
Text -- 1 Peter 3:10 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: 1Pe 3:10 - -- For ( gar ).
Reason for the entire exhortation in 1Pe 3:8, 1Pe 3:9 and introducing in 1Pe 3:10-12 a quotation from Psa 34:13-17 with some slight chan...
For (
Reason for the entire exhortation in 1Pe 3:8, 1Pe 3:9 and introducing in 1Pe 3:10-12 a quotation from Psa 34:13-17 with some slight changes.

Robertson: 1Pe 3:10 - -- Would love life ( thelōn zōēn agapāin ).
"Wishing to love life."This present life. The lxx expressions are obscure Hebraisms. The lxx has aga...
Would love life (
"Wishing to love life."This present life. The lxx expressions are obscure Hebraisms. The lxx has

Robertson: 1Pe 3:10 - -- Let him refrain ( pausatō ).
Third person singular first aorist active imperative of pauō to make stop, whereas the lxx has pauson (second pe...
Let him refrain (
Third person singular first aorist active imperative of

Robertson: 1Pe 3:10 - -- That they speak no guile ( tou mē lalēsai dolon ).
Purpose clause with genitive article tou (negative mē ) and the first aorist active infin...
That they speak no guile (
Purpose clause with genitive article
Vincent -> 1Pe 3:10
Vincent: 1Pe 3:10 - -- Will love ( θέλων ἀγαπᾶν )
Not the future tense of love , but the verb to will, with the infinitive: he that desires or me...
Will love (
Not the future tense of love , but the verb to will, with the infinitive: he that desires or means to love. Rev., would love.
Wesley -> 1Pe 3:10
JFB: 1Pe 3:10 - -- Greek, "wishes to love." He who loves life (present and eternal), and desires to continue to do so, not involving himself in troubles which will make ...
Greek, "wishes to love." He who loves life (present and eternal), and desires to continue to do so, not involving himself in troubles which will make this life a burden, and cause him to forfeit eternal life. Peter confirms his exhortation, 1Pe 3:9, by Psa 34:12-16.

JFB: 1Pe 3:10 - -- Curb, literally, "cause to cease"; implying that our natural inclination and custom is to speak evil. "Men commonly think that they would be exposed t...
Curb, literally, "cause to cease"; implying that our natural inclination and custom is to speak evil. "Men commonly think that they would be exposed to the wantonness of their enemies if they did not strenuously vindicate their rights. But the Spirit promises a life of blessedness to none but those who are gentle and patient of evils" [CALVIN].

JFB: 1Pe 3:10 - -- First he warns against sins of the tongue, evil-speaking, and deceitful, double-tongued speaking; next, against acts of injury to one's neighbor.
First he warns against sins of the tongue, evil-speaking, and deceitful, double-tongued speaking; next, against acts of injury to one's neighbor.
Clarke -> 1Pe 3:10
Clarke: 1Pe 3:10 - -- For he that will love life - This is a quotation from Psa 34:12-16, as it stands in the Septuagint; only the aorist of the imperative is changed fro...
For he that will love life - This is a quotation from Psa 34:12-16, as it stands in the Septuagint; only the aorist of the imperative is changed from the second into the third person, etc. He who wishes to live long and prosperously, must act as he is here directed
1. He must refrain from evil-speaking, lying, and slandering
2. He must avoid flattery and fair speeches, which cover hypocritical or wicked intentions
3. He must avoid evil, keep going away
4. He must do good; he must walk in the way of righteousness
5. He must live peaceably with all men; seek peace where it has been lost; restore it where it has been broken; and pursue it where it seems to be flying away
He who lives thus must live happy in himself. And as excess in action and passion always tends to the shortening of life, and nothing preys on the constitution more than disorderly passions, he must live not only happiest but longest who avoids them. It is an edifying story that is told in the book Mussar, chap. 1., quoted by Rosenmuller: "A certain person, travelling through the city, continued to call out, Who wants the elixir of life? The daughter of Rabbi Joda heard him, and told her father. He said, Call the man in. When he came in, the rabbi said, What is that elixir of life thou sellest? He answered, Is it not written, What man is he that loveth life, and desireth to see good days, let him refrain his tongue from evil, and his lips from speaking guile? This is the elixir of life, and is found in the mouth of man."
Calvin -> 1Pe 3:10
Calvin: 1Pe 3:10 - -- 10.For he He confirms the last sentence by the testimony of David. The passage is taken from the thirty-fourth Psalm, [Psa 34:12,] where the Spirit t...
10.For he He confirms the last sentence by the testimony of David. The passage is taken from the thirty-fourth Psalm, [Psa 34:12,] where the Spirit testifies that it will be well with all who keep themselves from all evil-doing and wrong-doing. The common feeling indeed favors what is very different; for men think that they expose themselves to the insolence of enemies, if they do not boldly defend themselves. But the Spirit of God promises a happy life to none except to the meek, and those who endure evils; and we cannot be happy except God prospers our ways; and it is the good and the benevolent, and not the cruel and inhuman, that he will favor.
Peter has followed the Greek version, though the difference is but little. David’s words are literally these, — “He who loves life and desires to see good days,” etc. It is indeed a desirable thing, since God has placed us in this world, to pass our time in peace. Then, the way of obtaining this blessing is to conduct ourselves justly and harmlessly towards all.
The first thing he points out are the vices of the tongue; which are to be avoided, so that we may not be contumelious and insolent, nor speak deceitfully and with duplicity. Then he comes to deeds, that we are to injure none, or cause loss to none, but to endeavor to be kind to all, and to exercise the duties of humanity.
Defender -> 1Pe 3:10
Defender: 1Pe 3:10 - -- 1Pe 3:10-12 are essentially quoted from Psa 34:12-16. Thus, a controlled tongue is a secret contribution to a long and happy life."
1Pe 3:10-12 are essentially quoted from Psa 34:12-16. Thus, a controlled tongue is a secret contribution to a long and happy life."
TSK -> 1Pe 3:10
TSK: 1Pe 3:10 - -- he : Psa 34:12-16
love : Deu 32:47; Job 2:4; Pro 3:2, Pro 3:18, Pro 4:22, Pro 8:35; Mat 19:17; Mar 8:35; Joh 12:25
see : Job 7:7, Job 7:8, Job 9:25, J...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 1Pe 3:10
Barnes: 1Pe 3:10 - -- For he that will love life - Greek, "He willing, ( θέλων thelōn ,) or that wills to love life."It implies that there is some posit...
For he that will love life - Greek, "He willing, (
(1) Because, as already intimated, life, as such, is to be regarded as a blessing. We instinctively shrink back from death, as one of the greatest evils; we shudder at the thought of annihilation. It is not wrong to love that, in proper degree, which, by our very nature, we are prompted to love; and we are but acting out one of the universal laws which our Creator has impressed on us, when, with proper submission to his will, we seek "to lengthen out our days as far as possible.
\caps1 (2) t\caps0 hat we may see the works of God, and survey the wonders of his hand on earth. The world is full of wonders, evincing the wisdom and goodness of the Deity; and the longest life, nay, many such lives as are allotted to us here, could be well employed in studying his works and ways.
\caps1 (3) t\caps0 hat we may make preparation for eternity. Man may, indeed, make preparation in a very brief period; but the longest life is not too much to examine and settle the question whether we have a well-founded hope of heaven. If man had nothing else to do, the longest life could be well employed in inquiries that grow out of the question whether we are suited for the world to come. In the possibility, too, of being deceived, and in view of the awful consequences that will result from deception, it is desirable that length of days should be given us that we may bring the subject to the severest test, and so determine it, that we may go sure to the changeless world.
\caps1 (4) t\caps0 hat we may do good to others. We may, indeed, do good in another world; but there are ways of doing good which are probably confined to this. What good we may do hereafter to the inhabitants of distant worlds, or what ministrations, in company with angels, or without them, we may exercise toward the friends of God on earth after we leave it, we do not know; but there are certain things which we are morally certain we shall not be permitted to do in the future world. We shall not:
(a)\caps1 p\caps0 ersonally labor for the salvation of sinners, by conversation and other direct efforts;
(b)\caps1 w\caps0 e shall not illustrate the influence of religion by example in sustaining us in trials, subduing and controlling our passions, and making us dead to the world;
©\caps1 w\caps0 e shall not be permitted to pray for our impenitent friends and kindred, as we may now;
(d)\caps1 w\caps0 e shall not have the opportunity of contributing of our substance for the spread of the gospel, or of going personally to preach the gospel to the perishing;
(e)\caps1 w\caps0 e shall not be employed in instructing the ignorant, in advocating the cause of the oppressed and the wronged, in seeking to remove the fetters from the slave, in dispensing mercy to the insane, or in visiting the prisoner in his lonely cell;
(f)\caps1 w\caps0 e shall not have it in our power to address a kind word to an impenitent child, or seek to guide him in paths of truth, purity, and salvation.
What we can do personally and directly for the salvation of others is to be done in this world; and, considering how much there is to be done, and how useful life may be on the earth, it is an object which we should desire, that our days may be lengthened out, and should use all proper means that it may be done. While we should ever be ready and willing to depart when God calls us to go; while we should not wish to linger on these mortal shores beyond the time when we may be useful to others, yet, as long as he permits us to live, we should regard life as a blessing, and should pray that, if it be his will, we may not be cut down in the midst of our way.
"Love not thy life, nor hate; but what thou livest.
Live well; how long, or short, permit to heaven."
Paradise Lost.
And see good days - In the Psalm Psa 34:12 this is, "and loveth many days, that he may see good."The quotation by Peter throughout the passage is taken from the Septuagint, excepting that there is a change of the person from the second to the third: in the psalm, e. g., "refrain thy tongue from evil,"etc.; in the quotation, "let him refrain his tongue from evil,"etc. "Good days"are prosperous days; happy days; days of usefulness; days in which we may be respected and loved.
Let him refrain his tongue from evil - The general meaning of all that is said here is, "let him lead an upright and pious life; doing evil to no one, but seeking the good of all men."To refrain the tongue from evil, is to avoid all slander, falsehood; "obscenity, and profaneness, and to abstain from uttering erroneous and false opinions. Compare Jam 1:26; Jam 3:2.
And his lips that they speak no guile - No deceit; nothing that will lead others astray. The words should be an exact representation of the truth. Rosenmuller quotes a passage from the Hebrew book Musar, which may be not an inappropriate illustration of this: "A certain Assyrian wandering through the city, cried and said, "Who will receive the elixir of life?"The daughter of Rabbi Jodus heard him, and went and told her father. "Call him in,"said he. When he came in, Rabbi Jannei said to him, "What is that elixir of life which thou art selling?"He said to him, "Is it not written, What man is he that desireth life, and loveth days that he may see good? Keep thy tongue from evil, and thy lips that they speak no guile. Lo, this is the elixir of life which is in the mouth of a man!""
Poole -> 1Pe 3:10
Poole: 1Pe 3:10 - -- He that will love life he that earnestly desires to lead a quiet and comfortable life here, and to enjoy eternal life hereafter.
And see good days ...
He that will love life he that earnestly desires to lead a quiet and comfortable life here, and to enjoy eternal life hereafter.
And see good days peaceable and prosperous; as evil days are such as are grievous and calamitous, Gen 47:9 .
Let him refrain his tongue from evil: from evil-speaking, railing, reviling, open detraction.
And his lips that they speak no guile tell no lies of his neighbour: or, this may imply whispering, backbiting, or any way secretly and closely speaking evil of him. Under these two, all the vices of the tongue, whereby our neighbour may be wronged, are contained, and the contrary virtues commanded, under the name of blessing.
PBC -> 1Pe 3:10
PBC: 1Pe 3:10 - -- In twenty-first century Western culture you frequently hear people talk about seeking the " good life." If you were to ask these people to define the...
In twenty-first century Western culture you frequently hear people talk about seeking the " good life." If you were to ask these people to define their idea of this life, you’d hear a multitude of lifestyles. Most of them would involve the indulgence of a particular appetite or taste for pleasure. Occasionally you will see a bumper sticker on an expensive motor home or other recreational vehicle, " He who dies with the most expensive toys wins." Sadly, many people define the " good life" in terms of a toy, not in terms of a godly lifestyle.
God has no objection to a believer owning a motor home, a boat, or other recreational " toys." God has a major objection to those toys owning us!
"he that will love life"
Loving life is not the equivalent to surviving life. It is not characterized by looking back over life with a long list of regrets and disappointments. Perhaps something of a surprise, the Greek word translated love in this phrase comes from the noblest Greek word for love. The word refers to God’s love for his people, to supreme, sacrificial love that considers the person loved, not self.
The image of loving life in this sense may at first glance surprise many believers. " I thought this world was not a friend to grace, that we are strangers who struggle to survive this world till we finally get to die and go to heaven." This idea considers only one aspect of the godly life. Indeed we face struggles in our faith. For the believer, life often seems like a battlefield with the forces of good and evil tearing at the very fabric of our existence. However, the balanced believer will also see in this world the incredible evidences of God’s creation, of His masterful dominion, of His handiwork in the beauty of creation. Further, the balanced believer will also see life in terms of opportunities to serve others with helpful words and encouraging deeds. Peter defines the good life for the believer in terms of the way we live, not in terms of what we possess-or of what possesses us.
" ... Let him refrain his tongue from evil."
Perhaps the most frequent sins we commit relate in one way or another to the tongue. On more than one occasion I have walked into conversations of believers talking about other believers, always focused on a major tragedy or sin in that person’s life, never on the other person’s successes. When confronted with the fact that this conduct is condemned in Scripture as gossip, the person actually responded, " Oh, I’m not gossiping. I’m ‘sharing’ the situation with others so that they can pray for him." If this were the truth, then you would frequently hear this same person talking about another person’s successes so that others can thank God for that person’s blessings, something the gossip almost never does. If, as Scripture clearly teaches, we receive what we sow, the person who gossips about others will frequently also be the object of gossip. Typically the gossip carefully hides his personal problems from others for this very reason. He/she doesn’t want others talking about him/her in the way he/she has habitually talked about them! Thus the person who refuses to refrain his tongue from evil lives a cloistered, often very lonely life behind a superficial façade, not a good place for living the good life.
" Let him eschew evil, and do good."
The Greek word translated as eschew means to go out of the way to avoid something. We do not realize the good life by walking blindly into evil, and then pretending we could do nothing to avoid it. We discern the difference between good and evil, and we take specific steps to avoid evil. The flip side of this coin appears in a calculated, purposeful determination to do good. We need not fret about what is good and what is not. God doesn’t leave us to our own private tastes to determine good. He clearly defines it, even illustrates it in the Incarnate life of His Son, in Scripture. Do you want to know what is good and what is not? Spend a lot of daily time with your Bible, and with your mind engaged as your read it. Don’t use the Bible as your sleeping pill, to be taken a few minutes before you go to sleep at night, a time when most people are tired, and their minds are not able to absorb active thoughts and engage challenging ideas. Spend active time with your Bible at the most productive time of day. Don’t read the Bible as an " other-worldly" book that contains little or nothing of value to your life and its routine demands. Read it as God’s relevant message to you for your immediate life and decisions.
" ... Let him seek peace."
Seek, the Greek word means to seek by thinking, meditating, and reasoning; to enquire into. We don’t discover peace in our life by accident. We don’t stumble into it. We realize peace through a reflective process of thinking and living that makes peace our primary objective. Peace with God will make peace with other people around us far more accessible. How easily Christian people seem inclined to live in a state of constant war with other believers, all the while claiming to be at contented peace with God.
I suggest that the state of our relationships with other people will typically mirror the state of our relationship with God!
The person who constantly encounters disappointments and tensions with other people in all likelihood struggles with disappointment and tension with God.
" ... And ensue it."
The mental image of this word is to run eagerly to catch something. The believer who seeks the good life will work " 24/7" toward peace, not war.
"For the eyes of the Lord are over the righteous..."
How can a believer live according to this pattern? For Peter, and for the Holy Spirit Who inspired his words, the spiritual good life lies within our reach only as we keep our eyes on God with the realization that His eyes are on us. We must come to realize that we do not gain our objectives by manipulating others, by walking over the people who get in our way, or by making our personal desires the most important things of life. A believer who embraces the liberating truth that God never takes His eyes off us, that He is intimately involved in every aspect of our life, can more readily let go of selfish strategies and engage the unrestrained giving of self to others.
"... His ears are open unto their prayers."
At times any of us may well pray and feel that God seems far away from us. Don’t forget. How we feel is not the objective of prayer. If we truly embrace the essential attribute of God’s omnipresence, we must pray with full conviction that, feel His presence or not, God is present. The faithful prayer approaches God with the realization of his presence, but it also embraces His essential trait of caring for the legitimate needs of his people. We don’t need to bargain with God to entice Him to listen to our prayer. We will never approach Him in prayer when He is too busy to listen.
" ... But the face of the Lord is against them that do evil."
What does Peter mean by this term, " the face of the Lord" ?God’s face is an open book to the believer. God never responds to us with fickle or unpredictable actions. We may rest as fully convinced that God opposes evil in our choices and conduct as we may rest assured that He will empower good.
The Old Testament lesson of Balaam, the false prophet, should instruct us in this point. Repeatedly God told Balaam not to curse Israel, regardless of the reward offered to him by Israel’s enemies. At first he chose to listen to God’s warning, but the appeal of an increasing sum of wealth to curse Israel tugged at his indulgent heart. Against God’s warning, he agreed to go. As he rode his donkey on this ill-intended journey, the donkey saw the angel of God, poised to destroy this mercenary prophet. The donkey stopped in his tracks. At first the prophet beat and coaxed the donkey. Finally, God allowed a donkey to speak to a prophet whose selfish motives were dumber than his donkey! Only by this donkey’s refusal to continue down the path had the false prophet been spared an instant death.
For a believer in Christ to pursue the carnal version of the good life, or to pursue godliness with selfish schemes, is no less bizarre than this stubborn prophet’s scheme. May we embrace God’s view of the good life-and pursue it.
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Gill -> 1Pe 3:10
Gill: 1Pe 3:10 - -- For he that will love life,.... This, with what follows here and in the two next verses, are taken out of Psa 34:12 and are produced as a proof of wha...
For he that will love life,.... This, with what follows here and in the two next verses, are taken out of Psa 34:12 and are produced as a proof of what is before said; that it is a good man's duty not to do or speak evil in return for what is done or said to him; but on the contrary, it becomes him to avoid evil, do good, and seek peace as much as possible, and leave it with a righteous God to vindicate him and his cause, who will not fail to do it; and that such shall inherit the blessing both here and hereafter: in the psalm, these words are put by way of question, "what man is he that desireth life?" that wills it with pleasure, that loves it with a love of complacency and delight? and which is to be understood, not of natural life; for what man is there that do not love that? love of a natural life is natural to men; it is a first principle in nature to desire life, and a preservation of it, and to a great length; a man will give all that he has for it, as Satan said, Job 2:4, but both of a spiritual life, a life of faith on Christ, communion with him, and holiness from him; the life of God, or to live soberly, righteously, and godly, which carnal men are alienated from, and enemies to, and cannot desire, only spiritual men; and of an eternal one; and so some of the Jewish interpreters u understand by life and good days, in the psalm, such as are both in this world, and in that which is to come:
and see good days; not the days of this life, which are evil, even the days of a good man, Gen 47:9 and the more so, the longer he lives; for the days of old age are evil days, in which there is no pleasure, Ecc 12:1, unless such days are meant, in which much good is done to the honour and glory of God, and in which gracious souls enjoy much of God, and see and taste of his grace and goodness in the land of the living; though, rather, the good days of eternity, even length of days for ever and ever, which holy men of God shall see, and enjoy in the other world, when they shall be possessed of fulness of joy, and of pleasure for evermore: in the psalm it is, "and loveth many days, that he may see good"; desires a blessed eternity of good things:
let him refrain his tongue from evil; bridle that unruly member, which has a world of iniquity in it; let him keep it as with a bit, from the vices incident to it; from all obscene words, filthy and corrupt communication, whatever is unsavoury and unedifying; from lying, cursing, swearing, and particularly from railing and evil speaking, in return for such language, which is chiefly meant; as well as from belching out blasphemies against God, and damnable heresies among men; for whoever would be thought a religious man, and lays no restraint on his tongue, his religion is a vain thing, Jam 1:26 and his lips that they speak no guile; as flatterers do, who speak that with their mouth which does not agree with their heart, and so beguile and deceive persons; and as false teachers, who use dishonest arts, walk in craftiness, handle the word of God deceitfully, use ambiguous phrases, and words of double meaning, and with their good words, and fair speeches, deceive the hearts of the simple but such things do not become persons that seek for glory, honour, and immortality; that profess to be Israelites indeed; in these guile should not be found in their lips, nor in their lives,

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Pe 3:1-22
TSK Synopsis: 1Pe 3:1-22 - --1 He teaches the duty of wives and husbands to each other;8 exhorting all men to unity and love;14 and to suffer persecution.19 He declares also the b...
MHCC -> 1Pe 3:8-13
MHCC: 1Pe 3:8-13 - --Though Christians cannot always be exactly of the same mind, yet they should have compassion one of another, and love as brethren. If any man desires ...
Matthew Henry -> 1Pe 3:8-15
Matthew Henry: 1Pe 3:8-15 - -- The apostle here passes from special to more general exhortations. I. He teaches us how Christians and friends should treat one another. He advises ...
Barclay -> 1Pe 3:8-12; 1Pe 3:8-12
Barclay: 1Pe 3:8-12 - --Peter, as it were, gathers together the great qualities of the Christian life.
(i) Right in the forefront he sets Christian unity. It is worth whil...

Barclay: 1Pe 3:8-12 - --(ii) Second, Peter sets sympathy. Here again the whole New Testament urges this duty upon us. We are to rejoice with those who rejoice and to weep ...
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...
