septuagint, @Pr 3:25 uses
the same Greek word, which Peter probably refers to. Anger assails
men; fear, women. You need fear no man in doing what is right: not
thrown into fluttering agitation by any sudden outbreak of temper on the
part of your unbelieving husbands, while you do well.
7. dwell--Greek, "dwelling": connected with the verb,
@1Pe 2:17, "Honor all."
knowledge--Christian knowledge: appreciating the due relation of the
sexes in the design of God, and acting with tenderness and forbearance
accordingly: wisely: with wise consideration.
them . . . giving honour to the wife--translate and punctuate
the Greek rather, "dwelling according to knowledge with the female
(Greek adjective, qualifying 'vessel'; not as English Version, a
noun) as with the weaker vessel
(see on 1Th 4:4. Both
husband and wife are vessels in God's hand, and of God's making, to
fulfil His gracious purposes. Both weak, the woman the weaker. The
sense of his own weakness, and that she, like himself, is God's
vessel and fabric, ought to lead him to act with tender and wise
consideration towards her who is the weaker fabric), giving
(literally, 'assigning,' 'apportioning') honor as being also
(besides being man and wife) heirs together," &c.; or, as the Vatican
manuscript reads, as to those who are also (besides being your wives)
fellow heirs." (The reason why the man should give honor to the
woman is, because God gives honor to both as fellow heirs; compare
the same argument, @1Pe 3:9). He does not take into account the case
of an unbelieving wife, as she might yet believe.
grace of life--God's gracious gift of life (@1Pe 1:4,13).
that your prayers be not hindered--by dissensions, which prevent
united prayer, on which depends the blessing.
8. General summary of relative duty, after having detailed
particular duties from @1Pe 2:18.
of one mind--as to the faith.
having compassion one of another--Greek, "sympathizing" in the joy
and sorrow of others.
love as brethren--Greek, "loving the brethren."
pitiful--towards the afflicted.
courteous--genuine Christian politeness; not the tinsel of the
world's politeness; stamped with unfeigned love on one side, and
humility on the other. But the oldest manuscripts read,
"humble-minded." It is slightly different from "humble," in that it
marks a conscious effort to be truly humble.
9. evil--in deed.
railing--in word.
blessing--your revilers; participle, not a noun after "rendering."
knowing that--The oldest manuscripts read merely, "because."
are--Greek, "were called."
inherit a blessing--not only passive, but also active; receiving
spiritual blessing from God by faith, and in your turn blessing others
from love [GERHARD in
ALFORD]. "It is not in order to inherit a blessing
that we must bless, but because our portion is blessing." No railing can injure you (@1Pe 3:13). Imitate God who "blesses" you. The first
fruits of His blessing for eternity are enjoyed by the righteous
even now (@1Pe 3:10) [BENGEL].
10. will love--Greek, "wishes to love." He who loves life (present and eternal), and desires to continue to do so, not
involving himself in troubles which will make this life a burden, and
cause him to forfeit eternal life. Peter confirms his exhortation,
@1Pe 3:9, by @Ps 34:12-16.
refrain--curb, literally, "cause to cease"; implying that our natural
inclination and custom is to speak evil. "Men commonly think that they
would be exposed to the wantonness of their enemies if they did not
strenuously vindicate their rights. But the Spirit promises a life of
blessedness to none but those who are gentle and patient of evils"
[CALVIN].
evil . . . guile--First he warns against sins of the
tongue, evil-speaking, and deceitful, double-tongued speaking;
next, against acts of injury to one's neighbor.
11. In oldest manuscripts, Greek, "Moreover (besides his
words, in acts), let him."
eschew--"turn from."
ensue--pursue as a thing hard to attain, and that flees
from one in this troublesome world.
12. Ground of the promised present and eternal life of blessedness
to the meek (@1Pe 3:10). The Lord's eyes are ever over them for
good.
ears . . . unto their prayers--(@1Jo 5:14,15).
face . . . against--The eyes imply favorable regard; the
face of the Lord upon (not as English Version, "against")
them that do evil, implies that He narrowly observes them, so as not to
let them really and lastingly hurt His people (compare @1Pe 3:13).
13. who . . . will harm you--This fearless confidence in God's
protection from harm, Christ, the Head, in His sufferings realized; so
His members.
if ye be--Greek, "if ye have become."
followers--The oldest manuscripts read "emulous," "zealous of"
(@Tit 2:14).
good--The contrast in Greek is, "Who will do you evil, if ye
be zealous of good?"
14. But and if--"But if even." "The promises of this life extend
only so far as it is expedient for us that they should be fulfilled"
[CALVIN]. So he proceeds to state the exceptions to the promise
(@1Pe 3:10), and how the truly wise will behave in such exceptional
cases. "If ye should suffer"; if it should so happen; "suffer," a
milder word than harm.
for righteousness--"not the suffering, but the cause for which one
suffers, makes the martyr" [AUGUSTINE].
happy--Not even can suffering take away your blessedness, but rather promotes it.
and--Greek, "but." Do not impair your blessing (@1Pe 3:9) by
fearing man's terror in your times of adversity. Literally, "Be
not terrified with their terror," that is, with that which they try to
strike into you, and which strikes themselves when in adversity. This
verse and @1Pe 3:15 is quoted from @Isa 8:12,13. God alone is
to be feared; he that fears God has none else to fear.
neither be troubled--the threat of the law, @Le 26:36 De 28:65,66;
in contrast to which the Gospel gives the believer a heart assured of
God's favor, and therefore unruffled, amidst all adversities. Not only
be not afraid, but be not even agitated.
15. sanctify--hallow; honor as holy, enshrining Him
in your hearts. So in the Lord's Prayer, @Mt 6:9. God's holiness
is thus glorified in our hearts as the dwelling-place of His Spirit.
the Lord God--The oldest manuscripts read "Christ." Translate,
"Sanctify Christ as Lord."
and--Greek, "but," or "moreover." Besides this inward
sanctification of God in the heart, be also ready always to give, &c.
answer--an apologetic answer defending your faith.
to every man that asketh you--The last words limit the universality
of the "always"; not to a roller, but to everyone among the heathen who
inquires honestly.
a reason--a reasonable account. This refutes Rome's dogma, "I believe
it, because the Church believes it." Credulity is believing without
evidence; faith is believing on evidence. There is no repose for reason
itself but in faith. This verse does not impose an obligation to bring
forward a learned proof and logical defense of revelation. But as
believers deny themselves, crucify the world, and brave persecution,
they must be buoyed up by some strong "hope"; men of the world, having
no such hope themselves, are moved by curiosity to ask the secret of
this hope; the believer must be ready to give an
experimental account "how this hope arose in him, what it contains,
and on what it rests" [STEIGER].
with--The oldest manuscripts read, "but with." Be ready, but with "meekness." Not pertly and arrogantly.
meekness--(@1Pe 3:4). The most effective way; not self-sufficient
impetuosity.
fear--due respect towards man, and reverence towards God, remembering
His cause does not need man's hot temper to uphold it.
16. Having a good conscience--the secret spring of
readiness to give account of our hope. So hope and
good conscience go together in @Ac 24:15,16. Profession without
practice has no weight. But those who have a good conscience can
afford to give an account of their hope "with meekness."
whereas--(@1Pe 2:12).
they speak evil of you, as of evildoers--One oldest manuscript reads,
"ye are spoken against," omitting the rest.
falsely accuse--"calumniate"; the Greek expresses malice shown in
deeds as well as in words. It is translated, "despitefully use,"
@Mt 5:44 Lu 6:28.
conversation--life, conduct.
in Christ--who is the very element of your life as Christians. "In
Christ" defines "good." It is your good walk as Christians, not as
citizens, that calls forth malice (@1Pe 4:4,5,14).
17. better--One may object, I would not bear it so ill if I had
deserved it. Peter replies, it is better that you did not deserve it,
in order that doing well and yet being spoken against, you may prove
yourself a true Christian [GERHARD].
if the will of God be so--rather as the optative is in the oldest
manuscripts, "if the will of God should will it so." Those who honor
God's will as their highest law (@1Pe 2:15) have the comfort to know
that suffering is God's appointment (@1Pe 4:19). So Christ Himself;
our inclination does not wish it.
18. Confirmation of @1Pe 3:17, by the glorious results of Christ's
suffering innocently.
For--"Because." That is "better," @1Pe 3:17, means of which we are
rendered more like to Christ in death and in life; for His death brought
the best issue to Himself and to us [BENGEL].
Christ--the Anointed Holy One of God; the Holy suffered for
sins, the Just for the unjust.
also--as well as yourselves (@1Pe 3:17). Compare @1Pe 2:21;
there His suffering was brought forward as an example to us; here, as a
proof of the blessedness of suffering for well-doing.
once--for all; never again to suffer. It is "better" for us also once
to suffer with Christ, than for ever without Christ We now are suffering
our "once"; it will soon be a thing of the past; a bright consolation to
the tried.
for sins--as though He had Himself committed them. He exposed Himself
to death by His "confession," even as we are called on to "give an
answer to him that asketh a reason of our hope." This was "well-doing"
in its highest manifestation. As He suffered, "The Just," so we ought
willingly to suffer, for righteousness' sake (@1Pe 3:14; compare
@1Pe 3:12,17).
that he might bring us to God--together with Himself in His ascension
to the right hand of God (@1Pe 3:22). He brings us, "the unjust,"
justified together with Him into heaven. So the result of Christ's death
is His drawing men to Him; spiritually now, in our having
access into the Holiest, opened by Christ's ascension; literally
hereafter. "Bring us," moreover, by the same steps of humiliation and
exaltation through which He Himself passed. The several steps of
Christ's progress from lowliness to glory are trodden over again by His
people in virtue of their oneness with Him (@1Pe 4:1-3). "To God,"
is Greek dative (not the preposition and case), implying that
God wishes it [BENGEL].
put to death--the means of His bringing us to God.
in the flesh--that is, in respect to the life of flesh and
blood.
quickened by the Spirit--The oldest manuscripts omit the Greek article. Translate with the preposition "in," as the antithesis to the
previous "in the flesh" requires, "IN spirit," that is, in respect
to His Spirit. "Put to death" in the former mode of life; "quickened"
in the other. Not that His Spirit ever died and was quickened, or
made alive again, but whereas He had lived after the manner of mortal
men in the flesh, He began to live a spiritual "resurrection"
(@1Pe 3:21) life, whereby He has the power to bring us to God.
Two ways of explaining @1Pe 3:18,19, are open to us: (1) "Quickened
in Spirit," that is, immediately on His release from the "flesh,"
the energy of His undying spirit-life was "quickened" by God the Father,
into new modes of action, namely, "in the Spirit He went down (as
subsequently He went up to heaven, @1Pe 3:22, the same
Greek verb) and heralded [not salvation, as
ALFORD, contrary to Scripture,
which everywhere represents man's state, whether saved or lost, after
death irreversible. Nor is any mention made of the conversion of
the spirits in prison.
See on 1Pe 3:20. Nor is the phrase here
'preached the Gospel' (evangelizo), but 'heralded' (ekeruxe)
or 'preached'; but simply made the announcement of His finished
work; so the same Greek in @Mr 1:45, 'publish,' confirming Enoch
and Noah's testimony, and thereby declaring the virtual condemnation of
their unbelief, and the salvation of Noah and believers; a sample of the
similar opposite effects of the same work on all unbelievers, and
believers, respectively; also a consolation to those whom Peter
addresses, in their sufferings at the hands of unbelievers; specially
selected for the sake of 'baptism,' its 'antitype' (@1Pe 3:21),
which, as a seal, marks believers as separated from the rest of the
doomed world] to the spirits (His Spirit speaking to the spirits)
in prison (in Hades or Sheol, awaiting the judgment, @2Pe 2:4),
which were of old disobedient when," &c. (2) The strongest point in
favor of (1) is the position of "sometime," that is, of old, connected with "disobedient"; whereas if the preaching or announcing
were a thing long past, we should expect "sometime," or of old, to
be joined to "went and preached." But this transposition may express
that their disobedience preceded His preaching. The Greek participle expresses the reason of His preaching, "inasmuch as
they were sometime disobedient" (compare @1Pe 4:6). Also "went"
seems to mean a personal going, as in @1Pe 3:22, not merely
in spirit. But see the answer below. The objections are "quickened"
must refer to Christ's body (compare @1Pe 3:21, end), for as His
Spirit never ceased to live, it cannot be said to be "quickened."
Compare @Joh 5:21 Ro 8:11, and other passages, where "quicken" is
used of the bodily resurrection. Also, not His Spirit, but His
soul, went to Hades. His Spirit was commended by Him at death to
His Father, and was thereupon "in Paradise." The theory--(1) would thus
require that His descent to the spirits in prison should be after His resurrection! Compare @Eph 4:9,10, which makes the descent
precede the ascent. Also Scripture elsewhere is silent about such a
heralding, though possibly Christ's death had immediate effects on the
state of both the godly and the ungodly in Hades: the souls of the godly
heretofore in comparative confinement, perhaps then having been, as some
Fathers thought, translated to God's immediate and heavenly presence;
but this cannot be proved from Scripture. Compare however,
@Joh 3:13 Col 1:18. Prison is always used in a bad sense in
Scripture. "Paradise" and "Abraham's bosom," the abode of good spirits
in Old Testament times, are separated by a wide gulf from Hell or Hades,
and cannot be called "prison." Compare @2Co 12:2,4, where "paradise"
and the "third heaven" correspond. Also, why should the antediluvian
unbelievers in particular be selected as the objects of His preaching in
Hades? Therefore explain: "Quickened in spirit, in which (as
distinguished from in person; the words "in which," that is,
in spirit, expressly obviating the objection that "went" implies a
personal going) He went
(in the person of Noah, "a preacher of righteousness," @2Pe 2:5:
ALFORD'S own Note, @Eph 2:17, is
the best reply to his argument from "went" that a local going to
Hades in person is meant. As "He CAME and preached peace"
by His Spirit in the apostles and ministers after His death and
ascension: so before His incarnation He preached in Spirit through Noah
to the antediluvians, @Joh 14:18,28 Ac 26:23. "Christ should show,"
literally, "announce light to the Gentiles") and preached unto the
spirits in prison, that is, the antediluvians, whose bodies indeed
seemed free, but their spirits were in prison, shut up in the earth as
one great condemned cell (exactly parallel to @Isa 24:22,23 "upon
the earth . . . they shall be gathered together as prisoners are
gathered in the pit, and shall be shut up in the prison," &c.
[just as the fallen angels are judicially regarded as "in chains of
darkness," though for a time now at large on the earth, @1Pe 2:4],
where @1Pe 3:18 has a plain allusion to the flood, "the
windows from on high are open," compare @Ge 7:11); from this
prison the only way of escape was that preached by Christ in Noah.
Christ, who in our times came in the flesh, in the days of Noah
preached in Spirit by Noah to the spirits then in prison
(@Isa 61:1, end, "the Spirit of the Lord God hath sent me to
proclaim the opening of the prison to them that are bound"). So
in @1Pe 1:11, "the Spirit of Christ" is said to have testified in
the prophets. As Christ suffered even to death by enemies, and was
afterwards quickened in virtue of His "Spirit" (or divine nature,
@Ro 1:3,4 1Co 15:45), which henceforth acted in its full energy,
the first result of which was the raising of His body (@1Pe 3:21,
end) from the prison of the grave and His soul from Hades; so the same
Spirit of Christ enabled Noah, amidst reproach and trials, to preach to
the disobedient spirits fast bound in wrath. That Spirit in you can
enable you also to suffer patiently now, looking for the resurrection
deliverance.
20. once--not in the oldest manuscripts.
when . . . the long-suffering of God waited in the days of Noah--Oldest
manuscripts. Greek, "was continuing to wait on"
(if haply men in the hundred twenty years of grace would repent)
until the end of His waiting came in their death by the flood. This
refutes ALFORD'S idea of
a second day of grace having been given in Hades. Noah's days are
selected, as the ark and the destroying flood answer respectively to
"baptism" and the coming destruction of unbelievers by fire.
while the ark was a-preparing--(@Heb 11:7). A long period of
God's "long-suffering and waiting," as Noah had few to help him, which
rendered the world's unbelief the more inexcusable.
wherein--literally, "(by having entered) into which."
eight--seven (the sacred number) with ungodly Ham.
few--so now.
souls--As this term is here used of living persons, why should
not "spirits" also? Noah preached to their ears, but Christ in spirit, to their spirits, or spiritual natures.
saved by water--The same water which drowned the unbelieving, buoyed
up the ark in which the eight were saved. Not as some translate, "were
brought safe through the water." However, the sense of the
preposition may be as in @1Co 3:15, "they were safely preserved
through the water," though having to be in the water.
21. whereunto--The oldest manuscripts read, "which": literally, "which
(namely, water, in general; being) the antitype (of the water of the flood)
is now saving (the salvation being not yet fully realized by us,
compare @1Co 10:1,2,5 Jude 1:5; puts into a state of salvation)
us also (two oldest manuscripts read 'you' for 'us': You also, as well as Noah and his party), to wit, baptism." Water saved Noah not
of itself, but by sustaining the ark built in faith, resting on
God's word: it was to him the sign and mean of a kind of regeneration, of the earth. The flood was for Noah a baptism, as the passage through
the Red Sea was for the Israelites; by baptism in the flood he and his
family were transferred from the old world to the new: from immediate
destruction to lengthened probation; from the companionship of the
wicked to communion with God; from the severing of all bonds between the
creature and the Creator to the privileges of the covenant: so we by
spiritual baptism. As there was a Ham who forfeited the privileges of
the covenant, so many now. The antitypical water, namely, baptism, saves
you also not of itself, nor the mere material water, but the spiritual
thing conjoined with it, repentance and faith, of which it is the sign
and seal, as Peter proceeds to explain. Compare the union of the sign
and thing signified, @Joh 3:5 Eph 5:26 Tit 3:5 Heb 10:22; compare
@1Jo 5:6.
not the, &c.--"flesh" bears the emphasis. "Not the putting away of
the filth of the flesh" (as is done by a mere water baptism,
unaccompanied with the Spirit's baptism, compare @Eph 2:11), but of
the soul. It is the ark (Christ and His Spirit-filled Church), not the
water, which is the instrument of salvation: the water only flowed round
the ark; so not the mere water baptism, but the water when accompanied
with the Spirit.
answer--Greek, "interrogation"; referring to the questions asked of candidates for baptism; eliciting a confession of faith "toward
God" and a renunciation of Satan
([AUGUSTINE, The Creed, 4.1];
[CYPRIAN, Epistles, 7, To Rogatianus]), which, when flowing from
"a good conscience," assure one of being "saved." Literally, "a good
conscience's interrogation (including the satisfactory answer)
toward God." I prefer this to the translation of WAHL,
ALFORD and
others, "inquiry of a good conscience after God": not one of the
parallels alleged, not even @2Sa 11:7, in the Septuagint, is
strictly in point. Recent Byzantine Greek idiom
(whereby the term meant: (1) the question; (2) the stipulation; (3) the engagement),
easily flowing from the usage of the word as Peter has it, confirms the
former translation.
by the resurrection of Jesus--joined with "saves you": In so far as
baptism applies to us the power of Christ's resurrection. As Christ's
death unto sin is the source of the believer's death unto, and so
deliverance from, sin's penalty and power; so His resurrection life is
the source of the believer's new spiritual life.
22. (@Ps 110:1 Ro 8:34,38 1Co 15:24 Eph 1:21 3:10 Col 1:16 2:10-15).
The fruit of His patience in His voluntary endured and undeserved
sufferings: a pattern to us, @1Pe 3:17,18.
gone--(@Lu 24:51). Proving against rationalists an actual material
ascension. Literally, "is on the right hand of God, having gone into
heaven." The oldest manuscripts of the Vulgate and the
Latin Fathers, add what expresses the benefit to us of Christ's
sitting on God's right hand, "Who is on the right hand of God, having swallowed up death that we may become heirs of everlasting life";
involving for us A STATE OF LIFE, saved, glorious, and eternal. The
Greek manuscripts, however, reject the words. Compare with this verse
Peter's speeches, @Ac 2:32-35 3:21,26 10:40,42.
CHAPTER 4
@1Pe 4:1-19. LIKE THE RISEN CHRIST, BELIEVERS HENCEFORTH OUGHT TO HAVE NO MORE TO DO WITH SIN.
As the end is near, cultivate self-restraint, watchful prayerfulness, charity, hospitality, scriptural speech, ministering to one another according to your several gifts to the glory of God: Rejoicing patience under suffering.
1. for us--supported by some oldest manuscripts and versions, omitted
by others.
in the flesh--in His mortal body of humiliation.
arm--(@Eph 6:11,13).
the same mind--of suffering with patient willingness what God wills you to suffer.
he that hath suffered--for instance, Christ first, and in His person
the believer: a general proposition.
hath ceased--literally, "has been made to cease," has obtained by
the very fact of His having suffered once for all,
a cessation from sin, which had heretofore lain on Him (@Ro 6:6-11,
especially, @1Pe 4:7). The Christian is by faith one with Christ: as
then Christ by death is judicially freed from sin; so the Christian who
has in the person of Christ died, has no more to do with it judicially,
and ought to have no more to do with it actually. "The flesh" is the
sphere in which sin has place.
2. That he, &c.--"That he (the believer, who has once for all obtained cessation from sin by suffering, in the person of Christ, namely, in virtue of his union with the crucified Christ) should no longer live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men, but to the will of God" as his rule. "Rest of his time in the flesh" (the Greek has the preposition "in" here, not in @1Pe 4:1 as to Christ) proves that the reference is here not to Christ, but to the believer, whose remaining time for glorifying God is short (@1Pe 4:3). "Live" in the truest sense, for heretofore he was dead. Not as ALFORD, "Arm yourselves . . . with a view no longer to live the rest of your time."
3. may suffice--Greek, "is sufficient." Peter takes the lowest
ground: for not even the past time ought to have been wasted in lust;
but since you cannot recall it, at least lay out the future to better
account.
us--omitted in oldest manuscripts.
wrought--Greek, "wrought out."
Gentiles--heathen: which many of you were.
when, &c.--"walking as ye have done [ALFORD] in
lasciviousness"; the Greek means
petulant, immodest, wantonness, unbridled conduct: not so much
filthy lust.
excess of wine--"wine-bibbings" [ALFORD].
abominable--"nefarious," "lawless idolatries," violating God's most
sacred law; not that all Peter's readers
(see on 1Pe 1:1)
walked in these, but many, namely, the Gentile portion of them.
4. Wherein--In respect to which abandonment of your former walk (@1Pe 4:3).
run not with them--eagerly, in troops [BENGEL].
excess--literally, "profusion"; a sink: stagnant water remaining
after an inundation.
riot--profligacy.
speaking evil--charging you with pride, singularity, hypocrisy, and
secret crimes (@1Pe 4:14 2Pe 2:2). However, there is no "of you" in
the Greek, but simply "blaspheming." It seems to me always to be
used, either directly or indirectly, in the sense of
impious reviling against God, Christ, or the Holy Spirit, and the
Christian religion, not merely against men as such; Greek,
@1Pe 4:14, below.
5. They who now call you to account falsely, shall have to give account
themselves for this very evil-speaking (@Jude 1:15), and be condemned
justly.
ready--very speedily (@1Pe 4:7 2Pe 3:10). Christ's coming is to the
believer always near.
6. For--giving the reason for @1Pe 4:5, "judge the dead."
gospel preached also to . . . dead--as well as to them now living, and
to them that shall be found alive at the coming of the Judge. "Dead"
must be taken in the same literal sense as in @1Pe 4:5, which refutes
the explanation "dead" in sins. Moreover, the absence of the
Greek article does not necessarily restrict the sense of "dead" to
particular dead persons, for there is no Greek article in @1Pe 4:5
also, where "the dead" is universal in meaning. The sense seems to be,
Peter, as representing the true attitude of the Church in every age,
expecting Christ at any moment, says, The Judge is ready to judge the
quick and dead--the dead, I say, for they, too, in their
lifetime, have had the Gospel preached to them, that so they might be
judged at last in the same way as those living now (and those who shall
be so when Christ shall come), namely, "men in the flesh," and that they
might, having escaped condemnation by embracing the Gospel so preached,
live unto God in the spirit (though death has passed over their flesh),
@Lu 20:38, thus being made like Christ in death and in life
(see on 1Pe 3:18). He says, "live," not "made alive" or
quickened; for they are supposed to have been already "quickened
together with Christ" (@Eph 2:5). This verse is parallel to
@1Pe 3:18; compare Note,
see on 1Pe 3:18. The Gospel, substantially, was "preached" to
the Old Testament Church; though not so fully as to the New Testament
Church. It is no valid objection that the Gospel has not been preached
to all that shall be found dead at Christ's coming. For Peter is
plainly referring only to those within reach of the Gospel, or who might
have known God through His ministers in Old and New Testament times.
Peter, like Paul, argues that those found living at Christ's coming
shall have no advantage above the dead who shall then be raised,
inasmuch as the latter live unto, or "according to," God, even
already in His purpose. ALFORD'S explanation is wrong, "that they might
be judged according to men as regards the flesh," that is,
be in the state of the completed sentence on sin, which is
death after the flesh. For "judged" cannot have a different meaning
in this verse from what "judge" bears in @1Pe 4:5. "Live according
to God" means, live a life with God, such as God lives, divine; as
contrasted with "according to men in the flesh," that is, a life such as
men live in the flesh.
7. Resuming the idea in @1Pe 4:5.
the end of all things--and therefore also of the wantonness
(@1Pe 4:3,4) of the wicked, and of the sufferings of the righteous
[BENGEL]. The nearness meant is not that of mere "time," but that
before the Lord; as he explains to guard against misapprehension,
and defends God from the charge of procrastination: We live in the last
dispensation, not like the Jews under the Old Testament. The Lord will
come as a thief; He is "ready" (@1Pe 4:5) to judge the world at any
moment; it is only God's long-suffering and His will that the Gospel
should be preached as a witness to all nations, that induces Him to
lengthen out the time which is with Him still as nothing.
sober--"self-restrained." The opposite duties to the sins in
@1Pe 4:3 are here inculcated. Thus "sober" is the opposite of
"lasciviousness" (@1Pe 4:3).
watch--Greek, "be soberly vigilant"; not intoxicated with worldly
cares and pleasures. Temperance promotes wakefulness or watchfulness,
and both promote prayer. Drink makes drowsy, and drowsiness prevents
prayer.
prayer--Greek, "prayers"; the end for which we should exercise
vigilance.
8. above all things--not that "charity" or love is placed above
"prayer," but because love is the animating spirit, without which
all other duties are dead. Translate as Greek, "Having your mutual
(literally, 'towards yourselves') charity intense." He presupposes its
existence among them; he urges them to make it more fervent.
charity shall cover the multitude, &c.--The oldest manuscripts have
"covereth." Quoted from @Pr 10:12; compare @Pr 17:9. "Covereth"
so as not harshly to condemn or expose faults; but forbearingly to bear
the other's burdens, forgiving and forgetting past offenses. Perhaps
the additional idea is included, By prayer for them,
love tries to have them covered by God; and so being the instrument
of converting the sinner from his error, "covereth a (not 'the,' as
English Version) multitude of sins"; but the former idea from
Proverbs is the prominent one. It is not, as Rome teaches,
"covereth" his own sins; for then the Greek middle voice would
be used; and @Pr 10:12 17:9 support the Protestant view. "As God
with His love covers my sins if I believe, so must I also
cover the sins of my neighbor" [LUTHER].
Compare the conduct of Shem
and Japheth to Noah (@Ge 9:23), in contrast to Ham's exposure of his
father's shame. We ought to cover others' sins only where love itself
does not require the contrary.
9. (@Ro 12:13 Heb 13:2.) Not the spurious hospitality which
passes current in the world, but the entertaining of those needing it, especially those exiled for the faith, as the representatives of
Christ, and all hospitality to whomsoever exercised from genuine
Christian love.
without grudging--Greek, "murmuring." "He that giveth, let him
do it with simplicity," that is open-hearted sincerity; with cordiality.
Not secretly speaking against the person whom we entertain, or
upbraiding him with the favor we have conferred in him.
10. every--"even as each man hath received," in whatever degree,
and of whatever kind. The Spirit's gifts (literally, "gift
of grace," that is, gratuitously bestowed) are the common property
of the Christian community, each Christian being but a steward for the
edifying of the whole, not receiving the gift merely for his own use.
minister the same--not discontentedly envying or disparaging
the gift of another.
one to another--Greek as in @1Pe 4:8, "towards yourselves";
implying that all form but one body, and in seeking the good of other
members they are promoting the good of themselves.
stewards--referring to @Mt 25:15, &c.;
@Lu 19:13-26.
11. If any . . . speak--namely, as a prophet, or divinely taught
teacher in the Church assembly.
as the, &c.--The Greek has no article: "as oracles of God."
This may be due to Greek: "God," having no article, it being a
principle when a governed noun omits the Greek article that the
governing noun should omit it, too. In @Ac 7:38 also, the Greek article is wanting; thus English Version, "as the oracles of God,"
namely, the Old Testament, would be "right," and the precept be
similar to @Ro 12:6, "prophesy according to
the analogy of the faith." But the context suits better thus, "Let
him speak as (becomes one speaking) oracles OF
GOD." His divinely
inspired words are not his own, but God's, and as a steward (@1Pe 4:10) having them committed to him, he ought so to speak
them. Jesus was the pattern in this respect (@Mt 7:29 Joh 12:49 14:10;
compare Paul, @2Co 2:17). Note, the very same term as is applied in
the only other passages where it occurs (@Ac 7:38 Ro 3:2 Heb 5:12),
to the Old Testament inspired writings, is here predicated of the
inspired words (the substance of which was afterwards committed to
writing) of the New Testament prophets.
minister--in acts; the other sphere of spiritual activity besides
speaking.
as of--"out of" the store of his "strength" (Greek, physical power in relation to outward service, rather than moral and intellectual
"ability"; so in @Mr 12:30).
giveth--Greek, "supplieth"; originally said of a choragus, who
supplied the chorus with all necessaries for performing their several
parts.
that God in all things may be glorified--the final end of all a
Christian's acts.
through Jesus Christ--the mediator through whom all our blessings come
down to us, and also through whom all our praises ascend to God. Through
Christ alone can God be glorified in us and our sayings and doings.
to whom--Christ.
be--Greek, "is."
for ever and ever--Greek, "unto the ages of the ages."
12. strange--they might think it strange that God should allow His
chosen children to be sore tried.
fiery trial--like the fire by which metals are tested and their dross
removed. The Greek adds, "in your case."
which is to try you--Greek, "which is taking place for a trial to
you." Instead of its "happening to you" as some strange and untoward
chance, it "is taking place" with the gracious design of trying
you; God has a wise design in it--a consolatory reflection.
13. inasmuch as--The oldest manuscripts read, "in proportion as"; "in
as far as" ye by suffering are partakers of Christ's sufferings, that
is, by faith enter into realizing fellowship with them; willingly for
His sake suffering as He suffered.
with exceeding joy--Greek, "exulting joy"; now ye
rejoice amidst sufferings; then ye shall EXULT, for ever free
from sufferings (@1Pe 1:6,8). If we will not bear suffering
for Christ now, we must bear eternal sufferings hereafter.
14. for--Greek, "IN the name of Christ," namely, as Christians (@1Pe 4:16 3:14, above); "in My name, because
ye belong to Christ." The emphasis lies on this: @1Pe 4:15, "as
a murderer, thief," &c., stands in contrast. Let your suffering be on
account of Christ, not on account of evil-doing (@1Pe 2:20).
reproached--Reproach affects noble minds more than loss of goods,
or even bodily sufferings.
the spirit . . . upon you--the same Spirit as rested on Christ
(@Lu 4:18). "The Spirit of glory" is His Spirit, for He is the
"Lord of glory" (@Jas 2:1). Believers may well overcome the
"reproach" (compare @Heb 11:26), seeing that "the Spirit of
glory" rests upon them, as upon Him. It cannot prevent the happiness
of the righteous, if they are reproached for Christ, because they retain
before God their glory entire, as having the Spirit, with whom
glory is inseparably joined [CALVIN].
and of God--Greek, "and the (Spirit) of God"; implying that
the Spirit of glory (which is Christ's Spirit) is at the same time
also the Spirit of God.
on their part he is evil spoken of, but on your part he is glorified--omitted in the two oldest Greek manuscripts and Syriac and
Coptic versions, but supported by one very old manuscript,
Vulgate, Sahidic, CYPRIAN, &c. "Evil spoken of," literally,
"blasphemed"; not merely do they "speak against you," as in
@1Pe 3:16, but blasphemously mock Christ and
Christianity itself.
15. But--Greek, "For." "Reproached in the name of Christ" I
say (@1Pe 4:14), "FOR let none," &c.
as . . . as . . . as . . . as--the "as" twice in italics is
not in the Greek. The second Greek, "as," distinguishes the
class "busybody in other men's matters," from the previous class of
delinquents. Christians, from mistaken zeal, under the plea of
faithfulness, might readily step out of their own calling and make
themselves judges of the acts of unbelievers. Literally, "a bishop in
what is (not his own, but) another's" province; an allusion to the
existing bishops or overseers of the Church; a self-constituted
bishop in others' concerns.
16. a Christian--the name given in contempt first at Antioch.
@Ac 11:26 26:28; the only three places where the term occurs. At first
believers had no distinctive name, but were called among themselves
"brethren," @Ac 6:3; "disciples," @Ac 6:1; "those of the way,"
@Ac 9:2; "saints," @Ro 1:7; by the Jews (who denied that Jesus
was the CHRIST, and so would never originate the name Christian), in
contempt, "Nazarenes." At Antioch, where first idolatrous Gentiles
(Cornelius, @Ac 10:1,2, was not an idolater, but a proselyte) were
converted, and wide missionary work began, they could be no longer
looked on as a Jewish sect, and so the Gentiles designated them
by the new name "Christians." The rise of the new name marked a new
epoch in the Church's life, a new stage of its development, namely, its
missions to the Gentiles. The idle and witty people of Antioch, we know
from heathen writers, were famous for inventing nicknames. The date of
this Epistle must have been when this had become the generally
recognized designation among Gentiles (it is never applied by Christians to each other, as it was in
after ages--an undesigned proof that the New Testament was composed
when it professes), and when the name exposed one to reproach and
suffering, though not seemingly as yet to systematic persecution.
let him not be ashamed--though the world is ashamed of shame. To suffer
for one's own faults is no honor (@1Pe 4:15 1Pe 2:20),--for Christ,
is no shame (@1Pe 4:14 1Pe 3:13).
but let him glorify God--not merely glory in persecution; Peter
might have said as the contrast, "but let him esteem it an honor to
himself"; but the honor is to be given to God, who counts him worthy
of such an honor, involving exemption from the coming judgments on the
ungodly.
on this behalf--The oldest manuscripts and Vulgate read, "in
this name," that is, in respect of suffering for such a name.
17. Another ground of consolation to Christians. All must pass under
the judgment of God; God's own household first, their chastisement being
here, for which they should glorify Him as a proof of their membership
in His family, and a pledge of their escape from the end of those whom
the last judgment shall find disobedient to the Gospel.
the time--Greek, "season," "fit time."
judgment must begin at the house of God--the Church of living
believers. Peter has in mind @Eze 9:6; compare @Am 3:2 Jer 25:29.
Judgment is already begun, the Gospel word, as a "two-edged sword,"
having the double effect of saving some and condemning others, and shall
be consummated at the last judgment. "When power is given to the
destroyer, he observes no distinction between the righteous and the
wicked; not only so, but he begins first at the righteous" [WETSTEIN
from Rabbins]. But God limits the destroyer's power over His people.
if . . . at us, what shall the end be of them, &c.--If even the
godly have chastening judgments now, how much more shall the ungodly be
doomed to damnatory judgments at last.
gospel of God--the very God who is to judge them.
18. scarcely--Compare "so as by fire," @1Co 3:15; having to pass
through trying chastisements, as David did for his sin. "The righteous"
man has always more or less of trial, but the issue is certain, and the
entrance into the kingdom abundant at last. The "scarcely" marks the
severity of the ordeal, and the unlikelihood (in a mere human point of
view) of the righteous sustaining it; but the righteousness of Christ
and God's everlasting covenant make it all sure.
ungodly--having no regard for God; negative description.
sinner--loving sin; positive; the same man is at once God-forgetting
and sin-loving.
appear--in judgment.
19. General conclusion from @1Pe 4:17,18. Seeing that the godly
know that their sufferings are by God's will, to chasten them that
they may not perish with the world, they have good reason to trust God
cheerfully amidst sufferings, persevering in well-doing.
let them--Greek, "let them also," "let even them," as
well as those not suffering. Not only under ordinary circumstances, but
also in time of suffering, let believers commit. (Compare Note,
see on 1Pe 3:14).
according to the will of
God--(See on 1Pe 3:17). God's will
that the believer should suffer (@1Pe 4:17), is for his good. One
oldest manuscript and Vulgate read, "in well-doings"; contrast
ill-doings, @1Pe 4:15. Our committing of ourselves to God is to be,
not in indolent and passive quietism, but accompanied with active
well-doings.
faithful--to His covenant promises.
Creator--who is therefore also our Almighty Preserver. He, not we, must
keep our souls. Sin destroyed the original spiritual relation between
creature and Creator, leaving that only of government. Faith restores
it; so that the believer, living to the will of God (@1Pe 4:2),
rests implicitly on his Creator's faithfulness.
CHAPTER 5
@1Pe 5:1-14. EXHORTATIONS TO ELDERS, JUNIORS, AND ALL IN GENERAL. PARTING PRAYER. CONCLUSION.
1. elders--alike in office and age (@1Pe 5:5).
I . . . also an elder--To put one's self on a level with those whom
we exhort, gives weight to one's exhortations (compare @2Jo 1:1,2).
Peter, in true humility for the Gospel's sake, does not put forward his
apostleship here, wherein he presided over the elders. In the
apostleship the apostles have no successors, for "the signs of an
apostle" have not been transmitted. The presidents over the presbyters
and deacons, by whatever name designated, angel, bishop, or
moderator, &c., though of the same ORDER as the presbyters, yet have virtually succeeded to a superintendency of the Church
analogous to that exercised by the apostles (this superintendency and
priority existed from the earliest times after the apostles
[TERTULLIAN]); just as the Jewish synagogue
(the model which the Church followed) was governed by a council of
presbyters, presided over by one of themselves, "the chief ruler of the
synagogue." (Compare VITRINGA [Synagogue and
Temple, Part II, chs. 3 and 7]).
witness--an eye-witness of Christ's sufferings, and so qualified
to exhort you to believing patience in suffering for well-doing after
His example (@1Pe 4:19 2:20). This explains the "therefore" inserted
in the oldest manuscripts, "I therefore exhort," resuming exhortation
from @1Pe 4:19. His higher dignity as an apostle is herein
delicately implied, as eye-witnessing was a necessary qualification
for apostleship: compare Peter's own speeches, @Ac 1:21,22 2:32 10:39.
also--implying the righteous recompense corresponding to the
sufferings.
partaker of the glory--according to Christ's promise; an earnest of
which was given in the transfiguration.
2. Feed--Greek, "Tend as a shepherd," by discipline and doctrine.
Lead, feed, heed: by prayer, exhortation, government, and example. The
dignity is marked by the term "elder"; the duties of the office,
to tend or oversee, by "bishop." Peter has in mind Christ's
injunction to him, "Feed (tend) My sheep . . . Feed (pasture) My
lambs" (@Joh 21:16). He invites the elders to share with him the
same duty (compare @Ac 20:28). The flock is Christ's.
which is among you--While having a concern for all the Church,
your special duty is to feed that portion of it "which is among you."
oversight--Greek, "bishopric," or duty of bishops, that is,
overseer.
not by constraint--Necessity is laid upon them, but willingness
prevents it being felt, both in undertaking and in fulfilling the duty
[BENGEL]. "He is a true presbyter and minister of the counsel of God
who doeth and teacheth the things of the Lord, being not accounted
righteous merely because he is a presbyter, but because righteous,
chosen into the presbytery" [CLEMENT OF
ALEXANDRIA].
willingly--One oldest manuscript, Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic, add, "as God would have it to be done" (@Ro 8:27).
not for filthy lucre--(@Isa 56:11 Tit 1:7).
of a ready mind--promptly and heartily, without selfish motive
of gain-seeking, as the Israelites gave their services
willing-heartedly to the sanctuary.
3. being lords--Greek, "lording it": implying pride and oppression.
"Not that we have dominion over your faith."
God's heritage--Greek, "the inheritances," that is, the
portions of the Church committed severally to your pastoral charge
[BENGEL]. It is explained by "the flock" in the next clause. However, in
@1Pe 5:2, "flock of God which is among you," answering to "(God's)
heritages" (plural to express the sheep who are God's
portion and inheritance, @De 32:9) committed to you, favors
English Version. The flock, as one whole, is God's heritage, or
flock in the singular. Regarded in relation to its
component sheep, divided among several pastors, it is in the plural
"heritages." Compare @Ac 1:17,25, "part" (the same Greek).
BERNARD OF
CLAIRVAUX, wrote to Pope Eugene, "Peter could not give thee
what he had not: what he had he gave: the care over the Church, not
dominion."
being--Greek, "becoming."
ensamples--the most effective recommendation of precept
(@1Ti 4:12).
@Tit 2:7, "patterns." So Jesus. "A monstrosity it is to see the
highest rank joined with the meanest mind, the first seat with the
lowest life, a grandiloquent tongue with a lazy life, much talking with
no fruit" [BERNARD].
4. And--"And so": as the result of "being ensamples" (@1Pe 5:3).
chief Shepherd--the title peculiarly Christ's own, not Peter's or the
pope's.
when . . . shall appear--Greek, "be manifested" (@Col 3:4).
Faith serves the Lord while still unseen.
crown--Greek, "stephanos," a garland of victory, the prize
in the Grecian games, woven of ivy, parsley, myrtle, olive, or oak. Our crown is distinguished from theirs in that it is "incorruptible" and
"fadeth not away," as the leaves of theirs soon did. "The crown
of life." Not a kingly "crown"
(a different Greek word, diadema):
the prerogative of the Lord Jesus (@Re 19:12).
glory--Greek, "the glory," namely, to be then revealed (@1Pe 5:1 1Pe 4:13).
that fadeth not away--Greek, "amaranthine"
(compare @1Pe 1:4).
5. ye younger--The deacons were originally the younger men, the
presbyters older; but subsequently as presbyter expressed the
office of Church ruler or teacher, so Greek "neoteros" means
not (as literally) young men in age, but subordinate ministers and servants of the Church. So Christ uses the term "younger." For He
explains it by "he that doth serve," literally, "he that ministereth as
a deacon"; just as He explains "the greatness" by "he that is chief,"
literally, "he that ruleth," the very word applied to the
bishops or presbyters. So "the young men" are undoubtedly the
deacons of the Church of Jerusalem, of whom, as being all Hebrews, the Hellenistic Christians subsequently complained as neglecting their
Grecian widows, whence arose the appointment of the seven others,
Hellenistic deacons. So here, Peter, having exhorted the
presbyters, or elders, not to lord it over those committed to them,
adds, Likewise ye neoters or younger, that is, subordinate ministers
and deacons, submit cheerfully to the command of the elders
[MOSHEIM].
There is no Scripture sanction for "younger" meaning laymen in
general (as ALFORD explains): its use in this sense is probably of later
date. The "all of you" that follows, refers to the congregation generally; and it is likely that, like Paul, Peter should notice,
previous to the general congregation, the subordinate ministers as
well as the presbyters, writing as he did to the same region
(Ephesus), and to confirm the teaching of the apostle of the Gentiles.
Yea--to sum up all my exhortations in one.
be subject--omitted in the oldest manuscripts and versions, but
TISCHENDORF quotes the Vatican manuscript for it. Then translate,
"Gird (@1Pe 1:13 4:1) fast on humility (lowliness of mind) to one
another." The verb is literally, "tie on with a fast knot"
[WAHL].
Or, "gird on humility as the slave dress (encomboma)": as
the Lord girded Himself with a towel to perform a servile office of
humility and love, washing His disciples' feet, a scene in which Peter
had played an important part, so that he would naturally have it before
his mind. Compare similarly @1Pe 5:2 with @Joh 21:15-17.
Clothing was the original badge of man's sin and shame. Pride caused the
need of man's clothing, and pride still reigns in dress; the Christian
therefore clothes himself in humility (@1Pe 3:3,4). God provides him
with the robe of Christ's righteousness, in order to receive which man
must be stripped of pride.
God resisteth the proud--Quoted, as @Jas 4:6, from @Pr 3:34.
Peter had James before his mind, and gives his Epistle inspired
sanction. Compare @1Pe 5:9 with @Jas 4:7, literally, "arrayeth
Himself against." Other sins flee from God: pride alone opposeth itself
to God; therefore, God also in turn opposes Himself to the proud
[GERHARD in
ALFORD]. Humility is the vessel of all graces
[AUGUSTINE].
6. under the mighty hand--afflicting you (@1Pe 3:15): "accept"
His chastisements, and turn to Him that smiteth you. He depresses the
proud and exalts the humble.
in due time--Wait humbly and patiently for His own fit time. One
oldest manuscript and Vulgate read, "In the season of visitation,"
namely, His visitation in mercy.
7. Casting--once for all: so the Greek aorist.
care--"anxiety? The advantage flowing from
humbling ourselves under God's hand (@1Pe 5:6) is confident
reliance on His goodness. Exemption from care goes along with humble
submission to God.
careth for you--literally "respecting you." Care is a burden which
faith casts off the man on his God. Compare @Ps 22:10 37:5 55:22, to
which Peter alludes; @Lu 12:22,37 Php 4:6.
careth--not so strong a Greek word as the previous Greek "anxiety."
8. Peter has in mind Christ's warning to himself to watch against
Satan, from forgetting which he fell.
Be sober . . . vigilant--"Care," that is, anxiety, will intoxicate
the soul; therefore be sober, that is, self-restrained. Yet, lest this
freedom from care should lead any to false security, he adds, "Be
vigilant" against "your adversary." Let this be your "care." God
provides, therefore do not be anxious. The devil seeks, therefore watch
[BENGEL].
because--omitted in the oldest manuscripts The broken and disjointed
sentences are more fervid and forcible. LUCIFER OF
CAGLIARI reads as English Version.
adversary--literally, "opponent in a court of justice" (@Zec 3:1).
"Satan" means opponent. "Devil," accuser or slanderer (@Re 12:10). "The enemy" (@Mt 13:39). "A murderer fro
m the
beginning" (@Joh 8:44). He counteracts the Gospel and its agents.
"The tempter."
roaring lion--implying his violent and insatiable thirst for prey as
a hungry lion. Through man's sin he got God's justice on his side
against us; but Christ, our Advocate, by fulfilling all the demands of
justice for us, has made our redemption altogether consistent with
justice.
walketh about--(@Job 1:7 2:2). So the children of the wicked one
cannot rest. Evil spirits are in @2Pe 2:4 Jude 1:6, said to be
already in chains of darkness and in hell. This probably means that this
is their doom finally: a doom already begun in part; though for a
time they are permitted to roam in the world (of which Satan is prince),
especially in the dark air that surrounds the earth. Hence perhaps
arises the miasma of the air at times, as physical and moral evil are
closely connected.
devour--entangle in worldly "care" (@1Pe 5:7) and other snares,
so as finally to destroy. Compare @Re 12:15,16.
9. (@Lu 4:13 Eph 6:11-17 Jas 4:7.)
steadfast--Compare established in the truth," @2Pe 1:12. Satan's
power exists only in respect to the unbelieving; the faithful he cannot
hurt (@1Jo 5:18). Faith gives strength to prayer, the great instrument
against the foe (@Jas 1:6, &c.).
knowing, &c.--"encouragement not to faint in afflictions": your
brethren suffer the same; nothing beyond the common lot of Christians
befalls you (@1Co 10:13). It is a sign of God's favor rather than
displeasure, that Satan is allowed to harass you, as he did Job. Your
fellow Christians have the same battle of faith and prayer against
Satan.
are--are being accomplished according to the appointment of God.
in the world--lying in the wicked one, and therefore necessarily the
scene of "tribulation" (@Joh 16:33).
10. Comforting assurance that God will finally "perfect" His work of
"grace" in them, after they have undergone the necessary previous
suffering.
But--Only do you watch and resist the foe: God will perform the rest
[BENGEL].
of all grace--(Compare @1Pe 4:10). The God to whom as its source
all grace is to be referred; who in grace completes what in grace He
began. He from the first "called (so the oldest manuscripts read for "us")
unto (with a view to) glory." He will not let His purpose fall
short of completion. If He does so in punishing, much more in grace. The
three are fitly conjoined: the call, the glory to which we are
called, and the way (suffering); the fourth is the ground of the
calling, namely, the grace of God in Christ.
by--Greek, "in." Christ is He in virtue of whom, and
in union with whom, believers are called to glory. The opposite is
"in the world" (@1Pe 5:9 Joh 16:33).
after that ye have suffered--Join to "called you": suffering, as
a necessary preliminary to glory, was contemplated in God's
calling.
a while--short and inconsiderable, as compared with the glory.
perfect, &c.--The two oldest manuscripts, and Vulgate and
Coptic versions, read, "shall perfect (so that there shall be
nothing defective in you), stablish, strengthen," and omit "settle,"
literally, "ground," or "fix on a foundation." ALFORD reads it in spite
of the oldest manuscripts The authority of the latter I prefer; moreover
the climax seems to require rather a verb of completing the work of
grace, than, as the Greek means, founding it. The Greek has,
"shall HIMSELF
perfect you": though you are called on to watch and
resist the foe, God Himself must really do all in and through
you. The same God who begins must Himself complete the work. The
Greek for "stablish" (so as to be "steadfast in the faith,"
@1Pe 5:9) is the same as "strengthen," @Lu 22:32. Peter has in
mind Christ's charge, "When thou art converted, strengthen thy
brethren." His exhortation accords with his name Peter, "Thou art
Peter, and upon this rock I will build My Church." "Stablish,"
so as not to waver. "Strengthen"
with might in the inner man by His Spirit, against the foe.
11. To him--emphatic. To Him and Him alone: not to ourselves. Compare
"Himself," see on 1Pe 5:10.
glory and--omitted in the oldest manuscripts and versions.
dominion--Greek, "the might" shown in so "perfecting," you,
@1Pe 5:10.
12. Silvanus--Silas, the companion of Paul and Timothy: a suitable
messenger by whom to confirm, as Peter here does, Paul's doctrine of
"the true grace of God" in the same churches (compare @2Pe 3:16). We
never meet with Silvanus as Paul's companion after Paul's last journey
to Jerusalem. His connection with Peter was plainly subsequent to that
journey.
as I suppose--Join "faithful unto you [STEIGER], as I suppose."
Silvanus may have stood in a close relation to the churches in Asia,
perhaps having taken the oversight of them after Paul's departure, and
had afterwards gone to Peter, by whom he is now sent back to them with
this Epistle. He did not know, by positive observation,
Silvanus' faithfulness to them; he therefore says, "faithful
to you, as I suppose," from the accounts I hear; not expressing
doubt. ALFORD joins "I have written unto you," which the Greek order favors. The seeming uncertainty, thus, is not as to Silvanus'
faithfulness, which strongly marked by the Greek article, but as to
whether he or some other would prove to be the bearer of the letter,
addressed as it was to five provinces, all of which Silvanus might
not reach: "By Silvanus, that faithful brother, as expect, I have
Written to you" [BIRKS].
briefly--Greek, "in few (words)," as compared with the importance
of the subject (@Heb 13:22).
exhorting--not so much formally teaching doctrines, which could
not be done in so "few words."
testifying--bearing my testimony in confirmation (so the Greek compound verb implies) of that truth which ye have already heard from
Paul and Silas (@1Jo 2:27).
that this--of which I have just written, and of which Paul before
testified to you (whose testimony, now that he was no longer in those
regions, was called in question probably by some; compare
@2Pe 3:15,16). @2Pe 1:12, "the present truth," namely, the grace
formerly promised by the prophets, and now manifested to you.
"Grace" is the keynote of Paul's doctrine which Peter now confirms
(@Eph 2:5,8). Their sufferings for the Gospel made them to need some
attestation and confirmation of the truth, that they should not fall
back from it.
wherein ye stand--The oldest manuscripts read imperatively,
"Stand ye." Literally, "into which
(having been already admitted, @1Pe 1:8,21 2:7,8,9) stand
(therein)." Peter seems to have in mind Paul's words (@Ro 5:2 1Co 15:1).
"The grace wherein we stand must be true, and our standing in it true
also" [BENGEL]. Compare in "He began his Epistle
with grace (@1Pe 1:2), he finishes it with grace, he has
besprinkled the middle with grace, that in every part he might teach
that the Church is not saved but by grace."
13. The . . . at Babylon--ALFORD,
BENGEL, and others translate, "She
that is elected together with you in Babylon," namely, Peter's wife, whom he led about with him in his missionary journeys. Compare
@1Pe 3:7, "heirs together of the grace of life." But why she
should be called "elected together with you in Babylon," as if there
had been no Christian woman in Babylon besides, is inexplicable on this
view. In English Version the sense is clear: "That portion of
the whole dispersion (@1Pe 1:1, Greek), or Church of
Christianized Jews, with Gentile converts, which resides in Babylon." As
Peter and John were closely associated, Peter addresses the Church in
John's peculiar province, Asia, and closes with "your co-elect sister Church at Babylon saluteth you"; and John similarly addresses
the "elect lady," that is, the Church in Babylon, and closes with
"the children of thine elect sister (the Asiatic Church) greet thee";
(compare Introduction
to Second John).
ERASMUS explains, "Mark who is in the place of a son to me":
compare @Ac 12:12, implying Peter's connection with Mark; whence
the mention of him in connection with the Church at Babylon, in
which he labored under Peter before he went to Alexandria is not
unnatural. PAPIAS reports from the presbyter John
[EUSEBIUS,
Ecclesiastical History, 3.39], that Mark was interpreter of Peter,
recording in his Gospel the facts related to him by Peter. Silvanus or
Silas had been substituted for John Mark, as Paul's companion, because
of Mark's temporary unfaithfulness. But now Mark restored is associated
with Silvanus, Paul's companion, in Peter's esteem, as Mark was already
reinstated in Paul's esteem. That Mark had a spiritual connection with
the Asiatic' churches which Peter addresses, and so naturally salutes
them, appears from @2Ti 4:11 Col 4:10.
Babylon--The Chaldean Babylon on the Euphrates.
See Introduction,
ON THE PLACE OF WRITING
this Epistle, in proof that Rome is not meant as Papists assert;
compare LIGHTFOOT sermon. How unlikely that in a
friendly salutation the enigmatical title of Rome given in prophecy (John, @Re 17:5), should be used! Babylon was the center from which
the Asiatic dispersion whom Peter addresses was derived.
PHILO
[The Embassy to Gaius, 36] and JOSEPHUS
[Antiquities, 15.2. 2 23.12] inform us that Babylon contained a
great many Jews in the apostolic age (whereas those at Rome were
comparatively few, about eight thousand [JOSEPHUS,
Antiquities, 17.11]); so it would naturally be visited by the apostle
of the circumcision. It was the headquarters of those whom he had so
successfully addressed on Pentecost, @Ac 2:9, Jewish
"Parthians . . . dwellers in Mesopotamia" (the Parthians were then
masters of Mesopotamian Babylon); these he ministered to in person. His other hearers, the Jewish "dwellers in Cappadocia, Pontus, Asia,
Phrygia, Pamphylia," he now ministers to by letter. The earliest
distinct authority for Peter's martyrdom at Rome is
DIONYSIUS,
bishop of Corinth, in the latter half of the second century. The
desirableness of representing Peter and Paul, the two leading apostles,
as together founding the Church of the metropolis, seems to have
originated the tradition. CLEMENT OF
ROME
[First Epistle to the Corinthians, 4.5], often quoted for, is really
against it. He mentions Paul and Peter together, but makes it as a
distinguishing circumstance of Paul, that he preached both in the
East and West, implying that Peter never was in the West. In
@2Pe 1:14, he says, "I must shortly put off this tabernacle,"
implying his martyrdom was near, yet he makes no allusion to Rome, or
any intention of his visiting it.
14. kiss of charity[email protected]Ro 16:16, "an holy kiss": the token of
love to God and the brethren. Love and holiness are inseparable.
Compare the instance, @Ac 20:37.
Peace--Peter's closing salutation; as Paul's is, "Grace be with you,"
though he accompanies it with "peace be to the brethren." "Peace"
(flowing from salvation) was Christ's own salutation after the
resurrection, and from Him Peter derives it.
be with you all that are in Christ Jesus--The oldest manuscripts
omit "Jesus." In @Eph 6:24, addressed to the same region, the same
limitation of the salutation occurs, whence, perhaps, Peter here adopts
it. Contrast, "Be with you all," @Ro 16:24 1Co 16:23.
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