2 Peter 1
2 Peter 1 Kingcomments Bible Studies

Introduction

In the second letter we have from Peter in the Bible Peter addresses the same believers as in his first letter. We can derive this from the first verse of chapter 3 of this second letter (2Pet 3:1). As in the first letter ‘the government of God’ is the central thought in this letter. The difference is that in the first letter it is about the government of God over the believers, while in this letter it is about God’s government over the unbelievers.

God rules. He is sovereign and firmly in control of the government of the world, even if to the natural eye it appears otherwise. Therefore you should not judge the things as they present themselves to you, but you should see them all in the light of God’s Word. That’s why this letter is also of great importance in order not to be confused by the actions of the ungodly who even seem to have the right on their side. That is just an appearance and appearances are deceiving.

Peter writes this letter as his spiritual testament. His departure is coming soon. In his first letter he encouraged the believers with a view to the persecutions and the sufferings they were enduring. In the kingdom of peace it will not be like that at all. That’s where he has drawn their attention to, over and over again. His second letter is full of warnings with a view to the destruction that is worked by the deceivers.

This is a character of other ‘second letters’, like the second letter to the Thessalonians and the second letter to Timothy. Then the point is not that much about dangers from the outside, from the world, but more from within, from within professing Christianity. You are also to be kept from the deceivers.

In both letters the coming of the Lord will change everything. Also in his second letter Peter refers to that coming. Thereby he even goes further than the coming of the Lord to establish the kingdom of peace. He writes about the eternal condition of the new heavens and the new earth. That is a great encouragement to be faithful and to see to it that the deceivers will get no chance to undermine the faith of God’s children.

Salutation and Blessing

2Pet 1:1. The letter has been written by Peter. He is its sender. Unlike in his first letter, he calls himself here “Simon Peter”. ‘Simon’ is the name that his parents gave him. It is, you could say, his old name. The Lord Jesus has given him his new name ‘Peter’ (Jn 1:42; Mt 10:2; Mt 16:18). That Peter introduces himself by his double name, is remarkable. It says, I think, a lot of his spiritual mind. He is at the end of his life. He knows who he is in Christ. Still, he has not forgotten his origin.

Further on, in 2Pet 1:9, he reminds his readers that he, who forgets what he was in the past, is blind and shortsighted. The longer a person goes his way with the Lord, the better he will know the Lord Jesus, but also the more he will understand what he himself is by nature. That will only make his awareness of grace increase. By introducing himself as Simon, he says to his readers that he is not better than them. By introducing himself also as Peter, he indicates that he addresses them as a brother among the brothers.

But he comes on behalf of another, on behalf of “Jesus Christ”. He is His “bond-servant”. What he has to say, he says because the Lord Jesus orders him to. He is completely subjected to His authority. That is not a burden, but a joy. He loves to call himself like that. There is nothing more wonderful than being a bond-servant of Him Who has redeemed you from the power of sin and has delivered you from death and the judgment after death (Heb 9:27).

Peter, however, is not only a bond-servant, he is also an “apostle”. That means that he speaks with authority. He not only comes because he is a bond-servant, but he comes also with the authority of the Lord Jesus and speaks in His Name. Therefore, what he has got to say was mandated by the Lord Jesus and he passes that on with the authority of His Sender. Ultimately it is not Peter who addresses you, but the Lord Jesus. That will on the one hand prevent you from reading this letter as a human writing and on the other hand impress you of the power of God that speaks from this letter.

Peter addresses his letter “to those who have received a faith of the same kind as ours”. He mentions in addition that he and they owe that to “the righteousness of our God and Savior, Jesus Christ”. The faith is precious, it is of special value. Here it is not so much the fact that you believe, that is your personal faith, but more about what you believe, about everything that the faith contains. What faith contains, are all blessings that are given to you in Christ. Those blessings are not only meant for an elite, a special group of privileged believers, but they are for all believers.

Peter especially addresses the Jews. They are raised with the thought that their own righteousness, the fulfillment of the law, gives the blessing of everything that God has promised. They have committed themselves to that as a people at Mount Sinai (Exo 19:8). But on that basis, they forfeited the blessing and each right to it forever because of their disobedience and the rejection of the Lord Jesus. That blessing can now only be obtained by faith in the rejected and glorified Lord. In what Christ has done, the basis has been laid for God to still give all the promised blessing to everyone who believes.

It is His righteousness, which means His righteous dealings, in response to the work of His Son, to give the opportunity to everyone who believes in the Son to partake of the precious value of all that faith contains. Therefore Peter speaks about the “righteousness” of our God and Savior Jesus Christ. Also, by “the righteousness of our God”, you may remember that God is faithful to the promises He made to the fathers of Israel. In His righteousness He will fulfill all His promises.

Because Peter speaks about “our God and Savior Jesus Christ”, you see that God and the Savior Jesus Christ are One Person (cf. Tit 2:13). This Name connects this verse with the Old Testament, which those to whom Peter is writing, know so well. God calls Himself ‘Savior’ in Isaiah 45 (Isa 45:15). He does that with a view to the approaching end of Israel. A Savior or Redeemer is needed when the end of the existence of a nation or of a human being comes into view. Therefore this Name is fitting in this letter in which we read about the end of everything that has been created (Lk 1:47; 1Tim 2:3; 1Tim 4:10; Tit 1:3; Tit 2:10; Tit 3:4; Jude 1:25). This Name also shows that the Lord Jesus is both Savior and Yahweh of the Old Testament.

Therefore when He is presented by Peter as the origin of the precious faith, it also reminds them of the faithfulness of the God of Israel, Who has granted this faith to His people. This faith is now no longer associated with God’s earthly people, but with God’s heavenly people, in whom we find the things that God gives. In Christendom they have been revealed as truths. It is a great grace to be able to see that.

2Pet 1:2. Peter concludes his introductory words by wishing his readers “grace and peace”. He does so, however, in a penetrating way. He is aware, and he therefore wants to make his readers aware of it too, that those who live by faith, will have to face heavy weather. While great dangers are appearing and increasing (Mt 24:12), he is very much aware of the equally multiply grace and peace. Where the threat appears to be that great, grace and peace abound all the more (cf. Rom 5:20b).

Therefore Peter speaks about a ‘multiplication’ of grace and peace. He wants you to be more and more aware of the grace that is available to you to enable you to live your life in this end time. You do not have to go through it by your own power and with your own means. Nor can you. Entrust yourself to the grace of God. You have learnt to know Him as “the God of all grace” (1Pet 5:10). Therefore you will also be able to endure the toughest circumstances with an increasing peace in your heart.

To this blessing Peter connects “the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord”. Here you have the firm foundation to experience the fulfillment of the wish of Peter. By your personal relationship with God and with the Lord Jesus you will learn to know Them better and better. You gain that knowledge by reading and studying God’s Word. That’s what you are doing now and that is a good thing.

God and the Lord Jesus reveal Their plans in the Bible. If you know them, you will not easily be led into confusion and despair. By reading the Word the Holy Spirit will show you everything what God’s plan is with the Lord Jesus. Christ is the center of all God’s thoughts. If your thoughts are focused on the same center, you will find the support and nourishment for your faith there. Your faith will develop itself and expand itself further and further in that knowledge. This is how the multiplication happens that Peter wishes you on behalf of Jesus Christ.

Now read 2 Peter 1:1-2 again.

Reflection: Which encouragements do these verses contain?

Divine Nature and Spiritual Growth

2Pet 1:3. Everything you have received and that has been summarized in the expression “faith” (2Pet 1:1), has been granted to you by God’s “divine power”. You yourself did in no way contribute to it or paid the slightest bit for it. What you have received has been really “granted” to you. That is all a gift of grace from God.

What is it that you have received? He has delivered you from the power of sin and has given you the forgiveness of your sins. He has given you free access to the sanctuary, in His presence. You are allowed to come there to worship Him and ask for His help. He has given you the Holy Spirit and His Word. He has provided you with the prospect of an inheritance. These are just some blessings that have become your portion because He has given them to you.

No one has been able to keep Him from doing that. Everything that God has granted to you by His Divine power is fully fitted to enable you to live the life that is only worthy of living. That is a life to His honor, a life in holiness and dedication to Him. It is a life that is entirely focused on God alone, a life that shows true Godliness, a life in holy respect for Him, which He values and in which He finds His pleasure.

You can only live to His honor according to the extent of the knowledge you have of Him, Who has called you. God’s power doesn’t become visible in your life through signs and wonders that you might perform, but through your actions in accordance with the knowledge you have of Him. What do you know about Him? You know about Him what you have seen of Him. Thereby it is important how you have come to know Him, your first encounter with Him. He called you at the beginning of your life as a believer. You have come to Him because He has called you.

And how did He call you? It is said here “by His own glory and excellence [or: virtue]”. You were living in your sins and you were not able to save yourself. Then God revealed Himself to you in His “glory”. Such a great power came from that, that you were drawn to Him, as it were. Abraham had such an experience. He saw the God of glory and left the idolatrous environment where he was living (Jos 24:2-3; Acts 7:2). Also Paul was completely changed in his course by that glory (Acts 22:6-11). It is inevitable that you have seen something of God’s glory, for nothing else could cause you to give up the world.

“Excellence” [or: virtue, i.e. spiritual courage and power] here indicates something that exceeds everything. God possesses a glory and excellence by which every earthly glory and excellence utterly pales. With ‘excellence’ is also associated the power of your calling. He who sees the glory and excellence of God, if the eyes have been opened for it, experiences an irresistible attraction.

2Pet 1:4. By His glory and excellence He “has granted to us His precious … promises”, which are promises of great value. They are also “magnificent” promises. It is all those promises that are “yes” and “amen” in Christ (2Cor 1:20). Thus you have received the Holy Spirit as a pledge of the promise that you will receive the inheritance (Gal 3:14; Eph 1:13-14). Another promise is that you are already now may have eternal life, while the full enjoyment of it will be given to you when you are in the Father’s house (Tit 1:2; 1Jn 2:25; Jn 17:3). Aren’t they “precious and magnificent promises”? First, before you go further, just take a moment to thank the Father for this.

All those promises for which you have just given thanks, show that you are a partaker of the Divine nature. Without the possession of God’s nature, in other words, without life of God, you would neither have possessed those promises nor would you have been able to enjoy them in fellowship with God.

The possession of the Divine nature and what you are able to enjoy as a result is a huge contrast to the life you used to live. Everything you used to long for was connected to the world and to destruction. Your lusts were fed by the world and could only end up in destruction. It was all filthy and unclean and only focused on satisfying your own lusts. You did not care at all about what you did to yourself and others and above all that, to God. You didn’t care about the fact that because of that you were heading for eternal judgment. Now you have escaped from all that. You have fled from that and by Divine power you have been taken out from that atmosphere. That’s also something you may thank Him for.

2Pet 1:5. Except a reason to thank Him eternally for it, it is also an exhortation to make efforts to seek God’s honor in all things. His Divine power should make you to diligently make use of it. If you think that everything is all right, it may prove that you are not a partaker of the Divine nature. For the possession of the Divine nature will make you conscious that you live in a world that seeks to eradicate your testimony. A person who really is a partaker of the Divine nature, which is given to him by Divine power, will desire to do everything that glorifies God, Who has blessed him abundantly. He will exert his best efforts to bring that about.

Then Peter shows the seven phases that bring faith to its optimal functioning. “Faith” is the faith in the Divine power and the glory of Christ that will be revealed. That is not a dogma, not a doctrine, but the reality which is the fundamental point. We go our way in that confidence of faith. That confidence of faith has to be deepened.

1. Therefore, “for this very reason”, “moral excellence” must be added to the faith, which is your trust in God, applying all diligence. If there is true faith, our confidence of faith will surely be tested. We will then not be scared by that, on the contrary, it will only be an occasion for us to show, especially then, spiritual courage and power. The hardships will be overcome instead of giving in to the pressure of relinquishing the faith.

2. The difficulties will drive you out to God. You will seek and experience the fellowship with Him and in that way gain more knowledge. Therefore “knowledge” follows after showing moral excellence or spiritual courage and power. If knowledge is not added, the tests will only become emotional events, where there is a great danger of showing off.

Excellence, or courage and power, can only function well if there is knowledge of God’s purpose with the test of faith. By growing in the knowledge of God’s will, you will rightly use the spiritual energy. In that way knowledge will become a guide for your conduct. It leads you to a deeper familiarity with God that works in your heart and that is seen in your conduct. It prevents you from error.

3. 2Pet 1:6. Knowledge must function in the right way. Therefore “self-control” must be added to knowledge. You may grow in the knowledge of God, you may get to know Him and His plans better and better, but then the important thing is that you make use of that knowledge in the right way.

The intention is not that you should think that with all the knowledge you’ve gained you should serve God uninhibitedly and that wherever you go you see a reason to do that. Real knowledge will focus your heart on Christ. He always perfectly faithfully did the will of God and He did that in perfect rest. He never let Himself be overwhelmed or be rushed to do something. His life was led by the knowledge of God’s will.

4. If you are willing to do the will of God in this way you will surely face resistance from the world. The Lord Jesus also had to do with that, but in no way did He let Himself be drawn away from the path of obedience to His God. He went on with perseverance. That goes also for you. Therefore you should add “perseverance” to self-control. The reason why self-control and perseverance are asked of you, is because you have an old nature and because you live in an environment that seeks to draw you away from God and His matters.

5. It goes without saying that you must persevere in the good things and that you must also bring them into practice in the right way. You could easily persevere in meaningless things. Therefore you should add “godliness” to it. Godliness is the consciousness of living in the presence of God. From there automatically, as it were, the next aspect flows.

6. 2Pet 1:7. If there is godliness, if your heart has such fellowship with God, then “brotherly kindness” will not be a difficult task. It will not be difficult to love all who are partakers of the same Divine nature. You will love your brothers and sisters with a love that will only increase the more you are in fellowship with God.

7. Brotherly kindness ultimately leads to “love”, that is the highest love, the Divine love. With brotherly kindness you may find that there are things that make loving one another easy. Divine love goes much further, for God also loves even if there is nothing worthy of being loved. It is the source, the revelation of love at the highest level. If this is the way you love, then you are connected to eternity and can resist the spirit of the age.

Now read 2 Peter 1:3-7 again.

Reflection: Make a list of some blessings that Divine power has given to you. What can be expected from you as a result of that?

An Abundant Entrance

2Pet 1:8. In the previous verses you saw the seven steps of spiritual growth of your faith. You have seen that your faith grows when you add in the right order the following aspects: excellence or virtue, knowledge, self-control, perseverance, Godliness, brotherly kindness and love. One follows the other. You cannot omit or displace one of them, for if you do, the growth will stop right there. If all these aspects in the growth of your faith have the right place, the result will be that you will get to know the Lord Jesus better and better. The more you know of the Lord the more you will love and serve Him.

The presence and efficacy of these ‘growth agents’ are the necessary conditions to grow. If they are there and are working, they prove their efficacy in the fruit that they produce. That fruit is a life in which the characteristics of the Lord Jesus become visible and in that way the Father is glorified.

2Pet 1:9. When these things are lacking, there will be no spiritual activity and no fruit. It proves that you are “blind” and “short-sighted”. I do not think that this applies to you, but still it is important for you to see the danger of it. To be blind means to be without the insight in God’s thoughts about the Lord Jesus. He who is blind has not grown to maturity. He who is shortsighted can only see things that are very close. To be shortsighted means that only the present time is considered, here and now, and not the future, the kingdom to come. There is no distant view. A person who is blind and shortsighted is therefore blind for the heavenly things and is shortsighted as far as it concerns the earthly things. He does not look any further than here and now.

The cause of that is that he has “forgotten [his] purification from his former sins”. Indeed he is converted, for otherwise there could be no mention of purification. A person who is not converted has never been purified from his sin. However, he is not to be distinguished from the people of the world, for although he is converted he lives as someone of the world. Did not Peter himself have such an experience? Was he not blind for his own weakness in the night that the Lord Jesus was delivered? Was he not shortsighted when he thought of having to defend the Lord? Was he not in the company of the world when he was standing with the foes of his Lord to warm his hands at the same fire? Had he not forgotten his former sins when he betrayed his Lord?

What happened to Peter can also happen to you and me. Fortunately, as far as Peter is concerned, it all turned out well and he has been restored. Therefore there is also hope for everyone who has forgotten the purification of his former sins.

2Pet 1:10. In order to be kept from such a situation, Peter appeals again to be diligent. Brothers and sisters have a collective origin. They are called and chosen by God. This awareness is a positive exhortation to be diligent. If you know for sure that you are called and chosen, it will stir you up to be diligent in making certain about God’s “calling and choosing you”. The point is that you for yourself unshakably hold on to what has been unshakably fixed with God. God has called you in the time. There is no doubt that God has called you. That He would call you was already fixed in eternity, for He has chosen you before the time. God’s call and God’s choice are unshakably fixed.

From God’s side everything is fixed, but you must show your position in practice. As far as your responsibility goes, you must realize your position, hold on to it and live up to it. God wants to see people who acknowledge His rights in their lives. Here on earth, where the Lord was rejected, God longs to see people who remind Him of the Lord Jesus. Such a life also prevents you from stumbling. You do not have to be afraid of false teachers who could draw you away from the path of faith, the path that leads to the eternal kingdom.

2Pet 1:11. If you make spiritual progress, it does not only give security, but it goes together with a promise. That promise is “the entrance into the eternal kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ”. Each believer will enter that kingdom, but not each believer will do that in the same way. Peter speaks about an entrance that “will be abundantly supplied to” those who make their call and being chosen certain. The “eternal kingdom” is the kingdom of God in its eternal form. The Lord Jesus will reign a thousand years over the kingdom of God, but also thereafter that kingdom will not cease to be God’s kingdom. As a matter of fact, it will change in form when eternity begins, whereby there will be a new heaven and a new earth (2Pet 3:13).

The reign of the Lord Jesus is an everlasting reign (cf. Rev 22:5). Terrestrial kingdoms come and go. That is not the case with the kingdom of “our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ”. The moment it begins it remains forever (cf. Dan 2:44; Dan 7:14; Lk 1:32-33). When He has established His kingdom He will reign over it with all His own who have accepted Him in the time of His rejection. He will give each of His own a task in His kingdom, according to the faithfulness with which they have served Him in the time of His rejection.

He will abundantly supply entrance to all who have made efforts to get to know Him better (2Pet 1:5-8) and who have diligently made their call and being chosen certain (2Pet 1:10). In that way He will especially honor those people in contrast to those who have lived after their own insights, though they were saved, yet as through fire (1Cor 3:14-15). I hope that you will make your best efforts to gain that abundant entrance.

2Pet 1:12. Peter’s point is not to proclaim new things. God did not include his letter in His Word to reveal to you something you did not already know. The importance of this letter and of other subjects that are dealt with more than once in God’s Word, is that you do not forget them. Repetition is often also meant as a confirmation, to be a safeguard (Phil 3:1). To assume something to be familiar, is not a reason not to talk about it. It is important to keep the truth in remembrance (2Tim 2:14; Tit 3:1; Jude 1:17).

The value of repetition is often underestimated. There are, I believe, not many people who, by reading or hearing something once, never forget it. Of course there are some particular things you read or hear, that are unforgettably engraved in your memory, but those are exceptions. You need repetition to remember and work out everything that God’s Word is telling you. Therefore you have to read it continually. People who say that they have read through the whole Bible once and therefore know what it says, have no relationship with God and no self-knowledge.

By faith in the Lord Jesus you know “the truth which is present with [you]” (cf. 1Jn 2:20-21). ‘The truth … present’ means ‘the truth that is spoken of’. You have been confirmed in the truth that Peter is speaking about here, by the teachings that you have already received on that from him.

2Pet 1:13. Peter doesn’t think that his work is finished yet. He has concluded that it is necessary to go on to remind about that as long as he lives. With “this [earthly] dwelling” or “tent” he means his body, with which he serves the Lord on earth. At the same time ‘tent’ indicates that it is a temporary dwelling place (cf. 2Cor 5:1-8). He faithfully has achieved the task the Lord has given him, until the end of his life. ‘Retirement’ and taking it easy are out of the question with him. He wants to continuously exhort his brothers and sisters, the lambs and sheep that were entrusted to him by the Lord, for living a life in which God is glorified.

2Pet 1:14. He knows that he has not got much time to live anymore. He knows this because “our Lord Jesus Christ has made clear” to him. By that Peter refers to what the Lord said in John 21 (Jn 21:18-19). It is not that certain whether he has been given another special revelation about his end of life besides that. In any case, the Lord told him that he would be imprisoned and die a painful, violent death.

2Pet 1:15. Instead of worrying about that, he is making his best efforts to leave a permanent remembrance with his beloved brothers and sisters, regarding everything that he had shared with them. That’s the reason why he writes this letter. He knows that the truth will survive the death of the servant. Therefore, in view of his death, he reminds them of the truth of the coming glory of Christ and the faith life of the Christian who is looking forward to that. He does that diligently, in spite of his already advanced age.

His efforts to share these things with them and to permanently draw their attention for it, is a proof that there is no apostolic succession. Everything that God had thought of to be significant for all His own through the ages, He has written down in His Word. There these things are written down in indelible script. This is why you can still read, so many ages after Peter’s death, his encouraging words. Do your profit with it!

Now read 2 Peter 1:8-15 again.

Reflection: Why is Peter so anxious to remind you of what you know?

The Prophetic Word

2Pet 1:16. Peter leaves no doubt that the coming of Christ in majesty is a reality. Any doubt that might arise about this, he radically represses. That doubt could be spread if his readers would listen to the false teachers who claim that that coming is a devised tale. There are also today many Christians, also leading scholars, who declare such a coming of the kingdom to a fairy tale. Let yourself not be fooled, in one way or the other, by such people who are inspired by the devil. Listen to Peter. Then you listen to a man who is completely rightly minded and who is able to tell you about what he himself has experienced.

He is not a follower of a fata morgana, an illusion. What he has told them about “the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ”, is not a story that he had made up, but he was one of its “eyewitnesses”. He is not an eloquent fantasist, but a sober realist. He and the other apostles – he also speaks on their behalf, that can be derived from the word “we” – were one in their testimony. It is not just the testimony of one single witness, but of several apostles. What they have made known is based on their own observation.

They have seen the Lord Jesus in radiant glory and majesty. That happened, as he says in 2Pet 1:18, “on the holy mountain”, that is the mountain of transfiguration. There he and James and John were given, as it were, a foretaste of the appearance of Christ in glory and of the power that goes together with it. That glory and power will characterize “our Lord Jesus Christ” during the millennial kingdom of peace, when He will be reigning on earth.

2Pet 1:17-18. After referring to the visible testimony, the testimony that he has seen with his own eyes, Peter then speaks about the audible testimony. He and the two brothers have heard what God the Father testified of His Son. Peter still remembers exactly what God the Father said. In what He said, the Father gave honor and glory to the Son. Peter must certainly have remembered how he proposed to build three tents, one for the Lord Jesus, one for Moses and one for Elijah, and how as a response to that, the Father directed all attention to His Son.

No one can stand in His shadow. He alone is worthy of receiving all honor and glory. The Father did that to prevent any misunderstanding that His Son would be put on a par with even the greatest men from His people (Mt 17:4-5). Out of His wonderful dwelling place the Father spoke out His undivided pleasure in His Son. He has given honor and glory to Christ (Heb 2:9).

In the voice that they heard, the pleasure of God in His Son was echoing. That voice came from “the Majestic Glory”, that is the cloud as the symbol of the dwelling place of God. This cloud was above the tabernacle as the visible sign of God’s presence among His people. That cloud overshadowed the three disciples. Out of the cloud “such a voice” came. The pleasure that came from “the Majestic Glory” in that voice to the Lord Jesus, was the expression of that glory. He was the Object to Whom the Father had given honor and glory.

The whole scene there on that holy mountain was shining of glory. And Peter and John and James were also there. That scene made a permanent impression. They had believed that Christ was the fulfillment of the prophecies.

2Pet 1:19. Through what they had seen and heard on that holy mountain, they had “the prophetic word [made] more sure”. Peter expresses himself in the most forceful words to take away every doubt concerning the coming of the kingdom. Then he emphasizes the prophetic word. You “do well to pay attention” to it. You pay attention to it if you consider it, if it determines the direction of your life. The prophetic word is “as a lamp” (Psa 119:105). In its light you are able to see how everything develops in the direction of the fulfillment.

You need that lamp, because the world is “a dark place”. The world is saying that it is enlightened, but without Christ it is really only darkness (Jn 1:5). The translated word ‘dark’ means ‘filthy’, ‘dirty’. The world with all its splendor and magnificence is according to God a filthy place and that’s how it is also to the Christian who is taught by God. The only light that shines through this filthiness, is the light of the prophecy.

The people of the world imagine that they are able to transform the world into a kingdom of peace. It is an illusion that they can cherish till the Lord Jesus comes and will judge all unrighteousness. The prophecy foretells His coming in many ways and with His coming the end of the day of man.

If you really pay attention to the prophecy you will surely want to study the prophecies diligently. That will prevent you from the foolishness to cooperate with the world in its search for a world peace. You will separate yourself from the world and point out to the people in the world the coming of the Judge, so that they may convert from their sins to escape from the judgment. You know that His coming is near, that He will come as “the sun of righteousness” (Mal 4:2). After exerting the judgment He will establish His kingdom of peace, the eternal kingdom. Then the day of Christ will come, the day of His glory and then the lamp will not be needed anymore. Then the prophetic word will be fully fulfilled.

Peter, however, does not speak about the sun, but about the “morning star”. Before the dawning of the day, the morning star arises. With the morning star the Lord Jesus is meant (cf. Rev 2:28; Rev 22:16) as the One Who brings light. The morning star appears when it is still dark, but at the moment that the day is dawning. The appearance of the morning star announces the rising of the sun.

Therefore Peter says that the morning arises in your heart, which means that, while there is darkness around you, your heart is focused on the nearby coming of the Lord Jesus. In that way you live as if the kingdom has already come and you now already consider the rights of the Lord Jesus, like it will soon happen over the whole earth. You are, to say it with another word of the Scripture, ‘a son of the day’ (1Thes 5:5), that is someone who now already has that day in his heart.

2Pet 1:20. For a sound study of the prophecy, Peter gives some more significant instructions at the end of this chapter. In the first place, “know this first of all”, you should not see a prophecy separately, but you should see it in relation with other prophecies. In this way Peter passes on the significant rule that you should always compare Scripture with Scripture. If you don’t do that you will manipulate the prophetic word and interpret it as it best suits you. But the fulfillment of the prophecies happens in the way it is written in the Word and not according to your own ideas. The key for the right understanding of the prophecies is Christ, His suffering and the glory thereafter. The testimony of Jesus is after all the spirit of prophecy (Rev 19:10b).

2Pet 1:21. It is of great importance to bear in mind that prophets have not spoken from their own will, but from God. The origin of God’s Word in its whole, amongst them the prophecies, is not in the will of man. It is to be compared with the new birth that also comes from God alone, without any contribution of man (Jn 1:13).

God the Holy Spirit has used men to have His Word to be written. Those men were ‘holy’ men, because God had set them apart for this service. They indeed wrote on their own initiative, but at the same time they were “moved” or ‘led’, ‘carried’ by the Holy Spirit (2Tim 3:16). In that way they did not write down their own thoughts, but what God wanted them to write. Not the authors were inspired, but what they wrote was inspired. Here you see what inspiration is: the efficacy of the Holy Spirit in the Bible authors at the moment of their writing.

To sum up, you learn from what Peter says here that there are three elements in the inspiration:
1. The Divine authorship of the Bible. God has ‘breathed out’ His Word; it comes from Him, it is not a writing about God, but from God.
2. The human instrument. The writers were ‘holy’ men, which means set apart to write down what was ‘breathed in’ by Him, according to His will – which did not happen at the expense of their own style, for they were not just ‘type writers’.
3. The written result. The product of the ‘breathing’ of God and of ‘moved’ by the Spirit of the authors is the Word of God as you now may have in your hands.

Now read 2 Peter 1:16-21 again.

Reflection: What is the importance of the prophetic word for you?

© 2023 Author G. de Koning

All rights reserved. No part of the publications may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior permission of the author.



Bible Hub


1 Peter 5
Top of Page
Top of Page