2 Peter 3
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1Dear ones, this is now a second letter I am writing to youa (in both of which I stir up your sincere mind by way of reminder),

2so that you remember the words that were spoken before by the holy prophets and the command of the Lord and Savior, through your apostles.b

Mockers will come

3Knowing this first: in the last days mockers will come, living according to their own lusts

4and saying: “Where is the promise of his coming? For since the fathers fell asleep all things continue as they were from the beginning of creation.”

5This because they deliberately ignorec that heavensd and land (out of water and through water)e had been existing from of old by the word of God,

6by which word the worldf that then was perished, being flooded by water.g

This world will be destroyed

7But the current heavens, and the earth, are being reserved by His word for fire,h being preserved until the day of judgment and perdition of godless men.i

The Lord is longsuffering

8But dear ones, do not forget this one thing, that with the Lord one day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day.j

9The Lord is not delaying the promise, as some consider delay, but rather is patient toward us, not wishing anyone to perish but all to come into repentance.k

Hasten the Day of God

10However, the day of the Lord will come like a thief at night, in which heavensl will pass away with a whoosh, while the elements will be dissolved by burning—both the earth and the works in it will be completely consumed.

11Therefore, since all these things will be destroyed, what kind of people ought you to be in holy living and godliness,

12expecting and hasteningm the coming of the day of God, because of which heavens, being on fire, will be dissolved, and the elements will melt with fervent heat?

A better world is coming

13Nevertheless, we look for new heavens and a new earthn in which dwells righteousness, according to His promise.

So be serious!

14Therefore, dear ones, looking forward to these things, be diligent to be found by Him in peace,o faultless and blameless;

15and consider the longsuffering of our Lord to be salvationp —just as our beloved brother Paul also wrote to you, according to the wisdom given to him,

16as also in all his epistlesq (speaking in them of these things, about which there are some things hard to understand), which the untaught and unstable distort, as they do also the rest of the Scriptures,r to their own destruction.s

17You therefore, dear ones, being forewarned, be on guard lest, being carried away by the error of the wicked, you fall from your own steadfastness.t

18Rather, may you grow in grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To Him be the glory both now and into the eternal day.u Amen.

Footnotes:

1 aSee 1 Peter 1:1 for the identification of the addressees.

2 bPeter places the “command of the Lord and Savior through your apostles” (which I take to be a reference to NT writings) on a par with the “words spoken before by the holy prophets”, which evidently refers to OT writings. Since “apostles” is plural, I take it that Peter was aware that there were several authors.

5 cIt appears to me that the term “deliberately” has a direct bearing on the intended meaning. How can one ‘forget’ deliberately? To ‘ignore’ is deliberate; to ‘pretend’ is deliberate. When a professor or a scholar or a scientist ignores the scientific evidence for a worldwide flood he is deliberately deceiving his students or readers. To do so is to be perverse.

5 dThere is no definite article with ‘heavens’, I suppose because the third heaven, God's abode, is not included—the reference here would be to the first heaven (the atmosphere) and the second (stellar space).

5 eTo be visible and useable (for normal purposes) land must rise above the water level, ‘out of water’, but to sustain life there must be water available on the land as well, ‘through/by water’.

6 f“World” is different from “land” (v. 5) and refers to the organized world—Noah's flood did not destroy the planet earth, just the organized surface. It was the divine decree that unleashed the destructive forces.

6 gAll around the world there are layers of sedimentary material hundreds of meters deep, and the layerings are similar. The whole globe was scoured and the surface rearranged about 4350 years ago. To ignore the evidence is a deliberate choice, and has serious consequences.

7 hGod promised Noah that He would never destroy the world by water again, designating the rainbow as a symbol of that promise (there were no rainbows before the Flood)—the next time it will be by fire. The destruction in Noah's day involved the earth and the first heaven, the atmosphere; the next destruction will include the second heaven, stellar space, as well.

7 i“Preserved”—our planet was created for the use of the human race and placed under human administration, so it cannot be destroyed until human history has run its course.

8 jAlthough I myself have been partial to the idea that this information constitutes a precise formula, it is doubtless more prudent to take this as a general statement, showing that an eternal Being does not regard time the way we do.

9 kIf everything were ‘cut and dried’, there would be no point in waiting.

10 lThe same comment applies as in verse 5 above.

12 m“Hastening” is a transitive verb. If we can hasten the coming, we can also delay it, or words do not mean anything. The point is, what we do or do not do makes a difference, which is why there will be an accounting. I imagine that there are outside limits or parameters that God's sovereignty will guarantee, but within those parameters it is up to us (like players on a football field—the score is up to them). So how can we hasten the coming of God's day? By living our lives to the hilt on behalf of His Kingdom, standing up for biblical values in the society at large, working to get the Gospel to the last ethnic nation.

13 nGod is not through creating, but since the Son will have His bride, the next time around righteousness will be guaranteed.

14 oWhen we face the Creator are we going to see a smile, or a frown—it is up to us.

15 pPeter repeats the truth stated in verse 9 above—just because God is not striking us down like He did with Ananias and Sapphira (Acts 5:1-11) does not mean that we are getting a free ride. If you have sense, you look ahead.

16 qPeter was obviously aware of a ‘Pauline corpus’—the use of ‘all’ suggests that Peter was aware of a fair number of Paul's letters.

16 rPeter affirms that Paul's letters are Scripture!

16 sThe verb form of this noun is usually rendered ‘to perish’—the implication is that such people are lost. To distort what is in a newspaper or magazine does not have the same consequence—it is distorting God's Word that is serious.

17 tPeter emphasizes human responsibility, again.

18 uPeter does not use the usual ‘forever’, but the effect is the same.