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Second Epistle of Peter

The Second Epistle of Peter[a] is a book of the New Testament of the Bible.

The text identifies the author as "Simon Peter, a bondservant and apostle of Jesus Christ" and the epistle is traditionally attributed to Peter the Apostle, but most scholars consider the epistle pseudepigraphical (i.e., authored by one or more of Peter's followers in Ancient Rome, using Peter as a pseudonym)[3][4][5][6][7] Scholars estimate the date of authorship anywhere from 60 to 150 AD. The original text was written in Koine Greek.

Authorship and date

According to the Epistle itself, it was composed by the Apostle Peter, an eyewitness to Jesus' ministry. If 2 Peter 3:1 (this second epistle) alludes to 1 Peter, the audience of the epistle is the various Churches in Asia Minor in general (see 1 Peter 1:1).

The date of composition has proven to be very difficult to determine. Taken literally, it would have been written between 65–68 AD because Peter was martyred around 68 AD by Nero and also because Peter references his approaching death in 2 Peter 1:14 ("since I know that the putting off of my body will be soon, as our Lord Jesus Christ made clear to me").[8]

 
Two sides of the Papyrus Bodmer VIII. This Papyrus today is the oldest source to the Second Epistle of Peter.

The questions of authorship and date are closely related. Scholars consider the epistle to have been written anywhere between c. AD 60-150, with "some reason to favour" a date between 80-90.[9] Dates suggested by various authors include:

The scholarly debate can be divided into two parts; external and internal evidence. The external evidence for its authenticity, though feasible, critics have been presented, mainly in the conclusions,[clarification needed] much of this debate stems from Professor Robert E. Picirilli's article "Allusion to 2 Peter in the Apostolic Fathers", which compiles many of the allusions by the Apostolic Fathers of the late first and early second centuries, thus demonstrating that 2 Peter is not to be considered a second century document.[35] Despite this effort, scholars such as Michael J. Gilmour, who consider Picirilli's evidences to be correct, disagree with classifying the work as authentic, but rather as a pseudepigrapha, arguing among many other things that Paul (2 Thess 2-1) had to warn against contemporary pseudo-Pauline writers. (See Syllogism)[36]

The internal debate focuses more on style, its ideology, and its relationship to the other works and stories. One of the internal arguments against the authenticity of 2 Peter has gained significant popularity since the 1980s. Being more precise is the argument that the scholar Bo Reicke first formulated in 1964, where 2 Peter is clearly an example of an ancient literary genre known as a 'testament', which originally arose from Moses' farewell discourse in Deuteronomy.[37][b][c] Richard J. Bauckham who popularised this argument wrote that the 'testament' genre contains 2 main elements: ethical warnings to be followed after the death of the writer and revelations of the future. The significant fact about the 'testament' genre was not in its markers but in its nature; it is argued that a piece of 'testament' literature is meant to "be a completely transparent fiction".[41] This argument has its detractors, who classify it as a syllogism.[42][43][44][45][46] Others characterise the writing as a 'farewell speech' because it lacks any semblance of final greetings or ties with recipients.[47]

One of the questions to be resolved is the relationship with the Pauline letters, The letter refers to the Pauline epistles and so must post-date at least some of them, regardless of authorship, thus a date before 60 is improbable. Further, it goes as far as to name the Pauline epistles as "scripture"—the only time a New Testament work refers to another New Testament work in this way—implying that it postdates them by some time.[48] Various hypotheses have been put forward to improve or resolve this issue; the hypothesis with the most potential is that the First Epistle of Clement (96CE) by citing as Scripture several of the Pauline letters[49] was inspired by 2 Peter because it was considered authentic (see below), thus giving that even the recipients of 1 Clement, the inhabitants of Corinth, would also be considered authentic, thus giving that the letter must have been in circulation long before that time.[50] the earliest reference to a Pauline collection is probably found in Ignatius of Antioch 108 AD.[51][52]

Another debate internal is about its linguistic complexity and about its relationship with 1 Peter, For the scholar Bart D. Ehrman, the historical Peter could not write any works, either because he was "unlettered" Acts 4:13 or because he was a fisherman from Capernaum, a comparatively small and probably monolingual town, in a time and province where there was little literacy.[53] Bauckham addresses the statistical differences in the vocabulary of the two writings, using the data given by U. Holzmeister's 1949 study;[54] 38.6 percent of the words are common to 1 and 2 Peter. 61.4 percent peculiar to 2 Peter, while of the words used in 1 Peter, 28.4 percent are common to 1 and 2 Peter, 71.6 percent are peculiar to 1 Peter. However discouraging these data may be, these figures can be compared with other epistles considered authentic,[55] which is why this is not a final argument, since pure statistical analysis is a weak way of showing literary relationship.[56][57][58] Bauckham also notes that "the Greek style of Second Peter is not to the taste of many modern readers, at times pretentiously elaborate, with an effort at pompous phrasing, a somewhat artificial piece of rhetoric, and 'slimy Greek'", contrary to the style of the first epistle, "2 Peter must relate to the 'Asiatic Greek'.[59] His style of Greek rhetoric which was becoming fashionable at the time, and which, with his love of the expressions -of high- flown expressions, of flowery and verbose language, and of elaborate literary effects.[60] The crux of the matter is how these differences are explained. Those who deny the Petrine authorship of the epistle, such as, for example, Kelly, insist that the differences show that First and Second Peter were not written by the same person,[61] others add that 2 Peter was a specific type of pseudepigraphy common and morally accepted at the time, either because it was a testamentary genre or because the works of the disciples could bear the names of their masters without any inconvenience.[62][63][d] Those who defend Petrine authorship often appeal to the different amanuenses or secretaries Peter used to write each letter, as first suggested by Jerome.[64][65][66]

Thomas R. Schreiner puts into perspective when some who doubt the authenticity of the letter consider the arguments defending its authenticity as a impotent resource. People of this mindset, according to Thomas, object to the claim that different secretaries may have been used on the one hand, and then to the claim that the corpus of the two letters is too small to establish stylistic variation, culminating in the statement that: "When we examine historical documents, we are not granted exhaustive knowledge of the circumstances in which the document came into being. Therefore, we must postulate probabilities, and in some cases, of course, more than one scenario is likely. Moreover, in some cases the likely scenarios are not internally contradictory, but both constitute plausible answers to the problem posed. Suggesting more than one solution is not necessarily an appeal to despair, but can be a sign of humility".[67]

The scholar Simon J. Kistemaker on the other hand believes that linguistically "the material presented in both documents provides substantial evidence to indicate that these letters are the product of a single author",[68] however, this view is very much in the minority. Most biblical scholars have concluded Peter is not the author, considering the epistle pseudepigraphical.[3][69][70][71][34][48] Reasons for this include its linguistic differences from 1 Peter, its apparent use of Jude, possible allusions to 2nd-century gnosticism, encouragement in the wake of a delayed parousia, and weak external support.[72]

Early surviving manuscripts

Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter are:

Greek

Latin

Relationship with the Epistle of Jude

There is an obvious relationship between the texts of 2 Peter and the Epistle of Jude.[76] The shared passages are:[77]

2 Peter Jude
1:5 3
1:12 5
2:1 4
2:4 6
2:6 7
2:10–11 8–9
2:12 10
2:13–17 11–13
3:2-3 17-18
3:14 24
3:18 25

Canonical acceptance

Acceptance of the letter into the canon did not occur without some difficulty; however, "nowhere did doubts about the letter's authorship take the form of definitive rejection."[78] The earliest record of doubts concerning the authorship of the letter were recorded by Origen (c. 185–254), though Origen mentioned no explanation for the doubts, nor did he give any indication concerning the extent or location. Donald Guthrie suggests that "It is fair to assume, therefore, that he saw no reason to treat these doubts as serious, and this would mean to imply that in his time the epistle was widely regarded as canonical."[78]

Origen, in another passage, has been interpreted as considering the letter to be Petrine in authorship.[79] Before Origen's time, the evidence is inconclusive;[80] there is a lack of definite early quotations from the letter in the writings of the Apostolic Fathers, though possible use or influence has been located in the works of Clement of Alexandria (d. c. 211), Theophilius (d. c. 183), Aristides (d. c. 134), Polycarp (d. 155), and Justin (d. 165).[81][82][35]

Robert E. Picirilli observed that Clement of Rome linked James 1:8, 2 Peter 3:4, and Mark 4:26 in 1 Clement 23:3.[35]: 59–65  Richard Bauckham and Peter H. Davids also noted the reference to “Scripture” in 1 Clement 23:3 matched 2 Peter 3:4, but make it dependent on a common apocalyptic source, which was also used in 2 Clement 11:2.[83][84]

Carsten Peter Thiede adds to Picirilli's work authors such as Justin and Minucius Felix who would use 2 Peter directly and a new reference in Clement of Rome (1 Clem. 9.2 = 2 Pet. 1.17).[85]

2 Peter in literature apocrypha seems to be quoted in Shepherd of Hermas (95–160CE),[86][87] Apocalypse of Peter (~125–135CE),[88][89][90][91][92] the Gospel of Truth (140–170CE) and the Apocryphon of John (120–180CE).[93]

Eusebius (c. 275–339) professed his own doubts (see also Antilegomena), and is the earliest direct testimony of such, though he stated that the majority supported the text, and by the time of Jerome (c. 346–420) it had been mostly accepted as canonical.[94]

The Peshitta, the standard version of the Bible for churches in the Syriac tradition, does not contain the Second Epistle of Peter and thus rejects its canonical status.[95]

Content

In both content and style this letter is very different from 1 Peter. Its author, like the author of the Gospel of Luke and the Acts of the Apostles, is familiar with literary conventions, writing in a more elevated Koine Greek than, for example, Paul's writings or the Gospel of Mark.[96] Gorgianic figures are used which are characteristic of Asian rhetoric (Asianism),[97][98] with style similar to that of Ignatius and the Epistle to Diognetus.[99] This leads some scholars to think that, like 1 Peter, the letter is addressed to Gentile Christians in Asia Minor.[100][101][102]

The epistle presciently declares that it is written shortly before the apostle's death (1:14), an assertion that may not have been part of the original text. Arguments for and against the assertion being original are based largely on the acceptance or rejection of supernatural intervention in the life of the writer.[103]

The epistle contains eleven references to the Old Testament. In 3:15, 16 a reference is made to one of Paul's epistles, which some have identified as 3:10a with Thess 5:2; 3:14 with Thess 5:23.[e]

The author of 2 Peter had a relationship with the Gospel tradition, mainly in the Transfiguration of Jesus, 1:4 with Mark 9:1; 1:11 with Mark 9:1; 1:16,18 with Mark 9:2-10; 1:17 with Matthew 17:5; 1:19 with Mark 9:4;[105] and in the promise of the Second Coming, 3:10b with Mark 13:31 or Luke 21:33.[106]

The book also shares a number of passages with the Epistle of Jude, 1:5 with Jude 3; 1:12 with Jude 5; 2:1 with Jude 4; 2:4 with Jude 6; 2:5 with Jude 5; 2:6 with Jude 7; 2:10–11 with Jude 8–9; 2:12 with Jude 10; 2:13–17 with Jude 11–13; 2:18 with Jude 16; 3:2f with Jude 17f; 3:3 with Jude 18; 3:14 with Jude 24; and 3:18 with Jude 25.[107] Because the Epistle of Jude is much shorter than 2 Peter, and due to various stylistic details, the scholarly consensus is that Jude was the source for the similar passages of 2 Peter.[107][108]

Tartarus is mentioned in 2 Peter 2:4 as devoted to the holding of certain fallen angels. It is elaborated on in Jude 6. Jude 6 however, is a clear reference to the Book of Enoch. Bauckham suggests that 2 Peter 2:4 is partially dependent on Jude 6 but is independently drawing on paraenetic tradition that also lies behind Jude 5–7. The paraenetic traditions are in Sirach 16:7–10, Damascus Document 2:17–3:12, 3 Maccabees 2:4–7, Testament of Naphtali 3:4–5 and Mishna Sanhedrin 10:3.[109]

Outline

Chapter 1

The chapters of this epistle show a triangular relationship between Christology (chapter 1), ethics (chapter 2) and eschatology (chapter 3).

At the beginning of chapter 1, the author calls himself "Simeon Peter" (see Acts 15:14). This detail, for the scholar Rob. van Houwelingen, is evidence of the authenticity of the letter.[110] The letter gives a list of seven virtues in the form of a ladder; Love, Brotherly affection, Godliness, Steadfastness, Self-control, Knowledge, and Excellence.[111] Through the memory of Peter (1:12–15), the author encourages the addressees to lead holy and godly lives (11b); in verse 13 the author speaks of righteousness (being just) in a moral sense and in verse 14 his line of argument reaches a climax as the addressees are encouraged to do all they can to be found blameless (1 Thess 5:23). In short the author is concerned to encourage his addressees to behave ethically without reproach (1:5–7; 3:12–14), probably because of the impending parousia Second Coming, which will come like a thief in the night (3:10; 1 Thess 5:2).[112]

Chapter 2

In this chapter the author affirms that, false teachers have arisen among the faithful to lead them astray with "destructive heresies" and "exploit people with false words" (2:1–2). Just as there were false prophets in ancient times, so there would be false teachers,[113] moreover false prophets sheep's clothing were one of the prophecies of Jesus [Matt. 7:15], to which the author of this letter together with the author of 1 John refers [1 John 4:1].[114] False teachers are accused of "denying the Lord who bought them" and promoting licentiousness (2:1–2). The author classifies false teachers as "irrational animals, instinctive creatures, born to be caught and destroyed" (2:12). They are "spots and stains, delighting in their dissipation" with "eyes full of adultery, insatiable for sin… hearts trained in covetousness" (2:13–14).[115] As a solution 2 Peter proposes in the following chapter tools such as penance, aimed at purging sins, and the re-actualisation of the eschatological hope, to be expected with attention, service and perseverance.[116] This chapter all likelihood adapts significant portions of the Epistle of Jude.[117][118][119][120]

The ethical goal is not to fall that debauchery, errors and to have hope, this is promoted with many stories of how God rescues the righteous while holding back the unrighteous for the day of judgment, the story of Noah, the story of Lot in Sodom and Gomorrah (2:6–8) and the story Balaam, son of Bosor (2:15–16) are used as a warning.

2 Peter 2:22 quotes Proverbs 26:11: "As a dog returns to his vomit, so a fool repeats his folly."

Chapter 3

The fundamental of this chapter is the authoritative Christian revelation. The revelation is found in a two-part source (3:2). There is little doubt that the "words spoken beforehand by the holy prophets" refers to the OT writings, either in part or in whole.[121][122] Then the author mentions the second source of revelation, the "commandment of the Lord" spoken by "your apostles." It is remarkable that this two-part authority includes an obvious older means "words spoken beforehand" as well as an obvious newer half, the apostolically mediated words (words about Jesus). One could be forgiven if he sees here a precursor to a future "old" and "new" Testament.[123] This juxtaposition of prophet and apostle as a two-part revelatory source is not first found in 3:1–2, but in 1:16–21.[124]

Another remarkable feature of this chapter is that the author presupposes that his audience is familiar with a plurality of apostles ("how many" is unclear), and, moreover, that they have had (and perhaps still have) access to the teaching of these apostles. One cannot "remember" teaching that they have not received. Of course, this raises difficult questions about the precise medium (oral or written) by which the public received this apostolic teaching. However, near the end of this chapter, the means by which the audience at least received the apostle Paul teaching is expressly stated. We are told that the audience knew the teachings of "our beloved brother Paul" (3:15) and that they knew them in written form: "Paul also wrote to you according to wisdom as he does in all his letters" (3:16), the "also" being the key word since in the first verse of the chapter the author referred to another written apostolic text, namely his first epistle (1 Peter): considering part of the "Scriptures" not only the OT prophets, but also Paul and the author himself,[125] from the Pauline corpus the author may have known 1 and 2 Thessalonians, Romans, Galatians, and possibly Ephesians and Colossians.[126][127] Thought on Christian revelation is also located in other early authors, namely Clement of Rome, Ignatius, Polycarp, Justin Martyr, and in the work 2 Clement.[128]

In the middle of the chapter is the explanation for the delay in Jesus' return (3:9); Jesus' delay is only to facilitate the salvation of the "already faithful" who may at times waver in their faith or have been led astray by false teachers (2:2–3). God is delaying to make sure that "all" have had sufficient time to secure their commitment (or return) to the gospel, including the false teachers. The remaining verses provide details about the coming day of the Lord along with the exhortation that flows seamlessly into the conclusion of the letter. The instruction offered here (3:11–13) echoes that of Jesus who called his disciples to await the consummation of his kingdom with attention, service and perseverance (Mt 24-25; Mk 13:3–13, 32–37; Lk 18:1–30; 21:1–38). Taken together with the final verses (3:14–18), here again the author expresses the concern that believers secure their eternal place in God's new creation by embracing lives that foster blessing and even hasten God's coming day.[129]

2 Peter 3:6 quotes Genesis 7:11–12. 2 Peter 3:8 quotes Psalm 90, specifically 90:4.[130]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The book is sometimes called the Second Letter of Peter, or simply 2 Peter.[1] It is most commonly abbreviated as "2 Pet."[2]
  2. ^ Within the NT it is speculated that 2 Timothy, John 13-17, Lukes 22:21-38 and Acts 20:18-35 are also farewell discourses or testamentary works.[38][39]
  3. ^ In addition to the end of Deuteronomy within the OT it is speculated that Genesis 47:29–49: 33 and 1 Samuel 12 are also farewell discourses.[40]
  4. ^ Tertullian, Adversus Marcionem. 4.5.3-4; That which Mark edited is stated to be Peter’s [Petri affirmetur], whose interpreter Mark was. Luke’s digest also they usually attribute to Paul [Paulo adscribere solent]. It is permissible for the works which disciples published to be regarded as belonging to their masters [Capit magistrorum videri quae discipuli promulgarint].
  5. ^ It alleged citation of 1 Thess 5:2 in 2 Pet 3:10 is disputed allusion. Duane F. Watson, Terranee Callan, and Dennis Farkasfalvy identify the allusion to 1 Thessalonians. Michael J. Gilmour, on the other hand, disputes the identification of the allusion.[104]

References

  1. ^ ESV Pew Bible. Wheaton, IL: Crossway. 2018. p. 1018. ISBN 978-1-4335-6343-0. from the original on June 3, 2021.
  2. ^ "Bible Book Abbreviations". Logos Bible Software. from the original on April 21, 2022. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  3. ^ a b Brown, Raymond E., Introduction to the New Testament, Anchor Bible, 1997, ISBN 0-385-24767-2. p. 767 "the pseudonymity of II Pet is more certain than that of any other NT work."
  4. ^ Ehrman, Bart (2005). Misquoting Jesus: The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why. Harper Collins. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-06-182514-9. Evidence comes in the final book of the New Testament to be written, 2 Peter, a book that most critical scholars believe was not actually written by Peter but by one of his followers, pseudonymously.
  5. ^ Duff 2007, p. 1271.
  6. ^ Davids, Peter H (1982). Marshall, I Howard; Gasque, W Ward (eds.). The Epistle of James. New International Greek Testament Commentary (repr. ed.). Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans. ISBN 0-80282388-2.
  7. ^ Evans, Craig A (2005). Evans, Craig A (ed.). John, Hebrews-Revelation. Bible Knowledge Background Commentary. Colorado Springs, CO: Victor. ISBN 0-78144228-1.
  8. ^ Bauckham, RJ (1983), Word Bible Commentary, Vol. 50, Jude-2 Peter, Waco.
  9. ^ a b Duff, J. (2001). 78. 2 Peter, in John Barton and John Muddiman (ed.), "Oxford Bible Commentary". Oxford University Press. p. 1271
  10. ^ Bigg, C. (1901) "The Epistle of St Peter and Jude", in International Critical Commentary. pp. 242-47.
  11. ^ Giese. C. P. (2012). 2 Peter and Jude. Concordia Commentary. St Louis: Concordia. pp. 11.
  12. ^ Wohlenberg, G. (1915). Der erste und zweite Petrusbrief, pp. 37.
  13. ^ Davids, P. H. (2006). The Letters of 2 Peter and Jude. (PNTC; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans), pp. 130-260. at. 130-131.
  14. ^ Harvey and Towner. (2009). 2 Peter & Jude. pp. 15.
  15. ^ Green, M. (1987). Second Epistle General of Peter and the Epistle of Jude. An Introduction and Commentary. Rev. ed. TNTC. Grand Rapids: Baker Academic. pp. 47.
  16. ^ Moo, D. J. (1996). 2 Peter and Jude. NIVAC. Grand Rapids: Zondervan. pp. 24-25.
  17. ^ Mounce. (1982). A Living Hope. pp. 99.
  18. ^ Chaine, J. (1943). Les Epitres Catholiques. pp. 34.
  19. ^ Bauckham 1983, 157-158.
  20. ^ Reicke, B. (1964). James, Peter and Jude. pp. 144 -145.
  21. ^ Spicq, C. (1966). Epitres de Saint Pierre. pp. 195.
  22. ^ Perkins, P. (1995). First and Second Peter. pp. 160.
  23. ^ Harrington, D. J. (2008). “Jude and 2 Peter”. pp. 237.
  24. ^ Werse, N. R. (2016). Second Temple Jewish Literary Traditions in 2 Peter. The Catholic Biblical Quarterly Vol. 78, No. 1. pp. 113.
  25. ^ Schelkle, K. H. (1964). Die Petrusbriefe. pp. 178-179.
  26. ^ Knoch, O. (1998). Erste und Zweite Petrusbrief. pp. 213.
  27. ^ Kelly, J. N. D. (1969). Epistles of Peter and of Jude, The (Black's New Testament Commentary). GrandRapids, Mich.: Baker Academic. pp. 237.
  28. ^ James, M. R. (1912). Second Epistle General of Peter. pp. 30.
  29. ^ Vogtle, A. (1994). Der Judasbrief/Der 2. Petrusbrief. pp. 237.
  30. ^ Paulsen, H. (1992). Der Zweite Petrusbrief und der Judasbrief. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. pp. 94.
  31. ^ Callan. (2014). Acknowledging the Divine Benefactor: The Second Letter of Peter. James Clarke & Company pp 36.
  32. ^ R. E. Brown 1997, 767.
  33. ^ Sidebottom, E. M. (1982) James, Jude, 2 Peter. New Century Bible Commentary. Eerdmans Publishing Co. Grand Rapids-Michigan. pp. 99.
  34. ^ a b Stephen L. Harris (1980). Understanding the Bible: a reader's guide and reference. Mayfield Pub. Co. p. 295. ISBN 978-0-87484-472-6. Virtually no authorities defend the Petrine authorship of 2 Peter, which is believed to have been written by an anonymous churchman in Rome about 150 C.E.
  35. ^ a b c Picirilli, Robert E. (May 1988). "Allusions to 2 Peter in the Apostolic Fathers". Journal for the Study of the New Testament. 10 (33): 57–83. doi:10.1177/0142064X8801003304. S2CID 161724733.
  36. ^ Gilmour, Michael. J. (2001), "Reflections on the Authorship of 2 Peter" EvQ 73. Pp. 298-300
  37. ^ Reicke 1964, 146.
  38. ^ Collins, Raymond (2002). 1 & 2 Timothy and Titus: A Commentary. Westminster John Knox Press. pp. 182–83.
  39. ^ Bauckham, R. J. (2010). The Jewish World Around the New Testament. Baker Academic. p. 144.
  40. ^ John Reumann (1991). "Two Blunt Apologists for Early Christianity: Jude and 2 Peter"; Variety and Unity in New Testament Thought. Oxford Scholarship Online.
  41. ^ Bauckham 1983, 131–33.
  42. ^ Thomas R. Schreiner, 2003, 1, 2 Peter, Jude, NAC, Nashville, TN: Holman Reference), pp. 266–75, at 275.
  43. ^ Green, Gene (2008). Jude and 2 Peter. Baker Academic, pp. 37–38.
  44. ^ P. H. R. Van Houwelingen (2010), “The Authenticity of 2 Peter: Problems and Possible Solutions.” European Journal of Theology 19:2, pp. 121–32.
  45. ^ Daryl Charles, 1997, “Virtueamidst Vice: The Catalog of Virtues in 2 Peter 1,” Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplement 150, Sheffield, ENG: Academic Press, pp. 75.
  46. ^ Mathews, Mark. D. (2011). The Genre of 2 Peter: A Comparison with Jewish and Early Christian Testaments. Bulletin for Biblical Research 21.1: pp. 51–64.
  47. ^ Reumann 1991.
  48. ^ a b Dale Martin 2009 (lecture). "24. Apocalyptic and Accommodation" on YouTube. Yale University. Accessed 22 July 2013. Lecture 24 (transcript)
  49. ^ Bruce M. Metzger, Canon of the New Testament (Oxford University Press) 1987:42–43.
  50. ^ E. Randolph Richards. (1998). The Code and the Early Collection of Paul's Letters. BBR 8. PP. 155-162.
  51. ^ Duane F. Watson, Terrance D. Callan. (2012). First and Second Peter (Paideia: Commentaries on the New Testament). Baker Books.
  52. ^ Epistle of Ignatius to the Ephesians 12:2 and Epistle of Ignatius to the Romans 4:3.
  53. ^ Ehrman, Bart (2011). Forged: Writing in the Name of God - Why the Bible's authors are not who we think they are. HarperOne. p. 52–77; 133–141. ISBN 9780062012616. OCLC 639164332.
  54. ^ Holzmeister, U. (1949). Vocabularium secundae espitolae S. Petri erroresque quidam de eo divulg ati. Biblica 30:339-355.
  55. ^ Bauckham 1983, 144. “These percentages do not compare badlywith those for 1 and 2 Corinthians: of the words used in 1 Corinthians, 40.4 percent are commonto 1 and 2 Corinthians, 59.6 percent are peculiar to 1 Corinthians; of the words used in 2Corinthians, 49.3 percent are common to 1 and 2 Corinthians, 50.7 percent are peculiar to 2Corinthians.”
  56. ^ Bruce M. Metzger. (1972). Literary Forgeries and Canonical Pseudepigrapha. Journal of Biblical Literature Vol. 91, No. 1 (Mar., 1972), pp. 3-24 at. 17.
  57. ^ Bruce M. Metzger. (1958). A Reconsideration of Certain Arguments Against the Pauline Authorship of the Pastoral Epistles. The Expository Times 1970; pp. 91-99.
  58. ^ Bauckham 1983, 144.
  59. ^ Bauckham 1983, 138.
  60. ^ Bauckham 1983, 138-139.
  61. ^ Kelly 1993, 237.
  62. ^ Bauckham, RJ. (1988). Pseudo-Apostolic Letters. Journal of Biblical Literature Vol. 107, No. 3 (Sep., 1988), pp. 469-494 (26 pages). at. 489.
  63. ^ Armin D. Baum. (2017). Content and Form: Authorship Attribution and Pseudonymity in Ancient Speeches, Letters, Lectures, and Translations—A Rejoinder to Bart Ehrman. Journal of Biblical Literature Vol. 136, No. 2 (Summer 2017), pp. 381-403 (23 pages). at. 389-390.
  64. ^ Jerome, Letter 120 [to Hedibia]: Therefore Titus served as an interpreter, as Saint Mark used to serve Saint Peter, with whom he wrote his Gospel. Also we see that the two epistles attributed to Saint Peter have different styles and turn phrases differently, by which it is discerned that it was sometimes necessary for him to use different interpreters.
  65. ^ Blum. "2 Peter" EBC, 12: 259.
  66. ^ . Archive date: 9 December 2003. Access date: 19 August 2013.
  67. ^ Schreiner 2003, pp. 266.
  68. ^ Simon J. Kistemaker, New Testament Commentary: Exposition of the Epistles of Peter and the Epistle of Jude (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Pub Group, 1987), 224
  69. ^ Erhman, Bart (2005). Misquoting Jesus: The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why. Harper Collins. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-06-182514-9. Evidence comes in the final book of the New Testament to be written, 2 Peter, a book that most critical scholars believe was not actually written by Peter but by one of his followers, pseudonymously.
  70. ^ Moyise, Steve (9 December 2004). The Old Testament in the New. A&C Black. p. 116. ISBN 978-0-567-08199-5.
  71. ^ Stephen L. Harris (1992). Understanding the Bible. Mayfield. p. 388. ISBN 978-1-55934-083-0. Most scholars believe that 1 Peter is pseudonymous (written anonymously in the name of a well-known figure) and was produced during postapostolic times.
  72. ^ Grant, Robert M. A Historical Introduction To The New Testament, chap. 14 2010-06-21 at the Wayback Machine.
  73. ^ Nongbri, "The Construction of P. Bodmer VIII and the Bodmer 'Composite' or 'Miscellaneous' Codex," 396
  74. ^ Eberhard Nestle, Erwin Nestle, Barbara Aland and Kurt Aland (eds), Novum Testamentum Graece, 26th ed., (Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 1991), p. 689.
  75. ^ Gregory, Caspar René (1902). Textkritik des Neuen Testaments. Vol. 2. Leipzig: Hinrichs. p. 609. ISBN 1-4021-6347-9.
  76. ^ Callan 2004, p. 42.
  77. ^ Robinson 2017, p. 10.
  78. ^ a b Donald Guthrie, Introduction to the New Testament 4th ed. (Leicester: Apollos, 1990), p. 806.
  79. ^ M. R. James, "The Second Epistle General of St. Peter and the General Epistle of St. Jude", in Cambridge Greek Testament (1912), p. xix; cf. Origen, Homily in Josh. 7.1.
  80. ^ Donald Guthrie, Introduction to the New Testament 4th ed. (Leicester: Apollos, 1990), p. 807.
  81. ^ Bigg 1901, 202–205.
  82. ^ J. W. C. Wand, The General Epistles of St. Peter and St. Jude (1934), p. 141.
  83. ^ Bauckham 1983, 283–84.
  84. ^ Davids, P. H. (2004). “The Use of Second Temple Traditions in 1 and 2 Peter and Jude,” in Jacques Schlosser, ed. The Catholic Epistles and the Tradition, Bibliotheca Ephemeridum Theologicarum Lovaniensium 176; Leuven: Peeters Publishers, 426–27.
  85. ^ Thiede, C. P. (1986). A Pagan Reader of 2 Peter: Cosmic Conflagration in 2 Peter 3 and the Octavius of Minucius Felix. Journal for the Study of the New Testament, 8(26), 79–96.
  86. ^ Osburn, D. Carroll. (2000). "Second Letter of Peter", in Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible, pp. 1039.
  87. ^ Elliott, John. (1993). "Second Epistle of Peter", in Anchor Bible Dictionary 5. pp. 282–87, at 287.
  88. ^ Elliott 1993, 283.
  89. ^ C. Detlef G. Müller (1992). "Apocalypse of Peter", in Schneemelcher, New Testament Apocrypha, vol. 2, pp. 620–38.
  90. ^ Bigg 1901, 207.
  91. ^ Spicq 1966, 189.
  92. ^ Bauckham 1983, 162.
  93. ^ Helmbold, Andrew (1967). The Nag Hammati Gnostic Texts and the Bible. Grand Rapids, pp. 61.
  94. ^ Donald Guthrie, 1990, Introduction to the New Testament 4th ed. Leicester: Apollos, pp. 808–9, though the exception of the Syrian canon is noted, with acceptance occurring sometime before 509; cf. Jerome, De Viris Illustribus chapter 1.
  95. ^ "Table of Contents". ܟܬܒܐ ܩܕܝ̈ܫܐ: ܟܬܒܐ ܕܕܝܬܩܐ ܥܛܝܼܩܬܐ ܘ ܚ̇ܕܬܐ. [London]: United Bible Societies. 1979. OCLC 38847449.
  96. ^ Helmut Koester, 1982, Introduction to the New Testament, Vol. One: History, Culture and Religion of the Hellenistic Age, Fortress Press/Walter de Gruyter. pp. 107–10.
  97. ^ Reicke 1964, 146–47.
  98. ^ Kelly 1969, 228.
  99. ^ Aune, David E. (2003). The Westminster Dictionary of New Testament and Early Christian Literature and Rhetoric. Westminster John Knox Press. pp. 199
  100. ^ Köstenberger, Andreas J; Kellum, Scott L, and Quarles, Charles L. (2012). The Lion and the Lamb. B&H Publishing Group, pp. 338–39
  101. ^ Chaine 1939, 32–3.
  102. ^ Knoch 1990, 199.
  103. ^ Davids, Peter H. (2006). The Letters of 2 Peter and Jude. Wm. B. Eerdmans. p. 126. ISBN 978-0-80283726-4.
  104. ^ Werse 2016, 112.
  105. ^ Longenecker, Richard N. (2005). Contours of Christology in the New Testament, pp 280–81.
  106. ^ Werse 2016, 124.
  107. ^ a b T. Callan, "Use of the Letter of Jude by the Second Letter of Peter", Biblica 85 (2004), pp. 42–64.
  108. ^ The Westminster dictionary of New Testament and early Christian literature, David Edward Aune, p. 256
  109. ^ Christian-Jewish Relations Through the Centuries By Stanley E. Porter, Brook W. R. Pearson
  110. ^ Van Houwelingen 2010, 125.
  111. ^ Köstenberger 2020, 155.
  112. ^ Lévy L. B. (2019). "Ethics and Pseudepigraphy – Do the Ends Always Justify the Means?" Athens Journal of Humanities & Arts, pp. 335
  113. ^ Kuhn, Karl (2006). 2 Peter 3:1–13. Sage Publications (UK).
  114. ^ Koestenberger, AJ (2020). Handbook on Hebrews Through Revelation (Handbooks on the New Testament). Baker Academic, pp. 147.
  115. ^ Kuhn, Karl (2006). 2 Peter 3:1–13. Sage Publications (UK).
  116. ^ Talbert, C. H. (1966) “II Peter and the delay of the parousia”, Vigiliae Christianae 20, 137–45.
  117. ^ Köstenberger, Kellum, Quarles, 2012. 862–63.
  118. ^ Callan, T. (2014). Use of the letter of Jude by the Second Letter of Peter. Bib 85, pp. 42–64.
  119. ^ Thurén, L. (2004). The Relationship between 2 Peter and Jude: A Classical Problem Resolved?. in The Catholic Epistles and the Tradition, ed. Jacques Schlosser. BETL 176, Leuven: Peeters, pp. 451–60.
  120. ^ Kasemann, Ernst (1982). Essays on New Testament Themes, "An Apologia for Primitive Christian Eschatology", trans. W. J. Montague, (SCM Press, 1968: Great Britain), pp. 172.
  121. ^ Bauckham 1983, 287.
  122. ^ Davids 2006, 260.
  123. ^ Kruger, M. J. (2020). 2 Peter 3:2, the Apostolate, and a Bi-Covenantal Canon. Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 63, pp. 5–24.
  124. ^ Davids 2006, 260.
  125. ^ Kruger 2020, 9–10.
  126. ^ Houwelingen 2010, 122. "These considerations make us think especially of Paul's letter to the Galatians. It is also possible to think of the letters to the Ephesians and Colossians – the latter is indeed difficult to interpret."
  127. ^ Levoratti, Armando J. (1981). La Biblia. Libro del Pueblo de Dios. Verbo Divino, 2018, pp. 1791. "In this passage is found the first mention of a collection of Paul's Letters considered an integral part of the canonical Scriptures. The passages therein which lent themselves to false interpretations were undoubtedly those concerning the second Coming of the Lord (1 Thess. 4. 13–5. 11; 2 Thess. 1.7–10; 2.1–12), and Christian liberty (Rom. 7; Gal. 5). In the latter, especially, some sought justification for moral licentiousness."
  128. ^ Kruger 2020, 15–20.
  129. ^ Kuhn 2006
  130. ^ Kirkpatrick, A. F. (1901). The Book of Psalms: with Introduction and Notes. The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges. Vol. Book IV and V: Psalms XC-CL. Cambridge: At the University Press. p. 839. Retrieved February 28, 2019.

Bibliography

External links

Online translations of the epistle

  • Book of 2 Peter (NLT) at BibleGateway.com
  • Online Bible at GospelHall.org
  •   Bible: 2 Peter public domain audiobook at LibriVox Various versions

Other

  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Epistles of Saint Peter" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • BibleProject Animated Overview (Evangelical Perspective)
Second Epistle of Peter
Preceded by New Testament
Books of the Bible
Succeeded by

second, epistle, peter, redirects, here, second, volume, peters, reports, list, united, states, supreme, court, cases, volume, book, testament, bible, text, identifies, author, simon, peter, bondservant, apostle, jesus, christ, epistle, traditionally, attribut. 2 Pet redirects here For the second volume of Peters s Reports see List of United States Supreme Court cases volume 27 The Second Epistle of Peter a is a book of the New Testament of the Bible The text identifies the author as Simon Peter a bondservant and apostle of Jesus Christ and the epistle is traditionally attributed to Peter the Apostle but most scholars consider the epistle pseudepigraphical i e authored by one or more of Peter s followers in Ancient Rome using Peter as a pseudonym 3 4 5 6 7 Scholars estimate the date of authorship anywhere from 60 to 150 AD The original text was written in Koine Greek Contents 1 Authorship and date 2 Early surviving manuscripts 2 1 Greek 2 2 Latin 3 Relationship with the Epistle of Jude 4 Canonical acceptance 5 Content 6 Outline 6 1 Chapter 1 6 2 Chapter 2 6 3 Chapter 3 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External links 11 1 Online translations of the epistle 11 2 OtherAuthorship and date EditSee also Authorship of the Petrine epistles According to the Epistle itself it was composed by the Apostle Peter an eyewitness to Jesus ministry If 2 Peter 3 1 this second epistle alludes to 1 Peter the audience of the epistle is the various Churches in Asia Minor in general see 1 Peter 1 1 The date of composition has proven to be very difficult to determine Taken literally it would have been written between 65 68 AD because Peter was martyred around 68 AD by Nero and also because Peter references his approaching death in 2 Peter 1 14 since I know that the putting off of my body will be soon as our Lord Jesus Christ made clear to me 8 Two sides of the Papyrus Bodmer VIII This Papyrus today is the oldest source to the Second Epistle of Peter The questions of authorship and date are closely related Scholars consider the epistle to have been written anywhere between c AD 60 150 with some reason to favour a date between 80 90 9 Dates suggested by various authors include c 60 Charles Bigg 10 63 Giese Wohlenberg 11 12 64 110 Davids 13 Mid 60s Harvey and Towner M Green Moo Mounce 14 15 16 17 c 70 or 80 Chaine 18 75 100 Bauckham perhaps about 80 90 19 80 90 Duff 9 c 90 Reicke Spicq 20 21 Late first or early second century Perkins Harrington Werse 22 23 24 c 100 Schelkle 25 100 110 Knoch Kelly 26 27 100 125 James Vogtle Paulsen 28 29 30 100 140 Callan perhaps about 125 31 130 Raymond E Brown Sidebottom 32 33 150 L Harris 34 The scholarly debate can be divided into two parts external and internal evidence The external evidence for its authenticity though feasible critics have been presented mainly in the conclusions clarification needed much of this debate stems from Professor Robert E Picirilli s article Allusion to 2 Peter in the Apostolic Fathers which compiles many of the allusions by the Apostolic Fathers of the late first and early second centuries thus demonstrating that 2 Peter is not to be considered a second century document 35 Despite this effort scholars such as Michael J Gilmour who consider Picirilli s evidences to be correct disagree with classifying the work as authentic but rather as a pseudepigrapha arguing among many other things that Paul 2 Thess 2 1 had to warn against contemporary pseudo Pauline writers See Syllogism 36 The internal debate focuses more on style its ideology and its relationship to the other works and stories One of the internal arguments against the authenticity of 2 Peter has gained significant popularity since the 1980s Being more precise is the argument that the scholar Bo Reicke first formulated in 1964 where 2 Peter is clearly an example of an ancient literary genre known as a testament which originally arose from Moses farewell discourse in Deuteronomy 37 b c Richard J Bauckham who popularised this argument wrote that the testament genre contains 2 main elements ethical warnings to be followed after the death of the writer and revelations of the future The significant fact about the testament genre was not in its markers but in its nature it is argued that a piece of testament literature is meant to be a completely transparent fiction 41 This argument has its detractors who classify it as a syllogism 42 43 44 45 46 Others characterise the writing as a farewell speech because it lacks any semblance of final greetings or ties with recipients 47 One of the questions to be resolved is the relationship with the Pauline letters The letter refers to the Pauline epistles and so must post date at least some of them regardless of authorship thus a date before 60 is improbable Further it goes as far as to name the Pauline epistles as scripture the only time a New Testament work refers to another New Testament work in this way implying that it postdates them by some time 48 Various hypotheses have been put forward to improve or resolve this issue the hypothesis with the most potential is that the First Epistle of Clement 96CE by citing as Scripture several of the Pauline letters 49 was inspired by 2 Peter because it was considered authentic see below thus giving that even the recipients of 1 Clement the inhabitants of Corinth would also be considered authentic thus giving that the letter must have been in circulation long before that time 50 the earliest reference to a Pauline collection is probably found in Ignatius of Antioch 108 AD 51 52 Another debate internal is about its linguistic complexity and about its relationship with 1 Peter For the scholar Bart D Ehrman the historical Peter could not write any works either because he was unlettered Acts 4 13 or because he was a fisherman from Capernaum a comparatively small and probably monolingual town in a time and province where there was little literacy 53 Bauckham addresses the statistical differences in the vocabulary of the two writings using the data given by U Holzmeister s 1949 study 54 38 6 percent of the words are common to 1 and 2 Peter 61 4 percent peculiar to 2 Peter while of the words used in 1 Peter 28 4 percent are common to 1 and 2 Peter 71 6 percent are peculiar to 1 Peter However discouraging these data may be these figures can be compared with other epistles considered authentic 55 which is why this is not a final argument since pure statistical analysis is a weak way of showing literary relationship 56 57 58 Bauckham also notes that the Greek style of Second Peter is not to the taste of many modern readers at times pretentiously elaborate with an effort at pompous phrasing a somewhat artificial piece of rhetoric and slimy Greek contrary to the style of the first epistle 2 Peter must relate to the Asiatic Greek 59 His style of Greek rhetoric which was becoming fashionable at the time and which with his love of the expressions of high flown expressions of flowery and verbose language and of elaborate literary effects 60 The crux of the matter is how these differences are explained Those who deny the Petrine authorship of the epistle such as for example Kelly insist that the differences show that First and Second Peter were not written by the same person 61 others add that 2 Peter was a specific type of pseudepigraphy common and morally accepted at the time either because it was a testamentary genre or because the works of the disciples could bear the names of their masters without any inconvenience 62 63 d Those who defend Petrine authorship often appeal to the different amanuenses or secretaries Peter used to write each letter as first suggested by Jerome 64 65 66 Thomas R Schreiner puts into perspective when some who doubt the authenticity of the letter consider the arguments defending its authenticity as a impotent resource People of this mindset according to Thomas object to the claim that different secretaries may have been used on the one hand and then to the claim that the corpus of the two letters is too small to establish stylistic variation culminating in the statement that When we examine historical documents we are not granted exhaustive knowledge of the circumstances in which the document came into being Therefore we must postulate probabilities and in some cases of course more than one scenario is likely Moreover in some cases the likely scenarios are not internally contradictory but both constitute plausible answers to the problem posed Suggesting more than one solution is not necessarily an appeal to despair but can be a sign of humility 67 The scholar Simon J Kistemaker on the other hand believes that linguistically the material presented in both documents provides substantial evidence to indicate that these letters are the product of a single author 68 however this view is very much in the minority Most biblical scholars have concluded Peter is not the author considering the epistle pseudepigraphical 3 69 70 71 34 48 Reasons for this include its linguistic differences from 1 Peter its apparent use of Jude possible allusions to 2nd century gnosticism encouragement in the wake of a delayed parousia and weak external support 72 Early surviving manuscripts EditSome early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter are Greek Edit Papyrus 72 3rd 4th century 73 Codex Vaticanus B or 03 325 50 Codex Sinaiticus א or 01 330 60 Codex Alexandrinus A or 02 400 40 Codex Ephraemi Rescriptus C or 04 c 450 partial 74 Papyrus 74 7th century extant verses 3 4 3 11 3 16 Latin Edit Codex Floriacensis h 6th century Old Latin partial 75 Relationship with the Epistle of Jude EditThere is an obvious relationship between the texts of 2 Peter and the Epistle of Jude 76 The shared passages are 77 2 Peter Jude1 5 31 12 52 1 42 4 62 6 72 10 11 8 92 12 102 13 17 11 133 2 3 17 183 14 243 18 25Canonical acceptance EditSee also Development of the New Testament canon Acceptance of the letter into the canon did not occur without some difficulty however nowhere did doubts about the letter s authorship take the form of definitive rejection 78 The earliest record of doubts concerning the authorship of the letter were recorded by Origen c 185 254 though Origen mentioned no explanation for the doubts nor did he give any indication concerning the extent or location Donald Guthrie suggests that It is fair to assume therefore that he saw no reason to treat these doubts as serious and this would mean to imply that in his time the epistle was widely regarded as canonical 78 Origen in another passage has been interpreted as considering the letter to be Petrine in authorship 79 Before Origen s time the evidence is inconclusive 80 there is a lack of definite early quotations from the letter in the writings of the Apostolic Fathers though possible use or influence has been located in the works of Clement of Alexandria d c 211 Theophilius d c 183 Aristides d c 134 Polycarp d 155 and Justin d 165 81 82 35 Robert E Picirilli observed that Clement of Rome linked James 1 8 2 Peter 3 4 and Mark 4 26 in 1 Clement 23 3 35 59 65 Richard Bauckham and Peter H Davids also noted the reference to Scripture in 1 Clement 23 3 matched 2 Peter 3 4 but make it dependent on a common apocalyptic source which was also used in 2 Clement 11 2 83 84 Carsten Peter Thiede adds to Picirilli s work authors such as Justin and Minucius Felix who would use 2 Peter directly and a new reference in Clement of Rome 1 Clem 9 2 2 Pet 1 17 85 2 Peter in literature apocrypha seems to be quoted in Shepherd of Hermas 95 160CE 86 87 Apocalypse of Peter 125 135CE 88 89 90 91 92 the Gospel of Truth 140 170CE and the Apocryphon of John 120 180CE 93 Eusebius c 275 339 professed his own doubts see also Antilegomena and is the earliest direct testimony of such though he stated that the majority supported the text and by the time of Jerome c 346 420 it had been mostly accepted as canonical 94 The Peshitta the standard version of the Bible for churches in the Syriac tradition does not contain the Second Epistle of Peter and thus rejects its canonical status 95 Content EditIn both content and style this letter is very different from 1 Peter Its author like the author of the Gospel of Luke and the Acts of the Apostles is familiar with literary conventions writing in a more elevated Koine Greek than for example Paul s writings or the Gospel of Mark 96 Gorgianic figures are used which are characteristic of Asian rhetoric Asianism 97 98 with style similar to that of Ignatius and the Epistle to Diognetus 99 This leads some scholars to think that like 1 Peter the letter is addressed to Gentile Christians in Asia Minor 100 101 102 The epistle presciently declares that it is written shortly before the apostle s death 1 14 an assertion that may not have been part of the original text Arguments for and against the assertion being original are based largely on the acceptance or rejection of supernatural intervention in the life of the writer 103 The epistle contains eleven references to the Old Testament In 3 15 16 a reference is made to one of Paul s epistles which some have identified as 3 10a with Thess 5 2 3 14 with Thess 5 23 e The author of 2 Peter had a relationship with the Gospel tradition mainly in the Transfiguration of Jesus 1 4 with Mark 9 1 1 11 with Mark 9 1 1 16 18 with Mark 9 2 10 1 17 with Matthew 17 5 1 19 with Mark 9 4 105 and in the promise of the Second Coming 3 10b with Mark 13 31 or Luke 21 33 106 The book also shares a number of passages with the Epistle of Jude 1 5 with Jude 3 1 12 with Jude 5 2 1 with Jude 4 2 4 with Jude 6 2 5 with Jude 5 2 6 with Jude 7 2 10 11 with Jude 8 9 2 12 with Jude 10 2 13 17 with Jude 11 13 2 18 with Jude 16 3 2f with Jude 17f 3 3 with Jude 18 3 14 with Jude 24 and 3 18 with Jude 25 107 Because the Epistle of Jude is much shorter than 2 Peter and due to various stylistic details the scholarly consensus is that Jude was the source for the similar passages of 2 Peter 107 108 Tartarus is mentioned in 2 Peter 2 4 as devoted to the holding of certain fallen angels It is elaborated on in Jude 6 Jude 6 however is a clear reference to the Book of Enoch Bauckham suggests that 2 Peter 2 4 is partially dependent on Jude 6 but is independently drawing on paraenetic tradition that also lies behind Jude 5 7 The paraenetic traditions are in Sirach 16 7 10 Damascus Document 2 17 3 12 3 Maccabees 2 4 7 Testament of Naphtali 3 4 5 and Mishna Sanhedrin 10 3 109 Outline EditChapter 1 Edit Main article 2 Peter 1 The chapters of this epistle show a triangular relationship between Christology chapter 1 ethics chapter 2 and eschatology chapter 3 At the beginning of chapter 1 the author calls himself Simeon Peter see Acts 15 14 This detail for the scholar Rob van Houwelingen is evidence of the authenticity of the letter 110 The letter gives a list of seven virtues in the form of a ladder Love Brotherly affection Godliness Steadfastness Self control Knowledge and Excellence 111 Through the memory of Peter 1 12 15 the author encourages the addressees to lead holy and godly lives 11b in verse 13 the author speaks of righteousness being just in a moral sense and in verse 14 his line of argument reaches a climax as the addressees are encouraged to do all they can to be found blameless 1 Thess 5 23 In short the author is concerned to encourage his addressees to behave ethically without reproach 1 5 7 3 12 14 probably because of the impending parousia Second Coming which will come like a thief in the night 3 10 1 Thess 5 2 112 Chapter 2 Edit Main article 2 Peter 2 In this chapter the author affirms that false teachers have arisen among the faithful to lead them astray with destructive heresies and exploit people with false words 2 1 2 Just as there were false prophets in ancient times so there would be false teachers 113 moreover false prophets sheep s clothing were one of the prophecies of Jesus Matt 7 15 to which the author of this letter together with the author of 1 John refers 1 John 4 1 114 False teachers are accused of denying the Lord who bought them and promoting licentiousness 2 1 2 The author classifies false teachers as irrational animals instinctive creatures born to be caught and destroyed 2 12 They are spots and stains delighting in their dissipation with eyes full of adultery insatiable for sin hearts trained in covetousness 2 13 14 115 As a solution 2 Peter proposes in the following chapter tools such as penance aimed at purging sins and the re actualisation of the eschatological hope to be expected with attention service and perseverance 116 This chapter all likelihood adapts significant portions of the Epistle of Jude 117 118 119 120 The ethical goal is not to fall that debauchery errors and to have hope this is promoted with many stories of how God rescues the righteous while holding back the unrighteous for the day of judgment the story of Noah the story of Lot in Sodom and Gomorrah 2 6 8 and the story Balaam son of Bosor 2 15 16 are used as a warning 2 Peter 2 22 quotes Proverbs 26 11 As a dog returns to his vomit so a fool repeats his folly Chapter 3 Edit Main article 2 Peter 3 The fundamental of this chapter is the authoritative Christian revelation The revelation is found in a two part source 3 2 There is little doubt that the words spoken beforehand by the holy prophets refers to the OT writings either in part or in whole 121 122 Then the author mentions the second source of revelation the commandment of the Lord spoken by your apostles It is remarkable that this two part authority includes an obvious older means words spoken beforehand as well as an obvious newer half the apostolically mediated words words about Jesus One could be forgiven if he sees here a precursor to a future old and new Testament 123 This juxtaposition of prophet and apostle as a two part revelatory source is not first found in 3 1 2 but in 1 16 21 124 Another remarkable feature of this chapter is that the author presupposes that his audience is familiar with a plurality of apostles how many is unclear and moreover that they have had and perhaps still have access to the teaching of these apostles One cannot remember teaching that they have not received Of course this raises difficult questions about the precise medium oral or written by which the public received this apostolic teaching However near the end of this chapter the means by which the audience at least received the apostle Paul teaching is expressly stated We are told that the audience knew the teachings of our beloved brother Paul 3 15 and that they knew them in written form Paul also wrote to you according to wisdom as he does in all his letters 3 16 the also being the key word since in the first verse of the chapter the author referred to another written apostolic text namely his first epistle 1 Peter considering part of the Scriptures not only the OT prophets but also Paul and the author himself 125 from the Pauline corpus the author may have known 1 and 2 Thessalonians Romans Galatians and possibly Ephesians and Colossians 126 127 Thought on Christian revelation is also located in other early authors namely Clement of Rome Ignatius Polycarp Justin Martyr and in the work 2 Clement 128 In the middle of the chapter is the explanation for the delay in Jesus return 3 9 Jesus delay is only to facilitate the salvation of the already faithful who may at times waver in their faith or have been led astray by false teachers 2 2 3 God is delaying to make sure that all have had sufficient time to secure their commitment or return to the gospel including the false teachers The remaining verses provide details about the coming day of the Lord along with the exhortation that flows seamlessly into the conclusion of the letter The instruction offered here 3 11 13 echoes that of Jesus who called his disciples to await the consummation of his kingdom with attention service and perseverance Mt 24 25 Mk 13 3 13 32 37 Lk 18 1 30 21 1 38 Taken together with the final verses 3 14 18 here again the author expresses the concern that believers secure their eternal place in God s new creation by embracing lives that foster blessing and even hasten God s coming day 129 2 Peter 3 6 quotes Genesis 7 11 12 2 Peter 3 8 quotes Psalm 90 specifically 90 4 130 See also EditFirst Epistle of Peter Textual variants in the Second Epistle of Peter Universal destination of goodsNotes Edit The book is sometimes called the Second Letter of Peter or simply 2 Peter 1 It is most commonly abbreviated as 2 Pet 2 Within the NT it is speculated that 2 Timothy John 13 17 Lukes 22 21 38 and Acts 20 18 35 are also farewell discourses or testamentary works 38 39 In addition to the end of Deuteronomy within the OT it is speculated that Genesis 47 29 49 33 and 1 Samuel 12 are also farewell discourses 40 Tertullian Adversus Marcionem 4 5 3 4 That which Mark edited is stated to be Peter s Petri affirmetur whose interpreter Mark was Luke s digest also they usually attribute to Paul Paulo adscribere solent It is permissible for the works which disciples published to be regarded as belonging to their masters Capit magistrorum videri quae discipuli promulgarint It alleged citation of 1 Thess 5 2 in 2 Pet 3 10 is disputed allusion Duane F Watson Terranee Callan and Dennis Farkasfalvy identify the allusion to 1 Thessalonians Michael J Gilmour on the other hand disputes the identification of the allusion 104 References Edit ESV Pew Bible Wheaton IL Crossway 2018 p 1018 ISBN 978 1 4335 6343 0 Archived from the original on June 3 2021 Bible Book Abbreviations Logos Bible Software Archived from the original on April 21 2022 Retrieved April 21 2022 a b Brown Raymond E Introduction to the New Testament Anchor Bible 1997 ISBN 0 385 24767 2 p 767 the pseudonymity of II Pet is more certain than that of any other NT work Ehrman Bart 2005 Misquoting Jesus The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why Harper Collins p 31 ISBN 978 0 06 182514 9 Evidence comes in the final book of the New Testament to be written 2 Peter a book that most critical scholars believe was not actually written by Peter but by one of his followers pseudonymously Duff 2007 p 1271 sfn error no target CITEREFDuff2007 help Davids Peter H 1982 Marshall I Howard Gasque W Ward eds The Epistle of James New International Greek Testament Commentary repr ed Grand Rapids MI Eerdmans ISBN 0 80282388 2 Evans Craig A 2005 Evans Craig A ed John Hebrews Revelation Bible Knowledge Background Commentary Colorado Springs CO Victor ISBN 0 78144228 1 Bauckham RJ 1983 Word Bible Commentary Vol 50 Jude 2 Peter Waco a b Duff J 2001 78 2 Peter in John Barton and John Muddiman ed Oxford Bible Commentary Oxford University Press p 1271 Bigg C 1901 The Epistle of St Peter and Jude in International Critical Commentary pp 242 47 Giese C P 2012 2 Peter and Jude Concordia Commentary St Louis Concordia pp 11 Wohlenberg G 1915 Der erste und zweite Petrusbrief pp 37 Davids P H 2006 The Letters of 2 Peter and Jude PNTC Grand Rapids Eerdmans pp 130 260 at 130 131 Harvey and Towner 2009 2 Peter amp Jude pp 15 Green M 1987 Second Epistle General of Peter and the Epistle of Jude An Introduction and Commentary Rev ed TNTC Grand Rapids Baker Academic pp 47 Moo D J 1996 2 Peter and Jude NIVAC Grand Rapids Zondervan pp 24 25 Mounce 1982 A Living Hope pp 99 Chaine J 1943 Les Epitres Catholiques pp 34 Bauckham 1983 157 158 Reicke B 1964 James Peter and Jude pp 144 145 Spicq C 1966 Epitres de Saint Pierre pp 195 Perkins P 1995 First and Second Peter pp 160 Harrington D J 2008 Jude and 2 Peter pp 237 Werse N R 2016 Second Temple Jewish Literary Traditions in 2 Peter The Catholic Biblical Quarterly Vol 78 No 1 pp 113 Schelkle K H 1964 Die Petrusbriefe pp 178 179 Knoch O 1998 Erste und Zweite Petrusbrief pp 213 Kelly J N D 1969 Epistles of Peter and of Jude The Black s New Testament Commentary GrandRapids Mich Baker Academic pp 237 James M R 1912 Second Epistle General of Peter pp 30 Vogtle A 1994 Der Judasbrief Der 2 Petrusbrief pp 237 Paulsen H 1992 Der Zweite Petrusbrief und der Judasbrief Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht pp 94 Callan 2014 Acknowledging the Divine Benefactor The Second Letter of Peter James Clarke amp Company pp 36 R E Brown 1997 767 Sidebottom E M 1982 James Jude 2 Peter New Century Bible Commentary Eerdmans Publishing Co Grand Rapids Michigan pp 99 a b Stephen L Harris 1980 Understanding the Bible a reader s guide and reference Mayfield Pub Co p 295 ISBN 978 0 87484 472 6 Virtually no authorities defend the Petrine authorship of 2 Peter which is believed to have been written by an anonymous churchman in Rome about 150 C E a b c Picirilli Robert E May 1988 Allusions to 2 Peter in the Apostolic Fathers Journal for the Study of the New Testament 10 33 57 83 doi 10 1177 0142064X8801003304 S2CID 161724733 Gilmour Michael J 2001 Reflections on the Authorship of 2 Peter EvQ 73 Pp 298 300 Reicke 1964 146 Collins Raymond 2002 1 amp 2 Timothy and Titus A Commentary Westminster John Knox Press pp 182 83 Bauckham R J 2010 The Jewish World Around the New Testament Baker Academic p 144 John Reumann 1991 Two Blunt Apologists for Early Christianity Jude and 2 Peter Variety and Unity in New Testament Thought Oxford Scholarship Online Bauckham 1983 131 33 Thomas R Schreiner 2003 1 2 Peter Jude NAC Nashville TN Holman Reference pp 266 75 at 275 Green Gene 2008 Jude and 2 Peter Baker Academic pp 37 38 P H R Van Houwelingen 2010 The Authenticity of 2 Peter Problems and Possible Solutions European Journal of Theology 19 2 pp 121 32 Daryl Charles 1997 Virtueamidst Vice The Catalog of Virtues in 2 Peter 1 Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplement 150 Sheffield ENG Academic Press pp 75 Mathews Mark D 2011 The Genre of 2 Peter A Comparison with Jewish and Early Christian Testaments Bulletin for Biblical Research 21 1 pp 51 64 Reumann 1991 a b Dale Martin 2009 lecture 24 Apocalyptic and Accommodation on YouTube Yale University Accessed 22 July 2013 Lecture 24 transcript Bruce M Metzger Canon of the New Testament Oxford University Press 1987 42 43 E Randolph Richards 1998 The Code and the Early Collection of Paul s Letters BBR 8 PP 155 162 Duane F Watson Terrance D Callan 2012 First and Second Peter Paideia Commentaries on the New Testament Baker Books Epistle of Ignatius to the Ephesians 12 2 and Epistle of Ignatius to the Romans 4 3 Ehrman Bart 2011 Forged Writing in the Name of God Why the Bible s authors are not who we think they are HarperOne p 52 77 133 141 ISBN 9780062012616 OCLC 639164332 Holzmeister U 1949 Vocabularium secundae espitolae S Petri erroresque quidam de eo divulg ati Biblica 30 339 355 Bauckham 1983 144 These percentages do not compare badlywith those for 1 and 2 Corinthians of the words used in 1 Corinthians 40 4 percent are commonto 1 and 2 Corinthians 59 6 percent are peculiar to 1 Corinthians of the words used in 2Corinthians 49 3 percent are common to 1 and 2 Corinthians 50 7 percent are peculiar to 2Corinthians Bruce M Metzger 1972 Literary Forgeries and Canonical Pseudepigrapha Journal of Biblical Literature Vol 91 No 1 Mar 1972 pp 3 24 at 17 Bruce M Metzger 1958 A Reconsideration of Certain Arguments Against the Pauline Authorship of the Pastoral Epistles The Expository Times 1970 pp 91 99 Bauckham 1983 144 Bauckham 1983 138 Bauckham 1983 138 139 Kelly 1993 237 Bauckham RJ 1988 Pseudo Apostolic Letters Journal of Biblical Literature Vol 107 No 3 Sep 1988 pp 469 494 26 pages at 489 Armin D Baum 2017 Content and Form Authorship Attribution and Pseudonymity in Ancient Speeches Letters Lectures and Translations A Rejoinder to Bart Ehrman Journal of Biblical Literature Vol 136 No 2 Summer 2017 pp 381 403 23 pages at 389 390 Jerome Letter 120 to Hedibia Therefore Titus served as an interpreter as Saint Mark used to serve Saint Peter with whom he wrote his Gospel Also we see that the two epistles attributed to Saint Peter have different styles and turn phrases differently by which it is discerned that it was sometimes necessary for him to use different interpreters Blum 2 Peter EBC 12 259 Second Peter Introduction Argument and Outline Archive date 9 December 2003 Access date 19 August 2013 Schreiner 2003 pp 266 Simon J Kistemaker New Testament Commentary Exposition of the Epistles of Peter and the Epistle of Jude Grand Rapids Mich Baker Pub Group 1987 224 Erhman Bart 2005 Misquoting Jesus The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why Harper Collins p 31 ISBN 978 0 06 182514 9 Evidence comes in the final book of the New Testament to be written 2 Peter a book that most critical scholars believe was not actually written by Peter but by one of his followers pseudonymously Moyise Steve 9 December 2004 The Old Testament in the New A amp C Black p 116 ISBN 978 0 567 08199 5 Stephen L Harris 1992 Understanding the Bible Mayfield p 388 ISBN 978 1 55934 083 0 Most scholars believe that 1 Peter is pseudonymous written anonymously in the name of a well known figure and was produced during postapostolic times Grant Robert M A Historical Introduction To The New Testament chap 14 Archived 2010 06 21 at the Wayback Machine Nongbri The Construction of P Bodmer VIII and the Bodmer Composite or Miscellaneous Codex 396 Eberhard Nestle Erwin Nestle Barbara Aland and Kurt Aland eds Novum Testamentum Graece 26th ed Stuttgart Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft 1991 p 689 Gregory Caspar Rene 1902 Textkritik des Neuen Testaments Vol 2 Leipzig Hinrichs p 609 ISBN 1 4021 6347 9 Callan 2004 p 42 sfn error no target CITEREFCallan2004 help Robinson 2017 p 10 sfn error no target CITEREFRobinson2017 help a b Donald Guthrie Introduction to the New Testament 4th ed Leicester Apollos 1990 p 806 M R James The Second Epistle General of St Peter and the General Epistle of St Jude in Cambridge Greek Testament 1912 p xix cf Origen Homily in Josh 7 1 Donald Guthrie Introduction to the New Testament 4th ed Leicester Apollos 1990 p 807 Bigg 1901 202 205 J W C Wand The General Epistles of St Peter and St Jude 1934 p 141 Bauckham 1983 283 84 Davids P H 2004 The Use of Second Temple Traditions in 1 and 2 Peter and Jude in Jacques Schlosser ed The Catholic Epistles and the Tradition Bibliotheca Ephemeridum Theologicarum Lovaniensium 176 Leuven Peeters Publishers 426 27 Thiede C P 1986 A Pagan Reader of 2 Peter Cosmic Conflagration in 2 Peter 3 and the Octavius of Minucius Felix Journal for the Study of the New Testament 8 26 79 96 Osburn D Carroll 2000 Second Letter of Peter in Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible pp 1039 Elliott John 1993 Second Epistle of Peter in Anchor Bible Dictionary 5 pp 282 87 at 287 Elliott 1993 283 C Detlef G Muller 1992 Apocalypse of Peter in Schneemelcher New Testament Apocrypha vol 2 pp 620 38 Bigg 1901 207 Spicq 1966 189 Bauckham 1983 162 Helmbold Andrew 1967 The Nag Hammati Gnostic Texts and the Bible Grand Rapids pp 61 Donald Guthrie 1990 Introduction to the New Testament 4th ed Leicester Apollos pp 808 9 though the exception of the Syrian canon is noted with acceptance occurring sometime before 509 cf Jerome De Viris Illustribus chapter 1 Table of Contents ܟܬܒܐ ܩܕܝ ܫܐ ܟܬܒܐ ܕܕܝܬܩܐ ܥܛܝ ܩܬܐ ܘ ܚ ܕܬܐ London United Bible Societies 1979 OCLC 38847449 Helmut Koester 1982 Introduction to the New Testament Vol One History Culture and Religion of the Hellenistic Age Fortress Press Walter de Gruyter pp 107 10 Reicke 1964 146 47 Kelly 1969 228 Aune David E 2003 The Westminster Dictionary of New Testament and Early Christian Literature and Rhetoric Westminster John Knox Press pp 199 Kostenberger Andreas J Kellum Scott L and Quarles Charles L 2012 The Lion and the Lamb B amp H Publishing Group pp 338 39 Chaine 1939 32 3 Knoch 1990 199 Davids Peter H 2006 The Letters of 2 Peter and Jude Wm B Eerdmans p 126 ISBN 978 0 80283726 4 Werse 2016 112 Longenecker Richard N 2005 Contours of Christology in the New Testament pp 280 81 Werse 2016 124 a b T Callan Use of the Letter of Jude by the Second Letter of Peter Biblica 85 2004 pp 42 64 The Westminster dictionary of New Testament and early Christian literature David Edward Aune p 256 Christian Jewish Relations Through the Centuries By Stanley E Porter Brook W R Pearson Van Houwelingen 2010 125 Kostenberger 2020 155 Levy L B 2019 Ethics and Pseudepigraphy Do the Ends Always Justify the Means Athens Journal of Humanities amp Arts pp 335 Kuhn Karl 2006 2 Peter 3 1 13 Sage Publications UK Koestenberger AJ 2020 Handbook on Hebrews Through Revelation Handbooks on the New Testament Baker Academic pp 147 Kuhn Karl 2006 2 Peter 3 1 13 Sage Publications UK Talbert C H 1966 II Peter and the delay of the parousia Vigiliae Christianae 20 137 45 Kostenberger Kellum Quarles 2012 862 63 Callan T 2014 Use of the letter of Jude by the Second Letter of Peter Bib 85 pp 42 64 Thuren L 2004 The Relationship between 2 Peter and Jude A Classical Problem Resolved in The Catholic Epistles and the Tradition ed Jacques Schlosser BETL 176 Leuven Peeters pp 451 60 Kasemann Ernst 1982 Essays on New Testament Themes An Apologia for Primitive Christian Eschatology trans W J Montague SCM Press 1968 Great Britain pp 172 Bauckham 1983 287 Davids 2006 260 Kruger M J 2020 2 Peter 3 2 the Apostolate and a Bi Covenantal Canon Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 63 pp 5 24 Davids 2006 260 Kruger 2020 9 10 Houwelingen 2010 122 These considerations make us think especially of Paul s letter to the Galatians It is also possible to think of the letters to the Ephesians and Colossians the latter is indeed difficult to interpret Levoratti Armando J 1981 La Biblia Libro del Pueblo de Dios Verbo Divino 2018 pp 1791 In this passage is found the first mention of a collection of Paul s Letters considered an integral part of the canonical Scriptures The passages therein which lent themselves to false interpretations were undoubtedly those concerning the second Coming of the Lord 1 Thess 4 13 5 11 2 Thess 1 7 10 2 1 12 and Christian liberty Rom 7 Gal 5 In the latter especially some sought justification for moral licentiousness Kruger 2020 15 20 Kuhn 2006 Kirkpatrick A F 1901 The Book of Psalms with Introduction and Notes The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges Vol Book IV and V Psalms XC CL Cambridge At the University Press p 839 Retrieved February 28 2019 Bibliography EditAdams Thomas B 1990 A Commentary on the Second Epistle General of Second Peter Soli Deo Gloria Ministries ISBN 978 1 877611 24 7 Green Michael 2007 The Second Epistle of Peter and The Epistle of Jude An Introduction and Commentary Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 8308 2997 2 Leithart Peter J 2004 The Promise of His Appearing An Exposition of Second Peter Canon Press ISBN 978 1 59128 026 2 Lillie John 1978 Lectures on the First and Second Epistles of Peter Klock amp Klock ISBN 978 0 86524 116 9 Seton Bernard E 1985 Meet Pastor Peter Studies in Peter s second epistle Review amp Herald ISBN 978 0 8280 0290 5External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article 2 Peter Online translations of the epistle Edit Book of 2 Peter NLT at BibleGateway com Online Bible at GospelHall org Bible 2 Peter public domain audiobook at LibriVox Various versionsOther Edit Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Epistles of Saint Peter Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company BibleProject Animated Overview Evangelical Perspective Second Epistle of PeterGeneral EpistlePreceded byFirst Peter New TestamentBooks of the Bible Succeeded byFirst John Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Second Epistle of Peter amp oldid 1146017711, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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