Wednesday, May 16, 2012

2 Peter 1:2


2 Grace and peace be yours in abundance through the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord. (NIV)

Grace is the love we don't deserve that comes only through God. Peace is the shalom, the end of the war between rebellious man (conscripted by the devil) against the loving God--the war we gratefully and wonderfully lost when Jesus tore away our sinfulness and released us from the bondage of the devil and made us his own children.

Part of the message of 2 Peter is a warning against the Gnostics. The "Gnosis" of these Gnostics was a secret Knowledge about God that could only be achieved by membership with other Gnostics and could not be achieved through the Bible. But Peter blasts at this Knowledge (gnosis) by showing that ordinary Christians have Knowledge of God, Greek epi-gnosis or "correct and thorough knowledge" of God. This knowledge is no secret, but is available out in the open, in public, for everyone to see and hear and believe.

"You," Peter assures all of us, "have more than mere gnosis. You have epi-gnosis!" You have everything you need to achieve eternal life and true knowledge of God. You have it because you know and believe the Scriptures about Jesus our Lord. Later in this letter, Peter will remind us that we also trust the Word of God given through the Apostle Paul, and in particular: "Salvation, as our dear brother Paul also wrote you with the wisdom God gave him" (2 Peter 3:15). Paul's wisdom corresponds exactly with the Wisdom described in those early chapters of Proverbs; the Wisdom that trusts God alone.

This is wisdom that grasps and grabs at God's grace and peace, through the knowledge -- the full, correct, certain and public knowledge -- of our God, Jesus Christ. This is the Jesus who saved us. Jesus who rescued us.


2 Peter 1:1


1 Simon Peter, a servant and apostle of Jesus Christ, To those who through the righteousness of our God and Savior Jesus Christ have received a faith as precious as ours: (NIV)

Another piece of evidence in favor of the genuineness of this epistle is the way Peter begins: A forger would have used the same words as 1 Peter 1:1, "Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ," but Peter himself is says what comes to him: "Simon Peter, a servant and apostle of Jesus Christ."

One of the most important teachings of the New Testament is the divinity of Jesus Christ, and here Peter lays it out for us in the clearest words possible: "Our God and Savior Jesus Christ." This agrees completely with Paul's words about "Christ, who is God over all, forever praised! Amen" (Romans 9:5).

Pick out the word "Savior" in this verse and put it in your pocket. A "savior" (Greek soteros) is the person who grabs you from a hopeless situation and saves you from otherwise certain death. Jesus' name is Greek, but it's identical to the Hebrew name Joshua, which means "The LORD Saves." That's a perfect reminder of Jesus' work on earth for our sakes: His is the LORD God himself who rescued us from the impossible circumstance of our sins.

Jesus is the one who saved us. Jesus is God himself, and we put our trust completely in him.

2 Peter - Introduction



 “A Faith as Precious as Ours”
 
2 Peter was the book questioned most of all in the early church. Should it be part of the New Testament? Why did some areas have a copy while others didn't? The question was much easier as the church wrestled with other books. The heretical books written by Cerinthus, Valentinus of Rome, Basilides of Alexandria and other were obviously Gnostic and rejected Jesus as the Savior (John's epistles and Gospel were at least partly an attack on the theology of Cerinthus). Other books such as the Gospel of Thomas were written too late to be considered by the early church (you can't include a book that hasn't been written yet in a collection) and the Gospel of Thomas in particular includes quite a bit of false doctrine woven along with stories lifted almost word for word from Luke.

2 Peter has a different style of writing than 1 Peter. This is probably due to Peter writing this letter himself. 1 Peter has a more classical Greek style and was probably dictated to a scribe (an amanuensis). This letter was also less widely circulated than the first letter. But people were probably more cautious about it than suspicious: Many of the things Peter says are also said in Jude's epistle, sometimes with almost identical words (we will talk about these things as they occur in chapter 2). It has also been said that 2 Peter is quoted far less by the early church fathers than the rest of the New Testament. I have found a few places where 2 Peter seems to brush past the pens of the Apostolic Fathers of the late first and early second centuries.

1. "Noah, a preacher of righteousness" (2 Peter 2:5).
    "Noah preached repentance..." (1 Clement 7:6).

2. "Their idea of pleasure is to carouse (tryphes) in broad daylight..." (2 Peter 2:13).
    "Lawlessness, drunkenness, wicked carousing (tryphes poneros)..." (Shepherd of Hermas, Mandate 8,3).

3. "In the last days scoffers will come, scoffing and following their own evil desires. They will say, 'Where is this "coming" he promised? Ever since our fathers died, everything goes on as it has since the beginning of creation.'" (2 Peter 3:3).
    (It is written:) "Miserable are the double-minded that doubt in their heart, who say, 'We heard these things long ago in the times of our fathers, but we have grown old, and none of them has happened to us.' You fools!" (1 Clement 23:3).

4. "...being kept for the day of judgment (kriseos) and destruction of ungodly (asebon) men" (2 Peter 3:7).
    "...and not the ungodly (asebon), who are judged (krinomenon)" (2 Clement 18:1).
    (Both the noun kriseos and the participle krinomenon are related to each other and our English word "crisis").

5. "With the Lord a day is like a thousand years..." (2 Peter 3:8).
    "For with him a day is like a thousand years..." (Barnabas 15:4).

6. "To him be glory both now and forever! Amen." (2 Peter 3:18).
    "To him be glory for ever and ever! Amen." (2 Clement 20:5).

Summary of background on 2 Peter:

Whereas 1 Peter gives support and encouragement toward outer (physical) persecution, 2 Peter warns against false teacher and false doctrines (inner persecution). 2 Peter makes several statements about Peter's time with Jesus, and also says it is the "second letter" (3:1). There is no reason to reject it's theology or authorship; it was simply less widely known.

Peter wrote this letter late in his life to Christians, especially Gentiles; the same group (this was their "second letter" from him) as in 1 Peter: "Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia and Bithynia" (1 Peter 1:1). These were the same Christians Paul had written to in Galatians, and was intended for people throughout the area of Asia Minor (Turkey). Written around 64 or 65 AD, from Rome, this letter is a warning about false teachers and an encouragement to Christians to persevere in their faith. Part of the trouble among these Christians was the growing error of Gnosticism, a belief in a secret higher Knowledge (Greek gnosis) obtainable outside the Word of God.