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1 Peter 3

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1 Peter 3:1-6

1 Peter 3:1-6. Duty of wives (Ephesians 5:21-24; Colossians 3:18; Titus 2:4)— Submissiveness and true adornment.—τοῖςἰδίοιςἀνδράσιν, your own husbands, the motive for submissiveness, Ephesians 5:22; Titus 2:4. St. Peter assumes knowledge of the reason alleged by St. Paul (Eph. l.c.; 1 Corinthians 9:3) after Genesis 3:16, αὐτόςσουκυριεύσει.—καὶεἰ … λόγῳ, even if in some cases your husbands are disobedient to the word (1 Peter 2:8), i.e., remain heathens in spite of the preaching of the Gospel. St.

Paul found it necessary to impress upon the Corinthian Church that this incompatibility of religion did not justify dissolution of marriage (1 Corinthians 12:10 ff.).—ἄνευλόγου, without word from their wives. Peter deliberately introduces λ. in its ordinary sense immediately after the technical τῷλ.— an example of what the grammarians call antanaclasis and men a pun. In his provision for the present and future welfare of the heathen husbands whose wives come under his jurisdiction he echoes the natural aspiration of Jews and Greeks; so Ben Sira said, a silent woman is a gift of the Lord … a loud crying woman and a scold shall be sought out to drive away enemies (Sir 26:14; Sir 26:27) and Sophocles, Silence is the proper ornament (κόσμος) for women (Ajax 293). St. Paul forbids women to preach or even ask questions at church meeting (1 Corinthians 14:34 : at Corinth they had been used to prophesy and pray).—ἵνα … κερδηθήσονται, be won, cf. ἵνακερδήσω in 1 Corinthians 9:20 ff. = ἵνα … σώσω, 1 Corinthians 9:22, (cf. 1 Corinthians 7:16.).

1 Peter 3:2

1 Peter 3:2. ἐποπτεύσαντες, having contemplated; see on 1 Peter 2:12. τὴν … ὑμῶν. ἐνφόβῳ, cf. 1 Peter 1:17 and Ephesians 5:21. ὑποτασσόμενοιἀλλήλοιςἐνφόβῳΧριστοῦ· αἱγυναῖκες: as no object is expressed, τοῦθεοῦ must be supplied.—ἁγνήν not merely chaste but pure, cf. 1 Peter 1:22 and 1 Peter 3:4.

1 Peter 3:3

1 Peter 3:3. The description of the external ornaments proper to heathen society seems to be based on Isaiah 3:17-23. where the destruction of the hair, jewels and raiment of the daughters of Zion is foretold.—ἐμπλοκῆςτριχῶν, braiding of hair. 1 Timothy 2:9, πλέγμασινκαὶχρυσίῳ refers to the golden combs and nets used for the purpose; cf. ἐμπλόκια, Isaiah 3:18, for ωαιριν. Juvenal describes the elaborate coiffures which Roman fashion prescribed for the Park and attendance at the Mysteries of Adonis: tot premit ordinibus tot adhuc compagibus altum aedificat caput (Sat. vi. 492– 504). Clement of Alexandria quotes 1 Peter 3:1-4, in his discussion of the whole subject (Paed., III. xi.); and in regard to this particular point says ἀπόχρημαλάσσειντὰςτρίχαςκαὶἀναδεῖσθαιτὴνκόμηνἐντελῶςπερόνῃτινιλιτῇπαρὰτὸναὐχένα … καὶγὰραἱπεριπλοκαὶτῶντριχῶναἱἑταιρικαὶκαὶαἱτῶνσειρῶνἀναδέσεις … κόπτουσιτὰςτρίχαςἀποτίλλουσαιταῖςπανούργοιςἐμπλοκαῖς, because of which they do not even touch their own head for fear of disturbing their hair— nay more sleep comes to them with terror lest they should unawares; spoil τὸσχῆματῆςἐμπλοκῆς (p. 290. P).—περιθέσεωςχρυσίων, i.e., rings bracelets, etc., enumerated in Isa. l.c.—ἐνδύσεωςἱματίων. Stress might be laid on κόσμος, or the crowning prohibition regarded as an exaggeration intended to counteract an ingrained bias.

In either case the expression points to a remarkable precedent for this teaching in Plato’ s Republic IV., iii. ff. “ Plato’ s assignment of common duties and common training to the two sexes is part of a well-reasoned and deliberate attempt by the Socratic school to improve the position of women in Greece … Socrates’ teaching inaugurated an era of protest against the old Hellenic view of things.… In later times the Stoics constituted themselves champions of similar views” (Adam, ad loc.). Accordingly gymnastics must be practised by women as by men: ἀποδυτέονδὴταῖςτῶνφυλάκωνγυναιξὶνἐπείπερἀρετὴνἀντὶἱματίωνἀμφιέσονται.

1 Peter 3:4

1 Peter 3:4. Yours be the secret man of the heart not the outward ornament. A better antithesis and a pretty paradox would be secured by supplying ἄνθρωπος with ὁἔξωθεν and taking κ. as predicate: your ornament be cf. οὕτωςἐκόσμουνἑαυτάς (1 Peter 3:5). But the order in 1 Peter 3:3 is against this and a Greek reader would naturally think of the other sense of κ.= world universe and remember that man is a microcosm and “ the universe the greatest and most perfect man” (Philo, p. 471 M.).—ὁκρυπτὸςτῆςκαρδίαςἄνθρωπος, the hidden man that is the heart (or which belongs to the heart) is the equivalent of the Pauline inner man (Romans 7:22), i.e., Mind as contrasted with the outward man, i.e., flesh (Rom. l.e., cf. 2 Corinthians 4:16). St. Peter employs the terms used in the Sermon on the Mount; cf.

St. Paul’ s ὁἐντῷκρυπτῷἸουδαῖος and περιτομὴκαρδίας, Romans 2:29.—ἐντῷἀφθάρτῳ clothed in the incorruptible thing (or ornament, sc. κόσμῳ) contrasted with corruptible goldens; cf. James 2:2, ἀνὴρ … ἐνἐσθῆτιλαμπρᾷ.—τοῦ … πνεύματος, namely, the meek and quiet spirit. The adjectives are perhaps derived from the version of Isa 64:2, known to Clement of Rome (Ep. i. xiii. 4), ἐπὶτίναἐπιβλέψωἀλλʼ ἢἐπὶτὸνπρᾳὺνκαὶἡσύχιονκαὶτρέμοντάμουτὰλόγια. Jesus professed Himself, πρᾳὺςκαὶταπεινὸςτῇκαρδίᾳ. For πνεύματος compare πνεῦμαἁγιωσύνης, Romans 1:4.

In Romans 2:29, πν. is coupled with heart as contrasted with flesh and outwardness. ὅ which spirit or the posssesion of which reference.—πολυτελές suggests use of conception of Wisdom which is precious above rubies (Proverbs 3:15, etc.); cf. James 1:21; James 3:13, ἐνπρᾳύτητισοφίας and description of the wisdom from above, James 3:17.

1 Peter 3:5

1 Peter 3:5. ποτε refers vaguely to O.T. history as part of αἱ … θεόν. References to the holy women of the O.T. are rare in N.T. and this appeal to their example illustrates the affinity of Peter to Heb. (Hebrews 11:11; Hebrews 11:35). Hannah is the obviously appropriate type (cf. Luke 1 with 2 Samuel 1 f.); but Peter is thinking of the traditional idealisation of Sarah.

1 Peter 3:6

1 Peter 3:6. ὡς … καλοῦσα. The only evidence that can be adduced from the O.T. narrative is Sarah laughed within herself and said … “ but my lord is old” (Genesis 18:12). The phrase, if pressed, implies a nominal subjection as of a slave to her lord, but the context at any rate excludes any hope in God. Philo, who starts with the assumption that Sarah is Virtue, evades the difficulty; her laughter was the expression of her joy, she denied it for fear of usurping God’ s prerogative of laughter (de Abr., ii. p. 30 M). The Rabbinic commentaries dwell upon the title accorded to Abraham and draw the same inference as Peter; but there are also traces of a tendency to exalt Sarah “ the princess” as superior to her husband in the gift of prophecy, which St. Peter may wish to correct (as St.

James corrects the exaggerated respect paid to Elijah, James 5:17).—ἧς … τέκνα. Christian women became children of Sarah who is Virtue or Wisdom: (Philo) just as men became children of Abraham. But the fact that they were Christians is still in the background; the essential point is that they must do the works traditionally ascribed to Sarah (cf. Romans 4.; John 8.) and so justify their technical parentage, whether natural or acquired. Oec. compares Isaiah 41:2, Sarah your mother.—ἀγαθοποιοῦσαι the present participle emphasises the need for continuance of the behaviour appropriate to children of Sarah.—μὴ … πτόησιν, from Proverbs 3:25, LXX. Peter regards Sarah’ s falsehood (Gen. l.c.) as the yielding to a sudden terror for which she was rebuked by God.

Fearlessness then is part of the character which is set before them for imitation and it is the result of obedience to the voice of Wisdom. Rabbinic exegesis as sociates the ideas of ornament with the promised child and that of peace between husband and wife with the whole incident.

1 Peter 3:7

1 Peter 3:7. Duty of husbands to their wives. Application of principle πάνταςτιμήσατε.—κατὰγνῶσιν, for the woman is the weaker vessel— the pot— which the stronger— the cauldron— may easily smash (Sir 13:2). ὡς, κ.τ.λ. point with comma after γνῶσιν and τιμήν. σκεύει. The comparison of Creator and creature to potter and clay is found first in Isaiah 29:16, but is latent in the description of the creation (éöø) of Adam from the dust of the earth (Genesis 2:7 f.). In the prophets it is developed and applied variously (Isaiah 45:9 f., Isaiah 64:8; Jeremiah 18:6). In Sap. 15:7, there is an elaborate description of the maker of clay images, in which σκεῦος replaces πλάσμα and vessels which serve clean uses are distinguished from the contrary sort.

Thence St. Paul adopts the figure and employs it to illustrate the absolute sovereignty of the Creator, as Isaiah had done (see Romans 9:21), distinguishing vessels intended for honour from those intended for dishonour. Lastly 2 Timothy 2:20 exemplifies the particular application of the figure, on which Peter’ s use of σκεῦος rests—ἐνμεγάλῃδὲοἰκίᾳ (1 Peter 2:5; 1 Peter 4:17) … κ.τ.λ. The comparative ἀσθενεστέρῳ proves that both husband and wife are vessels and assists to exclude the notion that St. Paul could mean to call a wife the vessel of her husband in 1 Thessalonians 4:4.—ὡς … ζωῆς, inasmuch as they are also heirs with you of the grace (1 Peter 1:10; 1 Peter 1:13) of life (1 Peter 2:24): the heavenly inheritance is not distributed according to earthly custom, which gave the wife no rights of her own.—εἰς … ὑμῶν. If the prayers are those of all (1 Peter 3:8) compare 1 Corinthians 7. (τὴνὀφειλὴνἀποδιδότω … ἵνασχολάσητετῇπροσευχῇ).

Peter teaches that married life need not— if the wife be properly honoured— hinder religious duties, as St. Paul feared (1 Corinthians 7:32 ff.). If ὑμῶν = you husbands (as v.l. συγκληρονόμοι requires) cf. James 5:4.

1 Peter 3:8

1 Peter 3:8. τὸ … τέλος, finally. Oecumenius brings out the possible connotations of the word goal and also the law for all love since love is the end of the law.—ὁμόφρονες, of one mind, united, an Epic word. St. Paul’ s τὸαὐτὸφρονεῖν but here wider than parallel expressing Romans 12:16, τὸαὐτὸεἰςἀλλήλουςφρονοῦντες.—συμπαθεῖς summarises χαίρεινμετὰχαιρόντωνκλαίεινμετὰκλαιόντων of Romans 12:15; cf. Hebrews 4:15 (of Christ), Hebrews 10:34 .—φιλάδελφοι, cf. 1 Peter 1:22; Romans 12:10, τῇφιλαδελφίᾳεἰςἀλλήλουςφιλόστοργοι.—εὔσπλαγχνοι, kind-hearted, in Ephesians 4:32 (only here in N.T.) coupled with kind … forgiving one another; epithet of Jehovah in Prayer of Manasses, 1 Peter 3:7 = compassionate, in accordance with metaphorical use of σπλάγχνακ.τ.λ. derived from different senses of øçí. Here = ἐνδύσασθε … τὰσπλάγχνατῆςχρηστότητος, Col.—ταπεινόφρονες = τοῖςταπεινοῖςσυναπαγόμενοι, Romans 12:16, cf. Proverbs 29:23, LXX, insolence humbleth a man but the humble (ταπεινόφρονας) Jehovah stayeth with glory (κ. ὕβρις).

1 Peter 3:9

1 Peter 3:9. μὴ … κακοῦ, from Romans 12:17; cf. 1 Thessalonians 5:15; Proverbs 20:22, Say not I will recompense evil (LXX τίσομαιτὸνἐχθρόν): an approximation to Christ’ s repeal of the lex talionis (Matthew 5:38 ff.) which Plato first opposed among the Greeks (see Crito., p. 49, with Adam’ s note).—λοιδορίανἀντὶλοιδορίας refers to pattern left by Christ (1 Peter 2:23).—τοὐναντίον, contrariwise.—εὐλογοῦντες with λοιδ., 1 Corinthians 4:21; cf. Romans 12:14, εὐλογεῖτετοὺςδιώκοντας Luke 6:28.—ὅτι … κληρονομήσητε, Christians must do as they hope to be done by. They are the new Israel called to inherit blessing in place of the Jews, who are reprobate like Esau; cf. Hebrews 12:17, ἴστεγὰρὅτικαὶμετέπειταθέλωνκληρονομῆσαιτὴνεὐλογίανἀπεδοκιμάσθη. So St. Paul reverses the current view which identified the Jews with Isaac and the Gentiles with Ishmael (Galatians 4:22 ff.).

1 Peter 3:10

1 Peter 3:10. Peter omits the rhetorical question τίςἐστινἄνθρωπος, which introduces ὁθέλων in the original (LXX = Hebrew) but is influenced by it in the substitution of the third for the second person throughout. The change of ἀγαπῶν (= Hebrew) to ἀγαπᾶνκαὶ removes the barbarisms θέλωνζωήν and ἀγαπῶνἰδεῖν (= Hebrew) and secures the balance between the clauses disturbed by the omission of the opening words.—ἰδεῖνἡμ. ἀγαθάς is the natural sequel of the alteration of the original (days to see good), which is already found in the LXX (ἡμ. ἰ. ἀγαθάς).—ζωήν = earthly life in the original corresponding to days. The text adopted by Peter makes it mean eternal life, parallel good days. Only with this interpretation is the quotation pertinent to his exhortation: cf. that ye might inherit blessing (9) with fellow-inheritors of the grace of life (7).—παυσάτω, κ.τ.λ., parallel μὴ … λοιδορίαν (9); cf. 1 Peter 2:22 f.

1 Peter 3:12

1 Peter 3:12. πρόσωπονΚυρίου, Jehovah’ s face, i.e., wrath (Targum, the face of Jehovah was angry) as the following clause, to cut off the remembrance of them … shows; cf. Lamentations 4:16; Psalms 21:9. But Peter stops short and leaves room for repentance. Ver, 13. κακώσων echoes ποιοῦνταςκακά (as ζηλ. τοῦἀγ. echoes ποιησάτωἀγαθόν); but the phrase comes also from O.T.: Isaiah 1:9, Κύριοςβοηθήσειμοι· τίςκακώσειμε;—τοῦἀγαθοῦζηλωταὶ. The phrase sums up 1 Peter 3:11. All that was good in Judaism, however it may have been perverted, finds its fulfilment in the new Israel (Romans 10:2). Some Jews were zealots, boasting their zeal for the Lord or His Law, like Phinehas and the Hasmonaeans (1 Maccabees 2. passim): all Christians should be zealots for that which is good. So Paul says of himself as Pharisee that he was a zealot for his ancestral traditions (Galatians 1:14). For him as for the colleague of Simon the Zealot the word retained a flavour of its technical sense; cf. Titus 2:14, that He might cleanse for Himself a peculiar people, zealot of good (καλῶν) works; cf. similar use of ἀφωρισμένος = Pharisee (Romans 1:1). τοῦἀγ. in emphatic position.

1 Peter 3:14

1 Peter 3:14. ἀλλʼ … μακάριοι. Nay if ye should actually suffer— if some one, despite the prophet (1 Peter 3:13), should harm you—for the sake of righteousness, blessed are ye. Peter appeals to the saying, μακάριοιοἱδεδιωγμένοιἕνεκενδικαιοσύνης (Matthew 5:10).—πάσχοιτε, ει with optative (cf. 1 Peter 3:17, εἰθέλοι) is used to represent anything as generally possible without regard to the general or actual situation at the moment (Blass, Grammar, p. 213). The addition of καί implies that the contingency is unlikely to occur and is best represented by an emphasis on should. The meaning of the verb is determined by κακώσων above, if ye should be harmed, i.e., by persons unspecified (αὐτῶν).—δικαιοσύνην. perhaps suggested ζηλωταί, cf. 1Ma 2:27-29, πᾶςὁζηλῶντῷνόμῳ … ἐξελθέτω … τότεκατέβησανπολλοὶζητοῦντεςδικ. καὶκρίμα.—τὸνδὲφόβον … ὑμῶν. An adaptation of Isa 8:12 f.

LXX, τὸνδὲφόβοναὐτοῦμὴφοβηθῆτεοὐδὲμὴταραχθῆτε· κύριοναὐτὸνἁγιάσατεκαὶαὐτόςἔσταισουφόβος. The scripture corresponding to the saying, Fear not them that kill the body; but fear rather him that can destroy both soul and body (Matthew 10:28 parallels Luke 12:4 f. where the description of God is modified).

The sense of the original, fear not what they (the people) fear; Jehovah of Hosts Him shall ye count holy and let Him be the object of your fear, has been in part abandoned. For it is simpler to take the fear as referring to the evil with which their enemies try to terrify them, than to supply the idea that their enemies employ the means by which they themselves would be intimidated. Compare 1 Peter 3:6.—τὸνχριστόν, gloss on κύριον = Jehovah; cf. 1 Peter 2:3.—ἐνταῖςκαρδίαις sc. mere profession. Peter is probably thinking of the prescribed prayer, Hallowed be thy name, elsewhere in N.T. it belongs to God to sanctify Christ and men.—ἔτοιμοιἀεὶπρὸςἀπολογίαν, ready for reply. The contrast between the inward hope (parallels sanctification of Christ in the heart) and the spoken defence of it is not insisted upon; the second δέ is not to be accepted. The use of the noun in place of verb is characteristic of St.

Peter. The play upon ἀπολογίαν back-word and λόγον cannot be reproduced.

Properly speech in defence, ἀ. is used metaphorically ([153] [154] παντί) here as by St. Paul in 1 Corinthians 9:3, ἡἐμὴἀπολογίατοῖςἐμὲἀνακρίνουσιν; where also, though another technical word is introduced, no reference is intended to formal proceedings in a court of law. St. Peter is thinking of the promise which he himself once forfeited lor unworthy fear, I will give you mouth and wisdom (Luke 21:14 f., Luke 12:11, uses ἀπολογεῖσθαι; Matthew 10:19, λαλεῖν).—παντι … λόγον, to every one (for dative cf. 1 Corinthians 9:3) that asketh of you an account. The phrase (compare Demosthenes Against Onetor, p. 868, ἐνεκάλουνκαὶλόγονἀπῄτουν) recalls the Parable of the Steward of Unrighteousness, of whom his lord demanded an account (Luke 16:1 ff.), as also the metaphor of 1 Peter 4:10, ὡςκαλοὶοἰκονόμοι.—μετὰπραΰτητοςκαὶφόβου, with meekness (cf. 1 Peter 3:4) and fear of God (Isa. l.c. has the same play on the senses of fear).—συνείδησινἔχοντεςἀγαθήν, intermediate step between διὰσ. θεοῦ and the quasi-personification of σ. ἀ. in 1 Peter 3:21; so St. Paul says οὐδὲνγὰρἐμαυτῷσύνοιδα (1 Corinthians 4:4) but goes on beyond the contrast between self-judgment and that of other men to God’ s judgment. 1 Peter 3:17 supplies the explanation here.—ἵνα … ἀναστροφήν, generalisation of Peter’ s personal experience at Pentecost, when the Jews first scoffed and then were pierced to the heart (Acts 2:13; Acts 2:37).

Misrepresentation is apparently the extent of their present suffering (17) and this they are encouraged to hope may be stopped. The heathen will somehow be put to shame even if they are not converted (1 Peter 2:12).—ἐνᾧ, in the matter in respect of which; see 1 Peter 2:12.—ἐπηρεάζοντες, occurs in Luke 6:28, προσεύχεσθεπερὶτῶνἐπηρεαζόντωνὑμᾶς, and therefore constitutes another hint of contact between St.

Luke and Peter (cf. χάρις, 1 Peter 2:19). Aristotle defines ἐπηρεασμός as “ hindrance to the wishes of another not for the sake of gaining anything oneself but in order to baulk the other”— the spirit of the dog in the manger. Ordinarily the verb means to libel, cf. λαλῆσαιδόλον (10).—ὑμῶν … ἀναστροφήν, your (possessive genitive precedes noun in Hellenistic Greek) good-in-Christ behaviour: ἑνΧριστῷ (1 Peter 4:14; 1 Peter 4:16) is practically equivalent to Christian, cf. if any is in Christ a new creature. [153] cod. Purpureus. 6th century (fragments of all the Gospels). [154] Codex Vaticanus (sæc. iv.), published in photographic facsimile in 1889 under the care of the Abbate Cozza-Luzi.

1 Peter 3:17

1 Peter 3:17. κρεῖττον, cf. 1 Peter 2:19 f., where χάριςκλέος correspond to μισθὸνπερισσόν of the sources.—εἰθέλοιτὸθέλημαθεοῦ. Again optative implies that it is a purely hypothetical case (cf. 1 Peter 3:14). For the semi-personification of the will of God compare Ephesians 1:11, where the θέλημα has a βουλή; so Paul is Apostle through the will of God (1 Corinthians 1:1; 2 Corinthians 1:1). For the pleonastic expression cf. the verbal parallel ἐάντιςθέλῃτὸθέλημααὐτοῦποιεῖν, John 7:17. So God’ s patience was waiting (1 Peter 3:20).

1 Peter 3:18

1 Peter 3:18. The advantage of suffering for well-doing is exemplified in the experience of Christ, who gained thereby quickening (1 Peter 3:21) and glory (1 Peter 3:22). How far the pattern applies to the Christian is not clear. Christ suffered once for all according to Hebrews 9:24-28; the Christian suffers for a little (1 Peter 3:10). But does the Christian suffer also for sins? St.

Paul and Ignatius speak of themselves as περίψημαπερικαθάρματα; compare the value of righteous men for Sodom. But even if Peter contemplated this parallel it is quite subordinate to the main idea, in which (spirit) even to the spirits in prison he went and preached them that disobeyed once upon a time when the patience of God was waiting in the days of Noah while the ark was being fitted out.… The spirits who disobeyed in the days of Noah are the sons of God described in Genesis 6:1-4.

But there as in the case of Sarah St. Peter depends on the current tradition in which the original myth has been modified and amplified. This dependence supplies an adequate explanation of the difficulties which have been found here and in 1 Peter 3:21, provided that the plain statement of the preaching in Hades is not prejudged to be impossible. The important points in the tradition as given in the Book of Enoch (vi.– xvi. cf. Jubilees v.) are as follows: the angels who lusted after the daughters of men descended in the days of Jared as his name (Descent) shows. The children of this unlawful union were the Nephilim and the Eliud.

They also taught men all evil arts so that they perished appealing to God for justice. At last Enoch was sent to pronounce the sentence of condemnation upon these watchers, who in terror besought him to present a petition to God on their behalf.

God refused to grant them peace. They were spirits eternal and immortal wi.o transgressed the line of demarcation between men and angels and disobeyed the law that spiritual beings do not marry and beget children like men. Accordingly they are bound and their children slay one another leaving their disembodied spirits to propagate sin in the world even alter it has been purged by the Flood. But Christians believed that Christ came to seek and to save the lost and the captives; all things are to be subjected to Him. So Peter supplements the tradition which he accepts. For him it was not merely important as connected with the only existing type of the Last Judgment or an alternative explanation of the origin and continuance of sin but also as the greatest proof of the complete victory of Christ over the most obstinate and worst of sinners.—ἐνᾧ sc. πνεύματι: as a bodiless spirit in the period between the Passion (18) and the Resurrection-Ascension (22).—καί, even to the typical rebels who had sinned past lorgiveness according to pre-Christian notions.—τοῖςἐνφυλακῇπνεύμασιν, the spirits in prison, i.e., the angels of Gen. l.c. who were identified with my spirit of Gen 6:3, and therefore described as having been sent to the earth by God in one form of the legend (Jubilees, l.c.).

The name contains also the point of their offending (Enoch summarised above); cf. 2 Peter 2:4; Jude 1:6; and the prophecy of Isa 51:1 (which Jesus claimed, Luke 4:8 f.), κηρῦξαιαἰχμαλώτοιςἄφεσιν. These spirits were in ward when Christ preached to them in accordance with God s sentence, bind them in the depths of the earth (Jub. 1 Peter 5:6).—ἐκήρυξεν = εὐηγγελίσατο, cf.

Luke 4:8. Before Christ came, they had not heard the Gospel of God’ s Reign. Enoch’ s mediation failed. But at Christ’ s preaching they repented like the men of Nineveh; for it is said that angels subjected themselves to Him (1 Peter 3:22, cf. ὑποτάσσεσθαι, throughout the Epistle.—ἀπειθήσασίνποτε, their historic disobedience or rebellion is latent in the narrative of Genesis 6. and expounded by Enoch; cf. 1 Peter 2:7)., 1 Peter 3:1, 1 Peter 4:17. In LXX ἀπ commonly = rebel (ξψδ).—ἀπεξεδέχετο … μακροθυμία, God’ s long-suffering was waiting. The reading ἅπαξἐξεδέχετο is attractive, as supplying a reference to the present period of waiting which precedes the second and final Judgment (Romans 2:4; Romans 9:22) The tradition lengthens the period of πάρεσις (Romans 3:25); but St.

Peter limits it by adding while the Ark was being fitted out in accordance with Gen. If Adam’ s transgression be taken as the origin of sin the long-suffering is still greater.

The idea seems to be due to ἐνεθυμήθην, I reflected, of the LXX, which stands for the unworthy anthropomorphism of the Hebrew I repented in Genesis 6:6. Compare for language James 5:7; Matthew 24:37 f.; Luke 17:26 f.—εἰςἣν, sc. entered and.—ὀλίγοικ.τ.λ. St. Peter hints that here in the typical narrative is the basis of the disciple’ s question, εἰὀλίγοιοἱσωζόμενοι (Luke 13:23).—ὀκτὼψυχαί so Genesis 7:7; ψ. = persons (of both sexes), cf. Acts 2:41, etc. The usage occurs in Greek of all periods; so πτω in Hebrew and soul in English.—διεσώθησανδιʼ ὕδατος, were brought safe through water. Both local and instrumental meanings of διʼ are contemplated. The former is an obvious summary of the whole narrative; cf. also διὰτὸὕδωρ (Genesis 7:7).

The latter is implied in the statement that the water increased and lifted up the ark (Genesis 7:17 f.); though it fits better the antitype. So Josephus (Ant. I., iii. 2) says that “ the ark was strong so that from no side was it worsted by the violence of the water and Noah with his household διασῴζεται” . Peter lays stress on the water (rather than the ark as e.g., Hebrews 11) for the sake of the parallel with Baptism (Romans 6:3; cf. St. Paul’ s application of the Passage of the Red Sea, 1 Corinthians 10:1 f.).

1 Peter 3:21

1 Peter 3:21. Baptism is generally the antitype of the deliverance of Noah. Christians pass through water (in both senses) to salvation; in each microcosm are the sins which must be washed away and the remnant which is to be saved. Therefore the antitypical water saves us (ὅ = τὸὕδωρ > διʼ ὕδατος) being οὐσαρκὸς, κ.τ.λ.; cf. Titus 3:5.—βάπτισμα if not an interpolation explains ὁἀντ. which corresponding to the (pre-existent) type (cf. Hebrews 9:24 the earthly temple is ἀντίτυπατῶνἀληθινῶν).

The following definition by exclusion contrasts Christian baptism with Jewish and pagan lustrations and also with the Deluge which was a removal of sin-fouled flesh from the sinners of old (1 Peter 4:6); the former affected the flesh and not the conscience (Hebrews 9:13 f.), the latter removed the flesh but not the spiritual defilement proceeding from past sin. σαρκός and συνειδήσεως stand before their belongings for emphasis and not merely in accordance with prevalent custom. For ἀπόθεσιςῥύπου compare Isaiah 4:4 (sequel of the description of the daughters of Zion which is used above 1 Peter 3:3), Jehovah shall wash away their filth (τὸνῥύπον: LXX chivalrously prefixes of the sons and). ἐπερώτημα is explained by Oecumenius as meaning earnest, pledge as in Byzantine Greek law.

Its use for the questions put to the candidate in the baptismal service (dost thou renou nee.…?) is probably due to St. Peter here. In ordinary Greek (Herodotus and Thucydides) it = question ἐπ. having no force, as if implying a second additional question arising out of the first). Here the noun corresponds to the verb as used in Isaiah 65:1, quoted by St. Paul in Romans 10:20, ἐμφανὴςἐγενόμηντοῖςἐμὲμὴἐπερωτῶσι = (1) a seeking, quest after God or (2) request addressed to God (supported by εἰς cf. the formula ἔντευξιςεἰςτὸβασίλεωςὄνομα, a petition addressed to the king’ s majesty). In the latter case Peter will still be thinking as above and below of the disobedient spirits who presented a petition (ἐρώτησις) to God inspired by an evil conscience (see Enoch summarised above).

At any rate συνειδ. is probably subjective or possessive rather than objective genitive. The believer who comes to baptism has believed in Christ and repented of his past sins, renounces them and the spirits which prompted them and appeals to God for strength to carry out this renunciation in his daily life.—διʼ ἀναστ. with σώζει; compare 1 Corinthians 15:13-17.

1 Peter 3:22

1 Peter 3:22. Christ went into Heaven— and now is on God’ s right hand (Psalms 110:1)— when angels and authorities and powers had subjected themselves to Him in accordance with prophecy (Psalms 8:7; cf. Hebrews 2:8; 1 Corinthians 15:24 ff.). For the orders of angels see also Romans 8:38; Ephesians 1:21. Clearly they include the rebels of 1 Peter 3:19 f. whom Jubilees calls the angels of the Lord (Jub. iv. 15) and Onkelos the sons of the mighty and their children (?) the giants.

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