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Text -- 1 Peter 4:4 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
4:4 So they are astonished when you do not rush with them into the same flood of wickedness, and they vilify you.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Worldliness | Slander | RIOT | Persecution | PETER, THE FIRST EPISTLE OF | Idolatry | Gentiles | Commandments | CRIME; CRIMES | Amusements and Worldly Pleasures | Adultery | APOSTOLIC AGE | more
Table of Contents

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

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , PBC , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

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

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Wherein ( en hōi ). "In which thing"(manner of life).

Wherein ( en hōi ).

"In which thing"(manner of life).

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...

They think it strange ( xenizontai ).

Present passive indicative of xenizō , old verb (from xenos , stranger), to entertain a guest (Act 10:23), to astonish (Act 17:20). See also 1Pe 4:12. "They are surprised or astonished."

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 ( mē suntrechontōn humōn ).

Genitive absolute (negative mē ) with present active participle of suntrechō , old compound, to run together like a crowd or a mob as here (just like our phrase, "running with certain folks").

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 ( eis tēn autēn tēs asōtias anachusin ).

Anachusin (from anacheō to pour forth) is a late and rare word, our overflowing, here only in N.T. Asōtias is the character of an abandoned man (asōtos , cf. asōtōs in Luk 15:13), old word for a dissolute life, in N.T. only here, Eph 5:18; Tit 1:6.

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 ( blasphēmountes ).

Present active participle of blasphēmeō as in Luk 22:65. "The Christians were compelled to stand aloof from all the social pleasures of the world, and the Gentiles bitterly resented their puritanism, regarding them as the enemies of all joy, and therefore of the human race"(Bigg).

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.

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 ( ἀνάχυσιν )

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.

Vincent: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Riot ( ἀσωτιάς ) From ἀ , not, and σώζω , to same. Lit., unsavingness, prodigality, wastefulness; and thence of squander...

Riot ( ἀσωτιάς )

From ἀ , not, and σώζω , to same. Lit., unsavingness, prodigality, wastefulness; and thence of squandering on one's own debased appetites, whence it takes the sense of dissoluteness profligacy. In Luk 15:13, the kindred adverb ἀσώτως , is used. The prodigal is described as scattering his substance, to which is added, living wastefully (ζῶν ἀσώτως ) . Compare Eph 5:18; Tit 1:6.

Wesley: 1Pe 4:4 - -- As ye did once.

As ye did once.

Wesley: 1Pe 4:4 - -- As proud, singular, silly, wicked and the like.

As proud, singular, silly, wicked and the like.

JFB: 1Pe 4:4 - -- In respect to which abandonment of your former walk (1Pe 4:3).

In respect to which abandonment of your former walk (1Pe 4:3).

JFB: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Eagerly, in troops [BENGEL].

Eagerly, in troops [BENGEL].

JFB: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Literally, "profusion"; a sink: stagnant water remaining after an inundation.

Literally, "profusion"; a sink: stagnant water remaining after an inundation.

JFB: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Profligacy.

Profligacy.

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.

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 - Ξενιζονται· They wonder and are astonished at you, that ye can renounce these gratifications of the flesh for a spiritual something, the good of which they cannot see

Clarke: 1Pe 4:4 - -- Excess of riot - Ασωτιας αναχυσιν· Flood of profligacy; bearing down all rule, order, and restraints before it

Excess of riot - Ασωτιας αναχυσιν· Flood of profligacy; bearing down all rule, order, and restraints before it

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 - Βλασφημουντες· Literally, blaspheming; i.e. speaking impiously against God, and calumniously of you.

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

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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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

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"( ἀνάχυσις anachusis ) means, properly, a pouring out, an affusion; and the idea here is, that all the sources and forms of riot and disorder were poured out together. There was no withholding, no restraint. The most unlimited indulgence was given to the passions. This was the case in the disorder referred to among the ancients, as it is the case now in scenes of midnight revelry. On the meaning of the word riot, see the Eph 5:18 note; Tit 1:6 note.

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.

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.

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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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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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

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...

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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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

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 - --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 - --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 4:4-6 - -- 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 - --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...

Constable: 1Pe 3:13--4:7 - --C. Eventual Vindication 3:13-4:6 Peter previously explained how a Christian can rejoice in his suffering...

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 - --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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Introduction / Outline

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

JFB: 1 Peter (Book Introduction) ITS GENUINENESS is attested by 2Pe 3:1. On the authority of Second Peter, see the Introduction. Also by POLYCARP (in EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History,...

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

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

TSK: 1 Peter 4 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 1Pe 4:1, He exhorts them to cease from sin by the example of Christ, and the consideration of the general end that now approaches; 1Pe 4:...

Poole: 1 Peter 4 (Chapter Introduction) PETER CHAPTER 4

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

MHCC: 1 Peter 4 (Chapter Introduction) (1Pe 4:1-6) The consideration of Christ's sufferings is urged for purity and holiness. (1Pe 4:7-11) And the approaching end of the Jewish state, as a...

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

Matthew Henry: 1 Peter 4 (Chapter Introduction) The work of a Christian is twofold - doing the will of God and suffering his pleasure. This chapter directs us in both. The duties we are here exho...

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

Barclay: 1 Peter 4 (Chapter Introduction) The Obligation Of The Christian (1Pe_4:1-5) The Ultimate Chance (1Pe_4:6) (1) The Descent Into Hell (1Pe_3:18-20; 1Pe_4:6) (2) The Descent Into H...

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

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

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

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

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

Gill: 1 Peter 4 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 1 PETER 4 In this chapter the apostle goes on to exhort to an holy life and conversation, and to the several duties of religion, an...

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

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

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