Text -- 2 Peter 2:18 (NET)
Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: 2Pe 2:18 - -- Great swelling words ( huperogka ).
Old compound adjective (huper and ogkos , a swelling, swelling above and beyond), in N.T. only here and Jud 1:1...
Great swelling words (
Old compound adjective (
Robertson: 2Pe 2:18 - -- Of vanity ( mataiotētos ).
Late and rare word (from mataios , empty, vain), often in lxx, in N.T. here, Rom 8:20; Eph 4:17.
Robertson: 2Pe 2:18 - -- By lasciviousness ( aselgeiais ).
Instrumental plural, "by lascivious acts."Note asyndeton as in 2Pe 1:9, 2Pe 1:17.
Robertson: 2Pe 2:18 - -- Those who are just escaping ( tous oligōs apopheugontas ).
So A B read oligōs (slightly, a little), while Aleph C K L P read ontōs (actuall...
Those who are just escaping (
So A B read
Robertson: 2Pe 2:18 - -- From them that live in error ( tous en planēi anastrephomenous ).
Accusative case after apopheugontas (escaping from) according to regular idiom....
From them that live in error (
Accusative case after
When they speak (
Rev., better, uttering. See on 2Pe 2:16.
Vincent: 2Pe 2:18 - -- Great swelling ( ὑπέρογκα )
Only here and Jud 1:16. The word means of excessive bulk. It accords well with the peculiar word utter...
Great swelling (
Only here and Jud 1:16. The word means of excessive bulk. It accords well with the peculiar word uttering, since it denotes a kind of speech full of high-sounding verbosity without substance.
Vincent: 2Pe 2:18 - -- Were clean escaped
The A. V. follows the Tex. Rec., ὄντως ἀποφυγόντας ; ὄντως meaning really, actually, as Luk...
Were clean escaped
The A. V. follows the Tex. Rec.,
Wesley -> 2Pe 2:18
Wesley: 2Pe 2:18 - -- Allowing them to gratify some unholy desire. Those who were before entirely escaped from the spirit, custom, and company of them that live in error - ...
Allowing them to gratify some unholy desire. Those who were before entirely escaped from the spirit, custom, and company of them that live in error - In sin.
Greek, "lay baits for."
JFB: 2Pe 2:18 - -- Greek, "in"; the lusts of the flesh being the element IN which they lay their baits.
Greek, "in"; the lusts of the flesh being the element IN which they lay their baits.
Greek, "by licentiousness"; the bait which they lay.
JFB: 2Pe 2:18 - -- Greek, "really escaped." But the oldest manuscripts and Vulgate read, "scarcely," or "for but a little time"; scarcely have they escaped from them who...
Greek, "really escaped." But the oldest manuscripts and Vulgate read, "scarcely," or "for but a little time"; scarcely have they escaped from them who live in error (the ungodly world), when they are allured by these seducers into sin again (2Pe 2:20).
Clarke: 2Pe 2:18 - -- They speak great swelling words of vanity - The word ὑπερογκα signifies things of great magnitude, grand, superb, sublime; it sometimes ...
They speak great swelling words of vanity - The word
Clarke: 2Pe 2:18 - -- Those that were clean escaped - Those who, through hearing the doctrines of the Gospel, had been converted, were perverted by those false teachers.
Those that were clean escaped - Those who, through hearing the doctrines of the Gospel, had been converted, were perverted by those false teachers.
Calvin -> 2Pe 2:18
Calvin: 2Pe 2:18 - -- 18.For when they speak great swelling words of vanity 172 He means that they dazzled the eyes of the simple by high-flown stuff of words, that they m...
18.For when they speak great swelling words of vanity 172 He means that they dazzled the eyes of the simple by high-flown stuff of words, that they might not perceive their deceit, for it was not easy to captivate their minds with such dotages, except they were first besotted by some artifice. He then says that they used an inflated kind of words and speech, that they might fill the unwary with admiration. And then this grandiloquence, which the ample lungs of the soul send forth, (as Persius says, 173) was very suitable to cover their shifts and trumperies. There was formerly a craft of this kind in Valentinus, and in those like him, as we learn from the books of Irenaeus. They made words unheard of before, by the empty sound of which, the unlearned being smitten, they were ensnared by their reveries.
There are fanatics of a similar kind at this day, who call themselves by the plausible title of Libertines or free-men. For they talk most confidently of the Spirit and of spiritual things, as though they roared out from above the clouds, and fascinate many by their tricks and wiles, so that you may say that the Apostle has correctly prophesied of them. For they treat all things jocosely and scoffingly; and though they are great simpletons, yet as they indulge in all vices, they find favor with their own people by a sort of drollery. The state of the case is this, that when the difference between good and evil is removed, everything becomes lawful; and men, loosed from all subjection to laws, obey their own lusts. This Epistle, therefore, is not a little suitable to our age.
They allure, or bait, through the lusts of the flesh. He strikingly compares to hooks the allurements of the ungodly, when they make anything they please lawful; for as the lusts of men are headstrong and craving, as soon as liberty is offered, they lay hold on it with great avidity; but soon afterwards the strangling hook within is perceived. But we must consider the whole sentence of the Apostle.
He says that they who had really escaped from the society of those in error were again deceived by a new kind of error, even when the reins were let loose to them for the indulgence of every sort of intemperance. He hereby reminds us how dangerous are the wiles of these men. For it was already a dreadful thing that blindness and thick darkness possessed almost all mankind. It was, therefore, in a manner a double prodigy, that men, freed from the common errors of the world, should, after having received the light of God, be brought back to a beastly indifference. Let us be reminded of what we ought especially to beware of, after having been once enlightened, that is, lest Satan entice us under the pretense of liberty, so as to give ourselves up to lasciviousness to gratify the lusts of the flesh. But they are safe from this danger who seriously attend to the study of holiness.
Defender: 2Pe 2:18 - -- "Vanity" here means "emptiness." False teachers have the remarkable ability of clothing vapid thought in pseudo-intellectual verbiage.
"Vanity" here means "emptiness." False teachers have the remarkable ability of clothing vapid thought in pseudo-intellectual verbiage.
Defender: 2Pe 2:18 - -- "Clean escaped" would be better read "just escaping." The picture here is of people who have been given some information about God and His salvation a...
"Clean escaped" would be better read "just escaping." The picture here is of people who have been given some information about God and His salvation and are interested in learning more, but they have not yet accepted Christ as Savior.
Defender: 2Pe 2:18 - -- They have been associating with a crowd of people who, literally, order their whole lives around error - that is, willingly reject God and want nothin...
They have been associating with a crowd of people who, literally, order their whole lives around error - that is, willingly reject God and want nothing to do with living under His domain."
TSK -> 2Pe 2:18
TSK: 2Pe 2:18 - -- they speak : Psa 52:1-3, Psa 73:8, Psa 73:9; Dan 4:30, Dan 11:36; Act 8:9; 2Th 2:4; Jud 1:13, Jud 1:15, Jud 1:16; Rev 13:5, Rev 13:6, Rev 13:11
great ...
they speak : Psa 52:1-3, Psa 73:8, Psa 73:9; Dan 4:30, Dan 11:36; Act 8:9; 2Th 2:4; Jud 1:13, Jud 1:15, Jud 1:16; Rev 13:5, Rev 13:6, Rev 13:11
great swelling :
wantonness : Rom 13:13; Jam 5:5
that were : 2Pe 2:20, 2Pe 1:4; Act 2:40
clean : or, for a little, or, a while, as some read
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 2Pe 2:18
Barnes: 2Pe 2:18 - -- For when they speak great swelling words of vanity - When they make pretensions to wisdom and learning, or seem to attach great importance to w...
For when they speak great swelling words of vanity - When they make pretensions to wisdom and learning, or seem to attach great importance to what they say, and urge it in a pompous and positive manner. Truth is simple, and delights in simple statements. It expects to make its way by its own intrinsic force, and is willing to pass for what it is worth. Error is noisy and declamatory, and hopes to succeed by substituting sound for sense, and by such tones and arts as shall induce men to believe that what is said is true, when it is known by the speaker to be false.
They allure through the lusts of the flesh - The same word is used here which in 2Pe 2:14 is rendered "beguiling,"and in Jam 1:14 "enticed."It does not elsewhere occur in the New Testament. It means that they make use of deceitful arts to allure, ensnare, or beguile others. The "means"which it is here said they employed, were "the lusts of the flesh;"that is, they promised unlimited indulgence to the carnal appetites, or taught such doctrines that their followers would feel themselves free to give unrestrained liberty to such propensities. This has been quite a common method in the world, of inducing people to embrace false doctrines.
Through much wantonness - See the notes at 2Ti 3:6. The meaning here is, that they made use of every variety of lascivious arts to beguile others under religious pretences. This has been often done in the world; for religion has been abused to give seducers access to the confidence of the innocent, only that they might betray and ruin them. It is right that for all such the "mist of darkness should be reserved forever;"and if there were not a place of punishment prepared for such men, there would be defect in the moral administration of the universe.
Those that were clean escaped from them who live in error - Margin, "for a little while."The difference between the margin and the text here arises from a difference of reading in the Greek. Most of the later editions of the Greek Testament coincide with the reading in the margin, (
Poole -> 2Pe 2:18
Poole: 2Pe 2:18 - -- Great swelling words of vanity i.e. big words, full of sound, and void of sense, at least of truth. He seems to tax the affected, vain speech of sedu...
Great swelling words of vanity i.e. big words, full of sound, and void of sense, at least of truth. He seems to tax the affected, vain speech of seducers, who were wont to clothe their erroneous doctrines (if not disguise the truths of God) with strange, uncouth phrases, which made a show of some rare discoveries, or deep mysteries, whereas indeed they were empty of any thing solid, or tending to edification.
They allure: as with a bait; a metaphor taken from the manner of taking fish.
Through the lusts of the flesh to which they give liberty, as a bait to draw men after them.
Through much wantonness this explains the former, and shows what lusts they indulge men in, viz. wantonness and uncleanness.
Those that were clean escaped truly, or really, which seems the better reading than that in the margin: and this is said of them:
1. In respect of the profession they made of a real conversion.
2. In respect of the assent they gave to the word by which they were called.
3. In respect of the change that appeared in their outward conversation.
From them who live in error: whether the error of Judaism, or heathenism, wherein they had been formerly involved, and others still were. This might be the case of some in whom yet there was no saving change wrought; that they might be brought off from these more foul ways of sin and error in which they had walked and yet might afterward return to the same, or as bad, Mat 12:43 13:21 .
Gill -> 2Pe 2:18
Gill: 2Pe 2:18 - -- For when they speak great swelling words of vanity,.... Marvellous things against the God of gods, great things and blasphemies against God, his name...
For when they speak great swelling words of vanity,.... Marvellous things against the God of gods, great things and blasphemies against God, his name, his tabernacle, and his saints; see Dan 11:36; or against men, dominions, and dignities, 2Pe 2:10; or it may design their self-applauses and vain glorying in themselves, and their empty boast of knowledge and learning; and also express the windiness of their doctrines, and the bombast style, and high flown strains of rhetoric in which they were delivered; as likewise the flattering titles they bestowed on men for the sake of their own worldly interest and advantage; see Jud 1:16 and hereby
they allure, through the lusts of the flesh, through much wantonness, those that were clean escaped from them who live in error: that is, from those who lived in the error of Heathenism or Judaism, from whom, and which, they were clean escaped; or truly, really, and entirely delivered, being fully convinced of the falsity thereof, and of the truth of the Christian religion; though some copies, as the Alexandrian, and two of Beza's, and two of Stephens's, read, not