Chapter 1
This epistle clearly is connected with the former epistle of
Peter. The apostle having stated the blessings to which God has
called Christians, exhorts those who had received these precious
gifts, to endeavour to improve in graces and virtues. They are
urged to this from the wickedness of false teachers. They are
guarded against impostors and scoffers, by disproving their
false assertions, ch. 3:1-7, and by showing why the great day
of Christ's coming was delayed, with a description of its awful
circumstances and consequences; and suitable exhortations to
diligence and holiness are given.
Exhortations to add the exercise of various other graces to
faith (1-11) The apostle looks forward to his approaching
decease. (12-15) And confirms the truth of the gospel, relating
to Christ's appearing to judgment. (16-21)
Verses 1-11
Faith unites the weak believer to Christ, as really as it
does the strong one, and purifies the heart of one as truly as
of another; and every sincere believer is by his faith justified
in the sight of God. Faith worketh godliness, and produces
effects which no other grace in the soul can do. In Christ all
fulness dwells, and pardon, peace, grace, and knowledge, and new
principles, are thus given through the Holy Spirit. The promises
to those who are partakers of a Divine nature, will cause us to
inquire whether we are really renewed in the spirit of our
minds; let us turn all these promises into prayers for the
transforming and purifying grace of the Holy Spirit. The
believer must add knowledge to his virtue, increasing
acquaintance with the whole truth and will of God. We must add
temperance to knowledge; moderation about worldly things; and
add to temperance, patience, or cheerful submission to the will
of God. Tribulation worketh patience, whereby we bear all
calamities and crosses with silence and submission. To patience
we must add godliness: this includes the holy affections and
dispositions found in the true worshipper of God; with tender
affection to all fellow Christians, who are children of the same
Father, servants of the same Master, members of the same family,
travellers to the same country, heirs of the same inheritance.
Wherefore let Christians labour to attain assurance of their
calling, and of their election, by believing and well-doing; and
thus carefully to endeavour, is a firm argument of the grace and
mercy of God, upholding them so that they shall not utterly
fall. Those who are diligent in the work of religion, shall have
a triumphant entrance into that everlasting kingdom where Christ
reigns, and they shall reign with him for ever and ever; and it
is in the practice of every good work that we are to expect
entrance to heaven.
Verses 12-15
We must be established in the belief of the truth, that
we may not be shaken by every wind of doctrine; and especially
in the truth necessary for us to know in our day, what belongs
to our peace, and what is opposed in our time. The body is but a
tabernacle, or tent, of the soul. It is a mean and movable
dwelling. The nearness of death makes the apostle diligent in
the business of life. Nothing can so give composure in the
prospect, or in the hour, of death, as to know that we have
faithfully and simply followed the Lord Jesus, and sought his
glory. Those who fear the Lord, talk of his loving-kindness.
This is the way to spread the knowledge of the Lord; and by the
written word, they are enabled to do this.
Verses 16-21
The gospel is no weak thing, but comes in power, Ro
1:16. The law sets before us our wretched state by sin, but
there it leaves us. It discovers our disease, but does not make
known the cure. It is the sight of Jesus crucified, in the
gospel, that heals the soul. Try to dissuade the covetous
worlding from his greediness, one ounce of gold weighs down all
reasons. Offer to stay a furious man from anger by arguments, he
has not patience to hear them. Try to detain the licentious, one
smile is stronger with him than all reason. But come with the
gospel, and urge them with the precious blood of Jesus Christ,
shed to save their souls from hell, and to satisfy for their
sins, and this is that powerful pleading which makes good men
confess that their hearts burn within them, and bad men, even an
Agrippa, to say they are almost persuaded to be Christians, Ac
26:28. God is well pleased with Christ, and with us in him.
This is the Messiah who was promised, through whom all who
believe in him shall be accepted and saved. The truth and
reality of the gospel also are foretold by the prophets and
penmenof the Old Testament, who spake and wrote under influence,
and according to the direction of the Spirit of God. How firm
and sure should our faith be, who have such a firm and sure word
to rest upon! When the light of the Scripture is darted into the
blind mind and dark understanding, by the Holy Spirit of God, it
is like the day-break that advances, and diffuses itself through
the whole soul, till it makes perfect day. As the Scripture is
the revelation of the mind and will of God, every man ought to
search it, to understand the sense and meaning. The Christian
knows that book to be the word of God, in which he tastes a
sweetness, and feels a power, and sees a glory, truly divine.
And the prophecies already fulfilled in the person and salvation
of Christ, and in the great concerns of the church and the
world, form an unanswerable proof of the truth of Christianity.
The Holy Ghost inspired holy men to speak and write. He so
assisted and directed them in delivering what they had received
from him, that they clearly expressed what they made known. So
that the Scriptures are to be accounted the words of the Holy
Ghost, and all the plainness and simplicity, all the power and
all the propriety of the words and expressions, come from God.
Mix faith with what you find in the Scriptures, and esteem and
reverence the Bible as a book written by holy men, taught by the
Holy Ghost.
Believers are cautioned against false teachers, and the
certainty of their punishment shown from examples. (1-9) An
account of these seducers, as exceedingly wicked. (10-16) But as
making high pretences to liberty and purity. (17-22)
Verses 1-9
Though the way of error is a hurtful way, many are always
ready to walk therein. Let us take care we give no occasion to
the enemy to blaspheme the holy name whereby we are called, or
to speak evil of the way of salvation by Jesus Christ, who is
the Way, the Truth, and the Life. These seducers used feigned
words, they deceived the hearts of their followers. Such are
condemned already, and the wrath of God abides upon them. God's
usual method of proceeding is shown by examples. Angels were
cast down from all their glory and dignity, for their
disobedience. If creatures sin, even in heaven, they must suffer
in hell. Sin is the work of darkness, and darkness is the wages
of sin. See how God dealt with the old world. The number of
offenders no more procures favour, than their quality. If the
sin be universal, the punishment shall likewise extend to all.
If in a fruitful soil the people abound in sin, God can at once
turn a fruitful land into barrenness, and a well-watered country
into ashes. No plans or politics can keep off judgments from a
sinful people. He who keeps fire and water from hurting his
people,
Isaiah 43:2
, can make either destroy his enemies; they
are never safe. When God sends destruction on the ungodly, he
commands deliverance for the righteous. In bad company we cannot
but get either guilt or grief. Let the sins of others be
troubles to us. Yet it is possible for the children of the Lord,
living among the most profane, to retain their integrity; there
being more power in the grace of Christ, and his dwelling in
them, than in the temptations of Satan, or the example of the
wicked, with all their terrors or allurements. In our intentions
and inclinations to commit sin, we meet with strange
hinderances, if we mark them When we intend mischief, God sends
many stops to hinder us, as if to say, Take heed what you do.
His wisdom and power will surely effect the purposes of his
love, and the engagements of his truth; while wicked men often
escape suffering here, because they are kept to the day of
judgment, to be punished with the devil and his angels.
Verses 10-16
Impure seducers and their abandoned followers, give
themselves up to their own fleshly minds. Refusing to bring
every thought to the obedience of Christ, they act against God's
righteous precepts. They walk after the flesh, they go on in
sinful courses, and increase to greater degrees of impurity and
wickedness. They also despise those whom God has set in
authority over them, and requires them to honour. Outward
temporal good things are the wages sinners expect and promise
themselves. And none have more cause to tremble, than those who
are bold to gratify their sinful lusts, by presuming on the
Divine grace and mercy. Many such there have been, and are, who
speak lightly of the restraints of God's law, and deem
themselves freed from obligations to obey it. Let Christians
stand at a distance from such.
Verses 17-22
The word of truth is the water of life, which refreshes
the souls that receive it; but deceivers spread and promote
error, and are set forth as empty, because there is no truth in
them. As clouds hinder the light of the sun, so do these darken
counsel by words wherein there is no truth. Seeing that these
men increase darkness in this world, it is very just that the
mist ofdarkness should be their portion in the next. In the
midst of their talk of liberty, these men are the vilest slaves;
their own lusts gain a complete victory over them, and they are
actually in bondage. When men are entangled, they are easily
overcome; therefore Christians should keep close to the word of
God, and watch against all who seek to bewilder them. A state of
apostacy is worse than a state of ignorance. To bring an evil
report upon the good way of God, and a false charge against the
way of truth, must expose to the heaviest condemnation. How
dreadful is the state here described! Yet though such a case is
deplorable, it is not utterly hopeless; the leper may be made
clean, and even the dead may be raised. Is thy backsliding a
grief to thee? Believe in the Lord Jesus, and thou shalt be
saved.
The design here is to remind of Christ's final coming to
judgement. (1-4) He will appear unexpectedly, when the present
frame of nature will be dissolved by fire. (5-10) From thence is
inferred the need for holiness, and stedfastness in the faith.
(11-18)
Verses 1-4
The purified minds of Christians are to be stirred up, that
they may be active and lively in the work of holiness. There
will be scoffers in the last days, under the gospel, men who
make light of sin, and mock at salvation by Jesus Christ. One
very principal article of our faith refers to what only has a
promise to rest upon, and scoffers will attack it till our Lord
is come. They will not believe that he will come. Because they
see no changes, therefore they fear not God,
Psalms 55:19
. What he
never has done, they fancy he never can do, or never will do.
Verses 5-10
Had these scoffers considered the dreadful vengeance with
which God swept away a whole world of ungodly men at once,
surely they would not have scoffed at his threatening an equally
terrible judgment. The heavens and the earth which now are, by
the same word, it is declared, will be destroyed by fire. This
is as sure to come, as the truth and the power of God can make
it. Christians are here taught and established in the truth of
the coming of the Lord. Though, in the account of men, there is
a vast difference between one day and a thousand years, yet, in
the account of God, there is no difference. All things past,
present, and future, are ever before him: the delay of a
thousand years cannot be so much to him, as putting off any
thing for a day or for an hour is to us. If men have no
knowledge or belief of the eternal God, they will be very apt to
think him such as themselves. How hard is it to form any
thoughts of eternity! What men count slackness, is
long-suffering, and that to us-ward; it is giving more time to
hisown people, to advance in knowledge and holiness, and in the
exercise of faith and patience, to abound in good works, doing
and suffering what they are called to, that they may bring glory
to God. Settle therefore in your hearts that you shall certainly
be called to give an account of all things done in the body,
whether good or evil. And let a humble and diligent walking
before God, and a frequent judging of yourselves, show a firm
belief of the future judgment, though many live as if they were
never to give any account at all. This day will come, when men
are secure, and have no expectation of the day of the Lord. The
stately palaces, and all the desirable things wherein
wordly-minded men seek and place their happiness, shall be
burned up; all sorts of creatures God has made, and all the
works of men, must pass through the fire, which shall be a
consuming fire to all that sin has brought into the world,
though a refining fire to the works of God's hand. What will
become of us, if we set our affections on this earth, and make
it our portion, seeing all these things shall be burned up?
Therefore make sure of happiness beyond this visible world.
Verses 11-18
From the doctrine of Christ's second coming, we are
exhorted to purity and godliness. This is the effect of real
knowledge. Very exact and universal holiness is enjoined, not
resting in any low measure or degree. True Christians look for
new heavens and a new earth; freed from the vanity to which
things present are subject, and the sin they are polluted with.
Those only who are clothed with the righteousness of Christ, and
sanctified by the Holy Ghost, shall be admitted to dwell in this
holy place. He is faithful, who has promised. Those, whose sins
are pardoned, and their peace made with God, are the only safe
and happy people; therefore follow after peace, and that with
all men; follow after holiness as well as peace. Never expect to
be found at that day of God in peace, if you are lazy and idle
in this your day, in which we must finish the work given us to
do. Only the diligent Christian will be the happy Christian in
the day of the Lord. Our Lord will suddenly come to us, or
shortly call us to him; and shall he find us idle? Learn to make
a right use of the patience of our Lord, who as yet delays his
coming. Proud, carnal, and corrupt men, seek to wrest some
things into a seeming agreement with their wicked doctrines. But
this is no reason why St. Paul's epistles, or any other part of
the Scriptures, should be laid aside; for men, left to
themselves, pervert every gift of God. Then let us seek to have
our minds prepared for receiving things hard to be understood,
by putting in practice things which are more easy to be
understood. But there must be self-denial and suspicion of
ourselves, and submission to the authority of Christ Jesus,
before we can heartily receive all the truths of the gospel,
therefore we are in great danger of rejecting the truth. And
whatever opinions and thoughts of men are not according to the
law of God, and warranted by it, the believer disclaims and
abhors. Those who are led away by error, fall from their own
stedfastness. And that we may avoid being led away, we must seek
to grow in all grace, in faith, and virtue, and knowledge.
Labour to know Christ more clearly, and more fully; to know him
so as to be more like him, and to love him better. This is the
knowledge of Christ, which the apostle Paul reached after, and
desired to attain; and those who taste this effect of the
knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, will, upon
receiving such grace from him, give thanks and praise him, and
join in ascribing glory to him now, in the full assurance of
doing the same hereafter, for ever. |
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