2 Peter 1


2 Peter 1 is the first chapter of the Second Epistle of Peter in the New Testament of the Christian Bible. The author identifies himself as "Simon Peter, a bondservant and apostle of Jesus Christ" and the epistle is traditionally attributed to Peter the Apostle, but some writers argue that it is the work of Peter's followers in Rome between the years 70 and 100.

Text

The original text was written in Koine Greek. This chapter is divided into 21 verses.

Textual witnesses

Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter are:
;Greek
;Latin

Old Testament references

  • :

Relationship with the Epistle of Jude

There is an obvious relationship between the texts of 2 Peter and the Epistle of Jude. The shared passages are:
2 PeterJude
1:53
1:125
2:14
2:46
2:67
2:10–118–9
2:1210
2:13–1711–13
3:2-317–18
3:1424
3:1825

Salutation (1:1–2)

Verse 1

  • "Simon" : Acts 15:14, similarly, reads Συμεὼν, Symeōn. The name is used together with "Peter" as a reminder of 'the change grace had brought about in the apostle's life'.
  • "A servant and an apostle": 1 Peter 1 uses only the second title, whereas Jude uses the first. The word δοῦλος is translated as "bondservant" in the New King James Version. The apostle adopts these titles to emphasize his authority as someone who is merely a slave but fully commissioned by his Master for his work.
  • "Obtained" or "received", with a meaning of "obtained by lot", implying "grace", not "merit", as the source of this gift.
  • "like precious faith" is read as "equally precious" by Johann Bengel, aeque pretiosam in his original Latin, from which he elaborates that "the faith of those who have seen Jesus Christ, as Peter and the rest of the apostles, and of those who believe without having seen Him, equally precious, flowing from Jesus Christ: it lays hold of the same righteousness and salvation".

A call to spiritual growth (1:3–11)

As Christians have obtained the "power" and "promise" for their resources, Peter urges that they "make every effort" to achieve the goal, that is "to grow to be like Jesus", following the steps towards it :

Reasons for the emphasis (1:12–21)

Verse 12

Emphasis is shown through repetition of information already known: Bengel speaks of the writer "emphatically repeat" his message.

Verse 18

Reference to Transfiguration of Jesus.

Verse 21

The King James Version adds wording, "the prophecy came not in old time". E. H. Plumptre argues against the additional word 'the': "the article before 'prophecy' in the Greek simply gives to the noun the generic sense which is better expressed in English by the absence of the article". Duff relates such 'prophecy' to the Old Testament; Plumptre suggests that the meaning of 'old time' is "wider in its range than the English words, and takes in the more recent as well as the more distant past, and is therefore applicable to the prophecies of the Christian... Church".