Second Peter/Introduction/Commentary

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Second Peter Introduction In reading various commentaries is it interesting that conservative denominational scholars feel that 2 Peter is a book that has been quite neglected, and I can see why. To a religious world that seems bent on only hearing new, comfortable and pleasant things (2 Timothy 4:2-4), this book does not sound so good. Some have claimed that the message of Second Peter is irrelevant, yet listen to the following comments: “We live in days when the contents of the Christian faith are widely questioned, when new and speculative theologies are widely disseminated, and when a new morality is being advocated….Christianity is presented to us in terms of love, with the content of the faith and the hope for the future both strangely muted in deference to the contemporary intellectual climate. There is, moreover, an intellectualism about much of our Christianity which is not, perhaps, so far removed from that attacked in these letters (Jude and 2 Peter) —the knowledge that has little relation to holy living, growing spirituality and deepening love. We can hardly maintain that 2 Peter and Jude, written as they were to meet problems very like our own, have nothing to teach us. So long as sin needs to be exposed, so long as man needs to be reminded that persistent wrongdoing ends in ruin, that lust is self-defeating, that intellectualism devoid of love is a barren thing, and that Christian theology has no right to outrun the ‘faith once delivered to the saints’, these Epistles remain uncomfortably, burningly relevant” 1 Authorship The book claims to have been written by Peter (1:1), and equally claims to be a second letter written by the same author to the same people (3:1). The author claims to have been a witness of the Transfiguration (1:16-18), at which event only Peter, James and John were present (Matthew 17:1-5).  Attacked by Critics 1 Tyndale New Testament Commentaries. ‘The Second Epistle of Peter and the Epistle of Jude’, Michael Green, p. 11 1


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