
Text -- 2 Peter 3:12 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: 2Pe 3:12 - -- Looking for ( prosdokōntas ).
Present active participle of prosdokaō (Mat 11:3) agreeing in case (accusative plural) with humās .
Looking for (
Present active participle of

Robertson: 2Pe 3:12 - -- Earnestly desiring ( speudontas ).
Present active participle, accusative also, of speudō , old verb, to hasten (like our speed) as in Luk 2:16, but...
Earnestly desiring (
Present active participle, accusative also, of

Robertson: 2Pe 3:12 - -- Being on fire ( puroumenoi ).
Present passive participle of puroō , old verb (from pur), same idea as in 2Pe 3:10.
Being on fire (
Present passive participle of

Robertson: 2Pe 3:12 - -- Shall melt ( tēketai ).
Futuristic present passive indicative of tēkō , old verb, to make liquid, here only in N.T. Hort suggests tēxetai (...
Shall melt (
Futuristic present passive indicative of
Vincent: 2Pe 3:12 - -- Looking for ( προσδοκῶντας )
The same verb as in Luk 1:21, of waiting for Zacharias. Cornelius waited (Act 10:24); the cripple ...

Vincent: 2Pe 3:12 - -- Hasting unto ( σπεύδοντας )
Wrong. Rev., earnestly desiring, for which there is authority. I am inclined to adopt, with Alford, Hut...
Hasting unto (
Wrong. Rev., earnestly desiring, for which there is authority. I am inclined to adopt, with Alford, Huther, Salmond, and Trench, the transitive meaning, hastening on; i.e., " causing the day of the Lord to come more quickly by helping to fulfil those conditions without which it cannot come; that day being no day inexorably fixed, but one the arrival of which it is free to the church to hasten on by faith and by prayer" (Trench, on " The Authorized Version of the New Testament" ). See Mat 24:14 : the gospel shall be preached in the whole world, " and then shall the end come." Compare the words of Peter, Act 3:19 : " Repent and be converted," etc., " that so there may come seasons of refreshing" (so Rev., rightly); and the prayer," Thy kingdom come." Salmond quotes a rabbinical saying, " If thou keepest this precept thou hastenest the day of Messiah." This meaning is given in margin of Rev.

Wherein (
Wrong. Rev., correctly, by reason of which .

Vincent: 2Pe 3:12 - -- Melt ( τήκεται )
Literal. Stronger than the word in 2Pe 3:10, 2Pe 3:11. Not only the resolving, but the wasting away of nature. Only...
As it were by your earnest desires and fervent prayers.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:12 - -- Many myriads of days he grants to men: one, the last, is the day of God himself.
Many myriads of days he grants to men: one, the last, is the day of God himself.
JFB: 2Pe 3:12 - -- With the utmost eagerness desiring [WAHL], praying for, and contemplating, the coming Saviour as at hand. The Greek may mean "hastening (that is, urgi...
With the utmost eagerness desiring [WAHL], praying for, and contemplating, the coming Saviour as at hand. The Greek may mean "hastening (that is, urging onward [ALFORD]) the day of God"; not that God's eternal appointment of the time is changeable, but God appoints us as instruments of accomplishing those events which must be first before the day of God can come. By praying for His coming, furthering the preaching of the Gospel for a witness to all nations, and bringing in those whom "the long-suffering of God" waits to save, we hasten the coming of the day of God. The Greek verb is always in New Testament used as neuter (as English Version here), not active; but the Septuagint uses it actively. Christ says, "Surely I come quickly. Amen." Our part is to speed forward this consummation by praying, "Even so, come, Lord Jesus" (Rev 22:20).

Greek, "presence" of a person: usually, of the Saviour.

JFB: 2Pe 3:12 - -- God has given many myriads of days to men: one shall be the great "day of God" Himself.
God has given many myriads of days to men: one shall be the great "day of God" Himself.

Rather as Greek, "on account of (or owing to) which" day.

Our igneous rocks show that they were once in a liquid state.
Clarke -> 2Pe 3:12
Clarke: 2Pe 3:12 - -- The heavens being on fire - See on 2Pe 3:10. (note). It was an ancient opinion among the heathens that the earth should be burnt up with fire; so Ov...
The heavens being on fire - See on 2Pe 3:10. (note). It was an ancient opinion among the heathens that the earth should be burnt up with fire; so Ovid, Met., lib. i. v. 256
Esse quoque in fatis reminiscitur, adfore tempus
Quo mare, quo tellus, correptaque regia coel
Ardeat; et mundi moles operosa laboret
"Remembering in the fates a time when fir
Should to the battlements of heaven aspire
And all his blazing world above should burn
And all the inferior globe to cinders turn.
Dryden
Minucius Felix tells us, xxxiv. 2, that it was a common opinion of the Stoics that, the moisture of the earth being consumed, the whole world would catch fire. The Epicureans held the same sentiment; and indeed it appears in various authors, which proves that a tradition of this kind has pretty generally prevailed in the world. But it is remarkable that none have fancied that it will be destroyed by water. The tradition, founded on the declaration of God, was against this; therefore it was not received.
Calvin -> 2Pe 3:12
Calvin: 2Pe 3:12 - -- 12.Looking for and hasting unto, or, waiting for by hastening; so I render the words, though they are two participles; for what we had before separa...
12.Looking for and hasting unto, or, waiting for by hastening; so I render the words, though they are two participles; for what we had before separately he gathers now into one sentence, that is, that we ought hastily to wait. Now this contrarious hope possesses no small elegance, like the proverb, “Hasten slowly,” ( festina lente .) When he says, “Waiting for,” he refers to the endurance of hope; and he sets hastening in opposition to topor; and both are very apposite. For as quietness and waiting are the peculiarities of hope, so we must always take heed lest the security of the flesh should creep in; we ought, therefore, strenuously to labor in good works, and run quickly in the race of our calling. 182 What he before called the day of Christ (as it is everywhere called in Scripture) he now calls the day of God, and that rightly, for Christ will then restore the kingdom to the Father, that God may be all in all.
Defender: 2Pe 3:12 - -- That is, "hastening the coming." From the human perspective, we can hasten the return of Christ by helping to win converts to Him. The reason why He h...

Defender: 2Pe 3:12 - -- The "heavens" here probably refer only to the atmospheric heavens, whose elements (hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, etc.) must also be "dissolved" (literal...
The "heavens" here probably refer only to the atmospheric heavens, whose elements (hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, etc.) must also be "dissolved" (literally "unloosed"), since they are also presently under "the bondage of corruption" (Rom 8:20-22) and must be cleansed and renewed just as the elements of the earth. It is even possible that the purging will dissolve and cleanse the starry heavens also, since these once were the domain of "the angels that sinned" (2Pe 2:4) and since "the whole creation" (Rom 8:22) is now in bondage to the law of decay.

Defender: 2Pe 3:12 - -- The word "elements" is translated from the Greek stoicheion, meaning "fundamental constituents" and implies an orderly arrangement of these basic enti...
The word "elements" is translated from the Greek
TSK -> 2Pe 3:12
TSK: 2Pe 3:12 - -- Looking : 1Co 1:7; Tit 2:13; Jud 1:21
hasting unto the coming : or, hasting the coming, 2Pe 3:10; 1Co 1:8; Phi 1:6
the heavens : 2Pe 3:10; Psa 50:3; I...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 2Pe 3:12
Barnes: 2Pe 3:12 - -- Looking for - Not knowing when this may occur, the mind should be in that state which constitutes "expectation;"that is, a belief that it will ...
Looking for - Not knowing when this may occur, the mind should be in that state which constitutes "expectation;"that is, a belief that it will occur, and a condition of mind in which we would not be taken by surprise should it happen at any moment. See the notes at Tit 2:13.
And hasting unto the coming - Margin, as in Greek: ""hasting the coming.""The Greek word rendered "hasting,"(
The coming of the day of God - Called "the day of God,"because God will then be manifested in his power and glory.
Poole -> 2Pe 3:12
Poole: 2Pe 3:12 - -- Looking for patiently waiting for, and expecting.
And hasting unto by fervent desire of it, and diligent preparation for it.
The coming of the day...
Looking for patiently waiting for, and expecting.
And hasting unto by fervent desire of it, and diligent preparation for it.
The coming of the day of God the day of the Lord, 2Pe 3:10 .
Gill -> 2Pe 3:12
Gill: 2Pe 3:12 - -- Looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God,.... The same with the day of the Lord, 2Pe 3:10, and so the Vulgate Latin and Arabic versio...
Looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God,.... The same with the day of the Lord, 2Pe 3:10, and so the Vulgate Latin and Arabic versions here read; and it intends the day of Christ's second coming to judgment, and so is a proof of the deity of Christ; and is called "the day of God", in distinction from man's day, or human judgment, 1Co 4:3, which is often fallacious; whereas the judgment of God is according to truth; and because in that day Christ will appear most clearly to be truly and properly God, by the manifest display of his omniscience, omnipotence, and other glorious perfections of his; and because it will be, as the day of God is, a thousand years; and also the day in which God will finish all his works, as on the seventh day the works of creation, on this the works of Providence; when all his purposes, promises, and threatenings, relating to the final state of all persons and things, will be fulfilled, and every work be brought to light, and into judgment, and everything will stand in a clear light; for the day will declare it, either respecting God, or men; and there will be a display, as of his grace and mercy, to his church and people; for it will be the day of his open espousals to them, and of the gladness of his heart; so of his wrath and anger towards the wicked: for this great and dreadful day of the Lord shall burn like an oven, and destroy the wicked, root and branch: and it will be the day of Christ's glorious appearing, and of his kingdom, in which he will reign, before his ancients, gloriously; and when it is ended, God, Father, Son and Spirit, will be all in all: now "the coming" of this day saints should be "looking for" by faith; believing that it certainly will come, since the patriarchs, prophets, Christ himself, the angels of heaven, and the apostles of the Lamb, have all declared and asserted the coming of this day; and they should look for it, and love it, as with the strongest affection for it, and most vehement desire of it, since they will then appear with Christ in glory; and they should look out, and keep looking out for it, as what will be quickly; and though it is not as soon as they desire and expect, yet should still look wistly for it, and with patience and cheerfulness wait for it: yea, they should be "hasting unto" it, or "hastening" it; for though the day is fixed for the coming of Christ, nor can it be altered, as his coming will not be longer, it cannot be sooner, yet it becomes the saints to pray earnestly for it, that it may be quickly, and for the accomplishment of all things that go before it, prepare for it, and lead unto it; such as the conversion of the Jews, and the bringing in of the fulness of the Gentiles; and by putting him in mind of, and pleading with him, his promises concerning these things, and giving him no rest till they are accomplished; there seems to be some reference to the prayers of the Jews for the Messiah's coming, which they desire may be
wherein; in which day, as in 2Pe 3:10; or by which; by which coming of Christ, or of the day of God,
the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat; at whose coming and presence, and from whose face the heavens and earth shall flee away, just as the earth shook, and the heavens dropped, and Sinai itself moved, when God appeared upon it; see Rev 20:11. This is a repetition of what is said in 2Pe 3:10, exciting attention to the exhortation given.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 2Pe 3:1-18
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 3:11-18
MHCC: 2Pe 3:11-18 - --From the doctrine of Christ's second coming, we are exhorted to purity and godliness. This is the effect of real knowledge. Very exact and universal h...
Matthew Henry -> 2Pe 3:11-18
Matthew Henry: 2Pe 3:11-18 - -- The apostle, having instructed them in the doctrine of Christ's second coming, I. Takes occasion thence to exhort them to purity and godliness in th...
Barclay -> 2Pe 3:11-14; 2Pe 3:11-14
Barclay: 2Pe 3:11-14 - --The one thing in which Peter is supremely interested is the moral dynamic of the Second Coming. If these things are going to happen and the world is ...

Barclay: 2Pe 3:11-14 - --There is in this passage still another great conception. Peter speaks of the Christian as not only eagerly awaiting the Coming of Christ but as actua...
Constable -> 2Pe 3:1-16; 2Pe 3:11-16
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 ...
