Verse 1
2 Peter 2:1. But — Now that I am
speaking of the
divinely-inspired Jewish
prophets, whose writings you
must give heed to, I must remind
you that there were also false
prophets among the people — Of
Israel, whose doctrine and
pretended predictions were to be
disbelieved and disregarded, and
whose society was to be shunned.
Under the name of false
prophets, that appeared among
the Israelites of old, those
that even spake the truth, when
God had not sent them, might be
comprehended; and also those
that were truly sent of him, and
yet corrupted or softened their
message. Even as there shall be
false teachers — As well as
true; among you — Christians.
The entrance of false teachers
into the church of Christ, their
impious doctrines, their success
in perverting many, and the
influence of their doctrines in
corrupting the morals of their
disciples, were all very early
made known by the Spirit to the
Apostle Paul, as we learn from
his speech to the elders of
Ephesus, and from his epistles
to the Thessalonians, to
Timothy, and to Titus. The same
discoveries were made to the
Apostles Peter, John, and Jude,
who, as well as Paul, published
them in their writings, that the
faithful might oppose these
false teachers, and confute
their errors, as soon as they
appeared. Peter, therefore, here
records the revelation which was
made to him concerning the false
teachers who were to arise in
the church, and concerning their
destructive ways. But, lest the
prospect of these great evils
should grieve the faithful too
much, as suggesting a fear that
God had forsaken his church, he
observes, by way of preface,
that such a thing was not
unexampled; because that,
together with many true
prophets, there were also many
false ones in God’s ancient
church, which, however, God had
not therefore forsaken, but
continued to superintend and
take care of it. Who privily
shall bring in — Into the
church; damnable, or destructive
heresies — As αιρεσεις απωλειας
signifies; understanding by the
word heresies not only
fundamental errors in doctrine
and practice, but divisions and
parties occasioned by them,
formed among the faithful. See
note on 1 Corinthians 11:18-19.
Even denying the Lord that
bought them — They either,
first, by denying the Lord,
introduced destructive
divisions, or they occasioned
first those divisions, and then
were given up to a reprobate
mind, even to deny the Lord,
both by their doctrine and their
works. By the Lord here may be
understood either the Father,
who hath redeemed mankind by the
blood of his Son, or the Son,
who hath bought them with his
own blood. Observe, reader, the
persons here spoken of as
denying the Lord, and therefore
as perishing everlastingly, were
nevertheless bought by him; by
which it appears that even those
who finally perish were bought
with the blood of Christ; a full
proof this of the truth of the
doctrine of general, redemption.
And bring upon themselves swift
destruction — Future and eternal
misery.
Verse 2-3
2 Peter 2:2-3. And many shall
follow their pernicious ways —
Their destructive doctrines, and
sinful practices. By reason of
whom the way of truth — The
doctrine of the gospel, and the
genuine religion of Christ;
shall be evil spoken of — By
many others, who will blend all
false and true Christians
together, as if the errors and
vices of those members who are
corrupted were to be charged on
those who are not infected with
their disorders; or the vices of
a few were to be imputed to all.
And through covetousness —
Having nothing in view but
worldly gain; shall they —
Namely, the false teachers here
spoken of; with feigned words —
Words formed to deceive, smooth
and artful speeches, such as
covetous merchants, or unfair
traders, make use of to put off
bad goods; make merchandise of
you — Use you to gain by you.
“In this single sentence,” says
Macknight, “there is a clear
prediction of the iniquitous
practices of those great
merchants of souls, the Romish
clergy, who have rated all
crimes, even the most atrocious,
at a fixed price; so that if
their doctrine be true, whoever
pays the price may commit the
crime without hazarding his
salvation.” Whose judgment now
of a long time lingereth not —
Was long ago determined, and
will be executed speedily. All
sinners are adjudged to
destruction; and God’s punishing
some proves he will punish the
rest; and their damnation
slumbereth not — How fondly
soever they may dream of
escaping it. Thus, while the
apostle asserts the justice of
God, he declares his patience.
He is slow to punish, that
sinners may have time to repent.
But if they continue impenitent,
he will, without fail, punish
them at last.
Verse 4
2 Peter 2:4. For if — Or since,
as ει γαρ may be here rendered;
God spared not the angels that
sinned — “The angels seem to
have been placed originally in a
state of trial. Those who stood
are called in Scripture, the
holy angels. The sin of the
angels is spoken of likewise,
John 8:44, and Jude, 2 Peter
2:6, as a thing well known.
Perhaps it was handed down by
tradition from Adam and Eve, for
the memory of it seems to have
been preserved among the
heathens in the fable of the
Titans warring against the gods.
What the sin of the angels was
is not well known. 1:6, says,
They kept not their first
estate, or their own
principality, as την εαυτων
αρχην may be properly rendered,
but left their proper
habitation. Hence their sin, by
many, is thought to have been
pride, and a discontent with
their station. See 1 Timothy
3:6. But whatever it was,
considering their high
intellectual powers, they might
easily have avoided it; and
therefore God did not spare
them, as he spared Adam and Eve,
who, on account of the greatness
of the temptation spread for
them by the evil angels, and
their own inexperience, were fit
objects of mercy.” But cast them
down to hell — The bottomless
pit, a place of unknown misery.
The original expression, αλλα
σειραις ζοφου ταρταρωσας, is
rendered by Macknight, But with
chains of darkness confining
them in Tartarus. The word
Tartarus, he observes, is not
found in the LXX., nor anywhere
in the New Testament but here.
Its meaning, therefore, must be
sought for among the Greeks.
Homer represents Tartarus,
Iliad, 8. ver. 13, as “a deep
place under the earth, where
there are iron gates and a
brazen entrance.” It is derived
from a word expressive of
terror, and signifies the
doleful prison in which wicked
spirits are reserved till they
shall be brought out to public
condemnation and execution. In
like manner, Hesiod speaks of
Tartarus as a place far under
ground, where the Titans are
bound with chains in thick
darkness. But on other occasions
the Greek writers speak of
Tartarus as in the air, and at
the extremity of the earth.
Hence the epithet ταρταρον
ηεροεντα, airy Tartarus. The
Jews, as appears from Job 2:2,
thought that at least some of
the fallen angels were permitted
to wander up and down the earth,
and to tempt men. This was the
doctrine of the evangelists
likewise, who speak of the devil
tempting our Lord; and of Peter,
who represents him as a roaring
lion walking about, &c., 1 Peter
5:8; as also of St. Paul, who
insinuates that evil spirits
have their habitation in the
air, Ephesians 2:2; Ephesians
6:11-12. Wherefore seeing the
Greeks named the place where
they supposed the Titans, the
enemies of the gods, were
confined, Tartarus, it was
natural for Peter, when writing
in the Greek language,
concerning confining the evil
angels in the place where they
were shut up, to call it
Tartarus, although his idea of
Tartarus was different from that
of the Greeks. Because it is
said, Revelation 20:3, that
Satan was cast, εις αβυσσον,
into the abyss, and Luke 8:31,
that the devil besought Jesus
that he would not command them
to go out, εις αβυσσον, into the
abyss, Estius infers that
Tartarus and Hell are the same;
and that the greatest part of
the angels who sinned are
confined there, though some of
them are allowed to roam about
on the earth, tempting men. See
Macknight and Doddridge.
Reserved unto judgment — The
full execution and open
manifestation thereof. From this
it follows that the angels who
sinned are not at present
suffering the punishment due to
them for their crimes; but, like
malefactors, they are kept in
durance till the time come when
they are to be punished with the
wicked of mankind, whom they
have seduced. Whitby hath shown
that this was the opinion of all
the Christian writers for five
centuries. And it is agreeable
to our Lord’s doctrine, who
says, the fire into which wicked
men are to be cast, is fire
prepared for the devil and his
angels.
Verse 5
2 Peter 2:5. And spared not the
old — The antediluvian; world,
but saved Noah — Interposed
amidst the general ruin for the
preservation of one good man and
his family; the eighth person, a
preacher, &c. — Bishop Pearson
translates this clause, the
eighth preacher of
righteousness; supposing that
Enoch, (Genesis 5:24,) from whom
Noah was descended, was the
first preacher of righteousness,
and that all the intermediate
persons were likewise preachers
thereof, and that Christ
preached by them all. But of
this there is no evidence; and
it seems certain that Enoch
could not be the first preacher
of righteousness: Adam was, in a
wonderful manner, fitted to
perform that office in the first
world, as Noah was in the
second; and what excellent
instructions both might give, is
easy to be conceived! Bishop
Pearson adds, that if the
above-mentioned sense of the
passage be not admitted, it may
be understood as denoting, not
the order in which Noah was
ranked, but merely the number of
persons that were with him,
namely, Noah with seven others,
or Noah one of eight. By terming
Noah a preacher, κηρυκα, a
crier, or herald, of
righteousness, Peter intimates
that all the time Noah was
preparing the ark, he proclaimed
to the antediluvians the
destruction of the world by a
flood, that from the dread of
that impending judgment of God
they might be brought to
repentance. His preaching,
however, it appears, was
attended with little or no
success. Bringing in the flood —
In a gradual, but irresistible
manner; upon the world of the
ungodly — Whose numbers stood
them in no stead.
Verses 6-8
2 Peter 2:6-8. And turning the
cities of Sodom, &c., into ashes
— When the inhabitants of those
places were sunk into the lowest
degeneracy; and condemned them
with an overthrow — Punished
them with utter destruction,
both of their persons and
habitations; making them an
ensample — Not an example to be
imitated, but an example to be
avoided, as the word υποδειγμα,
here used, signifies. Hence
Jude, to express the same idea,
uses the word δειγμα. And
delivered just Lot — By the
miraculous interposition of his
providence; vexed with the
filthy conversation of the
wicked — Exceedingly grieved by
the lewd behaviour of the
lawless Sodomites. For that
righteous man, dwelling among
them — Lot appears to have dwelt
sixteen years in Sodom, after he
parted from Abraham; a long
space to abide in one of the
lewdest and most outrageously
wicked cities in the world, and
not be tainted with their vices.
Doubtless, as he was so
exceedingly grieved with their
lewd conduct from day to day, he
often earnestly desired to leave
the place, but he was directed,
it seems, by God, to remain,
that he might be an example of
the divine goodness and power in
delivering the godly from
temptation, sin, and punishment.
In seeing their base actions,
and in hearing their lewd
speeches, he vexed — εβασανιζεν,
tormented; his righteous soul
from day to day — For their
wickedness was incessant; with
their unlawful deeds — The cry
of which came up at length to
heaven, and brought down upon
them flaming destruction.
Verse 9
2 Peter 2:9. The Lord, &c. —
This answers to 2 Peter 2:4, and
closes the sense which was begun
there; knoweth how to deliver —
As if he had said, It plainly
appears, from these instances,
that the Lord hath both wisdom
and power sufficient, or can
find out ways and means, and
will do so; to deliver the godly
— Those who now suffer
persecution; out of temptations
—
That is, trials and afflictions
of various kinds; and to reserve
— Or, keep in ward, as it were;
(so τηρειν seems here to
signify;) the unjust — The
unrighteous, or ungodly; unto
the day of judgment — Temporal
and eternal; to be punished — In
a most signal manner, or with a
severity becoming their guilt
and wickedness. “The multitude
of the inhabitants of the old
world, and of the cities of the
plain, was, in the eye of God,
no reason for not destroying
them. He destroyed them all at
once. On the other hand, the few
godly persons among them were
not overlooked by God because
they were few, but preserved by
an immediate interposition of
his power. This last observation
Peter makes to show that,
notwithstanding God permits
false teachers to arise and
deceive many, he will preserve
the sincere from being deluded
by them, and at length will
destroy them out of the church.
By God’s keeping the unrighteous
in ward to be punished at the
day of judgment, we are taught
that the punishment inflicted on
the wicked in this life, will
not hinder them from being
punished in the next. The
principal part of their
punishment will be that which
they shall suffer after the
judgment.”
Verse 10-11
2 Peter 2:10-11. But chiefly
them that walk after the flesh —
Their corrupt nature;
particularly in the lusts of
uncleanness — Which are
especially detestable in the eye
of God; and the crimes they
commit so much resemble those of
Sodom, that it is the less to be
wondered at if they share in its
punishment; and with them may be
joined those who despise
government — The authority of
their governors. Presumptuous —
τολμηται, audacious, ready to
venture upon any thing that may
serve their purposes;
self-willed — Uncontrollable in
their own designs and ways; they
are not afraid to speak evil of
dignities — Of persons in the
highest dignity. Whereas angels
— When they appear before the
Lord, (Job 1:6; Job 2:1,) to
give an account of what they
have seen and done in the earth;
even those who are greater in
power and might — Than the rest
of those glorious beings; bring
not railing accusation against
them — With whom they contend,
namely, the devil, (as 1:9,) or,
when they speak of rulers, they
speak honourably of them, Daniel
4:31; and, always avoiding all
violence of language, they, with
all calmness and decency,
declare matters as they are,
revering the presence of God,
how much soever they may abhor
the characters of wicked men.
Verses 12-14
2 Peter 2:12-14. But these —
False teachers; as natural brute
beasts — As irrational animals,
led merely by their brutish
inclinations, several of which,
in the present disordered state
of the world, seem to be made to
be taken and destroyed by
mankind. He speaks chiefly of
savage beasts, which men for
their own security and
preservation hunt down and
destroy; speak evil of things
that they understand not —
Namely, the mysteries of
Christianity; or magistracy, the
institution, use, and benefit
whereof they understand not; and
shall utterly perish in their
own corruption — In that loose
and abandoned course of life to
which they have given up
themselves, John 8:21; who
account it pleasure to riot in
the day-time — Reckon it their
chief happiness to pursue, even
in the broad light of day, those
riotous and voluptuous courses,
which one would suppose they
would endeavour to conceal under
the cover of night. See 1
Thessalonians 5:7; Isaiah 3:9.
Spots they are — In themselves;
and blemishes — To any church;
sporting themselves with their
own deceivings — Making a jest
of those whom they deceive, and
even jesting while they are
deceiving their own souls; while
they feast with you — When they
join with you in the
love-feasts. “The primitive
Christians were used to feast
together before they celebrated
the Lord’s supper, because it
was instituted by Christ after
he had eaten the passover with
his disciples. See 1 Corinthians
11:21. These previous suppers,
it appears from Jude, 2 Peter
2:13, were called αγαπαι,
love-feasts; because the rich,
by feasting their poor brethren,
expressed their love to them.
But on these occasions, it
seems, the false teachers and
their disciples were guilty of
great intemperance. Having eyes
full of adultery — Many of them
are as lewd as they are
gluttonous. The Greek is, more
literally, having eyes full of
an adulteress; a very strong
expression, implying their
having an adulteress continually
before their eyes; and that
cannot — Or who act as if they
could not; cease from sin;
beguiling — δελεαζοντες,
insnaring; unstable souls — Such
as are not established in the
faith and practice of the
gospel. A heart exercised with
covetous practices — Well
experienced in such contrivances
as are calculated to promote
their gain and carnal interest.
Cursed children — Persons worthy
to be had in utter abomination,
and peculiarly exposed to the
curse of God.
Verse 15
2 Peter 2:15. Which have
forsaken the right — ευθειαν,
straight; way — The way of truth
and integrity, and are gone
astray — Have wandered in
dangerous and destructive paths;
following the way of Balaam the
son of Bosor — (So the Chaldeans
pronounced what the Jews called
Beor,) namely, the ways of
covetousness. Balaam loved
wealth and honour so much, that
to obtain them he acted contrary
to his conscience. To follow his
way, therefore, is to be guided
by similar base passions, and to
commit similar base actions; who
loved the wages of
unrighteousness — “When Balaam
was first sent for to curse the
Israelites, Balak’s messengers
carried only the rewards of
divination in their hands,
Numbers 22:7 : and therefore
when God forbade him to go, he
easily acquiesced, and refused
to go, 2 Peter 2:13. But when
Balak sent a second request by
more honourable messengers, and
with them a promise to promote
him to very great honour, and to
do whatever he should say to
him, Balaam, inflamed with the
love of the promised hire,
endeavoured a second time to
obtain permission to go. And
though God allowed him to go, on
the express condition that he
should do nothing in the affair
without his order, Balaam went
with the resolution of cursing
the Israelites, whether God
permitted him or not;” as
evidently appears from the
circumstances of the story, to
which the reader is referred.
“And though he so far obeyed God
that he blessed the Israelites,
it was no dictate of his heart,
but a suggestion of the Spirit
of God, which he could not
resist. For that his love of the
hire, and his inclination to
curse the Israelites continued,
he showed by his behaviour
afterward, when, to bring the
curse of God upon the
Israelites, he counselled Balak
to entice them to fornication
and idolatry by means of the
Midianitish women, Numbers
31:16; Revelation 2:14 :” in
giving which advice he acted
most unrighteously, knowing it
to be evil, and that God’s
purpose concerning the
Israelites was irrevocable,
Numbers 23:19, &c. “He therefore
gave the advice, not in the
persuasion that it would be
effectual, but merely to gain
the promised hire, which
therefore is called the hire of
unrighteousness. In these things
the false teachers, who, to draw
money from their disciples,
encouraged them by their
doctrine to commit all manner of
lewdness, might well be said to
follow in the way of Baalam; and
their doctrine might justly be
called, the doctrine of Balaam.”
— Macknight.
Verse 16
2 Peter 2:16. But was rebuked
for his iniquity — In a very
extraordinary manner; the dumb
ass — On which he rode; speaking
with man’s voice — That is, in
man’s language; forbade the
madness of the prophet — Namely,
his endeavour to contradict the
will of God, which might well be
called madness, because it could
have no effect but to bring the
curse of God upon himself. “The
apostle does not mean that the
ass forbade Balaam, in so many
words, to go with the princes of
Moab; but that her unwillingness
to proceed in the journey, her
falling down under him rather
than go on, her complaint in
man’s language of his smiting
her three times for not going
on, and her saying, Was I ever
wont to do so to thee, were
things, so extraordinary,
especially her speaking, that
Balaam, from that miracle at
least, ought to have understood
that the whole was a rebuke from
God of his foolish project.”
Though Balaam is termed a
soothsayer, (Joshua 13:22,) and
is said to have used
enchantments, (Numbers 24:1,)
Peter justly calls him a
prophet, on account of God’s
speaking to him, and giving him
a very remarkable prophecy,
recorded Numbers 24:15. However,
being a very bad man, he may
often have feigned
communications with the Deity to
draw money from the multitude.
Perhaps the only communications
he ever had with God were on
this occasion; and they may have
been granted to him, that by
uttering them in the hearing of
Balak, and of the princes of
Moab and Midian, the coming of
one out of Jacob, who was to
have dominion, might be known to
the nations of the East.
Verse 17
2 Peter 2:17. These are wells
without water, &c. — Pretenders
to knowledge and piety, but
really destitute thereof; clouds
— Promising fertilizing showers
of instructive and edifying
doctrine, but yielding none;
carried with a tempest — Driven
by the violence of their own
lusts from one error and vice to
another; to whom the mist — ο
ζοφος, the blackness; of
darkness is reserved for ever —
Eternal darkness. Frequently in
Scripture the word darkness
signifies a state of
disconsolate misery; here it
denotes the punishment of the
wicked after the day of
judgment; which our Lord also
hath represented by persons
being cast into outer darkness.
“There being few wells and
little rain in the eastern
countries, for a thirsty
traveller to come to a well that
had no water, was a grievous
disappointment; as it was also
to the husbandman to see clouds
arise which gave him the
prospect of rain, but which,
ending in a tempest, instead of
refreshing, destroyed the fruits
of the earth. By these
comparisons the ostentation,
hypocrisy, levity, and mischief
of the false teachers are set
forth in the strongest colours.”
Verse 18-19
2 Peter 2:18-19. When they speak
great swelling words of vanity —
Propose their vain and false
doctrine in a lofty style, or
affect sublime strains of
language, which are often void
of any real meaning; they allure
through the lusts of the flesh —
By allowing their hearers to
live in lewd courses, or to
gratify some unholy desires
under pretence of Christian
liberty, 2 Peter 2:10; 2 Peter
2:19; those — Who, as
Christians; were clean escaped
from the spirit, customs, and
company of them that live in
error — That is, in sin. In
other words, they bring back
again to their former
sensuality, and other vices,
those who, having been
converted, had entirely forsaken
their former evil ways and
wicked companions. While they
promise them liberty — From
needless restraints and
scruples, and from the bondage
of the law; they themselves are
the servants of corruption —
Slaves to their own lusts, to
sin, the vilest of all kinds of
bondage; for of whom — Or what;
a man is overcome, of the same
thing he is brought into bondage
— Becomes a perfect slave to it.
The apostle seems here to allude
to the ancient custom of making
those slaves who were conquered
or taken in battle. It was one
of the Stoical paradoxes, that
the wise man is the only free
man, and that all wicked men are
slaves. This maxim the apostle
adopts, and supports it in a
sound sense by the above
unanswerable argument. Hence our
Lord said to the Jews, who
boasted of their freedom, (John
8:34,)
Whosoever committeth sin is the
slave of sin. Of the slavery in
which every carnal man lives,
St. Paul has given us a lively
picture, Romans 6:16-20.
Verses 20-22
2 Peter 2:20-22. For if after
they — The persons here spoken
of as deluded; have escaped the
pollutions of the world — The
sins which pollute those who
know not God; through the
knowledge of Christ — That is,
through faith in him, 2 Peter
1:3; they are again entangled
therein and overcome, the latter
end — Their last state; is worse
than the beginning — More
inexcusable, and exposing them
to a greater condemnation. For
it had been better for them not
to have known the way of
righteousness — As set forth in
the gospel; than, after they
have known it, to turn from the
holy commandment, &c. — The
doctrine of Christ, which
enjoins nothing but what is
holy. It would have been better,
because their sin would have
been less, and their punishment
lighter. See the margin. But it
has happened unto them according
to the true proverb — The
ancients used to sum up their
wisest and most useful
observations in short, nervous,
and impressive proverbs, which
were more easily understood, and
better remembered, than long,
laboured discourses. The dog,
the sow — Unclean creatures:
such are all men in the sight of
God before they receive his
grace, and after they have made
shipwreck of the faith. These
proverbs teach us the absolute
necessity of constant
watchfulness and prayer, self-
denial and mortification, in
order to our persevering in the
way of righteousness after we
have entered upon it. And, as
some think, they teach also that
many, if not most of those who
relapse into their former habits
of sin, had contented themselves
with a mere external
reformation, and had stopped
short of a thorough change of
nature, or being made new
creatures in Christ Jesus. It
may be worth observing, that the
former of these proverbs is
found Proverbs 26:11, and the
latter is said to have been a
common proverb among the
ancients: see Sirach 26:24-26.
Horace has a plain reference to
both of them, lib. 1. Sirach
26:26, where he is speaking of
the travels of Ulysses, and
says, “If he had been conquered
by the charms of Circe, he had
lived like an impure dog, or a
sow that is fond of the mire.”
Surely these proverbs will not
be thought coarse or unpolite in
St. Peter, when some of the most
elegant writers of antiquity
have made use of, or referred to
them. |