
Text -- 2 Peter 2:20-22 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: 2Pe 2:20 - -- After they have escaped ( apophugontes ).
Second aorist active participle here (see 2Pe 2:18).
After they have escaped (
Second aorist active participle here (see 2Pe 2:18).

Robertson: 2Pe 2:20 - -- The defilements ( ta miasmata ).
Old word miasma, from miainō , here only in N.T. Our "miasma."The body is sacred to God. Cf. miasmou in 2Pe 2:10...
The defilements (
Old word miasma, from

Robertson: 2Pe 2:20 - -- They are again entangled ( palin emplakentes ).
Second aorist passive participle of emplekō , old verb, to inweave (noosed, fettered), in N.T. only...
They are again entangled (
Second aorist passive participle of

Robertson: 2Pe 2:20 - -- Overcome ( hēttōntai ).
Present passive indicative of hēttaoō , for which see 2Pe 2:19, "are repeatedly worsted."Predicate in the condition o...
Overcome (
Present passive indicative of

Robertson: 2Pe 2:20 - -- Therein ( toutois ).
So locative case (in these "defilements"), but it can be instrumental case ("by these,"Strachan).
Therein (
So locative case (in these "defilements"), but it can be instrumental case ("by these,"Strachan).

With them (
Dative of disadvantage, "for them."

Robertson: 2Pe 2:20 - -- Than the first ( tōn prōtōn ).
Ablative case after the comparative cheirona . See this moral drawn by Jesus (Mat 12:45; Luk 11:26).

Robertson: 2Pe 2:21 - -- It were better ( kreitton ēn ).
Apodosis of a condition of second class without an , as is usual with clauses of possibility, propriety, obligation...

Robertson: 2Pe 2:21 - -- Not to have known ( mē epegnōkenai ).
Perfect active infinitive of epiginōskō (cf. epignōsei , 2Pe 2:20) to know fully.
Not to have known (
Perfect active infinitive of

Robertson: 2Pe 2:21 - -- The way of righteousness ( tēn hodon tēs dikaiosunēs ).
For the phrase see Mat 21:33, also the way of truth (2Pe 2:2), the straight way (2Pe 2:...

Robertson: 2Pe 2:21 - -- After knowing it ( epignousin ).
Second aorist active participle of epiginōskō (just used) in the dative plural agreeing with autois (for the...
After knowing it (
Second aorist active participle of

Robertson: 2Pe 2:21 - -- To turn back ( hupostrepsai ).
First aorist active infinitive of hupostrephō , old and common verb, to turn back, to return.
To turn back (
First aorist active infinitive of

Robertson: 2Pe 2:21 - -- From ( ek ).
Out of. So in Act 12:25 with hupostrephō . With ablative case. See Rom 7:12 for hagia applied to hē entolē (cf. 1Ti 6:14). 2 P...

Robertson: 2Pe 2:21 - -- Delivered ( paradotheisēs ).
First aorist passive participle feminine ablative singular of paradidōmi .
Delivered (
First aorist passive participle feminine ablative singular of

Robertson: 2Pe 2:22 - -- It has happened ( sumbebēken ).
Perfect active indicative of sumbainō , for which see 1Pe 4:12.
It has happened (
Perfect active indicative of

Robertson: 2Pe 2:22 - -- According to the true proverb ( to tēs alēthous paroimias ).
"The word (to used absolutely, the matter of, as in Mat 21:21; Jam 4:14) of the tr...
According to the true proverb (
"The word (

Robertson: 2Pe 2:22 - -- The sow that had washed ( hūs lousamenē ).
Hūs , old word for hog, here only in N.T. Participle first aorist direct middle of louō shows th...
The sow that had washed (

Robertson: 2Pe 2:22 - -- To wallowing ( eis kulismon ).
"To rolling."Late and rare word (from kuliō , Mar 9:20), here only in N.T.
To wallowing (
"To rolling."Late and rare word (from

Robertson: 2Pe 2:22 - -- In the mire ( borborou ).
Objective genitive, old word for dung, mire, here only in N.T. J. Rendel Harris ( Story of Ahikar , p. LXVII) tells of a st...
In the mire (
Objective genitive, old word for dung, mire, here only in N.T. J. Rendel Harris ( Story of Ahikar , p. LXVII) tells of a story about a hog that went to the bath with people of quality, but on coming out saw a stinking drain and went and rolled himself in it.
Vincent: 2Pe 2:20 - -- Pollutions ( μιάσματα )
Only here in New Testament. Compare 2Pe 2:10. The word is transcribed in miasma .
Pollutions (
Only here in New Testament. Compare 2Pe 2:10. The word is transcribed in

Vincent: 2Pe 2:20 - -- Entangled ( ἐμπλακέντες )
Only here and 2Ti 2:4. The same metaphor occurs in Aeschylus (" Prometheus" ): " For not on a sudden or ...
Entangled (
Only here and 2Ti 2:4. The same metaphor occurs in Aeschylus (" Prometheus" ): " For not on a sudden or in ignorance will ye be entangled (

Vincent: 2Pe 2:22 - -- According to the true proverb ( τὸ τῆς ἀληθοῦς παροιμίας )
Lit., that of the true proverb, or the matter of th...

Vomit (
Only here in New Testament.

Wallowing (
Only here in New Testament.
Who are thus ensnared.

The sins which pollute all who know not God.

Wesley: 2Pe 2:20 - -- That is, through faith in him, 2Pe 1:3. They are again entangled therein, and overcome, their last state is worse than the first - More inexcusable, a...
That is, through faith in him, 2Pe 1:3. They are again entangled therein, and overcome, their last state is worse than the first - More inexcusable, and causing a greater damnation.

Wesley: 2Pe 2:21 - -- The whole law of God, once not only delivered to their ears, but written in their hearts.
The whole law of God, once not only delivered to their ears, but written in their hearts.

Solemnly expressing in full the great and gracious One from whom they fall.

JFB: 2Pe 2:21 - -- "the way of truth" (2Pe 2:2). Christian doctrine, and "the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour."
"the way of truth" (2Pe 2:2). Christian doctrine, and "the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour."

JFB: 2Pe 2:21 - -- The Gospel which enjoins holiness; in opposition to their corruption. "Holy," not that it makes holy, but because it ought to be kept inviolate [TITTM...
The Gospel which enjoins holiness; in opposition to their corruption. "Holy," not that it makes holy, but because it ought to be kept inviolate [TITTMANN].

Once for all; admitting no turning back.

JFB: 2Pe 2:22 - -- You need not wonder at the event; for dogs and swine they were before, and dogs and swine they will continue. They "scarcely" (2Pe 2:18) have escaped ...
You need not wonder at the event; for dogs and swine they were before, and dogs and swine they will continue. They "scarcely" (2Pe 2:18) have escaped from their filthy folly, when they again are entangled in it. Then they seduce others who have in like manner "for a little time escaped from them that live in error" (2Pe 2:18). Peter often quoted Proverbs in his First Epistle (1Pe 1:7; 1Pe 2:17; 1Pe 4:8, 1Pe 4:18); another proof that both Epistles come from the same writer.
Clarke: 2Pe 2:20 - -- The pollutions of the world - Sin in general, and particularly superstition, idolatry, and lasciviousness. These are called μιασματα, miasm...
The pollutions of the world - Sin in general, and particularly superstition, idolatry, and lasciviousness. These are called

Clarke: 2Pe 2:21 - -- For it had been better for them not to have known - For the reasons assigned above; because they have sinned against more mercy, are capable of more...
For it had been better for them not to have known - For the reasons assigned above; because they have sinned against more mercy, are capable of more sin, and are liable to greater punishment

Clarke: 2Pe 2:21 - -- The holy commandment - The whole religion of Christ is contained in this one commandment, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, with...
The holy commandment - The whole religion of Christ is contained in this one commandment, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, with all thy soul, with all thy mind, and with all thy strength; and thy neighbor as thyself."He who obeys this great commandment, and this by the grace of Christ is possible to every man, is saved from sinning either against his God or against his neighbor. Nothing less than this does the religion of Christ require.

Clarke: 2Pe 2:22 - -- According to the true proverb - This seems to be a reference to Pro 26:11 : ככלב שב אל קאו kekeleb shab al keo ; as the dog returneth t...
According to the true proverb - This seems to be a reference to Pro 26:11 :
The Greeks have something like it; so Arrian, Dissert. Epict. l. iv. c. 11, says:
Here is a sad proof of the possibility of falling from grace, and from very high degrees of it too. These had escaped from the contagion that was in the world; they had had true repentance, and cast up "their soursweet morsel of sin;"they had been washed from all their filthiness, and this must have been through the blood of the Lamb; yet, after all, they went back, got entangled with their old sins, swallowed down their formerly rejected lusts, and rewallowed in the mire of corruption. It is no wonder that God should say, the latter end is worse with them than the beginning: reason and nature say it must be so; and Divine justice says it ought to be so; and the person himself must confess that it is right that it should be so. But how dreadful is this state! How dangerous when the person has abandoned himself to his old sins! Yet it is not said that it is impossible for him to return to his Maker; though his case be deplorable, it is not utterly hopeless; the leper may yet be made clean, and the dead may be raised. Reader, is thy backsliding a grief and burden to thee? Then thou art not far from the kingdom of God; believe on the Lord Jesus, and thou shalt be saved.
Calvin: 2Pe 2:20 - -- 20.For if after He again shews how pernicious was the sect which led men consecrated to God back again to their old filth and the corruptions of the ...
20.For if after He again shews how pernicious was the sect which led men consecrated to God back again to their old filth and the corruptions of the world. And he exhibits the heinousness of the evil by a comparison; for it was no common sin to depart from the holy doctrine of God. It would have been better for them, he says, not to have known the way of righteousness; for though there is no excuse for ignorance, yet the servant who knowingly and wilfully despises the commands of his lord, deserves a twofold punishment. There was besides ingratitude, because they wilfully extinguished the light of God, rejected the favor conferred on them, and having shaken off the yoke, became perversely wanton against God; yea, as far as they could, they profaned and abrogated the inviolable covenant of God, which had been ratified by the blood of Christ. The more earnest then ought we to be, to advance humbly and carefully in the course of our calling. We must now consider each sentence.
By naming the pollutions of the world, he shews that we roll in filth and are wholly polluted, until we renounce the world. By the knowledge of Christ he no doubt understands the gospel. He testifies that the design of it is, to deliver us from the defilements of the world, and to lead us far away from them. For the same reason he afterwards calls it the way of righteousness. He then alone makes a right progress in the gospel who faithfully learns Christ; and he truly knows Christ, who has been taught by him to put off the old man and to put on the new man, as Paul reminds us in Eph 4:22 174

Calvin: 2Pe 2:21 - -- 21. By saying that having forsaken the commandment delivered unto them, they returned to their own pollutions, he intimates first, how inexcusable...
21. By saying that having forsaken the commandment delivered unto them, they returned to their own pollutions, he intimates first, how inexcusable they were; and secondly, he reminds us that the doctrine of a holy and virtuous life, though common to all and indiscriminately belonging to all, is yet peculiarly taught to those whom God favors with the light of his gospel. But he declares that they who make themselves slaves again to the pollutions of the world fall away from the gospel. The faithful also do indeed sin; but as they allow not dominion to sin, they do not fall away from the grace of God, nor do they renounce the profession of sound doctrine which they have once embraced. For they are not to be deemed conquered, while they strenuously resist the flesh and its lusts.

Calvin: 2Pe 2:22 - -- 22.But it has happened unto them As the example disturbs many, when men who had submitted to the obedience of Christ, rush headlong into vices withou...
22.But it has happened unto them As the example disturbs many, when men who had submitted to the obedience of Christ, rush headlong into vices without fear or shame, the Apostle, in order to remove the offense, says that this happens through their own fault, and that because they are pigs and dogs. It hence follows that no part of the sin can be ascribed to the gospel.
For this purpose he quotes two ancient proverbs, the first of which is found as the saying of Solomon in Pro 26:11. But what Peter meant is briefly this, that the gospel is a medicine which purges us by wholesome vomiting, but that there are many dogs who swallow again what they have vomited to their own ruin; and that the gospel is also a laver which cleanses all our uncleanness, but that there are many swine who, immediately after washing, roll themselves again in the mud. At the same time the godly are reminded to take heed to themselves, except they wish to be deemed dogs or swine.
Defender: 2Pe 2:20 - -- It is thus very dangerous to know how to be saved, to understand the complete situation mentally, and then to deliberately turn Christ down. This is t...
It is thus very dangerous to know how to be saved, to understand the complete situation mentally, and then to deliberately turn Christ down. This is the same situation as described in Heb 6:4-6 and Heb 10:26-31."

Defender: 2Pe 2:21 - -- Knowledge is necessary, but knowledge alone is insufficient for salvation. One must not only know the basic facts about salvation but must receive Chr...
Knowledge is necessary, but knowledge alone is insufficient for salvation. One must not only know the basic facts about salvation but must receive Christ as personal Savior in true repentance and faith."
TSK: 2Pe 2:20 - -- after : Mat 12:43-45; Luk 11:24-26; Heb 6:4-8, Heb 10:26, Heb 10:27
escaped : 2Pe 2:18, 2Pe 1:4
through : 2Pe 1:2
the latter : Num 24:20; Deu 32:29; P...

TSK: 2Pe 2:21 - -- it had : Mat 11:23, Mat 11:24; Luk 12:47; Joh 9:41, Joh 15:22
the way : Pro 12:28, Pro 16:31; Mat 21:32
to turn : Psa 36:3, Psa 36:4, Psa 125:5; Eze 3...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 2Pe 2:20 - -- For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world - This does not necessarily mean that they had been true Christians, and had fallen ...
For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world - This does not necessarily mean that they had been true Christians, and had fallen from grace. People may outwardly reform, and escape from the open corruptions which prevail around them, or which they had themselves practiced, and still have no true grace at heart.
Through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesses Christ - Neither does This imply that they were true Christians, or that they had ever had any saving knowledge of the Redeemer. There is a knowledge of the doctrines and duties of religion which may lead sinners to abandon their outward vices, which has no connection with saving grace. They may profess religion, and may Know enough of religion to understand that it requires them to abandon their vicious habits, and still never be true Christians.
They are again entangled therein and overcome - The word rendered "entangled,"(
The latter end is worse with them than the beginning - This is usually the case. Apostates become worse than they were before their professed conversion. "Reformed"drunkards, if they go back to their "cups"again, become more abandoned than ever. Thus, it is with those who have been addicted to any habits of vice, and who profess to become religious, and then fall away. The "reasons"for this may be:
(1)\caps1 t\caps0 hat they are willing now to show to others that they are no longer under the restraints by which they had professedly bound themselves;
(2)\caps1 t\caps0 hat God gives them up to indulgence with fewer restraints than formerly; and,
(3)\caps1 t\caps0 heir old companions in sin may be at special pains to court their society, and to lead them into temptation, in order to obtain a triumph over virtue and religion.

Barnes: 2Pe 2:21 - -- For it had been better for them ... - Compare the notes at Mat 26:24. It would have been better for them, for: (1)\caps1 t\...
For it had been better for them ... - Compare the notes at Mat 26:24. It would have been better for them, for:
(1)\caps1 t\caps0 hen they would not have dishonored the cause of religion as they have now done;
(2)\caps1 t\caps0 hey would not have sunk so deep in profligacy as they now have; and,
(3)\caps1 t\caps0 hey would not have incurred so aggravated a condemnation in the world of woe. If people are resolved on being wicked, they had better never pretend to be good. If they are to be cast off at last, it had better not be as apostates from the cause of virtue and religion.

Barnes: 2Pe 2:22 - -- But it is happened unto them according to the true proverb - The meaning of the proverbs here quoted is, that they have returned to their forme...
But it is happened unto them according to the true proverb - The meaning of the proverbs here quoted is, that they have returned to their former vile manner of life. Under all the appearances of reformation, still their evil nature remained, as really as that of the dog or the swine, and that nature finally prevailed. There was no thorough internal change, any more than there is in the swine when it is washed, or in the dog. This passage, therefore, would seem to demonstrate that there never had been any real change of heart, and of course there had been no falling away from true religion. It should not, therefore, he quoted to prove that true Chrisfinns may fall from grace and perish. The dog and the swine had never been anything else than the dog and the swine, and these persons had never been anything else than sinners.
The dog is turned to his own vomit again - That is, to eat it up. The passage would seem to imply, that whatever pains should be taken to change the habits of the dog, he would return to them again. The quotation here is from Pro 26:11; "As a dog returneth to his vomit, so a feel returneth to his folly."A similar proverb is found in the Rabbinical writers. Of the truth of the disgusting fact here affirmed of the dog, there can be no doubt. Phaedrus (Fab. 27.) states a fact still more offensive respecting its habits. In the view of the Orientals, the dog was reckoned among the most vile and disgusting of all animals. Compare Deu 23:18; 1Sa 17:43; 2Sa 3:8; 2Sa 9:8; 2Sa 16:9; Mat 7:6; Phi 3:2. See also Horace, II. Epis. 1, 26:
Vixisset canis immundus, vel amica luto sus .
On the use of this proverb, see Wetstein, in loc.
And the sow that was washed ... - This proverb is not found in the Old Testament, but it was common in the Rabbinical writings, and is found in the Greek classics. See Wetstein, in loc. Its meaning is plain, and of the truth of what is affirmed no one can have any doubt. No matter how clean the swine is made by washing, this would not prevent it, in the slightest degree, from rolling in filth again. It will act out its real nature. So it is with the sinner. No external reformation will certainly prevent his returning to his former habits; and when he does return, we can only say that he is acting according to his real nature - a nature which has never been changed, any more than the nature of the dog or the swine. On the characteristics of the persons referred to in this chapter, 2Pe 2:9-19, see the introduction, Section 3.
This passage is often quoted to prove "the possibility of falling from grace, and from a very high degree of it too."But it is one of the last passages in the Bible that should be adduced to prove that doctrine. The true point of this passage is to show that the persons referred to never "were changed;"that whatever external reformation might have occurred, their nature remained the same; and that when they apostatized from their outward profession, they merely acted out their nature, and showed that in fact there had been "no"real change. This passage will prove - what there are abundant facts to confirm - that persons may reform externally, and then return again to their former corrupt habits; it can never be made to prove that one true Christian will fall away and perish. It will also prove that we should rely on no mere external reformation, no outward cleansing, as certain evidence of piety. Thousands who have been externally reformed have ultimately shown that they. had no religion, and there is nothing in mere outward reformation that can suit us for heaven. God looks upon the heart; and it is only the religion that has its seat there, that can secure our final salvation.
Poole: 2Pe 2:20 - -- The pollutions of the world those more gross wickednesses in which most of the world still lieth, 1Jo 5:19 .
Through the knowledge of the Lord and S...
The pollutions of the world those more gross wickednesses in which most of the world still lieth, 1Jo 5:19 .
Through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ such a knowledge of Christ as brings with it an outward reformation of life, though it do not purify the heart. For that the apostle doth not here speak of those that were rooted in Christ by a saving and heart purifying faith, appears by 2Pe 2:14 , where he calls them
unstable souls
They are again entangled therein, and overcome return to their old sins, yield up themselves to them, and continue in them.

Poole: 2Pe 2:21 - -- It had been better for them not to have known their sin had been less if they had not known the truth, but now they sin against knowledge, and therei...
It had been better for them not to have known their sin had been less if they had not known the truth, but now they sin against knowledge, and therein their apostacy is much worse than their ignorance would have been.
The way of righteousness the way of obtaining righteousness by Christ, and of living godly in Christ, 2Ti 3:12 , prescribed in the gospel; the same which is called the right way, 2Pe 2:15 , and the way of truth, 2Pe 2:2 .
The holy commandment the same in other words. It is called holy, not only as proceeding from God, who is holy, but as teaching nothing but what is holy, and being the means God useth in making men holy, and as being opposed to the pollutions of the world before mentioned.

Poole: 2Pe 2:22 - -- But it is happened unto them according to the true proverb: this is added, to prevent the scandal that might arise from their apostacy; q.d. It is no...
But it is happened unto them according to the true proverb: this is added, to prevent the scandal that might arise from their apostacy; q.d. It is not to be wondered at that they are again entangled in and overcome by their former pollutions, when there never was a thorough change wrought in their hearts. Dogs and swine (beasts unclean by the law) they still were, under the greatest appearances of reformation, and such they now show themselves to be by their vile apostacy.
The dog is turned to his own vomit again: as dogs vomit up what is burdensome to them, but, still being dogs, and not having changed their natures by easing their stomachs, lick up their own vomit again; so these, under a fit of conviction, through the power of the word, disgorge those sins which burdened their consciences, but having thereby gotten some ease, and their old nature and love to their former lusts still remaining, they again return to the same sins they had for a time forsaken.
The sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire: as swine, that naturally love the dirt and mire, if sometimes they be washed from it, yet, still retaining their former disposition, return again to it; so likewise these here mentioned, however they may be washed from the pollutions of the world, and by the preaching of the gospel brought off from their former ways of sin, and brought into a profession of holiness, yet, still retaining their old nature and corrupt dispositions, they are easily prevailed over by them, and so relapse into their former abominations.
PBC -> 2Pe 2:20
PBC: 2Pe 2:20 - -- The primary question among commentators regarding these verses is whether Peter is writing about the false teachers or the deluded students whom they ...
The primary question among commentators regarding these verses is whether Peter is writing about the false teachers or the deluded students whom they teach. A. T. Robertson (Word Pictures in the New Testament) makes the point that, even in the Greek structure of the passage, the antecedent to the pronouns is not clear. A reasonable case might well be made for either view. Given the dominant theme that Peter follows in the chapter of dealing with the perverse character of the false teachers, it is my belief that he here refers to the false teachers. It is an implication, but the reference to dogs and pigs following their nature seems to indicate that the people to whom Peter refers remain in a fallen, unchanged nature. If this point holds, the reference seems more appropriate to the false teachers than to the taught. According to Paul, {2Ti 2:18} false teachers can in fact overthrow the faith of children of God, though he adds emphatically that they cannot overthrow their salvation; God’s foundation stands secure against false teachers in that God knows " them that are his." Thus it seems to take the point too far to refer these metaphors to a saved person, but it comfortably and naturally fits the consistent description in the chapter of an unsaved person who is also a false teacher.
When respected New Testament Greek language authorities and English commentators alike make the point that the antecedent to the pronouns in this passage is not at all clear, we should hold whatever position we take with a loose grip and avoid dogmatic insistence that we are absolutely right about our view. I will state my views in this chapter, but I do so with this caveat. So long as you hold to a view that corresponds with other passages and with the essential theological framework of the New Testament, I will comfortably respect your view as fully as the one that I will present. As soon as we start down the slippery slope of judging the eternal destiny/judgment of particular people (apart from specific instances in which Scripture clearly makes the point), we have already moved out of our divine assignment and into God’s role. We would best avoid that setting whenever possible.
The reference to them having " escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ," in isolation from the remainder of the passage could easily refer to a child of God. However, we cannot remove the words from context. Even an evil unsaved person might for a time escape the obvious pollutions of sin while attempting to deceive and misguide others. It is worth noting that true salvation passages refer to what God does for us, not what we did by our actions. God " delivered us from the wrath to come." {1Th 1:10} In this context these people escaped temporarily from the pollution of sin, but the passage does not indicate that God permanently delivered them from it.
How then is the greater condemnation possible, "the latter end is worse with them than the beginning?" Although I am inclined to believe that the status of all the elect in heaven, at least after the resurrection and final judgment, will be equal, I believe that Scripture teaches that the wicked may suffer varying degrees of punishment that corresponds to their relative guilt of sins during their lifetime. The redemptive price of our Lord Jesus Christ was equally paid for each one of the elect. However, the sentence against the wicked at the final judgment will be specific to their sins committed. Thus there is no substantial difficulty in the idea of varying degrees of punishment. Notice Paul’s point that the sentence against the wicked is equated to wages, {Ro 6:23} but the state of the saved is equated to a gift. If this premise be true, then the greater the sin of the wicked, including wicked false teachers, the greater their punishment at the final judgment.
The larger flowing context of 2Pe 2:1-22, and of Peter’s overarching purpose in writing this letter against false teachers, inclines the verses in question toward the false teachers. We should not overlook the rather dramatic distinction between Peter’s primary objective in 1 Peter and in 2 Peter. In 1 Peter he writes about enemies who will persecute and seek to destroy the church from without. In 2 Peter he writes about false teachers who will seek similar destruction against the Lord’s church, but from within, not from without. However, Peter unites his strategy for both letters. Whether in dealing with hostile assault from without or from false teachers within, we are to be fully and constantly equipped to respond so as to honor our faith. {1Pe 3:15 and context}
Regardless of the eternal destination of these people at the final judgment, at least for a time they enter into a church and even rise to a position of teaching authority. (Our generation shirks at this idea, but the old Puritans had no problem with it. They referred to such imposters as " professors but not possessors." ) Then they follow their true motives, greed for prestige and power to themselves. In the process of this greed for self-gain they will abandon any sense of moral or ethical standard. Their greed is self-consuming and becomes apparent to the informed and well-equipped believer. However, they will use pretentious words to deceive the weak and ill informed among the church where they work. Peter’s primary objective is not for us to debate their eternal destiny, but to become so well equipped and informed as to insulate ourselves from their error and their total lack of ethics. Regardless of our locker room discussions about their eternal state, or whether these words primarily apply to the false teachers or the people whom they deceive, Peter’s obvious design is to equip us to recognize and avoid the false teachers whom he describes in the letter.
Based on the clarity and emphasis that Peter places on the question of false teachers, we have far less excuse for being deceived than we sometimes claim. Far too many who claim to be mature believers in Christ and in His truth are sadly careless about their study of Scripture. They gladly read their Bibles daily in devotional pursuit of personal growth and discipleship, but they seldom take their Bible study to the next grade-level and truly equip themselves with Biblical knowledge with sufficient clarity and depth as to be prepared to defend the truth against error or to identify many of the false teachings that we see around us. Devotional reading can evoke sentimental rewards and " good feelings," the epitome of a " heart-felt" faith, but godly, Biblical maturity requires more than a good sentimental feeling. It requires knowledge and skill in that knowledge. Like the tent maker who learns by long, tedious hours of apprenticeship and work to " cut straight" when he makes a tent, {2Ti 2:15} the well-equipped disciple will demonstrate the ability to " cut straight" and to the Master’s specifications when he interprets and applies Scripture.
Scripture, to be sure, holds each of us accountable to God for our discipleship, so we should be cautious when we blame someone else for our personal errors. Had we spent more time (to borrow a’Kempis’ famous comment) " in a nook with the Book," we would show ourselves far better equipped to articulate and to defend our faith.
That said with due emphasis and personal conviction, I equally believe that Scripture consistently lays a heavy responsibility upon anyone who teaches another. If he teaches error, God holds him responsible for the error taught, as well as for the hurt imposed upon the person who is deceived by that error. This basic truth lies at the foundation of Peter’s intense dialogue in this letter, particularly in this chapter. Throughout this chapter Peter has held to a scathing assault against the false teachers, even as he responded with occasional compassion toward those who fall prey to the smooth words and deceptive teachings that ensnared them. The greater truth of this whole letter and its function in the body of accepted and inspired holy writings for New Testament believers takes us to this point. We are duly informed and admonished to take our faith seriously, to be aware that false teachers abound, and that they are not nearly so benign or ethical as we might think them to be from our often naïve assessments. We may at times be deceived (Who among us has not been?), but the major errors propagated by the people whom Peter describes as altogether lacking in moral and ethical integrity should not deceive any among us. We are left essentially without excuse if we take our New Testament textbook seriously and become familiar with its teachings.
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Haydock -> 2Pe 2:20
Haydock: 2Pe 2:20 - -- For if flying, and been happily freed from the pollutions, the abominations, and corruptions of a wicked world, be upon your guard, and take great ca...
For if flying, and been happily freed from the pollutions, the abominations, and corruptions of a wicked world, be upon your guard, and take great care not to be entangled again in these dangerous snares and nets, lest your latter condition (as Christ said, Matthew xii. 45.) be worse than the former, lest you be like a dog that returns to his vomit, or like a sow that is washed and wallows again in the mire. (Witham)
Gill: 2Pe 2:20 - -- For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world,.... The sins of it, the governing vices of it, which the men of the world are addicted to,...
For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world,.... The sins of it, the governing vices of it, which the men of the world are addicted to, and immersed in; for the whole world lies in wickedness, and which are of a defiling nature: the phrase is Rabbinical; it is said q,
"he that studies not in the law in this world, but is defiled
these, men may escape, abstain from, and outwardly reform, with respect unto, and yet be destitute of the grace of God; so that this can be no instance of the final and total apostasy of real saints; for the house may be swept and garnished with an external reformation; persons may be outwardly righteous before men, have a form of godliness and a name to live, and yet be dead in trespasses and sins; all which they may have
through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. The Vulgate Latin, and all the Oriental versions, read, our Lord, and the latter leave out, "and Saviour"; by which "knowledge" is meant, not a spiritual experimental knowledge of Christ, for that is eternal life, the beginning, pledge, and earnest of it; but a notional knowledge of Christ, or a profession of knowledge of him, for it may be rendered "acknowledgment"; or rather the Gospel of Christ, which, being only notionally received, may have such an effect on men, as outwardly to reform their lives, at least in some instances, and for a while, in whose hearts it has no place. Now if, after all this knowledge and reformation,
they are again entangled therein; in the pollutions of the world, in worldly lusts, which are as gins, pits and snares:
and overcome; by them, so as to be laden with them, and led away, and entirely governed and influenced by them:
the latter end, or state,
is worse with them than the beginning; see Mat 12:45. Their beginning, or first estate, was that in which they were born, a state of darkness, ignorance, and sin, and in which they were brought up, and was either the state of Judaism, or of Gentilism; their next estate was an outward deliverance and escape from the error of the one, or of the other, and an embracing and professing the truth of the Christian religion, joined with a becoming external conversation; and this their last estate was an apostasy from the truth of the Gospel they had professed, a reception of error and heresy, and a relapse into sin and immorality, which made their case worse than it was at first; for, generally, such persons are more extravagant in sinning; are like raging waves of the sea, foaming out their own shame; and are seldom, or ever, recovered; and by their light, knowledge, and profession, their punishment will be more aggravated, and become intolerable.

Gill: 2Pe 2:21 - -- For it had been better for them,.... Not that ignorance is good, or to be excused; but it would have been a lesser evil, and not so much aggravated:
...
For it had been better for them,.... Not that ignorance is good, or to be excused; but it would have been a lesser evil, and not so much aggravated:
not to have known the way of righteousness; the same with "the way of truth", 2Pe 2:2, and "the right way", 2Pe 2:15, the Gospel, which points out the way and method of a sinner's justification before God, which is not by the works of the law, but by the righteousness of Christ imputed to them, and received by faith; and which teaches men to live soberly, righteously, and godly; and a large, notional, though not an experimental knowledge, these apostates had of the word and doctrine of righteousness, and indeed of the whole of the Christian religion, which may truly go by this name:
than after they have known it; owned, embraced, and professed it:
to turn: the Vulgate Latin version, and some copies, as the Alexandrian and others, add, to that which is behind; to their former lusts, or errors, or worse, which they had turned their backs upon externally:
from the holy commandment delivered unto them; by the commandment is meant the Gospel also, see 2Pe 3:2; called holy, because of its nature and influence, and in opposition to the pollutions of the world; and which is the faith once delivered, Jud 1:3, and which they received, as delivered to them; and, particularly, the ordinances of it, which they once submitted to, kept, and observed, as they were delivered to them, but now relinquished, or corrupted: wherefore, it would have been better for them to have been in their former ignorance, either in Judaism, or in Gentilism, since proportionate to a man's light is his guilt, and so his punishment, see Rom 2:12.

Gill: 2Pe 2:22 - -- But it is happened unto them, according to the true proverb,.... Which is true, both in fact and in the application of it, and which lies in the Scrip...
But it is happened unto them, according to the true proverb,.... Which is true, both in fact and in the application of it, and which lies in the Scriptures of truth, at least the first part of it, Pro 26:11.
The dog is turned to his own vomit again, and the sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire; which expresses the filthy nature of sin, signified by vomit, mire, and dirt, than which nothing is more abominable and defiling; and also the just characters of these apostates, who are filly compared to dogs and swine and likewise their irreclaimable and irrecoverable state and condition, it being impossible they should be otherwise, unless their natures were changed and altered. In the Hebrew language, a "sow" is called
"Tobiah returns to Tobiah, as it is said, Pro 26:11; as a dog returneth to his vomit r.''

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 2Pe 2:22 The source of this quotation is uncertain. Heraclitus has often been mentioned as a possible source, but this is doubtful. Other options on the transl...
Geneva Bible -> 2Pe 2:20
Geneva Bible: 2Pe 2:20 ( 9 ) For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, they are again entangled ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 2Pe 2:1-22
TSK Synopsis: 2Pe 2:1-22 - --1 He foretells them of false teachers, shewing the impiety and punishment both of them and their followers;7 from which the godly shall be delivered, ...
MHCC -> 2Pe 2:17-22
MHCC: 2Pe 2:17-22 - --The word of truth is the water of life, which refreshes the souls that receive it; but deceivers spread and promote error, and are set forth as empty,...
Matthew Henry -> 2Pe 2:10-22
Matthew Henry: 2Pe 2:10-22 - -- The apostle's design being to warn us of, and arm us against, seducers, he now returns to discourse more particularly of them, and give us an accoun...
Barclay -> 2Pe 2:17-22
Barclay: 2Pe 2:17-22 - --Peter is still rolling out his tremendous denunciation of the evil men.
They flatter only to deceive. They are like wells with no water and like mist...
Constable -> 2Pe 2:1-22; 2Pe 2:20-22
Constable: 2Pe 2:1-22 - --IV. THE DANGER TO THE CHRISTIAN 2:1-22
Peter next warned his readers of the false teachers who presented a messa...

Constable: 2Pe 2:20-22 - --D. The Condemnation of False Teachers 2:20-22
Peter focused his discussion next on the false teachers' final doom to warn his readers of the serious r...
College -> 2Pe 2:1-22
College: 2Pe 2:1-22 - --2 PETER 2
B. WARNING AGAINST FALSE TEACHERS (2:1-22)
1. The Coming of False Teachers (2:1-3)
1 But there were also false prophets among the people,...

expand allCommentary -- Other
Evidence: 2Pe 2:21 When sinners make professions of faith and refuse to have any regard for God’s Moral Law, their latter end becomes worse than the first. They fall a...
