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Text -- 2 Peter 2:8 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
2:8 (for while he lived among them day after day, that righteous man was tormented in his righteous soul by the lawless deeds he saw and heard)
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Wicked | Speaking | Sin | PRISON, SPIRITS IN | Minister | Lot | LOT (1) | LAWLESS | JUDE, EPISTLE OF | Heresy | Doctrines | Blessing | Associations | more
Table of Contents

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

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

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

Other
Evidence

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: 2Pe 2:8 - -- For ( gar ). Parenthetical explanation in 2Pe 2:8 of the remark about Lot.

For ( gar ).

Parenthetical explanation in 2Pe 2:8 of the remark about Lot.

Robertson: 2Pe 2:8 - -- Dwelling ( enkatoikōn ). Present active participle of enkatoikeō , old but rare double compound, here only in N.T.

Dwelling ( enkatoikōn ).

Present active participle of enkatoikeō , old but rare double compound, here only in N.T.

Robertson: 2Pe 2:8 - -- In seeing and hearing ( blemmati kai akoēi ). "By sight (instrumental case of blemma , old word, from blepō to see, here only in N.T.) and hear...

In seeing and hearing ( blemmati kai akoēi ).

"By sight (instrumental case of blemma , old word, from blepō to see, here only in N.T.) and hearing"(instrumental case of akoē from akouō , to hear, common as Mat 13:14).

Robertson: 2Pe 2:8 - -- From day to day ( hēmeran ex hēmerās ). "Day in day out."Accusative of time and ablative with ex . Same idiom in Psa 96:2 for the more common e...

From day to day ( hēmeran ex hēmerās ).

"Day in day out."Accusative of time and ablative with ex . Same idiom in Psa 96:2 for the more common ex hēmeras eis hēmeran .

Robertson: 2Pe 2:8 - -- Vexed ( ebasanizen ). Imperfect active (kept on vexing) of basanizō , old word, to test metals, to torment (Mat 8:29).

Vexed ( ebasanizen ).

Imperfect active (kept on vexing) of basanizō , old word, to test metals, to torment (Mat 8:29).

Robertson: 2Pe 2:8 - -- With their lawless deeds ( anomois ergois ). Instrumental case of cause, "because of their lawless (contrary to law) deeds."For anomos see 2Th 2:8.

With their lawless deeds ( anomois ergois ).

Instrumental case of cause, "because of their lawless (contrary to law) deeds."For anomos see 2Th 2:8.

Vincent: 2Pe 2:8 - -- Dwelling ( ἐγκατοικῶν ) Only here in New Testament. Dwelling, and therefore suffering continually, from day to day.

Dwelling ( ἐγκατοικῶν )

Only here in New Testament. Dwelling, and therefore suffering continually, from day to day.

Vincent: 2Pe 2:8 - -- In seeing ( βλέμματι ) Only here in New Testament. Usually of the look of a man from without, through which the vexation comes to t...

In seeing ( βλέμματι )

Only here in New Testament. Usually of the look of a man from without, through which the vexation comes to the soul. " Vexed his righteous soul. "

Vincent: 2Pe 2:8 - -- Vexed ( ἐβασανίζεν ) See on Mat 4:24, torments. The original sense is to test by touchstone or by torture. See on toiling, ...

Vexed ( ἐβασανίζεν )

See on Mat 4:24, torments. The original sense is to test by touchstone or by torture. See on toiling, Mar 6:48. Rev. gives tormented, in margin.

Vincent: 2Pe 2:8 - -- Unlawful ( ἀνόμοις ) Rev., lawless. Only here in New Testament with things. In all other cases it is applied to persons.

Unlawful ( ἀνόμοις )

Rev., lawless. Only here in New Testament with things. In all other cases it is applied to persons.

JFB: 2Pe 2:8 - -- Greek, "tormented."

Greek, "tormented."

Clarke: 2Pe 2:8 - -- That righteous man dwelling among them - Lot, after his departure from Abraham, A. M. 2086, lived at Sodom till A. M. 2107, a space of about twenty ...

That righteous man dwelling among them - Lot, after his departure from Abraham, A. M. 2086, lived at Sodom till A. M. 2107, a space of about twenty years; and, as he had a righteous soul, he must have been tormented with the abominations of that people from day to day

The word εβασανιζεν, tormented, is not less emphatic than the word καταπονουμενον, grievously pained, in the preceding verse, and shows what this man must have felt in dwelling so long among a people so abandoned.

Calvin: 2Pe 2:8 - -- 8.In seeing and hearing The common explanation is, that Lot was just in his eyes and ears, because all his senses abhorred the crimes of Sodom. Howev...

8.In seeing and hearing The common explanation is, that Lot was just in his eyes and ears, because all his senses abhorred the crimes of Sodom. However, another view may be taken of his seeing and hearing, so as to make this the meaning, that when the just man lived among the Sodomites, he tormented his soul by seeing and hearing; for we know that he was constrained to see and hear many things which greatly vexed his mind. The purport of what is said then is, that though the holy man was surrounded with every kind of monstrous wickedness, he yet never turned aside from his upright course.

But Peter expresses more than before, that is, that just Lot underwent voluntary sorrows; as it is right that all the godly should feel no small grief when they see the world rushing into every kind of evil, so the more necessary it is that they should groan for their own sins. And Peter expressly mentioned this, lest when impiety everywhere prevails, we should be captivated and inebriated by the allurements of vices, and perish together with others, but that we might prefer this grief, blessed by the Lord, to all the pleasures of the world.

TSK: 2Pe 2:8 - -- that : Pro 25:26, Pro 28:12; 1Ti 1:9; Jam 5:16 in seeing : Psa 119:136, Psa 119:139, Psa 119:158; Eze 9:4, Eze 9:6; Mal 3:15-17

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 2Pe 2:8 - -- For that righteous man dwelling among them - The Latin Vulgate renders this, "For in seeing and hearing he was just;"meaning that he maintained ...

For that righteous man dwelling among them - The Latin Vulgate renders this, "For in seeing and hearing he was just;"meaning that he maintained his uprightness, or that he did not become contaminated by the vices of Sodom. Many expositors have supposed that this is the correct rendering; but the most natural and the most common explanation is that which is found in our version. According to that, the meaning is, that compelled as he was, while living among them, to see and to hear what was going on, his soul was constantly troubled.

In seeing and hearing - Seeing their open acts of depravity, and hearing their vile conversation. The effect which this had on the mind of Lot is not mentioned in Genesis, but nothing is more probable than the statement here made by Peter. Whether this statement was founded on tradition, or whether it is a suggestion of inspiration to the mind of Peter, cannot be determined. The words rendered "seeing"and "hearing"may refer to the ACT of seeing, or to the object seen. Wetstein and Robinson suppose that they refer here to the latter, and that the sense is, that he was troubled by what he saw and heard. The meaning is not materially different. Those who live among the wicked are compelled to see and hear much that pains their hearts, and it is well if they do not become indifferent to it, or contaminated by it. "Vexed"his "righteous soul from day to day with"their "unlawful deeds."

Tortured or tormented his soul - ἐβασάνιζεν ebasanizen Compare Mat 8:6, Mat 8:29; Luk 8:28; Rev 9:5; Rev 11:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 20:10, where the same word is rendered "tormented."The use of this word would seem to imply that there was something active on the part of Lot which produced this distress on account of their conduct. He was not merely troubled as if his soul were passively acted on, but there were strong mental exercises of a positive kind, arising perhaps from anxious solicitude how he might prevent their evil conduct, or from painful reflections on the consequences of their deeds to themselves, or from earnest pleadings in their behalf before God, or from reproofs and warnings of the wicked. At all events, the language is such as would seem to indicate that he was not a mere passive observer of their conduct. This, it would seem, was "from day to day,"that is, it was constant. There were doubtless reasons why Lot should remain among such a people, and why, when he might so easily have done it, he did not remove to another place.

Perhaps it was one purpose of his remaining to endeavor to do them good, as it is often the duty of good men now to reside among the wicked for the same purpose. Lot is supposed to have resided in Sodom - then probably the most corrupt place on the earth - for 16 years; and we have in that fact an instructive demonstration that a good man may maintain the life of religion in his soul when surrounded by the wicked, and an illustration of the effects which the conduct of the wicked will have on a man of true piety when he is compelled to witness it constantly. We may learn from the record made of Lot what those effect will be, and what is evidence that one is truly pious who lives among the wicked.

\caps1 (1) h\caps0 e will not be contaminated with their wickedness, or will not conform to their evil customs.

\caps1 (2) h\caps0 e will not become indifferent to it, but his heart will be more and more affected by their depravity. Compare Psa 119:136; Luk 19:41; Act 17:16.

\caps1 (3) h\caps0 e will have not only constant, but growing solicitude in regard to it - solicitude that will be felt every day: "He vexed his soul from day to day."It will not only be at intervals that his mind will be affected by their conduct, but it will be an habitual and constant thing. True piety is not fitful, periodical, and spasmodic; it is constant and steady. It is not a "jet"that occasionally bursts out; it is a fountain always flowing.

\caps1 (4) h\caps0 e will seek to do them good. We may suppose that this was the case with Lot; we are certain that it is a characteristic of true religion to seek to do good to all, however wicked they may be.

\caps1 (5) h\caps0 e will secure their confidence. He will practice no improper arts to do this, but it will be one of the usual results of a life of integrity, that a good man will secure the confidence of even the wicked. It does not appear that Lot lost that confidence, and the whole narrative in Genesis leads us to suppose that even the inhabitants of Sodom regarded him as a good man. The wicked may hate a good man because he is good; but if a man lives as he should, they will regard him as upright, and they will give him the credit of it when he dies, if they should withhold it while he lives.

Poole: 2Pe 2:8 - -- Seeing and hearing: their wickedness was so open and shameless, that he not only heard the report of it, but saw them commit it, Isa 3:9 . Vexed Gr...

Seeing and hearing: their wickedness was so open and shameless, that he not only heard the report of it, but saw them commit it, Isa 3:9 .

Vexed Greek, tormented, i.e. extremely afflicted and troubled his own soul, provoking himself to godly sorrow at the sight and fame of their unlawful deeds. His grief was voluntary, and he active in it; the like is said of Christ, on occasion of Lazarus’ s death, Joh 11:33 , where the margin reads, he troubled himself.

Gill: 2Pe 2:8 - -- For that righteous man dwelling among them,.... Which is sometimes the lot of good men, to their great sorrow and grief, Psa 120:5. Upon mentioning th...

For that righteous man dwelling among them,.... Which is sometimes the lot of good men, to their great sorrow and grief, Psa 120:5. Upon mentioning those words in Gen 13:12 "and pitched his tent towards Sodom", but the men of Sodom were wicked, &c. says R. Eleazar i;

"he is a righteous man that dwells between two wicked men, and does not learn their works;''

and such an one was Lot, whatever they are elsewhere pleased to say of him: "in seeing and hearing"; the Vulgate Latin version reads this in connection with the word "righteous", thus, "in seeing and hearing he was righteous": he could not bear to see their filthy actions, and hear their obscene language, but turned away from them, and shut his eyes, and stopped his ears, by which he appears to be a righteous and good man; though rather this belongs to what follows, seeing their wicked practices, and hearing their filthy talk:

vexed his righteous soul from, day today with their unlawful deeds; either "they vexed" him, as the Vulgate Latin and Ethiopic versions read; or rather "he vexed" himself; he fretted and teased himself, and became exceeding uneasy, and was put upon a rack and tortured, as the word signifies, continually, with their wicked actions; see Psa 119:158.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 2Pe 2:8 Grk “by lawless deeds, in seeing and hearing [them].”

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 2:8 (For that righteous man dwelling among them, in ( g ) seeing and hearing, ( h ) vexed [his] righteous soul from day to day with [their] unlawful deeds...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

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 2:1-9 - --Though the way of error is a hurtful way, many are always ready to walk therein. Let us take care we give no occasion to the enemy to blaspheme the ho...

Matthew Henry: 2Pe 2:7-9 - -- When God sends destruction on the ungodly, he commands deliverance for the righteous; and, if he rain fire and brimstone on the wicked, he will cove...

Barclay: 2Pe 2:4-11 - --Here is a passage which for us combines undoubted power and equally undoubted obscurity. The white heat of its rhetorical intensity glows through it ...

Barclay: 2Pe 2:4-11 - --2Pe 2:9-11give us a picture of the evil man. Peter with a few swift, vivid strokes of the pen paints the outstanding characteristics of him who may ...

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 2:4-10 - --B. The Consequences of False Teaching 2:4-10a Peter next described the consequences that follow false teaching to help his readers see the importance ...

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,...

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Commentary -- Other

Evidence: 2Pe 2:8

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: 2 Peter (Book Introduction) THE SECOND EPISTLE OF PETER ABOUT a.d. 66 OR 67 By Way of Introduction Most Doubtful New Testament Book Every book in the New Testament is cha...

JFB: 2 Peter (Book Introduction) AUTHENTICITY AND GENUINENESS.--If not a gross imposture, its own internal witness is unequivocal in its favor. It has Peter's name and apostleship in ...

JFB: 2 Peter (Outline) ADDRESS: EXHORTATION TO ALL GRACES, AS GOD HAS GIVEN US, IN THE KNOWLEDGE OF CHRIST, ALL THINGS PERTAINING TO LIFE: CONFIRMED BY THE TESTIMONY OF APO...

TSK: 2 Peter 2 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 2Pe 2:1, He foretells them of false teachers, shewing the impiety and punishment both of them and their followers; 2Pe 2:7, from which th...

Poole: 2 Peter 2 (Chapter Introduction) PETER CHAPTER 2

MHCC: 2 Peter (Book Introduction) This epistle clearly is connected with the former epistle of Peter. The apostle having stated the blessings to which God has called Christians, exhort...

MHCC: 2 Peter 2 (Chapter Introduction) (2Pe 2:1-9) Believers are cautioned against false teachers, and the certainty of their punishment shown from examples. (2Pe 2:10-16) An account of th...

Matthew Henry: 2 Peter (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Second Epistle General of Peter The penman of this epistle appears plainly to be the same who wrote...

Matthew Henry: 2 Peter 2 (Chapter Introduction) The apostle, having in the foregoing chapter exhorted them to proceed and advance in the Christian race, now comes to remove, as much as in him lay...

Barclay: 2 Peter (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO THE SECOND LETTER OF PETER The Neglected Book And Its Contents Second Peter is one of the neglected books of the New Testament. ...

Barclay: 2 Peter 2 (Chapter Introduction) False Prophets (2Pe_2:1) The Sins Of The False Prophets And Their End (2Pe_2:1 Continued) The Work Of Falsehood (2Pe_2:2-3) The Fate Of The Wicke...

Constable: 2 Peter (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical Background This epistle claims that the Apostle Peter wrote it...

Constable: 2 Peter (Outline) Outline I. Introduction 1:1-2 II. The condition of the Christian 1:3-11 ...

Constable: 2 Peter 2 Peter Bibliography Alford, Henry. Alford's Greek Testament. 4 vols. New ed. London: Rivingtons, 1884. ...

Haydock: 2 Peter (Book Introduction) THE SECOND EPISTLE OF ST. PETER, THE APOSTLE. INTRODUCTION. This epistle, though not at first received [by some Churches] as canonical, was ac...

Gill: 2 Peter (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 2 PETER Though there was, among the ancients, a doubt concerning the authority of this epistle, which is first mentioned by Origen ...

Gill: 2 Peter 2 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 2 PETER 2 This chapter contains a description of false teachers, that were then in Christian churches, as there had been false prop...

College: 2 Peter (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION ABOUT THIS COMMENTARY This commentary is written for serious students of the Bible, including Bible class teachers, preachers, college ...

College: 2 Peter (Outline) OUTLINE I. INTRODUCTION - 1:1-15 A. Salutation and Greeting - 1:1-2 B. Preface: Exhortation to Godly Living - 1:3-11 C. Occasion: The ...

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