Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves likewise with the same mind: for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin;
Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves likewise with the same mind: for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin;
1. for us—supported by some
oldest manuscripts and versions, omitted by others.
in the flesh—in His
mortal body of humiliation.
arm— (Ephesians 6:11;
Ephesians 6:13).
the same mind—of
suffering with patient willingness what God wills you to
suffer.
he that hath suffered—for
instance, Christ first, and in His person the believer: a general
proposition.
hath ceased—literally,
"has been made to cease," has obtained by the very
fact of His having suffered once for all, a cessation from sin,
which had heretofore lain on Him (Ephesians 6:13, especially, 1 Peter 4:7).
The Christian is by faith one with Christ: as then Christ by death is
judicially freed from sin; so the Christian who has in the person of
Christ died, has no more to do with it judicially, and ought to have
no more to do with it actually. "The flesh" is the sphere
in which sin has place.
That he no longer should live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men, but to the will of God.
2. That he, &c.—"That
he (the believer, who has once for all obtained cessation from sin by
suffering, in the person of Christ, namely, in virtue of his union
with the crucified Christ) should no longer live the rest of his time
in the flesh to the lusts of men, but to the will of God" as his
rule. "Rest of his time in the flesh" (the Greek
has the preposition "in" here, not in as to Christ) proves that the reference is here not to
Christ, but to the believer, whose remaining time for glorifying God
is short (1 Peter 4:3). "Live"
in the truest sense, for heretofore he was dead. Not as
ALFORD, "Arm
yourselves . . . with a view no longer to live the rest of your
time."
For the time past of our life may suffice us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles, when we walked in lasciviousness, lusts, excess of wine, revellings, banquetings, and abominable idolatries:
3. may suffice—Greek,
"is sufficient." Peter takes the lowest ground: for not
even the past time ought to have been wasted in lust; but since you
cannot recall it, at least lay out the future to better account.
us—omitted in oldest
manuscripts.
wrought—Greek,
"wrought out."
Gentiles—heathen: which
many of you were.
when, c.—"walking
as ye have done [ALFORD]
in lasciviousness" the Greek means petulant,
immodest, wantonness, unbridled conduct: not so much filthy lust.
excess of
wine—"wine-bibbings" [ALFORD].
abominable—"nefarious,"
"lawless idolatries," violating God's most sacred law; not
that all Peter's readers (see on ) walked in these, but many, namely, the Gentile
portion of them.
Wherein they think it strange that ye run not with them to the same excess of riot, speaking evil of you:
4. Wherein—In respect to which
abandonment of your former walk ().
run not with them—eagerly,
in troops [BENGEL].
excess—literally,
"profusion"; a sink: stagnant water remaining after an
inundation.
riot—profligacy.
speaking evil—charging
you with pride, singularity, hypocrisy, and secret crimes (1 Peter 4:14;
2 Peter 2:2). However, there is no
"of you" in the Greek, but simply "blaspheming."
It seems to me always to be used, either directly or indirectly, in
the sense of impious reviling against God, Christ, or the Holy
Spirit, and the Christian religion, not merely against men as
such; Greek, 1 Peter 4:14,
below.
Who shall give account to him that is ready to judge the quick and the dead.
5. They who now call you to
account falsely, shall have to give account themselves for this very
evil-speaking (Judges 1:15), and be
condemned justly.
ready—very speedily
(1 Peter 4:7; 2 Peter 3:10).
Christ's coming is to the believer always near.
For for this cause was the gospel preached also to them that are dead, that they might be judged according to men in the flesh, but live according to God in the spirit.
6. For—giving the reason for
1 Peter 4:5, "judge the dead."
gospel preached also to . . .
dead—as well as to them now living, and to them that shall be
found alive at the coming of the Judge. "Dead" must be
taken in the same literal sense as in 1 Peter 4:5, which refutes the explanation "dead" in sins.
Moreover, the absence of the Greek article does not
necessarily restrict the sense of "dead" to particular dead
persons, for there is no Greek article in 1 Peter 4:5 also, where "the dead" is universal in meaning. The
sense seems to be, Peter, as representing the true attitude of the
Church in every age, expecting Christ at any moment, says, The Judge
is ready to judge the quick and dead—the dead, I say, for
they, too, in their lifetime, have had the Gospel preached to them,
that so they might be judged at last in the same way as those living
now (and those who shall be so when Christ shall come), namely, "men
in the flesh," and that they might, having escaped condemnation
by embracing the Gospel so preached, live unto God in the spirit
(though death has passed over their flesh), 1 Peter 4:5, thus being made like Christ in death and in life (see on
1 Peter 3:18). He says, "live,"
not "made alive" or quickened; for they are supposed to
have been already "quickened together with Christ" (1 Peter 3:18). This verse is parallel to 1 Peter 3:18; compare Note, see on 1 Peter 3:18. The Gospel, substantially, was "preached" to the
Old Testament Church; though not so fully as to the New Testament
Church. It is no valid objection that the Gospel has not been
preached to all that shall be found dead at Christ's coming.
For Peter is plainly referring only to those within reach of the
Gospel, or who might have known God through His ministers in Old and
New Testament times. Peter, like Paul, argues that those found living
at Christ's coming shall have no advantage above the dead who
shall then be raised, inasmuch as the latter live unto, or
"according to," God, even already in His purpose.
ALFORD'S explanation is
wrong, "that they might be judged according to men as regards
the flesh," that is, be in the state of the completed
sentence on sin, which is death after the flesh. For
"judged" cannot have a different meaning in this verse from
what "judge" bears in 1 Peter 3:18. "Live according to God" means, live a life with
God, such as God lives, divine; as contrasted with "according
to men in the flesh," that is, a life such as men live in the
flesh.
But the end of all things is at hand: be ye therefore sober, and watch unto prayer.
7. Resuming the idea in .
the end of all things—and
therefore also of the wantonness (1 Peter 4:3;
1 Peter 4:4) of the wicked, and of
the sufferings of the righteous [BENGEL].
The nearness meant is not that of mere "time," but that
before the Lord; as he explains to guard against
misapprehension, and defends God from the charge of procrastination:
We live in the last dispensation, not like the Jews under the Old
Testament. The Lord will come as a thief; He is "ready"
(1 Peter 4:5) to judge the world at
any moment; it is only God's long-suffering and His will that the
Gospel should be preached as a witness to all nations, that induces
Him to lengthen out the time which is with Him still as nothing.
sober—"self-restrained."
The opposite duties to the sins in 1 Peter 4:5 are here inculcated. Thus "sober" is the opposite
of "lasciviousness" (1 Peter 4:5).
watch—Greek, "be
soberly vigilant"; not intoxicated with worldly cares and
pleasures. Temperance promotes wakefulness or watchfulness,
and both promote prayer. Drink makes drowsy, and drowsiness prevents
prayer.
prayer—Greek,
"prayers"; the end for which we should exercise vigilance.
And above all things have fervent charity among yourselves: for charity shall cover the multitude of sins.
8. above all things—not that
"charity" or love is placed above "prayer,"
but because love is the animating spirit, without which all
other duties are dead. Translate as Greek, "Having your
mutual (literally, 'towards yourselves') charity intense." He
presupposes its existence among them; he urges them to make it more
fervent.
charity shall cover the
multitude, c.—The oldest manuscripts have "covereth."
Quoted from Proverbs 10:12 compare
Proverbs 17:9. "Covereth"
so as not harshly to condemn or expose faults; but forbearingly to
bear the other's burdens, forgiving and forgetting past offenses.
Perhaps the additional idea is included, By prayer for them,
love tries to have them covered by God; and so being the
instrument of converting the sinner from his error, "covereth a
(not 'the,' as English Version) multitude of sins"; but
the former idea from Proverbs is the prominent one. It is not,
as Rome teaches, "covereth" his own sins; for then
the Greek middle voice would be used; and Proverbs 10:12;
Proverbs 17:9 support the Protestant
view. "As God with His love covers my sins if I believe, so must
I also cover the sins of my neighbor" [LUTHER].
Compare the conduct of Shem and Japheth to Noah (Proverbs 17:9), in contrast to Ham's exposure of his father's shame. We
ought to cover others' sins only where love itself does not require
the contrary.
Use hospitality one to another without grudging.
9. (Romans 12:13;
Hebrews 13:2.) Not the spurious
hospitality which passes current in the world, but the entertaining
of those needing it, especially those exiled for the faith, as
the representatives of Christ, and all hospitality to whomsoever
exercised from genuine Christian love.
without grudging—Greek,
"murmuring." "He that giveth, let him do it with
simplicity," that is open-hearted sincerity; with cordiality.
Not secretly speaking against the person whom we entertain, or
upbraiding him with the favor we have conferred in him.
As every man hath received the gift, even so minister the same one to another, as good stewards of the manifold grace of God.
10. every—"even as each
man hath received," in whatever degree, and of whatever kind.
The Spirit's gifts (literally, "gift of grace,"
that is, gratuitously bestowed) are the common property of the
Christian community, each Christian being but a steward for the
edifying of the whole, not receiving the gift merely for his own use.
minister the same—not
discontentedly envying or disparaging the gift of another.
one to another—Greek
as in 1 Peter 4:8, "towards
yourselves"; implying that all form but one body, and in seeking
the good of other members they are promoting the good of themselves.
stewards—referring to
Matthew 25:15; Luke 19:13-26.
If any man speak, let him speak as the oracles of God; if any man minister, let him do it as of the ability which God giveth: that God in all things may be glorified through Jesus Christ, to whom be praise and dominion for ever and ever. Amen.
11. If any . . . speak—namely,
as a prophet, or divinely taught teacher in the Church
assembly.
as the, c.—The Greek
has no article: "as oracles of God." This may be due to
Greek: "God," having no article, it being a
principle when a governed noun omits the Greek article that
the governing noun should omit it, too. In also, the Greek article is wanting thus English
Version, "as the oracles of God," namely, the Old
Testament, would be "right," and the precept be similar
to Romans 12:6, "prophesy
according to the analogy of the faith." But the context
suits better thus, "Let him speak as (becomes one speaking)
oracles OF GOD."
His divinely inspired words are not his own, but God's,
and as a steward (1 Peter 4:10)
having them committed to him, he ought so to speak them. Jesus was
the pattern in this respect (Matthew 7:29;
John 12:49; John 14:10;
compare Paul, 2 Corinthians 2:17). Note,
the very same term as is applied in the only other passages where it
occurs (Acts 7:38; Romans 3:2;
Hebrews 5:12), to the Old
Testament inspired writings, is here predicated of the inspired
words (the substance of which was afterwards committed to
writing) of the New Testament prophets.
minister—in acts;
the other sphere of spiritual activity besides speaking.
as of—"out of"
the store of his "strength" (Greek, physical power
in relation to outward service, rather than moral and intellectual
"ability"; so in Hebrews 5:12).
giveth—Greek,
"supplieth"; originally said of a choragus, who
supplied the chorus with all necessaries for performing their
several parts.
that God in all things may be
glorified—the final end of all a Christian's acts.
through Jesus Christ—the
mediator through whom all our blessings come down to us, and also
through whom all our praises ascend to God. Through Christ alone can
God be glorified in us and our sayings and doings.
to whom—Christ.
be—Greek, "is."
for ever and ever—Greek,
"unto the ages of the ages."
Beloved, think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you, as though some strange thing happened unto you:
12. strange—they might think
it strange that God should allow His chosen children to be sore
tried.
fiery trial—like the
fire by which metals are tested and their dross removed. The Greek
adds, "in your case."
which is to try you—Greek,
"which is taking place for a trial to you." Instead of its
"happening to you" as some strange and untoward
chance, it "is taking place" with the gracious
design of trying you; God has a wise design in it—a
consolatory reflection.
But rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ's sufferings; that, when his glory shall be revealed, ye may be glad also with exceeding joy.
13. inasmuch as—The oldest
manuscripts read, "in proportion as"; "in as far as"
ye by suffering are partakers of Christ's sufferings, that is, by
faith enter into realizing fellowship with them; willingly for His
sake suffering as He suffered.
with exceeding joy—Greek,
"exulting joy"; now ye rejoice amidst
sufferings; then ye shall EXULT,
for ever free from sufferings (1 Peter 1:6;
1 Peter 1:8). If we will not bear
suffering for Christ now, we must bear eternal sufferings hereafter.
If ye be reproached for the name of Christ, happy are ye; for the spirit of glory and of God resteth upon you: on their part he is evil spoken of, but on your part he is glorified.
14. for—Greek, "IN
the name of Christ," namely, as Christians (1 Peter 4:16;
1 Peter 3:14, above); "in My
name, because ye belong to Christ." The emphasis lies
on this: 1 Peter 4:15, "as a
murderer, thief," c., stands in contrast. Let your suffering be
on account of Christ, not on account of evil-doing (1 Peter 4:15).
reproached—Reproach
affects noble minds more than loss of goods, or even bodily
sufferings.
the spirit . . . upon you—the
same Spirit as rested on Christ (1 Peter 4:15). "The Spirit of glory" is His Spirit, for
He is the "Lord of glory" (1 Peter 4:15). Believers may well overcome the "reproach"
(compare Hebrews 11:26), seeing
that "the Spirit of glory" rests upon them, as upon
Him. It cannot prevent the happiness of the righteous, if they are
reproached for Christ, because they retain before God their glory
entire, as having the Spirit, with whom glory is inseparably
joined [CALVIN].
and of God—Greek,
"and the (Spirit) of God" implying that the
Spirit of glory (which is Christ's Spirit) is at the same time
also the Spirit of God.
on their part he is evil
spoken of, but on your part he is glorified—omitted in the two
oldest Greek manuscripts and Syriac and Coptic
versions, but supported by one very old manuscript, Vulgate,
Sahidic, CYPRIAN, c.
"Evil spoken of," literally, "blasphemed" not
merely do they "speak against you," as in Hebrews 11:26, but blasphemously mock Christ and Christianity
itself.
But let none of you suffer as a murderer, or as a thief, or as an evildoer, or as a busybody in other men's matters.
15. But—Greek, "For."
"Reproached in the name of Christ" I say (), "FOR let
none," c.
as . . . as
. . . as . . . as—the "as" twice
in italics is not in the Greek. The second Greek, "as,"
distinguishes the class "busybody in other men's matters,"
from the previous class of delinquents. Christians, from mistaken
zeal, under the plea of faithfulness, might readily step out of their
own calling and make themselves judges of the acts of unbelievers.
Literally, "a bishop in what is (not his own, but) another's"
province an allusion to the existing bishops or overseers of
the Church; a self-constituted bishop in others' concerns.
Yet if any man suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed; but let him glorify God on this behalf.
16. a Christian—the name given
in contempt first at Antioch. Acts 11:26;
Acts 26:28; the only three places
where the term occurs. At first believers had no distinctive name,
but were called among themselves "brethren," Acts 26:28; "disciples," Acts 26:28; "those of the way," Acts 26:28; "saints," Romans 1:7;
by the Jews (who denied that Jesus was the CHRIST,
and so would never originate the name Christian), in contempt,
"Nazarenes." At Antioch, where first idolatrous
Gentiles (Cornelius, Acts 10:1;
Acts 10:2, was not an idolater,
but a proselyte) were converted, and wide missionary work began, they
could be no longer looked on as a Jewish sect, and so the
Gentiles designated them by the new name "Christians."
The rise of the new name marked a new epoch in the Church's life, a
new stage of its development, namely, its missions to the Gentiles.
The idle and witty people of Antioch, we know from heathen writers,
were famous for inventing nicknames. The date of this Epistle must
have been when this had become the generally recognized designation
among Gentiles (it is never applied by Christians to each
other, as it was in after ages—an undesigned proof that the New
Testament was composed when it professes), and when the name exposed
one to reproach and suffering, though not seemingly as yet to
systematic persecution.
let him not be ashamed—though
the world is ashamed of shame. To suffer for one's own faults is no
honor (1 Peter 4:15; 1 Peter 2:20),
—for Christ, is no shame (1 Peter 4:14;
1 Peter 3:13).
but let him glorify God—not
merely glory in persecution; Peter might have said as the contrast,
"but let him esteem it an honor to himself"; but the honor
is to be given to God, who counts him worthy of such an honor,
involving exemption from the coming judgments on the ungodly.
on this behalf—The
oldest manuscripts and Vulgate read, "in this name,"
that is, in respect of suffering for such a name.
For the time is come that judgment must begin at the house of God: and if it first begin at us, what shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God?
17. Another ground of
consolation to Christians. All must pass under the judgment of God;
God's own household first, their chastisement being here, for which
they should glorify Him as a proof of their membership in His family,
and a pledge of their escape from the end of those whom the last
judgment shall find disobedient to the Gospel.
the time—Greek,
"season," "fit time."
judgment must begin at the
house of God—the Church of living believers. Peter has in mind
Ezekiel 9:6; compare Amos 3:2;
Jeremiah 25:29. Judgment is already
begun, the Gospel word, as a "two-edged sword," having the
double effect of saving some and condemning others, and shall be
consummated at the last judgment. "When power is given to the
destroyer, he observes no distinction between the righteous and the
wicked; not only so, but he begins first at the righteous"
[WETSTEIN from Rabbins].
But God limits the destroyer's power over His people.
if . . . at us, what shall
the end be of them, &c.—If even the
godly have chastening judgments now, how much more shall the ungodly
be doomed to damnatory judgments at last.
gospel of God—the very
God who is to judge them.
And if the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear?
18. scarcely—Compare "so
as by fire," 1 Corinthians 3:15;
having to pass through trying chastisements, as David did for his
sin. "The righteous" man has always more or less of trial,
but the issue is certain, and the entrance into the kingdom abundant
at last. The "scarcely" marks the severity of the ordeal,
and the unlikelihood (in a mere human point of view) of the righteous
sustaining it; but the righteousness of Christ and God's everlasting
covenant make it all sure.
ungodly—having no
regard for God; negative description.
sinner—loving sin;
positive; the same man is at once God-forgetting and sin-loving.
appear—in judgment.
Wherefore let them that suffer according to the will of God commit the keeping of their souls to him in well doing, as unto a faithful Creator.
19. General conclusion from
1 Peter 4:17; 1 Peter 4:18.
Seeing that the godly know that their sufferings are by God's
will, to chasten them that they may not perish with the world,
they have good reason to trust God cheerfully amidst sufferings,
persevering in well-doing.
let them—Greek,
"let them also," "let even them,"
as well as those not suffering. Not only under ordinary
circumstances, but also in time of suffering, let
believers commit. (Compare Note, see on 1 Peter 4:18).
according to the will of
God—(See on 1 Peter 3:17).
God's will that the believer should suffer (1 Peter 3:17), is for his good. One oldest manuscript and Vulgate
read, "in well-doings"; contrast ill-doings, 1 Peter 3:17. Our committing of ourselves to God is to be, not in
indolent and passive quietism, but accompanied with active
well-doings.
faithful—to His
covenant promises.
Creator—who is
therefore also our Almighty Preserver. He, not we, must keep
our souls. Sin destroyed the original spiritual relation between
creature and Creator, leaving that only of government. Faith restores
it; so that the believer, living to the will of God (1 Peter 3:17), rests implicitly on his Creator's faithfulness.