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Text -- 2 Peter 3:3 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
3:3 Above all, understand this: In the last days blatant scoffers will come, being propelled by their own evil urges
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  
Table of Contents

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

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , PBC , Haydock , 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 3:3 - -- Knowing this first ( touto prōton ginōskontes ). Present active participle of ginōskō . See 2Pe 1:20 for this identical phrase. Nominative ab...

Knowing this first ( touto prōton ginōskontes ).

Present active participle of ginōskō . See 2Pe 1:20 for this identical phrase. Nominative absolute here where accusative ginōskontas would be regular. Peter now takes up the parousia (2Pe 1:16) after having discussed the dunamis of Christ.

Robertson: 2Pe 3:3 - -- In the last days ( ep' eschatōn tōn hēmerōn ). "Upon the last of the days."Jud 1:18 has it ep' eschatou chronou (upon the last time). In 1P...

In the last days ( ep' eschatōn tōn hēmerōn ).

"Upon the last of the days."Jud 1:18 has it ep' eschatou chronou (upon the last time). In 1Pe 1:5 it is en kairōi eschatōi (in the last time), while 1Pe 1:20 has ep' eschatou tōn chronōn (upon the last of the times). John has usually tēi eschatēi hēmerāi (on the last day, Joh 6:39.). Here eschatōn is a predicate adjective like summus mons (the top of the mountain).

Robertson: 2Pe 3:3 - -- Mockers with mockery ( empaigmonēi empaiktai ). Note Peter’ s play on words again, both from empaizō (Mat 2:16), to trifle with, and neith...

Mockers with mockery ( empaigmonēi empaiktai ).

Note Peter’ s play on words again, both from empaizō (Mat 2:16), to trifle with, and neither found elsewhere save empaiktēs in Jud 1:18; Isa 3:4 (playing like children).

Vincent: 2Pe 3:3 - -- Scoffers walking ( ἐμπαῖκται πορευόμενοι ) This is the reading followed by A. V. But the later texts have added ἐμ...

Scoffers walking ( ἐμπαῖκται πορευόμενοι )

This is the reading followed by A. V. But the later texts have added ἐμπαιγμονῇ , in mockery, occurring only here, though a kindred word for mockings (ἐμπαιγμῶν ) is found Heb 11:36. This addition gives a play upon the words; and so Rev., " Mockers shall come with mockery, walking," etc.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:2-3 - -- Before the Lord comes.

Before the Lord comes.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:2-3 - -- Here is the origin of the error, the root of libertinism. Do we not see this eminently fulfilled?

Here is the origin of the error, the root of libertinism. Do we not see this eminently fulfilled?

JFB: 2Pe 3:3 - -- From the word of the apostles.

From the word of the apostles.

JFB: 2Pe 3:3 - -- Their very scoffing shall confirm the truth of the prediction.

Their very scoffing shall confirm the truth of the prediction.

JFB: 2Pe 3:3 - -- The oldest manuscripts and Vulgate add, "(scoffers) in (that is, 'with') scoffing." As Rev 14:2, "harping with harps."

The oldest manuscripts and Vulgate add, "(scoffers) in (that is, 'with') scoffing." As Rev 14:2, "harping with harps."

JFB: 2Pe 3:3 - -- (2Pe 2:10; Jud 1:16, Jud 1:18). Their own pleasure is their sole law, unrestrained by reverence for God.

(2Pe 2:10; Jud 1:16, Jud 1:18). Their own pleasure is their sole law, unrestrained by reverence for God.

Clarke: 2Pe 3:3 - -- Knowing this first - Considering this in an especial manner, that those prophets predicted the coming of false teachers: and their being now in the ...

Knowing this first - Considering this in an especial manner, that those prophets predicted the coming of false teachers: and their being now in the Church proved how clearly they were known to God, and showed the Christians at Pontus the necessity of having no intercourse or connection with them

Clarke: 2Pe 3:3 - -- There shall come - scoffers - Persons who shall endeavor to turn all religion into ridicule, as this is the most likely way to depreciate truth in t...

There shall come - scoffers - Persons who shall endeavor to turn all religion into ridicule, as this is the most likely way to depreciate truth in the sight of the giddy multitude. The scoffers, having no solid argument to produce against revelation, endeavor to make a scaramouch of some parts; and then affect to laugh at it, and get superficial thinkers to laugh with them

Clarke: 2Pe 3:3 - -- Walking after their own lusts - Here is the true source of all infidelity. The Gospel of Jesus is pure and holy, and requires a holy heart and holy ...

Walking after their own lusts - Here is the true source of all infidelity. The Gospel of Jesus is pure and holy, and requires a holy heart and holy life. They wish to follow their own lusts, and consequently cannot brook the restraints of the Gospel: therefore they labor to prove that it is not true, that they may get rid of its injunctions, and at last succeed in persuading themselves that it is a forgery; and then throw the reins on the neck of their evil propensities. Thus their opposition to revealed truth began and ended in their own lusts

There is a remarkable addition here in almost every MS. and version of note: There shall come in the last days, In Mockery, εν εμπαιγμονῃ, scoffers walking after their own lusts. This is the reading of ABC, eleven others, both the Syriac, all the Arabic, Coptic, Ethiopic, Vulgate, and several of the fathers. They come in mockery; this is their spirit and temper; they have no desire to find out truth; they take up the Bible merely with the design of turning it into ridicule. This reading Griesbach has received into the text

Clarke: 2Pe 3:3 - -- The last days - Probably refer to the conclusion of the Jewish polity, which was then at hand.

The last days - Probably refer to the conclusion of the Jewish polity, which was then at hand.

Calvin: 2Pe 3:3 - -- 3.Knowing this first The participle knowing may be applied to the Apostle, and in this way, “I labor to stir you up for this reason, because I kn...

3.Knowing this first The participle knowing may be applied to the Apostle, and in this way, “I labor to stir you up for this reason, because I know what and how great is your impending danger from scoffers.” I however prefer this explanation, that the participle is used in place of a verb, as though he had said, “Know ye this especially.” For it was necessary that this should have been foretold, because they might have been shaken, had impious men attacked them suddenly with scoffs of this kind. He therefore wished them to know this, and to feel assured on the subject, that they might be prepared to oppose such men.

But he calls the attention of the faithful again to the doctrine which he touched upon in the second chapter. For by the last days is commonly meant the kingdom of Christ, or the days of his kingdom, according to what Paul says, “Upon whom the ends of the world are come.” (1Co 10:11.) 177 The meaning is, that the more God offers himself by the gospel to the world, and the more he invites men to his kingdom, the more audacious on the other hand will ungodly men vomit forth the poison of their impiety.

He calls those scoffers, according to what is usual in Scripture, who seek to appear witty by shewing contempt to God, and by a blasphemous presumption. It is, moreover, the very extremity of evil, when men allow themselves to treat the awful name of God with scoffs. Thus, Psa 1:1 speaks of the seat of scoffers. So David, in Psa 119:51, complains that he was derided by the proud, because he attended to God’s law. So Isaiah, in Isa 28:14, having referred to them, describes their supine security and insensibility. Let us therefore bear in mind, that there is nothing to be feared more than a contest with scoffers. On this subject we said something while explaining the third chapter of the Epistle to the Galatians. As, however, the Holy Scripture has foretold that they would come, and has also given us a shield by which we may defend ourselves, there is no excuse why we should not boldly resist them whatever devices they may employ.

Defender: 2Pe 3:3 - -- "First" means "first of all" or "of primary importance" (compare 2Pe 1:20). It is vitally important both to understand this key characteristic of the ...

"First" means "first of all" or "of primary importance" (compare 2Pe 1:20). It is vitally important both to understand this key characteristic of the last days (that is, the denial of both creation and consummation) and also to know and practice the divinely inspired Scriptures.

Defender: 2Pe 3:3 - -- The context here is set in the last days. Although we must not set dates, these aspects of the last days are surely more characteristic of our own tim...

The context here is set in the last days. Although we must not set dates, these aspects of the last days are surely more characteristic of our own times than any time before us. At least, we are closer to the last days than anyone has even been before. Thus, Peter's exhortation and analysis surely fits us better than anyone before us.

Defender: 2Pe 3:3 - -- People of the last days, by and large, will be almost entirely motivated by self-interest and will be unconcerned about God's purposes, either for the...

People of the last days, by and large, will be almost entirely motivated by self-interest and will be unconcerned about God's purposes, either for themselves or for the world as a whole. They will mock God's Word. The word "mock" is used thirteen times in the New Testament, twelve of which speak of mocking Christ."

TSK: 2Pe 3:3 - -- that there : 1Ti 4:1, 1Ti 4:2; 2Ti 3:1; 1Jo 2:18; Jud 1:18 scoffers : Pro 1:22, Pro 3:34, Pro 14:6; Isa 5:19, Isa 28:14, Isa 29:20; Hos 7:5 walking : ...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 2Pe 3:3 - -- Knowing this first - As among the first and most important things to be attended to - as one of the predictions which demand your special regar...

Knowing this first - As among the first and most important things to be attended to - as one of the predictions which demand your special regard. Jude Jud 1:18 says that the fact that there would be "mockers in the last time,"had been particularly foretold by thom. It is probable that Peter refers to the same thing, and we may suppose that this was so well understood by all the apostles that they made it a common subject of preaching.

That there shall come in the last days - In the last dispensation; in the period during which the affairs of the world shall be wound up. The apostle does not say that that was the last time in the sense that the world was about to come to an end; nor is it implied that the period called "the last day"might not be a very long period, longer in fact than either of the previous periods of the world. He says that during that period it had been predicted there would arise those whom he here calls "scoffers."On the meaning of the phrase "in the last days,"as used in the Scriptures, see the Act 2:17 note; Heb 1:2 note; Isa 2:2 note.

Scoffers - In Jude Jud 1:18 the same Greek word is rendered "mockers."The word means those who deride, reproach, ridicule. There is usually in the word the idea of contempt or malignity toward an object. Here the sense seems to be that they would treat with derision or contempt the predictions respecting the advent of the Saviour, and the end of the world. It would appear probable that there was a particular or definite class of men referred to; a class who would hold special opinions, and who would urge plausible objections against the fulfillment of the predictions respecting the end of the world, and the second coming of the Saviour - for those are the points to which Peter particularly refers. It scarcely required inspiration to foresee that there would be "scoffers"in the general sense of the term - for they have so abounded in every age, that no one would hazard much in saying that they would be found at any particular time; but the eye of the apostle is evidently on a particular class of people, the special form of whose reproaches would be the ridicule of the doctrines that the Lord Jesus would return; that there would be a day of judgment; that the world would be consumed by fire, etc. Tillotson explains this of the Carpocratians, a large sect of the Gnostics, who denied the resurrection of the dead, and the future judgment.

Walking after their own lusts - Living in the free indulgence of their sensual appetites. See the notes at 2Pe 2:10, 2Pe 2:12, 2Pe 2:14, 2Pe 2:18-19.

Poole: 2Pe 3:3 - -- Knowing this first especially, as being very necessary to be known. The apostle having in the former chapter cautioned these saints against the more ...

Knowing this first especially, as being very necessary to be known. The apostle having in the former chapter cautioned these saints against the more close enemies of the gospel, seducers and false teachers, here he foretells them of more open enemies, profane scoffers.

In the last days: see 1Co 10:11 2Ti 3:1 .

Scoffers profane contemners of God, and deriders of his truth, Psa 1:1 119:51 Isa 28:14,22 .

Walking after their own lusts such as are natural to them; lusts of ungodliness, Jud 1:18 .

PBC: 2Pe 3:3 - -- To some extent I need to explore this passage in terms of the contemporary interpretation of extreme preterists, the error examined briefly in the las...

To some extent I need to explore this passage in terms of the contemporary interpretation of extreme preterists, the error examined briefly in the last chapter. Did Peter actually have the local military siege of Jerusalem by the Romans (A. D. 70) in mind when he wrote these words? Or did he have something more universal in mind? Basic hermeneutical skills require us to follow the most natural import of words and sentence structure in our pursuit of the original author’s (and we must not forget the original Author, the Holy Spirit) meaning and intent.

When he wrote these words, Peter focused on three examples of God’s sovereignty, two of which involve His sovereign and holy judgment of sin. The first example deals with God’s creation. God created this universe in the pattern of Ge 1:1-31 and various corroborating Scriptures throughout the Bible. The implication of the scoffers denies creation, so it implies that matter is eternal that it had no beginning, simply a variety of changes over endless past times. Occasionally contemporary extreme preterists also raise this issue and imply their belief against creation. For the sake of this question, it matters not whether the days of Ge 1:1-31 are twenty-four hour days or prolonged logical eras of time. Ge 1:1-31 leaves no doubt that God created the universe. Sincere traditional Christians may debate the length of the days, but no Bible believing Christian can reasonably doubt the primary message of Ge 1:1-31; God created the universe. It had a beginning with God. Heb 11:3 clarifies this teaching in simple words. Faith embraces the fact that God created the material universe so that what we see is not the endless evolutionary cycle of change in form, but in fact the actual appearance of something that had a beginning in the purpose and creative power of God.

Implied in one’s rejection of creation is a deeper rejection of God. In Ro 1:1-32 Paul states that fallen man has no excuse but to believe in God’s power and deity (KJV, "Godhead"). Nature will never reveal redemption, but it undeniably reveals its intelligent and supernatural origin. In order to erode the foundation of the scoffers’ error Peter took the roof off their argument and affirmed that God created this universe. Thus He is not a part of creation, but transcends it and has the Creator’s right to deal with it as He chooses.

The second error in the scoffers’ reasoning is their claim that all natural processes continue as they always have, a uniformitarian view of nature. Everything has always been as it is today. To counter this error Peter raised the fact of the flood. In the flood God judged the increasing blackness and prevalence of sin by sending a flood of water on the earth. Although some professing Christians hold to the idea of a "local flood" only in the Mesopotamian Valley, most Bible believing Christians hold to a wider scope for the flood. There is worldwide evidence of a flood, along with mythological traditions in every ancient culture of a cataclysmic flood that tends strongly to corroborate the Biblical account of the flood as a universal event. In this case Peter’s example accomplishes a number of strategic objectives. First, everything in the material universe has not continued uniformly throughout time. Secondly, Peter’s example affirms God’s personal involvement in human history and His personal judgment against sin and against the sinners who indulged in it. Peter is precisely narrowing the scope of his argument to expose the true nature of the false teaching that he is opposing in this case.

Peter’s final example further narrows his focus so as to give us a rather detailed idea of the false teaching set forth by the false teachers whom he opposes in this letter. "But the heavens and the earth, which are now, by the same word are kept in store, reserved unto fire against the day of judgment and perdition of ungodly men." Forget about creation; forget about the flood; God will yet intervene in human history in an epochal and universal judgment.

This error goes directly to the scoffers’ rejection of the Biblical view of the Second Coming of Christ, the final judgment of mankind, and eternity, either in punishment for sins committed or in celebration of God’s mercy and saving grace in heaven. In a tape recording of a southern California preterist’s radio broadcast that I heard sometime back, the speaker specifically rejected the idea that the Bible, either Old or New Testament, promises resurrection to anyone other than the Lord Jesus Christ. The preposterous claim fails utterly against the multiple New Testament teachings on this doctrine. Wrested hermeneutical principles must be overworked in order to give any credible posture to this claim. Allegorical interpretation, almost to the point of mystical sign language, must be employed to make any case whatever for the claim.

A simple and natural assessment of Peter’s words here rejects outright the idea of local and natural judgment against one city. Had Peter intended such a local and cultural judgment, he would not have employed such universal terms; "But the heavens and the earth, which are now..." "Heavens and earth" hardly depict one city or culture of people. In the context Peter has been dealing with broad epochal events, creation and the flood, likely if not certainly universal. Peter’s readers would view neither event as being local and temporal only. The allegorical interpretation that makes the "heavens and the earth" mystically represent the New Testament church are as unfounded in the context of this lesson as the preterist’s rejection of God’s final and universal judgment of mankind.

What is the most natural interpretation of Peter’s words in the context of his reasoning against false teachers and their scoffing denial of the Christian claim of a future return of Christ and universal judgment of sinners? After all, this is the point they denied in their scoffing attack against Peter and the believers to whom he wrote this letter. God created the natural material earth. In the unfolding processes of human sin Peter gives the example of God’s cataclysmic judgment against sinners that impacted Planet Earth by a flood of water. The earth didn’t become extinct after the flood, but it distinctly changed in appearance because of the flood. The flood was not a superstitious or mythical event for Peter; it was a real event in actual human and earth history.

In the same way Peter affirms that the present earth, still existent after the flood, but altered by that past event of divine judgment, faces yet another cataclysmic event because of human sin. "But the heavens and the earth, which are now, by the same word are kept in store, reserved unto fire against the day of judgment and perdition of ungodly men." The same "word" of God that created the universe-that sent the flood in judgment against sinners-is holding this earth in its control until yet another judgment that shall again destroy it as we know it today. It stands in suspense, waiting for a future day of judgment when God shall reveal His holy judgment against "ungodly men." They will face both "judgment" and "perdition." Peter’s union of these two words implies obvious penal judgment, followed by the imposition of the sentence against those found guilty in the judgment.

In the verses that follow Peter will discuss God’s merciful disposition of the saved and of the material universe. His first task, given the character of the false teachers and the nature of their error, is to deal with God’s sovereign right and intent to remain personally involved in the ultimate disposition of sinners, and of the material world in which they live. The false teachers had obviously rejected these foundational truths. Consequently, they had fallen prey to base and depraved sins of the body, alleging that they were doing nothing wrong in the process, part of the false "liberty" that they promised their hearers. In the second chapter Peter correctly reminds his readers that the false "liberty" to sin is in fact slavery, not liberty. Even the false teachers who promised this freedom to their followers demonstrated their slavery to these sins. Take God and the final judgment that He has revealed in Scripture out of the equation, and you have removed the most significant factor imaginable against immorality and the hedonistic indulgence of sins that were practiced in the first century, as well as in our time and culture. May we never allow this holy event to fade in our memory or our conviction of Biblical and historical truth.

41

Haydock: 2Pe 3:3 - -- Scoffers [1] with deceit, (such as make a jest of all revealed religion) walking according to their own lusts, as if they might indulge themselve...

Scoffers [1] with deceit, (such as make a jest of all revealed religion) walking according to their own lusts, as if they might indulge themselves in every thing which their inclinations prompt them to, saying: where is his promise, or his coming? They have no belief nor regard for what has been revealed concerning the coming of Christ to judge every one, to reward the good, and punish the wicked. Such were the Sadducees, who believe not the immortality of the soul, nor the resurrection; such were at all times those atheistical men, who endeavoured to persuade themselves that all religion is no more than a human and politic invention; of this number are they who some in our days call free-thinkers. St. Peter here gives us the words of these unbelieving libertines, whom he calls scoffers: where, they say, is his promise? those pretended promises of God, those predictions and menaces in the Scriptures? what appearance of Christ's coming to judge the world? for, since the Fathers slept, ever since the death of the patriarchs and prophets, all things continue. (Witham)

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

In deceptione illusores; the true reading in the Greek is, as Dr. Wells has restored it, Greek: en empaigmone empaiktai, illusione illudentes.

Gill: 2Pe 3:3 - -- Knowing this first,.... In the first place, principally, and chiefly, and which might easily be known and observed from the writings of the apostles a...

Knowing this first,.... In the first place, principally, and chiefly, and which might easily be known and observed from the writings of the apostles and prophets; see 1Ti 4:1;

that there shall come in the last days scoffers, or "mockers"; such as would make a mock at sin, make light of it, plead for it, openly commit it, and glory in it; and scoff at all religion, as the prejudice of education, as an engine of state, a piece of civil policy to keep subjects in awe, as cant, enthusiasm, and madness, as a gloomy melancholy thing, depriving men of true pleasure; and throw out their flouts and jeers at those that are the most religious, for the just, upright man, is commonly by such laughed to scorn, and those that depart from evil make themselves a prey; and particularly at the ministers of the word, for a man that has scarcely so much common sense as to preserve him from the character of an idiot, thinks himself a wit of the age, if he can at any rate break a jest upon a Gospel minister: nor do the Scriptures of truth escape the banter and burlesque of these scoffers; the doctrines of it being foolishness to them, and the commands and ordinances in it being grievous and intolerable to them; yea, to such lengths do those proceed, as to scoff at God himself; at his persons, purposes, providences, and promises; at Jehovah the Father, as the God of nature and providence, and especially as the God and Father of Christ, and of all grace in him; at Jehovah the Son, at his person, as being the Son of God, and truly God, at his office, as Mediator, and at his blood, righteousness, and sacrifice, which they trample under foot; and at Jehovah the Spirit, whom they do despite unto, as the spirit of grace, deriding his operations in regeneration and sanctification, as dream and delusion; and, most of all, things to come are the object of their scorn and derision; as the second coming of Christ, the resurrection of the dead, a future judgment, the torments of hell, and the joys of heaven; all which they represent as the trifles and juggles of designing men: such as these, according to the prophets and apostles, were to come in "the last days"; either in the days of the Messiah, in the Gospel dispensation, the times between the first and second coming of Christ; for it is a rule with the Jews s, that wherever the last days are mentioned, the days of the Messiah are intended; see Heb 1:1; when the prophets foretold such scoffers should come; or in the last days of the Jewish state, both civil and religious, called "the ends of the world", 1Co 10:11; a little before the destruction of Jerusalem, when iniquity greatly abounded, Mat 24:11; or "in the last of the days"; as the words may be rendered; and so answer to באחרית הימים, in Isa 2:2, and may regard the latter part of the last times; the times of the apostles were the last days, 1Jo 2:18; they began then, and will continue to Christ's second coming; when some time before that, it will be a remarkable age for scoffers and scorners; and we have lived to see an innumerable company of them, and these predictions fulfilled; from whence it may be concluded, that the coming of Christ is at hand: these scoffers are further described as

walking after their own lusts; either after the carnal reasonings of their minds, admitting of nothing but what they can comprehend by reason, making that the rule, test, and standard of all their principles, and so cast away the law of the Lord, and despise the word of the Holy One of Israel; or rather, after their sinful and fleshly lusts, making them their guides and governors, and giving up themselves entirely to them, to obey and fulfil them; the phrase denotes a continued series of sinning, a progress in it, a desire after it, and pleasure in it, and an obstinate persisting in it; scoffers at religion and revelation are generally libertines; and such as sit in the seat of the scornful, are in the counsel of the ungodly, and way of sinners, Psa 1:1.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 2Pe 3:3 Grk “going according to their own evil urges.”

Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:3 ( 2 ) Knowing this first, that there shall come in the last days ( a ) scoffers, walking after their own lusts, ( 2 ) He vouches the second coming of...

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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 3:3-7 - -- To quicken and excite us to a serious minding and firm adhering to what God has revealed to us by the prophets and apostles, we are told that there ...

Barclay: 2Pe 3:3-4 - --The characteristic of the heretics which worried Peter most of all was their denial of the Second Coming of Jesus. Literally, their question was: "...

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 3:3-6 - --B. Scoffing in the Last Days 3:3-6 Peter warned his readers about the activity of mockers preceding the Lord's return to enable them to deal with this...

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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Commentary -- Other

Evidence: 2Pe 3:3 Signs of the end times (combined from Matthew 24; Mark 13; Luke 21; 1 Timothy 4; and 2 Timothy 3): There will be false Christs; wars and rumors of wa...

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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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