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2Peter
3:1-6 Commentary |
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2 Peter 3:1
This is
now,
beloved, the
second
letter I am
writing to you
in
which I am
stirring up
your
sincere
mind by
way of
reminder, (NASB:
Lockman) |
Greek:
Tauten
ede
agapetoi,
deuteran
humin
grapho (1SPAI)
epistolen,
en
hais
diegeiro (1SPAI)
humon
en
hupomnesei
ten
eilikrine
dianoian,
Amplified:
BELOVED, I am now writing you this second letter. In [both of] them I
have stirred up your unsullied (sincere) mind by way of remembrance, (Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
NET:
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:
(NET
Bible)
NJB:
My dear friends, this is the second letter I have written to you,
trying to awaken in you by my reminders an unclouded understanding. (NJB)
NLT:
This is my second letter to you, dear friends, and in both of them I
have tried to stimulate your wholesome thinking and refresh your
memory. (NLT
- Tyndale House)
Phillips: This
is the second letter I have written to you, dear friends of mine, and
in both of them I have tried to stimulate you, as men with minds
uncontaminated by error, by simply reminding you of what you really
know already. (Phillips:
Touchstone)
Wuest:
This already, divinely loved ones, is a second letter I am writing to
you, in which I am stirring up your unsullied mind by way of
remembrance (Eerdmans)
Young's Literal: This, now,
beloved, a second letter to you I write, in both which I stir up your
pure mind in reminding you, |
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THIS IS NOW
BELOVED: Tauten ede, agapetoi:
Illustrations related to 2 Peter
3:1-6
2 Peter 3:1-13 Are You Ready?
2 Peter 3:2-15 Mount St. Helens Syndrome
2 Peter 3:3-4 Beyond
What We Can See
2 Peter 3:4 Fire Mountain
2 Peter 3:4 Fun Loving Audience
2 Peter 3:7 Rainbows
2 Peter 3:1
Devotional
Hiebert reminds us that this
book naturally divides into three parts clearly marked by the chapter
divisions...
The first chapter portrays the
nature of the Christian life with its challenge to continuing growth and
maturity, built on the sure foundation of God’s revelation. The
spiritual growth and maturity of the readers will be their best
safeguard against the moral and doctrinal perversions which will
confront them in the dangerous days ahead.
Chapter 2 is a ringing polemic
against the depraved false teachers who will seek to mislead God’s
people, while chapter 3 deals with the denial of the return of Christ by
immoral mockers.
In the third chapter Peter
refutes the mockers’ denial of Christ’s return (2 Peter 3:1-7), presents
the correct view concerning Christ’s return (2 Peter 3:8-13), and
concludes with timely exhortation to his readers in view of the dark and
dangerous days facing them (2 Peter 3:14-18). These concluding
exhortations readily fall into two parts. The two exhortations in 2
Peter 3:14-16 are linked to the thought of the eschatological future
prominent in this chapter, while the two final exhortations in 2 Peter
3:17-18a gather up the themes of chapters 2 and 1, respectively.
As Mayor observes Peter Peter “turns
away from the Libertines and their victims” in the second chapter to
those who Wuest terms
"divinely-loved ones."
Beloved (27)
(agapetos) (See
related word
agape) means dear, dear friend, dear to one's heart or
very much loved and expresses strong love for and affection toward his
readers (cf first use in Scripture describing Abraham's love for Isaac
in the
Septuagint - LXX, the Greek translation of the Hebrew OT
= Gen 22:2).
Agapetos was used by our Heavenly Father describing His
Son (Mt 3:17, 12:18, 17:5, Mk 1:11, 9:7, Lk 3:22, 9:35, cp Mk 12:6, Lk
20:13)
and so clearly agapetos conveys the
thought of one who is in a very special relationship with another. And
so Peter reminds his readers that he prized and valued them. He lets his
heart go out to them and draws their hearts to him.
People
don't care how much you know until they know how much you care!
Six
of the 61 NT uses of agapetos (click
2Peter including 3:8, 3:14 and 3:17)
are in this brief epistle.
Agapetos is used only to believers as united with
God or with each other in the bonds of holy love and is never
descriptive of non-believers.
Agapetos declares Peter's
pastoral concern toward his "flock" which was manifest by a
lofty, even sacrificial love, a love that desires and seeks their
highest good.
What a contrast is
the tender and moving term "beloved"
in the context of the resounding denunciation of false teachers in the
preceding chapter.
The NIV translation as “friends” is not strong enough.
Matthew Henry adds that Peter's opening
statement in this chapter...
Expresses
his special affection and tenderness for them, by calling them beloved,
hereby evidencing that he added to godliness brotherly-kindness, as he
had exhorted them to do. Ministers must be examples of love and
affection, as well as life and conversation.
THE SECOND LETTER I AM WRITING TO YOU: deuteran humin grapho (1SPAI)
epistolen: (2Co 13:2 1Pe 1:1,2 )
The second
letter - The most natural conclusion is that the first letter he
wrote is a reference to First Peter. However Stedman points out
that...
First Peter is not really a letter of
reminder as he suggests here, and it is sent to a wide range of readers
living in five different provinces of the Empire (see 1Peter 1:1) while
this letter seems addressed to a single church (or closely situated
churches) whose people and circumstances Peter knows well. For these
reasons many take the first letter to be a letter written to the same
readers but which is now lost to us. It would be similar to the
reference Paul makes in 1Corinthians. 5:9 to a previous letter which is
also lost.
Letter (1992)(epistole from
epi = upon + stello = send) means a transmitted
message, the Greek giving us the English word epistle and
here signifying a letter with apostolic authority. If you read the
commentaries, you may note that some interpreters feel that "second"
suggests that there is lost "first" epistle. Although one cannot
exclude that conjectural possibility, it certainly seems more natural
and probable that the first epistle is Peter's first letter in the NT
canon.
Calvin
comments...
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.
IN WHICH I AM STIRRING UP: en
hais diegeiro (1SPAI): (2Peter 1:13, 14, 15; 2Ti 1:6)
Calvin
comments on stirring up writing 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.
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.
Stirring
up
(1326)
(diegeiro from diá = intensifies verb +
egeíro = raise, rouse) means to wake up fully, arouse (lit.
or fig.) as from sleep (literal or spiritual).
Mt1:24 Mk 4:38,39 Lk 8:24 Jn 6:18
2Pe1:13 2Pe 3:1
wake up fully, arouse (lit. or fig.) as from sleep (literal or
spiritual) Mt1:24; Mk4:38, 39; Lu8:24
Present tense
indicates Peter's desire was to continually awaken his readers and
to
simulate (their) wholesome thinking. (NLT)
It makes one
think that ringing through his mind must have been the words of Jesus to
Peter
when once you have turned again, strengthen your brothers" (Lk
22:32)
So Peter seeks to
fully arouse his brethren from their spiritual sluggishness. He is
saying don't let the delay of our Lord's return cause you to "nod of"
spiritually. He is saying that the Lord's return is ever nigh and that
such a mindset affects one's conduct.
Martin Luther
(1483-1546) was looking for His return and this stimulated him to
write...
The darkness grows thicker around us,
and godly servants of the Most High become rarer and more rare. Impiety
and licentiousness are rampant throughout the world, and we live like
pigs, like wild beasts, devoid of all reason. But a voice will soon be
heard thundering forth: ‘Behold, the bridegroom cometh!’ God will not be
able to bear this wicked world much longer, but will come, with the
dreadful day, and chastise the scorners of his Word.”
If Martin Luther
felt that the Lord’s return was near almost 500 years ago, what should
we think today who are that much closer to His second advent!
Later in this
chapter Peter reminds the readers that...
according to His promise we are
looking for new heavens and a new earth, in which righteousness
dwells. Therefore, beloved, since you look for these things,
be diligent to be found by Him in peace, spotless and blameless (see
notes
2 Peter 3:13;
14)
Observe the verbs
that are underlined in this passage - looking, look, be
diligent. Do you see the relationship between how what you are
looking for will (or should) influence how you then live (or what/who
you are living for)?
Peter's point is
that if we keep these precious promises at the forefront of our mind and
truly believe them, the Spirit will sanctify us in the truth, God's Word
(cf John 17:17) (here the precious promise of Christ's return and
consummation of all events in Christ). What you truly believe will
determine how you behave. Creed should always impact conduct. Belief and
behavior go hand in hand. Peter is very practical in this section and
says that if we are confident and expectant regarding the certainty the
real "brave new world" of righteousness (that which God demands and
which ultimately only He can provide, which is exactly what Peter says
will happen one day when "righteousness dwells". What a glorious day
that will be! Hallelujah!). As we contemplate the promise of this future
righteousness, we should be strongly motivated and inspired to live
in peace, spotless and blameless. No, we won't carry out these goals
perfectly in this life, if our minds are stirred up by such truth, we
will be far more likely to work our our salvation in fear and trembling
(Philippians 2:12-note)
If you have been a
believer for any length of time, you are all too painfully aware of how
easy it is to become accustomed to God’s truth and to take it for
granted to the point that we are lulled to sleep by it rather than
stimulated to love and good deeds by it!
Do you remember Eutychus who
fell sleep listening to surely one of the most erudite, anointed
preachers who ever lived? Luke records the episode in Acts 20...
And on the first day of the week,
when we were gathered together to break bread, Paul began talking to
them, intending to depart the next day, and he prolonged his message
until midnight. 8 And there were many lamps in the upper room where we
were gathered together. 9 And there was a certain young man named
Eutychus sitting on the window sill, sinking into a deep sleep;
and as Paul kept on talking, he was overcome by sleep and fell down
from the third floor, and was picked up dead. 10 But Paul went down
and fell upon him and after embracing him, he said, "Do not be troubled,
for his life is in him." (Acts 20:7-10)
Peter does not
want for his readers to suffer the fate of Eutychus! And so here we see
his purpose for writing this epistle -- to arouse
his readers (cf 2Pe 1:12; 13; 14; 15-notes
2Pe 1:12;
13;
14;
15).
He arouses them that they might be protected from false teachers. One of
the best defenses against false doctrine is a recall and appropriation
of the truths we already know. In other words, we don't need "new" or
"deeper" truths to stand against the lies of the darkness. There is a
parallel thought in Jeremiah's admonishment of faithless Judah:
Stand by the ways and see and ask
for the ancient paths, where the good way is, and walk in
it and you shall find rest for your souls. But they said, 'We will not
walk in it. (Jer 6:16)
THE FOUL FRUIT
OF SPECIOUS SPIRITUALITY
The modern
evangelical church in the new millennium (2000 and counting), is in
grave danger of stepping off of the ancient paths (Je 6:16, cp Is
35:8) especially as it seeks to "emerge" from the tried and true
old paths (cp Jehovah's words to Israel in Jer 18:15 - things have not
changed much because man's heart is still as deceitful as ever Jer
17:9). Bob DeWaay discusses one of many examples of modern
deceptive bypaths in his critique of the slippery slope of specious
(superficially plausible, but actually wrong. Deceptively attractive and
alluring having a false look of truth or genuineness!) spirituality
known as
Theophostic Ministry.
I am aware of a well known church that sowed the seeds of this false
teaching and reaped the corrupting, destructive fruit for years
thereafter (Ga 6:7, 8). Beloved, we need to hold fast to the mantra
"Take no prisoners!" (cp 2Co 10:3, 4, 5-note;
Col 2:8, 9, 10-note)
in regard to questionable teaching and hold it up to the plumbline of
God's Word (Acts 17:11-note,
1Th 5:21, 22-note,
1Jn 4:1, Mt 10:16). In the example I mentioned above, the tragedy is
that several members of that local body began to feel "uneasy" about the
"mystical" prayer practices almost 3 years before the exodus of a
significant number of leading families. To add to the tragedy is the
fact that the elders of the church were clearly and directly alerted to
this potential danger and were even provided with Scriptural
documentation from another respected church that had seen fit to
"jettison" theophostic practices from their body. Unfortunately the
elders literally turned the proverbial deaf ear to the warnings, most
likely because some of the wives of the elders were involved in this
practice! (cp Paul's repeated warning below - "from among your own
selves") And as a result no action was taken (those who expressed their
discernment were never again contacted!) and the reaping of rotten fruit
became the inevitable result, a result which could have been avoided if
the shepherds had been guarding the sheep! (Mt 7:15, 16-note,
Mt 7:17, 18, 19, 20-note,
cp Jn 21:15, 16, 17 - tend...shepherd...tend
- all
present imperative
commands calling for continual attention including the feeding [KJV
translates the command to "feed"
all 3x] His Word of Truth, 2Ti 2:15-note).
Elders are called to guard the
flock and when they do not, the flock will surely suffer.
Paul knew the vital importance of this principle and exhorted the elders
at Ephesus in his last personal contact with them...
"Be
on guard (present
imperative =
continual command - Why? There will be continual infiltration by subtle
"insurgents"!) for yourselves and for all the flock, among which the
Holy Spirit has made you overseers (episkopos
[word study]), to shepherd the church of God which He
purchased with His own blood. 29 "I know that after my departure (Why
didn't they come when Paul was present?) savage wolves will come in
among you (Where do they come from?! What do they do?), not sparing
the flock; 30 and from among your own selves men will arise (Why does he
repeat himself?), speaking perverse (twisting or distorting the meaning
or sense of) things, to draw away the disciples (the learners) after
them. 31 "Therefore (Because the wolves leaving their lair and on the
prowl for stragglers!) be
on the alert
present imperative
= continual command - Why? False teachers will continue to attempt to
infiltrate and influence the flock!), remembering (present
tense =
continually remembering. Why? If you're like me, you are prone to
forget, especially warning passages because they make us uncomfortable
and we'd rather not talk about them!) that night and day for a period of
three years I did not cease to admonish each one with tears (How
passionate was Paul about the integrity of Christ's Body?!
Am I likewise?).
32 "And now I commend (paratithemi
= literally set near = a banking term for depositing something safely!)
you (note who is being set near and what they are being set
near??) to God and to the word of His grace (Not meetings, not
conferences, not great theological works or the newest church fad for
church growth, but THE LIVING AND ABIDING WORD by which [and only by
which] shepherds and sheep are both daily sanctified in answer to Jesus'
prayer - Jn 17:17, cp 1Pe 2:1-note,
[Note verse 1 must be invoked before verse 2 can take effect!] 1Pe 2:2
note-
Observe verse 2 especially - no Word, no growth in respect to
salvation =
"present tense salvation" or
sanctification), which is
able (dunamai
= has the inherent power [present
tense =
continuously] - the Word is like a living and abiding seed - plant it
and know that it always has the inherent power) to build you up and to
give you the inheritance among all those who are sanctified. (Acts
20:28, 29, 30, 31, 32-see
notes) (compare how important it is to have elders who
have a good grasp of God's Word - Titus 1:9-note)
Peter's
point is that the genuine church comprised of born again men and women
needs to be aroused regularly lest the enemy find us asleep and take
advantage of our spiritual lethargy (and laziness).
As an aside two
good tests to enable you to exercise spiritual discernment include:
(1). Will it make you or others stumble? (Mk 9:42, 43, 45, 47; Lk
17:2) (2) Will I be ashamed if Jesus should return? (1Jn 2:28,
1Jn 3:2-note,
1Jn 3:3-note,
1Jn 3:21; 4:17).
Illustration
you've probably heard - "The American Banking Association once
sponsored a two-week training program to help tellers detect counterfeit
bills. The program was unique--never during the two-week training did
the tellers even look at a counterfeit bill, not did they listen to any
lectures concerning the characteristics of counterfeit bills....All they
did for two weeks was handle authentic currency, hour after hour and day
after day, until they were so familiar with the true that they could not
possibly be fooled by the false." (Ben Patterson, Waiting Downers Grove:
InterVarsity Press, 1989, p. 153.)
Wayne Barber explains what it
means to stir up...
Note
first that the same verb "stirring
up" (diegeiro) used
in 2 Peter 3:1 is used twice in the following verses and helps
give us a picture Peter is conveying by using this verb
Mk 4:38 Jesus Himself was in the stern,
asleep on the cushion; and they WOKE (diegeiro) Him and said to
Him, "Teacher, do You not care that we are perishing?" 39 And He
BEING AROUSED (STIRRED UP) (diegeiro) rebuked the wind and said to
the sea, "Hush, be still." And the wind died down and it became
perfectly calm.
So what is the picture of that is being stirred up? First, you have to awaken and
secondly you don't just wake up, but you also "put it in gear"
so to speak so that
the appropriate action follows. Peter is saying "I want to wake you
up, get you off the world's "soft rock AM band" (this is a terminology Dr
Wayne Barber frequently uses to depict "worldly, secular, humanistic,
fleshly, self centered" thinking & thoughts) and onto God's
classic FM band". With your mind now "renewed" by a true knowledge, you
are able to get back on the "highway of holiness" walking in a manner
worthy of your Lord, not being drawn away by false & deceptive ("AM")
doctrine. But there are times when the circumstances in our life simply
seem to sweep in & overwhelm us and we lose heart (Lk 18:1, 2Co
4:16, Gal 6:9, Heb 12:3-note) and
we are tempted to "turn to the AM band" (the world's way of handling
trying circumstances).
What are we to do in those times when we are walking in darkness & seem
to have no light?
(Isa 50:10,11)
God through the prophet Isaiah says if we get in darkness and have no
light, don't go out and build your own fires ("AM band"). No, Isaiah
says "Let him trust in the name of the Jehovah and rely on his God." (cf
Pr 18:10-note)
remaining on the "FM" band even though there may be some "static"
from our circumstances.
How's Peter going to "STIR THEM UP"? By reminding them.
HOW MANY TIMES DO WE NEED TO BE REMINDED OF THE THINGS GOD HAS ALREADY
TAUGHT US! The principle is that we don't ever really "possess" this knowledge.
This knowledge "possesses" us! The moment we think we've got "IT",
we have lost it and the truths we're having the hardest time with
right now in our walk are the ones possibly we thought we already
knew. Are you living on God's "FM" band? True spiritual
knowledge (genuine gnosis) is going
to effect and govern the way you live. It this gnosis does
not affect your lifestyle you are playing church, pretending to do Bible study & in some ways more deceived
then the individual who totally rejects the gospel. Genuine gnosis is going to keep your conscience pure. From
a clean
conscience will flow your convictions and out of your convictions will flow your
lifestyle. Peter is reminding us that we already "know" something and
that we need to get back on that FM band that we know and start living like we ought to live. True spiritual knowledge will give us the means of growth (2Pe 1:3, 4-note,
2Pe 3:18-note),
the means of discernment and an urgency that will constrain our
behavior and cause us to discipline ourselves for godly living.
Remember how easy it is to "switch channels". You can be
on the "spiritual FM band" in church or in Precept Bible study and you can switch over to the
"AM
fleshly band" the moment you arrive home.
Knowledge has got to be something you are learning out of obedience
and then that knowledge will stabilize you and stir you up when you
remember what God has already taught you.
YOUR SINCERE MIND: humon en hupomnesei ten eilikrine dianoian: (Ps
24:4; 73:1; Mt 5:8; 1Ti 5:22; 1Pe 1:22)
minds uncontaminated by error (Phillips)
trying to awaken in you by my
reminders an unclouded understanding (New Jerusalem Bible)
I seek to revive in your sincere
minds certain memories (Weymouth0
reminders to stimulate you to
wholesome thinking (NIV )
Your sincere mind - Peter
credits his readers as possessing the quality of mind which signifies
that he considers them to be genuine believers.
Your sincere mind is also a dramatic contrast to
the deceived minds of the
false teachers who as
Barclay says
would refuse to be stirred up, would
scorn any reminding that Peter could offer, and would only the more
strenuously cling to its false ideas."
Sincere (1506)
(eilikrines
from
heíle = shining or splendor of the sun + kríno = judge,
discern = but see possible alternative derivation below) literally means
that which is judged by sunlight' (compare the "Son's light" as when we
all ''appear before the bema of Christ'' in 2 Co 5:10-note) Being tested by sunlight
something is shown to genuine, pure, sincere, uncontaminated, unmixed by
seductive influences of the world, the flesh, and the devil.
Eilikrines describes that which is free from spot or blemish such a
degree as to bear examination in full splendor of sun.
Alternatively, some say that
eilikrines may be derived from eilein which means to whirl
round and round as in a sieve and so to sift until every impurity is
extracted. On that basis the Christian character is cleansed of all evil
until it is altogether pure. The picture is like a winnowing process
that removes chaff which leaves that which is unalloyed or unmixed,
figuratively here referring to moral and ethical purity.
Sincere mind was a secular phrase
used by Plato referring to ethical purity or pure reason, uncontaminated by the
seductive
influence of the senses.
Here Peter describes a mind that is
unmixed and unadulterated. It conveys the thought of a mind
characterized by moral and ethical purity, unsullied by vices and
heresies. Peter tells his readers, that they have a pure mind, which is
uncontaminated and unmixed by the seductive influences of the world, the
flesh, and the devil. How different the true believers were from the
corrupt and apostate false teachers in chapter 2.
Eilikrines
is rarely used in secular Greek but one use describes fire, the
purest thing of all and another use describes a 'total' eclipse
of the sun.
Moffatt
translates eilikrines as "transparent" in Phil 1:10-note and as
pure here in 2Peter 3:1.
Vine writes
that eilikrines
expresses that moral quality by which
all that is said and done is consistent with convictions. (Vine,
W. Collected writings of W. E. Vine. Nashville: Thomas Nelson
)
As stated above although there is not
complete agreement on the etymology of eilikrines, the word does appear
to be derived from the combination of heile indicating the sun's rays
plus krino meaning to judge. So literally eilikrines
means "sun judged". What does this practice refer to?
James Montgomery Boice
explains eilikrines...
The second prerequisite of a fruitful
life is that the life must be pure or free of obstructions. The word
Paul uses means “oven tested.” This does not mean that we must be
perfect, for none of us is. But it does mean that our lives must be open
before God and before others. There must be no hypocrisy. In ancient
times the biggest industry in the world was the pottery industry. And
pottery varied in quality just as cars, office supplies, or household
goods vary today. The cheapest pottery was thick and solid and did not
require much skill to make. It is found everywhere at archaeological
sites. The finest pottery was thin. It had a clear color, and it brought
a high price. Fine pottery was very fragile both before and after
firing, and it would often crack in the oven. Cracked pottery should
have been thrown away. But dishonest dealers were in the habit of
filling in the cracks with a hard pearly wax that would blend in with
the color of the pottery. This made the cracks practically undetectable
in the shops, especially when painted or glazed; but the wax was
immediately detectable when the pottery was held up to light, especially
the sun (Ed note: cracks would show up as darker lines). It was
said that the artificial element was detected by “sun-testing.” (Ed
note: "sun-judged") Honest dealers marked their finer product by the
caption sine cera—“without wax.”
(Peter) is saying that the
flaws in the lives of believers must not be covered up with wax. Our
lives are not perfect. In this life we will always have flaws, but we
must not disguise them artificially. We must be sincere. God’s love will
not flow through a Christian whose life is a sham. Hypocrisy will stop
the flow. Fortunately, however, we may also say that God’s love will
flow through an honest Christian, no matter how marred the vessel. Paul
says, “We have this treasure in jars of clay to show that this
all-surpassing power is from God and not from us” (2Cor 4:7-note).
Moreover, we look forward to the day when what is begun on earth, with
all its imperfections, will be made perfect in heaven. There we will be
sterling examples of God’s fine workmanship. (Philippians
An Expositional Commentary)
Webster's 1828 American Dictionary
of the English Language (also cited in Collins English Dictionary)
records that the English word sincere is "from Latin
sincerus, which is said to be composed of sine,
without, and cera, wax; as if applied originally to pure
honey."
Indeed, God wants His people to have
"sun-judged minds" (cp "Son judged!"), not those in which
their "sin spots" have been covered over but which have been
specifically confessed and fully forsaken.
John MacArthur adds that...
Even as it was wise for customers in the ancient marketplaces to give
all pieces of pottery the “sunlight test” by holding it up to the sun,
our lives need to be tested for the "wax of hypocrisy". (The
Power of Integrity Building a Life Without Compromise)
In the church
are those who appear as "fine pottery" but are not. There are cracks of
sin in their lives filled with the wax of religious ceremony and
activity. When held up to the light of God’s Word, the presence or
absence of sinful cracks will be apparent. That’s why it is so important
for us to feed daily on Scripture (Ps 119:9, 10, 11-note)
and to allow our lives to be shaped by its power (Heb 5:14-note).
As followers of Christ who desire to
be honorable vessels used by Him (2Ti 2:20-note),
we need to cleanse ourselves, so that we might indeed "be a vessel for
honor, sanctified, useful to the Master, prepared for every good work."
(2Ti 2:21-note)
Beloved "vessel" of the Lord, how
would your life stand up to the "sun judged" ("Son judged") test?
Barclay adds several piercing
questions regarding eilikrines...
The question that this word asks is,
Could our inmost thoughts stand being brought out into the full light of
day? Could our inmost motives stand being dragged out into the full
glare of revealing light? To put the matter at its highest, could the
inmost thoughts of our minds and motions of our heart stand the scrutiny
of the light of God's eye? The Christian purity is a purity which is
sifted until the last admixture of evil is gone, a purity which has
nothing to conceal and whose inmost thoughts and desires will bear the
full glare of the light of day.
(Barclay,
W: The Daily Study Bible Series. The Westminster Press
or
The New Daily Study Bible New Testament - Logos)
Mind
(1271)(dianoia from
dianoéomai = to agitate in
mind in turn from dia = separation + noeo = to think over)
means thinking through something, meditating, reflecting. It refers to
the intellect, moral understanding or the way of thinking. It is the
faculty of thinking, comprehending, and reasoning. Dianoia is the
seat of perception and thinking, the faculty of understanding, feeling,
desiring.
TDNT writes
that dianoia is the...
common word for “thought” has such
varied senses as (1) thought as a function, (2) the power of thought,
the thinking consciousness, (3) the way of thought, (4) the result of
thought, e.g., thought, idea, opinion, or judgment, (5) resolve of
intention, and (6) the meaning of words or statements. The
LXX
uses it as an equivalent of
kardia, and the usage is much the same in other Jewish works. (Kittel,
G., Friedrich, G., & Bromiley, G. W. Theological Dictionary of the New
Testament. Eerdmans)
Dianoia refers to the mind
that takes time to think through a matter, meditatively and
reflectively. As the Lutheran commentator Lenski says...
The thinking mind receives the
reminding and does the remembering but the adjective (sincere) is
important.
This is a mind that is disposed to received Peter's reminder and to ponder its significance. As a
sincere mind
it is free from wrong considerations and thus dramatically contrasts
with the
mind of the false teachers in Chapter 2 and the mockers in Chapter 3 who
refuse to be stirred up instead scorning any reminder of coming
judgment.
Believers of all people are to have
"sun (Son) tested" minds that are morally and ethically pure and free of
sensual thoughts and passions. To the saints at Philippi Paul wrote...
Finally, brethren, whatever is true,
whatever is honorable, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is
lovely, whatever is of good repute, if there is any excellence and if
anything worthy of praise,
let your mind dwell (present
imperative =
command to seek to make this your habitual practice) on these things. (see
note
Philippians 4:8).
Child of God, how is your mind? What
thoughts, images, and other input have traversed your mind this past
week? The information
overload that so characterizes this present evil age, especially in the
form of visual input from television, movies, and the internet is
typically godless and degrading, and thus calls for all believers to be
diligent to guard the "eye gate" of their minds.
Lenski
says Peter's
own pure mind contacts their (his reader's)
pure mind, (and) his reminder thus produces their effective remembering. All
of the apostles were somehow masterful psychologists!
Spurgeon comments that...
The purest minds need stirring up at
times. It would be a great pity to stir up impure minds. That would only
be to do mischief; but pure minds may be stirred as much as you please,
and the more the better. There are hallowed memories in the minds of all
Christians; but those memories are apt to lie asleep, and it is well to
ring the alarm bell, and wake up all the memories within the believer’s
heart, even as Peter did when he wrote, “I stir up your pure minds by
way of remembrance.”
BY WAY OF REMINDER: en hupomnesei: (Heb13:6)
The
Net Bible says that Peter desired
to stimulate (their) wholesome thinking and refresh (their) memory.
By
way of
translates the Greek preposition "en" or in English "in"
which more literally reads in reminder or in reminding.
Reminder
(hupomnesis from hupó = under +
mimnesko = to remind) means a reminding or recollection, a
remembrance.
Hupomnesis - 3x in 3v -
2Ti1:5; 2Pe 1:13; 3:1
Peter sought to impress on his readers the truth they
already knew so that their sanctified reason and spiritual discernment
would be able to detect and refute the purveyors of false doctrine. As
someone has well said, men more frequently require to be reminded than
informed! Note the prefix "hupo" which means "under".
The idea then is that once they were awakened, everything that they had
previously learned gets up under them, continues to keep them stirred
and continues to keep them stable.
Application - It isn’t enough
just to quote a verse of Scripture. It must be memorized, meditated on,
or repeated, until it captivates our minds and grips our souls. We win
the battle of joy in your mind by focusing on the Holy, wholesome
Scriptures.
J. Vernon McGee comments on our
tendency to forget:
A man said to me, “I have a good
memory. My problem is that my forgettery is even better.” Well, many of
us have that same problem, and Simon Peter could tell you about it from
his own experience. On that night when he denied our Lord while he was
warming his hands by the enemy’s fire, he forgot all about the fact that
the Lord Jesus had said that he would deny Him. The record tells us,
“And the Lord turned, and looked upon Peter. And Peter remembered the
word of the Lord, how he had said unto him, Before the cock crow, thou
shalt deny me thrice” (Lk 22:61). Peter had forgotten all about it, you see. He had the same frailties
that we have, and so he wants to stir up their (and our) sincere minds
by way of remembrance." (Listen to Dr McGee's Mp3 on
2 Peter 3:1) |
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THAT YOU SHOULD REMEMBER:
mnesthenai (APN): (2Pe 1:19, 20, 21; Lk 1:70; 24:27; 24:44 Acts
3:18; 3:24, 25, 26, 10:43; 28:23; 1Pe 1:10, 11, 12; Rev 19:10)
Remember
(mimnesko) means to
bring to mind, recall information from memory, recollect, or think of again.
Mimnesko - 23x in 23v - Matt
5:23; 26:75; 27:63; Luke 1:54, 72; 16:25; 23:42; 24:6, 8; John 2:17, 22;
12:16; Acts 10:31; 11:16; 1 Cor 11:2; 2 Tim 1:4; Heb 2:6; 8:12; 10:17;
13:3; 2 Pet 3:2; Jude 1:17; Rev 16:19. NAS = recall(1),
remember(13), remembered(8), remembrance(1).
The
aorist tense signifies effective action and the infinitive mood expresses purpose. What
is the purpose?
Peter desires his readers to hold fast to their first beliefs for he had
just warned them that false teachers would bring in destructive
doctrines that were sinister, sensual and seductive.
Lenski says that...
Reminding causes
effective remembering in those who are reminded.
Christians must be reminded of the
importance of sound doctrine and especially the truths that relate to the
return of Christ. Prophetic teaching must not lull us to sleep but
instead should awaken us to live godly lives and to seek to win the lost (Ro
13:11-note,
Ro 13:12-note,
Ro 13:13, 14-note).
John Piper
summarizes this section writing
that...
In 2Peter 1:16-note Peter had already taken the
offensive against the denial of the second coming. He said, "We did not
follow cleverly devised myths when we made known to you the power and
coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but we were eyewitnesses of his
majesty." That is, Christ certified to us that he was indeed going to
return in bodily glory, by revealing to us the glory of his transformed
body in a preview on the mount of transfiguration. Therefore we have the
prophetic word of the second coming made more sure and we should keep it
before us like a lamp shining in a dark place until the day of his
coming dawns, and the day star of glory rises in your hearts. (Read the
complete sermon
Where Is the Promise of His Appearing?)
THE WORDS SPOKEN BEFOREHAND: ton proeiremenon (RPPNPG) rhematon:
Literally "the before spoken utterances"
The first things Peter wants his readers to effectively remember are the
Old Testament prophecies.
Spurgeon
comments on the words writing that...
Peter believed in the inspiration of
the very “words” of Scripture; he was not one of those precious
“advanced thinkers” who would, if they could, tear the very soul out
of the Book, and leave us nothing at all; but he wrote, “That ye may be
mindful of the words” — the very words — “which were spoken before by
the holy prophets.” “Oh!” says one, “but words do not signify; it is
the inward sense that is really important.” Exactly so; that is just
what the feel said about egg-shells. Me said that they did not signify;
it was only the inward life-germ of the chick within that was important;
so he broke all the shells, and thereby destroyed the life that was
within. We contend for every word of the Bible, and believe in the
verbal and plenary inspiration of Holy Scripture, believing indeed that
there can be no other inspiration but that. If the words could be taken
from us, the sense itself would be gone.
Calvin adds
that...
By these words he intimates that we
have enough in the writings of the prophets, and in the gospel, to stir
us up, provided we be as diligent as it behooves us, in meditating on
them; and that our minds sometimes contract a rust, or become bedimmed
through darkness, is owing to our sloth. That God may then continually
shine upon us, we must devote ourselves to that study: let our faith at
the same time acquiesce in witnesses so certain and credible (referring
to the Old and New Testament writings). For when we have the prophets
and apostles agreeing with us, nay, as the ministers of our faith, and
God as the author, and angels as approvers, there is no reason that the
ungodly, all united, should move us from our position. By the
commandment of the apostles he means the whole doctrine in which
they had instructed the faithful (this is certainly a possible
interpretation which is discussed more in the following section).
Words
(4487)
(rhema
from verb rheo = to speak - to
say, speak or utter definite words) refers to the spoken word,
especially a word as uttered by a living voice. Laleo is another
word translated speak but it refers only to uttering a sound whereas
rheo refers to uttering a definite intelligible word. Rhema
refers to any sound produced by the voice which has a definite meaning.
It focuses upon the content of the communication.
For example in Luke we read...
And they understood none of these
things, and this saying (rhema) was hidden from them, and they
did not comprehend the things that were said. (Luke 18:34)
In the plural
rhema ("words"), means saying, speech or discourse.
The significance
of rhema (as distinct from logos) is exemplified in the
injunction to take the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God,
Eph 6:17
And take THE HELMET OF SALVATION, and
the sword of the Spirit, which is the word (rhema) of God. (See
note
Ephesians 6:17)
In Hebrews 11 we
see rhema is a creating word...
By faith we understand that the
worlds were prepared by the word of God, so that what is seen was
not made out of things which are visible. (see note
Hebrews 11:3)
In Hebrews 1
rhema is a upholding word, a word associated with Jesus'
power...
And He is the radiance of His glory
and the exact representation of His nature, and upholds all things by
the word of His power. When He had made purification of sins, He
sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high (see note
Hebrews 1:3)
Spoken beforehand (proereo
from pró = before + eréo = to say, declare)
means to say before, foretell, speak of in advance.
The
perfect tense
emphasizes the permanence of the prophetic utterances and indicates that
the inspired Holy writings of old are still speaking loud and clear! The
point is that God is neither silent nor dead unlike one famous mocking
atheistic philosopher Nietzsche who is both silent and dead!
BY THE HOLY
PROPHETS: hupo ton hagion propheton:
By (hupo)
means through and speaks of the agency or means through which something
is done.
The holy prophets and
the...apostles - Notice that Peter places the OT
prophets and the NT apostles on an equal footing. Holy prophets
are in direct contrast to the unholy false prophets of chapter 2.
Holy (40) (hagios)
means set apart, sanctified, consecrated. The fundamental idea is that
of separation from sin, consecration to God, devotion to service of
Deity, sharing in God’s purity, abstaining from earth’s defilement.
These men of the
Old Testament
were set apart from the secular, profane and evil in this world and
dedicated to the service of God. Their setting apart was in in marked
contrast to the "unholy" false teachers who instead of being set apart
for God were in fact set against Him and His truth.
Prophets (prophetes from próphemi
- tell beforehand in turn from pró = before or forth +
phemí = tell; see study of related word
propheteia) is literally one who tells forth or tells before
hand.
Prophetes defines an individual in the OT who spoke under
divine influence and inspiration and foretold future events (spoke
beforehand). He also
exhorted, reproved, and even threatened individuals or nations (spoke
forth) as the
ambassador of God and the interpreter of His will to men for as Peter
earlier explained...
no prophecy was ever made by an act of human will, but men moved by the
Holy Spirit spoke from God. (see note
2 Peter 1:21)
The
prophet
spoke not his own thoughts but what he received from God, doing so while
yet retaining his own consciousness and personality.
Considering that
in this section Peter is referring to Messiah's return and the time of
the end of the age, his allusion to the Old Testament prophets would
undoubtedly include prophets like Malachi who wrote sobering and
at the same time hopeful prophecies such as...
Behold, the day is coming, burning
like a furnace; and all the arrogant and every evildoer will be chaff;
and the day that is coming will set them ablaze," says the LORD of
hosts, "so that it will leave them neither root nor branch (picturing
the totality of the Lord's judgment for fire usually spares the roots
buried beneath the ground). But for you who fear My name (in
context the believing
remnant
; by way of application a reference to all believers) the sun of
righteousness (KJV rightly capitalizes "Sun" in this phrase that
refers to the Messiah, the "righteous Branch" in Jer 23:5,6) will rise
with healing in its wings (especially healing from sin); and you will go
forth and skip about like calves from the stall (calves that have been
confined "leap for joy" when set free -- so too will genuine believers
at our Lord's return when we are finally glorified and forever free of
even the presence of sin! Hallelujah!). (Malachi 3:1, 2)
AND THE COMMANDMENT OF THE LORD
AND SAVIOR
SPOKEN BY
YOUR APOSTLES: kai tes ton apostolon humon entoles ton kurion kai soteroskai
tes ton apostolon: (2Pet 3:15; 2:21; Ep 2:20; 1Jn 4:6; Jude 1:17)
Commandment
(entole) is the most commonly used of several words meaning commandment
and stresses the authority of the one commanding.
What commandment? One cannot be dogmatic but
the context suggests that the commandment Peter refers to here is to
look for and to be ever ready for His
parousia. Several times in Jesus' last
words to His disciples (the apostles) our Lord commanded them to
be on the alert
(present
imperative - this
is to be a disciple's habitual practice and lifestyle), (why be on the
alert?) for you do not know which day your Lord is coming. (Mt 24:42)
(Literally, the verb be alert means to keep awake and
figuratively to be watchful and vigilant in light of the imminent return
of the Lord.)
Be on the alert
(present
imperative - this
is to be a disciple's habitual practice and lifestyle) then, for you do
not know the day nor the hour. (Mt 25:13)
Take heed
(present
imperative -
continually pay close attention, watching and aware),
keep on the alert
(present
imperative -
literally be sleepless or lie awake conveying the idea of vigilance);
for you do not know when the appointed time is.
Both the OT
prophets and NT apostles made clear and unmistakable utterances
regarding the blessed hope (certainty) of our Lord's return. In fact 25
of 27 NT books directly or indirectly refer to the Second Coming.
Someone has observed that roughly one in every 25 NT verses speaks in
some way of the Second Coming. (See
The Blessed Hope
especially the hope of Messiah)
Lord and Savior - Peter's double designation emphasizes that Jesus is both
Lord and Savior (4
of 7 NT uses of this combined name are in this epistle
click here)
Lord (master, owner)(2962)
(kurios)
from kuros = might or power) has a variety of meanings/uses in
the NT and therefore one must carefully examine the context in order to
discern which sense is intended by the NT author. For example, some
passages use kurios only as a common form of polite address with no
religious/spiritual meaning. The reader should also be aware that in
view of the fact that kurios is used over 9000 times in the
Septuagint (LXX)
and over 700 times in the NT, this discussion of kurios at best only
"skims the surface" of this prodigious, precious word.
At the outset should be noted that in
the NT Jesus is referred to as Lord (Kurios) more
frequently than by any other title. Therefore it behooves us to
understand the truth concerning Jesus as Lord and not allow
ourselves to become side tracked in debate over so-called "Lordship
salvation". The indisputable Biblical facts are that faith in Jesus
saves and Jesus is Lord. The confession of "Jesus is Lord" became
a direct affront to the practice of emperor worship. Certain cities even
built temples for Caesar-worship as was the case in Smyrna where the
command was to honor the emperor by confessing "Caesar is Lord".
To declare "Jesus is Lord" became a crime punishable by death,
resulting in the martyrdom. I think the first century believers
understood "Lordship" in a way modern believers would find it difficult
to comprehend! (cp Jesus' "prophetic" warning in Mt 10:22, 23, 24, 25
where "master" is kurios)
Lord is not
merely a name that composes a title, but signifies a call to action so
that every saint should willingly, reverently bow down to Jesus Christ.
If Christ is our Lord, we are to live under Him, consciously,
continually submitting our wills to him as His loyal, loving
bondservants ("love slaves"), always seeking first His Kingdom and His
righteousness (Mt 6:33-note).
According to this practical working "definition" beloved we all need to
ask ourselves "Is Jesus Christ my Lord?". "Do I arise each day,
acknowledges this is the day the Lord hath made?" (Ps 118:24-note)
"Do I surrender my will to His will as I begin each day?" (cp Ro 12:1-note,
Ro 12:2-note)
Beloved, don't misunderstand. None of us have "arrived" in this area of
Jesus as Lord of our lives. And it is precisely for that reason that
Peter commands us to continually "grow
(present
imperative)
in the grace (unmerited favor, power to live the supernatural, abundant
life in Christ) and knowledge (not just intellectual but
transformational) of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To Him be
the glory, both now and to the day of eternity. Amen." (2Pe 3:18-note)
So do not be discouraged. Don't "throw in the towel" as they say. Keep
on keeping on, pressing (continually =
present tense)
"on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ
Jesus." (Php 3:14-note)
Spurgeon in
his sermon on
Jesus our Lord
writes that...
you will always find that, in
proportion as faith grows, reverence grows. Unbelief is presumptuous,
but faith is always humble. The more you know of Jesus as your Savior,
saving you from sin, the more will you recognize Him also as your
Lord. No one rebels against Christ because he believes in Him; but,
because we believe in Him, He becomes our Lord, and we learn to obey
Him. That is the spirit I long to have reigning in all our hearts, the
spirit of devout, worshipful reverence towards “Jesus our Lord.”...Oh,
that we might suck the sweetness out of these words, “Jesus our Lord”!
George Herbert wrote,-
“How sweetly doth ’My Master’ sound!
My Master!’”
I may alter the words a little, and
say,-
“How sweetly doth Jesus our Lord’
sound! ’Jesus our Lord!’
As
ambergris
leaves a rich scent unto the taster.
So do these words a sweet content,
An oriental fragrancy, ’Jesus our Lord.’”
Savior (4990)
(soter
from
sozo =
rescue from peril, to protect, keep alive, the action involving
preservation of life both physical or spiritual) refers to the agent of
salvation or deliverance, the one who rescues, delivers, saves and
preserves. Anyone who saves or delivers can be called a deliverer or
rescuer (a soter).
Peter says Jesus is
our Savior, Deliverer,
Preserver, Protector, Healer, Who rescues us from danger, suffering and
destruction and brings us into a state of spiritual prosperity.
Spoken by - These words are added by the translators. The Greek text
is more literally translated
and of the command of us the apostles of the Lord and Saviour.
The point is that
the Lord
is the Author of the commandment of the apostles.
Apostles (652)
(apostolos
from apo
= from, denotes separation + stello = send forth) literally means
one sent forth from by another, often with a special commission to
represent another and to accomplish his work. It can be a delegate,
commissioner, ambassador sent out on a mission or orders or commission
and with the authority of the one who sent him.
Apostolos referred to someone who was officially commissioned to a
position or task, such as an envoy. Cargo ships were sometimes called
apostolic, because they were dispatched with a specific shipment for
a specific destination. In secular Greek apostolos was used of an
admiral of a fleet sent out by the king on special assignment.
In the
ancient world a apostle was the personal representatives of the
king, functioning as an ambassador with the king’s authority and
provided with credentials to prove he was the king's envoy.
Peter
and the other NT apostles were the Lord's envoys and missionaries.
As Henry Martyn pioneer missionary to India said
The Spirit of Christ is the spirit of missions and the nearer we get to
Him the more intensely missionary we must become.
In this section Peter points his readers
to both the OT prophets
and the NT apostles, in essence pointing them to the entire Word
of God. The "whole counsel" of God's Word is the only true safeguard for
saints in these latter days characterized by spiritual and moral declension.
Peter had previously explained why these "words" were deserving
of their full attention writing that...
we have the prophetic word made more
sure ("we have the word of prophecy as a surer confirmation of God’s
truth than what we ourselves saw, i.e., Old-Testament testimony is more
convincing than even the voice heard at the transfiguration"), to
which you do well to pay attention as to a lamp shining in a dark place,
until the day dawns and the morning star arises in your hearts. But know
this first of all, that no prophecy of Scripture is a matter of one's
own interpretation, for no prophecy was ever made by an act of human
will, but men moved by the Holy Spirit spoke from God. (see
notes
2 Peter 1:19;
20;
21)
When our enemy
cannot deceive us with lies, he resorts
to sending scoffers who ridicule God's Word, seeking to cause us to
"abandon ship" and to forgo and forget the
very Word they mock, the Word which prophesies of their ultimate defeat
and eternal destruction. Let us hold fast to this faithful Word, for the
only way we can recognize the errors of the mockers is by comparing
their teaching with the teaching of the holy prophets and apostles, i.e.
the scriptures of the Old and New Testaments. As Stedman wisely writes
Scripture is
always the test of error and the ground of confidence for believers.
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2 Peter 3:3
Know
this
first of all,
that in the
last
days
mockers will
come with their
mocking ,
following
after their
own
lusts, (NASB:
Lockman) |
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Greek:
touto
proton
ginoskontes, (PAPMPN)
hoti
eleusontai (3PFMI)
ep'
eschaton
ton
hemeron
[en]
empaigmone
empaiktai
kata
tas
idias
epithumias
auton
poreuomenoi (PMPMPN)
Amplified:
To begin with, you must know and understand this, that scoffers
(mockers) will come in the last days with scoffing, [people who] walk
after their own fleshly desires (Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
NET:
Above all, understand this: in the last days blatant scoffers will
come, being propelled by their own evil urges
(NET
Bible)
NLT:
First, I want to remind you that in the last days there will be
scoffers who will laugh at the truth and do every evil thing they
desire. (NLT
- Tyndale House)
Phillips: First
of all you must realise that in the last days mockers will undoubtedly
come - men whose only guide in life is what they want for themselves
(Phillips:
Touchstone)
Wuest:
knowing this first, that there shall come in the last of the days
mockers with mockery, ordering their manner of life according to their
own personal desires (Eerdmans)
Young's Literal: this first
knowing, that there shall come in the latter end of the days scoffers,
according to their own desires going on, |
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KNOW THIS
FIRST OF ALL: Touto proton ginoskontes (PAPMPN):
Literally "This first knowing"
Moffatt
translates it
To begin with you know that mockers will come with their mockeries in
the last days.
The libertinism of the false teachers in Chapter 2 is following in
Chapter 3 by the denial of Christ's Parousia (Second Coming). Notice how the latter denial "validates" and facilitates the
former lifestyle in their warped thinking. In other words, they act the
way they act because they believe the way they believe. In this case it
is more accurate to state the act the way they do because they disbelief
the truth of God's Word concerning the imminent return of Christ.
Remember that "loose" morals are a reflection of "loose" doctrine in a
Biblical sense. Aberrant creed issues forth in aberrant conduct. Wrong
belief produces wrong behavior.
Peter is about to "shatter" their denial of truth by using divine
inspiration in the form of a prophesy. Peter's words are reminiscent of Jehovah's
rhetorical question to his prophet Jeremiah who was
surrounded by nay saying false prophets...
Is not My word like fire?" declares the
LORD, "and like a hammer which shatters a rock?" (Jer 23:29)
Know (1097)
(ginosko) means to keep knowing (present
tense) by experience. The NASB
makes this verb sound like it is a command and some think it may well
have this force. Certainly Peter wants the facts about last day's
mockers to be a truth we are well acquainted with. As Wayne Barber
reminds us the word "ginosko" speaks of a process of getting spiritual knowledge and primarily
involves obedience to the Word of God. As I obey, (chose to deny my
fleshly way of thinking & chose God's thinking regardless of
what He says) I began to learn
truth and as this truth sinks down into
my life, the final product is gnosis. The process of getting the
finished product, gnosis, is called ginosko.
Peter used a
similar phrase in 2Peter 1:20
know
this
first of all,
that no prophecy of Scripture is a matter of one's own interpretation. (see
notes)
First of all
(proton) can mean the first thing in a list, but in this context means foremost in importance or "above
all". Peter uses this "prioritization" to warn his readers
of the great importance of the arrival of mockers. He is about to state
the preeminent matter in the form of a warning to all believers.
The Amplified
Version nicely conveys this sense of priority translating it as
To begin with,
you must know.
God's Word
Translation similarly
conveys the urgency of the exhortation
First, you must understand this
It is vitally
important both to understand this key characteristic of the last days
("mocking"). Peter did not want his readers to be
surprised, unarmed and confused by these mockers. The "sameness'' of
daily life in the universe may lull one into the deceptive reasoning
that we live in an eternal universe
without a Creator. Christians should be alert to these reactions and not be
bowled over by the arrogant and blasphemous denials of these men but
instead should see in them a definite indication that the end of the age
is nearing, and specifically in context that the Parousia shall come
after the mockers have appeared. Don't be surprised by the coming of the
mockers. Forewarned is forearmed!
THAT IN THE LAST DAYS MOCKERS
WILL COME WITH THEIR MOCKING: ep eschaton ton
hemeron [en] empaigmone eupaiktai: (1Ti 4:1,2; 2Ti 3:1; 1Jn 2:18;
Jude 1:18) (See Torrey's
Topic" "Scorning
& Mocking") (Pr 1:22; 3:34; 14:6; Isa 5:19; 28:14;
29:20; Hos 7:5)
Paul warned
Timothy to...
realize this, that in the last
days difficult times will come. (2Ti 3:1-note)
and to be alert to
the fact that...
the Spirit explicitly says that in
later times some will fall away from the faith, paying attention to
deceitful spirits and doctrines of demons, 2 by means of the hypocrisy
of liars seared in their own conscience as with a branding iron, 3 men
who forbid marriage and advocate abstaining from foods, which God has
created to be gratefully shared (1 Timothy 4:1-3)
In a parallel
passage Jude exhorts believers...
But you, beloved,
ought to remember
(aorist
imperative =
command given with a sense of urgency) the words that were spoken
beforehand by the apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ, that they
were saying to you, "In the last time there shall be mockers,
following after their own ungodly lusts." (Jude 1:17, 18)
The context is the last days,
but Scripture teaches that this scoffing attitude toward God is nothing
new (Isa 5:18,19, Mal 2:17, La 3:14)
and Jesus had warned His disciples (Mt 24:48, Lk 12:45).
We are in "the last days",
that time between the first and second coming of Christ.
When are the
last days? The first coming
of Christ ushered in the last days.
Peter writes that
Christ
has
appeared in these last times for the sake of you” (2Peter 1:20-note
cf 1Jn 2:18)
The writer of Hebrews
amplifies this truth instructing us that God
in these last days
has spoken to us in His Son” (Hebrews 1:2-note)
Peter refers to
the beginning of the last days at Pentecost declaring that...
It shall be in the last days,
God says "that I will pour forth of my Spirit upon all mankind"... (Acts
2:17) (The messianic era was inaugurated, although its complete
fulfillment must await the time of the end).
The last days
have thus lasted nearly two thousand years and are called last
because nothing more is in prospect except the return of Christ in His
Parousia. We are closer
to the "last" of the last days than anyone has even been before.
Does
our lifestyle as "set apart ones" (saints) truly reveal our
understanding of the lateness of the hour? (Ro
13:11;12;13;14-notes
Ro 13:11; 12; 13;14)
Mockers will
come - Literally "scoffers
in their scoffing” or "mockers with mockery". Blatant scoffers
(NET). The somewhat
redundant wording ("mockers in mockery") is a Greek way of adding
emphasis to the mocking.
Spurgeon observed that this
is...
A prophecy which has been abundantly
fulfilled. You need not go far to find them; they come in the form of
living men, and they swarm in the form of their books. They are to be
met with almost everywhere; like the locusts, they fill the air, and
hide the light of the sun: “There shall come in the last days
scoffers”
Every time a blasphemer opens his
mouth to deny the truth of revelation, he will help to confirm us in our
conviction of the very truth which he denies. The Holy Ghost told us by
the pen of Peter that it would be so
Calvin adds that Peter...
calls those scoffers, according to
what is usual in Scripture, who seek to appear witty by showing 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, Ps 1:1 (note) speaks of the seat of scoffers. So David,
in Ps 119:51, complains that he was derided by the proud, because he
attended to God’s law. So Isaiah, in Isa 28:14, 15, 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. Mockers (empaiktes)
is derived from
the verb empaizo which means to play with, trifle
with, deride, mock, scoff.
The verb empaizo is used 13 times in the NT
(Matt 2:16; 20:19; 27:29, 31, 41; Mark 10:34; 15:20, 31; Luke 14:29;
18:32; 22:63; 23:11, 36) all
referring to the mocking of our Lord Jesus Christ. It is therefore
little surprise that if evil men mocked Him at His first coming, they
would mock His prophesied second coming. These individuals "trifle" with
the things of God dealing with them as if they are of no temporal or
eternal import. They show their contempt for Christ's return by
ridiculing and deriding that certainty, their derision motivated
by their insolence, disrespect, incredulity and desire to justify their
ungodly behavior. If you are not looking for Him, you will hardly be
motivated to be living for Him!
Mocking implies an underlying unyielding pride and a
hardness toward God and His holy word. The scoffer refuses to submit to
God's Word and stirs up trouble wherever he goes. Proverbs instructs us
to...
Drive out the scoffer, and contention
will go out, even strife and dishonor will cease. (Pr 22:10)
Scoffers treat lightly and with profanity that which ought to be taken
seriously and with holy awe. They
have no desire to find out truth but take up the Bible merely with the
design of ridiculing it. Woe to this brood of vipers!
It is interesting
that when the scoffers denied “the power and coming” (2Peter 1:16-note) of Jesus Christ, they were denying the truth of the
both the Old and New Testament for His coming is amply foretold in both
testaments!
The
people in Noah’s day scoffed at the idea of a judgment, and the citizens
of Sodom scoffed at the possibility of fire and brimstone destroying
their sinful city. If you have tried to witness for Jesus,
you have no doubt met people who scoff at the idea of hell or a future
day of judgment.
Spurgeon
expounds on scoffers (scorners) in Psalm 1:1 where we read "blessed
is the man who does not...sit in the seat of scoffers"...
The seat of the scorner may be
very lofty, but it is very near to the gate of hell; let us flee from
it, for it shall soon be empty, and destruction shall swallow up the man
who sits therein. Mark the gradation in the first verse:
He walketh not in the counsel of the
ungodly,
Nor standeth in the way of sinners,
Nor SITTETH in the SEAT of SCORNFUL.
When men are living in sin they go
from bad to worse. At first they merely walk in the counsel of the
careless and ungodly, who forget God -- the evil is rather practical
than habitual -- but after that, they become habituated to evil, and
they stand in the way of open sinners who wilfully violate God's
commandments; and if let alone, they go one step further, and become
themselves pestilent teachers and tempters of others, and thus they sit
in the seat of the scornful. They have taken their degree in vice, and
as true Doctors of Damnation they are installed, and are looked up to by
others as Masters in Belial. But the blessed man, the man to whom all
the blessings of God belong, can hold no communion with such characters
as these. He keeps himself pure from these lepers; he puts away evil
things from him as garments spotted by the flesh; he comes out from
among the wicked, and goes without the camp, bearing the reproach of
Christ. O for grace to be thus separate from sinners.
Adam Clarke
writes that...
The scorner (mocker, scoffer) has
brought, in reference to himself, all religion and moral feeling to an
end. He has sat down -- is utterly confirmed in impiety, and makes a
mock at sin. His conscience is seared, and he is a believer in all
unbelief. Now, blessed is the man who sits not down in his SEAT.
Martin Luther
had this to say of scoffers...
With respect to the term
"seat," to sit in the seat, is to teach, to act the instructor and
teacher; as in Matthew 23:2, "The scribes sit in Moses' chair."
They sit in the seat of pestilence,
who fill the church with the opinions of philosophers, with the
traditions of men, and with the counsels of their own brain, and oppress
miserable consciences, setting aside, all the while, the word of God, by
which alone the soul is fed, lives, and is preserved.
FOLLOWING
AFTER THEIR OWN LUSTS: kata
tas
idias
epithumias
auton
poreuomenoi (PMPMPN):
(2Pet 2:10; 2Co 4:2; Jude 16 Jude 1:18)
These
are "men whose only guide in life is what they want for themselves"
(Phillips), "sarcastic scoffers whose life is ruled by their
passions" (New Jerusalem Bible), "being propelled by
their own evil urges" (NET), "going where their own
passions lead" (Goodspeed), "behaving in line with their
own lusts" (Berkley), for they are "men governed by their own passions."
(Weymouth). What a miserable description.
Spurgeon rightly notes that
this is...
Errors of doctrine are almost always
attended with errors of practice, and certainly’ they legitimately lead
that way. Those who scoff according to the lusts of their intellect are
very likely to live according to the lusts of their flesh. The two
things are congruous; they are born from the same cause, they flourish
for the same reasons, and they tend to the same ends: “Walking after
their own lusts,”
As alluded to earlier, what a person believes is
intimately related to how he or she lives. If one refuses to follow
Christ, the only other option is to follow self. And so Peter explains why
they "mock" -- they
want to continue living in their sins.
Mockery and lust will go together. Peter says that these things are a sign of the
last days, days when men's and women's own pleasure is the sole "law"
governing their behavior.
They follow
after their own lusts because they are unrestrained by a reverential,
holy fear
of God. Paul's description of unbelievers in Romans 3 depicts the
essence of these mockers...
THERE IS NO FEAR OF GOD BEFORE THEIR
EYES. (Ro 3:18-note).
If
one's lifestyle
contradicts the Word of God, he or she must either change their lifestyle or
"change" the Word of God and these mockers choose the latter path.
They scoffed at the doctrine of God's righteous judgment especially the
judgment that is associated with
the return of the Lord Jesus Christ. John vividly describes this event
writing...
And I saw heaven opened; and behold,
a white horse, and He who sat upon it is called Faithful and True; and
in righteousness He judges and wages war. And His eyes are a flame of
fire, and upon His head are many diadems; and He has a name written upon
Him which no one knows except Himself. And He is clothed with a robe
dipped in blood; and His name is called The Word of God. And the armies
which are in heaven, clothed in fine linen, white and clean, were
following Him on white horses. And from His mouth comes a sharp
sword, so that with it He may smite the nations; and He will rule them
with a rod of iron; and He treads the wine press of the fierce wrath of
God, the Almighty. And on His robe and on His thigh He has a name
written, "KING OF KINGS, AND LORD OF LORDS." (see notes
Revelation 19:11;12;
13;
14;
15;
16)
A primary motivation for righteous living is the expectation
of the return of the Righteous One, as John explained...
Beloved, now we are children of God,
and it has not appeared as yet what we shall be. We know that, when He
appears, we shall be like Him, because we shall see Him just as He is.
And everyone who has this hope fixed on Him purifies himself,
just as He is pure. (1John 3:2-note,
1Jn 3:3-note)
The delay in the Lord's return produced
(and still produces) scoffers who mocked His coming, because
they desired to live in ways
that fulfilled their self-indulgent desires. Times have not changed
much, except that we are one day closer to His return!
It is interesting to note that this section in the Greek text is
introduced by the preposition kata which means down, down upon,
down in. This preposition thus pictures the lusts of these mockers as marking out
the downward course along which they wantonly proceed. In
short, mockers are on a broad road of destruction, the "highway to hell"
instead of the narrow way, the "highway of holiness" which
Peter describes towards the end of chapter 3.
Following
(poreuomai) means literally going from one place to another, in
this case from one passion to another (chasing, journeying). It speaks
of their predominant way of conduct, the prevalent course of their life.
What a vivid picture of their blatant disregard of God's holy word and
His righteous judgment.
Present tense marks their action as habitual (as their lifestyle) and middle
voice conveys a reflexive sense (they themselves following
after). Having rejected the
knowledge of God (and right fear of God), they fearlessly seek to indulge their fleshly
appetites, advocating permissiveness with total disregard of any
impending judgment. Peter says that the ungodly
in the last days, will be almost entirely motivated by self-interest (2Timothy
3:1-note,
Torrey's Topic
Selfishness) and will
be unconcerned about God's purposes (which
is a good working definition of "ungodliness").
Lusts (1939)
(epithumia
[word study]
from
epi = at, toward {the
preposition "epi-" in the compound is directive conveying the picture of
"having one’s passion toward" } + thumos = passion; epithumeo
= set heart upon) is a neutral term denoting the presence of strong
desires or impulses, longings or passionate craving (whether it is good
or evil is determined by the
context) directed toward an object. (Click
article in ISBE) Most NT uses
of epithumia describe strong desires which are perverted and
unrestrained and which originate from our SIN (flesh) nature, which is
corrupt and fallen.
Hiebert has an interesting
note that the
degeneration in the meaning of the
term (epithumia from God given desires to perverted desires) is a
revealing commentary on human nature. Left to himself, instead of
gaining mastery over his base desires and steadfastly adhering to the
good, the individual is characteristically overcome by his evil
cravings, so that they become the dominating force of his life."
(Hiebert, D. Edmond: 1 Peter. Page 94. Moody)
Their own - (idias...auton)
The adjective idios pertains to self.
Hiebert observes that the phrase
their own
emphatically indicates their self-identification with these lusts and
brings out the self will and opposition of these men to the law of God
and the God of the law.
The tragic saga of Judges exhibits a similar principle of belief (more
accurately of unbelief) working itself out in aberrant behavior...
In
those
days
there was
no
king in
Israel;
everyone
did
what was
right in his own
eyes. (see note Judges 21:25-note)
As Solomon said
when
their is no prophetic vision (word), the people are unrestrained (run
wild) (Pr 29:18)
Adam Clarke adds that this section
brings out...
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.
><>><>><>
Quotes and Illustrations related
to Scoffers & Mockers...
William
Culbertson...In the last days mockers will come - Sometimes those of
us who hold that the Lord Jesus Christ is coming again are spoken of as
pessimists. I think it can be truly said that we are really the only
ones who have any right to be optimistic. (William Culbertson)
Scoffers...A
recent cartoon depicts a man at his desk looking at a computer screen,
while outside his open office window another man is flying past, having
just jumped from the top of the building. The man at the desk says to
the jumper, “Tough luck, Conners. The market has gone up 1,200 points
since you jumped.” So much for assuming that things will always be the
way they are right now. As the saying goes, the only constant in life is
change, and you would think that people would know better than to risk
their eternal future on the assumption that nothing is going to change.
But that’s exactly what doubters and skeptics have been doing since the
earliest days of Christianity. “Scoffers” choose to forget or ignore the
fact that God has kept His word in history and will do so again. God
judged the world in the flood of Noah, and the world is scheduled for
judgment again when Christ returns. |
|
|
2 Peter 3:4 and
saying,
"Where is the
promise of His
coming? For ever
since
* the
fathers
fell
asleep,
all
continues
just as it was from the
beginning of
creation (NASB:
Lockman) |
|
Greek:
kai
legontes, (PAPMPN)
Pou
estin (3SPAI)
e
epaggelia
tes
parousias
autou
aph
hes
gar
hoi
pateres
ekoimethesan, (3PAPI)
panta
outos
diamenei (3SPAI)
ap'
arches
ktiseos.
Amplified:
And say, Where is the promise of His coming? For since the forefathers
fell asleep, all things have continued exactly as they did from the
beginning of creation. (Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
NET:
and saying, "Where is his promised coming? For ever since our
ancestors fell asleep, all things have continued as they were from the
beginning of creation."
(NET
Bible)
NJB:
What has happened to the promise of His coming?' they will say, 'Since
our Fathers died everything has gone on just as it has since the
beginning of creation!' (NJB)
NLT:
This will be their argument: "Jesus promised to come back, did he?
Then where is he? Why, as far back as anyone can remember, everything
has remained exactly the same since the world was first created." (NLT
- Tyndale House)
Phillips: and
they will say, "What has happened to his promised coming? Since the
first Christians fell asleep, everything remains exactly as it was
since the beginning of creation!" (Phillips:
Touchstone)
Wuest:
and saying, Where is the promise of His coming? For since the fathers
fell asleep, all things are remaining permanently in that state in
which they were since the beginning of the creation. (Eerdmans)
Young's Literal: and
saying, 'Where is the promise of his presence? for since the fathers
did fall asleep, all things so remain from the beginning of the
creation;' |
|
|
AND SAYING
"WHERE IS THE PROMISE OF HIS COMING"?: Kai legontes (PAPMPN) pou estin (3SPAI) te eppagelia tes parousias autou:
(See Torrey's Topics "Promises
of God") (Ge 19:14; Eccl 1:9; 8:11; Isa 5:18,19; Jer
5:12,13; 17:15; Ezek 12:22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27; Mal 2:17; Mt 24:28; Mt
24:38, Lk 12:45)
Related
Resource:
Table comparing Rapture vs Second
Coming
C H Spurgeon
Every time a blasphemer opens his mouth to deny the truth of revelation,
he will help to confirm us in our conviction of
the
very truth which he denies. The Holy Ghost told us by the pen of Peter
that it would be so.
Here we see Peter quoting the mockers who we might paraphrase as
asking...
You say that Jesus promised a great Parousia. Well, show it to us. Where
is it?
Can
you not hear their condescending tone and envision their smug sneer?
Rest assured, dear tried and tested saint, when the Parousia does occur,
their sneers will turn to fears!
As John writes
BEHOLD, HE IS COMING WITH THE CLOUDS, and every eye will see Him, even
those who pierced Him and all the tribes of the earth will mourn over
Him. Even so. Amen. (see note
Revelation 1:7)
And saying - Note that the
conjunction and
marks the intimate connection between the scoffer's self indulgent
lifestyle and their blatant cynicism.
Men and women who give themselves
over to the lust of their own flesh obviously will always mock at any
suggestion of godly living. Do not be deceived beloved. Their rhetorical
question about the return of Christ is not a desire to know truth but a
attempt to challenge the truth of God. Why? Because the Second Coming of
Christ will bring swift, certain judgment as Paul solemnly instructed
Timothy
I solemnly charge you in the presence
of God and of Christ Jesus, Who is to judge the living (believers) and
the dead (spiritually dead - see Ep 2:1-note), and by His appearing and His kingdom. (see
note
2 Timothy 4:1)
The ridiculous implication of
scoffers question in this verse is that there is no Second Coming and
thus we can
live any way we want. God will never judge us. But they are wrong..."dead" wrong!
(Torrey's Topic
Spiritual
Death)!
PROPHECY
AND CONDUCT
As an aside this section of 2 Peter
illustrates what should be a major motivations for studying eschatology
(eschatos = last things + -ology = study) or prophecy. Prophecy should
never be studied simply to satisfy our curiosity about the future, but
such knowledge should radically impact our conduct in the present! If
our study of prophecy does not have this impact, we need to do a "motive
check"!
Hiebert makes the point that "where?"
(pou)
asks for evidence of its fulfillment
(the return of Christ) and implies that such evidence is non-existent.
Their use of the question constitutes a more contemptuous form of
rejection than a categorical denial. They formulated their challenge in
the language of orthodox believers, but instead of expressing a pious
yearning for Christ's return, it mocks at the very idea.
Saying
(lego) is
present tense which indicates that they were
continuously belittling the truth about Christ's Second
Coming
("coming" is the Greek word
parousia [see word study]
which literally means “a being
beside” and refers primarily to Christ's presence and secondarily to
His coming or arrival). The apostles clearly did not want this
foundational truth to
be missed or misunderstood as attested to by about 300 NT references (out of
260 NT chapters) to the "Second Coming".
Jesus gave His "promise" (epaggelia =
His pronouncement providing assurance of what He intended to do)
to return "in power and great glory" (Mt 24:30, cf Mt 10:23,16:28, the angels likewise promised
His return Acts 1:11). Peter affirmed the
certainty of Christ's coming earlier in (see note 2Pe 1:6-note,
cf "promise" in 2Pe1:4-note,
2Pe-note).
Paul promised that at His
return, Christ would deal
out retribution to those who do not
know God and to those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus and
these will pay the penalty of eternal destruction, away from the
presence of the Lord and from the glory of His power. (2Thes 1:7-10)
Little wonder that the ungodly would
rather this event be the figment of an active imagination then a certain
to be fulfilled promise!
The wicked man says to himself, "God has forgotten; He has
hidden His face; He will never see it. (Ps 10:11)
Spurgeon comments that...
As upon the former count, so upon
this one; a witness is forthcoming, who has been listening at the
keyhole of the heart. Speak up, friend, and let us hear your story. He
hath said in his heart, God hath forgotten: he hideth his face; he will
never see it. This cruel man comforts himself with the idea that God is
blind, or, at least, forgetful: a fond and foolish fancy, indeed. Men
doubt Omniscience when they persecute the saints. If we had a sense of
God's presence with us, it would be impossible for us to ill treat his
children. In fact, there can scarcely be a greater preservation from sin
than the constant thought of "Thou, God, seest me."
How does God know? And is there knowledge with the Most High?
(Ps 73:11)
(Spurgeon's
note)
Rienecker adds that "where?"
was a traditional formula for expressing skepticism and was a form of
Hebrew expression which implied that the thing asked about did not exist
at all. For example the wicked generation in Judah prior to their exile into Babylon had
similar mocking comments concerning Jeremiah's prophesy of coming
judgment, saying
Where is the word of the LORD? Let it come now!
(Jer 17:15).
Where is your God?” the heathen demanded of the
Psalmist (Ps 42:3; 79:10).
Similarly in Malachi the unrighteous
Jews were asking tauntingly
Where is the God of justice?
(Mal 2:17)
In each of these examples the
implication of the question is that the thing or the person asked about
does not exist. The heretics of Peter’s day were denying that Jesus
Christ would ever come again.
BELIEF OF THE
FIRST CENTURY CHURCH
The early
church believed that Jesus was coming back and that His return was
imminent (cf. 1Cor 15:51 [Notice that Paul says "we"
as if he has this expectancy that he would not "sleep" [die]!]; 1Th 1:10; 2:19, 4:15; 16; 17
[Notice again Paul uses "we" - "we...will be caught up" expressing the
possibility of his experiencing this great event, the
Rapture];
1Th 4:18; 5:1; 5:2-see notes
1Th 1:10;
2:19
4:15; 16; 17;
18; 5:1;
5:2)
See related study on
Imminency, Imminent - Christ's Second
Coming (Another
discussion on imminency)
Coming
(3952)(parousia)
is a combination of two Greek words para = with, alongside +
ousia = being (ousia is the participial form of the verb
eimi = to be) which together literally mean to be alongside.
Parousia
then literally means a being beside or a presence. The
word denotes both an arrival and a consequent presence with.
Parousia
conveys the thought of an arrival (advent or coming) of a person to a
place plus the idea of their presence at that place until a certain
event transpires. The word parousia has no English equivalent and
therefore is often transliterated in writings.
John MacArthur
writes that...
Parousia refers to more than
just coming; it includes the idea of “presence.” Perhaps the
best English translation would be “arrival.” The church’s great
hope is the arrival of Jesus Christ when He comes to bless His people
with His presence. That glorious truth appears in more than 500 verses
throughout the Bible. (Macarthur
J. James. Moody or
Logos)
(Bolding added)
Since the first century there have been sporadic periods of prophetic
interest, but sadly most of the world has remained utterly indifferent
(even defiant) to the blessed hope (Titus 2:13-note)
of believers.
In fact most of the world does not even believe in a
personal Creator God, let alone His divine incarnation in Christ and His
great plan of salvation. They are too busy "following after their own
lusts" and so they create a "delusional eschatology"
(study of "last
things", i.e., prophecy) that fits
with and panders to their depraved misconduct. (See
Torrey's Topic "Self
delusion"). The irony is that their scoffing is
evidence of the fulfillment of Peter's prophetic warning and undergirds
the fact that the last days are indeed present.
They adopt the doctrine of laissez faire or let’s continue with
the status quo.
Matthew Henry has this to say about the Second Coming
Without this, all the other articles of the Christian faith will
signify very little. This is that which fills up and gives the finishing
stroke to all the rest.
John Calvin
echoes this thought
It was a dangerous scoff when they insinuated a doubt as to the
last resurrection (Calvin's synonym for the Second Coming - Calvin did
not believe in the
Millennium
but he did believe the Lord would come again); for when that is taken away, there is no
Gospel any
longer, the power of Christ is brought to nothing, the whole of religion
is gone. Then Satan aims directly at the throat of the Church, when he
destroys faith in the coming of Christ.
FOR EVER SINCE THE FATHERS FELL
ASLEEP ALL CONTINUES JUST AS IT WAS FROM THE BEGINNING OF CREATION: apo hes gar hoi pateres ekoimethesan (3PAPI) panta outos diamenei (3SPAI) ap arches ktiseos:
For - Introduces the reasoning the scoffers feel justified in
asking the question about His coming.
Spurgeon writes that...
Only the modern scoffers have tried
to improve upon their predecessors, for they say, “All things have
developed by evolution from the beginning, which never had a beginning,
but which somehow or other has always existed.” Thus the scoffers
change their strain, but they never alter their spirit; it is always an
attack upon revealed truth. Indeed, they scarcely seem to believe that
there is any revealed truth, and they will only accept that which they
might themselves have invented.
Notwithstanding what these men say,
all things have not continued as they were since the beginning of the
creation, for there have been great interposition’s of divine power in
the past, as Peter goes on to show.
These mockers are even bold (and foolish) enough to present an argument to
substantiate their scoffing. The tragic aspect of this argument is that
it can upset those who fail to see what the mockers purposely ignored.
The crushing answer to their argument is to show what they have ignored.
Lenski has
this interesting comment...
This is the logic involved. All conclusions
that are based on some facts but omit other, contrary
facts are false in toto. (they say) It is a fact that all things
have gone on in their accustomed way for ages and ages, in particular
since Jesus lived on earth. The time since these arguments were used has
now been extended to almost 2000 years. Ergo, quit talking about this
Parousia of Jesus!"
The longer the world stands as it is, the surer the mockers are that
their fallacy is sound.
Who are the
fathers? Examination of the 9 NT uses (See Luke 1:17 John 6:58, 7:22
Acts 13:32 Ro 9:5, Ro 11:28 Rom 15:8 Heb 1:1 2 Pet 3:4) show that the
fathers is used predominantly to refer to the Old
Testament fathers.
Fall asleep
(2837)
(koimao) is
a NT euphemism for death and is a pleasant way of speaking of something
that in itself is not considered pleasant (cf Jn 11:11). As an
aside beware of using the NT's metaphorical description of death as
"sleep" to justify the false teaching of "soul sleep." (What
is soul sleep?)
Vincent adds that koimao was
used
in classical Greek to denote death. The difference between the pagan and
the Christian usage lies in the fact that, in the latter, it was defined
by the hope of the resurrection....
The related word
koimeterion was used by the Greeks to describe a place of rest
and was adopted by the Christians to describe the place of interment of
the bodies of their departed and which is the root word of our English
word “cemetery” or “the sleeping place”.
Continues
(diameno from dia = intensifies meaning of
the verb meno = remain) means to remain permanently and not to
change.
The things that continue today, the
scoffers contend, are the things that
have always been and, therefore, always will be. Thus the scoffers
assert a continuous, uniform duration for the material universe and
their use of all leaves no room for cataclysmic exceptions in their argument. Their false reasoning is known
as the theory of uniformity
or
Uniformitarianism, a geological theory propagated and
popularized in the 1800's by geologist Sir Charles Lyell and directly
refuting the geological doctrine of
Catastrophism (the
doctrine that at intervals in the earth’s history all living things have
been destroyed by cataclysms, e.g., floods & earthquakes,
and replaced by an entirely different population.)
Wikipedia's description is
eerily almost "Biblical"...
The dominant paradigm of modern
geology is
uniformitarianism
(sometimes described as
gradualism),
in which slow incremental changes, such as erosion, create the Earth's
appearance. This view holds that the present is the key to the past, and
that all things continue as
they were from the beginning of the world.
(Ref)
According to the
"futile speculation" of
Uniformitarianism, it is assumed
that the processes that govern nature today have always been the same in
the past so that the present is the key
to the past.
These fools claim that everything seen on earth can be explained by
natural laws and processes presently in operation. This notion is
reflected in the modern view that evolution can explain
the origin of earth, of vegetable and animal life, and of human life as
well. These
scoffers take a so-called “scientific approach” by
examining evidence (but as Peter shows in the next verse they are
dishonest observers with "selective" memory loss), applying reason, and drawing a conclusion. They
reason that since no creation is
occurring today, it never happened in the past either! The false
teachers were implying that God is absent from the affairs of this planet.
They express an incipient deism which rules out
divine intervention in the universal order (by the
way a number of America's founding fathers were deists). The mockers argue that in a universe governed by
natural laws, supernatural occurrences such as miracles (e.g., a literal Creation
out of nothing [ex nihilo] or a universal flood) simply cannot occur.
Therefore they "reason" that Jesus Christ could not come (again). In
effect, they were teaching that,
There will not be a great cataclysmic
judgmental event at the end of history, because that is not how the
universe works. There never has been such a judgment, so why should we
expect one in the future. Instead, everything in the universe is stable,
closed, fixed, and governed by never varying patterns and principles of
evolution. Nothing catastrophic has ever happened in the past, so nothing catastrophic ever will happen in the future."
And so the mockers blatantly deny the
truth of both the Creation and the Flood in Genesis. Paul had an
excellent description of their aberrant, arrogant "logic":
For
even though they knew God, they did not honor Him as God, or give
thanks; but they became futile in their speculations, and their foolish
heart was darkened. Professing to be wise, they became fools." (Ro
1:21; 22-see notes
Ro 1:21; 22)
(See Torrey's
Topic "Spiritual
Blindness"
"Self
delusion")
C H Spurgeon observed that...
Men have frequently inferred liberty
to sin from the apparent absence of God from the world. Because the
Lord, in His infinite long-suffering, has suffered transgression to go
for awhile unpunished, therefore they have wickedly said, “How doth God
know? The Almighty doth not regard us. He will neither interfere to
punish men nor to reward them, whether they break or keep his
commandments.”
When for a long time no great changes
have occurred in the world, no remarkable judgments, no visitations of
famine, pestilence, or war, men are very apt to grow carnally secure,
and to take license to sin from the merciful respite which ought to
halve led them to gratitude, and through gratitude to obedience.
At certain periods it has seemed to
the Most High to be imperatively necessary to send great calamities upon
mankind lest pride oppression, and profanity should cause society
utterly to rot. The fall of dynasties, the overthrow of empires,
devastating wars, and dire famines have been necessities of God’s moral
government, bits in men’s mouths, bridles for their arrogance, checks to
their licentiousness.
The Lord is slow to smite the wicked,
for His tender mercy is great, and He delights not in the sufferings of
men, and therefore He keeps His arrows in his quiver, and hangs up His
bow; but, alas, men take advantage of His love to grow grossly sinful,
and to blaspheme His name.
Against this spirit the apostle is
arguing in this chapter. The profanely secure had said,
“Since the fathers fell asleep all
things continue as they were; where then is the evidence of God’s
existence? The world goes on like a clock, needing no hand to move its
wheels or guide its action. There is no God,” say they, “to interfere,
and we may live as we list.”
“Nay,” says apostle, “but God has
interfered;” and though he might have quoted a thousand lesser
instances which I have already hinted at, he preferred to forego them
for the present, and to put his finger upon the great event of the
flood, and say, “Here at least God did interfere.” He could no longer
bear the transgressions of mankind, and therefore he pulled up the
sluices of the great deep, and opened the floodgates of heaven. He bade
the angry floods leap forth from their lairs, and they swallowed up the
earth right speedily.
Thus it is plain that all things have
not continued in one course, there have been interpositions of divine
justice.
The apostle then tells the scoffer
that there will be another interposition ere long; instead of water,
fire shall be the instrument of destruction.
God’s mill grinds slowly, but it
grinds to powder.
Justice loiters to commune with
mercy, but it speedily makes up for its lingering.
Long is the blow withheld, but when
it falls it cuts to the soul.
God’s wrath is long in kindling, but
in the end it shall burn as an oven. (from
2 Peter 3:10-11 The World on Fire)
John Piper emphasizes just how modern
this heretical reasoning is:
This is an amazingly modern argument for rejecting the
supernatural, bodily Second Coming. It simply says, the laws of nature
are constant and unchanging. The sun has come up and gone down, the
seasons have followed each other, the tides have risen and fallen for
thousands of years in perfect order. Therefore we must expect this
constancy for the future, and any thought that the sky might be rolled
up like a scroll and the earth purged with global, fiery judgment by the
returning Christ is unimaginable and unwarranted. This is exactly the
position of much modern science and there are hundreds of pastors and
theologians in the churches and seminaries today who reject a physical
second coming and future judgment for the same reason. (Read the full
sermon "Where Is the Promise of His
Appearing?")
Ron Ritchie echoes Piper's thoughts:
This attitude has intensified in our scientific age, spurred on by
TV series such as Cosmos, which preaches that we are all alone on this
earth, that nothing exists except the cosmos, that everything will
remain the same. They maintain, "The sun rises, the sun sets. The tide
comes in, the tide goes out. Nothing ever changes. Here is an excerpt
from a National Geographic article on the Mt. St. Helens' volcano that
illustrates the futility of this kind of thinking "Old man Harry Truman
(83) built a cabin by Spirit Lake on the slopes of Mt. St. Helens some
53 years ago. All those years nature remained consistent. But then the
mountain started to awaken. Residents were asked to leave. Warnings were
given. Park guards came to the cabin to tell him it wasn't safe. TV and
newspaper folks interviewed him. He said he could not live anywhere
else. He was part of the mountain and the mountain was part of him. He
laughed at and cursed all his visitors. Then on May 18, 1980 the
mountain exploded and Harry Truman perished under hundreds of feet of
volcanic ash." This man did not heed the warnings of those who tried to
save his life. The mockers do not heed the warnings of Scripture which
seek to bring men to repentance. Make no mistake about it, Jesus Christ
is coming again. (See the full sermon
How Should We Answer the Mockers?)
Solomon has a parallel
thought:
Because the sentence against an evil
deed is not executed quickly, therefore the hearts of the sons of men
among them are given fully to do evil. (Eccl 8:11)
Jameison & Fausset have an
excellent, albeit scathing comment on this attitude of the ungodly:
Presumptuous skepticism and lawless lust, setting nature and its
so-called laws above the God of nature and revelation, and arguing from
the past continuity of nature’s phenomena that there can be no future
interruption to them, was the sin of the antediluvians, and shall be
that of the scoffers in the last days.
J. Vernon McGee gives us some modern
application regarding the question
Where is the promise of his
coming?”: "In other words, they will say something like this, “Some
of you pre-millennial folk have been saying for years that the Lord
Jesus is going to come back and take the church out of the world, and
then after a seven-year period of tribulation, He will come to the earth
to establish His kingdom. Well, where is He? Why hasn’t He come?” They
are going to scoff at it (AND at you). The second coming of Christ will
be denied—not only by the atheist or Communist standing out yonder on a
soap box, but it will also be denied by those who stand in the pulpit
and profess to be believers. |
|
|
2 Peter 3:5 For when they
maintain
this, it
escapes their
notice that by
the
word of
God the
heavens
existed
long
ago and the
earth was
formed out of
water and by
water, (NASB:
Lockman) |
|
Greek:
anthanei (3SPAI)
gar
autous
touto
thelontas, (PAPMPA)
hoti
ouranoi
esan (3PIAI)
ekpalai
kai
ge
ex
hudatos
kai
di'
hudatos
sunestosa (RAPFSN)
to
tou
theou
logo,
Amplified:
For they willfully overlook and forget this [fact], that the heavens
[came into] existence long ago by the word of God, and the earth also
which was formed out of water and by means of water (Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
NET:
For they deliberately suppress this fact, that by the word of God
heavens existed long ago and an earth was formed from water and by
water. (NET
Bible)
NLT:
They deliberately forget that God made the heavens by the word of his
command, and he brought the earth up from the water and surrounded it
with water. (NLT
- Tyndale House)
Phillips: They
are deliberately shutting their eyes to a fact that they know very
well, that there were, by God's command, heavens in the old days and
an earth formed out of the water and surrounded by water. (Phillips:
Touchstone)
Wuest:
For concerning this they willfully forget that heavens existed from
ancient times, and land [standing] out of water, and by means of water
cohering by the word of God (Eerdmans)
Young's Literal: for this is unobserved by
them willingly, that the heavens were of old, and the earth out of
water and through water standing together by the word of God, |
|
|
FOR WHEN THEY MAINTAIN THIS IT ESCAPES THEIR NOTICE: Lamthanei (3SPAI) gar
autos touto thelontes (PAPMPA): (Jn 3:19,20; Ro 1:28; 2Th 2:10,
11, 2:12)
Please note
-The NAS is probably not the best translation of the Greek in this
passage.
It
is one thing to have something escape one's notice but quite another to
willfully overlook a matter. The KJV gives a
better sense of the heart of these unbelieving scoffers stating that
they willingly are ignorant of...
The NET Bible
Note says...
The Greek is difficult at this point.
An alternative is "Even though they maintain this, it escapes them
that…" Literally the idea seems to be: "For this escapes these [men]
who wish [it to be so]."
Here are several
other renderings...
they deliberately suppress this fact
(NET)
they willfully overlook and forget
this [fact] (Amplified)
they deliberately forget (NIV)
they willfully forget (NKJV)
For
(gar) is a marker of cause or reason
and follows one or more words in a preceding clause (Always pause and
ponder
terms of explanation
- this practice will facilitate
Biblical Meditation which
is linked to untold blessings! See Ps 1:2-note,
Ps 1:3-note;
Joshua 1:8-note). The reason
that they ascribed to the false teaching of "uniformatarianism" (there have been no
significant physical changes or interventions on planet earth) is now
explained --- For
they deliberately chose to suppress, disregard, overlook (cp Paul's
statement that they continually, actively, volitionally, on purpose
"suppress [hold down, quash, restrain] the truth in unrighteousness" Ro
1;18-note) and forget the
truths that Peter now reminds us of.
Wuest...
The literal Greek is, “for this
escapes them being willing” (Robertson); Vincent translates, “this
escapes them of their own will,” and quotes the Revision, “this they
willfully forget.” Alford suggests: “for (i.e., they speak thus because)
this (namely, this fact which follows) escapes them (passes unnoticed by
them) of their own will (i.e., they shut their eyes to this fact).” All
of which means that the denial of the second Advent by these false
teachers is due to a culpable ignorance on their part.
As
McGee quips
My, this puts a great
many scientists and Ph.D.’s in a pretty bad light!
It is amazing how so-called “thinkers” (scientists, liberal theologians,
philosophers) will be selective and deliberately refuse to consider
certain data.
Escapes...notice
(lanthano cf
use in
Acts 26:26)
means to
ignore (discount, disregard, refuse to take notice of), to succeed
in avoiding attention or awareness or to not recall information and thus
to lose sight of its significance. Their bold assertion that our world
has continued without any great convulsion from the beginning of
creation rests on their deliberate exclusion. And so we see that their
ignoring of the flood as a divine intervention was not an oversight but
was deliberate. They did not want to face up to the fallacy in their
argument.
Willingly
(thelo) (See notes above) is a word which expresses a desire that comes from
an active decision of one's will and clearly implies choice and purpose.
Webster says that willful implies an obstinate, often perverse
determination to have one's way.
Thelo is in the
present tense (which
indicates they are habitually willful) and the
active voice
indicates that they made a personal choice. They persistently ignore
the obvious facts.
Thelo therefore describes a
conscious willing and denotes a more active resolution which urges one
on to action. This understanding of the meaning of thelo helps us
get a sense of how blatant and deep-seated
was the mockers' hatred and rebellion toward God.
The mockers pride themselves on being knowledgeable,
objective, and scientific, and yet
willfully ignore the indisputable knowledge, objective data and
scientific discoveries that strongly support a worldwide flood.
They
have a made a determination not to know.
These last days mockers are
similar to the rich man's brothers in Luke 16. As "father Abraham" (in the cool side
of Sheol) told the rich man (in the hot side of Sheol)
If they do not listen to Moses and
the Prophets, neither will they be persuaded if someone rises from the
dead.
(Lk 16:31)
In John's Gospel Jesus speaking of
salvation described men's willful determination to reject the good news
regarding our Lord Who was the light of the world (Jn 8:12)...
And this is the judgment, that the
light is come into the world, and men loved the darkness rather than the
light (Ed: Therein lies the "root" or their rejection of
truth-their love of sin, not righteousness!); for (term
of explanation
= explains their "love" = their
lifestyle backs up their lips so to speak) their deeds were evil. For everyone who does evil hates the
light, and does not come to the light, (Why
don't they come to
the light?) lest his deeds should be exposed. (John 3:19,20,
cp Eph 5:13-note,
Compare what speakers of God's Word should be doing - Lam 2:14)
Spurgeon comments that these
individuals are...
Ignorant that there has been one
great interposition of God to avenge the insults to his holy law, and to
overturn the rule of sin: “For this they willingly are ignorant of,”
Jamieson & Fausset add that
They obstinately shut their eyes to
the Scripture record of the creation and the deluge
Dr. Henry Morris writes that...
It is remarkable that evolutionism (Darwinianism) which is currently
such dominant theory of the origin and meaning of life is based on
absolutely no verifiable evidence. There is simply no scientific or
historical evidence that evolution has taken place. In fact the most
basic laws of science (laws of probability and thermodynamics) prove that
genuine macro-evolution could not happen at all. As Peter prophesied,
this belief would be based on "willful ignorance"... which is why Paul
categorically stated that such "suppressers of the truth" (the 2 major
previous divine cataclysmic events—creation and the flood) are "without
excuse" (Ro 1:20-note).
THAT BY THE WORD OF GOD THE HEAVENS EXISTED LONG AGO
AND THE EARTH:
hoti ouranoi esan (3PIAI) ekpalai: (Ge 1:6,9; Ps 24:2; 33:6;
102:25, 136:6; Is 44:24, Jn 1:3 Col 1:16,17 Heb 11:3)
(Torrey's Topic "Creation")
By the word of God -
God created the heavens and the earth by His spoken word.
Related Resources:
Power of God's Word - a simple
inductive study
Scriptural Description of the Word of
God
The writer explains that in order to accept Peter's statement we need
genuine belief, something the scoffers lack (sure they know "about" God
or "of" God, but they do not intimately "know" Him in terms of
possessing a personal relationship)...
By faith we understand that the worlds were prepared by the word of
God, so that what is seen was
not made out of things
which are visible. (Heb 11:3-note)
Jeremiah...
Thus you shall say to them, "The
gods that did not make the heavens and the earth shall perish from the
earth and from under the heavens." It is He who made the earth by His
power, Who established the world by His wisdom; And by His understanding
He has stretched out the heavens. (Jeremiah 10:11,12)
Through His prophet Isaiah,
Jehovah
charges all peoples to...
Lift up your eyes on high and
see Who has created these stars. The One who leads forth their host by
number, He calls them all by name; because of the greatness of His might
and the strength of His power not one of them is missing. (Isaiah 40:26)
(Ed: Who would not
reverentially fear such an awesome God?)
The phrase God said (the word of God) occurs nine times in Genesis 1
beginning in verse 6...
Then God said (= "by the
word of the Lord"), "Let there be an expanse in the midst of the waters,
and let it separate the
waters from the waters."...Then God said, "Let the waters below
the heavens be gathered into one place, and let the dry land appear";
and it was so. (Ge 1:6,9)
The
Psalmist also testified to the creative power of God's Word crying out...
Let
all the
earth
fear the
LORD. Let
all the
inhabitants of the
world
stand in
awe of Him. For He
spoke, and it was done; He
commanded, and it
stood fast. (Ps 33:8-9)
C H Spurgeon comments that...
Creation was the fruit of a word.
Jehovah said, "Light be," and light was. The Lord's acts are sublime in
their ease and instantaneousness. "What a word is this?" This was the
wondering enquiry of old, and it may be ours to this day.
He commanded, and it stood fast.
Out of nothing creation stood forth, and was confirmed in existence. The
same power which first uplifted, now makes the universe to abide;
although we may not observe it, there is as great a display of sublime
power in confirming as in creating. Happy is the man who has learned to
lean his all upon the sure word of Him who built the skies!
Spurgeon
calls us to...
Admire the power of God’s Word., It
was by the Word of God that the heavens were made, by the Word of God
that the earth was drowned, by the Word of God that it has been
preserved ever since, and will be preserved until, by that same Word,
fire shall come to devour all the works of men. As surely as Noah’s
flood came,
so
surely shall there be a burning up at the appointed season: “The
heavens and the earth, which are now, by the same word are kept in
store, reserved unto fire?
Paul leaves all men without
excuse (this includes the natives in the deepest darkest jungles of
Africa - they are without excuse!)...
because that which is known about God
is evident within them; for God made it evident to them. For since the
creation of the world His invisible attributes, His eternal power
and divine nature, have been
clearly seen, being
understood through what has been made,
so that
(term
of explanation)
they are without excuse.
For even though they knew God, they did not honor Him as God, or give
thanks; but they became futile in their speculations (Ed: And
their mocking!), and their foolish heart was darkened. (Ro 1:19-note,
Ro 1:20, 21-note)
Comment: Paul demolishes the
common statement I hear when sharing the Gospel with an unbeliever --
"But what about those who never heard!" Paul's answer is they have "No
excuse!" If there are those natives who respond to the evidence of
Creation, God will send men and women with "beautiful feet" who will
proclaim the Good News of Jesus Christ. If you are skeptical, let me
encourage you to read Don Richardson's book "Eternity
in Their Hearts Startling Evidence of Belief in the One True God in
Hundreds of Cultures Throughout the World" or at least scan
through some of the predominantly positive
Reviews of this
fascinating book.)
THREE PROOFS:
Creation, Flood
and Fire
In this passage and those that
follow, Peter cites three events in history (creation and the flood in
the past, fire in the future) to answer the assumption of the mockers
and their reasoning that there will never be a Second Coming of Christ.
Peter reminds them of what God had
done in the past to substantiate that His work is consistent throughout
the ages. Peter simply presented evidence that the false teachers and
scoffers willfully choose to forget or ignore. As an aside, in so doing
Peter gives a good example to follow when confronted with the specious
soliloquies of skeptical scoffers. We are to refute their arguments with
the unchanging Word of God.
Paul alluded to this same approach in
his advice to Timothy instructing him to
Refuse
(present
imperative =
continually, never caving in to the temptation to fight spiritual
battles with fleshly means) foolish and ignorant speculations, knowing that they produce
quarrels. And the Lord's bond-servant must not be quarrelsome, but be
kind to all, able to teach, patient when wronged, with gentleness
correcting those who are in opposition, if perhaps God may grant them
repentance leading to the knowledge of the truth and they may come to
their senses and escape from the snare of the devil, having been held
captive by him to do his will. (see notes
2 Timothy 2:23;
24;
25;
26)
Creationist
Dr. Henry Morris explains the
heavens existed long ago
this way...
Evolutionists, whether they are atheistic, pantheistic,
deistic, or theistic evolutionists, willingly ignore God's testimony
that the heavens and the earth did not evolve by continuing natural
processes but were called into existence by God's omnipotent Word, fully
complete and functioning from the beginning (Ge 1:1-2:3; Ex 20:8-11; Ps
33:6-9;
Heb 4:3,10; Hebrews 11:3). The only reason God took as long as six
natural days to finish the whole creation was to serve as a pattern for
man's six-day work week (Ex 20:8, 9, 11). The various theories of
cosmic evolution, stellar evolution and planetary evolution are all
unproven and internally destructive, as are the various theories of
chemical evolution, organic evolution, human evolution and cultural
evolution. There are now thousands of fully qualified scientists, some
from every field of science, who have studied the scientific evidence,
pro and con, who have come to the conviction that the Biblical record of
earth history is precisely correct and that evolutionary theory is
totally false (Defenders
Study Bible. World Publishing)
AND THE EARTH WAS FORMED OUT
OUT OF WATER AND BY WATER: kai ge ek hudatos kai di hudatos sunestosa (RAPFSN):
Formed
(sunistao from sún = together with + hístemi = set, place, stand) means literally to put together and
then to bring into existence in an organized manner or to join together
the parts into a whole.
God caused the earth to be placed together with His spoken word! Mockers
must deny this or else they are faced with a God Who is indeed
sovereignly in control and Who has the power and the right to judge the
earth for sin, the sin in which they enjoy participating. Peter's point
is the same God Who created the world by His Word can also intervene in
His world and do whatever He wishes to do!
MacArthur understands this description
to mean that.
The earth was
formed between two realms of
watery mass. During the early part of the creation week, God collected
the upper waters into a canopy around the whole earth, and the lower
waters into underground reservoirs, rivers, lakes, and seas."
Dr. Henry Morris
comments on out
of water and by water...
In the 1st stage of creation, after the 2nd day, the
primeval earth material was surrounded by vast "waters above the
firmament" and suspended in other "waters under the firmament" (Gen 1:7
--- "... separated the waters which were below the expanse from the
waters which were above the expanse..." This could possibly have
been a canopy of water vapor which acted to make the earth like a
hothouse, provided uniform temperature, inhibited mass air movements,
caused mist to fall, and filtered out ultraviolet rays, thus extending
life.). The
waters beneath the "firmament" (the "expanse" of the troposphere) later
were either formed into seas or confined in a great deep beneath the
earth's crust. This regime apparently continued until the time of the
great Flood when they all came together again. Until then the earth was
"standing" (Greek sunistemi--that is, being "sustained" in and by the
waters). The earth is, in fact, uniquely, the "water planet."
(Morris,
Henry: Defenders Study Bible. World Publishing)
David Guzik makes an
interesting application of these truths to believers writing that...
A literal belief in Creation, in Adam
and Eve, and in Noah’s Flood are essential for a true understanding of
God’s working both then and now. To deny these things undermines the
very foundations of our faith. Sadly, today it is many Christians who
willfully forget these things, putting themselves in the place of
scoffers. |
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THROUGH WHICH
THE WORLD AT THAT TIME WAS DESTROYED: Di hon ho tote
kosmos...apoleto (3SAMI):
Through (dia) is
a marker of instrumentality by which something is accomplished. In this
case the instrument through which the world
was destroyed
was the water
(and some commentators add "and the Word").
It is
interesting that God, by creating water above and below,
built into His creation the means of its destruction. From its inception, the earth was
formed with the means of its own
destruction for it had water in its subterranean depths, in the
seas, and in the clouds. In His perfect timing, God released the waters
from below and above
(see Gen 7:11ff),
inundating
the land and destroying all life outside of the ark.
John
Calvin notes that Peter
confutes the scoff of the ungodly, even by
this, that the world once perished by a deluge of waters, when yet it
consisted of waters.
At
that time (tote)
means then and so the Greek phrase (ho tote kosmos) literally
means the then world. When is then?
In context Peter is describing the
world
as it was at the time the cataclysmic flood in Genesis 6-9. This time
phrase directly addresses the statement of the ungodly regarding the beginning
of creation in (3:3)
World (2889)
(kosmos) refers to an orderly arrangement
and thus gives us our English word "cosmetics" which keep one's face
"orderly"!
Most
conservative Biblical scholars feel that the "world order"
at that time
was substantially different than the "world order" after the flood.
Extrapolating from the Biblical account the world of Noah's day
seems to have possessed a unique physical environment often referred to
as the canopy,
representing a collection of water above the land and sheltering the
earth from the sun’s destructive ultraviolet rays, producing a gentle
climate that was devoid of rain, storms, and winds. Further this
pre-flood orderly arrangement was characterized by incredible human
longevity (cf Ge 5) and remarkable fruitfulness as the canopy
acted much like a green house.
Now whether you accept the so called
"canopy theory" or not does not negate Peter's main point which is that
a cataclysmic flood destroyed the kosmos. It is also notable that world
in this context includes the inhabitants of the earth at the time of the
flood. As Peter has just explained in chapter 2, God...
did not spare the ancient world, but
preserved Noah, a preacher of righteousness, with seven others, when He
brought a flood upon the world of the ungodly (2Peter 2:5)
The ungodly heard Noah proclaim the
righteousness which God demanded and provided, but refused to acknowledge their need
and consequently refused to enter the ark (a prefiguring of our rescue
in Christ).
Destroyed
(622)(apollumi)
pertains to destruction without annihilation. It basically has to do
with that which is ruined and is no longer usable for its intended
purpose. The thing ruined can no longer fulfill the use for
which it was designed. All people are created by God for His glory, but
when they refuse to come to Him for salvation they lose their
opportunity for redemption, for becoming what God intends for them to
be. They are then fit only for condemnation and destruction.
Destroyed
is in the historical
aorist tense which indicates a past completed action.
The
indicative mood
speaks of a definite event.
Peter is refuting
what is commonly referred to as the uniformatarianism of the mockers,
which is an "-ism" that postulates things
have always been the same since the beginning of time. Peter says this
theory is not valid for God has in fact “broken into” human history in the past
in Creation and in the Flood. And just as He has supernaturally
intervened in the past to create and destroy, so too He will intervene
the future to destroy with fire.
The psalmist
glories in God's sovereignty declaring
Our God is in the heavens: He does whatever He pleases (Ps 115:3)
(See
Spurgeon's note)
Creationist
Dr. Henry Morris
has some interesting comments on the "world...destroyed" writing
that...
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 willful 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 (Ge 6:1-9:1ff), confirmed by Christ (Lk 17:26;27), 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." (Morris,
Henry: Defenders Study Bible. World Publishing)
(bolding added)
The
Columbia Encyclopedia, a secular
source has this entry under deluge
Flood stories
resembling the biblical story are found in the folklore of many
races—Native Americans, Fiji Islanders, and Australian aborigines. The
earliest known of these stories is Sumerian, one form being found in the
record of Berossus (3rd century BC), another on a tablet of the
Gilgamesh epic of at least 2000 BC.
BEING FLOODED WITH WATER: hudati kataklustheis (AAPMSN) apoleto (3SAMI): (2Pet
2:5; Ge 7:10-23; 9:15; Job 12:15; Mt 24:38; 39 Lk 17:27) (Torrey's Topic The
Deluge)
Being flooded
with water - Peter specifies the means of the earth's destruction.
Being flooded (2626)
(katakluzo from kata
= intensifies meaning + kludon = dashing or surging wave, a
surge, a violent agitation of the sea from kluzo = to billow,
dash over) means to surge over completely, to inundate (cover with a
flood, figuratively to overwhelm), to deluge, to overflow or to
submerge. The word pictures a large flood with destructive force (and
implies complete, destructive overflow) and is
used in its literal sense by Peter. Katakluzo is used
metaphorically in several OT passages (see
Septuagint
uses below), which picture an enemy force as "overflowing" (Jer 47:2) or
a manifestation of God's anger (Ezek 13:13)
In 2Peter 2:5 Peter the related noun
kataklusmos which means “an inundation, deluge.” (Used only of
Noah's flood in Mt 24:38, 39; Lk 17:27; 2Pe2:5)
In the Greek NT katakluzo
is only used to refer to Noah’s Flood (cf. Mt 24:38,39; Luke 17:27;
2Peter 2:5) for other words were used for other, lesser, local floods
(cf. Luke 6:48 [plemmúra = tide, floodtide inundation], Rev 12:15
[potamophoretos]-note).
Note the use of the historical
aorist tense
which
signifies a past completed action. It has been well said that
those who cannot remember (or refuse to acknowledge the reality of) the
past are condemned to repeat it (cp "condemned" in 2Pe 2:6-note;
"condemnation" of ungodly in Jude 1:4, Heb 11:7-note
= Noah's obedient faith "condemned the world"! [Corollary: a
"faith" that does not obey is suspect! We are not speaking of
"perfection" for none of achieve perfect obedience, but of general
"direction" of our lives as manifest by our choices, our lifestyle - are
we journeying "heavenward" or "hell-ward"?]).
Katakluzo gives us our
English word cataclysm (from Latin "cataclysmos" - deluge) which Webster defines as a
momentous and violent event marked
by overwhelming upheaval and demolition, an event that brings great
changes, a violent upheaval; a disastrous flood; a deluge; calamity,
woe, disaster.
In Geology cataclysm is
"another name for catastrophe...any sudden and violent change in the
earth's surface caused by flooding, earthquake or some other rapid
process". (Collins Dictionary)
Comment: Webster's 1828
version says "cataclysm is used "particularly (of) the flood in Noah's
day." It is interesting that the modern version has "jettisoned" this
description in its more "enlightened" definition!
The Concise Oxford English
Dictionary has an interesting note on the origin of cataclysm,
explaining that it originated in the seventeenth century, "originally
denoting the biblical Flood".
Katakluzo is used 9x in the
Septuagint (Lxx)
and is used literally as in 2Peter but is also used metaphorically to
describe enemy forces who will overflow the land of Israel (Jer 47:2).
Job 14:19 Water wears away stones,
Its torrents wash away the dust of the earth; So You destroy
man's hope.
Psalm 78:20 "Behold, He struck the rock so that waters gushed out, And
streams were overflowing; Can He give bread also? Will He provide
meat for His people?"
Jeremiah 47:2 Thus says the LORD: "Behold, waters are going to
rise from the north And become an overflowing torrent, And
overflow the land and all its fullness, The city and those who live
in it; And the men will cry out, And every inhabitant of the land will
wail.
Comment: Metaphor for Babylon
coming out of the North - Jer 1:14, 4:6, Jer 25:1, 9, 11, 12. The NET
Bible paraphrases the passage to help the reader understand Jeremiah is
using a
term of comparison, specifically a simile (use of
"as" or "like")
= ""Look! Enemies are gathering in the north like water rising in a
river. They will be like an overflowing stream."
Ezekiel 13:11-note so tell those who plaster it over with whitewash, that it
will fall. A flooding rain will come, and you, O hailstones, will
fall; and a violent wind will break out....13-note Therefore, thus says the
Lord GOD, "I will make a violent wind break out in My wrath. There will
also be in My anger a flooding rain and hailstones to consume it
in wrath.
Comment: False prophets had
lulled the people into false security. Phony “peace” promises (while sin continued on the brink of God’s judgment) was a way, so to
speak, of erecting a defective “wall” and whitewashing it to make it
look good. Such an unsafe “wall” was doomed to collapse when God would
bring His storm, picturing the invaders’ assault (v11) (Ed:
The enemy
assault was depicted as a flood.
Have you ever been in a
devastating flood? We have all seen the pictures of the destruction and
relative helplessness of men in the face of sudden, overwhelming
floodwaters.) .The ”whitewash“ was their false prophecies; and when
Jerusalem was destroyed, this would be revealed.
(MacArthur,
J.: The MacArthur Study Bible Nashville: Word
or
Logos)
Ezekiel 38:22 "With pestilence and with blood I will enter into judgment
with him; and I will rain on him and on his troops, and on the many
peoples who are with him, a torrential rain, with hailstones,
fire and brimstone.
Daniel 11:10-note "His sons will mobilize and assemble a multitude of great
forces; and one of them will keep on coming and overflow and pass
through, that he may again wage war up to his very fortress....22-note "The
overflowing forces will be flooded away before him and shattered,
and also the prince of the covenant....26-note "Those who eat his choice food
will destroy him, and his army will overflow, but many will fall
down slain.
The universal flood which drowned the whole earth and altered the
originally created world order is the second great divine cataclysm (the first being the
"cataclysm" of creation,
the Divine "Big Bang"!) that
soundly refutes the idea of uniformatarianism. The people living on
earth had never seen rain or the fountains of the deep broken up, but
these events happened just the same (Gen 7:11ff).
The ancient “scientists” could have argued as the scoffers of the last
days will argue,
Everything goes on as it did from the
beginning. Life is uniform so nothing unusual can happen. But it did in fact
happen!
GENESIS EMPHASIZES
THE FLOOD!
It is worth noting that Moses took
two chapters to describe the creation of the world, one chapter to
portray the Fall, but devoted four chapters to the Flood. In so doing we
clearly see the nature of God's dealings with mankind both in regard to
His judgment of sin and His mercy toward sinners.
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