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Text -- 2 Peter 3:1 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
The False Teachers’ Denial of the Lord’s Return
3:1 Dear friends, this is already the second letter I have written you, in which I am trying to stir up your pure mind by way of reminder:
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Word of God | STIR, STIR UP | SINCERE; SINCERITY | PURE; PURELY; PURITY | PETER, THE SECOND EPISTLE OF | PETER, SIMON | Beloved | Amanuensis | more
Table of Contents

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

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , PBC , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

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

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: 2Pe 3:1 - -- Beloved ( agapētoi ). With this vocative verbal (four times in this chapter), Peter "turns away from the Libertines and their victims"(Mayor).

Beloved ( agapētoi ).

With this vocative verbal (four times in this chapter), Peter "turns away from the Libertines and their victims"(Mayor).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:1 - -- This is now the second epistle that I write unto you ( tautēn ēdē deuteran humin graphō epistolēn ). Literally, "This already a second epis...

This is now the second epistle that I write unto you ( tautēn ēdē deuteran humin graphō epistolēn ).

Literally, "This already a second epistle I am writing to you."For ēdē see Joh 21:24. It is the predicate use of deuteran epistolēn in apposition with tautēn , not "this second epistle."Reference apparently to 1 Peter.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:1 - -- And in both of them ( en hais ). "In which epistles."

And in both of them ( en hais ).

"In which epistles."

Robertson: 2Pe 3:1 - -- I stir up ( diegeirō ). Present active indicative, perhaps conative, "I try to stir up."See 2Pe 1:13.

I stir up ( diegeirō ).

Present active indicative, perhaps conative, "I try to stir up."See 2Pe 1:13.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:1 - -- Mind ( dianoian ). Understanding (Plato) as in 1Pe 1:13.

Mind ( dianoian ).

Understanding (Plato) as in 1Pe 1:13.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:1 - -- Sincere ( eilikrinē ). Old adjective of doubtful etymology (supposed to be heilē , sunlight, and krinō , to judge by it). Plato used it of ethi...

Sincere ( eilikrinē ).

Old adjective of doubtful etymology (supposed to be heilē , sunlight, and krinō , to judge by it). Plato used it of ethical purity (psuchē eilikrinēs ) as here and Phi 1:10, the only N.T. examples.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:1 - -- By putting you in remembrance ( en hupomnēsei ). As in 2Pe 1:13.

By putting you in remembrance ( en hupomnēsei ).

As in 2Pe 1:13.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:1 - -- Beloved Occurring four times in this chapter.

Beloved

Occurring four times in this chapter.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:1 - -- Second - I write An incidental testimony to the authorship of the second epistle.

Second - I write

An incidental testimony to the authorship of the second epistle.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:1 - -- Pure minds ( εἰλικρινῆ διάνοιαν ) The latter word is singular, not plural. Hence, as Rev., mind. The word rendered pure...

Pure minds ( εἰλικρινῆ διάνοιαν )

The latter word is singular, not plural. Hence, as Rev., mind. The word rendered pure is often explained tested by the sunlight; but this is very doubtful, since εἵλη , to which this meaning is traced, means the heat, and not the light of the sun. Others derive it from the root of the verb εἱλίσσω , to roll, and explain it as that which is separated or sifted by rolling, as in a sieve. In favor of this etymology is its association in classical Greek with different words meaning unmixed. The word occurs only here and Phi 1:10. The kindred noun εἰλικρίνεια , sincerity, is found 1Co 5:8; 2Co 1:12; 2Co 2:17. Rev., here, sincere.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:1 - -- Mind ( διάνοιαν ) Compare 1Pe 1:13; and see on Mar 12:30.

Mind ( διάνοιαν )

Compare 1Pe 1:13; and see on Mar 12:30.

JFB: 2Pe 3:1 - -- "This now a second Epistle I write." Therefore he had lately written the former Epistle. The seven Catholic Epistles were written by James, John, and ...

"This now a second Epistle I write." Therefore he had lately written the former Epistle. The seven Catholic Epistles were written by James, John, and Jude, shortly before their deaths; previously, while having the prospect of being still for some time alive, they felt it less necessary to write [BENGEL].

JFB: 2Pe 3:1 - -- The Second Epistle, though more general in its address, yet included especially the same persons as the First Epistle was particularly addressed to.

The Second Epistle, though more general in its address, yet included especially the same persons as the First Epistle was particularly addressed to.

JFB: 2Pe 3:1 - -- Literally, "pure when examined by sunlight"; "sincere." Adulterated with no error. Opposite to "having the understanding darkened." ALFORD explains, T...

Literally, "pure when examined by sunlight"; "sincere." Adulterated with no error. Opposite to "having the understanding darkened." ALFORD explains, The mind, will, and affection, in relation to the outer world, being turned to God [the Sun of the soul], and not obscured by fleshly and selfish regards.

JFB: 2Pe 3:1 - -- Greek, "in," "in putting you in remembrance" (2Pe 1:12-13). Ye already know (2Pe 3:3); it is only needed that I remind you (Jud 1:5).

Greek, "in," "in putting you in remembrance" (2Pe 1:12-13). Ye already know (2Pe 3:3); it is only needed that I remind you (Jud 1:5).

Clarke: 2Pe 3:1 - -- This second epistle - In order to guard them against the seductions of false teachers, he calls to their remembrance the doctrine of the ancient pro...

This second epistle - In order to guard them against the seductions of false teachers, he calls to their remembrance the doctrine of the ancient prophets, and the commands or instructions of the apostles, all founded on the same basis

He possibly refers to the prophecies of Enoch, as mentioned by Jude, Jud 1:14, Jud 1:15; of David, Psa 1:1, etc.; and of Daniel, Dan 12:2, relative to the coming of our Lord to judgment: and he brings in the instructions of the apostles of Christ, by which they were directed how to prepare to meet their God.

Calvin: 2Pe 3:1 - -- 1. Lest they should be wearied with the Second Epistle as though the first was sufficient, he says that it was not written in vain, because they sto...

1. Lest they should be wearied with the Second Epistle as though the first was sufficient, he says that it was not written in vain, because they stood in need of being often stirred up. To make this more evident, he shews that they could not be beyond danger, except they were well fortified, because they would have to contend with desperate men, who would not only corrupt the purity of the faith, by false opinions, but do what they could to subvert entirely the whole faith.

By saying, I stir up your pure mind, he means the same as though he had said, “I wish to awaken you to a sincerity of mind.” And the words ought to be thus explained, “I stir up your mind that it may be pure and bright.” For the meaning is, that the minds of the godly become dim, and as it were contract rust, when admonitions cease. But we also hence learn, that men even endued with learning, become, in a manner, drowsy, except they are stirred up by constant warnings. 175

It now appears what is the use of admonitions, and how necessary they are; for the sloth of the flesh smothers the truth once received, and renders it inefficient, except the goads of warnings come to its aid. It is not then enough, that men should be taught to know what they ought to be, but there is need of godly teachers, to do this second part, deeply to impress the truth on the memory of their hearers. And as men are, by nature, for the most part, fond of novelty and thus inclined to be fastidious, it is useful for us to bear in mind what Peter says, so that we may not only willingly suffer ourselves to be admonished by others, but that every one may also exercise himself in calling to mind continually the truth, so that our minds may become resplendent with the pure and clear knowledge of it.

Defender: 2Pe 3:1 - -- This shows that Peter's second epistle was addressed to the same general audience as the first. They, therefore, would already have knowledge of what ...

This shows that Peter's second epistle was addressed to the same general audience as the first. They, therefore, would already have knowledge of what he had written before, but now he was giving them additional instruction in light of the difficult days coming and his own approaching demise. The Lord's return might have been very soon, as far as they knew, for it was always imminent. As we are almost at the end of the twentieth century, surely Peter's message of the first century is even more needed and appropriate today.

Defender: 2Pe 3:1 - -- It is vital that Christians in the last days "stir up" their minds and not just their emotions.

It is vital that Christians in the last days "stir up" their minds and not just their emotions.

Defender: 2Pe 3:1 - -- It is easy to forget the more important truths when we are being bombarded continuously by the trivial (2Pe 1:13)."

It is easy to forget the more important truths when we are being bombarded continuously by the trivial (2Pe 1:13)."

TSK: 2Pe 3:1 - -- second epistle : 2Co 13:2; 1Pe 1:1, 1Pe 1:2 I stir : 2Pe 1:13-15; 2Ti 1:6 pure : Psa 24:4, Psa 73:1; Mat 5:8; 1Ti 5:22; 1Pe 1:22 way : 2Pe 1:12

second epistle : 2Co 13:2; 1Pe 1:1, 1Pe 1:2

I stir : 2Pe 1:13-15; 2Ti 1:6

pure : Psa 24:4, Psa 73:1; Mat 5:8; 1Ti 5:22; 1Pe 1:22

way : 2Pe 1:12

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 2Pe 3:1 - -- This second epistle, beloved, I now write unto you - This expression proves that he had written a former epistle, and that it was addressed to ...

This second epistle, beloved, I now write unto you - This expression proves that he had written a former epistle, and that it was addressed to the same persons as this. Compare Introduction, Section 3.

In both which I stir up your pure minds ... - That is, the main object of both epistles is the same - to call to your remembrance important truths which you have before heard, but which you are in danger of forgetting, or from which you are in danger of being turned away by prevailing errors. Compare the notes at 2Pe 1:12-15. The word rendered "pure"( εἰλικρινής eilikrinēs ) occurs only here and in Phi 1:10, where it is rendered "sincere."The word properly refers to "that which may be judged of in sunshine;"then it means "clear, manifest;"and then "sincere, pure"- as that in which there is no obscurity. The idea here perhaps is, that their minds were open, frank, candid, sincere, rather than that they were "pure."The apostle regarded them as "disposed"to see the truth, and yet as liable to be led astray by the plausible errors of others. Such minds need to have truths often brought fresh to their remembrance, though they are truths with which they had before been familiar.

Poole: 2Pe 3:1 - -- 2Pe 3:1-7 The apostle declareth it to be the design of both his Epistles to remind the brethren of Christ’ s coming to judgment, in opposition...

2Pe 3:1-7 The apostle declareth it to be the design of both his

Epistles to remind the brethren of Christ’ s coming

to judgment, in opposition to scoffers.

2Pe 3:8,9 No argument can be drawn against it from the delay,

which is designed to leave men room for repentance.

2Pe 3:10-14 He describeth the day of the Lord, and exhorteth to

holiness of life in expectation of it.

2Pe 3:15,16 He showeth that Paul had taught the like in his Epistles,

2Pe 3:17,18 and concludeth with advice to beware of seduction,

and to grow in Christian grace and knowledge.

This second epistle: this confirms what has been said, that this Epistle was written by Peter, as well as the former.

I stir up your pure minds or, sincere minds: the sense is either:

1. I stir up your minds, that they may be pure and sincere; and then he doth not so much commend them for what they were, as direct and exhort them to what they should be, that they might receive benefit by what he wrote, there being nothing that contributes more to the fruitful entertaining of the word, than sincerity and honesty of heart, when men lay aside those things which are contrary to it, and might hinder its efficacy, 1Pe 2:1,2 . Or:

2. I stir up your minds, though pure and sincere, to continuance and constancy in that pure doctrine ye have received.

By way of remembrance: see 2Pe 1:13 .

PBC: 2Pe 3:1 - -- Throughout 2Pe 2:1-22, Peter made brief mention of the error set forth by the false teachers, while emphatically exposing their self-serving motives a...

Throughout 2Pe 2:1-22, Peter made brief mention of the error set forth by the false teachers, while emphatically exposing their self-serving motives and evil character. In 2Pe 2:1 he mentions that they deny " the Lord that bought them," the only distinct mention of their teaching throughout the second chapter. When we examined that verse, we reviewed the fact that the word translated " Lord" is the Greek root for our English word " despot," not the normal Greek word translated Lord in the New Testament. If Peter intended to assert that the false teachers had been redeemed by Jesus’ blood, he almost certainly would not have used this word. Given the appearance of a different word and the emphatic and repeated points made in the verses that follow in 2Pe 2:1-22, it appears far more likely that Peter intended to contrast the fact that God owns the whole universe and that false teachers who rebel against God in their malicious errors shall surely face severe judgment. God has an inherent right to rule as Sovereign over the whole universe. Therefore, no false teacher has any authority whatever to teach error for selfish gain. Peter makes the point clearly that the error of false teaching is compounded by malicious rebellion against God and His rightful authority over His creation. Otherwise throughout 2Pe 2:1-22 Peter emphasizes the character of the false teachers and the certain judgment that they will face in the final day.

Only as he begins 2Pe 3:1-18 does Peter surface at least one segment of their false teaching, denial of the Second Coming and of God’s inherent authority to rule over His universe. As he implied the similarity between false teachers in the New Testament era and false prophets in the Old Testament dispensation, Peter begins 2Pe 3:1-18 with an appeal to the continuing authenticity of Old Testament teaching for New Testament believers. While we are not bound by the " law" of the Old Testament, we are clearly informed by Old Testament Scripture of the character and work of God that is timeless. Peter stops short of telling us to " obey" the prophets, but he distinctly directs us to " be mindful" of their words. On that premise of authentic Old Testament Scripture Peter directs us to be mindful of the " commandment" of the apostles of the Lord Jesus Christ. You can only be " mindful" of a commandment by obeying it.

Invariably the question surfaces when discussing Old Testament law and New Testament believers. Are we under the law? Or the more specific question arises, " Are we under the Ten Commandments?" Paul twice answers the question in Ro 6:1-23, affirming that we are not under the law. However, the full context of Ro 6:1-23 affirms that we are under no less moral obligation to God than the Old Testament saints. In fact I hold that we are under a far stronger injunction to godly living than the Old Testament believers. Obligation relates to the authority of the one who rules and to the clarity of his instructions. New Testament believers have clearer instructions than Old Testament believers, and we cannot distinguish the divine authority of the law from the direct commandments of the Lord Jesus and of His apostles in the New Testament.

I reject antinomianism as one of the most insidious and destructive errors of Western Christianity in our time. It has invaded almost every segment of Western Christianity, including our own fellowship. If you doubt that this error has invaded believers today, start teaching the clear and emphatic teachings of New Testament obligation to people. If they readily and instantly respond with obedience, you know that they are not infected with antinomianism. If they start making excuses and giving explanations as to why they cannot, or need not, obey New Testament Scripture, make a note. They are antinomian. The two favorite gods of antinomianism are lifestyle and wallet. Call on people to make adjustments in how they manage either of these possessions, and you will quickly see the antinomian virus surface if they are infected.

The conduct specified in New Testament teaching is not simple suggestions or recommendations; it is " commandment." Occasionally in some Christian fellowships people will declare that " God gave me a revelation," followed by anything from a simplistic fact that appears in Scripture to a bizarre idea that contradicts Scripture. The Holy Spirit Who inspired the New Testament is in every sense God and shares in all the attributes of deity, including immutability; He cannot and does not change. Rest assured that when a person claims a " revelation" that contradicts the clear teaching of Scripture; his " revelation" did not come from God! The Holy Spirit never contradicts Himself, so He will never give anyone a revelation that contradicts the Scripture that He directed for our authority and instruction.

We frequently see the problem of disrespect toward authority in adolescents in our culture. Even professing Christian adolescents look around at their peers rather than at authoritative Scripture and feel fully justified in open rebellion against their parents’ authority. We need to come to terms with a more alarming reality. What we see in rebellious adolescents is a rather detailed mirror of what those young people see in the adults around them. Disrespect for authority appears in almost every aspect of our whole culture. It impacts the workplace where employees and employers mutually speak and act disdainfully toward each other. It impacts the neighborhood where friends build fences and fight over insignificant issues. And it happens in homes when parents disrespect each other, and the God Who instituted marriage, by ignoring Scripture and filing for divorce for any trivial issue that displeases them. Jesus described the Old Testament allowance for divorce as permission, not as a " command," due to the hardness of man’s heart. Often couples will remain married, but will openly defy the Biblical teachings regarding the God-honoring relationship between husband and wife. A recent movie casts a wife of a Greek family as boasting about her ability to control her husband, " Yes, he is the head of the family, but I’m the neck, and the neck can turn the head anyway it wishes." Many wives give transparent lip service to the Biblical model of marriage, while openly showing disrespect, if not contempt, for their husbands. Likewise, many husbands claim a near-despot authority over their wives under the guise of demanding that their wives " obey" them according to Eph 5:1-33. While Eph 5:1-33 clearly teaches submission, including but not limited to wives and husbands, there is not a single word in Eph 5:1-33 about husbands demanding submission of their wives. The divine command to the husband is to love his wife as Christ loved his church and gave Himself for her, not browbeat her and demand submission. Rebellion against God is rampant in our culture, and even in the Christian subculture of our society. We will never curb the rebellious problem among adolescents till we curb it in the adults whom they observe as role models. We will not restore respectful obedience to Christ in our Christian subculture till we openly, willingly, and even joyfully begin to live under His clear authority over our lives. In 1Pe 3:15 Peter directs us to be constantly equipped and prepared to respond to people who ask for a reason for our faith. Our primary problem today is not that we are ill prepared to answer the question. It is rather that our lifestyle is so nearly like that of the culture around us that no one ever asks us the question about our faith. We have attempted to create an invisible faith, one that we claim to possess, but that no one can see. When we begin to live our faith so pervasively in every aspect of our lives that people take notice of us, we will begin the process that identifies us as Christian men and women, not as respectable rebels to our God. We may be orthodox and clear in every aspect of our theology, but, if we fail to practice Biblical faith in every aspect of our conduct, we fail the test of robust and authentic Christianity according to the New Testament model.

This question of authority is pervasive. It invades every dimension of our life and thought. Peter devoted a long, and rather difficult, chapter to the fact that false teachers practiced open rebellion against God, barely mentioning the teachings of these people at all. We need to spend long, thoughtful hours in self-examination. Are we submissive and obedient, or are we actually rebels against our God? Our credible testimony stands in the balance. Which way will it finally tilt?

51

Gill: 2Pe 3:1 - -- This second epistle, beloved, I now write unto you,.... This is a transition to another part of the epistle; for the apostle having largely described ...

This second epistle, beloved, I now write unto you,.... This is a transition to another part of the epistle; for the apostle having largely described false teachers, the secret enemies of the Christian religion under a profession of it, passes on to take notice of the more open adversaries and profane scoffers of it; and from their ridicule of the doctrine of Christ's second coming, he proceeds to treat of that, and of the destruction of the world, and the future happiness of the saints: he calls this epistle his "second epistle", because he had written another before to the same persons; and that the author of this epistle was an apostle, is evident from 2Pe 3:2; and which, compared with 2Pe 1:18 shows him to be the Apostle Peter, whose name it bears, and who was an eyewitness to the transfiguration of Christ on the mount, Mat 17:1, he addresses these saints here, as also in 2Pe 3:8, under the character of "beloved"; because they were the beloved of God, being chosen by him according to his foreknowledge, and regenerated by him, according to his abundant mercy; and were openly his people, and had obtained mercy from him, and like precious faith with the apostles; and were also the beloved of Christ, being redeemed by him, not with gold and silver, but with his precious blood; for whom he suffered, and who were partakers of his sufferings, and the benefits arising from them, and who had all things given them by him, pertaining to life and godliness, and exceeding great and precious promises; and were likewise beloved by the apostle, though strangers, and not merely as Jews, or because they were his countrymen, but because they were the elect of God, the redeemed of Christ, and who were sanctified by the Spirit, and had the same kind of faith he himself had. The Syriac and Arabic versions read, "my beloved"; and the Ethiopic version, "my brethren": his end in writing both this and the former epistle follows;

in both which I stir up your pure minds by way of remembrance; that this was his view both in this and the former epistle, appears from 1Pe 1:13; he calls their minds pure; not that they were so naturally, for the minds and consciences of men are universally defiled with sin; nor are the minds of all men pure who seem to be so in their own eyes, or appear so to others; nor can any man, by his own power or works, make himself pure from sin; only the blood of Christ purges and cleanses from it; and a pure mind is a mind sprinkled with that blood, and which receives the truth as it is in Jesus, in the power and purity of it, and that holds the mystery of the faith in a pure conscience. Some versions, as the Vulgate Latin and Arabic, render the word "sincere", as it is in Phi 1:10; and may design the sincerity of their hearts in the worship of God, in the doctrines of Christ, and to one another, and of the grace of the Spirit of God in them; as that their faith was unfeigned, their hope without hypocrisy, and their love without dissimulation, and their repentance real and genuine; but yet they needed to be stirred up by way of remembrance, both of the truth of the Gospel, and the duties of religion; for saints are apt to be forgetful of the word, both of its doctrines and its exhortations; and it is the business of the ministers of the word to put them in mind of them, either by preaching or by writing; and which shows the necessity and usefulness of the standing ministry of the Gospel: the particulars he put them in mind of next follow.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:1 Or “I have stirred up, aroused.” The translation treats the present tense verb as a conative present.

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:1 This ( 1 ) second epistle, beloved, I now write unto you; in [both] which I stir up your pure minds by way of remembrance: ( 1 ) The remedy against t...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 2Pe 3:1-18 - --1 He assures them of the certainty of Christ's coming to judgment, against those scorners who dispute against it;8 warning the godly, for the long pat...

MHCC: 2Pe 3:1-4 - --The purified minds of Christians are to be stirred up, that they may be active and lively in the work of holiness. There will be scoffers in the last ...

Matthew Henry: 2Pe 3:1-2 - -- That the apostle might the better reach his end in writing this epistle, which is to make them steady and constant in a fiducial and practical remem...

Barclay: 2Pe 3:1-2 - --In this passage we see clearly displayed the principles of preaching which Peter observed. (i) He believed in the value of repetition. He knows that ...

Constable: 2Pe 3:1-16 - --V. THE PROSPECT FOR THE CHRISTIAN 3:1-16 Peter turned from a negative warning against false teachers to make a ...

Constable: 2Pe 3:1-2 - --A. The Purpose of This Epistle 3:1-2 3:1 Peter's first letter was most likely 1 Peter. He implied that he wrote this letter soon after the earlier one...

College: 2Pe 3:1-18 - --2 PETER 3 C. THE NECESSITY OF BELIEVING IN CHRIST'S RETURN (3:1-13) 1. The False Teaching (3:1-7) 1 Dear friends, this is now my second letter to y...

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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 3 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 2Pe 3:1, He assures them of the certainty of Christ’s coming to judgment, against those scorners who dispute against it; 2Pe 3:8, warni...

Poole: 2 Peter 3 (Chapter Introduction) PETER CHAPTER 3

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 3 (Chapter Introduction) (2Pe 3:1-4) The design here is to remind of Christ's final coming to judgement. (2Pe 3:5-10) He will appear unexpectedly, when the present frame of n...

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 3 (Chapter Introduction) The apostle drawing towards the conclusion of his second epistle, begins this last chapter with repeating the account of his design and scope in wr...

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 3 (Chapter Introduction) The Principles Of Preaching (2Pe_3:1-2) The Denial Of The Second Coming (2Pe_3:3-4) Destruction By Flood (2Pe_3:5-6) Destruction By Fire (2Pe_3:7...

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 3 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 2 PETER 3 In this chapter the apostle makes mention of the end and design of his writing this second epistle; foretells that there ...

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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