Verse 1-2
1:1-2. Jude, the servant of
Jesus Christ — The highest glory
which any, either man or angel,
can aspire to. The word servant,
under the old covenant, was
adapted to the spirit of fear
and bondage, which cleaved to
that dispensation. But when the
time appointed of the Father was
come for the sending of his Son,
to redeem them that were under
the law, the word servant (used
by the apostles concerning
themselves and all the children
of God) signified one that,
having the Spirit of adoption,
was made free by the Son of God.
His being a servant is the fruit
and perfection of his being a
Son. And whenever the throne of
God and of the Lamb shall be in
the New Jerusalem, then it will
be indeed that his servants
shall serve him, Revelation
22:3. And brother of James — So
well known by his distinguished
services in the cause of Christ
and of his gospel. St. James was
the more eminent, namely, James
the Less, usually styled the
brother of the Lord; and Jude,
being his brother, might also
have been called the brother of
Christ, rather than the brother
of James. But he avoided that
designation in the inscription
of a letter, which he wrote in
the character of an apostle, to
show, that whatever respect as a
man he might deserve on account
of his relation to Christ, he
derived no authority from it as
an apostle, nor indeed claimed
any. To them that are sanctified
by God the Father — Devoted to
his service, set apart for him
and made holy, through the
influence of his grace; and
preserved in Jesus Christ — In
the faith and profession of
Christ, and union with him, and
by his power. In other words,
brought into the fellowship of
his religion, and guarded by his
grace in the midst of a thousand
snares, which might have tempted
them to have made shipwreck of
their faith. And called — By the
preaching of the word, by the
dispensations of divine
providence, and by the drawings
of divine grace; called to
receive the whole gospel
blessing in time and in
eternity. These things are
premised, lest any of them
should be discouraged by the
terrible things which are
afterward mentioned. Mercy and
peace, &c. — A holy and truly
apostolical blessing, says
Estius; observing, that from
this, and the benedictions in
the two epistles of Peter, we
learn that the benedictions in
Paul’s epistles are to be
completed by adding the word
multiplied.
Verse 3
1:3. When I gave all diligence —
Or made all haste, as πασαν
σπουδην ποιουμενος literally
signifies, Jude being informed
of the assiduity, and perhaps
the success, with which the
false teachers were spreading
their pernicious errors, found
it necessary to write this
letter to the faithful without
delay. To write to you of the
common salvation — The salvation
from the guilt and power of sin,
into the favour and image of God
here, and from all the
consequences of sin into eternal
felicity and glory hereafter; a
salvation called common, because
it belongs equally to all who
believe; to the Gentiles as well
as to the Jews; to men of all
nations and conditions; designed
for all, and enjoyed in part by
all believers. For the same
reason Paul terms the faith of
the gospel, the common faith,
(Titus i, 4,) because an
opportunity of believing is
afforded to all. Here the design
of the epistle is expressed, the
end of which exactly answers the
beginning. It was needful for me
to exhort you that ye should
earnestly contend — Yet humbly,
meekly, and lovingly, otherwise
your contending will only hurt
your cause, if not destroy your
souls; for the faith — All the
fundamental truths of the
gospel. “In the circumstances in
which the faithful were when
Jude wrote this letter, an
exhortation to hold fast and
maintain the true doctrine of
the gospel against the false
teachers, was more necessary and
profitable for the disciples,
than explications of the
particular doctrines of the
gospel. By strenuously
contending for the faith, the
apostle did not mean contending
for it with fire and sword, but
their endeavouring, in the
spirit of meekness and love, to
establish the true doctrines of
the gospel, by arguments drawn,
not only from the Jewish
Scriptures, but especially from
the writings of the evangelists
and apostles, which were all, or
most of them, published when
Jude wrote this letter. In the
same manner they were strongly
to oppose and confute the errors
of the false teachers. The word
επαγωνιζεσθαι properly
signifies, to strive as in the
Olympic games, that is, with
their whole force.”
Once delivered to the saints —
By απαξ, once, Macknight
understands formerly, the word
being used in that sense, 1:5.
But Estius and Beza adopt the
common translation, supposing
the meaning of the clause to be,
that the faith spoken of was
delivered to the saints once for
all, and is never to be changed;
nothing is to be added to it,
and nothing taken from it. By
the saints Jude first means the
holy apostles and prophets of
Christ, (in which sense the word
saints is used, Colossians 3:26,
compared with Ephesians 3:5,) to
whom the Lord Jesus delivered
the doctrine of the gospel in
all its parts, including the
truths which men were to
believe, and the precepts they
were to perform, together with
the promises of present and
eternal salvation made to the
believing and obedient, and the
threatenings denounced against
the unbelieving and disobedient.
This doctrine the apostles and
evangelists delivered to their
hearers in their various
discourses, and consigned it to
writing for the instruction of
future ages. “Hence it is
evident that the faith for which
Christians are to contend
strenuously, is that alone which
is contained in the writings of
the evangelists, apostles, and
Jewish prophets. Now as they
have expressed the things which
were revealed to them in words
dictated by the Spirit, (1
Corinthians 2:13,) we are to
contend, not only for the things
contained in their writings, but
also for that form of words in
which they have expressed these
things, lest by contending for
forms invented and established
by human authority, as better
fitted to express the truth than
the words of inspiration, we
fall into error. See 2 Timothy
1:13. Jude’s exhortation ought
in a particular manner to be
attended to by the ministers of
the gospel, whose duty more
especially it is to preserve the
people from error, both in
opinion and practice.” —
Macknight.
Verse 4
1:4. For there are certain men
(see the margin) crept in
unawares — Insinuating
themselves into people’s
affections by their plausible
pretences, and leavening them by
degrees with their errors. The
ungodly teachers here described
seem to have been the
Nicolaitans, mentioned
Revelation 2:6, whose doctrine
Christ himself declared to be
hateful to him. Perhaps the
Gnostics and Carpocratians, the
successors of the Nicolaitans,
were also meant. The Nicolaitans
are said to have maintained that
marriage was a human invention,
not binding on Christians; on
which account they had women in
common, and practised unnatural
lusts, as is plain from Jude’s
account of them. And they
hardened themselves against the
fear of punishment in a future
state for these crimes, by
extolling the goodness and mercy
of God, which they thus
perverted to lasciviousness. Who
were of old ordained — Or
rather, as the original
expression, προγεγραμμενοι
εις τουτο το κριμα, literally
signifies, written, or
described, before to this
condemnation — Even as early as
Enoch, by whom it was foretold,
that by their wilful sins they
would incur this condemnation.
“Jude means, that these wicked
teachers had their punishment
before written, that is,
foretold, in what is written
concerning the wicked Sodomites
and rebellious Israelites, whose
crimes were the same with
theirs; and whose punishment was
not only a proof of God’s
resolution to punish sinners,
but an example of the punishment
which he would inflict on them.
Others think that in the word
προγεγραμμενοι, written before,
there is an allusion to the
ancient custom of writing laws
on tables, which were hung up in
public places, that the people
might know the punishment
annexed to the breaking of the
laws. If this is the allusion,
the apostle’s meaning will be,
that the wicked teachers, of
whom he is speaking, were, by
the divine law, condemned to
severe punishment from the
beginning. Turning the grace of
our God — Revealed in the
gospel; into lasciviousness —
Into an occasion of more
abandoned wickedness, even to
countenance their lewd and
filthy practices. It seems these
ungodly men interpreted the
doctrine of justification by
faith, in such a manner as to
free believers from all
obligation to obey the law of
God, and taught that they might
commit the worst actions without
being liable to punishment, if
they possessed faith; by which
they meant the mere speculative
belief and outward profession of
the gospel. Denying the only
Lord God, and our Lord Jesus
Christ — See on 2 Peter 2:1. The
original words, και τον μονον
δεσποτην θεον και κυριον ημων
ιησουν χριστον αρνουμενοι, “may
be translated various ways, all
equally literal: 1st, And
denying the only Lord God, even
our Lord Jesus Christ. According
to this translation, one person
only is spoken of here, namely,
our Lord Jesus Christ, who is
called the only Lord God. 2d,
Denying both the only Lord God,
and our Lord Jesus Christ.
According to this translation,
two persons are distinctly
spoken of, namely, the one Lord
God, or God the Father, and our
Lord Jesus Christ his Song of
Solomon 3 d, And denying the
only Lord God, and our Lord
Jesus Christ. This, which is the
translation in our English
Bible, and which, in sense, is
not different from the second
rendering, I have adopted,” says
Macknight, “not only because,
according to it, two persons are
spoken of as denied, namely, the
only Lord God, and our Lord
Jesus Christ, but because it
represents Jude’s sentiment as
precisely the same with John’s
1st epist. 1 John 2:22, He is
the antichrist who denieth the
Father and the Son. By declaring
that those ungodly teachers
denied both the Father and the
Son, the apostle showed to what
a pitch of impiety they had
proceeded.
Verse 5
1:5. I will therefore put you in
remembrance, &c. — I will remind
you of some examples of God’s
judgments against such persons.
Œcumenius observes, that “by
proposing the following examples
of the destruction of sinners
from the Old Testament history,
the apostle designed to show,
that the God of the Old
Testament is the same with the
God of the New, in opposition to
the Manicheans, who denied this;
also to prove that the goodness
of God will not hinder him from
punishing the wicked under the
new dispensation, any more than
it hindered him from punishing
them under the old.” In this
passage Jude has mentioned two
of the instances of the divine
vengeance against atrocious
sinners, which Peter took notice
of, 2 Peter 2:4-5, (where see
the notes,) and in place of the
third instance, the destruction
of the old world, he hath
introduced the destruction of
the rebellious Israelites in the
wilderness. Though ye once knew
this — Were informed of it, and
received it as a truth; that the
Lord, having saved the people
out of Egypt — By a train of
wonderful miracles; afterward
destroyed them that believed not
— That is, destroyed the far
greater part of that very
people, whom he had once saved
in a very extraordinary manner.
Let no one, therefore, presume
upon past mercies, as if he were
now out of danger. Jude does not
mention the various sins
committed by the Israelites in
the wilderness, such as their
worshipping the golden calf,
refusing to go into Canaan, when
commanded of God, their
fornication with the Midianitish
women, their frequent
murmurings, &c., but he sums up
the whole in their unbelief,
because it was the source of all
their sins.
Verse 6
1:6. And the angels which kept
not their first estate — Or, as
the clause may be rendered,
their first dignity, or
principality, (see on 2 Peter
2:4,) namely, the dignity or
principality assigned them; but
left their own habitation —
Properly their own by the free
gift of God. The apostle’s
manner of speaking insinuates
that they attempted to raise
themselves to a higher station
than that which God had allotted
to them; consequently, that the
sin for which they were and are
to be punished, was pride and
rebellion. He hath reserved —
Delivered to be kept; in
everlasting chains under
darkness — O how unlike their
own habitation! Everlasting
chains is a metaphorical
expression, which denotes a
perpetual confinement, from
which it is no more in their
power to escape, than a man, who
is strongly bound with iron
chains, can break them. Unto the
judgment of the great day —
Elsewhere called the day of the
Lord, and emphatically that day.
In our Lord’s description of the
general judgment, he tells us
that the wicked are to depart
into everlasting fire prepared
for the devil and his angels;
which implies that these wicked
spirits are to be punished with
the wicked of mankind. Observe,
reader, when these fallen angels
came out of the hands of God,
they were holy, (else God made
that which was evil,) and being
holy they were beloved of God,
(else he hated the image of his
own spotless purity.) But now he
loves them no more, they are
doomed to endless destruction;
(for if he loved them still, he
would love what is sinful;) and
both his former love, and his
present righteous and eternal
displeasure, toward the same
work of his own hands, are
because be changeth not; because
he invariably loveth
righteousness, and hateth
iniquity.
Verse 7-8
1:7-8. Even as Sodom and
Gomorrha — See on 2 Peter 2:6-9;
and the cities about them —
These were Admah and Zeboim. The
four are mentioned Deuteronomy
29:23; Zoar, the fifth city in
the plain of Sodom, was spared,
at the request of Lot, for a
place of refuge to him and his
family. In like manner — τον
ομοιον τουτοις τροπον, in a
manner like to these; that is,
either like to these wicked
teachers, or like to the
inhabitants of these wicked
cities, Sodom and Gomorrah;
giving themselves over to
fornication — The word is
applicable to any sort of
uncleanness; and going after
strange flesh — Giving
themselves up to unnatural
lusts; are set forth for an
example — To other presumptuous
sinners; suffering the vengeance
of eternal fire — Having their
lovely and fruitful country
turned into a kind of hell upon
earth. The meaning is, The
vengeance which they suffered is
an example, or type, of eternal
fire. Likewise — ομοιως μεν τοι,
in like manner, indeed; these
filthy dreamers — So our
translators render the word
ενυπνιαζομενοι, an epithet which
the persons described
undoubtedly deserved. The word,
however, only signifies
dreamers; or rather, persons
cast into a deep sleep, namely,
into a state of ignorance and
insensibility, of negligence and
sloth, with respect to spiritual
and eternal things; sleeping and
dreaming all their lives. Defile
the flesh — Their own bodies,
which ought to be sacred,
together with their spirits, to
the service of God. Despise
dominion — Those that are
invested with it by Christ, and
made by him the overseers of his
flock; or, he may mean that they
despised their civil rulers; and
speak evil of dignities — Of
persons in the most honourable
stations. The Jews, fancying it
sinful to obey the heathen
magistrates, despised both them
and their office. The ungodly
teachers, of whom Jude speaks,
carried the matter still
further; they reviled all
magistrates whatever, as enemies
to the natural liberty of
mankind.
Verse 9
1:9. Yet Michael, &c. — It does
not appear whether St. Jude
learned this by any revelation,
or from an ancient tradition. It
suffices that these things were
not only true, but acknowledged
to be so by them to whom he
wrote. Michael is mentioned
Daniel 10:13; Daniel 10:21;
Daniel 12:1, as standing up in
defence of Daniel’s people.
“Because the book of Daniel is
the first sacred writing in
which proper names are given to
particular angels, some have
fancied that, during the
Babylonish captivity, the Jews
invented these names, or learned
them from the Chaldeans. But
this seems an unfounded
conjecture. For the angel who
appeared to Zacharias, (Luke
1:19,) called himself Gabriel,
which shows that that name was
not of Chaldean invention.” The
archangel — This word occurs but
once more in the sacred
writings, namely, 1
Thessalonians 4:16. So that,
whether there be one archangel
only, or more, it is not
possible for us to determine.
Michael is called one of the
chief princes, Daniel 10:13, and
the great prince, Daniel 12:1;
(on which passages see the
notes.) And, because it is said,
(Revelation 12:7,) that Michael
and his angels fought against
the dragon and his angels,
Estius conjectures that Michael
is the chief or prince of all
the angels. But this argument is
not conclusive. When contending
with the devil, he disputed (at
what time we know not)
concerning the body of Moses —
Beza, Estius, Tillotson, and
other good writers, think this
passage is illustrated by
Deuteronomy 34:6, where it is
said the Lord buried Moses in a
valley, in the land of Moab, and
that no one knew of his
sepulchre. They suppose that,
had the devil been able to
discover to the Jews the place
where Moses was interred, they
would afterward have paid an
idolatrous honour to his
remains; and it would have
gratified his malice
exceedingly, to have made him an
occasion of idolatry, after his
death, who had been so great an
enemy to it in his life. To
prevent this, he thinks, Michael
buried his body secretly. This
proves, by the way, that good
angels are sometimes concerned
in limiting the power of the
devils, which must, no doubt, be
a great vexation to those
malignant spirits. But Mr.
Baxter suggests it as a doubt,
whether it were about the dead
body of Moses, or Moses exposed
on the water, when an infant,
that there was this contention.
Baxter suggests also another
interpretation, in his note on
this verse. Because the apostle
here seems to allude to
Zechariah 3:1, where we read of
Joshua the high-priest,
(representing the Jewish
people,) standing before the
angel of the Lord, and Satan
standing at his right hand to
resist him; and the Lord,
namely, by his angel, saying
unto Satan, The Lord rebuke
thee, O Satan; even the Lord
that hath chosen Jerusalem,
rebuke thee: and inasmuch as the
subject of that contention,
between the angel and Satan, was
the restoration of the Jewish
Church and state, Baxter thinks
that by the body of Moses here
may be meant the Jewish
constitution, civil and
religious, which Moses had
established. An interpretation
which Macknight seems to
countenance; “Michael is spoken
of as one of the chief angels,
who took care of the Israelites
as a nation. He may therefore
have been the angel of the Lord,
before whom Joshua, the
high-priest, is said, (Zechariah
3:1) to have stood, Satan being
at his right hand to resist him,
namely, in his design of
restoring the Jewish Church and
state, called by Jude, the body
of Moses, just as the Christian
Church is called by Paul, the
body of Christ.” And this
interpretation, however
apparently improbable, receives
some countenance from the
consideration, that, among the
Hebrews, the body of a thing is
often used for the thing itself.
Thus, Romans 7:24, the body of
sin signifies sin itself. So the
body of Moses may signify Moses
himself, who is sometimes put in
the New Testament for his law,
as 2 Corinthians 3:15, When
Moses is read, &c.; Acts 15:21,
Moses hath in every city them
that preach him.
Durst not bring against him a
railing accusation — But so
revered the divine presence as
to speak with moderation and
gentleness, even to that great
enemy of God and men. Michael’s
duty, says Archbishop Tillotson,
“restrained him, and probably
his discretion too. As he durst
not offend God in doing a thing
so much beneath the dignity and
perfection of his nature, so he
could not but think that the
devil would have been too hard
for him at railing; a thing to
which, as the angels have no
disposition, so I believe they
have no talent, no faculty at
it; the cool consideration
whereof should make all men,
particularly those who call
themselves divines, and
especially in controversies
about religion, ashamed and
afraid of this manner of
disputing.” But simply said — So
great was his modesty! The Lord
rebuke thee — I leave thee to
the Judge of all. The argument
of the apostle certainly does
not lie in any regard shown by
the angel to the devil, as a
dignitary, and one who exercises
dominion over subordinate evil
spirits; for to be the leader of
a band of such inexcusable
rebels could entitle him to no
respect; but it arises from the
detestable character of the
devil; as if the apostle had
said, If the angel did not rail
even against the devil, how much
less ought we against men in
authority, even supposing them
in some things to behave amiss?
To do it, therefore, when they
behave well, must be a
wickedness yet much more
aggravated. — Doddridge.
Verse 10-11
1:10-11. But these — Without any
shame; speak evil of those
things which they know not —
Namely, the things of God; of
whose nature and excellence,
truth and importance, they are
entirely ignorant. See on 1
Corinthians 2:14. But what they
know naturally as brute beasts —
By instinct, as animals void of
reason; in those things they
corrupt themselves — They make
them occasions of sin: or, they
are corrupted by the gross and
scandalous abuse of them, to the
dishonour of God, and their own
infamy and destruction. Thus the
apostle signifies that,
notwithstanding their high
pretensions to knowledge, they
had no knowledge even concerning
the use of their own bodies, but
what they derived from natural
instinct as brute animals; and
that, instead of using that
knowledge rightly, they thereby
destroyed both their souls and
bodies. Thus, in this passage,
he condemned the lascivious
practices of the Nicolaitans,
and of all the ungodly teachers,
who defended the promiscuous use
of women, and confuted the
argument taken from natural
appetite, by which they
vindicated their common
whoredoms. Wo unto them — Of all
the apostles, Jude alone, and
that in this single passage,
denounces a wo. St. Peter, to
the same effect, pronounces them
cursed children. Macknight, who
renders the clause, wo is to
them, considers it as only a
declaration of the misery which
was to come on them: in which
sense only the phrase is used by
our Lord, Matthew 24:19; Wo unto
them that are with child, &c.,
for certainly this was no wish
of punishment, since to be with
child, and to give suck in those
days, was no crime. But it was a
declaration of the misery which
was coming on persons in that
helpless condition. For they
have gone in the way of Cain —
The murderer; and ran greedily —
Greek, εξεχυθησαν, have been
poured out, like a torrent
without banks; after the error
of Balaam — The covetous false
prophet, being strongly
actuated, like him, by a passion
for riches, and therefore
drawing money from their
disciples by allowing them to
indulge their lusts without
restraint. See on 2 Peter 2:15.
And perished in the gainsaying
of Core — Having opposed God’s
messengers, as Korah did, like
him and his company, vengeance
will overtake them, as it did
him. Here, as in many passages
of Scripture, a thing is said to
have happened which was only to
happen. This manner of speaking
was used to show the absolute
certainty of the thing spoken
of. The gainsaying, here
mentioned, implies rebellion;
for when princes and magistrates
are contradicted, it is
rebellion. By declaring that the
ungodly teachers would perish in
the rebellion of Korah, Jude
insinuated that these men, by
opposing the apostles of Christ,
were guilty of a rebellion
similar to that of Korah and his
companions, who opposed Moses
and Aaron, on pretence that they
were no more commissioned by
God, the one to be a prince, the
other a priest, than the rest of
the congregation, who, they
said, were all holy, Numbers
16:3; Numbers 16:13. By
comparing these false and wicked
teachers to Cain, Balaam, and
Korah, Jude has represented them
as guilty of murder,
covetousness, and ambition.
Verse 12
1:12. These — Ungodly teachers;
are spots — Blemishes; in your
feasts of charity — Or
love-feasts, as αγαπαις is
rendered by many interpreters.
Commentators, however, are not
agreed what sort of feasts they
were. Some think they were those
suppers which the first
Christians ate previous to their
eating the Lord’s supper, of
which St. Paul is supposed to
have spoken 1 Corinthians 11:21;
but which, in consequence of the
abuse of them by persons of a
character like those here
described, were soon laid aside.
Others think Jude is speaking of
the ancient love-suppers, which
Tertullian hath described, (Apol.,
chap. 39,) and which do not seem
to have been accompanied with
the eucharist. These were
continued in the church to the
middle of the fourth century,
when they were prohibited to be
kept in the churches. Dr. Benson
observes, “they were called
love-feasts, or suppers, because
the richer Christians brought in
a variety of provisions to feed
the poor, the fatherless, the
widows, and strangers, and ate
with them to show their love to
them.” When they feast with you,
feeding themselves without fear
— Abandoning themselves to
gluttony and excess, without any
fear of God, or jealousy over
themselves, and so bringing a
great reproach on the gospel,
and the religion of Christ.
Clouds without water — Promising
fertilizing showers of
instruction and edification, but
yielding none, or making a show
of what they have not; see on 2
Peter 2:17; carried about of
winds — Of temptation hither and
thither, without any command of
themselves, into various sorts
of wickedness. Trees without
fruit — The original expression,
δενδρα φθινοπωρινα, is rendered
by Macknight, withered autumnal
trees; the latter word being
derived from φθινοπωρον, which,
according to Scapula, signifies,
The decline of autumn drawing
toward winter. Or, according to
Phavorinus, it signifies a
disease in trees which withers
their fruit; a sense of the word
which Beza has adopted in his
translation. The translation of
the Vulgate, arbores autumnales
infructuoscæ, gives the same
sense with that of Macknight,
and suggests, he thinks, a
beautiful idea. For, “in the
eastern countries, the finest
fruits being produced in autumn,
by calling the corrupt teachers
autumnal trees, Jude intimated
the just expectation which was
entertained of their being
fruitful in good doctrine: but
by adding ακαρπα, without fruit,
he marked their uselessness, and
the disappointment of their
disciples.” Twice dead — First
in the stock, and afterward in
the graft; first by nature, and
afterward by apostacy. Or dead
under the Mosaic dispensation,
(those ungodly teachers being
mostly of the Jewish nation,)
and though at first apparently
quickened on their reception of
the gospel, yet, through the
abuse of its doctrines and
privileges, dead and barren a
second time: plucked up by the
roots — As hopeless and
irrecoverable. “There is a
striking climax in this
description of the false
teachers: they were trees
stripped of their leaves, and
withering; they had no fruit,
being barren that season: they
were twice dead, having borne no
fruit formerly: lastly, they
were rooted out, as utterly
barren.”
Verse 13
1:13. Raging waves of the sea —
Unstable in their doctrine, and
turbulent and furious in their
tempers and manners, having no
command of their irascible
passions. Foaming out their own
shame — By their wicked and
outrageous behaviour, even among
their disciples, showing their
own filthiness to their great
disgrace. The apostle seems here
to have alluded to Isaiah 57:20,
The wicked are like the troubled
sea when it cannot rest, whose
waters cast up mire and dirt.
Wandering stars — πλανηται,
literally, planets, which shine
for a time, but have no light in
themselves. The Jews called
their teachers stars, and
Christian teachers are
represented under the emblem of
stars, Revelation 1:20;
Revelation 2:1. And as the
planets seem to have a very
irregular motion, being
sometimes stationary and
sometimes retrograde, they are
very proper emblems of persons
unsettled in their principles,
and irregular in their behaviour,
such as these men were. To whom
is reserved the blackness of
darkness, &c. Who will soon be
driven to an eternal distance
from the great original of light
and happiness, to which they
shall never return. Thus the
apostle illustrates their
desperate wickedness, by
comparisons drawn from the air,
earth, sea and heavens.
Verse 14-15
1:14-15. And Enoch also, the
seventh from Adam — Thus
described to distinguish him
from Enoch the son of Cain,
(Genesis 4:17,) who was only the
third from Adam; so early was
the prophecy delivered, referred
to 1:4 : prophesied of these —
As well as of the antediluvian
sinners. The first coming of
Christ was revealed to Adam, his
second and glorious coming to
Enoch, who foretold the things
which will conclude the last age
of the world. St. Jude might
know this either from some
ancient book or tradition, or
from immediate revelation. In
whatever way he knew it, a
precious fragment of
antediluvian history is thus
preserved to us by the special
providence of God, who taught
the Apostle Jude to distinguish
between what was genuine and
what was spurious in ancient
story. “Though Moses has said
nothing concerning Enoch’s
prophesying, yet by telling us
that he was a person of such
piety, as to be translated to
heaven in the body without
dying, he hath warranted us to
believe Jude’s account of him;
namely, that God employed him,
as he did Noah, in reforming the
wicked of the age in which he
lived, and that he inspired him
to deliver the prophecy of which
Jude speaks. Saying, Behold, (as
if it were already done!) The
Lord cometh with ten thousand of
his saints — Or holy ones,
namely, angels, with legions of
whom his descent for the purpose
here mentioned will be attended;
to execute judgment — Or to pass
sentence, as ποιησαι κρισιν may
be rendered; upon all —
According to their respective
works. Herein Enoch looked
beyond the flood: and to
convince — Or convict rather, as
εξελεγξαι more properly
signifies, by witnesses that
cannot be confronted; all that
are ungodly among them — Among
those judged, and upon whom
sentence is passed. Of all their
ungodly deeds — Their wicked
actions; which they have ungodly
— Impiously; committed — Being
destitute of the fear as well as
love of God, and in defiance of
his justice and wrath: and of
all their hard — Their impious,
atheistical, scoffing speeches,
which ungodly sinners have
spoken against him — Namely,
against Christ, as if he were an
impostor, who was justly
punished with an ignominious
death; and against his people,
representing them, although the
excellent of the earth, of whom
the world was not worthy,
(Hebrews 11:38,) as the vilest
of men.
Verse 16
1:16. These are murmurers —
Against God and men, never
contented with the allotments of
Providence, or with the conduct
of any about them; complainers —
΄εμψιμοιροι, literally,
complainers of their fate. Some
think that the two expressions,
murmurers and complainers, are
synonymous terms to express the
same thought with more strength
and emphasis. If there be any
difference in their
signification, the former may
imply their murmuring in
general, the other the subject
of their murmuring; they
complained of their lot and
condition in the world, and of
the course of Providence. Jude,
in writing this, seems to have
had his eye upon the murmurings
and complainings of the
Israelites in the wilderness,
which were highly displeasing to
God, 1 Corinthians 10:10. And
writing, if not chiefly, yet at
least in part, to such
Christians as had been Jews, he
might partly refer to the
complaining temper prevalent
among the Jews about this time,
as Josephus testifies, in which
the Judaizing Christians very
much resemble them. Walking
after their own lusts — Their
own foolish and mischievous
desires; the source this of
their murmuring and complaining.
For the plan of the divine
government is in favour of piety
and virtue: and vice cannot
always prosper, or even hope to
end well, in such a constitution
of things; and their mouth
speaketh great swelling words —
In praise of themselves, as the
only teachers who free men from
the shackles of superstition. Or
perhaps the apostle means that
the false teachers spake in an
insolent manner against the
Roman magistrates for punishing
them, and against the laws for
prohibiting the vices in which
they delighted. For they are
said ( 1:8) to despise
government, and to revile
dignities. And this they might
do on pretence of maintaining
the cause of the people of God,
against the tyranny and
oppression of the Romans; having
men’s persons in admiration
because of advantage — Admiring
and commending them only for
what they can get.
Verse 17
1:17. But, beloved — To prevent
you from giving heed to the vain
speeches of these deceivers;
remember the words which were
spoken before — Or spoken
prophetically; by the apostles —
Who have preached the gospel to
you in all its purity. He does
not exempt himself from the
number of apostles; for in the
next verse he says, they told
you, not us. The resemblance, as
Doddridge justly observes,
between this text and 1 Peter
3:2, is very remarkable. It is
such as would incline one to
think that Jude had the text in
Peter before him, and omitted
what had a peculiar reference to
the former part of St. Peter’s
epistle, and to which there was
nothing in his own to answer.
Though Jude only cites the words
spoken by Peter in particular
concerning the coming of
scoffers in the last time, yet
his exhortation being general,
it comprehends the words spoken
by the other apostles concerning
the coming of false teachers,
such as Paul’s, 1 Timothy 4:1-5;
2 Timothy 3:4. Nay, it
comprehends the words spoken by
Jude himself in the preceding
part of this epistle.
Verse 19
1:19. These be they who separate
themselves — Namely, from the
communion of the church and from
other Christians, under pretence
of their greater illumination;
sensual — ψυχικοι, animal; not
having the Spirit — Having a
natural understanding and
natural senses, but not the
Spirit of God, either as the
Spirit of truth or grace, and
therefore addicted to the low
gratifications of their animal
life; otherwise they would not
separate themselves from the
Church of Christ. For that it is
a sin, and a very heinous one,
to separate from it, is out of
all question. But then it should
be observed, 1st, That by the
Church of Christ is meant a body
of living Christians, who are a
habitation of God through the
Spirit, Ephesians 2:20-21. And,
2d, That by separating is
understood renouncing all
religious intercourse with them,
no longer joining with them in
solemn prayer, or the other
public offices of religion.
Verse 20-21
1:20-21. But ye, beloved — Not
separating yourselves from your
Christian brethren, but building
up — Or edifying one another in
knowledge and grace; on, or in,
your most holy faith — The true
Christian faith, having for its
object all the doctrines,
precepts, and promises of the
gospel; a faith, than which none
can be more holy in itself, or
more conducive to the most
refined and exalted holiness;
praying in, or through, the Holy
Ghost — By a principle of grace
derived from him, and by his
enlightening, quickening,
sanctifying, and comforting
influences, showing you what
blessings you may and ought to
pray for, inspiring you with
sincere and fervent desires
after those blessings, and
enabling you to offer these
desires to God in faith, with
gratitude for the blessings
which you have already received.
And by these means, and through
divine grace communicated
therein, keep yourselves in the
love of God — That is, in love
to God, arising from a sense of
his love to you; looking for the
mercy, &c. — Continually
possessing a confident
expectation of that eternal
life, which is purchased for you
and conferred upon you through
the mere mercy of our Lord Jesus
Christ.
Verse 22-23
1:22-23. And of some — Who are
perverted by these seducers,
erring only through infirmity,
and in lesser points; have
compassion — Treat with lenity,
and endeavour to reclaim, in a
mild and gentle way, by the
winning method of persuasion;
making a difference — Between
them and others that are more
guilty and stubborn. And others
— Who sin presumptuously and
openly; save with fear —
Endeavour to rouse their fears,
setting before them a future
judgment and its awful
consequences in all their
terrors. And if they continue
unmoved, use the censures of the
church as the last remedy. Or,
as some think, he may mean with
a jealous fear for yourselves,
lest you should be infected with
the disease you endeavour to
cure; pulling them out of the
fire — Of temptation, sin, and
divine wrath, into which they
are fallen, or are just ready to
fall. As if he had said, And if
you desire that your efforts in
either of these cases should be
successful, you must take great
care to preserve your own
purity; and while you love the
sinners, to retain the utmost
abhorrence of their sins, and of
every the least degree of
approach to them; hating even
the garment spotted by the flesh
— Lest by the touch of it you
yourselves should be polluted.
This clause, which is a caution
addressed to “those who snatch
others out of the fire, implies
that in doing them that
compassionate office, they are
to avoid all familiarity with
them, even as they would avoid
touching a garment spotted by
the flesh of one who had died of
the plague, lest they should be
infected by their vicious
conversation.”
Verse 24-25
1:24-25. Now unto him who alone
is able to keep you from falling
— Into any of these errors or
sins, or from stumbling, as
απταιστους literally signifies,
rugged and dangerous as the ways
of life are, and feeble as you
know yourselves to be; and at
length to present you faultless
— Fully sanctified and conformed
to the image of God’s Son; see
on Colossians 1:22; before the
presence of his glory — That is,
in his own presence, when he
shall be revealed in all his
glory; with exceeding joy — With
joy, great and unutterable. To
the only wise God, now become
our Saviour — That is, our
Deliverer from the guilt and
power of sin and its
consequences, our Restorer to
the enjoyment of the blessings
lost by the fall, and our
Preserver to eternal life. Or,
as Macknight reads the clause,
To the wise God alone. See on
Romans 16:27. Be glory, &c. —
That is, the glory of infinite
perfection; and the majesty — Of
empire absolutely universal;
dominion — Or strength, as
κρατος may be properly rendered,
namely, to govern that empire;
and power — εξουσια, authority,
or right to do whatever seemeth
to himself good; both now and
ever — εις παντας τους αιωνας,
throughout all ages, or both now
and throughout all eternity.
“From the appellation here used,
our Saviour, it is argued by
some that this doxology is
addressed to the Lord Jesus,
whose proper title is our
Saviour, and who is called God
in other passages of Scripture,
particularly Romans 9:5, where
he is styled, God blessed for
ever. Nevertheless, as in some
passages of Scripture,
particularly Luke 1:47; 1
Timothy 1:1; Titus 1:3, the
Father is styled our Saviour,
this argument is doubtful. They
who contend that the doxology in
this passage belongs to the
Father, observe that the same
doxology is unambiguously
addressed to God the Father,
Romans 16:27,” to which passage
we have just referred the
reader. |