
Text -- 1 Peter 5:4 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: 1Pe 5:4 - -- When the chief Shepherd shall be manifested ( phanerōthentos tou archipoimenos ).
Genitive absolute with first aorist passive participle of phanero...
When the chief Shepherd shall be manifested (
Genitive absolute with first aorist passive participle of

Robertson: 1Pe 5:4 - -- The crown of glory that fadeth not away ( ton amarantinon tēs doxēs stephanon ).
For "crown"(stephanos ) see Jam 1:12; 1Co 9:25; 2Ti 4:8; Rev 2:...
The crown of glory that fadeth not away (
For "crown"(
Vincent: 1Pe 5:4 - -- The chief Shepherd ( ἀρχιποίμενος )
Only here in New Testament. In harmony with 1Pe 5:2. " The last thing Peter could have dreame...
The chief Shepherd (
Only here in New Testament. In harmony with 1Pe 5:2. " The last thing Peter could have dreamed of as possible would be its misapplication to himself or his so-called successors" (Cook). Compare Heb 13:20, great Shepherd; and Joh 10:11, Joh 10:14, good Shepherd. Also, Eze 34:15, Eze 34:16, Eze 34:23.

Vincent: 1Pe 5:4 - -- Crown ( στέφανον )
From στέφω , to put round, encircle. It is the crown of victory in the games; of military valor; the marria...
Crown (
From
"And so": as the result of "being ensamples" (1Pe 5:3).

The title peculiarly Christ's own, not Peter's or the pope's.

JFB: 1Pe 5:4 - -- Greek, "stephanos," a garland of victory, the prize in the Grecian games, woven of ivy, parsley, myrtle, olive, or oak. Our crown is distinguished fro...
Greek, "stephanos," a garland of victory, the prize in the Grecian games, woven of ivy, parsley, myrtle, olive, or oak. Our crown is distinguished from theirs in that it is "incorruptible" and "fadeth not away," as the leaves of theirs soon did. "The crown of life." Not a kingly "crown" (a different Greek word, diadema): the prerogative of the Lord Jesus (Rev 19:12).

Clarke -> 1Pe 5:4
Clarke: 1Pe 5:4 - -- When the chief Shepherd - That is, the Lord Jesus Christ, whose is the flock, and who provides the pasture, and from whom, if ye are legally called ...
When the chief Shepherd - That is, the Lord Jesus Christ, whose is the flock, and who provides the pasture, and from whom, if ye are legally called to the most awful work of preaching the Gospel, ye have received your commission; when he shall appear to judge the world in righteousness, ye who have fed his flock, who have taken the superintendency of it, not by constraint, nor for filthy lucre’ s sake, not as lords over the heritage, but with a ready mind, employing body, soul, spirit, time and talents, in endeavoring to pluck sinners as brands from eternal burnings, and build up the Church of Christ on its most holy faith; Ye shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth not away, an eternal nearness and intimacy with the ineffably glorious God; so that ye who have turned many to righteousness shall shine, not merely as stars, but as suns in the kingdom of your Father! O ye heavenly-minded, diligent, self-denying pastors after God’ s own heart, whether ye be in the Church established by the state, or in those divisions widely separated from, or nearly connected with it, take courage; preach Jesus; press through all difficulties in the faith of your God; fear no evil while meditating nothing but good. Ye are stars in the right hand of Jesus, who walks among your golden candlesticks, and has lighted that lamp of life which ye are appointed to trim; fear not, your labor in the Lord cannot be in vain! Never, never can ye preach one sermon in the spirit of your office, which the God of all grace shall permit to be unfruitful; ye carry and sow the seed of the kingdom by the command and on the authority of your God; ye sow it, and the heavens shall drop down dew upon it. Ye may go forth weeping, though bearing this precious seed; but ye shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing your sheaves with you. Amen, even so, Lord Jesus!
Calvin -> 1Pe 5:4
Calvin: 1Pe 5:4 - -- 4.When the chief Shepherd shall appear Except pastors retain this end in view, it can by no means be that they will in good earnest proceed in the co...
4.When the chief Shepherd shall appear Except pastors retain this end in view, it can by no means be that they will in good earnest proceed in the course of their calling, but will, on the contrary, become often faint; for there are innumerable hindrances which are sufficient to discourage the most prudent. They have often to do with ungrateful men, from whom they receive an unworthy reward; long and great labors are often in vain; Satan sometimes prevails in his wicked devices. Lest, then, the faithful servant of Christ should be broken down, there is for him one and only one remedy, — to turn his eyes to the coming of Christ. Thus it will be, that he, who seems to derive no encouragement from men, will assiduously go on in his labors, knowing that a great reward is prepared for him by the Lord. And further, lest a protracted expectation should produce languor, he at the same time sets forth the greatness of the reward, which is sufficient to compensate for all delay: An unfading crown of glory, he says, awaits you.
It ought also to be observed, that he calls Christ the chief Pastor; for we are to rule the Church under him and in his name, in no other way but that he should be still really the Pastor. So the word chief here does not only mean the principal, but him whose power all others ought to submit to, as they do not represent him except according to his command and authority.
Defender -> 1Pe 5:4
Defender: 1Pe 5:4 - -- The Lord Jesus Christ is called the "good shepherd" in Joh 10:11, and "that great shepherd of the sheep" in Heb 13:20. Actually, "pastor" is the same ...
TSK -> 1Pe 5:4
TSK: 1Pe 5:4 - -- the : 1Pe 5:2, 1Pe 2:25; Psa 23:1; Isa 40:11; Eze 34:23, Eze 37:24; Zec 13:7; Joh 10:11; Heb 13:20
appear : Matt. 25:31-46; Col 3:3, Col 3:4; 2Th 1:7-...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 1Pe 5:4
Barnes: 1Pe 5:4 - -- And when the chief Shepherd shall appear - The prince of the pastors - the Lord Jesus Christ. "Peter, in the passage above, ranks himself with ...
And when the chief Shepherd shall appear - The prince of the pastors - the Lord Jesus Christ. "Peter, in the passage above, ranks himself with the elders; here he ranks Christ himself with the pastors"- Benson. See the notes at 1Pe 2:25. Compare Heb 13:20.
Ye shall receive a crown of glory - A glorious crown or diadem. Compare the notes at 2Ti 4:8.
That fadeth not away - This is essentially the same word, though somewhat different in form, which occurs in 1Pe 1:4. See the notes at that verse. The word occurs nowhere else in the New Testament. Compare the notes at 1Co 9:25.
Poole -> 1Pe 5:4
Poole: 1Pe 5:4 - -- And when the chief Shepherd the Lord Jesus Christ, the only Prince of pastors, called the great Shepherd of the sheep, Heb 13:20 , as here the ch...
And when the chief Shepherd the Lord Jesus Christ, the only Prince of pastors, called the great Shepherd of the sheep, Heb 13:20 , as here the chief Shepherd, not only for his supereminent dignity over all other pastors, but because of the power he hath over them, they being all subject to his authority, receiving their charge from him, and exercising their office in his name, and being accountable to him for their administrations.
Shall appear: see 1Pe 1:7,13 4:13 .
Ye shall receive or, carry away, viz. from Christ, who, as the Judge, shall award it to you.
A crown of glory either, a glorious crown; or, that glory which shall be as a crown to you. It is called a crown of righteousness, 2Ti 4:8 ; a crown of life, Jam 1:12 .
That fadeth not away in opposition to those crowns which were given to conquerors in war, and in public games, which were made of perishable flowers or herbs: see 1Pe 1:4 1Co 9:25 .
PBC -> 1Pe 5:4
PBC: 1Pe 5:4 - -- Human nature vacillates between extremes. Even the human nature of believers suffers this malady. At times in the history of Christianity we see churc...
Human nature vacillates between extremes. Even the human nature of believers suffers this malady. At times in the history of Christianity we see church leadership filling the role of despotic overlords. Whether in civil government or in church government, the cliché holds true to reality; " Absolute power corrupts absolutely."
At other times we see the opposite view of " power to the people," manifested in our time by the fairly popular idea that, if a church votes by majority, it is absolutely correct and cannot be questioned. If it votes unanimously, the case is closed; it was surely right in its decision. The dead churches scattered across the landscape of history prove this idea to be false. Satan could get a unanimous vote in hell, but unanimity is not inherently equivalent to rightness. We can all be agreed in error.
Peter takes us by the hand and leads us to a far different view of church leadership. Any church that is worthy of its name must view its mission, as well as its activities aimed at that mission, from an " other worldly" perspective. Either of the extreme views of church leadership operates as if the leadership, be it one man or the popular vote of all, has divine right and endorsement of its decisions, whatever they be, a " this worldly" mindset.
" The chief Shepherd"
clearly reminds us that the Lord Jesus Christ stands at the head of each local church. As indicated by John in the first three chapters of Revelation, He planted it, the symbol of the " candlestick," and He will remove it if the church fails to live up to its mission of enlightening the community and its members with heavenly truth. Paul affirms this truth by noting that the Father has given the Lord Jesus Christ to be " head over all things to the church." {Eph 1:22} Even Ephesus, the crown jewel of first century churches, lapsed into danger of losing its " candlestick" through forsaking its " first love." {Re 2:4} In this verse " first" refers to the most important love, not the first in chronological terms. The Ephesian church was sound and solid in its theology, its doctrine, but it was pathetic in its failure to live by heavenly priorities.
The idea that the Lord Jesus Christ holds lordship over every local church must be viewed as the dominant point of this term " chief Shepherd." We can get people to do whatever we want or think they should do. We can work to gain leadership for ourselves or for our favorite person. We can campaign for a particular idea and get the church to vote for it. However, unless we submit every thought and action to the lordship of Christ, we deceive ourselves and fail the first test of a Biblical church’s identity. Regardless of numbers or of unanimity, any church that does not submit the whole of its course and conduct to the Lord Jesus Christ has failed in its most fundamental assignment. He cannot be our " chief Shepherd" unless He governs our whole course of activity and thought.
First century Judaism holds a frightening lesson for us. This culture had survived centuries of internal idolatry. It had endured incredible persecution. Surely God had a purpose for them that could not be denied. When the time came for their finest hour, they were wholly unprepared for it. They rejected the very Christ Whose coming had prompted their divine preservation. In the parables Jesus frequently taught the truth of unfaithful stewardship. The steward must remain as diligent in his duties during the master’s absence as when the lord of the manor is present. " My lord delayeth his coming" justified the steward’s abusive harshness of his fellow servants. Can we miss the point? At the very moment when the unfaithful servant decided to ignore the master’s promised return, the master returned and called him to account for his failure. Inherent in stewardship is the idea that what you have belongs to another, not to you. How you use his property becomes the measure of your faithfulness, and will be the measure of his approval or disapproval when he returns. Regardless of the ways that you rationalize your conduct, faithfulness to his assignment-nothing else-will become the measure of his approval or rejection of your stewardship.
Perhaps the point is subtle, but it seems that Peter confronts the all too human inclination to seek peer approval in this verse. No less than anyone else, leaders seek the approval of those whom they lead. Popularity drives much of human activity. Failure to consider God’s will and the courting of the will of the people appears repeatedly in the prophetic books of the Old Testament as a primary cause for failure and the corruption of God’s direction to His Old Testament people. Peter takes us by the hand and clarifies the priorities of true leadership. Will we honor the chief Shepherd? Or will we court the favors of the sheep whom that chief Shepherd has assigned to our care? In the end, when the chief Shepherd appears, what a few sheep thought will matter little against the will of the chief Shepherd.
Balance highlights truth. We have occasionally seen Christian leaders who appealed to Scripture with roughshod, almost cruel, abuse as they ruled the people in their church with an iron rod. God assigned His " under-shepherds" to feed His sheep, not abuse them. Leaders who fail to lead with a kind and gentle hand, even when confronting error and correcting failure, forsake their divine assignment. {2Ti 2:24-26} Leadership by example requires the leader to live with constant awareness of God’s superintending governance over every aspect of the church’s conduct. The best way to instill this " other worldly" consciousness into a church is for the pastor to exhibit it in his leadership.
" When the chief Shepherd shall appear..."
may refer to the Second Coming, but we should not restrict His appearance to that event. To hold that all personal divine intervention is suspended till the Second Coming cultivates the abuse that Jesus confronted in the parable by the comment, " My lord delayeth his coming." {Mt 24:48} To haggle excessively over when He appears is to miss the greater truth. He shall appear, and we should live in perpetual consciousness of His certain coming. Further, we should live so as to demonstrate our belief in His perpetual involvement in our conduct. To deny all divine intervention or involvement till the Second Coming courts the error of Deism; God is too busy being God to get involved in human affairs. A wise and godly church leader will conduct his leadership with a perpetual sense of God’s present involvement and superintendence.
" ... Ye shall receive a crown of glory..."
stands in contrast to the metaphor of " under shepherd." In first century Judaism shepherds were considered near the bottom rung on the social ladder. They were nomads who lived with sheep. Jesus chose this metaphor to magnify His personal relationship with His people. He assumed the lowest position in order to gain the highest glory for His chosen people. Linger with the tenth chapter of John’s gospel {Joh 10:1-42} long enough to get the clear image; this lesson focuses on the Shepherd, not the sheep. Leadership by example subjects a man to countless frustrations. As he lives with sheep and tries to influence them by his conduct and teaching, he must avoid the manipulative strategies of secular management techniques, pop psychology, or political tactics. How simple his assignment would seem if these tools were available to him. Simple, yes; Biblical and God-centric, no; our methods exhibit more clearly than we realize that we either honor the chief Shepherd or a lesser power.
Regardless of when the chief Shepherd appears, Peter will not allow us to ignore His certain appearance and obvious personal involvement in every aspect of a church’s activities. The crown most sought by pastors and church leaders must be the Shepherd’s crown, not the garland of human popularity. " Well done, good and faithful servant..." should drive all activities, both in the pulpit and in the pew. Otherwise our claim to being one of the Lord’s churches rings hollow. " I know the Bible teaches, but because of (Fill in the blank; we’ve all offered our empty rationalizations.)...we simply can’t do what the Bible teaches at this time." I grew up in an area where the churches commonly met for worship only once or twice a month. When asked why they didn’t meet every Sunday, or even more frequently, people would say that there simply weren’t enough preachers to fill every pulpit. Some would protest that they couldn’t visit other churches regularly if their own church met more frequently. There was little sensitivity to the Biblical practice {Ac 20:7} of weekly worship, or of the fact that God supplies preachers (Did they believe that God couldn’t supply enough preachers to practice what God directed His church to do?).
We shall account to the chief Shepherd. Why not live in constant sensitivity to His perpetual lordship over our lives?
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Gill -> 1Pe 5:4
Gill: 1Pe 5:4 - -- And when the chief Shepherd shall appear,.... This is the encouraging motive and argument to engage the elders and pastors of churches to discharge th...
And when the chief Shepherd shall appear,.... This is the encouraging motive and argument to engage the elders and pastors of churches to discharge their office faithfully, cheerfully, and in an humble manner: by "the chief Shepherd" is meant Christ, who may well be called so, since he is God's fellow, and in all respects equal with him, and is the Shepherd and Bishop of the souls of men; all other bishops, pastors, and elders, are under him; they receive their commissions from him to feed his lambs and sheep; are made pastors and overseers by him; and have their gifts, qualifying them for such offices, from him; and have their several flocks assigned unto them by him; and from him have they all the food with which they feed them, and are accountable to him for them, and the discharge of their office; so that Christ is the chief Shepherd, in the dignity of his person, he being God over all, blessed for ever; in his qualifications for his office, having all power, grace, and wisdom in him, to protect his flock, supply their wants, guide and direct them; and in the nature and number of his flock, being rational creatures, the souls of men, even elect men; and though they are, when compared with others, but a little flock, yet, considered by themselves, are a great number; and especially the general assembly will be, in comparison of the little bodies and societies of saints under pastors and teachers, of Christ's setting over them, with respect to whom, principally, he is called the chief Shepherd: the allusion is to the principal shepherd, whose own the sheep were, or, however, had the principal charge of them; who used to have others under him, to do the several things relating to the flocks he directed, and were called "little shepherds"; so Aben Ezra says s, it was customary for the shepherd to have under him
ye shall receive a crown of glory which fadeth not away; in distinction from those crowns which were given to the conqueror, in the Olympic games; which were made of divers flowers, of the olive, wild olive, pine tree, and of parsley, and inserted in a branch of the wild olive tree y and which quickly faded away; or in allusion to crowns made of amaranthus z, the plant "everlasting", so called, from the nature of it, because it never fades: the eternal glory and happiness, which is here meant by a crown of glory, or a glorious crown, never fades away, but ever shines in its full lustre; and this faithful ministers shall receive at the hands of the chief Shepherd, as a gift of his, as a reward of grace; when they have finished their work, they will enter into the joy of their Lord, and shine as the stars for ever and ever; they shall reign with Christ, as kings, on a throne of glory, wearing a crown of glory, and enjoying a kingdom and glory to all eternity.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> 1Pe 5:4
NET Notes: 1Pe 5:4 Here καί (kai) has been translated as “Then” to reflect the logical sequence of events.
Geneva Bible -> 1Pe 5:4
Geneva Bible: 1Pe 5:4 ( 7 ) And when the chief Shepherd shall appear, ye shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth not away.
( 7 ) That the shepherds' minds are not overc...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Pe 5:1-14
TSK Synopsis: 1Pe 5:1-14 - --1 He exhorts the elders to feed their flocks;5 the younger to obey;8 and all to be sober, watchful, and constant in the faith;9 and to resist the crue...
MHCC -> 1Pe 5:1-4
MHCC: 1Pe 5:1-4 - --The apostle Peter does not command, but exhorts. He does not claim power to rule over all pastors and churches. It was the peculiar honour of Peter an...
Matthew Henry -> 1Pe 5:1-4
Matthew Henry: 1Pe 5:1-4 - -- Here we may observe, I. The persons to whom this exhortation is given - to the presbyters, pastors, and spiritual guides of the church, elders by of...
Barclay: 1Pe 5:1-4 - --Few passages show more clearly the importance of the eldership in the early church. It is to the elders that Peter specially writes and he, who was ...

Barclay: 1Pe 5:1-4 - --When we turn to the Christian Church we find that the eldership is its basic office.
It was Paul's custom to ordain elders in every community to which...

Barclay: 1Pe 5:1-4 - --Peter sets down in a series of contrasts the perils and the privileges of the eldership; and everything he says is applicable, not only to the elder...

Barclay: 1Pe 5:1-4 - --One thing in this passage which defies translation and is yet one of the most precious and significant things in it is what we have translated "petty...

Barclay: 1Pe 5:1-4 - --One of the lovely things about this passage is Peter's attitude throughout it. He begins by, as it were, taking his place beside those to whom he s...
Constable -> 1Pe 5:1-11; 1Pe 5:1-4
Constable: 1Pe 5:1-11 - --B. The Church under Trial 5:1-11
Peter concluded the body of his epistle and this section on encourageme...
