
Text -- 1 Peter 2:20-25 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: 1Pe 2:20 - -- For what glory ( poion gar kleos ).
Qualitative interrogative (what kind of glory). "What price glory?"Kleos is old word from kleō (kaleō , t...
For what glory (
Qualitative interrogative (what kind of glory). "What price glory?"

Robertson: 1Pe 2:20 - -- If ye shall take it patiently ( ei hupomeneite ).
First-class condition with ei and future active indicative of hupomenō , for which see Jam 1:12...
If ye shall take it patiently (
First-class condition with

Robertson: 1Pe 2:20 - -- When ye sin ( hamartanontes ).
Present active participle of hamartanō (continued repetition).
When ye sin (
Present active participle of

Robertson: 1Pe 2:20 - -- And are buffeted for it ( kai kolaphizomenoi ).
Present passive participle of kolaphizō , late word (from kolaphos fist), only in N.T. (cf. Mat 2...
And are buffeted for it (
Present passive participle of

Robertson: 1Pe 2:20 - -- When ye do well ( agathopoiountes ).
Present active participle of agathopoieō as in 1Pe 2:15.
When ye do well (
Present active participle of

Robertson: 1Pe 2:20 - -- And suffer for it ( kai paschontes ).
Present active participle of paschō (1Pe 2:19). No "for it"in the Greek here or in the previous sentence.
And suffer for it (
Present active participle of

Robertson: 1Pe 2:20 - -- This is acceptable with God ( touto charis para theōi ).
"This thing (neuter) is thanks (1Pe 2:19) by the side of (para ) God (as God looks at it)...
This is acceptable with God (
"This thing (neuter) is thanks (1Pe 2:19) by the side of (

Robertson: 1Pe 2:21 - -- For hereunto were ye called ( eis touto gar eklēthēte ).
First aorist indicative of kaleō , to call. They were called to suffer without flinchi...
For hereunto were ye called (
First aorist indicative of

Robertson: 1Pe 2:21 - -- Because ( hoti ).
The fact that Christ suffered (epathen ) lifts their suffering to a new plane.
Because (
The fact that Christ suffered (

Robertson: 1Pe 2:21 - -- Leaving you an example ( humin hupolimpanōn hupogrammon ).
Present active participle of the late Ionic verb hupolimpanō (in the papyri) for the...
Leaving you an example (
Present active participle of the late Ionic verb

Robertson: 1Pe 2:21 - -- That ye should follow his steps ( hina epakolouthēsēte tois ichnesin autou ).
Purpose clause with hina and first aorist active subjunctive of e...
That ye should follow his steps (
Purpose clause with

Robertson: 1Pe 2:22 - -- Who did no sin ( hos hamartian ouk epoiēsen ).
Quotation from Isa 53:9. He has already expressed the sinlessness of Christ in 1Pe 1:19. The next cl...

Robertson: 1Pe 2:22 - -- Was found ( heurethē ).
First aorist passive indicative of heuriskō . Christ’ s guilelessness stood the test of scrutiny (Vincent), as Peter...

Robertson: 1Pe 2:23 - -- When he was reviled ( loidoroumenos ).
Present passive participle of loidoreō , old verb (from loidoros , reviler, 1Co 5:11) as in Joh 9:28.

Robertson: 1Pe 2:23 - -- Reviled not again ( ouk anteloidorei ).
Imperfect active (for repeated incidents) of antiloidoreō , late and rare compound (Plutarch, Lucian, one p...
Reviled not again (
Imperfect active (for repeated incidents) of

Robertson: 1Pe 2:23 - -- Threatened not ( ouk ēpeilei ).
Imperfect again (repeated acts) of apeileō , old compound (from apeilē , threat, Act 9:1), in N.T. only here an...

Robertson: 1Pe 2:23 - -- But committed himself ( paredidou de ).
Imperfect active again (kept on committing himself) of paradidōmi , to hand over, usually of one to a judge...
But committed himself (
Imperfect active again (kept on committing himself) of

Robertson: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Who his own self ( hos autos ).
Intensive pronoun with the relative referring to Christ (note relatives also in 1Pe 2:22, 1Pe 2:23).

Robertson: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Bare our sins ( anēnegken tas hamartias hēmōn ).
Second aorist active indicative of anapherō , common verb of bringing sacrifice to the altar...
Bare our sins (
Second aorist active indicative of

Robertson: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Upon the tree ( epi to xulon ).
Not tree here as in Luk 23:31, originally just wood (1Co 3:12), then something made of wood, as a gibbet or cross. So...

Robertson: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Having died unto sins ( tais hamartiais apogenomenoi ).
Second aorist middle participle of apoginomai , old compound to get away from, with dative (a...
Having died unto sins (
Second aorist middle participle of

Robertson: 1Pe 2:24 - -- That we might live unto righteousness ( hina tēi dikaiosunēi zēsōmen ).
Purpose clause with hina and the first aorist active subjunctive of...

Robertson: 1Pe 2:24 - -- By whose stripes ye were healed ( hou tōi mōlōpi iathēte ).
From Isa 53:5. First aorist passive indicative of iaomai , common verb to heal (J...
By whose stripes ye were healed (
From Isa 53:5. First aorist passive indicative of

Robertson: 1Pe 2:25 - -- For ye were going astray like sheep ( ēte gar hōs probata planōmenoi ).
Brought from Isa 53:6, but changed to periphrastic imperfect indicative...
For ye were going astray like sheep (
Brought from Isa 53:6, but changed to periphrastic imperfect indicative with

Robertson: 1Pe 2:25 - -- But are now returned ( alla epestraphēte ).
Second aorist passive indicative of epistrephō , old verb, to turn, to return (Mat 10:13).
But are now returned (
Second aorist passive indicative of

Robertson: 1Pe 2:25 - -- Unto the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls ( epi ton poimena kai episkopon tōn psuchōn humōn ).
Jesus called himself the Good Shepherd (Joh 10:...
Unto the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls (
Jesus called himself the Good Shepherd (Joh 10:11, and see also Heb 13:20). Here alone is Christ called our "Bishop"(overseer). See both ideas combined in Eze 34:11. Philo calls God
Vincent: 1Pe 2:20 - -- What glory ( ποῖον κλέος )
Lit., what kind of glory. This word for glory occurs nowhere else in the New Testament.
What glory (
Lit., what kind of glory. This word for glory occurs nowhere else in the New Testament.

Vincent: 1Pe 2:20 - -- Buffeted ( κολαφιζόμενοι )
See Mat 26:67 : struck with the fist. This whole passage, 1Pe 2:19-24, bears the mark of Peter's memori...
Buffeted (
See Mat 26:67 : struck with the fist. This whole passage, 1Pe 2:19-24, bears the mark of Peter's memories of the scene of Christ's last sufferings (see Introduction) - the blows of the servants, the scorn of the high-priest, the silent submission of Jesus, the cross, the stripes.

Leaving (
Only here in the New Testament.

Vincent: 1Pe 2:21 - -- An example ( ὑπογραμμὸν )
Only here in the New Testament. A graphic word, meaning a copy set by writing-masters for their pupils....
An example (
Only here in the New Testament. A graphic word, meaning a copy set by writing-masters for their pupils. Some explain it as a copy of characters over which the student is to trace the lines.

Vincent: 1Pe 2:21 - -- Follow ( ἐπακολουθήσητε )
Lit., follow upon. The compound verb implies close following. From writers and painters, the ...
Follow (
Lit., follow upon. The compound verb implies close following. From writers and painters, the metaphor changes now to a guide.

Vincent: 1Pe 2:22 - -- Found ( εὑρέθη )
Stronger than the simple was, and indicating a guilelessness which had stood the test of scrutiny. Compare Mat 26:...

Reviled - again (
Only here in the New Testament.

Vincent: 1Pe 2:23 - -- Committed himself ( παρεδίδου )
But this gives a reflexive force to the verb which has no parallel. Commentators are divided, some sup...
Committed himself (
But this gives a reflexive force to the verb which has no parallel. Commentators are divided, some supplying his cause, as Rev., in margin; others, his judgment; others, his revilers. Better, the subject of the contest - his insults and injuries. Salmond renders, but left it to him, etc.

Vincent: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Bare ( ἀνήνεγκεν )
See on 1Pe 2:5. Bare up to the cross, as to an altar, and offered himself thereon.
Bare (
See on 1Pe 2:5. Bare up to the cross, as to an altar, and offered himself thereon.

Vincent: 1Pe 2:24 - -- The tree ( ξύλον )
Lit., wood. Peter uses the same peculiar term for the cross, Act 5:30; Act 10:39.

Vincent: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Being dead ( ἀπογενόμενοι )
Rev., more strictly, having died. Used here only in the New Testament. The rendering of the verb ca...
Being dead (
Rev., more strictly, having died. Used here only in the New Testament. The rendering of the verb can be given only in a clumsy way, having become off unto sin ; not becoming separate from sins, but having ceased to exist as regards them. Compare Rom 6:18.

Vincent: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Stripes ( μώλωπι )
Lit., bruise. So Rev., in margin. Only here in New Testament; meaning a bloody wale which arises under a blow. " S...
Stripes (
Lit., bruise. So Rev., in margin. Only here in New Testament; meaning a bloody wale which arises under a blow. " Such a sight we feel sure, as we read this descriptive passage, St. Peter's eyes beheld on the body of his Master, and the flesh so dreadfully mangled made the disfigured form appear in his eyes like one single bruise" (Lumby).

Vincent: 1Pe 2:25 - -- For ye were as sheep going astray ( ἦτε γὰρ ὡς πρόβατα πλανώμενοι );
i.e., as commonly understood, ye were ...
For ye were as sheep going astray (
i.e., as commonly understood, ye were like straying sheep. But the ye were should be construed with the participle going astray, the verb and the participle together denoting habitual action or condition. Render, as Rev., ye were going astray like sheep. See on Mar 12:24.
Wesley -> 1Pe 2:21; 1Pe 2:21; 1Pe 2:21; 1Pe 2:21; 1Pe 2:22-23; 1Pe 2:22-23; 1Pe 2:24; 1Pe 2:24; 1Pe 2:24; 1Pe 2:25
Christians.

Wesley: 1Pe 2:22-23 - -- In all these instances the example of Christ is peculiarly adapted to the state of servants, who easily slide either into sin or guile, reviling their...
In all these instances the example of Christ is peculiarly adapted to the state of servants, who easily slide either into sin or guile, reviling their fellowservants, or threatening them, the natural result of anger without power.

Wesley: 1Pe 2:22-23 - -- The only solid ground of patience in affliction. Isa 53:4, Isa 53:6-7, Isa 53:9.
The only solid ground of patience in affliction. Isa 53:4, Isa 53:6-7, Isa 53:9.

Wesley: 1Pe 2:24 - -- That is, the punishment due to them. In his afflicted, torn, dying body on the tree - The cross, whereon chiefly slaves or servants were wont to suffe...
That is, the punishment due to them. In his afflicted, torn, dying body on the tree - The cross, whereon chiefly slaves or servants were wont to suffer.

Wesley: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Wholly delivered both from the guilt and power of it: indeed, without an atonement first made for the guilt, we could never have been delivered from t...
Wholly delivered both from the guilt and power of it: indeed, without an atonement first made for the guilt, we could never have been delivered from the power.

Which is one only. The sins we had committed, and he bore, were manifold.

The kind observer, inspector, or overseer of your souls.
Greek, "what kind of."

The punishment of slaves, and suddenly inflicted [BENGEL].

JFB: 1Pe 2:20 - -- Some oldest manuscripts read, "for." Then the translation is, "But if when . . . ye take it patiently (it is a glory), for this is acceptable."
Some oldest manuscripts read, "for." Then the translation is, "But if when . . . ye take it patiently (it is a glory), for this is acceptable."

JFB: 1Pe 2:21 - -- Christ's example a proof that patient endurance under undeserved sufferings is acceptable with God.
Christ's example a proof that patient endurance under undeserved sufferings is acceptable with God.

JFB: 1Pe 2:21 - -- 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."
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."

JFB: 1Pe 2:21 - -- His dying for us is the highest exemplification of "doing well" (1Pe 2:20). Ye must patiently suffer, being innocent, as Christ also innocently suffer...
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.

Behind: so the Greek: on His departure to the Father, to His glory.

JFB: 1Pe 2:21 - -- 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 gra...
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.

Footsteps, namely, of His patience combined with innocence.

JFB: 1Pe 2:22 - -- Greek aorist. "Never in a single instance did" [ALFORD]. Quoted from Isa 53:9, end, Septuagint.
Greek aorist. "Never in a single instance did" [ALFORD]. Quoted from Isa 53:9, end, Septuagint.

JFB: 1Pe 2:22 - -- 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, ...

JFB: 1Pe 2:23 - -- 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 ins...
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.

JFB: 1Pe 2:23 - -- 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 Rom 12:19, on our co...
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 Rom 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.

JFB: 1Pe 2:24 - -- 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 antitheti...
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).

JFB: 1Pe 2:24 - -- 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 promine...
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.

JFB: 1Pe 2:24 - -- 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 ...
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].

JFB: 1Pe 2:24 - -- 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) d...
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.

JFB: 1Pe 2:24 - -- 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...
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].

JFB: 1Pe 2:24 - -- A paradox, yet true. "Ye servants (compare 'buffeted,' 'the tree,' 1Pe 2:20, 1Pe 2:24) often bear the strife; but it is not more than your Lord Himsel...

JFB: 1Pe 2:25 - -- 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," &...
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.

JFB: 1Pe 2:25 - -- 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 "bis...
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."
Clarke: 1Pe 2:20 - -- For what glory is it - It appears from this that the poor Christians, and especially those who had been converted to Christianity while in a state o...
For what glory is it - It appears from this that the poor Christians, and especially those who had been converted to Christianity while in a state of slavery, were often grievously abused, they were buffeted because they were Christians, and because they would not join with their masters in idolatrous worship.

Clarke: 1Pe 2:21 - -- Hereunto were ye called - Ye were called to a state of suffering when ye were called to be Christians; for the world cannot endure the yoke of Chris...
Hereunto were ye called - Ye were called to a state of suffering when ye were called to be Christians; for the world cannot endure the yoke of Christ, and they that will live godly in Christ must suffer persecution; they will meet with it in one form or other

Clarke: 1Pe 2:21 - -- Christ also suffered for us - And left us the example of his meekness and gentleness; for when he was reviled, he reviled not again. Ye cannot expec...
Christ also suffered for us - And left us the example of his meekness and gentleness; for when he was reviled, he reviled not again. Ye cannot expect to fare better than your master; imitate his example, and his Spirit shall comfort and sustain you. Many MSS. and most of the versions, instead of Christ also suffered for Us, leaving Us, etc., read, suffered for You, leaving You, etc. This reading, which I think is genuine, is noticed in the margin.

Clarke: 1Pe 2:22 - -- Who did no sin - He suffered, but not on account of any evil he had either done or said. In deed and word he was immaculate, and yet he was exposed ...
Who did no sin - He suffered, but not on account of any evil he had either done or said. In deed and word he was immaculate, and yet he was exposed to suffering; expect the same, and when it comes bear it in the same spirit. It is very likely that the apostle mentions guile, because those who do wrong generally strive to screen themselves by prevarication and lies. These words appear to be a quotation from Isa 53:9.

Clarke: 1Pe 2:23 - -- But committed himself - Though he could have inflicted any kind of punishment on his persecutors, yet to give us, in this respect also, an example t...
But committed himself - Though he could have inflicted any kind of punishment on his persecutors, yet to give us, in this respect also, an example that we should follow his steps, he committed his cause to him who is the righteous Judge. To avoid evil tempers, and the uneasiness and danger of avenging ourselves, it is a great advantage in all such cases to be able to refer our cause to God, and to be assured that the Judge of all the earth will do right
The Vulgate, one copy of the Itala, St. Cyprian, and Fulgentius, read, Tradebat autem judicanti se injuste ; "He delivered himself to him who judged unrighteously;"meaning Pontius Pilate. Some critics approve of this reading, but it has not sufficient evidence to recommend it as genuine.

Clarke: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Who his own self - Not another in his place, as some anciently supposed, because they thought it impossible that the Christ should suffer
Who his own self - Not another in his place, as some anciently supposed, because they thought it impossible that the Christ should suffer

Clarke: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Bare our sins in his own body - Bore the punishment due to our sins. In no other sense could Christ bear them. To say that they were so imputed to h...
Bare our sins in his own body - Bore the punishment due to our sins. In no other sense could Christ bear them. To say that they were so imputed to him as if they had been his own, and that the Father beheld him as blackened with imputed sin, is monstrous, if not blasphemous

Clarke: 1Pe 2:24 - -- That we, being dead to sins - Ἱνα ταις ἁμαρτιαις απογενομενοι· That we, being freed from sin - delivered out of i...
That we, being dead to sins -

Clarke: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Should live unto righteousness - That righteousness should be our master now, as sin was before. He is speaking still lo servants who were under an ...
Should live unto righteousness - That righteousness should be our master now, as sin was before. He is speaking still lo servants who were under an oppressive yoke, and were cruelly used by their masters, scourged, buffeted, and variously maltreated

Clarke: 1Pe 2:24 - -- By whose stripes ye were healed - The apostle refers here to Isa 53:4-6; and he still keeps the case of these persecuted servants in view, and encou...
By whose stripes ye were healed - The apostle refers here to Isa 53:4-6; and he still keeps the case of these persecuted servants in view, and encourages them to suffer patiently by the example of Christ, who was buffeted and scourged, and who bore all this that the deep and inveterate wounds, inflicted on their souls by sin, might be healed.

Clarke: 1Pe 2:25 - -- For ye were as sheep going astray - Formerly ye were not in a better moral condition than your oppressors; ye were like stray sheep, in the wilderne...
For ye were as sheep going astray - Formerly ye were not in a better moral condition than your oppressors; ye were like stray sheep, in the wilderness of ignorance and sin, till Christ, the true and merciful Shepherd, called you back from your wanderings, by sending you the Gospel of his grace

Clarke: 1Pe 2:25 - -- Bishop of your souls - Unless we consider the word bishop as a corruption of the word επισκοπος episcopos , and that this literally signi...
Bishop of your souls - Unless we consider the word bishop as a corruption of the word
Calvin: 1Pe 2:20 - -- It is not, however, an assertion without its difficulty, when he says, that there is nothing praiseworthy in him who is justly punished; for, when t...
It is not, however, an assertion without its difficulty, when he says, that there is nothing praiseworthy in him who is justly punished; for, when the Lord punishes our sins, patience is certainly a sacrifice of sweet odour to him, that is, when we bear with a submissive mind our punishment. But to this I reply, that Peter does not here speak simply but comparatively; for it is a small and slender praise to bear with submission a just punishment, in comparison with that of an innocent man, who willingly bears the wrongs of men, only because he fears God. At the same time he seems indirectly to refer to the motive; because they who suffer punishment for their faults, are influenced by the fear of men. But the reply already given is sufficient.

Calvin: 1Pe 2:21 - -- 21.For even hereunto were ye called For though his discourse was respecting servants, yet this passage ought not to be confined to that subject. For ...
21.For even hereunto were ye called For though his discourse was respecting servants, yet this passage ought not to be confined to that subject. For the Apostle here reminds all the godly in common as to what the condition of Christianity is, as though he had said, that we are called by the Lord for this end, patiently to bear wrongs; and as he says in another place that we are appointed to this. Lest, however, this should seem grievous to us, he consoles us with the example of Christ. Nothing seems more unworthy, and therefore less tolerable, than undeservedly to suffer; but when we turn our eyes to the Son of God, this bitterness is mitigated; for who would refuse to follow him going before us?
But we must notice the words, Leaving us an example 33 For as he treats of imitation, it is necessary to know what in Christ is to be our example. He walked on the sea, he cleansed the leprous, he raised the dead, he restored sight to the blind: to try to imitate him in these things would be absurd. For when he gave these evidences of his power, it was not his object that we should thus imitate him. It has hence happened that his fasting for forty days has been made without reason an example; but what he had in view was far otherwise. We ought, therefore, to exercise in this respect a right judgment; as also Augustine somewhere reminds us, when explaining the following passage,
“Learn of me, for I am meek and lowly in heart.”
(Mat 11:29.)
And the same thing may be learnt from the words of Peter; for he marks the difference by saying that Christ’s patience is what we ought to follow. This subject is handled more at large by Paul in Rom 8:29, where he teaches us that all the children of God are foreordained to be made conformable to the image of Christ, in order that he might be the first-born among many brethren. Hence, that we may live with him, we must previously die with him.

Calvin: 1Pe 2:22 - -- 22.Who did no sin This belongs to the present subject; for, if any one boasts of his own innocence, he must know that Christ did not suffer as a male...
22.Who did no sin This belongs to the present subject; for, if any one boasts of his own innocence, he must know that Christ did not suffer as a malefactor. He, at the same time, shews how far we come short of what Christ was, when he says, that there was no guile found in his mouth; for he who offends not by his tongue, says James, is a perfect man. (Jas 3:2.) He then declares that there was in Christ the highest perfection of innocency, such as no one of us can dare claim for himself. It hence appears more fully how unjustly he suffered beyond all others. There is, therefore, no reason why any one of us should refuse to suffer after his example, since no one is so conscious of having acted rightly, as not to know that he is imperfect.

Calvin: 1Pe 2:23 - -- 23.When he was reviled, or, reproached. Here Peter points out what we are to imitate in Christ, even calmly to bear wrongs, and not to avenge wrongs...
23.When he was reviled, or, reproached. Here Peter points out what we are to imitate in Christ, even calmly to bear wrongs, and not to avenge wrongs. For such is our disposition, that when we receive injuries, our minds immediately boil over with revengeful feelings; but Christ abstained from every kind of retaliation. Our minds, therefore, ought to be bridled, lest we should seek to render evil for evil.
But committed himself, or, his cause. The word cause is not expressed, but it is obviously understood. And Peter adds this for the consolation of the godly, that is, that if they patiently endured the reproaches and violence of the wicked, they would have God as their defender. For it would be a very hard thing for us, to be subjected to the will of the ungodly, and not to have God caring for our wrongs. Peter, therefore, adorns God with this high attribute, that he judgeth righteously, as though he had said, “It behoves us calmly to bear evils; God in the meantime will not neglect what belongs to him, but will shew himself to be a righteous judge.” However wanton then the ungodly may be for a time, yet they shall not be unpunished for the wrongs done now to the children of God. Nor is there any cause for the godly to fear, as though they were without any protection; for since it belongs to God to defend them and to undertake their cause, they are to possess their souls in patience.
Moreover, as this doctrine brings no small consolation, so it avails to allay and subdue the inclinations of the flesh. For no one can recumb on the fidelity and protection of God, but he who in a meek spirit waits for his judgment; for he who leaps to take vengeance, intrudes into what belongs to God, and suffers not God to perform his own office. In reference to this Paul says, “Give place to wrath,” (Rom 12:19;) and thus he intimates that the way is closed up against God that he might not himself judge, when we anticipate him. He then confirms what he had said by the testimony of Moses, “Vengeance is mine.” (Deu 32:35.) Peter in short meant this, that we after the example of Christ shall be more prepared to endure injuries, if we give to God his own honor, that is, if we, believing him to be a righteous judge, refer our right and our cause to him.
It may however be asked, How did Christ commit his cause to the Father; for if he required vengeance from him, this he himself says is not lawful for us; for he bids us to do good to those who injure us, to pray for those who speak evil of us. (Mat 5:44.) To this my reply is, that it appears evident from the gospel-history, that Christ did thus refer his judgment to God, and yet did not demand vengeance to be taken on his enemies, but that, on the contrary, he prayed for them, “Father,” he said, “forgive them.” (Luk 23:34.) And doubtless the feelings of our flesh are far from being in unison with the judgment of God. That any one then may commit his cause to him who judgeth righteously, it is necessary that he should first lay a check on himself, so that he may not ask anything inconsistent with the righteous judgment of God. For they who indulge themselves in looking for vengeance, concede not to God his office of a judge, but in a manner wish him to be an executioner. He then who is so calm in his spirit as to wish his adversaries to become his friends, and endeavors to bring them to the right way, rightly commits to God his own cause, and his prayer is, “Thou, O Lord, knowest my heart, how I wish them to be saved who seek to destroy me: were they converted, I should congratulate them; but if they continue obstinate in their wickedness, for I know that thou watchest over my safety, I commit my cause to thee.” This meekness was manifested by Christ; it is then the rule to be observed by us.

Calvin: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Had he commended nothing in Christ’s death except as an example, it would have been very frigid: he therefore refers to a fruit much more excellent...
Had he commended nothing in Christ’s death except as an example, it would have been very frigid: he therefore refers to a fruit much more excellent. There are then three things to be noticed in this passage. The first is, that Christ by his death has given us an example of patience; the second, that by his death he restored us to life; it hence follows, that we are so bound to him, that we ought cheerfully to follow his example. In the third place, he refers to the general design of his death, that we, being dead to sins, ought to live to righteousness. And all these things confirm his previous exhortation.
24.Who his own self bare our sins This form of speaking is fitted to set forth the efficacy of Christ’s death. For as under the Law, the sinner, that he might be released from guilt, substituted a victim in his own place; so Christ took on himself the curse due to our sins, that he might atone for them before God. And he expressly adds, on the tree, because he could not offer such an expiation except on the cross. Peter, therefore, well expresses the truth, that Christ’s death was a sacrifice for the expiation of our sins; for being fixed to the cross and offering himself a victim for us, he took on himself our sin and our punishment. Isaiah, from whom Peter has taken the substance of his doctrine, employs various forms of expression, — that he was smitten by God’s hand for our sins, that he was wounded for our iniquities, that he was afflicted and broken for our sake, that the chastisement of our peace was laid on him. But Peter intended to set forth the same thing by the words of this verse, even that we are reconciled to God on this condition, because Christ made himself before his tribunal a surety and as one guilty for us, that he might suffer the punishment due to us.
This great benefit the Sophists in their schools obscure as much as they can; for they prattle that by the sacrifice of the death of Christ we are only freed after baptism from guilt, but that punishment is redeemed by satisfactions. But Peter, when he says that he bore our sins, means that not only guilt was imputed to him, but that he also suffered its punishment, that he might thus be an expiatory victim, according to that saying of the Prophet, “The chastisement of our peace was upon him.” If they object and say, that this only avails before baptism, the context here disproves them, for the words are addressed to the faithful.
But this clause and that which follows, by whose stripes ye were healed, may be also applied to the subject in hand, that is, that it behoves us to bear on our shoulders the sins of others, not indeed to expiate for them, but only to bear them as a burden laid on us.
Being dead to sins 34 He had before pointed out another end, even an example of patience; but here, as it has been stated, it is made more manifest, that we are to live a holy and righteous life. The Scripture sometimes mentions both, that is, that the Lord tries us with troubles and adversities, that we might be conformed to the death of Christ, and also that the old man has been crucified in the death of Christ, that we might walk in newness of life. (Phi 3:10; Rom 6:4.) At the same time, this end of which he speaks, differs from the former, not only as that which is general from what is particular; for in patience there is simply an example; but when he says that Christ suffered, that we being dead to sins should live to righteousness, he intimates that there is power in Christ’s death to mortify our flesh, as Paul explains more fully in Rom 6:6. For he has not only brought this great benefit to us, that God justifies us freely, by not imputing to us our sins; but he also makes us to die to the world and to the flesh, that we may rise again to a new life: not that one day makes complete this death; but wherever it is, the death of Christ is efficacious for the expiation of sins, and also for the mortification of the flesh.

Calvin: 1Pe 2:25 - -- 25.For ye were as sheep This also has Peter borrowed from Isaiah, except that the Prophet makes it a universal statement, “All we like sheep have ...
25.For ye were as sheep This also has Peter borrowed from Isaiah, except that the Prophet makes it a universal statement,
“All we like sheep have gone astray.” (Isa 53:6.)
But on the word sheep there is no particular stress; he indeed compares us to sheep, but the emphasis is on what the Prophet adds, when he says that every one had turned to his own way. The meaning then is, that we are all going astray from the way of salvation, and proceeding in the way of ruin, until Christ brings us back from this wandering.
And this appears still more evident from the clause which follows, but are now returned to the Shepherd, etc.; 35 for all who are not ruled by Christ, are wandering like lost sheep in the ways of error. Thus, then, is condemned the whole wisdom of the world, which does not submit to the government of Christ. But the two titles given here to Christ are remarkable, that he is the Shepherd and Bishop of souls There is then no cause to fear, but that he will faithfully watch over the safety of those who are in his fold and under his care. And it is his office to keep us safe both in body and soul; yet Peter mentions only souls, because this celestial Shepherd keeps us under his own spiritual protection unto eternal life.
Defender: 1Pe 2:21 - -- Following His steps, we should "walk, even as He walked" (1Jo 2:6), even to the cross if that should be His will. We should also love as He loved (Joh...

Defender: 1Pe 2:22 - -- In order to die for our sins, the Lord Jesus could do no sin of His own, and Peter, His close friend, assures us He did not. John, the beloved discipl...
In order to die for our sins, the Lord Jesus could do no sin of His own, and Peter, His close friend, assures us He did not. John, the beloved disciple, testified that "in him is no sin" (1Jo 3:5), and Paul, the prince of theologians, says that He "knew no sin" (2Co 5:21). Judas, who betrayed Him, admitted that "I have betrayed innocent blood" (Mat 27:4). Pilate, who judged and condemned Him, said, "I find in him no fault at all" (Joh 18:38), and the centurion who crucified Him said, "Certainly this was a righteous man" (Luk 23:47)."

Defender: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Peter thus draws the same inference as Paul did on the relation between the death of Christ for our sins and our death to sin (Gal 2:19, Gal 2:20; Rom...
Peter thus draws the same inference as Paul did on the relation between the death of Christ for our sins and our death to sin (Gal 2:19, Gal 2:20; Rom 6:11-13).


"Returned" is the same as "converted."

"Shepherd and Bishop," can mean "Guide and Guardian.""
TSK: 1Pe 2:20 - -- For : 1Pe 3:14, 1Pe 4:14-16; Mat 5:47
buffeted : Mat 26:67; Mar 14:65; 1Co 4:11
when : 1Pe 2:19
this : Mat 5:10-12; Rom 12:1, Rom 12:2; Eph 5:10; Phi ...

TSK: 1Pe 2:21 - -- even : Mat 10:38, Mat 16:24; Mar 8:34, Mar 8:35; Luk 9:23-25, Luk 14:26, Luk 14:27; Joh 16:33; Act 9:16, Act 14:22; 1Th 3:3, 1Th 4:2; 2Ti 3:12
because...
even : Mat 10:38, Mat 16:24; Mar 8:34, Mar 8:35; Luk 9:23-25, Luk 14:26, Luk 14:27; Joh 16:33; Act 9:16, Act 14:22; 1Th 3:3, 1Th 4:2; 2Ti 3:12
because : 1Pe 2:24, 1Pe 3:18, 1Pe 4:1; Luk 24:26; Act 17:3; Heb 2:10
for us : Some read, for you. 1Pe 1:20
leaving : Psa 85:13; Joh 13:15; Rom 8:29; 1Co 11:1; Eph 5:2; Phi 2:5; 1Jo 2:6; 1Jo 3:16; Rev 12:11

TSK: 1Pe 2:22 - -- did : Isa 53:9; Mat 27:4, Mat 27:19, Mat 27:23, Mat 27:24; Luk 23:41, Luk 23:47; Joh 8:46; 2Co 5:21; Heb 4:15, Heb 7:26, Heb 7:27, Heb 9:28; 1Jo 2:1, ...

TSK: 1Pe 2:23 - -- when he was : Psa 38:12-14; Isa 53:7; Mat 27:39-44; Mar 14:60,Mar 14:61, Mar 15:29-32; Luk 22:64, Luk 22:65, Luk 23:9, Luk 23:34-39; Joh 8:48, Joh 8:4...
when he was : Psa 38:12-14; Isa 53:7; Mat 27:39-44; Mar 14:60,Mar 14:61, Mar 15:29-32; Luk 22:64, Luk 22:65, Luk 23:9, Luk 23:34-39; Joh 8:48, Joh 8:49, Joh 19:9-11; Act 8:32-35; Heb 12:3
threatened : Act 4:29, Act 9:1; Eph 6:9
but : 1Pe 4:19; Psa 10:14, Psa 31:5, Psa 37:5; Luk 23:46; Act 7:59; 2Ti 1:12
himself : or, his cause
judgeth : Gen 18:25; Psa 7:11, Psa 96:13; Act 17:31; Rom 2:5; 2Th 1:5; 2Ti 4:8; Rev 19:11

TSK: 1Pe 2:24 - -- his own self : Exo 28:38; Lev 16:22, Lev 22:9; Num 18:22; Psa 38:4; Isa 53:4-6, Isa 53:11; Mat 8:17; Joh 1:29; Heb 9:28
on : or, to
the tree : Deu 21:...
his own self : Exo 28:38; Lev 16:22, Lev 22:9; Num 18:22; Psa 38:4; Isa 53:4-6, Isa 53:11; Mat 8:17; Joh 1:29; Heb 9:28
on : or, to
the tree : Deu 21:22, Deu 21:23; Act 5:30, Act 10:39, Act 13:29; Gal 3:13
being : 1Pe 4:1, 1Pe 4:2; Rom 6:2, Rom 6:7, Rom 6:11, Rom 7:6 *marg. Col 2:20, Col 3:3 *Gr: 2Co 6:17; Heb 7:26
live : Mat 5:20; Luk 1:74, Luk 1:75; Act 10:35; Rom 6:11, Rom 6:16, Rom 6:22; Eph 5:9; Phi 1:11; 1Jo 2:29, 1Jo 3:7

TSK: 1Pe 2:25 - -- ye : Psa 119:176; Isa 53:6; Jer 23:2; Eze 34:6; Mat 9:36, Mat 18:12; Luk 15:4-6
the Shepherd : 1Pe 5:4; Psa 23:1-3, Psa 80:1; Son 1:7, Son 1:8; Isa 40...
ye : Psa 119:176; Isa 53:6; Jer 23:2; Eze 34:6; Mat 9:36, Mat 18:12; Luk 15:4-6
the Shepherd : 1Pe 5:4; Psa 23:1-3, Psa 80:1; Son 1:7, Son 1:8; Isa 40:11; Eze 34:11-16, Eze 34:23, Eze 34:24, Eze 37:24; Zec 13:7; Joh 10:11-16; Heb 13:20

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 1Pe 2:20 - -- For what glory is it - What honor or credit would it be. If, when ye be buffeted for your faults - That is, if you are punished when you ...
For what glory is it - What honor or credit would it be.
If, when ye be buffeted for your faults - That is, if you are punished when you deserve it. The word "buffet"(
Ye shall take it patiently - "If, even then, you evince an uncomplaining spirit, and bear it with the utmost calmness and patience, it would be regarded as comparatively no virtue, and as entitling you to no honor. The feeling of all who saw it would be that you deserved it, and there would be nothing to excite their sympathy or compassion. The patience evinced might indeed be as great as in the other case, but there would be the feeling that you deserved all that you received, and the spirit evinced in that case could not be regarded as entitled to any particular praise. If your masters are inflicting on you only what you deserve, it would be in the highest degree shameful for you to rise up against them, and resist them, for it would be only adding to the wrong which you had already done."The expression here is, doubtless, to be understood comparatively. The meaning is not that absolutely there would be no more credit due to one who should bear his punishment patiently when he had done wrong, than if he had met it with resistance and complaining; but that there is very little credit in that compared with the patience which an innocent person evinces, who, from regard to the will of God, and by control over all the natural feelings of resentment, meekly endures wrong.
This expresses the common feeling of our nature. We attribute no particular credit to one who submits to a just punishment even with a calm temper. We feel that it would be wrong in the highest degree for him to do otherwise. So it is when calamities are brought on a man on account of his sins. If it is seen to be the fruit of intemperance or crime, we do not feel that there is any great virtue exhibited if he bears it with a calm temper. But if he is overwhelmed with calamity when it seems to have no particular connection with his sins, or to be a punishment for any particular fault; if he suffers at the hand of man, where there is manifest injustice done him, and yet evinces a calm, submissive, and meek temper, we feel that in such cases there is eminent virtue.
This is acceptable with God - Margin, as in 1Pe 2:19, "thank."It is that which is agreeable to him, or with which he is pleased.

Barnes: 1Pe 2:21 - -- For even hereunto were ye called - Such a spirit is required by the very nature of your Christian vocation; you were called into the church in ...
For even hereunto were ye called - Such a spirit is required by the very nature of your Christian vocation; you were called into the church in order that you might evince it. See the notes at 1Th 3:3.
Because Christ also suffered for us - Margin, "some read, for you."The latest editions of the Greek Testament adopt the reading "for you."The sense, however, is not essentially varied. The object is, to hold up the example of Christ to those who were called to suffer, and to say to them that they should bear their trials in the same spirit that he evinced in his. See the notes at Phi 3:10.
Leaving us an example - The apostle does not say that this was the only object for which Christ suffered, but that it was an object, and an important one. The word rendered "example"(
That ye should follow his steps - That we should follow him, as if we trod exactly along behind him, and should place our feet precisely where his were. The meaning is, that there should be the closest imitation or resemblance. The things in which we are to imitate him are specified in the following verses.

Barnes: 1Pe 2:22 - -- Who did no sin - Who was in all respects perfectly holy. There is an allusion here to Isa 53:9; and the sense is, that he was entirely innocent...
Who did no sin - Who was in all respects perfectly holy. There is an allusion here to Isa 53:9; and the sense is, that he was entirely innocent, and that he suffered without having committed any crime. In this connection the meaning is, that we are to be careful that, if we suffer, it should be without committing any crime. We should so live, as the Saviour did, as not to deserve to be punished, and thus only shall we entirely follow his example. It is as much our duty to live so as not to deserve the reproaches of others, as it is to bear them with patience when we are called to suffer them. The first thing in regard to hard treatment from others, is so to live that there shall be no just occasion for it; the next is, if reproaches come upon us when we have not deserved them, to bear them as the Saviour did. If he suffered unjustly, we should esteem it to be no strange thing that we should; if he bore the injuries done him with meekness, we should learn that it is possible for us to do it also; and should learn also that we have not the spirit of his religion unless we actually do it. On the expression used here, compare the Isa 53:9 note; Heb 7:26 note.
Neither was guile found in his mouth - There was no deceit, hypocrisy, or insincerity. He was in all respects what he professed to be, and he imposed on no one by any false and unfounded claim. All this has reference to the time when the Saviour was put to death; and the sense is, that though he was condemned as an impostor, yet that the charge was wholly unfounded. As in his whole life before he was perfectly sincere, so he was eminently on that solemn occasion.

Barnes: 1Pe 2:23 - -- Who, when he was reviled, reviled not again - He did not use harsh and opprobrious words in return for those which he received: (1) He was rev...
Who, when he was reviled, reviled not again - He did not use harsh and opprobrious words in return for those which he received:
(1) He was reviled. He was accused of being a seditious man; spoken of as a deceiver; charged with being in league with Beelzebub, the "prince of the devils"and condemned as a blasphemer against God. This was done:
\tx720 \tx1080 (a)\caps1 b\caps0 y the great and the influential of the land;
(b)\caps1 i\caps0 n the most public manner;
©\caps1 w\caps0 ith a design to alienate his friends from him;
(d)\caps1 w\caps0 ith most cutting and severe sarcasm and irony; and,
(e)\caps1 i\caps0 n reference to everything that would most affect a man of delicate and tender sensibility.
\caps1 (2) h\caps0 e did not revile those who had reproached him. He asked that justice might be done. He demanded that if he had spoken evil, they should bear witness of the evil; but beyond that he did not go. He used no harsh language. He showed no anger. He called for no revenge. He prayed that they might robe forgiven. He calmly stood and bore it all, for he came to endure all kinds of suffering in order that he might set us an example, and make an atonement for our sins.
When he suffered, he threatened not - That is, when he suffered injustice from others, in his trial and in his death, he did not threaten punishment. He did not call down the wrath of heaven. He did not even predict that they would be punished; he expressed no wish that they should be.
But committed himself to him that judgeth righteously - Margin, his cause. The sense is much the same. The meaning is, that he committed his cause, his name, his interests, the whole case, to God. The meaning of the phrase "that judgeth righteously"here is, that God would do him exact justice. Though wronged by people, he felt assured that he would do right. He would rescue his name from these reproaches; he would give him the honor in the world which he deserved; and he would bring upon those who had wronged him all that was necessary in order to show his disapprobation of what they had done, and all that would be necessary to give the highest support to the cause of virtue. Compare Luk 23:46. This is the example which is set before us when we are wronged. The whole example embraces these points:
(1) We should see to it that we ourselves are guiltless in the matter for which we are reproached or accused. Before we fancy that we are suffering as Christ did, we should be sure that our lives are such as not to deserve reproach. We cannot indeed hope to be as pure in all things as he was; but we may so live that if we are reproached and reviled we may be certain that it is not for any wrong that we have done to others, or that we do not deserve it from our fellow-men.
(2) When we are reproached and reviled, we should feel that we were called to this by our profession; that it was one of the things which we were taught to expect when we became Christians; that it is what the prophets and apostles endured, and what the Master himself suffered in an eminent degree; and that if we meet with the scorn of the great, the frivilous, the rich, the powerful, it is no more than the Saviour did, and no more than we have been taught to expect will be our portion. It may be well, too, to remember our unworthiness; and to reflect, that though we have done no wrong to the individual who reviles us yet that we are sinners, and that such reproaches may not be a useless admonisher of our being guilty before God. So David felt when reproached by Shimei: "So let him curse, because the Lord hath said unto him, Curse David. Who shall then say, Wherefore hast thou done so?"2Sa 16:10.
\caps1 (3) w\caps0 hen this occurs, we should calmly and confidently commit our cause to God. Our name, our character, our influence, our reputation, while living and after we are dead, we should leave entirely with him. We should not seek nor desire revenge. We should not call down the wrath of God on our persecutors and slanderers. We should calmly feel that God will give us the measure of reputation which we ought to have in the world, and that he will suffer no ultimate injustice to be done us. "Commit thy way unto the Lord; trust also in him, and he shall bring it to pass; and he shall bring forth thy righteousness as the light, and thy judgment as the noon-day,"Psa 37:5-6. The Latin Vulgate has here, "But he committed himself to him who judged him unjustly,"judicanti se injuste; that is, to Pontius Pilate, meaning that he left himself in his hands, though he knew that the sentence was unjust. But there is no authority for this in the Greek, and this is one of the instances in which that version departs from the original.

Barnes: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Who his own self - See the notes at Heb 1:3, on the phrase "when he had by himself purged our sins."The meaning is, that he did it in his own p...
Who his own self - See the notes at Heb 1:3, on the phrase "when he had by himself purged our sins."The meaning is, that he did it in his own proper person; he did not make expiation by offering a bloody victim, but was himself the sacrifice.
Bare our sins - There is an allusion here undoubtedly to Isa 53:4, Isa 53:12. See the meaning of the phrase "to bear sins"fully considered in the notes at those places. As this cannot mean that Christ so took upon himself the sins of people as to become himself a sinner, it must mean that he put himself in the place of sinners, and bore that which those sins deserved; that is, that he endured in his own person that which, if it had been inflicted on the sinner himself, would have been a proper expression of the divine displeasure against sin, or would have been a proper punishment for sin. See the notes at 2Co 5:21. He was treated as if he had been a sinner, in order that we might be treated as if we had not sinned; that is, as if we were righteous. There is no other way in which we can conceive that one bears the sins of another. They cannot be literally transferred to another; and all that can be meant is, that he should take the consequences on himself, and suffer as if he had committed the transgressions himself.
(See also the supplementary notes at 2Co 5:21; Rom. 4; 5; and Gal 3:13, in which the subject of imputation is discussed at large)
In his own body - This alludes undoubtedly to his sufferings. The sufferings which he endured on the cross were such as if he had been guilty; that is, he was treated as he would have been if he had been a sinner. He was treated as a criminal; crucified as those most guilty were; endured the same kind of physical pain that the guilty do who are punished for their own sins; and passed through mental sorrows strongly resembling - as much so as the case admitted of - what the guilty themselves experience when they are left to distressing anguish of mind, and are abandoned by God. The sufferings of the Saviour were in all respects made as nearly like the sufferings of the most guilty, as the sufferings of a perfectly innocent being could be.
On the tree - Margin, "to the tree"Greek,
That we, being dead to sins - In virtue of his having thus been suspended on a cross; that is, his being put to death as an atoning sacrifice was the means by which we become dead to sin, and live to God. The phrase "being dead to sins"is, in the original,
Should live unto righteousness - Though dead in respect to sin, yet we have real life in another respect. We are made alive unto God to righteousness, to true holiness. See the Rom 6:11 note; Gal 2:20 note.
By whose stripes - This is taken from Isa 53:5. See it explained in the notes on that verse. The word rendered "stripes"(
Ye were healed - Sin is often spoken of as a disease, and redemption from it as a restoration from a deadly malady. See this explained in the notes at Isa 53:5.

Barnes: 1Pe 2:25 - -- For ye were as sheep going astray - Here also is an allusion to Isa 53:6, "All we like sheep have gone astray."See the notes at that verse. The...
For ye were as sheep going astray - Here also is an allusion to Isa 53:6, "All we like sheep have gone astray."See the notes at that verse. The figure is plain. We were like a flock without a shepherd. We had wandered far away from the true fold, and were following our own paths. We were without a protector, and were exposed to every kind of danger. This aptly and forcibly expresses the condition of the whole race before God recovers people by the plan of salvation. A flock thus wandering without a shepherd, conductor, or guide, is in a most pitiable condition; and so was man in his wanderings before he was sought out and brought back to the true fold by the Great Shepherd.
But are now returned unto the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls - To Christ, who thus came to seek and save those who were lost. He is often called a Shepherd. See the notes at John 10:1-16. The word rendered "bishop,"(
Remarks On 1 Peter 2
In the conclusion of this chapter we may remark:
(1) That there is something very beautiful in the expression "Bishop of souls."It implies that the soul is the special care of the Saviour; that it is the object of his special interest; and that it is of great value - so great that it is that which mainly deserves regard. He is the Bishop of the soul in a sense quite distinct from any care which he manifests for the body. That too, in the proper way, is the object of his care; but that has no importance compared with the soul. Our care is principally employed in respect to the body; the care of the Redeemer has special reference to the soul.
\caps1 (2) i\caps0 t follows that the welfare of the soul may be committed to him with confidence. It is the object of his special guardianship, and he will not be unfaithful to the trust reposed in him. There is nothing more safe than the human soul is when it is committed in faith to the keeping of the Son of God. Compare 2Ti 1:12.
\caps1 (3) a\caps0 s, therefore, he has shown his regard for us in seeking us when we were wandering and lost; as he came on the kind and benevolent errand to find us and bring us back to himself, let us show our gratitude to him by resolving to wander no more. As we regard our own safety and happiness, let us commit ourselves to him as our great Shepherd, to follow where he leads us, and to be ever under his pastoral inspection. We had all wandered away. We had gone where there was no happiness and no protector. We had no one to provide for us, to care for us, to pity us. We were exposed to certain ruin. In that state he pitied us, sought us out, brought us back. If we had remained where we were, or had gone further in our wanderings, we should have gone certainly to destruction. He has sought us out; be has led us back; he has taken us under his own protection and guidance; and we shall be safe as long as we follow where he leads, and no longer. To him then, a Shepherd who never forsakes his flock, let us at all times commit ourselves, following where he leads, feeling that under him our great interests are secure.
\caps1 (4) w\caps0 e may learn from this chapter, indeed, as we may from every other part of the New Testament, that in doing this we may be called to suffer. We may be reproached and reviled as the great Shepherd himself was. We may become the objects of public scorn on account of our devoted attachment to him. We may suffer in name, in feeling, in property, in our business, by our honest attachment to the principles of his gospel. Many who are his followers may be in circumstances of poverty or oppression. They may be held in bondage; they may be deprived of their rights; they may feel that their lot in life is a hard one, and that the world seems to have conspired against them to do them wrong; but let us in all these circumstances look to Him "who made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross,"Phi 2:7-8; and let us remember that it is "enough for the disciple that he be as his master, and the servant as his lord,"Mat 10:25. In view of the example of our Master, and of all the promises of support in the Bible, let us bear with patience all the trials of life, whether arising from poverty, an humble condition, or the reproaches of a wicked world. Our trials will soon be ended; and soon, under the direction of the "Shepherd and Bishop of souls,"we shall be brought to a world where trials and sorrows are unknown.
\caps1 (5) i\caps0 n our trials here, let it be our main object so to live that our sufferings shall not be on account of our own faults. See 1Pe 2:19-22. Our Saviour so lived. He was persecuted, reviled, mocked, condemned to die. But it was for no fault of his. In all his varied and prolonged sufferings, he had the ever-abiding consciousness that he was innocent; he had the firm conviction that it would yet be seen and confessed by all the world that he was "holy, harmless, undefiled,"1Pe 2:23. His were not the sufferings produced by a guilty conscience, or by the recollection that he had wronged anyone. So, if we must suffer, let our trials come upon us. Be it our first aim to have a conscience void of offence, to wrong no one, to give no occasion for reproaches and revilings, to do our duty faithfully to God and to people. Then, if trials come, we shall feel that we suffer as our Master did; and then we may, as he did, commit our cause "to him that judgeth righteously,"assured that in due time "he will bring forth our righteousness as the light, and our judgment as the noon-day,"Psa 37:6.
Poole: 1Pe 2:20 - -- For what glory is it? What praise or glory do you get by it? Or, what great matter do you do? This interrogation hath the force of negation, but is t...
For what glory is it? What praise or glory do you get by it? Or, what great matter do you do? This interrogation hath the force of negation, but is to be understood comparatively; it is worthy of praise to suffer patiently, even when men suffer justly, but worthy of little in comparison of suffering patiently when unjustly.
This is acceptable with God: this shows what is meant by thank-worthy, 1Pe 2:19 ; and the apostle adds what kind of thanks or praise he intends, viz. not that which is of man, (which many times may fail, even when men patiently suffer injuries), but that which is of God, to which believers should especially have respect.

Poole: 1Pe 2:21 - -- For even hereunto viz. to patient bearing of sufferings even for well-doing.
Were ye called viz. to Christ and the fellowship of his kingdom; q.d. ...
For even hereunto viz. to patient bearing of sufferings even for well-doing.
Were ye called viz. to Christ and the fellowship of his kingdom; q.d. Your very calling and profession, as Christians, requires this of you.
Also there is an emphasis in this particle, it is as much as if he had said: Even Christ our Lord and Head hath suffered for us, and therefore we that are but his servants and members must not think to escape sufferings.
For us or, as in the margin, for you, which agrees with the beginning and end of the verse, where the second person is used; but most read it as we do, in the first person, and the sense is still the same; only the apostle from a general proposition draws a particular exhortation: Christ suffered for us, (therein he comprehends the saints to whom he writes), and left an example for us all; do ye therefore to whom, as well as to others, he left this example, follow his steps, Joh 13:15 1Jo 2:6 .
Leaving us an example as of other graces, so especially of patience.

Poole: 1Pe 2:22 - -- i.e. There was no guile in his mouth; it is a Hebraism; to be found is the same as to be, and not to be found the same as not to be, Gen 2:20 Isa 39...
i.e. There was no guile in his mouth; it is a Hebraism; to be found is the same as to be, and not to be found the same as not to be, Gen 2:20 Isa 39:2 : see Rom 7:10 . This signifies Christ’ s absolute perfection, in that he did not offend so much as with his mouth, Jam 3:2 . The sense is, Christ was free from all manner of sin, and yet he suffered patiently; and therefore well may ye be content to suffer too, though wrongfully; seeing, though ye may be innocent in your sufferings, yet you come so far short of Christ’ s perfection.

Poole: 1Pe 2:23 - -- By Christ’ s being reviled we are to understand all those injurious words, reproaches, slanders, blasphemies, which his persecutors cast out a...
By Christ’ s being reviled we are to understand all those injurious words, reproaches, slanders, blasphemies, which his persecutors cast out against him.
Reviled not again therefore when he told the Jews they were of their father the devil, Joh 8:44 , that was not a reviling them, but a just accusation of them, or reproof of their devilish behaviour.
When he suffered when he was affected not only with verbal but real injuries, buffeted, spit upon, crowned with thorns, crucified.
He threatened not he was so far from avenging himself, or recompensing evil for evil, that he did not so much as threaten what he would afterward do to them.
But committed himself or his cause; neither is in the Greek, but either may be well supplied, and to the same purpose: the sense is, Christ did not retaliate, nor act any thing out of private revenge, but so referred himself, and the judgment of his cause, to his Father’ s good pleasure, as rather to desire pardon for his persecutors, than vengeance on them, Luk 23:34 .
To him that judgeth righteously: the apostle adds this of God’ s judging righteously, for the comfort of servants to whom he speaks, as Eph 6:8,9 Col 3:24 4:1 , and for the terror of masters, that the former might learn patience, and the latter moderation.

Poole: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Who his own self not by offering any other sacrifice, (as the Levitical priests did), but by that of himself.
Bare our sins or, took up, or lifted ...
Who his own self not by offering any other sacrifice, (as the Levitical priests did), but by that of himself.
Bare our sins or, took up, or lifted up, in allusion to the sacrifices of the Old Testament, the same word being used of them, Heb 7:27 Jam 2:21 . As the sins of the offerer were typically laid upon the sacrifice, which, being substituted in his place, was likewise slain in his stead; so Christ standing in our room, took upon him the guilt of our sins, and bare their punishment, Isa 53:4 , &c. The Lord laid on him our iniquities, and he willingly took them up; and by bearing their curse, took away our guilt. Or, it may have respect to the cross, on which Christ being lifted up, Joh 3:14,15 Joh 12:32took up our sins with him, and expiated their guilt by undergoing that death which was due to us for them.
In his own body this doth not exclude his soul but is rather to be understood, by a synecdoche, of his whole human nature, and we have the sufferings of his soul mentioned, Isa 53:10,12Jo 12:27 ; but mention is made of his body, because the sufferings of that were most visible.
On the tree on the cross.
That we, being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness another end of Christ’ s death, the mortification of sin, and our being freed from the dominion of it, Rom 6:2,6 , and being reformed to a life of holiness.
By whose stripes ye were healed viz. of the wound made in your souls by sin: this seems to relate to the blows that servants might receive of cruel masters, against which the apostle comforts them, and to the patient bearing of which he exhorts them, because Christ by bearing stripes, (a servile punishment), under which may be comprehended all the sufferings of his death, had healed them of much worse wounds, and spiritual diseases, the guilt of their consciences, and the defilement of their souls.

Poole: 1Pe 2:25 - -- For ye were while ye continued in your Judaism, and had not yet received the gospel, as sheep going astray, from Christ the great Shepherd, and th...
For ye were while ye continued in your Judaism, and had not yet received the gospel, as sheep going astray, from Christ the great Shepherd, and the church of believers his flock, and the way of righteousness in which he leads them. Ye were alienated from the life of God, bewildered and lost in the way of sin, Isa 53:6 .
But are now returned in your conversion to the faith,
to the Shepherd Christ the good Shepherd, Joh 10:11,14,16 , that takes care of souls, as a shepherd doth of his sheep.
And Bishop of your souls superintendent, inspector, or, as the Hebrews phrase it, visitor, i.e. he that with care looks to, inspects, and visits the flock. This he adds for the comfort (as of all believers, so) particularly of servants, that even they, as mean as they were, and as much exposed to injuries, yet were under the care and tuition of Christ.
PBC: 1Pe 2:21 - -- Peter just introduced the lesson regarding a believer’s response to an unjust and perverse (froward) master. We readily enjoy interacting with our f...
Peter just introduced the lesson regarding a believer’s response to an unjust and perverse (froward) master. We readily enjoy interacting with our favorite boss, but we shiver at the Biblical expectation to react graciously toward a supervisor who treats us unfairly. In isolation to the context of this lesson we would offer every reason imaginable to justify a different reaction. Peter cuts us no slack. Understanding our humanity through his human frailty, Peter arrived at this perspective through the crucible of personal trial. Can we forget that the writer is Peter, the man who fiercely stepped up to defend his Lord by cutting off a man’s ear with his sword? {Mt 26:51}
Peter immediately takes us from this surprising and challenging exhortation regarding respect for our masters, both good and bad, to the fundamental reason that we should practice it, our Lord’s personal example. Not only did Jesus exemplify godly conduct toward the ungodly, he calls us to follow His example. "... hereunto were ye called..."
"... leaving us an example."
This phrase cuts off all other alternatives. We have no other options. Jesus exemplified gracious conduct toward the ungraceful and directed us to follow His example. He didn’t sin so as to deserve the punishment that was heaped upon Him. To revile means to heap reproach upon someone. When evil men heaped reproach upon our Lord during his trial, he "opened not his mouth." He didn’t dare them to cross the line so that he would feel justified in reviling them with greater verbal fire than they hurled at him. He could have melted them with words; he repeatedly proved throughout his ministry that he had a flawless command of logic and language. Rather than responding in kind, he endured quietly.
451

PBC: 1Pe 2:23 - -- "... when he suffered, he threatened not."
A few years ago I read a physician’s description of the impact on the human body from scourging and cruc...
"... when he suffered, he threatened not."
A few years ago I read a physician’s description of the impact on the human body from scourging and crucifixion. We cannot imagine the pain our Lord endured during those few hours. How did he respond to such intense suffering? Our human nature would readily lash out at anyone who imposed such intense pain on us. What did Jesus do? He didn’t consider a retaliatory threat. He quietly endured.
How could anyone, even Jesus in his humanity, endure such an ordeal without striking back? Most teaching in discipleship builds, at times subtly but distinctly, on human willpower and stubborn determination. "Grab your bootstraps; maintain a ‘stiff upper lip.’ You can do it." Well meaning Christians under this influence try to practice these traits and inevitably fail. They proceed to beat up on themselves, to muster up greater determination, only to fail again. And again! Why? What are they missing? If Jesus left us an example to suffer silently for our faith, why can’t we live up to His teachings? We must be soft, second-class citizens of heaven to wilt so consistently under pressure. "I can wear the cross around my neck, but I can’t manage to wear it on my heart and in my life. I must be the worst excuse of a Christian who ever lived."
All this self-inflated determination misses the point wholly. Keep reading. He " ... committed himself to him that judgeth righteously." Even Jesus didn’t rely on his humanity, sinless as it was, to empower his exemplary conduct. He endured it through thoughtful and intentional reliance on God. Rather than stepping into the heat of the trial and striking back, our Lord resigned his whole self to the Father. His role in the flesh was not to judge or to correct every inequity, whether imposed against others or even against himself. Up to the moment of atonement, Jesus lived a life intended to exemplify the model Christian life for each of us. The New Testament contains distinct rules, but the power that drives the effective Christian life in the midst of heated resistance does not come from rules or from self-determination. Rules and stubborn self-will actually increase our burden; they never enable obedience. Further, the believer who relies on rules and self-will to comply with Biblical ethics will heap guilt and self-condemnation upon himself for his constant failures. This legalistic, self-reliant process always defeats itself. Oh, at times you will meet a Christian who thinks that he must put on a good appearance of faithfulness through such self-driven means, but in the heat of life’s struggles the shallow façade will crumble, revealing the emptiness behind it. The believer who practices such futile tactics then must either build another façade or face the fact that he/she has followed the wrong strategy in their lives and begin to seek a better way to live.
Eventually you will meet someone in authority who creates problems for you. It may be a supervisor on the job where you work. It may be a person in a social organization where you work to serve the needs of the less fortunate. It may be in your child’s school. Rest assured, you will meet this overbearing person face to face. How will you respond? Jesus was Peter’s example to lift him above angry, self-serving responses. Shall he become our example? We could do worse. We couldn’t do better!
Recently an advertising campaign against large sports utility vehicles appeared on television, using the question "What would Jesus drive?" as their theme. The implication is that Jesus would drive a small, fuel-efficient vehicle, not a behemoth gas-guzzler. The ad obviously appeals to the Christian community to reject the larger vehicles. What would Jesus drive? Frankly, if anyone gave the thoughtful time to study the gospels, the answer wouldn’t help the advertisers who ran this ad. Except for a ceremonial ride into Jerusalem on a donkey, Jesus walked everywhere he went.
"What would Jesus do?" offers a valid challenge to our culture, and to believers in our time. The question focuses on the fact that we should view Jesus as our example in all things. How did Jesus deal with the incredibly unfair and painful torture inflicted upon him? Peter answers the question. He "committed himself to him that judgeth righteously." In this situation the Father did not judge Jesus. Rather He judged those who reviled and tortured him. Jesus committed his unfair treatment at the hands of cruel men to the Father for judgment. He took no interest in revenge or in striking back at them. When you face the unfairness that occasionally invades your life, trivial in comparison with what Jesus faced, do you look for a way to step back from retaliation and commit the matter to God for His judgment? What a powerful incentive!
452

PBC: 1Pe 2:24 - -- "Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree..."
Not only did Jesus set the perfect example for our conduct, he took the legal guilt o...
"Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree..."
Not only did Jesus set the perfect example for our conduct, he took the legal guilt of our sins, their deserved penalty, upon himself. He actually endured in his own life the penalty and suffering that our sins deserved. Jesus’ death was not a propositional offer from God. He did not die to open a pathway of possible salvation. He actually engaged in a legal process that removed the guilt of sins for those whom He represented in His sufferings. Augustus Toplady, the author of the rich hymn Rock of Ages, wrote these words in reflection on this profound Biblical truth:
Payment God cannot twice demand,
First at my bleeding Surety’s hand
And then again at mine.
Complete atonement Thou hast made,
And to the uttermost farthing paid
What e’re Thy people owed.
How then can wrath on me take place
If sheltered in Thy righteousness
And sprinkled with Thy blood?
Turn, then, my soul, unto thy rest,
The merits of thy Great High Priest
Speak peace and liberty.
Trust in His efficacious blood,
Nor fear thy banishment from God
Since Jesus died for thee.
"... that we, being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness: by
whose stripes ye were healed."
Not only did he heal us from the fatal disease of sin, he also freed
us to live to righteousness. Do you live today as if you are still a
slave to sin? Or have you realized your salvation and started to
enjoy the true freedom He gained for you and gave to you?
Salvation-all of God-empowers godliness.
453

PBC: 1Pe 2:25 - -- " ... returned to the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls."
In the Greek New Testament the verb " returned" is in the passive voice. You didn’t retu...
" ... returned to the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls."
In the Greek New Testament the verb " returned" is in the passive voice. You didn’t return to Him, thereby gaining your salvation. He returned you to Himself by His suffering and death.
454
Haydock -> 1Pe 2:23
Haydock: 1Pe 2:23 - -- Christ, who was incapable of sinning, did not revile [7] them that reviled him; he suffered all with patience; he willingly gave himself up to Ponti...
Christ, who was incapable of sinning, did not revile [7] them that reviled him; he suffered all with patience; he willingly gave himself up to Pontius Pilate, that judged him, and condemned him unjustly [8] to the death of the cross: and remember that all he suffered was to satisfy for your sins, that he bore our sins in his own body on the tree of the cross. Remember always this great benefit of your redemption, and of your being called to believe in him, and to be eternally happy by following his doctrine; that all of you were as sheep going astray, lost in your ignorance and in your sins, but that by his grace and by his merits you are now called and converted to Jesus Christ, the great pastor and bishop of your souls. You are happy if you live under his care, inspection, and protection. (Witham)
===============================
[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Cum malediceretur, non maledicebat, Greek: loidoroumenos, convitiis appetitus; improperly translated, cursed, by Mr. N.
===============================
[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Judicanti se injuste. In the present Greek we read Greek: dikaios, juste, as also some Latin Fathers read. St. Augustine, (tract. 21. in Joan.) Commendabat autem judicanti juste; and so the sense is, that he commanded and committed his cause to God, the just judge of all.
====================
Gill: 1Pe 2:20 - -- For what glory is it, if, when ye be buffeted for your faults,.... Which ye have committed, and are guilty of, and are truly such:
ye shall take it...
For what glory is it, if, when ye be buffeted for your faults,.... Which ye have committed, and are guilty of, and are truly such:
ye shall take it patiently? to be silent, and not murmur when beaten, within measure, for real faults, is no great honour, nor does it deserve any praise; it is the least that can be done:
but if, when ye do well; either in their master's service, or rather in the business of religion, and the things of God; as when what they do is according to the will of God, and from love to him, and in faith, and in the name and strength of Christ, and to the glory of God; without all which there is no well doing:
and suffer for it; reproach and persecution, by words or blows, in person or property:
ye take it patiently; without grieving and repining, or answering again, and making any returns:
this is acceptable with God; is agreeably to his will, and grateful in his sight, what he is well pleased with, is reckoned grace with him; and though it is his own grace, and of his own bestowing, he will reward it with glory.

Gill: 1Pe 2:21 - -- For even hereunto were ye called,.... Both to well doing, of which none but those who are called with an holy and effectual calling are capable; and w...
For even hereunto were ye called,.... Both to well doing, of which none but those who are called with an holy and effectual calling are capable; and which they are fitted for, and are under obligation to perform, and to suffer for so doing, which they must always expect, and to patience in suffering for it, which highly becomes them. This being then one end of the saints' effectual calling, is made use of as an argument to engage them to the exercise of the grace of patience in suffering for well doing; and another follows:
because Christ also suffered for us; in our room and stead, to fulfil the law, satisfy the justice of God, and make reconciliation for sin; and not only for our good, or merely as a martyr, to confirm the truth of his doctrine, or barely as an example to us, though this also is true: the Alexandrian copy, and some others, read, "for you"; for you servants, as well as others, and therefore should cheerfully and patiently suffer for the sake of Christ, and his Gospel; and the rather, because he suffered,
leaving us, or "you", as the same copies, and the Vulgate Latin version read,
an example that ye should follow his steps: Christ is an example to his people in the exercise of grace, as of faith, love, zeal, meekness, and humility; and in the discharge of duty, in his regard to the commands of the moral law, and positive institutions of religion; in his constancy in prayer; in frequent attendance on public worship; in his submission to the ordinance of baptism, and his celebration of the supper; and likewise in his sufferings; and in his meekness, patience, courage, and resignation to the will of God, which is what is here intended, and in which his people are to fellow and imitate him.

Gill: 1Pe 2:22 - -- Who did no sin,.... He was in the likeness of sinful flesh; he looked like a sinful man, being born of a sinful woman, and keeping company with sinful...
Who did no sin,.... He was in the likeness of sinful flesh; he looked like a sinful man, being born of a sinful woman, and keeping company with sinful men, being himself a man of sorrows, greatly afflicted, and at last put to death. He was traduced as a sinner by his enemies, and had all the sins of his people on him, which he bore, and made satisfaction for, and were the reason of his sufferings; but he had no sin in his nature, nor did he commit any in his life:
neither was guile found in his mouth; though it was diligently sought for, by the Scribes and Pharisees; there was no deceit in his lips, no falsehood in his doctrine, any more than there was immorality in his conversation; he was an Israelite indeed on all accounts, and in the fullest sense of that phrase; reference is had to Isa 53:9 and this is observed, partly to show that Christ suffered not for himself, or for any sins of his own, but for the sins of others, for which he was very fit, since he had none of his own; and partly as an argument for patience in suffering; for since Christ suffered, who had no sin, nor did any, nor could any be found in him, charged upon him, and proved against him; and which sufferings of his he bore with patience; then how much must it become sinful men to bear their sufferings patiently, though they may not be criminal with respect to the things for which they suffer, but yet are so in other things, whereas Christ was not criminal, nor blameworthy in anything?

Gill: 1Pe 2:23 - -- Who when he was reviled, reviled not again,.... When he was reproached as a glutton, a winebibber, a friend of publicans and sinners, all the reply he...
Who when he was reviled, reviled not again,.... When he was reproached as a glutton, a winebibber, a friend of publicans and sinners, all the reply he made was, that Wisdom is justified of her children; and when he was charged with casting out devils by Beelzebub, the prince of devils, he defended himself, not with bad language, but with strong reasonings; and when he was said to be a Samaritan, and had a devil, his only answer was, that he had not, that he honoured his Father, and they dishonoured him; and when he was reviled on the cross, by those that passed by, by the chief priests, and Scribes, and the thieves that were crucified with him, he made no return, he opened not his mouth, and much less in a recriminating way,
When he suffered he threatened not; when he endured buffetings, and scourgings in his body, when the officers in the palace of the high priests spit in his face, buffeted him, and smote him with the palms of their hands, and bid him prophesy who smote him, all which were very provoking; yet he said not one word to them, much less threatened them with what he would do to them for such usage another day, when he would let them know, with vengeance, who it was that smote him; no, he took all patiently from them, and from Pilate, and the Roman soldiers, when scourged by them; he gave his back to the smiters, and his cheeks to them that plucked off the hair; and when he suffered crucifixion, and was put to such distressing pains and agonies, he did not threaten his crucifiers with a future judgment, when he would take vengeance, and execute his wrath upon them, but prays to his Father for the forgiveness of their sins: and, as it follows,
but committed himself to him that judgeth righteously; he commended his Spirit, or soul, to God his Father, and committed his cause to him, to vindicate it in what way he should think fit, who he knew was the Judge of all the earth, that would do right; and so the Syriac version supplies it with

Gill: 1Pe 2:24 - -- Who his own self bare our sins,.... As was typified by the high priest bearing the sins of the holy things of the people of Israel, when he went into ...
Who his own self bare our sins,.... As was typified by the high priest bearing the sins of the holy things of the people of Israel, when he went into the most holy place, and by the scape goat bearing the iniquities of all the people unto a land not inhabited, and as was foretold by the Prophet Isaiah. The apostle here explains the nature and end of Christ's sufferings, which were to make atonement for sins, and which was done by bearing them. What Christ bore were "sins", even all sorts of sin, original and actual, and every act of sin of his people; and all that is in sin, all that belongs to it, arises from it, and is the demerit of it, as both filth, guilt, and punishment; and a multitude of sins did he bear, even all the iniquities of all the elect; and a prodigious load and weight it was; and than which nothing could be more nauseous and disagreeable to him, who loves righteousness, and hates iniquity: and these sins he bore were not his own, nor the sins of angels, but of men; and not of all men, yet of many, even as many as were ordained to eternal life, for whom Christ gave his life a ransom, whom he justifies and brings to glory; our sins, not the sins of the Jews only, for Peter was a Jew, and so were those to whom he writes, but of the Gentiles also, even the sins of all his people, for them he saves from their sins, being stricken for them. His "bearing" them was in this manner: he becoming the surety and substitute of his people, their sins were laid upon him by his Father, that is, they were imputed to him, they were reckoned as his, and placed to his account; and Christ voluntarily took them upon himself; he took them to himself, as one may take the debt of another, and make himself answerable for it; or as a man takes up a burden, and lays it on his shoulders; so Christ took up our sins, and "carried" them "up", as the word here used signifies, alluding to the priests carrying up the sacrifice to the altar, and referring to the lifting up of Christ upon the cross; whither he carried the sins of his people, and bore them, and did not sink under the weight of them, being the mighty God, and the man of God's right hand, made strong for himself; and so made entire satisfaction for them, by enduring the wrath of God, the curse of the law, and all that punishment which was due unto them; and thereby bore them away, both from his people, and out of the sight of God, and his vindictive justice; and removed them as far as the east is from the west, and made a full end of them; and this he himself did, and not another, nor by another, or with the help of another; not by the means of a goat, as the high priest, but by himself; though he was assisted in bearing his cross, yet he had no help in bearing our sins; angels could not help him; his Father stood at a distance from him; there was none to help; his own arm brought salvation to him; but
his own self, who knew no sin, nor did any, he by himself purged away our sins, and made reconciliation for them, by bearing them: and which he did
in his own body, and not another's; in that body which his Father prepared for him, and which he took of the virgin, and was free from sin; though not to the exclusion of his soul, which also was made an offering for sin, and in which he endured great pains and sorrows for sin: and all this
on the tree; the accursed tree, the cross; which is expressive both of the shame and pain of his sufferings and death. The end of which was,
that we being dead to sin; "to our sins", as the Alexandrian copy, and the Ethiopic version read; as all the elect are, through bearing their sins, and suffering death for them, so as that sin shall not be imputed to them; it is as though it never was; it is dead to them, and they to that, as to its damning power and influence; so as that they are entirely discharged from it, and can never come into condemnation on account of it, and can never be hurt, so as to be destroyed by it; nor by death, either corporeal or eternal, since the sting of death, which is sin, is taken away, and the strength of sin, which is the law, is dead to them, and they to that: in short, through the death of Christ they are so dead to sin, that it is not only finished, made an end of, and put away, but the body of it is destroyed, that it should not be served; which is an end subordinate to the former, and expressed in the next clause:
should live unto righteousness; live, and not die the second death, and live by faith on the righteousness of Christ, for justification of life, and soberly, righteously, and godly in this present evil world; which the grace of God teaches, and the love of Christ in bearing sin constrains to, and the redemption by his precious blood lays under an obligation to do; for those whose sins Christ has bore are not their own, but being bought with the price of his blood, they are bound to live to him who has a property in them, and a right to claim all obedience from them:
by whose stripes ye were healed; the passage referred to is in Isa 53:5 which is a prophecy of the Messiah, as is acknowledged by the Jews g, who say h,
"this is the King Messiah, who was in the generation of the ungodly, as it is said, Isa 53:5 "and with his stripes we are healed"; and for this cause God saved him, that he might save Israel, and rejoice with them in the resurrection of the dead.
Sin is a disease, a natural and hereditary one, an epidemic distemper, that reaches to all men, and to all the powers and faculties of their souls, and members of their bodies; and which is nauseous and loathsome, and in itself mortal and incurable; nor can it be healed by any creature, or anything that a creature can do. Christ is the only physician, and his blood the balm and sovereign medicine; this cleanses from all sin; through it is the remission of sin, which is meant by healing; for healing of diseases, and forgiving iniquities, is one and the same thing; see Psa 103:3 on which latter text a learned Jew i has this note,
"this interpreters explain
and the Jews say, there is no healing of diseases but it signifies forgiveness k: it is an uncommon way of healing by the stripes of another. Some think the apostle alludes to the stripes which servants receive from their masters, to whom he was now speaking; and in order to encourage them to bear them patiently, observes, that Christ himself suffered stripes, and that they had healing for their diseases and wounds, by means of his stripes, or through his being wounded and bruised for them,

Gill: 1Pe 2:25 - -- For ye were as sheep going astray,.... This is a proof of their being healed, namely, their conversion; in which an application of the blood of Christ...
For ye were as sheep going astray,.... This is a proof of their being healed, namely, their conversion; in which an application of the blood of Christ, and pardon, and so healing by it, was made to their souls. The apostle has still in view the prophecy of Isa 53:6. God's elect are sheep before conversion; not that they have the agreeable properties of sheep, as to be meek, harmless, innocent, clean, and profitable, for they are the reverse of all this; nor can some things be said of them before conversion, as may be after, as that they hear Christ's voice, and follow him; nor are they so called, because unprejudiced against, and predisposed unto the Gospel, for the contrary is true of them; but they are so in electing grace, and were so considered in the Father's gift of them to Christ, and when made his care and charge, and hence they are called the sheep of his hand; and when Christ laid down his life, and rose again, which he did for the sheep, and as the great Shepherd of them; and when called by grace, for their being sheep, and Christ's own sheep by the Father's gift, and his own purpose, is the reason why he looks them up, calls them by name, and returns them: but then they are not yet of his fold; they are lost sheep, lost in Adam, and by his fall, and by their own actual transgressions; they are as sheep going astray from the shepherd, and from the flock, going out of the right way, and in their own ways; and are, like sheep, stupid and insensible of their danger; and as they never return of themselves, until they are sought for, and brought back: hence it follows,
but are now returned; not returned themselves, but were returned by powerful and efficacious grace: saints are passive, and not active in first conversion; they are turned, not by the power of their own free will, but by the power of God's free grace; they are returned under the illuminations and quickenings of the blessed Spirit, and through the efficacious drawings of the Father's love, unto Christ:
unto the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls; by whom Christ is meant, who bears the office of a Shepherd, and fully performs it by feeding his sheep, providing a good fold and pasture for them; by gathering the lambs in his arms, and gently leading those that are with young; by healing their diseases, and preserving them from beasts of prey; hence he is called the good, the great, and chief Shepherd: and he is the "Bishop" or "Overseer" of the souls of his people, though not to the exclusion of their bodies: he has took the oversight of them willingly, and looks well to his flock, inspects into their cases, and often visits them, and never forsakes them; nor will he leave them till they receive the end of their faith, the salvation of their souls; which he has undertook and effected by his obedience, sufferings and death. Philo the Jew l observes, that "to be a shepherd is so good a work, that it is not only a title given to kings and wise men, and souls perfectly purified, but to God the governor of all---who, as a Shepherd and King, leads according to justice and law, setting over them his right Logos, "the first begotten Son", who has taken the care of this holy flock, as does the deputy of a great king.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: 1Pe 2:20 Grk “For this [is] favor/grace with God,” used as a metonymy as in vs. 19 of that which pleases him, which he looks on with favor (cf. BDA...


NET Notes: 1Pe 2:23 Grk “to the one”; the referent (God) has been specified in the translation for clarity.


Geneva Bible: 1Pe 2:21 ( 23 ) For even hereunto were ye called: because Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an ( g ) example, that ye should follow his steps:
( 23 ) He...

Geneva Bible: 1Pe 2:23 Who, when he was reviled, reviled not again; when he suffered, he threatened not; but ( 24 ) committed [himself] to him ( 25 ) that judgeth righteousl...

Geneva Bible: 1Pe 2:24 ( 26 ) Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree, that we, being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness: by whose stripes ye we...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Pe 2:1-25
TSK Synopsis: 1Pe 2:1-25 - --1 He exhorts them from the breach of charity;4 shewing that Christ is the foundation whereupon they are built.11 He beseeches them also to abstain fro...
MHCC -> 1Pe 2:18-25
MHCC: 1Pe 2:18-25 - --Servants in those days generally were slaves, and had heathen masters, who often used them cruelly; yet the apostle directs them to be subject to the ...
Matthew Henry -> 1Pe 2:13-25
Matthew Henry: 1Pe 2:13-25 - -- The general rule of a Christian conversation is this, it must be honest, which it cannot be if there be not a conscientious discharge of all relativ...
Barclay: 1Pe 2:18-25 - --Here is the passage which would be relevant to by far the greatest number of the readers of this letter, for Peter writes to servants and slaves, an...

Barclay: 1Pe 2:18-25 - --Into this situation came Christianity with its message that every man was precious in the sight of God. The result was that within the Church the soc...

Barclay: 1Pe 2:18-25 - --But Christianity did not leave the matter in that merely negative form. It introduced three great new principles into a man's attitude as a servant a...

Barclay: 1Pe 2:18-25 - --(1) The Shepherd Of The Souls Of Men
In the last verse of this chapter we come upon two of the great names for God--the Shepherd and Bishop of our sou...
Constable: 1Pe 2:11--4:12 - --III. The responsibilities of the christian individually 2:11--4:11
Since Christians have a particular vocation i...

Constable: 1Pe 2:13--3:13 - --B. Respect for Others 2:13-3:12
This section of the letter clarifies what it means to function obedientl...
