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Text -- 1 Peter 4:1-5 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: 1Pe 4:1 - -- For as much then as Christ suffered in the flesh ( Christou oun pathontos sarki ).
Genitive absolute with second aorist active participle of paschō...
For as much then as Christ suffered in the flesh (
Genitive absolute with second aorist active participle of
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:1 - -- Arm ye yourselves also ( kai humeis hoplisasthe ).
Direct middle first aorist imperative of hoplizō , old verb from hoplon (weapon, Joh 18:3), in...
Arm ye yourselves also (
Direct middle first aorist imperative of
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:1 - -- With the same mind ( tēn autēn ennoian ).
Accusative of the thing (content), ennoian , old word (from en , nous ), putting in mind, thinking, w...
With the same mind (
Accusative of the thing (content),
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For (
Reason for the exhortation.
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:1 - -- Hath ceased from sin ( pepautai hamartias ).
Perfect middle indicative of pauō to make cease and the ablative singular hamartias , but B reads th...
Hath ceased from sin (
Perfect middle indicative of
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:2 - -- That ye no longer should live ( eis to mēketi biōsai ).
Purpose clause with eis to (negative mē ) and the first aorist (for the Attic second...
That ye no longer should live (
Purpose clause with
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:2 - -- The rest of your time in the flesh ( ton epiloipon en sarki chronon ).
Accusative of time (chronon , period of time). Epiloipon is old adjective (e...
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:3 - -- Past ( parelēluthōs ).
Perfect active participle of the compound verb parerchomai , old verb, to go by (beside) as in Mat 14:15 with hōra (ho...
Past (
Perfect active participle of the compound verb
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:3 - -- May suffice ( arketos ).
No copula in the Greek, probably estin (is) rather than dunatai (can). Late and rare verbal adjective from arkeō , to ...
May suffice (
No copula in the Greek, probably
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:3 - -- To have wrought ( kateirgasthai ).
Perfect middle infinitive of katergazomai , common compound (kata , ergon work) as in 1Co 5:3.
To have wrought (
Perfect middle infinitive of
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:3 - -- The desire ( to boulēma ).
Correct text, not thelēma . Either means the thing desired, willed. Jews sometimes fell in with the ways of Gentiles (...
The desire (
Correct text, not
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:3 - -- And to have walked ( peporeumenous ).
Perfect middle participle of poreuomai in the accusative plural of general reference with the infinitive kate...
And to have walked (
Perfect middle participle of
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:3 - -- In lasciviousness ( en aselgeiais ).
All these sins are in the locative case with en . "In unbridled lustful excesses"(2Pe 2:7; 2Co 12:21).
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:3 - -- Winebibbings ( oinophlugiais ).
Old compound (oinos , wine, phluō , to bubble up), for drunkenness, here only in N.T. (also in Deu 21:20).
Winebibbings (
Old compound (
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:3 - -- Revellings ( komois ).
Old word (from keimai , to lie down), rioting drinking parties, in N.T. here and Gal 5:21; Rom 13:13.
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:3 - -- Carousings ( potois ).
Old word for drinking carousal (from pinō , to drink), here only in the N.T. In the light of these words it seems strange to...
Carousings (
Old word for drinking carousal (from
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:3 - -- Abominable idolatries ( athemitois eidōlolatriais ).
To the Christian all "idolatry,"(eidōlon , latreia ), worship of idols, is "abominable,"no...
Abominable idolatries (
To the Christian all "idolatry,"(
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Wherein (
"In which thing"(manner of life).
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:4 - -- They think it strange ( xenizontai ).
Present passive indicative of xenizō , old verb (from xenos , stranger), to entertain a guest (Act 10:23), to...
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:4 - -- That ye run not with them ( mē suntrechontōn humōn ).
Genitive absolute (negative mē ) with present active participle of suntrechō , old c...
That ye run not with them (
Genitive absolute (negative
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Into the same excess of riot ( eis tēn autēn tēs asōtias anachusin ).
Anachusin (from anacheō to pour forth) is a late and rare word, o...
Into the same excess of riot (
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Speaking evil of you ( blasphēmountes ).
Present active participle of blasphēmeō as in Luk 22:65. "The Christians were compelled to stand alo...
Speaking evil of you (
Present active participle of
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:5 - -- Who shall give account ( hoi apodōsousin logon ).
Future active indicative of apodidōmi . For this use with logon (account) see Mat 12:36; Luk ...
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Robertson: 1Pe 4:5 - -- To him that is ready to judge ( tōi hetoimōs krinonti ).
Dative, "to the one readily judging,"correct text, not hetoimōs echonti krinai , "to t...
Vincent: 1Pe 4:1 - -- Arm yourselves ( ὁπλίσασθε )
Only here in New Testament. The thought is Pauline. See Rom 13:12; 2Co 6:7; Eph 6:10, Eph 6:17; 1Th 5:8...
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Vincent: 1Pe 4:1 - -- Mind ( ἔννοιαν )
Only here and Heb 4:12. Literally the word means thought, and so some render it here. Rev. puts it in margin. The r...
Mind (
Only here and Heb 4:12. Literally the word means thought, and so some render it here. Rev. puts it in margin. The rendering intent, resolution, is very doubtful. It seems rather to be the thought as determining the resolution. Since Christ has suffered in the flesh, be ye also willing to suffer in the flesh.
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Live (
Only here in New Testament.
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The rest of the time (
Only here in New Testament.
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Of our life (
The best texts omit.
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Vincent: 1Pe 4:3 - -- Will ( βούλημα , the better reading for θέλημα )
Desire, inclination. See on Mat 1:19.
Will (
Desire, inclination. See on Mat 1:19.
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Vincent: 1Pe 4:3 - -- When we walked ( πεπορευμένους )
Rev., rightly, ye walked. Construe with to have wrought. The time past may suffice for you ...
When we walked (
Rev., rightly, ye walked. Construe with to have wrought. The time past may suffice for you to have wrought the desire, etc., walking as ye have done; the perfect participle having an inferential reference to a course of life now done with.
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Vincent: 1Pe 4:3 - -- Lasciviousness ( ἀσελγείαις )
The following enumeration of vices is characteristic of Peter's style in its fulness and condensation...
Lasciviousness (
The following enumeration of vices is characteristic of Peter's style in its fulness and condensation. He enumerates six forms of sensuality, three personal and three social: (1)
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Vincent: 1Pe 4:3 - -- Revellings ( κώμοις )
The word originally signifies merely a merry-making; most probably a village festival, from κώμη , a vil...
Revellings (
The word originally signifies merely a merry-making; most probably a village festival, from
" With vigorous hand the clamorous drum they rouse,
And wake the sounding cymbal; the hoarse horn
Pours forth its threatening music, and the pipe,
With Phrygian airs distracts the maddening mind,
While arms of blood the fierce enthusiasts wield
To fright the unrighteous crowds, and bend profound
Their impious souls before the power divine.
Thus moves the pompous idol through the streets,
Scattering mute blessings, while the throngs devout
Strew, in return, their silver and their brass,
Loading the paths with presents, and o'ershade
The heavenly form; and all th' attending train,
With dulcet sprays of roses, pluckt profuse,
A band select before them, by the Greeks
Curetes called, from Phrygian parents sprung,
Sport with fantastic chains, the measured dance
Weaving infuriate, charmed with human blood,
And madly shaking their tremendous crests."
De Rerum Natura , ii., 618-631.
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Banquetings (
Lit., drinking-bouts. Rev., carousings .
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Vincent: 1Pe 4:3 - -- Abominable ( ἀθεμίτοις )
Only here, and by Peter in Act 10:28. More literally, unlawful, emphasizing the idolatries as violations ...
Abominable (
Only here, and by Peter in Act 10:28. More literally, unlawful, emphasizing the idolatries as violations of divine law.
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Vincent: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Run not with them
" In a troop" (Bengel); like a band of revellers. See above. Compare Ovid's description of the Bacchic rites:
" Lo, Bacchus ...
Run not with them
" In a troop" (Bengel); like a band of revellers. See above. Compare Ovid's description of the Bacchic rites:
" Lo, Bacchus comes! and with the festive cries
Resound the fields; and mixed in headlong rout,
Men, matrons, maids, paupers, and nobles proud,
To the mysterious rites are borne along."
Metamorphoses , iii., 528-530.
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Vincent: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Excess ( ἀνάχυσιν )
Only here in New Testament. Lit., pouring forth. Rev. has flood in margin. The word is used in classical Gree...
Excess (
Only here in New Testament. Lit., pouring forth. Rev. has flood in margin. The word is used in classical Greek of the tides which fill the hollows.
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Vincent: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Riot ( ἀσωτιάς )
From ἀ , not, and σώζω , to same. Lit., unsavingness, prodigality, wastefulness; and thence of squander...
Riot (
From
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Vincent: 1Pe 4:5 - -- That is ready ( ἑτοίμως ἔχοντι )
Lit., having himself in readiness; there at God's right hand in heaven, whither he has go...
Which will be armour of proof against all your enemies.
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Wesley: 1Pe 4:1 - -- That hath so suffered as to he thereby made inwardly and truly conformable to the sufferings of Christ.
That hath so suffered as to he thereby made inwardly and truly conformable to the sufferings of Christ.
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Wesley: 1Pe 4:2 - -- Either your own or those of others. These are various; but the will of God is one.
Either your own or those of others. These are various; but the will of God is one.
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Wesley: 1Pe 4:3 - -- Have these words any meaning now? They had, seventeen hundred years ago. Then the former meant, meetings to eat; meetings, the direct end of which was...
Have these words any meaning now? They had, seventeen hundred years ago. Then the former meant, meetings to eat; meetings, the direct end of which was, to please the taste: the latter, meetings to drink: both of which Christians then ranked with abominable idolatries.
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As proud, singular, silly, wicked and the like.
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Of this, as well as all their other ways.
Supported by some oldest manuscripts and versions, omitted by others.
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Of suffering with patient willingness what God wills you to suffer.
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JFB: 1Pe 4:1 - -- For instance, Christ first, and in His person the believer: a general proposition.
For instance, Christ first, and in His person the believer: a general proposition.
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JFB: 1Pe 4:1 - -- Literally, "has been made to cease," has obtained by the very fact of His having suffered once for all, a cessation from sin, which had heretofore lai...
Literally, "has been made to cease," has obtained by the very fact of His having suffered once for all, a cessation from sin, which had heretofore lain on Him (Rom 6:6-11, especially, 1Pe 4:7). The Christian is by faith one with Christ: as then Christ by death is judicially freed from sin; so the Christian who has in the person of Christ died, has no more to do with it judicially, and ought to have no more to do with it actually. "The flesh" is the sphere in which sin has place.
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JFB: 1Pe 4:2 - -- "That he (the believer, who has once for all obtained cessation from sin by suffering, in the person of Christ, namely, in virtue of his union with th...
"That he (the believer, who has once for all obtained cessation from sin by suffering, in the person of Christ, namely, in virtue of his union with the crucified Christ) should no longer live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men, but to the will of God" as his rule. "Rest of his time in the flesh" (the Greek has the preposition "in" here, not in 1Pe 4:1 as to Christ) proves that the reference is here not to Christ, but to the believer, whose remaining time for glorifying God is short (1Pe 4:3). "Live" in the truest sense, for heretofore he was dead. Not as ALFORD, "Arm yourselves . . . with a view no longer to live the rest of your time."
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JFB: 1Pe 4:3 - -- Greek, "is sufficient." Peter takes the lowest ground: for not even the past time ought to have been wasted in lust; but since you cannot recall it, a...
Greek, "is sufficient." Peter takes the lowest ground: for not even the past time ought to have been wasted in lust; but since you cannot recall it, at least lay out the future to better account.
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JFB: 1Pe 4:3 - -- "walking as ye have done [ALFORD] in lasciviousness"; the Greek means petulant, immodest, wantonness, unbridled conduct: not so much filthy lust.
"walking as ye have done [ALFORD] in lasciviousness"; the Greek means petulant, immodest, wantonness, unbridled conduct: not so much filthy lust.
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JFB: 1Pe 4:3 - -- "nefarious," "lawless idolatries," violating God's most sacred law; not that all Peter's readers (see on 1Pe 1:1) walked in these, but many, namely, t...
"nefarious," "lawless idolatries," violating God's most sacred law; not that all Peter's readers (see on 1Pe 1:1) walked in these, but many, namely, the Gentile portion of them.
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Literally, "profusion"; a sink: stagnant water remaining after an inundation.
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JFB: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Charging you with pride, singularity, hypocrisy, and secret crimes (1Pe 4:14; 2Pe 2:2). However, there is no "of you" in the Greek, but simply "blasph...
Charging you with pride, singularity, hypocrisy, and secret crimes (1Pe 4:14; 2Pe 2:2). However, there is no "of you" in the Greek, but simply "blaspheming." It seems to me always to be used, either directly or indirectly, in the sense of impious reviling against God, Christ, or the Holy Spirit, and the Christian religion, not merely against men as such; Greek, 1Pe 4:14, below.
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JFB: 1Pe 4:5 - -- They who now call you to account falsely, shall have to give account themselves for this very evil-speaking (Jud 1:15), and be condemned justly.
They who now call you to account falsely, shall have to give account themselves for this very evil-speaking (Jud 1:15), and be condemned justly.
Clarke: 1Pe 4:1 - -- As Christ hath suffered - He is your proper pattern; have the same disposition he had; the same forgiving spirit, with meekness, gentleness, and com...
As Christ hath suffered - He is your proper pattern; have the same disposition he had; the same forgiving spirit, with meekness, gentleness, and complete self-possession
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Clarke: 1Pe 4:1 - -- He that hath suffered in the flesh, hath ceased from sin - This is a general maxim, if understood literally: The man who suffers generally reflects ...
He that hath suffered in the flesh, hath ceased from sin - This is a general maxim, if understood literally: The man who suffers generally reflects on his ways, is humbled, fears approaching death, loathes himself because of his past iniquities, and ceases from them; for, in a state of suffering, the mind loses its relish for the sins of the flesh, because they are embittered to him through the apprehension which he has of death and judgment; and, on his application to God’ s mercy, he is delivered from his sin
Some suppose the words are to be understood thus: "Those who have firmly resolved, if called to it, to suffer death rather than apostatize from Christianity, have consequently ceased from, or are delivered from, the sin of saving their lives at the expense of their faith."Others think that it is a parallel passage to Rom 6:7, and interpret it thus: "He that hath mortified the flesh, hath ceased from sin."Dr. Bentley applies the whole to our redemption by Christ: He that hath suffered in the flesh hath died for our sins. But this seems a very constrained sense.
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Clarke: 1Pe 4:2 - -- That he no longer should live - in the flesh - Governed by the base principle of giving up his faith to save his life; to the lusts of men - accordi...
That he no longer should live - in the flesh - Governed by the base principle of giving up his faith to save his life; to the lusts of men - according to the will of his idolatrous persecutors; but to the will of God; which will of God is, that he should retain the truth, and live according to its dictates, though he should suffer for it.
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Clarke: 1Pe 4:3 - -- The time past of our life - This is a complete epitome of the Gentile or heathen state, and a proof that those had been Gentiles to whom the apostle...
The time past of our life - This is a complete epitome of the Gentile or heathen state, and a proof that those had been Gentiles to whom the apostle wrote
1. They walked in lasciviousness,
2. In lusts,
3. In excess of wine,
4. In revellings,
5. In banquetings,
6. In abominable idolatries,
This was the general state of the Gentile world; and with this monstrous wickedness Christianity had everywhere to struggle.
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Clarke: 1Pe 4:4 - -- They think it strange - Ξενιζονται· They wonder and are astonished at you, that ye can renounce these gratifications of the flesh for a...
They think it strange -
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Clarke: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Excess of riot - Ασωτιας αναχυσιν· Flood of profligacy; bearing down all rule, order, and restraints before it
Excess of riot -
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Clarke: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Speaking evil of you - Βλασφημουντες· Literally, blaspheming; i.e. speaking impiously against God, and calumniously of you.
Speaking evil of you -
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Clarke: 1Pe 4:5 - -- To judge the quick and the dead - They shall give account of these irregularities to Him who is prepared to judge both the Jews and the Gentiles. Th...
To judge the quick and the dead - They shall give account of these irregularities to Him who is prepared to judge both the Jews and the Gentiles. The Gentiles, previously to the preaching of the Gospel among them, were reckoned to be dead in trespasses and sins, Eph 2:1-5; under the sentence of death, because they had sinned. The Jews had at least, by their religious profession, a name to live; and by that profession were bound to give to God.
Calvin: 1Pe 4:1 - -- 1.Forasmuch then as Christ When he had before set forth Christ before us, he only spoke of the suffering of the cross; for sometimes the cross means ...
1.Forasmuch then as Christ When he had before set forth Christ before us, he only spoke of the suffering of the cross; for sometimes the cross means mortification, because the outward man is wasted by afflictions, and our flesh is also subdued. But he now ascends higher; for he speaks of the reformation of the whole man. The Scripture recommends to us a twofold likeness to the death of Christ, that we are to be conformed to him in reproaches and troubles, and also that the old man being dead and extinct in us, we are to be renewed to a spiritual life. (Phi 3:10; Rom 6:4.) Yet Christ is not simply to be viewed as our example, when we speak of the mortificaion of the flesh; but it is by his Spirit that we are really made conformable to his death, so that it becomes effectual to the crucifying of our flesh. In short, as Peter at the end of the last chapter exhorted us to patience after the example of Christ, because death was to him a passage to life; so now from the same death he deduces a higher doctrine, that we ought to die to the flesh and to the world, as Paul teaches us more at large in Rom 6:1. He therefore says, arm yourselves, or be ye armed, intimating that we are really and effectually supplied with invincible weapons to subdue the flesh, if we partake as we ought of the efficacy of Christ’s death.
For he that hath suffered The particle
“He who is dead is justified or freed from sin;”
for both the Apostles intimate, that when we become dead to the flesh, we have no more to do with sin, that it should reign in us, and exercise its power in our life. 44
It may, however, be objected, that Peter here speaks unsuitably in making us to be conformable to Christ in this respect, that we suffer in the flesh; for it is certain that there was nothing sinful in Christ which required to be corrected. But the answer is obvious, that it is not necessary that a comparison should correspond in all its parts. It is then enough that we should in a measure be made conformable to the death of Christ. In the same way is also explained, not unfitly, what Paul says, that we are planted in the likeness of his death, (Rom 6:5;) for the manner is not altogether the same, but that his death is become in a manner the type and pattern of our mortification.
We must also notice that the word flesh is put here twice, but in a different sense; for when he says that Christ suffered in the flesh, he means that the human nature which Christ had taken from us was made subject to death, that is, that Christ as a man naturally died. In the second clause, which refers to us, flesh means the corruption, and the sinfulness of our nature; and thus suffering in the flesh signifies the denying of ourselves. We now see what is the likeness between Christ and us, and what is the difference; that as he suffered in the flesh taken from us, so the whole of our flesh ought to be crucified.
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Calvin: 1Pe 4:2 - -- 2.That he no longer Here he sets forth the way of ceasing from sin, that renouncing the covetings of men we should study to form our life according t...
2.That he no longer Here he sets forth the way of ceasing from sin, that renouncing the covetings of men we should study to form our life according to the will of God. And thus he includes here the two things in which renovation consists, the destruction of the flesh and the vivification of the spirit. The course of good living is thus to begin with the former, but we are to advance to the latter.
Moreover, Peter defines here what is the rule of right living, even when man depends on the will of God. It hence follows, that nothing is right and well ordered in man’s life as soon as he wanders from this rule. We ought further to notice the contrast between God’s will and the covetings or lusts of men We hence understand how great is our depravity, and how we ought to strive to become obedient to God. When he says, the rest of time in the flesh, the word flesh means the present life, as in Heb 5:7
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Calvin: 1Pe 4:3 - -- 3.For the time past of our life may suffice Peter does not mean that we ought to be wearied with pleasures, as those are wont to be who are filled wi...
3.For the time past of our life may suffice Peter does not mean that we ought to be wearied with pleasures, as those are wont to be who are filled with them to satiety; but that on the contrary the memory of our past life ought to stimulate us to repentance. And doubtless it ought to be the sharpest goad to make us run on well, when we recollect that we have been wandering from the right way the greatest part of our life. And Peter reminds us, that it would be most unreasonable were we not to change the course of our life after having been enlightened by Christ. For he makes a distinction here between the time of ignorance and the time of faith, as though he had said that it was but right that they should become new and different men from the time that Christ had called them. But instead of the lusts or covetings of men, he now mentions the will of the Gentiles, by which he reproves the Jews for having mixed with the Gentiles in all their pollutions, though the Lord had separated them from the Gentiles.
In what follows he shews that those vices ought to be put off which prove men to be blind and ignorant of God. And there is a peculiar emphasis in the words, the time past of our life, for he intimates that we ought to persevere to the end, as when Paul says, that Christ was raised from the dead, to die no more. (Rom 6:6.) For we have been redeemed by the Lord for this end, that we may serve him all the days of our life.
In lasciviousness He does not give the whole catalogue of sins, but only mentions some of them, by which we may briefly learn what those things are which men, not renewed by God’s Spirit, desire and seek, and to which they are inclined. And he names the grosser vices, as it is usually done when examples are adduced. I shall not stop to explain the words, for there is no difficulty in them.
But here a question arises, that Peter seems to have done wrong to many, in making all men guilty of lasciviousness, dissipation, lusts, drunkenness, and revellings; for it is certain that all were not involved in these vices; nay, we know that some among the Gentiles lived honourably and without a spot of infamy. To this I reply, that Peter does not so ascribe these vices to the Gentiles, as though he charged every individual with all these, but that we are by nature inclined to all these evils, and not only so, but that we are so much under the power of depravity, that these fruits which he mentions necessarily proceed from it as from an evil root. There is indeed no one who has not within him the seed of all vices, but all do not germinate and grow up in every individual. Yet the contagion is so spread and diffused through the whole human race, that the whole community appears infected with innumerable evils, and that no member is free or pure from the common corruption.
The last clause may also suggest another question, for Peter addressed the Jews, and yet he says that they had been immersed in abominable idolatries; but the Jews then living in every part of the world carefully abstained from idols. A twofold answer may be adduced here, either that by mentioning the whole for a part, he declares of all what belonged to a few, (for there is no doubt but the Churches to which he wrote were made up of Gentiles as well as of Jews,) or that he calls those superstitions in which the Jews were then involved, idolatries; for though they professed to worship the God of Israel, yet we know that no part of divine worship was genuine among them. And how great must have been the confusion in barbarous countries and among a scattered people, when Jerusalem itself, from whose rays they borrowed their light, had fallen into extreme impiety! for we know that dotages of every kind prevailed with impunity, so that the high-priesthood, and the whole government of the Church, were in the power of the Sadducees.
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Calvin: 1Pe 4:4 - -- 4.Wherein they think it strange The words of Peter literally are these, “In which they are strangers, you not running with them into the same exces...
4.Wherein they think it strange The words of Peter literally are these, “In which they are strangers, you not running with them into the same excess of riot, blaspheming.” But the word, to be strangers, means to stop at a thing as new and unusual. This is a way of speaking which the Latins also sometimes use, as when Cicero says that he was a stranger in the city, because he knew not what was carried on there. But in this place, Peter fortifies the faithful, lest they should suffer themselves to be disturbed or corrupted by the perverse judgments or words of the ungodly. For it is no light temptation, when they among whom we live, charge us that our life is different from that of mankind in general. “These,” they say, “must form for themselves a new world, for they differ from all mankind.” Thus they accuse the children of God, as though they attempted a separation from the whole world.
Then the Apostle anticipated this, and forbade the faithful to be discouraged by such reproaches and calumnies; and he proposed to them, as a support, the judgment of God: for this it is that can sustain us against all assaults, that is, when we patiently wait for that day, in which Christ will punish all those who now presumptuously condemn us, and will shew that we and our cause are approved by Him. And he expressly mentions the living and the dead, lest we should think that we shall suffer any loss, if they remain alive when we are dead; for they shall not, for this reason, escape the hand of God. And in what sense he calls them the living and the dead, we may learn from 1Co 15:12
Defender -> 1Pe 4:1
Defender: 1Pe 4:1 - -- Having died for our sins, Christ is forever done with sin (Phi 2:5-8). Peter urges us likewise to have the same mind He did, that we might also cease ...
Having died for our sins, Christ is forever done with sin (Phi 2:5-8). Peter urges us likewise to have the same mind He did, that we might also cease from sin, having died to sin and risen to a new life in Christ. This must always be our goal, and, increasingly, our reality, until we finally will cease from even the presence of sin when we are with Him in heaven (compare Rom 6:1-14; 1Jo 3:2-10)."
TSK: 1Pe 4:1 - -- Christ : 1Pe 3:18
arm : Rom 13:12-14; Phi 2:5; Heb 12:3
for : Rom 6:2, Rom 6:7, Rom 6:11; Gal 2:20, Gal 5:24; Col 3:3-5
ceased : Isa 1:16; Eze 16:41; ...
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TSK: 1Pe 4:2 - -- no : 1Pe 2:1, 1Pe 2:14; Rom 7:4, Rom 14:7; Eph 4:17, Eph 4:22-24, Eph 5:7, Eph 5:8; Col 3:7, Col 3:8; Tit 3:3-8
the lusts : Hos 6:7 *marg. Mar 7:21; E...
no : 1Pe 2:1, 1Pe 2:14; Rom 7:4, Rom 14:7; Eph 4:17, Eph 4:22-24, Eph 5:7, Eph 5:8; Col 3:7, Col 3:8; Tit 3:3-8
the lusts : Hos 6:7 *marg. Mar 7:21; Eph 2:3
the will : 1Pe 2:15; Psa 143:10; Mat 7:21, Mat 12:50, Mat 21:31; Mar 3:35; Joh 1:13, Joh 7:17; Rom 6:11, Rom 12:2; 2Co 5:15; Gal 2:19, Gal 2:20; Eph 5:17, Eph 6:6; Col 1:9, Col 4:12; 1Th 5:18; Heb 13:21; Jam 1:18; 1Jo 2:17
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TSK: 1Pe 4:3 - -- the time : Eze 44:6, Eze 45:9; Act 17:30; Rom 8:12, Rom 8:13; 1Co 6:11
to have : 1Pe 1:14; Deu 12:30,Deu 12:31; Rom 1:20-32; Eph 2:2, Eph 2:3, Eph 4:1...
the time : Eze 44:6, Eze 45:9; Act 17:30; Rom 8:12, Rom 8:13; 1Co 6:11
to have : 1Pe 1:14; Deu 12:30,Deu 12:31; Rom 1:20-32; Eph 2:2, Eph 2:3, Eph 4:17; 1Th 4:5; Tit 3:3
lasciviousness : Mar 7:22; 2Co 12:21; Gal 5:19; Eph 4:19; Jud 1:4
excess : 2Sa 13:28; Pro 23:29-35; Isa 5:11, Isa 28:7; Eph 5:18
revellings : Gal 5:21
and : 1Ki 21:26; 2Ch 15:8; Isa 65:4; Jer 16:18; Rev 17:4, Rev 17:5
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TSK: 1Pe 4:4 - -- excess : Mat 23:25; Luk 15:13; Rom 13:13; 2Pe 2:22
speaking : 1Pe 2:12, 1Pe 3:16; Act 13:45, Act 18:6; 2Pe 2:12; Jud 1:10
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TSK: 1Pe 4:5 - -- shall : Mal 3:13-15; Mat 12:36; Luk 16:2; Rom 14:12; Jud 1:14, Jud 1:15
that : Psa 1:6; Ecc 12:14; Eze 18:30; Matt. 25:31-46; Joh 5:22, Joh 5:23, Joh ...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 1Pe 4:1 - -- Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh - Since he as a man has died for us. See the notes at 1Pe 3:18. The design was to se...
Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh - Since he as a man has died for us. See the notes at 1Pe 3:18. The design was to set the suffering Redeemer before them as an example in their trials.
Arm yourselves likewise with the same mind - That is, evidently, the same mind that he evinced - a readiness to suffer in the cause of religion, a readiness to die as he had done. This readiness to suffer and die, the apostle speaks of as armour, and having this is represented as being armed. Armour is put on for offensive or defensive purposes in war; and the idea of the apostle here is, that that state of mind when we are ready to meet with persecution and trial, and when we are ready to die, will answer the purpose of armour in engaging in the conflicts and strifes which pertain to us as Christians, and especially in meeting with persecutions and trials. We are to put on the same fortitude which the Lord Jesus had, and this will be the best defense against our foes, and the best security of victory.
For he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin - Compare the notes at Rom 6:7. To "suffer in the flesh"is to die. The expression here has a proverbial aspect, and seems to have meant something like this: "when a man is dead, he will sin no more;"referring of course to the present life. So if a Christian becomes dead in a moral sense - dead to this world, dead by being crucified with Christ (see the notes at Gal 2:20) - he may be expected to cease from sin. The reasoning is based on the idea that there is such a union between Christ and the believer that his death on the cross secured the death of the believer to the world. Compare 2Ti 2:11; Col 2:20; Col 3:3.
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Barnes: 1Pe 4:2 - -- That he no longer should live - That is, he has become, through the death of Christ, dead to the world and to the former things which influence...
That he no longer should live - That is, he has become, through the death of Christ, dead to the world and to the former things which influenced him, in order that he should hereafter live not to the lusts of the flesh. See the notes at 2Co 5:15.
The rest of his time in the flesh - The remainder of the time that he is to continue in the flesh; that is, that he is to live on the earth.
To the lusts of men - Such lusts as people commonly live for and indulge in. Some of these are enumerated in the following verse.
But to the will of God - In such a manner as God commands. The object of redemption is to rescue us from being swayed by wicked lusts, and to bring us to be conformed wholly to the will of God.
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Barnes: 1Pe 4:3 - -- For the time past of our life may suffice us - "We have spent sufficient time in indulging ourselves, and following our wicked propensities, an...
For the time past of our life may suffice us - "We have spent sufficient time in indulging ourselves, and following our wicked propensities, and we should hereafter live in a different manner."This does not mean that it was ever proper thus to live, but that, as we would say, "we have had enough of these things; we have tried them; there is no reason why we should indulge in them any more."An expression quite similar to this occurs in Horace - Lusisti satis, edisti satis, atque bibisti. Tempus abire tibi est , etc. Epis. ii. 213.
To have wrought the will of the Gentiles - This does not mean to be subservient to their will, but to have done what they willed to do; that is, to live as they did. That the Gentiles or pagan lived in the manner immediately specified, see demonstrated in the notes at Rom 1:21-32.
When we walked in lasciviousness - When we lived in the indulgence of corrupt passions - the word walk being often used in the Scriptures to denote the manner of life. On the word "lasciviousness,"see the notes at Rom 13:13. The apostle says we, not as meaning that he himself had been addicted to these vices, but as speaking of those who were Christians in general. It is common to say that we lived so and so, when speaking of a collection of persons, without meaning that each one was guilty of all the practices enumerated. See the notes at 1Th 4:17, for a similar use of the word we. The use of the word we in this place would show that the apostle did not mean to set himself up as better than they were, but was willing to be identified with them.
Lusts - The indulgence of unlawful desires. See the notes at Rom 1:24.
Excess of wine - The word used here (
Revellings - Rendered rioting in Rom 13:13. See the notes at that verse. The Greek word (
Banquetings - The word used here (
And abominable idolatries - Literally, unlawful idolatries; that is, unlawful to the Jews, or forbidden by their laws. Then the expression is used in the sense of wicked, impious, since what is unlawful is impious and wrong. That the vices here referred to were practiced by the pagan world is well known. See the notes at Rom 1:26-31. That many who became Christians were guilty of them before their conversion is clear from this passage. The fact that they were thus converted shows the power of the gospel, and also that we should not despair in regard to those who are indulging in these vices now. They seem indeed almost to be hopeless, but we should remember that many who became Christians when the gospel was first preached, as well as since, were of this character. If they were reclaimed; if those who had been addicted to the gross and debasing vices referred to here, were brought into the kingdom of God, we should believe that those who are living in the same manner now may also be recovered. From the statement made in this verse, that "the time past of our lives may suffice to have worked the will of the Gentiles,"we may remark that the same may be said by all Christians of themselves; the same thing is true of all who are living in sin:
(1) It is true of all who are Christians, and they feel it, that they lived long enough in sin:
(a) They made a fair trial - many of them with ample opportunities; with abundant wealth; with all that the fashionable world can furnish; with all that can be derived from low and gross indulgences. Many who are now Christians had opportunities of living in splendor and ease; many moved in joyful and brilliant circles; many occupied stations of influence, or had brilliant prospects of distinction; many gave indulgence to gross propensities; many were the companions of the vile and the abandoned. Those who are now Christians, take the church at large, have had ample opportunity of making the fullest trial of what sin and the world can furnish.
(b) They all feel that the past is enough for this manner of living. It is "sufficient"to satisfy them that the world cannot furnish what the soul demands. They need a better portion; and they can now see that there is no reason why they should desire to continue the experiment in regard to what the world can furnish. On that unwise and wicked experiment they have expended time enough; and satisfied with that, they desire to return to it no more.
\caps1 (2) t\caps0 he same thing is true of the wicked - of all who are living for the world. The time past should be regarded as sufficient to make an experiment in sinful indulgences; for:
(a)\caps1 t\caps0 he experiment has been made by millions before them, and has always failed; and they can hope to find in sin only what has always been found - disappointment, mortification, and despair.
(b) They have made a sufficient experiment. They have never found in those indulgences what they flattered themselves they would find, and they have seen enough to satisfy them that what the immortal soul needs can never be obtained there.
© They have spent sufficient time in this hopeless experiment. Life is short. Man has no time to waste. He may soon die - and at whatever period of life anyone may be who is living in sin, we may say to him that he has already wasted enough of life; he has thrown away enough of probation in a fruitless attempt to find happiness where it can never be found.
For any purpose whatever for which anyone could ever suppose it to be desirable to live in sin, the past should suffice. But why should it ever be deemed desirable at all? The fruits of sin are always disappointment, tears, death, despair.
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Barnes: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Wherein they think it strange - In respect to which vices, they who were once your partners and accomplices now think it strange that you no lo...
Wherein they think it strange - In respect to which vices, they who were once your partners and accomplices now think it strange that you no longer unite with them. They do not understand the reasons why you have left them. They regard you as abandoning a course of life which has much to attract and to make life merry, for a severe and gloomy superstition. This is a true account of the feelings which the people of the world have when their companions and friends leave them and become Christians. It is to them a strange and unaccountable thing, that they give up the pleasures of the world for a course of life which to them seems to promise anything but happiness. Even the kindred of the Saviour regarded him as"beside himself,"Mar 3:21, and Festus supposed that Paul was mad, Act 26:24. There is almost nothing which the people of the world so little comprehend as the reasons which influence those with ample means of worldly enjoyment to leave the circles of gaiety and vanity, and to give themselves to the serious employments of religion. The epithets of fool, enthusiast, fanatic, are terms which frequently occur to the heart to denote this, if they are not always allowed to escape from the lips. The reasons why they esteem this so strange, are something like the following:
(1) They do not appreciate the motives which influence those who leave them. They feel that it is proper to enjoy the world, and to make life cheerful, and they do not understand what it is to act under a deep sense of responsibility to God, and with reference to eternity. They live for themselves. They seek happiness as the end and aim of life. They have never been accustomed to direct the mind onward to another world, and to the account which they must soon render at the bar of God. Unaccustomed to act from any higher motives than those which pertain to the present world, they cannot appreciate the conduct of those who begin to live and act for eternity.
\caps1 (2) t\caps0 hey do not yet see the guilt and folly of sinful pleasures. They are not convinced of the deep sinfulness of the human soul, and they think it strange that ethers should abandon a course of life which seems to them so innocent. They do not see why those who have been so long accustomed to these indulgences should have changed their opinions, and why they now regard those tilings as sinful which they once considered to be harmless.
\caps1 (3) t\caps0 hey do not see the force of the argument for religion. Not having the views of the unspeakable importance of religious truth and duty which Christians now have, they wonder that they should break off from the course of life which they formerly pursued, and separate from the mass of their fellow-men. Hence, they sometimes regard the conduct of Christians as amiable weakness; sometimes as superstition; sometimes as sheer folly; sometimes as madness; and sometimes as sourness and misanthropy. In all respects they esteem it strange:
"Lions and beasts of savage name.
Put on the nature of the lamb,
While the wide world esteems it strange,
Gaze, and admire, and hate the change."
That ye run not with them - There may be an allusion here to the well-known orgies of Bacchus, in which his votaries ran as if excited by the furies, and were urged on as if transported with madness. See Ovid, Metam. iii. 529, thus translated by Addison:
"For now, through prostrate Greece, young Bacchus rode,
Whilst howling matrons celebrate the god;
All ranks and sexes to his orgies ran,
To mingle in the pomp and fill the train,"
The language, however, will well describe revels of any sort, and at any period of the world.
To the same excess of riot - The word rendered "excess"(
Speaking evil of you - Greek, blaspheming. See the notes at Mat 9:3. The meaning here is, that they used harsh and reproachful epithets of those who would not unite with them in their revelry. They called them fools, fanatics, hypocrites, etc. The idea is not that they blasphemed God, or that they charged Christians with crime, but that they used language suited to injure the feelings, the character, the reputation of those who would no longer unite with them in the ways of vice and folly.
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Barnes: 1Pe 4:5 - -- Who shall give account - That is, they shall not do this with impunity. They are guilty in this of a groat wrong and they must answer for it to...
Who shall give account - That is, they shall not do this with impunity. They are guilty in this of a groat wrong and they must answer for it to God.
That is ready to judge - That is, "who is prepared to judge"-
To judge the quick and the dead - The living and the dead; that is, those who shall be alive when he comes, and those in their graves. This is a common phrase to denote all who shall be brought before the bar of God for judgment. See the Act 10:42 note; 1Th 4:16-17 notes; 2Ti 4:1 note. The meaning in this connection seems to be, that they should bear their trials and the opposition which they would meet with patiently, not feeling that they were forgotten, nor attempting to avenge themselves; for the Lord would vindicate them when he should come to judgment, and call those who had injured them to an account for all the wrongs which they had done to the children of God.
Poole: 1Pe 4:1 - -- 1Pe 4:1-6 The apostle exhorteth to cease from sin, in regard of
Christ’ s having suffered for it, and of a future judgment.
1Pe 4:7 From ...
1Pe 4:1-6 The apostle exhorteth to cease from sin, in regard of
Christ’ s having suffered for it, and of a future judgment.
1Pe 4:7 From the approaching end of all things, he urgeth to
sobriety, watchfulness, a prayer,
1Pe 4:8 to charity,
1Pe 4:9 hospitality,
1Pe 4:10,11 and a right use of spiritual gifts.
1Pe 4:12-19 Sundry motives of comfort under persecution.
The apostle having in the former chapter exhorted believers to patient bearing of afflictions by the example of Christ, 1Pe 4:18 , proceeds in this to persuade them to improve the crosses they bore outwardly to inward mortification. Christ’ s death is proposed to us in Scripture as an exemplar both of external mortification in bearing reproaches, persecutions, &c., (this the apostle prosecutes in the former chapter), and of internal, in the destroying the body of sin; this he exhorts to in this chapter, and indeed draws his argument from Christ’ s death, not only as the exemplary, but efficient and meritorious, cause of our mortification, and which hath a real influence upon it, in that Christ by his death did not only merit the pardon of sin, but the giving the Spirit, whereby corruption might be destroyed, and our natures renewed.
Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us viz. not only as an exemplar of patience and submission to the will of God, but for the taking away of sin, both in the guilt and power of it, and that he might be the procurer as well as pattern of our mortification.
In the flesh in his human nature, as 1Pe 3:18 .
Arm yourselves likewise with the same mind strengthen and fortify yourselves against all temptations, and unto the mortification of your lusts, with the consideration of these ends, and the mighty efficacy of Christ’ s death, he suffering in his flesh, i.e. in his human nature, that you might suffer in your flesh, i.e. in your sinful, corrupt nature; or, (which comes to the same), with the same mind which Christ had, who, in his death, aimed not only at the pardon of your sin, but the destruction of it, and the renovation of your natures: or, arm yourselves with the same mind, viz. a purpose of suffering in the flesh, i.e. of dying spiritually with Christ in the mortification of your flesh, Rom 6:6,7 ; as Christ died, and suffered in the flesh, so reckon that you, by the virtue of his death, must die to sin. and crucify your flesh, with its affections and lusts, Gal 5:24 : or else, what the same mind is, he declares in the following clause.
For or rather, that, the Greek word here seems rather to be explicative than causal.
He that hath suffered in the flesh i.e. the old man, his corrupt flesh, ( flesh being taken here in a different sense from what it was in the former part of the verse), he that is spiritually dead with Christ, whose old man is crucified with him.
Hath ceased from sin from sinning willingly and delightfully, and yielding himself up to the power of sin; compare Rom 6:1-23 , which explains this: what Peter here calls suffering in the flesh, Paul there calls a being dead to sin, Rom 6:2,11 ; and what Peter calls a ceasing from sin, Paul calls a living no longer in sin, Rom 6:2 , and a being freed from it, Rom 6:7 . And this may be the mind or thought, with which they were to be armed, that they being dead with Christ to sin, should not live any longer in it; having their flesh crucified, should not indulge its affections and lusts.
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Poole: 1Pe 4:2 - -- In the flesh i.e. in the body, meaning his natural life: flesh is here taken in a third sense, different from the two former: so Gal 2:20 Phi 1:22 ...
In the flesh i.e. in the body, meaning his natural life: flesh is here taken in a third sense, different from the two former: so Gal 2:20 Phi 1:22 . By the lusts of men, he means the corrupt desires and sinful ways of carnal men, to which they were not to conform themselves, or make them the rule of their living, Rom 12:2 1Co 3:3 Col 2:8 Tit 1:14 .
But to the will of God the holy will of God revealed to us in his law, (which is the rule by which we are to walk), in opposition to the lusts of men; we are to live not as men would have us, but as God commands us.
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Poole: 1Pe 4:3 - -- For the time past of our be may see: the apostle doth not mean by this expression merely that they should forbear their former lusts out of a satiety...
For the time past of our be may see: the apostle doth not mean by this expression merely that they should forbear their former lusts out of a satiety and weariness, as having had their fill of them, but to stir them up to holiness by minding them of their former sinful life; q.d. Ye are concerned to run well now, when ye have for so great a part of your time run wrong. It is a figure whereby he mitigates and lenifies the sharpness of his reproof for their former sinful life: see the like, Eze 44:6 45:9 Mar 14:41 .
Us some copies read, ye, and that agrees with the following verse, where the second person is made use of: or if we read, according to our translation, us, it is a figure called anacoenosis, whereby Peter assumes to himself in common with them what yet, in his own person, he was never guilty of, as Isa 64:6,7 Da 9:5 , &c.; or else it may be an analogy of the person, whereby the first is put for the second.
To have wrought the will of the Gentiles viz. those that were profane and ignorant of God and Christ, and so it is the same as the lusts of men, 1Pe 4:2 .
When we walked had our conversation, as Eph 2:3 , walking being taken for the course of man’ s life; and sometimes in an evil way, as 2Pe 2:10 3:3 Jud 1:16,18 ; and sometimes in a good, as Luk 1:6 .
In lasciviousness especially outward acts, here set in distinction from lusts, which implies those inward motions from which those outward defilements proceed.
Excess of wine, revellings unseasonable and luxurious feasting, Rom 13:13 Gal 5:21 .
Banquetings: compotations, or meetings for drinking, Pro 23:30 Isa 5:11,12 .
And abominable idolatries:
Question. Why doth Peter charge the Jews with idolatry, who generally kept themselves from it after the Babylonish captivity?
Answer.
1. Though most did, yet all might not.
2. It is a sort of idolatry to eat things sacrificed to idols, which many of the Jews, being dispersed among the idolatrous Gentiles, and being invited by them to their idol feasts, might possibly do; and, being under the temptation of poverty, might too far conform themselves to the customs of the nations among which they were.
3. Probably this idolatry might be the worship of angels, frequent among the Gentiles, particularly the Colossians, inhabiting a city of Phrygia, which was a part of Asia where many Jews were, 1Pe 1:1 .
4. The churches to which he wrote might be made up of Jews and Gentiles, and the apostle may, by a synecdoche, ascribe that to all in common, which yet is to be understood only of a part.
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Poole: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Wherein they think it strange: Greek, are strangers, i.e. carry themselves as strangers, wondering (as at some new thing) at the change the gospel ha...
Wherein they think it strange: Greek, are strangers, i.e. carry themselves as strangers, wondering (as at some new thing) at the change the gospel hath made in you, and your no more conforming yourselves to their wicked courses; they seem to be in another world when among you.
That ye run not with them: this seems to signify the eagerness and vehemency of these Gentiles in pursuing their lusts, and may perhaps have some respect to the feasts of Bacchus, to which they were wont madly to run, and there commit the abominations mentioned 1Pe 4:3 .
To the same excess of riot or, profuseness, or confusion, of riot or luxury, and then it suits well with that heap of sins before mentioned, whereof this seems to be comprehensive.
Speaking evil Greek, blaspheming, or speaking evil;
of you is added by the translators: this may therefore be understood not only of their speaking evil of believers, as void of humanity and enemies to civil society, but of God and the Christian religion, as a dull, morose, sour way, and which they could not embrace without renouncing all mirth and cheerfulness.
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Poole: 1Pe 4:5 - -- Who shall give account to him of their evil speaking as well as of other sins, Jud 1:15 ; it is a metaphor taken from stewards giving account to thei...
Who shall give account to him of their evil speaking as well as of other sins, Jud 1:15 ; it is a metaphor taken from stewards giving account to their masters, Mat 18:23 Luk 16:2 .
That is ready not only prepared for it, but at hand to do it, Jam 5:9 .
To judge the quick and the dead those that shall be alive at Christ’ s coming, and those that died before, but then shall be raised, and brought to judgment. Hereby he intimates, for their comfort, that though their enemies and ill-willers might outlive them, yet they shall not escape God’ s judgment.
PBC: 1Pe 4:1 - -- Peter continues the theme he introduced in 1Pe 3:17, suffering in well-doing. What he writes here cannot be interpreted as a general principle of life...
Peter continues the theme he introduced in 1Pe 3:17, suffering in well-doing. What he writes here cannot be interpreted as a general principle of life or of suffering. For example, some people who encounter suffering grow through it and become stronger people. Others become discouraged or bitter and disillusioned. While Peter, in making the specific point, notes that the person who suffers in the manner in which he intends to develop has " ceased from sin," suffering in some people actually becomes the reason for sin, sins of unbelief and rebellion. Occasionally Scripture draws general principles to our attention, concepts or attitudes/actions that apply broadly to our Christian living. We should accept and practice them faithfully. At other times Scripture presents principles that specifically apply to carefully defined situations. In those cases we should identify the occasion or situation and learn from the teaching that applies. This lesson falls into the latter category.
Since Jesus suffered in the flesh in well-doing, why should His followers be surprised if on occasion they also face suffering in the very act of doing what is good and right? The exhortation to arm ourselves with this state of mind seems directed to those seasons when we may face suffering in well-doing. Our human inclination will react with frustration and perhaps even anger. " Why should I suffer for doing the right thing? It just isn’t fair!" In order to counteract this rebellious inclination we need to face it as aggressively as if it were a soldier from an enemy camp, armed and engaged in battle against us, and we against him.
Jesus suffered in the flesh because of righteousness, but he never reacted with bitterness or, heaven forbid, a self-indulgent pity-party. He stayed the course and continued faithfully in righteous conduct.
" For he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin."
Peter’s assertion (Don’t forget that he wrote under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit.) refers to a mature and obedient believer who has committed his/her life to walking with the Lord Jesus Christ, even if that walk brings suffering. Endure the suffering with winsome grace, respecting Jesus’ holy example. The decision to suffer in well-doing inevitably involves an equally conscious decision to avoid deliberate or casual sins. Scripture sufficiently makes the point that we will never rise to the level of sinless perfection in this life. The point Peter makes brings the two sides of conscious choices and conduct together. You choose to accept suffering, if necessary, in order to live in daily fellowship with the Lord Jesus Christ. You truly honor Him as the Lord of your life, not merely as your casual companion who walks along with you as you chart your course on life’s road. Paul makes a similar point when he teaches that, if we name the name of Christ, we are to depart from iniquity. {2Ti 2:19}
Peter’s whole premise of suffering in well-doing clearly exposes the unbiblical teaching of our time that faithful Christian living guarantees prosperity and inoculates us from any form of discomfort or unpleasantness in life. The " peace and prosperity" gospel is a cruel farce, not the gospel of the New Testament.
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PBC: 1Pe 4:2 - -- " That he no longer should live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men, but to the will of God."
What drives our lives and choices? W...
" That he no longer should live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men, but to the will of God."
What drives our lives and choices? Why do we choose one course of action over another? Our human natures love companionship. We focus the dangers of peer pressure on young people, particularly teenagers. However, peer pressure is as insidious for an adult as for an adolescent. Seventeen or seventy, we desire companionship. Our choice of lifestyle will dictate the companions with whom we choose to associate. If we opt for the path of lustful pleasure, we will seek out others who enjoy indulgence and practice it. If we choose the path of success, we will likely choose highly motivated and successful people with whom to rub shoulders. Our choice of companions speaks volumes to our private choice of personal lifestyle. What is Peter’s point? Our first, and most important, choice of companionship must be our Lord Jesus Christ. We choose Him above all others. Then we filter all other relationships through our stable and committed relationship with Him. If a particular circle of people tend to compromise our friendship and fellowship with the Lord Jesus Christ, we step back from that circle of people. The believer who has faced suffering in well-doing, and has committed to accepting it as the price for godliness, will seek the peer pressure of the Lord Jesus Christ, and of others who follow Him, over any other social circle.
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PBC: 1Pe 4:3 - -- " ... The time will suffice..."
We had our fill of sin in the past. Peter makes logical and compelling arguments for a devoted godly lifestyle, even ...
" ... The time will suffice..."
We had our fill of sin in the past. Peter makes logical and compelling arguments for a devoted godly lifestyle, even if the choice brings suffering and difficulty. Not long ago I heard of a man who stated that he believed it was altogether possible that Saddam Hussein was actually a child of God in disobedience. We could agree that he might be a child of God who has not yet been born again if at some future time we see a clear change of moral outlook in his conduct. However, to claim that a person so entrenched in cruel inhumanity to man is at the moment a child of God flies in the face of everything the Bible says about the impact of God’s saving grace on the life of the person whom God saves. God’s law written in the heart and in the mind makes a change in our moral and ethical outlook. We have no Biblical basis to consider anyone so committed to evil as a child of God. God reserves the final act of righteous judgment, but Jesus clearly taught that a person’s fruit, his lifestyle, bears direct evidence of his inner nature. A good tree will produce good fruit; an evil tree will produce evil fruit. A saved person will manifest salvation by moral conduct that grows out of a saved heart. An unsaved person will manifest the black sins of his nature by conduct that grows out of that black nature.
God’s saving grace, particularly when reinforced by the gospel and by habitual reading and study of Scripture, will strongly nudge a person to turn from sinful conduct to righteousness. The saved person who lives out the influence of his salvation will acknowledge that he had more than his fill of sin in the past. He has no desire to feed that part of his nature in the present.
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PBC: 1Pe 4:4 - -- " ... They think it strange..."
Sinful people think that everyone else has the same depth of evil desires as they. They tend to see all other people ...
" ... They think it strange..."
Sinful people think that everyone else has the same depth of evil desires as they. They tend to see all other people in the moral mirror of their own conscience. They simply can’t understand why committed believers, not only will not join them in their indulgent sins, but actually spurn such conduct. " What kind of weirdo are you?" will be their likely attitude.
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PBC: 1Pe 4:5 - -- " Who shall give account to him that is ready to judge the quick and the dead."
Peter brings a punctuating clarity to the discussion here. How will ...
" Who shall give account to him that is ready to judge the quick and the dead."
Peter brings a punctuating clarity to the discussion here. How will these wicked people rationalize their sins when they stand before God, the Judge of all, at the last day? The believer in Christ will embrace that day as a joyful reality to be welcomed. While we need not fear that day because of the imputed righteousness of our Lord Jesus Christ, we will live now as nearly as possible to His example. The profound moral character of God compels His children, because of His law imbedded into their deepest and most essential nature, to work at living according to that imputed holy nature. As we trace our course along the continuum of salvation, we seek to live now as nearly in keeping with God’s moral character as possible.
Every action of every human being, at some time and in some manner or another, must face God, the final and ultimate Judge. We must account for our choices and conduct. For the elect it may occur within the context of divine chastening that confronts our sins and urges us to more godly living. Perhaps, even for the elect, there will be a momentous, epochal moment at, or shortly after, death when we come to full and righteous insight into all the sins that we committed, and immediately and readily accept God’s judgment regarding those actions. For the wicked, it will be no less an epochal moment at which the blackness of their sins will be displayed before God and brought to righteous judgment. God will have the last word regarding every moral choice and every action of every human who ever lived. May we live in reverential awareness of that day and seek to conform our present conduct to our Savior’s holy example.
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Haydock: 1Pe 4:1 - -- He that hath suffered in the flesh, hath ceased from sins. Some expound these words of Christ; but he never had committed the least sin. The true s...
He that hath suffered in the flesh, hath ceased from sins. Some expound these words of Christ; but he never had committed the least sin. The true sense is, that every one who suffers by Christ's example, leaves off an sinful life, so as not to fall into great sins. (Witham)
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Haydock: 1Pe 4:3 - -- For the time past is sufficient, &c. As if he said, you who were Gentiles, have already lived too long in vices before your conversion; so that they...
For the time past is sufficient, &c. As if he said, you who were Gentiles, have already lived too long in vices before your conversion; so that they who are not yet converted, admire [1] at the change they see in you, make a jest of you, talk against you for your not running on with them in the same wicked and shameful disorders: but they shall render an exact account of all to the just Judge of the living and the dead. For as I told you before, in the last chap. (ver. 19.) for this cause (i.e. because Christ is judge of all) he descended to the place where the souls of the dead were, and preached to them, shewing himself, their Redeemer, who judgeth and condemneth those who had lived according to the flesh, but gave life to those who had lived well, or done penance according to the spirit of God. (Witham)
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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
In quo admirantur, Greek: xenizontai, from Greek: xenos, hospes, peregrinus. The same word is used ver. 12, nolite peregrinari in fervore, Greek: me xenizesthe te en umin purosei: in ustione, meaning the heat of persecutions.
Gill: 1Pe 4:1 - -- Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh..... The apostle having finished his digression concerning Christ's preaching in the minist...
Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh..... The apostle having finished his digression concerning Christ's preaching in the ministry of Noah, to men whose spirits were now in prison, and concerning the salvation of Noah's family in the ark, by water, and concerning its antitype, baptism, its nature and effect, returns to the sufferings of Christ he had before made mention of; and argues from thence to holiness of life, and patience in sufferings, after this manner; seeing then Christ, the eternal Son of God, the Lord of glory, the holy and Just One, suffered such indignities, reproaches, and persecutions from men, the wrath of God, the curses of the law, and death itself; and that not for himself, nor for angels, but for men, and those not all men, otherwise his death, with respect to some, must be in vain; but for a particular number of men, in distinction from others, described in the beginning of this epistle, as elect, according to the foreknowledge of God; and these sufferings he endured in the room and stead of those persons, in the days of his flesh, while here on earth, and in his human nature, both soul and body, and was crucified through the weakness of his flesh, and for the sins of our flesh, and which he bore in his own:
arm yourselves likewise with the same mind; that was in Christ; as he suffered for you, do ye likewise suffer for him, in his cause, for righteousness sake, for the sake of him and his Gospel; and bear all reproaches, afflictions, and persecutions on his account, willingly and cheerfully, with meekness and patience, as he did, and with the same view; not indeed to make satisfaction for sin, which was his principal design, but that being dead unto sin, you might live unto righteousness. The apostle speaks to the saints, in this exhortation, as to soldiers, and who had many enemies to engage with, and therefore should put on their armour, and be in a readiness to meet any attack upon them:
for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin: meaning either Christ, who having suffered in human nature for the sins of his people, whereby he has made satisfaction for them, is now clear of them; the sins that were imputed to him being took and bore away, finished and made an end of, and he justified from them, and freed from all the effects of them, and punishment for them, as from all the infirmities of human nature, from mortality and death: or the person that has suffered in and with Christ, his head and representative, which is all one as if he had suffered himself, in person; by virtue of which his sin ceases, and he ceases from being chargeable with it, as if he had never sinned; which is the case of every criminal, when he has suffered the penalty of the law for his crime: or else the person that is dead to sin, by virtue of the death of Christ, and, in imitation of it, who has been baptized into Christ's death, and planted in the likeness of it; whose old man is crucified with Christ, and he is dead with him; who has crucified the affections with the lusts, and through the Spirit has mortified the deeds of the body; which way the generality of interpreters go: such a man has ceased from sin; not from the being and indwelling of it in him; nor from the burden of it on him; nor from a continual war with it in him; nor from slips and falls by it, and into it; no, nor from it in the most solemn and religious services; but as from the guilt of it, and obligation to punishment by it, through the death of Christ; so from the servitude and dominion of it, through the power of divine grace, in consequence of Christ's death: or rather, the believer that suffers death in his body, for the sake of Christ, such an one immediately ceases from the very being of sin, and all commission of it; he becomes at once perfectly pure and holy, without spot or wrinkle, or any such thing; and a noble argument this is to meet death without fear, and to suffer it cheerfully and willingly, since the consequence of this will be an entire freedom from sin, than which nothing can be more desirable by a believer: to this agrees the Syriac version, which renders the words thus: "for whoever is dead in his body hath ceased from all sins"; but the Arabic version more fully confirms this sense, and is the best version of the text, and is this; "be ye armed with this (same) thought, that (not for) he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin"; that is, fortify your minds against all the fears of sufferings, and of death, for the sake of Christ, with this single thought; that he that has suffered martyrdom for Christ, in his body, or has suffered death for his sake, or dies in the Lord, is free from sin, and so from sorrow, and is the most happy person imaginable; so that this last clause is not a reason of the former, but points out, and is explanative of what that same mind or thought is Christians should arm themselves with, against the fears of death; and it is the best piece of armour for this service, a saint can make use of.
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Gill: 1Pe 4:2 - -- That he no longer should live,.... The Arabic version reads, "that ye no longer should live". This expresses the end of being armed with the above tho...
That he no longer should live,.... The Arabic version reads, "that ye no longer should live". This expresses the end of being armed with the above thought, that a suffering saint after death is clear of sin; and the use that is to be made of it in the present time of life, and the remainder of it, that such a person who so thinks, and is thus guarded and fortified against the fears of death, should no more, or any longer live,
the rest of his time in the flesh, to the lusts of men, but to the will of God: the phrase, "his time in the flesh", means the present time of life, in the body, and is the same with those phrases, in the days of his flesh, to abide in the flesh, and be at home in the body; and the words of the text suppose the former part of this time to have been spent in sinful lusts and pleasures, as the former part of the time of God's elect, even that before conversion, is; and that the remaining part of it, be it longer or shorter, ought to be spent otherwise: "not to the lusts of men"; of wicked and unregenerate men, unconverted Gentiles; which they are addicted to, immersed in, and serve; and which they are desirous others should live in; and which are sometimes called divers worldly and fleshly lusts; and are foolish, and hurtful, and deceitful, and drown men in perdition, and therefore not to be lived unto: "but to the will of God"; revealed in his word, and which is good, acceptable, and perfect; one part of which is sanctification, holiness of heart, life, and conversation, as also patient suffering all reproach, injury, and persecution, for the sake of the Gospel; to live soberly, righteously, and godly, to study to exercise a conscience void of offence towards God and men, and to suffer patiently for his name's sake, is to live to the will of God; and nothing more strongly should engage to this than the consideration of a sinless life after death; see 2Pe 3:11. The lusts of men, and the will of God, being opposed to each other, shows that the nature of man is sadly corrupted, and is opposite to God; and that the will of man is depraved, and that the desires of it are not to that which is good, but are contrary to the will of God.
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Gill: 1Pe 4:3 - -- For the time past of our life may suffice us,.... The word "our" is left out in the Alexandrian copy, and in the Vulgate Latin and Syriac versions. Th...
For the time past of our life may suffice us,.... The word "our" is left out in the Alexandrian copy, and in the Vulgate Latin and Syriac versions. The Arabic version reads, "the time of your past life"; and to the same purpose the Ethiopic version; and which seems to be the more agreeable reading, since it can hardly be thought that the apostle would put himself among the Jews dispersed among the Gentiles, who had walked with them in their unregeneracy, in all the sins hereafter mentioned, and best agrees with the following verse:
to have wrought the will of the Gentiles; or "when ye wrought", as the Syriac, Arabic, and Ethiopic versions;
when we walked, or "were walking in lasciviousness, lusts, excess of wine, revellings, banquetings, and abominable idolatries". These converted persons, in the past time of their life, before conversion, "walked" in sin; which denotes a series and course of sinning, a persisting and progress in it, with delight and pleasure, promising themselves security and impunity: the particular sins they walked in are reducible to these three heads, unchastity, intemperance, and idolatry:
in lasciviousness, lusts; which belong to the head of uncleanness, and take in all kinds of it; as fornication, adultery, incest, sodomy, and all unnatural lusts:
excess of wine, revellings, banquetings; which refer to intemperance of every sort, by eating or drinking: as gluttony, drunkenness, surfeitings, and all luxurious feasts and entertainments, attended with riotings, revellings, and obscene songs; and which are here mentioned in the Syriac and Arabic versions, and which lead to lasciviousness, and every unclean lust:
and abominable idolatries; which some understand of worshipping of angels; but they seem rather to intend the idolatries the Jews were led into by the feasts of the Gentiles, either at their own houses, or in the idol's temple; by which means they were gradually brought to idolatry, and to all the wickedness and abominations committed by them at such times: and it is easy to observe, that the two former, uncleanness and intemperance, often lead men into idolatry; see Exo 32:6. Now when they walked in these things, they "wrought the will of the Gentiles"; they did the things which the sinners of the Gentiles, the worst of men, that knew not God, took pleasure in, and what they would have others do; and therefore, since the past time of their life had been spent in such a way, it was sufficient, and more than sufficient; see Eze 44:6, for no time is allowable for sin; and therefore it became them for the future, and in the remaining part of life, to behave in another manner; not to do the will of the Gentiles, but the will of God; to which that grace of God obliged them, that had made a difference between what they were themselves formerly, and themselves now, and between themselves, and others.
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Gill: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Wherein they think it strange,.... Here the apostle points out what the saints must expect from the men of the world, by living a different life; and ...
Wherein they think it strange,.... Here the apostle points out what the saints must expect from the men of the world, by living a different life; and he chooses to mention it, to prevent discouragements, and that they might not be uneasy and distressed when they observed it; as that they would wonder at the change in their conversations, and look on it as something unusual, new, and unheard of, and treat them as strangers, yea, as enemies, on account of it:
that you run not with them into the same excess of riot; to their luxurious entertainments, their Bacchanalian feasts, and that profusion of lasciviousness, luxury, intemperance, and wickedness of all sorts, which, with so much eagerness of mind, and bodily haste, they rushed into; being amazed that they should not have the same taste for these things as before, and as themselves now had; and wondering how it was possible for them to abstain from them, and what that should be that should give them a different cast of mind, and turn of action:
speaking evil of you; and so the Syriac and Arabic versions supply "you" as we do; but in the Greek text it is only, "speaking evil of, or blaspheming"; God, Christ, religion, the Gospel, and the truths of it, and all good men; hating them because different from them, and because their lives reprove and condemn them; charging them with incivility, unsociableness, preciseness, and hypocrisy.
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Gill: 1Pe 4:5 - -- Who shall give account to him,.... "To God himself", as the Syriac version reads; of all their blasphemies, and hard speeches spoken by them against G...
Who shall give account to him,.... "To God himself", as the Syriac version reads; of all their blasphemies, and hard speeches spoken by them against God, Christ, the Gospel, and good men, and receive their just punishment. This the apostle says, to calm the minds of God's people, and make them to sit easy under all censures, reproaches, and calumnies, and not think of avenging themselves, but commit themselves to him that will judge righteously; even to him,
that is ready to judge the quick and the dead; that is, all men, such as will be found alive when he comes, and those that have died before, who will then be raised from the dead, to receive their judgment; and by whom is meant the Lord Jesus Christ, to whom all judgment is committed; and who is ordained to be the Judge of quick and dead, and will judge both at his appearing and kingdom; yea, the day is appointed when this judgment will proceed by him, and he is at the door; so that he may be truly said to be ready for it, as he is every way equal to it, and will finish it with righteousness.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: 1Pe 4:1 Has finished with sin. The last sentence in v. 1 may refer to Christ as the one who suffered in the flesh (cf. 2:21, 23; 3:18; 4:1a) and the latter pa...
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NET Notes: 1Pe 4:2 This verse may give the purpose or result of their “arming” themselves as called for in v. 1b and then the translation would be: “so...
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NET Notes: 1Pe 4:3 The Greek words here all occur in the plural to describe their common practice in the past.
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NET Notes: 1Pe 4:4 Grk “blaspheming,” giving the result of their astonishment. Here the target of their “blasphemy/vilification” is not God but t...
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NET Notes: 1Pe 4:5 Grk “the one”; the referent (Jesus Christ) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
Geneva Bible: 1Pe 4:1 Forasmuch ( 1 ) then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves likewise with the same mind: for he that hath suffered in the flesh h...
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Geneva Bible: 1Pe 4:2 That he no longer should live the ( a ) rest of [his] time in the flesh to the lusts of men, but to the will of God.
( a ) So much of this present li...
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Geneva Bible: 1Pe 4:3 ( 2 ) For the time past of [our] life may suffice us to have wrought the ( b ) will of the Gentiles, when we walked in lasciviousness, lusts, excess o...
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Geneva Bible: 1Pe 4:4 ( 3 ) Wherein they think it ( c ) strange that ye run not with [them] to the same excess of riot, speaking evil of [you]:
( 3 ) That we be not moved ...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Pe 4:1-19
TSK Synopsis: 1Pe 4:1-19 - --1 He exhorts them to cease from sin by the example of Christ, and the consideration of the general end that now approaches;12 and comforts them agains...
Maclaren -> 1Pe 4:1-8
Maclaren: 1Pe 4:1-8 - --Christian Asceticism
Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves likewise with the same mind: for he that hath suffere...
MHCC -> 1Pe 4:1-6
MHCC: 1Pe 4:1-6 - --The strongest and best arguments against sin, are taken from the sufferings of Christ. He died to destroy sin; and though he cheerfully submitted to t...
Matthew Henry: 1Pe 4:1-3 - -- The apostle here draws a new inference from the consideration of Christ's sufferings. As he had before made use of it to persuade to patience in suf...
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Matthew Henry: 1Pe 4:4-6 - -- I. Here you have the visible change wrought in those who in the foregoing verse were represented as having been in the former part of their life ver...
Barclay -> 1Pe 4:1-5
Barclay: 1Pe 4:1-5 - --The Christian is committed to abandon the ways of heathenism and to live as God would have him to do.
Peter says, "He who has suffered in the flesh h...
Constable: 1Pe 2:11--4:12 - --III. The responsibilities of the christian individually 2:11--4:11
Since Christians have a particular vocation i...
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Constable: 1Pe 3:13--4:7 - --C. Eventual Vindication 3:13-4:6
Peter previously explained how a Christian can rejoice in his suffering...
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Constable: 1Pe 4:1-6 - --3. Living with the promise in view 4:1-6
Since Jesus Christ has gained the victory, Peter urged his readers to rededicate themselves to God's will as ...
College -> 1Pe 4:1-19
College: 1Pe 4:1-19 - --1 PETER 4
C. LIVE FOR THE WILL OF GOD (4:1-6)
1 Therefore, since Christ suffered in his body, arm yourselves also with the same attitude, because he...
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expand allCommentary -- Other
Evidence: 1Pe 4:1 QUESTIONS & OBJECTIONS “Do you sin, as a Christian?” If a Christian sins, it is against his will. One who is regenerate falls rather than dive...
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