
Text -- 2 Peter 3:6 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: 2Pe 3:6 - -- By which means ( di' hōn ).
The two waters above or the water and the word of God. Mayor against the MSS. reads di' hou (singular) and refers it ...
By which means (
The two waters above or the water and the word of God. Mayor against the MSS. reads

Robertson: 2Pe 3:6 - -- Being overshadowed ( kataklustheis ).
First aorist passive participle of katakluzō , old compound, here only in N.T., but see kataklusmos in 2Pe ...
Being overshadowed (
First aorist passive participle of

With water (
Instrumental case of

Perished (
Second aorist middle indicative of
Vincent: 2Pe 3:6 - -- The world that then was ( ὁ τότε κόσμος )
Lit., the then world. The word for world is literally order, and denotes the per...
The world that then was (
Lit., the then world. The word for world is literally order, and denotes the perfect system of the material universe.

Vincent: 2Pe 3:6 - -- Being overflowed ( κατακλυσθεὶς )
Only here in New Testament. Cataclysm is derived from it.
Being overflowed (
Only here in New Testament. Cataclysm is derived from it.
Wesley: 2Pe 3:6 - -- Heaven and earth, the windows of heaven being opened, and the fountains of the great deep broken up.
Heaven and earth, the windows of heaven being opened, and the fountains of the great deep broken up.

Wesley: 2Pe 3:6 - -- The whole antediluvian race. Being overflowed with water, perished - And the heavens and earth themselves, though they did not perish, yet underwent a...
The whole antediluvian race. Being overflowed with water, perished - And the heavens and earth themselves, though they did not perish, yet underwent a great change. So little ground have these scoffers for saying that all things continue as they were from the creation.
JFB -> 2Pe 3:6
JFB: 2Pe 3:6 - -- Greek, "By which" (plural). By means of which heavens and earth (in respect to the WATERS which flowed together from both) the then world perished (th...
Greek, "By which" (plural). By means of which heavens and earth (in respect to the WATERS which flowed together from both) the then world perished (that is, in respect to its occupants, men and animals, and its then existing order: not was annihilated); for in the flood "the fountains of the great deep were broken up" from the earth (1) below, and "the windows of heaven" (2) above "were opened." The earth was deluged by that water out of which it had originally risen.
Calvin -> 2Pe 3:6
Calvin: 2Pe 3:6 - -- It seems, however, strange that he says that the world perished through the deluge, when he had before mentioned the heaven and the earth. To this I ...
It seems, however, strange that he says that the world perished through the deluge, when he had before mentioned the heaven and the earth. To this I answer, that the heaven was then also submerged, that is, the region of the air, which stood open between the two waters. For the division or separation, mentioned by Moses, was then confounded. (Gen 1:6;) and the word heaven is often taken in this sense. if any wishes for more on this subject, let him read Augustine on the City of God. Lib. 20. 178
Defender: 2Pe 3:6 - -- The antediluvian world (Greek kosmos, meaning "ordered system") was "overflowed" (Greek katakluzo, a word used only here, but obviously related to kat...
The antediluvian world (Greek

Defender: 2Pe 3:6 - -- The "perishing" of the "world that then was" is especially evidenced by the vast beds of fossils of plants and animals that have been preserved in the...
The "perishing" of the "world that then was" is especially evidenced by the vast beds of fossils of plants and animals that have been preserved in the sedimentary rocks of the earth's crust. These fossil beds have been misinterpreted by evolutionary scientists as a record of the evolution of life over many ages (despite the ubiquitous absence of any true transitional forms in these billions of fossils). What they really represent is the cataclysmic destruction of life in one age, at the time of the great Flood. Both sedimentary rocks and unhardened sediments have mostly been deposited under water, and they now cover most of the earth's land surface as well as ocean bottom surface. Furthermore, flood traditions somewhat similar to the Flood record in Genesis have been found among almost all nations and tribes of the earth. The genuine facts of science and history thoroughly support the Biblical account of the Flood, while only wilful ignorance can warrant the evolutionary interpretation of these evidences, and Peter said it would be so in the last days. Most important of all, of course, is the divinely inspired record in the Bible itself (Genesis 6-9), confirmed by Christ (Luk 17:26, Luk 17:27; Mat 24:37-39), Peter and others that the Flood, indeed, was a worldwide cataclysm. That being the case, the fossil record (which is the main hope of the evolutionist) is mostly a record of the Flood, not of evolution."
TSK -> 2Pe 3:6

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 2Pe 3:6
Barnes: 2Pe 3:6 - -- Whereby - Δι ̓ ὧν Di' hōn . Through which, or by means of which. The pronoun here is in the plural number, and there has been ...
Whereby -
The world that then was ... - Including all its inhabitants. Rosenmuller supposes that the reference here is to some universal catastrophe which occurred before the deluge in the time of Noah, and indeed before the earth was fitted up in its present form, as described by Moses in Gen. 1. It is rendered more than probable, by the researches of geologists in modern times, that such changes have occurred; but there is no evidence that Pater was acquainted with them, and his purpose did not require that he should refer to them. All that his argument demanded was the fact that the world had been once destroyed, and that therefore there was no improbability in believing that it would be again. They who maintained that the prediction that the earth would be destroyed was improbable, affirmed that there were no signs of such an event; that the laws of nature were stable and uniform; and that as those laws had been so long and so uniformly unbroken, it was absurd to believe that such an event could occur. To meet this, all that was necessary was to show that, in a case where the same objections substantially might be urged, it had actually occurred that the world had been destroyed. There was, in itself considered, as much improbability in believing that the world could be destroyed by water as that it would be destroyed by fire, and consequently the objection had no real force. Notwithstanding the apparent stability of the laws of nature, the world had been once destroyed; and there is, therefore, no improbability that it may be again. On the objections which might have been plausibly urged against the flood, see the notes at Heb 11:7.
Poole -> 2Pe 3:6
Poole: 2Pe 3:6 - -- Whereby by which heavens and water, mentioned in the former verse, the fountains of the great deep being broken up, and the windows of heaven opened,...
Whereby by which heavens and water, mentioned in the former verse, the fountains of the great deep being broken up, and the windows of heaven opened, Gen 7:11 . Or, by the word of God, as the principal cause, and the water as the instrumental, which, at his command, was poured out upon the earth both from above and below.
The world the earth, with all the inhabitants of it, eight persons excepted. This the apostle allegeth against the forementioned scoffers, who said that all things continued as they were, when yet the flood had made so great a change in the face of the lower creation.
Gill -> 2Pe 3:6
Gill: 2Pe 3:6 - -- Whereby the world that then was,.... The old world, as it is called in 2Pe 2:5; and as the Ethiopic version here renders it; the world before the floo...
Whereby the world that then was,.... The old world, as it is called in 2Pe 2:5; and as the Ethiopic version here renders it; the world before the flood, that had stood from the creation 1656 years:
being overflowed with water; by the windows of heaven being opened, and the waters over the earth poured down upon it; and by the fountains of the great deep being broken up in it; thus by these waters from above and below, a general inundation was brought upon it; for that the deluge was universal is clear from hence, and from the account by Moses; for as the earth was filled with violence, and all flesh had corrupted its way, God threatened a general destruction, and which was brought by a flood, which overflowed the whole earth; for all the hills that were under the whole heaven were covered with it, and everything that had life in the dry land died, and every living substance was destroyed that was upon the face of the ground; see Gen 6:11; and hence it follows, that hereby the then world
perished; not as to the substance of it, whatever alteration there might be in its form and position; but as to the inhabitants of it; for all creatures, men and cattle, and the creeping things, and fowls of the heaven, were destroyed, excepting Noah and his wife, and his three sons and their wives, and the creatures that were with him in the ark; see Gen 7:23; and by this instance the apostle shows the falsehood of the above assertion, that all things continued as they were from the beginning of the creation; for the earth was covered with water first, and which, by the command of God, was removed, and, after a long series of time, was brought on it again, and by it drowned; and from whence it also appears, that this sort of reasoning used by those scoffers is very fallacious; for though the heavens and the earth may continue for a long time, as they did before the flood, in the same form and situation, it does not follow from thence that they always will, for the contrary is evident from what follows.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> 2Pe 3:6
NET Notes: 2Pe 3:6 The antecedent is ambiguous. It could refer to the heavens, the heavens and earth, or the water and the word. If the reference is to the heavens, the ...
Geneva Bible -> 2Pe 3:6
Geneva Bible: 2Pe 3:6 ( 5 ) Whereby the world that then was, being overflowed with ( c ) water, perished:
( 5 ) Secondly he sets against them the universal flood, which wa...

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 3:5-10
MHCC: 2Pe 3:5-10 - --Had these scoffers considered the dreadful vengeance with which God swept away a whole world of ungodly men at once, surely they would not have scoffe...
Matthew Henry -> 2Pe 3:3-7
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 3:5-6
Barclay: 2Pe 3:5-6 - --Peter's first argument is that the world is not eternally stable. The point he is making is that the ancient world was destroyed by water, just as t...
Constable -> 2Pe 3:1-16; 2Pe 3:3-6
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 ...
