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Text -- Jude 1:15 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
1:15 to execute judgment on all, and to convict every person of all their thoroughly ungodly deeds that they have committed, and of all the harsh words that ungodly sinners have spoken against him.”
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  
Table of Contents

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

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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

Other
Evidence

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Jud 1:15 - -- To execute judgment ( poiēsai krisin ). "To do justice."

To execute judgment ( poiēsai krisin ).

"To do justice."

Robertson: Jud 1:15 - -- To convict ( elegxai ). First aorist (effective) active infinitive like poiēsai before it.

To convict ( elegxai ).

First aorist (effective) active infinitive like poiēsai before it.

Robertson: Jud 1:15 - -- Ungodly ( asebeis ). See Jud 1:4 and end of this verse.

Ungodly ( asebeis ).

See Jud 1:4 and end of this verse.

Robertson: Jud 1:15 - -- Of ungodliness ( asebeias ). Old word as in Rom 1:18, plural in Jud 1:18 as in Rom 11:26.

Of ungodliness ( asebeias ).

Old word as in Rom 1:18, plural in Jud 1:18 as in Rom 11:26.

Robertson: Jud 1:15 - -- Which ( hōn ). Genitive by attraction from ha (cognate accusative with ēsebēsan , old verb, to act impiously, here alone in N.T. save some MS...

Which ( hōn ).

Genitive by attraction from ha (cognate accusative with ēsebēsan , old verb, to act impiously, here alone in N.T. save some MSS. in 2Pe 2:6) to agree with the antecedent ergōn (deeds).

Robertson: Jud 1:15 - -- Hard things ( sklērōn ). Harsh, rough things as in Joh 6:60.

Hard things ( sklērōn ).

Harsh, rough things as in Joh 6:60.

Robertson: Jud 1:15 - -- Which ( hōn ). Genitive by attraction from ha (object of elalēsan , first aorist active indicative of laleō ) to the case of the antecedent ...

Which ( hōn ).

Genitive by attraction from ha (object of elalēsan , first aorist active indicative of laleō ) to the case of the antecedent sklērōn . Four times in this verse as a sort of refrain asebeis (twice), asebeias , ēsebēsan .

Wesley: Jud 1:15 - -- Enoch herein looked beyond the flood.

Enoch herein looked beyond the flood.

Wesley: Jud 1:15 - -- Sinners, in general. And to convict all the ungodly, in particular, of all the grievous things which ungodly sinners (a sinner is bad; but the ungodly...

Sinners, in general. And to convict all the ungodly, in particular, of all the grievous things which ungodly sinners (a sinner is bad; but the ungodly who sin without fear are worse) have spoken against him, Jud 1:8, Jud 1:10, though they might not think, all those speeches were against him.

JFB: Jud 1:15 - -- This verse and the beginning of Enoch's prophecy is composed in Hebrew poetic parallelism, the oldest specimen extant. Some think Lamech's speech, whi...

This verse and the beginning of Enoch's prophecy is composed in Hebrew poetic parallelism, the oldest specimen extant. Some think Lamech's speech, which is also in poetic parallelism, was composed in mockery of Enoch's prophecy: as Enoch foretold Jehovah's coming to judgment, so Lamech presumes on impunity in polygamy and murder (just as Cain the murderer seemed to escape with impunity).

JFB: Jud 1:15 - -- Convict.

Convict.

JFB: Jud 1:15 - -- Such as are noticed in Jud 1:8, Jud 1:10, Jud 1:16; Mal 3:13-14; contrast Rom 16:17.

Such as are noticed in Jud 1:8, Jud 1:10, Jud 1:16; Mal 3:13-14; contrast Rom 16:17.

JFB: Jud 1:15 - -- Not merely sinners, but proud despisers of God: impious.

Not merely sinners, but proud despisers of God: impious.

JFB: Jud 1:15 - -- They who speak against God's children are regarded by God as speaking against Himself.

They who speak against God's children are regarded by God as speaking against Himself.

Clarke: Jud 1:15 - -- To execute judgment - This was originally spoken to the antediluvians; and the coming of the Lord to destroy that world was the thing spoken of in t...

To execute judgment - This was originally spoken to the antediluvians; and the coming of the Lord to destroy that world was the thing spoken of in this prophecy or declaration. But as God had threatened this, it required no direct inspiration to foretell it. To execute judgment, etc. This is a very strange verse as to its composition, and is loaded with various readings; the MSS. and versions being at little agreement among themselves on its phraseology. Αυτων, which we translate among them, is omitted by the best MSS. and versions, and is, in all probability, spurious. Many also omit ασεβειας after ργων, ungodly deeds. Many insert λογων, words or speeches, after σκληρων, hard; and this word our translators have supplied. And instead of ἁμαρτωλοι, sinners, the Sahidic has ανθρωποι, men. There are others of less note; but the frequent recurrence of All and Ungodly makes the construction of the sentence very harsh

Dr. Macknight supposes that Enoch’ s prophecy was common among the Jews; for the first words in Hebrew are Maranatha, and these were used by them in that form of excommunication or cursing which they pronounced against irreclaimable offenders. The doctor forgets himself here; the words Maranatha are not Hebrew, but Syriac. In Hebrew the form of execration begins with ארור אתה arur attah , "cursed art thou;"or מחרם אתה mochoram attah : but the Syriac maran atha , is literally, our Lord is coming; see on 1Co 16:22 (note); but here, in the Syriac, the words are atha moria , "the Lord cometh."So it is doubtful whether this fancied analogy exists.

Calvin: Jud 1:15 - -- But the vengeance suspended over the wicked ought to keep the elect in fear and watchfulness. He speaks of deeds and words, Because their corrupte...

But the vengeance suspended over the wicked ought to keep the elect in fear and watchfulness. He speaks of deeds and words, Because their corrupters did much evil, not only by their wicked life, but also by their impure and false speech. And their words were hard, on account of the refractory audacity, by which, being elated, they acted insolently. 199

TSK: Jud 1:15 - -- execute : Psa 9:7, Psa 9:8, Psa 37:6, Psa 50:1-6, Psa 98:9, Psa 149:9; Ecc 11:9, Ecc 12:14; Joh 5:22, Joh 5:23, Joh 5:27; Act 17:31; Rom 2:16, Rom 14:...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Jud 1:15 - -- To execute judgment upon all - That is, he shall come to judge all the dwellers upon the earth, good and bad. And to convince all - The w...

To execute judgment upon all - That is, he shall come to judge all the dwellers upon the earth, good and bad.

And to convince all - The word "convince we now use commonly in a somewhat limited sense, as meaning "to satisfy"a man’ s own mind"either of the truth of some proposition, or of the fact that he has done wrong, as being in this latter sense synonymous with the word "convict."This "conviction"is commonly produced by argument or truth, and is not necessarily followed by any sentence of disapprobation, or by any judicial condemnation. But this is clearly not the sense in which the word is used here. The purpose of the coming of the Lord will not be to convince men in that sense, though it is undoubtedly true that the wicked will see that their lives have been wrong; but it will be to pronounce a sentence on them as the result of the evidence of their guilt. The Greek word which is here used occurs nowhere else in the New Testament.

All that are ungodly among them - All that are not pious; all that have no religion.

Of all their ungodly deeds ... - Of their wicked actions and words. This is the common doctrine of the Bible, that all the wicked actions and words of men will be called into judgment. In regard to this passage, thus quoted from an ancient prophecy, we may remark:

\caps1 (1) t\caps0 hat the style bears the marks of its being a quotation, or of its being preserved by Jude in the language in which it had been handed down by tradition. It is not the style of Jude. It is not so terse, pointed, energetic.

\caps1 (2) i\caps0 t has every probable mark of its having been actually delivered by Enoch. The age in which he lived was corrupt. The world was ripening for the deluge. He was himself a good man, and, as would seem perhaps, almost the only good man of his generation. Nothing would be more natural than that he should be reproached by hard words and speeches, and nothing more natural than that he should have pointed the men of his own age to the future judgment.

\caps1 (3) t\caps0 he doctrine of the final judgment, if this was uttered by Enoch, was an early doctrine in the world. It was held even in the first generations of the race. It was one of those great truths early communicated to man to restrain him from sin, and to lead him to prepare for the great events which are to occur on the earth. The same doctrine has been transmitted from age to age, and is now one of the most important and the most affecting that refers to the final destiny of men.

Poole: Jud 1:15 - -- To execute judgment upon all; either upon all the wicked in general, who afterwards may seem to be distinguished into different sorts, or else the ...

To execute judgment upon all; either upon all the wicked in general, who afterwards may seem to be distinguished into different sorts, or else the Greek preposition kata is put for peri , and the word all is to be understood of all universally, good and bad; and the words may be read, to execute judgment over all, i.e. to judge all.

And to convince all that are ungodly among them: if we take the words in the latter sense mentioned, then he distinguisheth those that are to be judged into good and bad, and the Lord comes to execute judgment over all, having convinced the wicked among them; but if in the former, the ungodly here may be taken for those that are more notoriously so, those that have obstinately rejected the gospel, or wickedly perverted it, or persecuted the saints, &c.

Which they have ungodly committed; i.e. with an ungodly mind, willingly, delightfully, perseveringly.

Their hard speeches; i.e. blasphemous, irreverent, against God, his truth and ways.

Which ungodly sinners have spoken against him; he executes judgment, though upon all the wicked, yet especially upon these ungodly sinners, i.e. that are such both in their words and deeds against him, in his truths, ways, ordinances, people, &c., and therefore are the worst of sinners.

Haydock: Jud 1:15 - -- Nothing more terrible than a God avenging in the majesty of his power his own cause. Then the impious libertine, in proportion as he has studied to e...

Nothing more terrible than a God avenging in the majesty of his power his own cause. Then the impious libertine, in proportion as he has studied to extinguish in himself and to stifle in others the light of faith, the more shall be confounded and overwhelmed with the glory of God in the day of just retribution.

Gill: Jud 1:15 - -- To execute judgment upon all,.... Quick and dead, small and great, high and low, rich and poor, good and bad, righteous and wicked, sheep and goats; t...

To execute judgment upon all,.... Quick and dead, small and great, high and low, rich and poor, good and bad, righteous and wicked, sheep and goats; to pass the definitive sentence on each, that of absolution, life, and happiness, on his own people, and that of condemnation, death, and misery, on the wicked; which will be done in the most strict and righteous manner:

and to convince all that are ungodly among them; those who are without God, the fear of him love to him, or faith in him; who have lived without the worship of him, or in a false worship; and particularly false teachers are here meant, the same as in Jud 1:4; who will then be convicted in their own consciences, by that clear evidence, and full light, in which things will be set:

of all their ungodly deeds; both against law and Gospel:

which they have ungodly committed; which they lived in the commission of, and continually practised in a vile manner, publicly, and in defiance of heaven, and with seared consciences:

and of all their hard speeches, which ungodly sinners have spoken against him; either "against" God, as the Vulgate Latin version reads, against his being, his perfections, his providence, his purposes, his word, and worship; or rather against Jesus Christ the Lord, who will come to judge them, against his person and offices, his blood, righteousness, and sacrifice; his ministers and people, his truths and ordinances.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Jud 1:15 An apparent quotation from 1 En. 1:9. There is some doubt as to whether Jude is actually quoting from the text of 1 Enoch; the text here in Jude diffe...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Jude - --1 He exhorts them to be constant in the profession of the faith.4 False teachers are crept in to seduce them, for whose evil doctrine and manners horr...

MHCC: Jud 1:8-16 - --False teachers are dreamers; they greatly defile and grievously wound the soul. These teachers are of a disturbed mind and a seditious spirit; forgett...

Matthew Henry: Jud 1:8-15 - -- The apostle here exhibits a charge against deceivers who were now seducing the disciples of Christ from the profession and practice of his holy reli...

Barclay: Jud 1:12-16 - --This is one of the great passages of invective of the New Testament. It is blazing moral indignation at its hottest. As Moffatt puts it: "Sky, lan...

Barclay: Jud 1:12-16 - --(ii) These wicked men revel in their own cliques and have no feeling of responsibility for anyone except themselves. These two things go together for...

Barclay: Jud 1:12-16 - --Jude goes on to use a vivid picture of these evil men. "They are like wild sea waves frothing out their own shameless deeds." The picture is this. ...

Barclay: Jud 1:12-16 - --In Jud 1:16Jude sets down three last characteristics of the evil men. (i) They are grumblers, for ever discontented with the life which God has allot...

Constable: Jud 1:5-16 - --III. WARNINGS AGAINST FALSE TEACHERS vv. 5-16 "The brief epistle of Jude is without parallel in the New Testamen...

College: Jude - --JUDE I. ADDRESS AND GREETING (1-2) 1 Jude, a servant of Jesus Christ and a brother of James, To those who have been called, who are loved by God th...

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Commentary -- Other

Evidence: Jud 1:15 With the help of God, we are to convince the ungodly that their deeds and their speech are offensive to their Creator, and will bring swift judgment u...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: Jude (Book Introduction) THE EPISTLE OF JUDE ABOUT a.d. 65 TO 67 By Way of Introduction The Author He calls himself Judas, but this was a very common name. In the N.T....

JFB: Jude (Book Introduction) AUTHOR.--He calls himself in the address "the servant of Jesus Christ, and brother of James." See Introduction to the Epistle of James, in proof of Ja...

TSK: Jude (Book Introduction) St. Jude, says Origen, has written an Epistle in a few lines indeed, but full of vigorous expressions of heavenly grace - Ιουδας [Strong’s...

TSK: Jude 1 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Jud 1:1, He exhorts them to be constant in the profession of the faith; Jud 1:4, False teachers are crept in to seduce them, for whose ev...

Poole: Jude 1 (Chapter Introduction) ARGUMENT Some question there hath been concerning the penman of this Epistle, and some have thought that Jude the apostle was not the man, whoe...

MHCC: Jude (Book Introduction) This epistle is addressed to all believers in the gospel. Its design appears to be to guard believers against the false teachers who had begun to cree...

MHCC: Jude 1 (Chapter Introduction) (Jud 1:1-4) The apostle exhorts to stedfastness in the faith. (Jud 1:5-7) The danger of being infected by false professors, and the dreadful punishme...

Matthew Henry: Jude (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The General Epistle of Jude This epistle is styled (as are some few others) general or Catholic, be...

Matthew Henry: Jude 1 (Chapter Introduction) We have here, I. An account of the penman of this epistle, a character of the church, the blessings and privileges of that happy society (Jud 1:1,...

Barclay: Jude (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO THE LETTER OF JUDE The Difficult And Neglected Letter It may well be said that for the great majority of modern readers reading the l...

Barclay: Jude 1 (Chapter Introduction) What It Means To Be A Christian (Jud_1:1-2) The Call Of God (Jud_1:1-2 Continued) Defending The Faith (Jud_1:3) The Peril From Within (Jud_1:4) ...

Constable: Jude (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical background Traditionally the writer of this epistle was Judas,...

Constable: Jude (Outline) Outline I. Introduction vv. 1-2 II. The purpose of this epistle vv. 3-4 ...

Constable: Jude Jude Bibliography Alford, Henry. The Greek Testament. 4 vols. London: Rivingtons, 1859-1861. Ba...

Haydock: Jude (Book Introduction) THE CATHOLIC EPISTLE OF ST. JUDE, THE APOSTLE. INTRODUCTION. This Epistle, as we find by Eusebius (lib. iii. History of the Church, chap. xx...

Gill: Jude (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JUDE That this epistle was written by Jude, one of the twelve apostles of Christ, and not by Jude the fifteenth bishop of Jerusalem...

Gill: Jude 1 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JUDE 1 The writer of this epistle describes himself by his name, Jude; by his spiritual condition, "a servant of Christ"; and by hi...

College: Jude (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION One writer calls Jude "the most neglected book in the New Testament." One seldom hears sermons, Bible classes, or devotional readings fr...

College: Jude (Outline) OUTLINE I. ADDRESS AND GREETING - 1-2 II. REASON FOR WRITING - 3-4 III. JUDGMENT OF THE UNGODLY - 5-19 A. Three Biblical Examples of Ungod...

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