Verse 1-2
1 Peter 3:1-2. Likewise — As I
have exhorted servants to be in
subjection to their masters, I
in like manner say, Ye wives, be
in subjection to your own
husbands — In all things just
and lawful; that if any (he
speaks tenderly) obey not the
word — Disbelieve and reject the
gospel; they also may, without
the word — Though they neglect
or reject that means of grace;
be won by the conversation — The
good behaviour of the wives —
That is, be gained over to
Christ. “Here St. Peter wisely
intimates to the women, that the
silent, but powerful persuasion
of a becoming behaviour, would
be more effectual in winning
their unbelieving husbands to
embrace the gospel, than many
arguments, proposed perhaps with
heat, for the purpose of
convincing them. For when the
husbands found what a happy
influence the gospel had in
making their wives
sweet-tempered and dutiful in
every respect, they could not
but entertain a good opinion of
a religion which produced such
excellent effects.” While, with
admiration and increasing love,
they daily behold your chaste
and spotless conversation
coupled with fear — With a
dutiful, respectful, obliging
conduct, and a care not to
displease.
Verse 3-4
1 Peter 3:3-4. Whose adorning,
&c, — See note on 1 Timothy 2:9;
Titus 2:3. “Three things are
here expressly forbidden:
curling the hair, wearing gold,
(by way of ornament,) and
putting on costly or gay
apparel. These, therefore, ought
never to be allowed, much less
defended, by Christians.” —
Wesley. But let it be the hidden
man of the heart — An inward,
gracious disposition, or
complete inward holiness,
namely, that which is not
corruptible — Which will not
wear out and decay, as the
external ornaments of dress
will; even a meek and quiet
spirit — Essential to true
holiness. A meek spirit consists
in bearing provocation
patiently; a quiet spirit in
abstaining from giving
provocation, especially by
bitter language, and from
causing unnecessary trouble to
any; in the sight of God — Who
looks at the heart. “All
superfluity of dress contributes
more to pride and anger than is
generally supposed. The apostle
seems to have an eye to this, by
substituting meekness and
quietness in the room of the
ornaments he forbids. ‘I do not
regard these things,’ is often
said by those whose hearts are
wrapped up in them. But offer to
take them away, and you touch
the very idol of their souls.
Some, indeed, only dress
elegantly that they may be
looked on; that is, they
squander away their Lord’s
talent to gain applause; thus
making sin to beget sin, and
then plead one in excuse of the
other.” — Wesley. The sentiments
contained in this verse are
illustrated by Blackwall (Sacred
Classics: vol. 1. p. 164,) as
follows: “How must all the
short-lived beauties, the
shapes, features, and most
elegant and rich ornaments of
the mortal body, which attract
the eyes and admiration of vain
mortals, fade away, and lose
their charms and lustre, when
compared with the heavenly
graces of a pious and regular
temper, the incorruptible
ornaments and beauties of the
soul, which are ever amiable,
and of high value in the eye of
God, the Sovereign Judge of what
is good and beautiful!” Nearly
resembling this is a passage of
Crates, a heathen philosopher,
quoted by Plutarch: “Neither
gold, nor emeralds, nor pearls
grace and ornament a woman; but
all those things which clearly
express and set off her gravity,
regularity, and modesty.”
Verse 5-6
1 Peter 3:5-6. For after this
manner — Namely, with inward
holiness and outward plainness;
in old time — In the patriarchal
ages; the holy women who trusted
in God — And therefore did not
act thus from servile fear, but
from true piety, and are
consequently worthy to be
imitated; adorned themselves —
Their adorning, according to St.
Peter here, was, 1st, Their meek
subjection to their husbands;
2d, Their quiet spirit, not
afraid or amazed; and, 3d, Their
unblameable behaviour, doing all
things well. Even as Sarah
obeyed Abraham — See Genesis
12:5; Genesis 18:6; calling him
lord — In token of her
subjection; for the ancients, by
giving titles of respect to
their superiors, acknowledged
their own inferiority.
Therefore, by mentioning the
reverence with which Sarah spake
of Abraham, the apostle
intimates that she entertained
the highest respect for him, and
a just sense of her own
subjection to him. Sarah was
considered by the Jewish women
as an illustrious pattern of a
dutiful wife; whose daughters —
Or children, in a spiritual, as
well as natural sense; ye are —
Or show yourselves to be, and
that ye are entitled to the same
inheritance; as long as ye do
well — Discharge all your
conjugal duties conscientiously.
Sarah being constituted by God
the mother of all believers,
(Galatians 4:26,) even as
Abraham was made their father,
the believing women of Pontus,
by imitating Sarah’s virtues,
became her children, though not
descended from her. And are not
afraid with any amazement — So
terrified with the apprehension
of any danger or prejudice that
may arise to you on account of
your piety, as to be discouraged
from your duty, or induced,
through fear of displeasing your
husbands, to do actions contrary
to your religion. For, while the
apostle enjoined wives to be in
subjection to their husbands, he
cautioned them against
committing sin, especially the
sin of idolatry, either from a
desire to please their husbands,
or from a fear of offending
them.
Verse 7
1 Peter 3:7. Likewise, ye
husbands — See on Ephesians
5:25; Colossians 3:19; dwell
with them — Conduct yourselves
toward them, according to
knowledge — Wisely and
discreetly; suitably to that
knowledge of your duty which you
have obtained by the gospel: or,
knowing they are weak, and
therefore to be used with
tenderness: yet do not despise
them for this, but give them
honour — Both in heart and in
your behaviour toward them, as
those who are called to be
joint-heirs of that eternal life
which ye and they hope to
receive by the free grace of
God. “In Scripture, honour is
sometimes used for maintenance,
because to supply any one with
the necessaries and conveniences
of life was considered, in
ancient times, as doing him
honour. Accordingly the Greeks,
in reward of eminent services
done to the community, decreed
maintenance at the public
expense to those who had
performed these services. By
assigning as the reason why
honour should be given to the
wife, that she is weaker than
the husband, in body or person,
(as the word σκευος, vessel,
here seems to mean,) the apostle
hath intimated, not only that he
ought to afford her a competent
share of the necessaries and
conveniences of life, but as
much relief from bodily labour
as his circumstances will allow:
all which is most reasonable,
considering the many bodily
troubles women are subject to,
in the breeding, bearing, and
nursing of children.” That your
prayers be not hindered — On the
one part or the other. All sin
hinders prayer, particularly
anger. Any thing at which we are
angry is never more apt to come
into our minds than when we are
at prayer. And those who do not
forgive, will find no
forgiveness from God.
Verse 8-9
1 Peter 3:8-9. Finally — This
section of the epistle reaches
to 1 Peter 4:11. The apostle
seems to have added the rest
afterward. Be ye all of one mind
— ομοφρονες, unanimous; guarding
against all unnecessary occasion
of contention: see on Romans
12:16 : have compassion, &c. —
Greek, συμπαθεις, sympathizing
with each other; rejoicing and
sorrowing together: love all
believers as brethren: be
pitiful — Toward the afflicted.
The original word, ευσπλαγχνοι,
is, literally, of good bowels.
The meaning is, Be moved with
compassion on beholding the
weaknesses and distresses of
others, and do all you can to
assist and relieve them. Be
courteous — To all men. Courtesy
is such a behaviour toward
equals and inferiors as shows
respect mixed with love. Not
rendering evil for evil — See on
Matthew 5:39; or railing for
railing — One reproachful speech
for another; but contrariwise,
blessing — Even to those that
curse you, according to Christ’s
precept; wishing and praying for
their welfare, and endeavouring
to promote it. Knowing that ye
are thereunto called — Namely,
to be of this benevolent and
beneficent forgiving temper:
that ye should inherit a
blessing, immense and eternal.
Therefore their railing cannot
hurt you; and by blessing them,
you imitate God, who blesses
you.
Verses 10-13
1 Peter 3:10-13. He that will
love life — That would make life
amiable and desirable; and see
good days — Namely, such as are
prosperous and happy; let him
refrain his tongue from evil —
From railing, back-biting,
tale-bearing, from all rash and
provoking expressions; and his
lips that they speak no guile —
No deceit; nothing contrary to
sincerity and simplicity. See on
Psalms 32:2. In this and the
following verses the apostle
offers three arguments, of great
importance, to induce men to the
practice of piety and virtue:
1st, It secures the happiness
both of the present and of the
future life: 2d, It ensures the
favour and protection of God, 1
Peter 3:12 : 3d, It disarms the
malice of men, 1 Peter 3:13. Let
him eschew evil — εκκλινατω απο
κακου, let him turn away from
evil, of every kind, and from
evil dispositions, as well as
evil words and actions; and do
good — To the utmost extent of
his power. Let him seek peace —
Endeavour, as much as in him
lieth, to live peaceably with
all men: and pursue it — When it
appears to flee from him. For
the eyes of the Lord are over
the righteous — Are continually
set upon them, to watch over and
protect them; and his ears are
open to their prayers —
Especially when they are in
distress. But the face of the
Lord — His countenance, full of
wrath and resentment; is against
them that do evil — Against all
that live in known sin, whether
high or low, rich or poor. And
who is he that shall harm you —
That shall have the ability to
do you any real harm; if ye be
followers of that which is good
— Or imitators of the good One,
as the original expression, του
αγαθου μιμηται, may be rendered:
that is, if you copy after the
benevolence of your heavenly
Father, and of his beloved Son,
your great Master, whose whole
life was so illustrious an
example of the most diffusive
generosity and goodness to his
followers?
Verses 14-16
1 Peter 3:14-16. But if you
should suffer — If any should be
so wicked as to endeavour to
harm you when you are doing
good; if your heathen rulers, or
any others, should persecute you
for righteousness’ sake; that
is, upon the account of your
religion, because you follow
Christ, and believe and obey his
gospel; this, properly speaking,
will be no harm to you, but a
good: yea, happy are you — In so
suffering, in spite of all the
malicious and outrageous efforts
of your enemies; yea, your
sufferings will be so far from
lessening, that they will
increase your happiness, and
that in many respects. Be not
afraid of their terror — τον δε
φοβον αυτων μη φοβηθητε, the
very words of the Septuagint,
Isaiah 8:12-13; Fear ye not
their fear: the exhortation
which Isaiah gave to the Jews
when threatened with an invasion
by the Assyrians. The words are
a Hebraism; the meaning of which
is, Be not affected with the
fear which they endeavour to
raise in you by their
threatenings. Or, as some
understand the expression, Let
not that fear be in you which
the wicked feel. But sanctify
the Lord God in your hearts —
Namely, by fearing him more than
men, how many or powerful soever
they may be; by believing all
his promises; by trusting in his
wisdom, power, and goodness; by
acknowledging his justice in the
punishments which he inflicts,
and by patiently bearing all the
trials he is pleased to appoint.
By these dispositions, believers
sanctify God in their hearts;
they give him the glory of all
his perfections. See on Isaiah
8:13. And be ready always — By a
familiar acquaintance with the
contents and evidences of your
holy religion, and by that
cheerfulness and presence of
mind which arises from a
consciousness of your practical
regard to it; to give an answer
to every man that asketh you —
Either by virtue of his office,
or for his own information; or
when the defence of the truth
requires it; a reason of the
hope that is in you — Of eternal
life; with meekness — For anger
would hurt your cause, as well
as your soul; and fear — A
filial fear of offending God,
and a jealous fear of
yourselves, lest you should
speak amiss. Having a good
conscience — Keeping your
consciences clear from guilt,
that they may justify you when
men accuse you; or conducting
yourselves so that your
consciences may not reproach you
for dishonouring the gospel, by
walking unsuitably to its holy
precepts; that whereas, or
wherein, they speak evil of you,
as of evil-doers — And lay to
your charge crimes of the most
detestable nature; they may be
put to shame, who falsely —
Without any shadow of cause;
accuse your good conversation —
Your inoffensive, useful, and
holy behaviour; in Christ —
According to his doctrine and
example.
Verse 17-18
1 Peter 3:17-18. For it is
infinitely better, if the will
of God be so — That you should
suffer; and his permissive will
in this respect appears from his
providence; that ye suffer for
well-doing, rather than for
evil-doing — The testimony of a
good conscience, and the sense
of the divine favour, affording
the no blest supports in the
former case; whereas, in the
latter, the severest torments
that can be endured are those
which the guilty mind inflicts
upon itself; to which may be
added, that while we suffer for
the truth, we have the comfort
of reflecting that we follow our
blessed Redeemer, which is
another most powerful source of
consolation. For Christ also
hath once suffered for sins —
Not his own, but for ours, to
make an atonement for them; the
just for the unjust — Or the
holy for the unholy; for the
word just here denotes a person
who has fulfilled not barely
social duties, but every branch
of righteousness; and the word
unjust signifies not only those
who have wronged their
neighbours, but those who have
transgressed any of the commands
of God; that he might bring us
to God — Might reconcile God to
us, and us to God; and might
obtain for us his gracious
favour here, his Holy Spirit, to
renew us after his image, and
might bring us to his blissful
presence hereafter; by the same
steps of suffering and of glory.
It is justly observed by
Macknight, that in the
sufferings of Christ we have a
clear proof that sufferings are
no evidence of the wickedness of
the sufferer, nor of the badness
of the cause for which he
suffers; and that the power of
God, visible in Christ’s
resurrection, affords to all,
who lose their lives for the
gospel, a sure ground of
consolation and hope that God
will raise them up at the last
day. Being put to death in the
flesh — In the human nature; or
in respect of that frail, mortal
life he had on earth; but
quickened — ζωοποιηθεις, made
alive; by the Spirit — The
Spirit of God and of Christ. “As
Christ was conceived in the womb
of his mother by the Holy
Spirit, (Luke 1:35,) so he was
raised from the dead by the same
Spirit; on which account he is
said (1 Timothy 3:16) to have
been justified by the Spirit;
and (Hebrews 9:14) to have
offered himself without spot to
God, through the eternal Spirit.
It is true the resurrection of
Christ is ascribed to the
Father, 1 Corinthians 6:14; 2
Corinthians 4:14; Ephesians
1:20; but that is not
inconsistent with Peter’s
affirmation in this verse;” for
the Father may, with the
strictest propriety, be said to
have done what his Spirit did,
especially as it was done to
show that God acknowledged Jesus
to be his Son. And our Lord’s
words, (John 2:19,) Destroy this
temple, and in three days I will
raise it up, are to be
understood in the same manner.
He raised it up by that Spirit
which proceeded from him as well
as from the Father.
Verse 19-20
1 Peter 3:19-20. By which also —
That is, by which Spirit; he
went and preached — πορευθεις
εκηρυξεν, having gone, he
preached, namely, in and by
Noah, who spake by the Spirit of
Christ, (1 Peter 1:11,) and of
the Father, who said, (Genesis
6:3,) referring to the men of
that generation, My Spirit shall
not always strive with man.
Hence Noah is called a preacher
of righteousness: 2 Peter 2:5.
“By attributing the preaching of
the ancient prophets to Christ,
the apostle hath taught us, that
from the beginning the economy
of man’s redemption has been
under the direction of Christ.
To the spirits in prison — That
is, which were in prison when
St. Peter wrote this epistle.
They were men in the flesh when
Christ preached to them by his
Spirit speaking in Noah; but
after they were dead, their
spirits were shut up in the
infernal prison, detained, like
the fallen angels, ( 1:6,) unto
the judgment of the great day;
which sometime — ποτε, once, or
formerly, were disobedient, when
the long-suffering of God waited
— For their repentance; in the
days of Noah — During the long
space of one hundred and twenty
years; while the ark was
preparing — During which time
Noah warned them all to repent,
and flee from the wrath to come.
Wherein — In which ark; few,
that is, eight souls — Namely,
Noah and his wife, with their
three sons and their wives; were
saved by water — Or, were
carried safely through the
water; namely, the waters of the
flood, which bare up the ark in
which they were enclosed. Some
suppose that the persons here
spoken of are said to have been
in prison in the days of Noah,
by the same figure of speech, by
which the persons to whom Christ
preached in the days of his
flesh, are called captives in
prison, Luke 4:18. “Christ’s
preaching to the antediluvians
by Noah, their destruction for
their disobedience to that
preaching, and the preservation
of Noah and his family in the
ark, are all fitly mentioned, to
show that it hath been God’s way
from the beginning of the world,
when the wickedness of men
became general, to oppose it, by
raising up prophets to reprove
them, and warn them of their
danger; and after waiting for
their repentance to no purpose,
to destroy them; while he
delivered the righteous from the
evils to which they were
exposed, by manifest
interpositions of his power.
These things teach us, that we
should not think the worse of
the gospel, because it hath been
rejected by many; nor of
ourselves, because we are
persecuted by the wicked. On the
other hand, by the punishment of
the antediluvians, and of the
Jews who crucified our Lord;
wicked men and persecutors are
taught to dread the judgments of
God.” — Macknight.
Verse 21-22
1 Peter 3:21-22. The like figure
whereunto — αντιτυπον, the
antitype whereof, that is, the
thing which corresponds, not
with the water, but with the
ark; even baptism doth now save
us — Or is the instrument of our
safety and preservation, from
the guilt, power, and
consequences of sin, which
overwhelms the world as a flood.
Not the putting away the filth
of the flesh — As if he had
said, By baptism I do not mean
merely or chiefly the sprinkling
or washing the body with water
from its filthiness, which is
only the outward or visible sign
of baptism, but the inward
renewing grace of God, producing
the answer of a good conscience,
or a divine consciousness that
both our persons and our actions
are accepted; by the
resurrection of Christ — That
is, the baptism which consists
in the answer of a good
conscience toward God, and which
is the antitype or thing which
was signified by Noah’s
preservation in the ark, now
saves us as effectually as the
ark preserved Noah from
destruction by the flood. It is
well known the Jews laid a great
stress upon their lustrations or
washings. The apostle,
therefore, very properly
cautions his readers against
such foolish dependancies. A
readiness to perform their whole
duty, and even to suffer
persecution for the sake of
truth, was absolutely necessary
in the first Christians, in
order to their maintaining that
good conscience, to which, in
their baptism, they professed a
great regard, and to the
exercise of which they solemnly
engaged themselves. The word
επερωτημα, here rendered answer,
signifies rather interrogation,
and is said by Archbishop
Leighton to be a judicial word,
and to signify interrogations
used in the law for a trial, or
executing a process, and has
been thought by some
commentators to refer to certain
interrogations, said by Cyprian
and other ancient writers to be
put to persons who offered
themselves to baptism,
concerning their faith in
Christ, and their renunciation
of Satan with all his works, and
the vanities of the world. But
it does not appear, Macknight
thinks, that these questions and
answers were used in the
apostle’s days; and if they were
not, the apostle could not refer
to them. “Allowing, however,” he
says, “that the word question is
here put for the word answer,
this answer of a good
conscience, being made to God,
is an inward answer, and means
the baptized person’s sincere
persuasion of the things which,
by submitting to baptism, he
professed to believe; namely,
that Jesus, in whose name
baptism is administered, arose
from the dead, and that at the
last day he will raise all from
the dead to eternal life, who
sincerely obey him. This
signification of baptism the
Apostle Paul hath taught, Romans
6:4-5; and therefore he calls
it, our begun confidence,
Hebrews 3:14; and exhorts the
Hebrews to hold it steadfast to
the end.” Who is gone into
heaven — As our forerunner; and
is on the right hand of God —
Having all power in heaven and
on earth; angels, authorities,
and powers — That is, all
orders, both of angels and men;
being made subject to him —
Insubserviency of his great
design, of saving all his true
followers. The apostle, in
speaking here of the
resurrection and glory of
Christ, means not only to
represent him as the object of
our confidence, but to intimate,
that if we imitate him in his
courageous fidelity, we may hope
to partake with him in his
glory. |