collapse all  

Text -- 1 Peter 1:22 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
1:22 You have purified your souls by obeying the truth in order to show sincere mutual love. So love one another earnestly from a pure heart.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: UNFEIGNED | Truth | Sincerity | Regeneration | Purity | PETER, THE SECOND EPISTLE OF | One Another | Man | Love | Holy Spirit | Heart | HYPOCRISY; HYPROCRITE | Fraternity | FERVENT | Brother | BROTHERLY KINDNESS; BROTHERLY LOVE | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , PBC , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , Maclaren , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: 1Pe 1:22 - -- Seeing ye have purified ( hēgnikotes ). Perfect active participle of hagnizō , old verb from hagnos (pure), here with psuchas (souls), with k...

Seeing ye have purified ( hēgnikotes ).

Perfect active participle of hagnizō , old verb from hagnos (pure), here with psuchas (souls), with kardias (hearts) in Jam 4:8 as in 1Jo 3:3 of moral cleansing also. See the ceremonial sense of the word as in lxx in Joh 11:55; Act 21:24, Act 21:26; Act 24:18.

Robertson: 1Pe 1:22 - -- In your obedience ( en tēi hupakoēi ). With repetition of the idea in 1Pe 1:2, 1Pe 1:14 (children of obedience).

In your obedience ( en tēi hupakoēi ).

With repetition of the idea in 1Pe 1:2, 1Pe 1:14 (children of obedience).

Robertson: 1Pe 1:22 - -- To the truth ( tēs aletheias ). Objective genitive with which compare Joh 17:17, Joh 17:19 about sanctification in the truth and 2Th 2:12 about bel...

To the truth ( tēs aletheias ).

Objective genitive with which compare Joh 17:17, Joh 17:19 about sanctification in the truth and 2Th 2:12 about believing the truth. There is cleansing power in the truth of God in Christ.

Robertson: 1Pe 1:22 - -- Unfeigned ( anupokriton ). Late and rare double compound, here alone in Peter, but see Jam 3:17; 2Co 6:6, etc. No other kind of philadelphia (broth...

Unfeigned ( anupokriton ).

Late and rare double compound, here alone in Peter, but see Jam 3:17; 2Co 6:6, etc. No other kind of philadelphia (brotherly love) is worth having (1Th 4:9; Heb 13:1; 2Pe 1:7).

Robertson: 1Pe 1:22 - -- From the heart fervently ( ek kardias ektenōs ). Late adverb (in inscriptions, Polybius, lxx). The adjective ektenēs is more common (1Pe 4:8).

From the heart fervently ( ek kardias ektenōs ).

Late adverb (in inscriptions, Polybius, lxx). The adjective ektenēs is more common (1Pe 4:8).

Vincent: 1Pe 1:22 - -- Purified ( ἡγνικότες ) The Septuagint translation of the Old-Testament technical term for the purification of the people and priests...

Purified ( ἡγνικότες )

The Septuagint translation of the Old-Testament technical term for the purification of the people and priests (Joshua 3:5; 1 Chronicles 15:12; 1 Samuel 16:5). Also, of the separation from wine and strong drink by the Nazarite (Num 6:2-6). In this ceremonial sense, Joh 11:55; Act 21:24, Act 21:26; Act 24:18. In the moral sense, as here, Jam 4:8; 1Jo 3:3. Compare καθαρίσας , purifying, Act 15:9.

Vincent: 1Pe 1:22 - -- Obeying ( ὑπακοῇ ) Rev., obedience. A peculiarly New Testament term unknown in classical Greek. In the Septuagint only 2 Samuel 22:...

Obeying ( ὑπακοῇ )

Rev., obedience. A peculiarly New Testament term unknown in classical Greek. In the Septuagint only 2 Samuel 22:36; rendered in A. V. gentleness. Rev., condescension, in margin.

Vincent: 1Pe 1:22 - -- Unfeigned ( ἀνυπόκριτον ) Ἀ , not, ὑποκριτής , actor. The latter word is from ὑποκρίνεσθαι , t...

Unfeigned ( ἀνυπόκριτον )

Ἀ , not, ὑποκριτής , actor. The latter word is from ὑποκρίνεσθαι , to answer on the stage, and hence to play a part or to act. A hypocrite is, therefore, an actor .

Vincent: 1Pe 1:22 - -- With a pure heart ( ἐκ καθαρᾶς καρδίας ) The best texts reject καθαρᾶς , pure. Render, therefore, as Rev., from...

With a pure heart ( ἐκ καθαρᾶς καρδίας )

The best texts reject καθαρᾶς , pure. Render, therefore, as Rev., from the heart.

Vincent: 1Pe 1:22 - -- Fervently ( ἐκτενῶς ) Used by Peter only, and only in this passage. He uses the kindred adjective ἐκτενής without ceasing...

Fervently ( ἐκτενῶς )

Used by Peter only, and only in this passage. He uses the kindred adjective ἐκτενής without ceasing, in Act 12:5, where the narrative probably came from him, and also at 1Pe 4:8; " fervent charity." The words are compounded with the verb τείνω , to stretch, and signify intense strain; feeling on the rack.

Wesley: 1Pe 1:22 - -- Having purified your souls by obeying the truth through the Spirit, who bestows upon you freely, both obedience and purity of heart, and unfeigned lov...

Having purified your souls by obeying the truth through the Spirit, who bestows upon you freely, both obedience and purity of heart, and unfeigned love of the brethren, go on to still higher degrees of love.

Wesley: 1Pe 1:22 - -- With the most strong and tender affection; and yet with a pure heart - Pure from any spot of unholy desire or inordinate passion.

With the most strong and tender affection; and yet with a pure heart - Pure from any spot of unholy desire or inordinate passion.

JFB: 1Pe 1:22 - -- 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 purifi...

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 (Act 15:9; Rom 1:5, "obedience to the faith").

JFB: 1Pe 1:22 - -- Omitted in the oldest manuscripts. The Holy Spirit is the purifier by bestowing the obedience of faith (1Pe 1:2; 1Co 12:3).

Omitted in the oldest manuscripts. The Holy Spirit is the purifier by bestowing the obedience of faith (1Pe 1:2; 1Co 12:3).

JFB: 1Pe 1:22 - -- 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...

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].

JFB: 1Pe 1:22 - -- 1Pe 2:1-2, "laying aside . . . hypocrisies . . . sincere."

1Pe 2:1-2, "laying aside . . . hypocrisies . . . sincere."

JFB: 1Pe 1:22 - -- That is, of Christians. Brotherly love is distinct from common love. "The Christian loves primarily those in Christ; secondarily, all who might be in ...

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.

JFB: 1Pe 1:22 - -- 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.

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.

JFB: 1Pe 1:22 - -- The oldest manuscripts read, "(love) from the heart."

The oldest manuscripts read, "(love) from the heart."

JFB: 1Pe 1:22 - -- Greek, "intensely": with all the powers on the stretch (1Pe 4:8). "Instantly" (Act 26:7).

Greek, "intensely": with all the powers on the stretch (1Pe 4:8). "Instantly" (Act 26:7).

Clarke: 1Pe 1:22 - -- Seeing ye have purified your souls - Having purified your souls, in obeying the truth - by believing in Christ Jesus, through the influence and teac...

Seeing ye have purified your souls - Having purified your souls, in obeying the truth - by believing in Christ Jesus, through the influence and teaching of the Spirit; and giving full proof of it by unfeigned love to the brethren; ye love one another, or ye will love each other, with a pure heart fervently. These persons

First, heard the truth, that is, the Gospel; thus called in a great variety of places in the New Testament, because it contains The truth without mixture of error, and is the truth and substance of all the preceding dispensations by which it was typified

Secondly, they obeyed that truth, by believing on Him who came into the world to save sinners

Thirdly, through this believing on the Son of God, their hearts were purified by the word of truth applied to them by the Holy Spirit

Fourthly, the love of God being shed abroad in their hearts by the Holy Ghost, they loved the brethren with pure hearts fervently, εκτενως, intensely or continually; the full proof that their brotherly love was unfeigned, φιλαδελφιαν ανυποκριτον, a fraternal affection without hypocrisy.

Calvin: 1Pe 1:22 - -- 22.Seeing ye have purified your souls, or, Purifying your souls. Erasmus badly renders the words, “Who have purified,” etc. For Peter does not ...

22.Seeing ye have purified your souls, or, Purifying your souls. Erasmus badly renders the words, “Who have purified,” etc. For Peter does not declare what they had done, but reminds them of what they ought to do. The participle is indeed in the past tense, but it may be rendered as a gerund, “By purifying, etc. ” The meaning is, that their souls would not be capable of receiving grace until they were purified, and by this our uncleanness is proved. 17 But that he might not seem to ascribe to us the power of purifying our souls, he immediately adds, through the Spirit; as though he had said, “Your souls are to be purified, but as ye cannot do this, offer them to God, that he may take away your filth by his Spirit.” He only mentions souls, though they needed to be cleansed also from the defilements of the flesh, as Paul bids the Corinthians, (2Co 7:1;) but as the principal uncleanness is within, and necessarily draws with it that which is outward, Peter was satisfied with mentioning only the former, as though he had said, that not outward actions only ought to be corrected, but the very hearts ought to be thoroughly reformed.

He afterwards points out the manner, for purity of soul consists in obedience to God. Truth is to be taken for the rule which God prescribes to us in the Gospel. Nor does he speak only of works, but rather faith holds here the primacy. Hence Paul specially teaches us in the first and last chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, that faith is that by which we obey God; and Peter in Acts, Act 15:9, bestows on it this eulogy, that God by it purifies the heart.

Unto love of the brethren, or, Unto brotherly love. He briefly reminds us what God especially requires in our life, and the mark to which all our endeavors should be directed. So Paul in Eph 1:4 the Epistle to the Ephesians, when speaking of the perfection of the faithful, makes it to consist in love. And this is what we ought the more carefully to notice, because the world makes its own sanctity to consist of the veriest trifles, and almost overlooks this the chief thing. We see how the Papists weary themselves beyond measure with thousand invented superstitions: in the meantime, the last thing is that love which God especially commends. This, then, is the reason why Peter calls our attention to it, when speaking of a life rightly formed.

He had before spoken of the mortification of the flesh, and of our conformity with the will of God; but he now reminds us of what God would have us to cultivate through life, that is, mutual love towards one another; for by that we testify also that we love God; and by this evidence God proves who they are who really love him.

He calls it unfeigned, (ἀνυπόκριτον), as Paul calls faith in 1Ti 1:5; for nothing is more difficult than to love our neighbors in sincerity. For the love of ourselves rules, which is full of hypocrisy; and besides, every one measures his love, which he shews to others, by his own advantage, and not by the rule of doing good. He adds, fervently; for the more slothful we are by nature, the more ought every one to stimulate himself to fervor and earnestness, and that not only once, but more and more daily.

Defender: 1Pe 1:22 - -- Note that truth (that is, God's Word), if obeyed, will generate a purified soul and genuine love."

Note that truth (that is, God's Word), if obeyed, will generate a purified soul and genuine love."

TSK: 1Pe 1:22 - -- ye have : Joh 15:3, Joh 17:17, Joh 17:19; Act 15:9; Rom 6:16, Rom 6:17; 2Th 2:13; Jam 4:8 in : 1Pe 3:1, 1Pe 4:17; Act 6:7; Rom 1:5, Rom 2:8; Gal 3:1, ...

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 1Pe 1:22 - -- Seeing ye have purified your souls - Greek, "Having purified your souls."The apostles were never afraid of referring to human agency as having ...

Seeing ye have purified your souls - Greek, "Having purified your souls."The apostles were never afraid of referring to human agency as having an important part in saving the soul Compare 1Co 4:15. No one is made pure without personal intention or effort - any more than one becomes accomplished or learned without personal exertion. One of the leading effects of the agency of the Holy Spirit is to excite us to make efforts for our own salvation; and there is no true piety which is not the fair result of culture, as really as the learning of a Person, or the harvest of the farmer. The amount of effort which we make "in purifying our souls"is usually also the measure of our attainments in religion. No one can expect to have any true piety beyond the amount of effort which he makes to be conformed to God, any more than one can expect wealth, or fame, or learning, without exertion.

In obeying the truth - That is, your yielding to the requirements of truth, and to its fair influence on your minds, has been the means of your becoming pure. The truth here referred to is, undoubtedly, that which is revealed in the gospel - the great system of truth respecting the redemption of the world.

Through the Spirit - By the agency of the Holy Spirit. It is his office to apply truth to the mind; and however precious the truth may be, and however adapted to secure certain results on the soul, it will never produce those effects without the influences of the Holy Spirit. Compare Tit 3:5-6; the notes at Joh 3:5.

Unto unfeigned love of the brethren - The effect of the influence of the Holy Spirit in applying the truth has been to produce sincere love to all who are true Christians. Compare the Joh 13:34 note; 1Th 4:9 note. See also 1Jo 3:14-18.

See that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently - Compare the Heb 13:1 note; Joh 13:34-35 notes; Eph 5:2 note. The phrase "with a pure heart fervently,"means:

(1)\caps1     t\caps0 hat it should be genuine love proceeding from a heart in which there is no guile or hypocrisy; and,

(2)\caps1     t\caps0 hat it should be intense affection, ( ἐκτενῶς ektenōs ;) not cold and formal, but ardent and strong.

If there is any reason why we should love true Christians at all, there is the same reason why our attachment to them should be intense. This verse establishes the following points:

(1) That truth was at the foundation of their piety. They had none of which this was not the proper basis; and in which the foundation was not as broad as the superstructure. There is no religion in the world which is not the fair developement of truth; which the truth is not suited to produce.

\caps1 (2) t\caps0 hey became Christians as the result of obeying the truth; or by yielding to its fair influence on the soul. Their own minds complied with its claims; their own hearts yielded; there was the exercise of their own volitions. This expresses a doctrine of great importance:

(a)    There is always the exercise of the powers of the mind in true religion; always a yielding to truth; always a voluntary reception of it into the soul.

\tx720 \tx1080 (b)    Religion is always of the nature of obedience. It consists in yielding to what is true and right; in laying aside the feelings of opposition, and in allowing the mind to follow where truth and duty lead.

©    This would always take place when the truth is presented to the mind, if there were no voluntary resistance. If all people were ready to yield to the truth, they would become Christians. The only reason why all people do not love and serve God is that they refuse to yield to what they know to be true and right.

\caps1 (3) t\caps0 he agency by which this was accomplished was that of the Holy Spirit. Truth is adapted in itself to a certain end or result, as seed is adapted to produce a harvest. But it will no more of itself produce its appropriate effects on the soul, than seed will produce a harvest without rains, and dews, and suns. In all cases, therefore, the proper effect of truth on the soul is to be traced to the influence of the Holy Spirit, as the germination of the seed in the earth is to the foreign cause that acts on it. No man was ever converted by the mere effect of truth without the agency of the Holy Spirit, any more than seed germinates when laid upon a hard rock.

\caps1 (4) t\caps0 he effect of this influence of the Holy Spirit in applying the truth is to produce love to all who are Christians. Love to Christian brethren springs up in the soul of everyone who is truly converted: and this love is just as certain evidence that the seed of truth has germinated in the soul, as the green and delicate blade that peeps up through the earth is evidence that the seed sown has been quickened into life. Compare the 1Th 4:9 note; 1Jo 3:14 note. We may learn hence:

\tx720 \tx1080 (a)\caps1     t\caps0 hat truth is of inestimable value. It is as valuable as religion itself, for all the religion in the world is the result of it.

(b)    Error and falsehood are mischievous and evil in the same degree. There is no true religion which is the fair result of error; and all the pretended religion that is sustained by error is worthless.

©    If a system of religion, or a religious measure or doctrine, cannot be defended by truth, it should be at once abandoned. Compare the notes at Job 13:7.

(d)    We should avoid the places where error is taught. Pro 19:27, "cease, my son, to hear the instruction that causeth to err from the words of knowledge."

(e)    We should place ourselves under the teachings of truth, for there is truth enough in the world to occupy all our time and attention; and it is only by truth that our minds can be benefitted.

Poole: 1Pe 1:22 - -- Your souls i.e. yourselves; the whole person is implied, the soul being the principal part. In obeying the truth in subjecting yourselves to the tr...

Your souls i.e. yourselves; the whole person is implied, the soul being the principal part.

In obeying the truth in subjecting yourselves to the truth of the gospel, by faith, to which the purification of the heart is ascribed, Act 15:9 , not only as to justification, and purging away the guilt of sin, but as to sanctification, and cleansing from the defilement of it: q.d. Seeing ye have begun to purify your hearts by faith in Christ, set forth in the gospel, and made sanctification to them that believe, 1Co 1:30 .

Through the Spirit by the operation of the Spirit working faith in you.

Unto unfeigned love of the brethren without hypocrisy, and which is not in word only, but in deed and in truth, 1Jo 3:18 . Love to the brethren in Christ, and for Christ’ s sake. This notes one great end of our sanctification, viz. the exercise of brotherly love, whereby our love to God is likewise manifested, when we love them upon his acconut. The whole clause may likewise be understood, as an exhortation to purify themselves more and more by faith, that so they might (being purged from carnal affections) be the better able, and more disposed, to love one another.

Love one another with a pure heart as the source and fountain of your love to each other, and from whence it proceeds, 1Ti 1:5 2Ti 2:22 .

Fervently or, vehemently, and intensely, strongly. The word seems to be a metaphor taken from a bow, which the more it is bent, with the greater force it sends forth the arrow; so love, the more fervent and strong it is, the more abundantly it puts forth itself for the benefit of others.

PBC: 1Pe 1:22 - -- " obeying the truth" Obedient believers in God take revealed truth seriously. They obey it and purify their lives through its influence. Rather than ...

" obeying the truth"

Obedient believers in God take revealed truth seriously. They obey it and purify their lives through its influence. Rather than rationalize why they shouldn’t apply Scripture to their personal conduct, they gladly seek its wisdom for their lives. Not interested in personal glory, they honor the purifying impact of the gospel as a work of the Holy Spirit. Hardness of heart and other personal sins will promote cynical and critical attitudes toward other believers, the fault-finding spirit personified. Sensitive obedience to God will promote both brotherly love and self-sacrificing love toward other believers.

64

See WebbSr: VIEWS GIVEN

See WebbSr: VIEWS GIVEN (3)

Gill: 1Pe 1:22 - -- Seeing ye have purified your souls,.... The apostle passes to another exhortation, namely, to brotherly love; the ground of which he makes to be, the ...

Seeing ye have purified your souls,.... The apostle passes to another exhortation, namely, to brotherly love; the ground of which he makes to be, the purification of their souls; and which supposes that they had been impure; and indeed, their whole persons, souls and bodies, were so by nature; even all the members of their bodies, and all the powers and faculties of their souls: it is internal purity, purity of the heart, that is here particularly respected; though not to the exclusion of outward purity, for where there is the former, there will be the latter; but there may be an external purity, where there is not the inward one: this the apostle ascribes to the saints themselves, but not without the grace of God, the blood of Christ, and the operations of his Spirit; as appears by a following clause; but they are said to purify themselves, inasmuch as having the grace of faith bestowed on them, they were enabled, under the influences of the Spirit of God, to exercise it on the blood of Christ, which cleanses from all sin:

in obeying the truth; of the Gospel, by receiving, believing, and embracing it in the love of it; which teaches outward purity, and is a means in the hand of the spirit of inward purity, and of directing to the purifying blood of Jesus, who sanctifies and cleanses by the word:

through the Spirit; this clause is left out in the Alexandrian copy, and some others, and in the Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and Ethiopic versions, but is in the Arabic version, and ought to be retained; for, as Christ died to purify to himself a peculiar people, the Spirit of Christ does from him purify the heart by faith in his blood; by sprinkling that on the conscience, and by leading the faith of God's people to the fountain of it, to wash it for sin, and for uncleanness; even both their consciences and their conversation, garments; whereby they obtain inward and outward purity:

unto unfeigned love of the brethren; which is the end of sanctification, and an evidence of it; when the saints are loved as brethren, and because such; and with a love without dissimulation, not in word and in tongue only, but in deed and in truth: this being the case, the exhortation follows:

see that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently: this is Christ's new commandment, and the evidence of regeneration; a distinguishing badge of Christianity, and without which all profession of religion is a vain and empty thing: this should he mutual and cordial; should proceed from the heart, and from an heart sprinkled from an evil conscience; and should be with warmth and fervency, and not with coldness and indifference; though the word here used, εκτενως, may not only design the intenseness of it, but the extensiveness of it also; as that it should reach to all the saints, the poor as well as the rich, and the lesser as well as the greater and more knowing believers; and likewise may denote the continuance of it; it ought to be continually exercised, and to last always; and so the Arabic version renders it, "with a perpetual love".

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 1Pe 1:22 A few mss (A B 1852 pc) lack καθαρᾶς (kaqaras, “pure”) and read simply καρδί&...

Geneva Bible: 1Pe 1:22 ( 13 ) Seeing ye have purified your souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit unto unfeigned love of the brethren, [see that ye] love one another ...

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 1Pe 1:1-25 - --1 He blesses God for his manifold spiritual graces;10 shewing that the salvation in Christ is no news, but a thing prophesied of old;13 and exhorts th...

Maclaren: 1Pe 1:22 - --Purifying The Soul "ye have purified your souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit unto unfeigned love of the brethren.'--1 Peter 1:22. NOTE the...

MHCC: 1Pe 1:17-25 - --Holy confidence in God as a Father, and awful fear of him as a Judge, agree together; and to regard God always as a Judge, makes him dear to us as a F...

Matthew Henry: 1Pe 1:13-23 - -- Here the apostle begins his exhortations to those whose glorious state he had before described, thereby instructing us that Christianity is a doctri...

Barclay: 1Pe 1:14-25 - --There are three great lines of approach in this passage and we look at them one by one. (1) Jesus Christ Redeemer And Lord It has great things to say ...

Constable: 1Pe 1:3--2:11 - --II. The Identity of Christians 1:3--2:10 The recurrence of the direct address, "Beloved," in 2:11 and 4:12 divid...

Constable: 1Pe 1:13-25 - --B. Our New Way of Life 1:13-25 Peter wanted his readers to live joyfully in the midst of sufferings. Con...

Constable: 1Pe 1:22-25 - --3. A life of love 1:22-25 Peter next turned his attention from the believer's duty to God to the believer's duty to his or her Christian brethren. He ...

College: 1Pe 1:1-25 - --1 PETER 1 I. THE GREETING (1:1-2) 1 Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ, To God's elect, strangers in the world, scattered throughout Pontus, Galatia...

expand all
Introduction / Outline

Robertson: 1 Peter (Book Introduction) THE FIRST EPISTLE GENERAL OF PETER ABOUT a.d. 65 By Way of Introduction The Author The Epistle is not anonymous, but claims to be written by "...

JFB: 1 Peter (Book 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,...

JFB: 1 Peter (Outline) ADDRESS TO THE ELECTED OF THE GODHEAD: THANKSGIVING FOR THE LIVING HOPE TO WHICH WE ARE BEGOTTEN, PRODUCING JOY AMIDST SUFFERINGS: THIS SALVATION AN ...

TSK: 1 Peter (Book Introduction) As the design of this Epistle is excellent, remarks Dr. Macknight, so is its execution, in the judgment of the best critics, does not fall short of it...

TSK: 1 Peter 1 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 1Pe 1:1, He blesses God for his manifold spiritual graces; 1Pe 1:10, shewing that the salvation in Christ is no news, but a thing prophes...

Poole: 1 Peter 1 (Chapter Introduction) ARGUMENT Of the penman of this Epistle there is no doubt; and of the time of his writing it, no certainty, whether about the year of our Lord 45, o...

MHCC: 1 Peter (Book Introduction) The same great doctrines, as in St. Paul's epistles, are here applied to same practical purposes. And this epistle is remarkable for the sweetness, ge...

MHCC: 1 Peter 1 (Chapter Introduction) (1Pe 1:1-9) The apostle blesses God for his special benefits through Christ. (1Pe 1:10-12) Salvation by Christ foretold in ancient prophecy. (1Pe 1:...

Matthew Henry: 1 Peter (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The First Epistle General of Peter Two epistles we have enrolled in the sacred canon of the scripture w...

Matthew Henry: 1 Peter 1 (Chapter Introduction) The apostle describes the persons to whom he writes, and salutes them (1Pe 1:1, 1Pe 1:2), blesses God for their regeneration to a lively hope of et...

Barclay: 1 Peter (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO THE FIRST LETTER OF PETER The Catholic Or General Epistles First Peter belongs to that group of New Testament letters which are k...

Barclay: 1 Peter 1 (Chapter Introduction) The Great Inheritance (1Pe_1:1-2) The Chosen Of God And The Exiles Of Eternity (1Pe_1:1-2 Continued) The Three Great Facts Of The Christian Life ...

Constable: 1 Peter (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical background This epistle claims that the Apostle Peter wrote it...

Constable: 1 Peter (Outline) Outline I. Introduction 1:1-2 II. The identity of Christians 1:3-2:10 A....

Constable: 1 Peter 1 Peter Bibliography Bailey, Mark L., and Thomas L. Constable. The New Testament Explorer. Nashville: Word Publ...

Haydock: 1 Peter (Book Introduction) THE FIRST EPISTLE OF ST. PETER, THE APOSTLE. INTRODUCTION. This first Epistle of St. Peter, though brief, contains much doctrine concerning fa...

Gill: 1 Peter (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 1 PETER That Simon, called Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ, was the writer of this epistle, is not questioned by any; nor was the...

Gill: 1 Peter 1 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 1 PETER 1 In this chapter, after the inscription and salutation, the apostle gives thanks to God for various blessings of grace bestow...

College: 1 Peter (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION This commentary is written for the general reader with a serious interest in Scripture. Its purpose is to provide a historical interpret...

College: 1 Peter (Outline) OUTLINE I. THE GREETING - 1:1-2 II. A CALL TO BE HOLY - 1:3-2:10 A. The Hope of Salvation - 1:3-9 B. The Glory of This Salvation - 1:10-1...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


created in 0.09 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA