John Gill's Exposition of 1 Peter —
Chapter 2
INTRODUCTION
This chapter consists of
exhortations, in general, to a holy life; and, in particular, to obedience to
superiors. It begins with an exhortation to lay aside various vices, which were
unbecoming regenerate persons, (1 Pet. 2:1) and, agreeably to their character,
as new born babes, to express a desire after the Gospel, which is commended from
its nature, being comparable to milk; and from its quality, being reasonable,
sincere, and unmixed; and from the end and usefulness of it, a spiritual growth;
and the argument engaging to such a desire is the experience they had of the
grace of Christ in it, (1 Pet. 2:2) whose excellency is declared, under the
metaphor of a stone, said to be living, to be chosen of God, and precious to
him, though rejected by men; to whom the saints are encouraged to come, as
lively stones built up, a spiritual house, for the exercise of the holy office
of the priesthood, by offering up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through
Christ, (1 Pet. 2:4) and that Christ is such a precious stone, is proved from
Isaiah 28:16 and not only to God, but to all them that believe; though to them
that believe not, he is the stone of rejection, stumbling, and offence; to
stumble at which, and the doctrine of it, through disobedience, they were of old
appointed by God, (1 Pet. 2:6), but the character of the persons the apostle
writes to was very different, quite the reverse, being chosen and called, and
manifestly the people of God, and sharing in his grace and mercy, (1 Pet. 2:9),
and these he exhorts, suitable to their state and condition, to abstain from
sin, as an enemy to their souls, and to live an honest life and conversation
among the Gentiles, that they, instead of speaking evil of them, might, by
beholding their good works, glorify God, (1 Pet. 2:11). And particularly he
exhorts them to obedience to civil magistrates, both superior and inferior;
partly from the author of them, they being of the Lord; and partly from the
usefulness of them to punish wicked men, and to encourage good men; and also
from its being the will of God, by such obedience, to silence the cavils of
foolish men, (1 Pet. 2:13). And whereas it might be objected, that they were
made free by Christ, and therefore should not be the servants of men; it is
granted, that they were free; but then it is denied, that they should use their
liberty for a cloak of maliciousness: and besides, it should be observed, that
they were the servants of God, and therefore ought to do what he enjoined them;
and, among other things, yield obedience to civil magistrates, (1 Pet. 2:16).
And to this purpose are various exhortations in 1 Peter 2:17, and another
particular one is added, which is to servants, to be subject to their masters,
and fear them, whether they be good or bad, (1 Pet. 2:18) and then he comforts
such that had bad masters, and encourages them to bear the injuries they
received from them patiently; because so to do was grateful to God, and
acceptable in his sight; and because they were called unto it by him; and
because of the example Christ had left them in suffering for them, (1 Pet.
2:19). And this is further urged from the character of Christ, who was without
sin, and yet suffered, and from his conduct, who, when reviled, made no return,
but left his cause with God, (1 Pet. 2:22) which leads on the apostle take
notice of the nature of Christ’s sufferings in his body on the cross, and the
ends of them, which were expiation of sin, healing diseases, and holiness of
life, as a consequent thereof, (1 Pet. 2:24) previous to which conversion, which
is illustrated by the former state and condition men are in, being as sheep
going astray; and by their present one, being returned to Christ, the Shepherd
and Bishop of souls, (1 Pet. 2:25).
1 Peter 2:1-25
1
Peter 2:1—“Wherefore laying aside all malice, and all guile, and hypocrisies,
and envies, all evil speakings,”
·
Wherefore, laying aside all malice—Since
the persons the apostle writes to were born again, and therefore ought to love
one another, he exhorts them to the disuse of such vices as were disagreeable to
their character as regenerate men, and contrary brotherly love; he dissuades
them from them, and advises to “lay them aside,” either as weights and burdens,
which it was not fit for new born babes to carry, (see Heb 12:1); or rather as
old worn out clothes, as filthy rags, which should be put off, laid by, and
never used more, being what were very unsuitable to their character and
profession to wear: the metaphor is the same as in Ephesians 4:22 and the first
he mentions is malice; to live in which is a mark of an unregenerate man, and
very unbecoming such who are born again; and is not consistent with the relation
of brethren, and character of children, or new born babes, who are without
malice, and do not bear and retain it: “all” of this is to be laid aside,
towards all persons whatever, and in every shape, and in every instance of it:
·
and all guile—fraud,
or deceit, in words or actions; and which should not be found, and appear in any
form, in Israelites indeed, in brethren, in the children of God; who ought not
to lie one to another, or defraud each other, nor express that with their lips
which they have not in their hearts; which babes are free from, and so should
babes in Christ:
·
and hypocrisies—both
to God and men: hypocrisy to God is, when persons profess that which they have
not, as love to God, faith in Christ, zeal for religion, fervent devotion, and
sincerity in the worship of God; and do all they do to be seen of men, and
appear outwardly righteous, and yet are full of all manner of iniquity:
hypocrisy to men is, pretence of friendship, loving in word and tongue only,
speaking peaceably with the mouth, but in heart laying wait; a sin to be
abhorred and detested by one that is born from above; and is contrary to that
integrity, simplicity, and sincerity of heart, which become regenerate persons,
the children of God, and brethren one of another:
·
and envies—at
each other’s happiness and prosperity, riches, honors, gifts temporal or
spiritual; for such are works of the flesh, show men to be carnal, are
unbecoming regenerated persons, and contrary to the exercise of Christian
charity, or love, which envieth not the welfare of others, either respecting
body, soul, or estate:
·
and all evil speakings—backbitings,
whisperings, detractions, hurting one another’s characters by innuendos, false
charges, and evil surmises; which is not acting like men that are made new
creatures, and are partakers of the divine nature, nor like brethren, or as
Christ’s little ones, and who are of God, begotten again to be a kind of
firstfruits of his creatures.
1
Peter 2:2—“As newborn babes, desire the sincere milk of the word, that ye may
grow thereby:”
·
As new born babes—The
Syriac version renders it, “be ye simple as infants;” and as if it was a
distinct exhortation of itself, and from that which follows; though it seems
rather to be descriptive of the persons spoken to, and a character of them,
under which the apostle addresses them; which carries in it a reason
strengthening the exhortation after given: he takes it for granted that they
were begotten again, according to the abundant mercy of God, and born of
incorruptible seed, by the word of God, and that they were just, or lately born;
and which is to be understood of them all in general, and not of younger
converts among them, who might be called little children with respect to others
who were young men or fathers; but that, comparatively speaking, those that had
been of the longest standing were but as it were newly born, it being at most
but a few years since they were called by grace: and they were as “babes,” not
on account of their want of knowledge, or unskilfulness in the word of
righteousness; or of non-proficiency in the learning of divine truths, and their
great dullness, backwardness, and imperfection; or because of their incapacity
in taking in, and digesting the strong meat and sublimer doctrines of the
Gospel; or for their instability and simplicity, being easily deceived and
beguiled; nor for their weakness in faith, not being able to walk alone, and
their insufficiency to defend, or provide for themselves; but because of their
harmlessness and innocence, meekness and humility; and for the sincerity of
their faith and love, obedience and profession. The proselytes to the Jews’
religion are often said to be “as an infant just born,” or a new born babe; to
which the allusion may here be made:
·
desire the sincere milk of the word—this
is not a declaration that these new born souls did do so, though that might be
true, but an exhortation to them so to do, as it became them: by “the sincere
milk of the word” is meant the Gospel, even the whole of it, and not, as
elsewhere, the more plain and easy truths of it; which is compared to milk for
its purity in itself, for every word of God is pure and for its purifying
nature, as used by the Spirit of God; and for its sweetness and agreeable taste
to a regenerate man; and because easy of digestion to a spiritual one; and
because it is nutritive to him, by it he is nourished up unto eternal life; and
because, as milk is of a cooling nature, so the Gospel is a means, in the hand
of the Spirit of God, of assuaging those inflammations, and of allaying that
wrath and fiery indignation, raised in the conscience of a sinner by the law;
and because as milk, medicinally used, is a restorative in consumptive
disorders, so the Gospel is not only the means of helping a declining person,
and who is wasted and consumed by sin, but even of quickening such as are dead
in sin; it is the savour of life unto life. The Jewish writers speak of “the
milk of the law,” of which they generally interpret the passage in Isaiah 55:1
but it is much better applied to the Gospel, which is the milk of the word, or
“rational milk:” not that the Gospel is a scheme according to the carnal reason
of men; it is contrary to that, and above sound reason, though not repugnant to
it; but it is what is calculated for faith, the spiritual reason of men, and for
such who have their spiritual senses exercised, to discern between good and
evil; it is a spiritual drink, and is made up of spiritual things, and suited to
the spiritual man; it is milk, not in a natural, but in a mystic and spiritual
sense: the Syriac version renders it, “the word which is as milk, pure and
spiritual:” and it is “sincere;” without mixture, unadulterated with the
inventions and doctrines of men, Jews or heretics: or “without deceit;” being
neither deceitfully handled by the faithful ministers of it, nor causing deceit,
or deceiving those that cordially receive it. Now, this it becomes regenerate
person, to “desire;” and vehemently long after, as a new born babe does after
its mother’s milk; for the Gospel is that to one that is born again, as the
breast is to a babe: desire after it supposes knowledge of it; and where there
is an experimental knowledge, there will be a value and esteem for it, even
above necessary food, and, at times, an hungering and thirsting after it, an
impatient longing for, and desire of it; when such souls will labor after it,
and diligently observe and attend every opportunity of enjoying it, and think
long ere the seasons of meeting with it return; for it is suitable food for
them, savory food, such as their souls love, and which indeed they cannot live
without: now the end of this exhortation, and of such a desire, and of feeding
on the words of faith and sound doctrine, is,
·
that ye may grow thereby—regenerate
persons are not at their full growth at once; they are first children, then
young men, and then fathers in Christ; the Gospel is appointed as a means of
their spiritual growth, and by the blessing of God becomes so, and which they
find to be so by good experience; and therefore this milk of the word is
desirable on this account, for the increase of faith, and the furtherance of the
joy of it; for their growth in grace, and in the knowledge of Jesus Christ, and
in an experience of spiritual strength from him, and unto him, as their head in
all things; not merely in the leaves of a profession, but in the fruits of
grace, righteousness, and holiness. The Alexandrian copy, and several others,
and also the Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and Ethiopic versions, add, “unto
salvation:” that is, until they come to a perfect knowledge of Christ, and to be
perfect men with him, being arrived to the measure of the stature of the
fullness of Christ, and in the possession of that salvation he has obtained for
them.
1
Peter 2:3—“If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious.”
·
If so be ye have tasted that the
Lord is gracious—Reference is had to
Psalm 34:8, “O taste and see that the Lord is good;” and the Syriac version here
adds, “if ye have seen:” by the Lord is meant, the Lord Jesus Christ, as the
following words show, who is gracious and amiable, and lovely in his person; who
has a fullness of grace in him for his people; has displayed his grace towards
them, in engaging for them as a surety, in assuming their nature, obeying,
suffering, and dying in their stead; he is gracious in his word and promises,
truths and ordinances, and in all his offices and relations; and regenerate
persons have tasted that he is so: an unregenerate man has no spiritual taste;
his taste is vitiated by sin, and not being changed, sin is a sweet morsel in
his mouth, and he disrelishes everything that is spiritual; but one that is born
again savours the things of the Spirit of God; sin is exceeding sinful to him,
and Christ exceeding precious; he, and his fruit, his promises, and blessings of
grace, his word and ordinances, are sweet unto his taste: and the taste he has
is not a mere superficial one, such as hypocrites may have of the good word of
God, and the powers of the world to come; but such a taste of Christ, and of his
grace, as, by a true faith, to eat his flesh, and drink his blood, and so have
everlasting life; such have a saving and experimental knowledge of Christ, an
application of him, and his saving benefits to them, a revelation of him in
them, so that they find and feel that he dwells in them, and they in him; such
receive out of Christ’s fullness, and grace for grace, and live by faith upon
him, and receive nourishment from him; and of this the apostle made no doubt
concerning these persons, but took it for granted that they had had such tastes
of Christ, and therefore could not but desire the Gospel, which is a revelation
of Christ, and sets forth the glory of his person, and the riches of his grace:
and whereas, such as have truly tasted of his grace cannot but desire to have
more, and fresh tastes of it; where should they have them, but in his word and
ordinances? and therefore, would they grow in grace, and know more of Christ,
and taste more of his goodness, it is their interest, as it is their spiritual
nature, to desire the Gospel, in the purity and sincerity of it.
1
Peter 2:4—“To whom coming, as unto a living stone, disallowed indeed of men, but
chosen of God, and precious,”
·
To whom coming, as unto a living
stone—Christ here, as often
elsewhere, is compared to a “stone;” and Peter, by the use of this metaphor,
shows that he is not the rock, but Christ is the rock on which the church is
built, and he is the foundation stone on which every believer is laid; and it is
chiefly with respect to the usefulness of a stone in building, that Christ is
compared to one, who is the foundation and cornerstone, as well as for strength
and duration; and he is called a “living” one, because he has life in himself,
as God, as Mediator, and as man; and communicates life to others, as natural
life to all creatures, and spiritual and eternal life to his people, whose great
privilege it is to come to him: and by coming to him is meant believing in him;
and it does not design the first act of faith on Christ, or a soul’s first
coming to Christ, but an after and continued exercise of faith on him; and it
supposes Christ to be come at, notwithstanding he is in heaven, and saints on
earth, for their faith and hope can enter into, and reach him within the vail,
and notwithstanding their many transgressions and backslidings; it supposes life
in them, or they could not come; and a sense of their need of him, of his
righteousness to justify them, of his blood for pardoning and cleansing, of his
fullness to supply their want of food, rest, peace, comfort, and salvation in
him; and a persuasion of his ability and willingness to relieve them: and they
are encouraged to come to him under the above considerations, as a stone, a
foundation stone; believing that he is laid as a foundation, and that he is the
only foundation, and therefore they lay the whole stress of their salvation, and
build all their hopes of happiness on him; and as a living stone, deriving
grace, life, and strength from him; exercising faith on him for all the mercies,
blessings, and comforts of a spiritual life, and looking to his mercy for
eternal life.
·
Disallowed indeed of men—by
the Jewish builders, high priests, Scribes, and Pharisees, and the body and bulk
of that nation; who rejected him as the Messiah, and stone of Israel, refused
him as a foundation stone, and left him out of the building; and laid another
foundation, even their own works of righteousness, on which sandy foundation
they built themselves, and directed others to do so likewise; and set him, at
nought, as a living stone, would not come to him for life, but sought it in the
law, the killing letter, and among their dead works; but though Christ was thus
disallowed and disesteemed of by men, yet was he highly valued and esteemed by
God:
·
but chosen of God, and precious—his
human nature was “chosen” from among, and above all other individuals of
mankind; to be united to the Son of God; as God-man and Mediator, he was chosen
to that high office, to be the head of the church, and the Saviour of the body;
to be the foundation in the spiritual building, and to be the author and giver
of spiritual and eternal life to as many as were given him. Moreover, this
phrase denotes the superior excellency of Christ to angels and men in the
account of God; being the brightness of his glory, the express image of his
person, the Son of his love, in whom he was always well pleased, and in whom he
took infinite delight, considered both as his Son, and the surety of his people;
and to whom he was precious, and by him highly honored, made higher than the
kings of the earth, than the angels in heaven, than the heavens themselves,
being set down at God’s right hand, and a name given him above every name in
this world, or that to come; and who is precious to the saints too, more so than
rubies, or any precious stones, or any thing or creature whatever; his person is
precious, and so are his name, his blood, his righteousness, his truths, his
ordinances, and his people.
1
Peter 2:5—“Ye also, as lively stones, are built up a spiritual house, an holy
priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus
Christ.”
·
Ye also, as lively stones—Saints
likewise are compared to stones; they lie in the same quarry, and are the same
by nature as the rest of mankind, till dug out and separated from thence by the
powerful and efficacious grace of God, when they are hewn, and made fit for the
spiritual building; where both for their ornament, beauty, and strength, which
they receive from Christ, they are compared to stones, and are lasting and
durable, and will never perish, nor be removed out of the building: and because
of that life which they derive from him, and have in him, they are called
“lively,” or “living stones;” the spirit of life having entered into them, a
principle of life being implanted in them, and coming to Christ, the living
stone, they live upon him, and he lives in them; and his grace in them is a well
of living water, springing up into eternal life. It was usual with poets and
philosophers to call stones, as they lie in the quarry before they are taken out
of it, “living” ones: so Virgil, describing the seats of the nymphs, says,
“intus aquae dulces vivoque sedilia saxo, nympharum domus,” &c. but here the
apostle calls such living stones, who were taken out from among the rest: the
stones which Deucalion and Pyrrha cast over their heads after the flood are
called “quickened stones,” they becoming men, as the fable says. “Are built up a
spiritual house;” these living stones being laid, and cemented together, in a
Gospel church state, become the house of God in a spiritual sense, in
distinction from the material house of the tabernacle, and temple of old, to
which the allusion is; and which is built up an habitation for God, by the
Spirit, and is made up of spiritual men; such as have the Spirit of God, and
savour the things of the Spirit, and worship God in Spirit and in truth; among
whom spiritual services are performed, as prayer, praise, preaching, and hearing
the word, and administering ordinances. Some read these words in the imperative,
as an exhortation, “be ye built up as lively stones; and be ye spiritual temples
and holy priests,” as the Syriac version. A synagogue with the Jews is called,
“a spiritual house;” and so is the third temple which the Jews expect in the
times of the Messiah; of which one of their writers thus says: “it is known from
the ancient wise men, that the future redemption, with which shall be the third,
“spiritual” sanctuary, is the work of God, and will not be as the former
redemptions: “I will fill this house with glory;” this is, “a spiritual” one,
for even the walls shall be, “spiritual” —for even all this “house” shall be
“spiritual;” for that which was then built, which is the second, shall be turned
into another a “spiritual” one:’’ and which has been already done, and is what
the apostle means here, the church, under the Gospel dispensation, or the Gospel
church state, in opposition to the worldly sanctuary, and carnal worship of the
Jews.
·
An holy priesthood—in
allusion to the priests under the law, who were set apart, and sanctified for
that office; but now, under the Gospel, all the saints are priests unto God, and
are all appointed and directed
·
to offer up spiritual sacrifices—their
whole selves, souls, and bodies, as a holy, living, and acceptable sacrifice;
their prayers and praises, and all good works done in faith, and from love, and
to the glory of God; particularly acts of kindness and beneficence to poor
saints; these are called spiritual, in distinction from legal sacrifices, and
because offered in a spiritual manner, under the influence, and by the
assistance of the Spirit of God, and with their spirits. So the Jews speak of
spiritual sacrifices, as distinct from material ones: “the intellectual
sacrifice (they say) is before the material sacrifices, both in time and
excellency. —Cain brought an offering to the Lord of the fruit of the earth, and
behold the intellectual attention did not agree with it, which is “the spiritual
sacrifice.” Now such are
·
acceptable to God by Jesus Christ—through
whom they are offered up; for it is through him the saints have access to God,
present themselves to him, and their services; and both persons and services are
only accepted in Christ, and for his sake, and in virtue of his sacrifice, which
is always of a sweet smelling savour to God.
1
Peter 2:6—“Wherefore also it is contained in the scripture, Behold, I lay in
Sion a chief corner stone, elect, precious: and he that believeth on him shall
not be confounded.”
·
Wherefore also it is contained in
the Scripture—(Isa 28:16). This is
produced as a proof of the excellency of Christ, as compared to a stone; and of
his usefulness in the spiritual building; and of his being chosen of God, and
precious, though rejected by men; and of the happiness, comfort, and safety of
those that believe in him. That this prophecy belongs to the Messiah, is the
sense of some of the Jewish writers: the Targum on it applies it to a mighty
king; it does not mention the King Messiah, as Galatinus cites it; but Jarchi
expressly names him, and interprets it of him:
·
behold, I lay in Sion a chief
corner stone, elect, precious—Christ
is here called a chief corner stone, as in Ephesians 2:20 because he not only
adorns and strengthens the building, but unites the parts, and keeps them
together, even all the saints, Jews or Gentiles, in all ages and places, whether
in heaven or earth; and he, as such, is chosen of God for that purpose, and is
precious both to God and man, on that account; and is a stone, not of men’s
laying, but of God’s laying in his council, covenant, promises, and prophecies,
in the mission of him into this world, and in the Gospel ministry; the place
where he is laid is in Sion, the Gospel church, of which he is both the
foundation and corner stone: and this account is introduced with a “behold,” it
being something very wonderful, and worthy of attention: to which is added,
·
he that believeth on him shall not
be confounded—or “ashamed;” of the
foundation and cornerstone Christ, nor of his faith in him; and he shall not be
confounded by men or devils, neither in this world, nor in that to come; he
shall have confidence before Christ, and not be ashamed at his coming; he shall
be safe now, being laid on this stone; nor shall he be removed from it, or
intimidated by any enemy, so as to flee from it; nor shall he make haste, as it
is in Isaiah 28:16 to lay another foundation; and he shall be found upon this
hereafter; so that his person and state will be safe, though many of his works
may be burnt up.
1
Peter 2:7—“Unto you therefore which believe he is precious: but unto them which
be disobedient, the stone which the builders disallowed, the same is made the
head of the corner,”
·
Unto you therefore which believe—And
such are not all they that can say their creed, or give their assent to the
articles of it; nor all that believe a divine revelation, and that the
Scriptures are the word of God, and give credit to all that is contained in the
sacred oracles; or who believe the whole Gospel, and all the truths of it; as
that there is one God; that there are three persons in the Godhead, Father, Son,
and Spirit; that Christ is the Son of God, and truly God; that he is the
Mediator between God and man; that he is the Messiah, is become incarnate, has
obeyed, suffered, and died for men, and is the Saviour of them: that he rose
again, ascended to heaven, is set down at the right hand of God, intercedes for
his people, and will come a second time to judge the world in righteousness;
together with all other truths which arise from, depend upon, and are connected
with these; nor all that say they believe, or profess to do so; but such who
have seen themselves lost and undone by sin, their need of a Saviour, and Christ
as the only one; who have seen the Son, the beauty of his person, the fullness
of his grace, and the necessity and suitableness of salvation by him; who have
beheld him as able to save them, as every way proper for them, and desirable by
them, for faith is a sight of Christ; who also come to him under the drawings of
efficacious grace, as perishing sinners, encouraged by his invitations and
declarations, and venture on him; who likewise lay hold upon him, as their
Saviour, and will have no other; give up themselves to him, and commit their all
into his hands; who rely and stay themselves upon him, trust him with all they
have, and for all they want, expecting grace and glory from him; who live upon
him, and walk on in him, go on believing in him, till they receive the end of
their faith, the salvation of their souls. Now to these, in proof of what is
asserted in the above passage out of Isaiah, Christ is
·
precious;
he is so in all his names and titles, as Immanuel, God with us, and that cluster
of them in Isaiah 9:6 and particularly his name Jesus, a Saviour, which is as
ointment poured forth, and draws the love of believers to him; and so he is in
both his natures, divine and human; the perfections of deity in him, his being
in the form of God, and equal to him, the brightness of his Father’s glory, and
the express image of his person, render him very amiable in the view of
believers; who rightly conclude from hence, that all he has done, and does, must
answer the purposes for which they are designed; and his having a perfect human
nature, like to theirs, excepting sin, in which he wrought salvation for them on
earth, and is now glorified in heaven, makes him a delightful object to them: he
is also precious to them in all his offices; in his priestly office, his blood
is precious, as it must needs be, since by it they are purchased and redeemed;
they are justified and sanctified by it; through it they have the forgiveness of
sin, and boldness to enter into the holiest of all: his righteousness is
precious to them, it being the best robe, the wedding garment, fine linen, clean
and white, every way suitable to them, and answerable to the demands of the law;
is pure, perfect, and everlasting; that by which they are justified from all
things, and which will answer for them in a time to come, and entitles them to
eternal life. His sacrifice is precious, of a sweet smelling savour to them, as
well as to God; by which their sins are fully expiated, put, and taken away;
full satisfaction being made for them, and they themselves thereby perfected for
ever. And so he is in his prophetic office. His word is precious, and all the
truths of the Gospel, which are comparable to gold, silver, and precious stones;
the promises of it are exceeding great and precious, being suited to the cases
of all believers: and he is also precious in his kingly office; his commands are
not grievous; his yoke is easy, and burden light; believers love his
commandments above gold, yea; above fine gold, and esteem his precepts
concerning all things to be right, and delight in his ways and ordinances:
moreover, he is precious to them in all his relations, as he is the head of
eminence and influence, their kind and loving husband, their everlasting Father,
their affectionate brother, and faithful friend; his whole person, in every
view, is precious to them that believe; the church of Christ, the members of his
body, the sons of Zion, comparable to fine gold, in these is all the delight of
saints; everything that is in Christ, that is of him, or belongs to him, is
precious to such souls: some read the words, “to you therefore that believe, he
is honor;” as the Vulgate Latin, Arabic, and Ethiopic versions; and so the word
is rendered in Romans 13:7, he is both an honor to them, that they are related
to him; and he is honored by them, by believing in him, and obeying him; and he
is the cause of all their true honor, both in this and the other world. The
Syriac version renders it, “to therefore is this honor given;” namely, that such
a stone is laid, and that they were built upon it, and should not be confounded
or ashamed, either here or hereafter; connecting the words with the preceding.
The Septuagint use the word the apostle here does, in Isaiah 11:10 where it is
prophesied of the Messiah, that his rest shall be glorious; they render it
“honor,” or “precious.” The Jewish writers have adopted the word into their
language, and use it for profit and gain; in which sense it is applicable to
Christ, who is gain to believers, both in life and in death; they being blessed
with all spiritual blessings in him, and he being all in all to them: and also
they use it, as denoting the intrinsic price and value of anything, and which is
a right sense of the word; and to believers the price of wisdom, or Christ, is
far above rubies, and all the things that can be desired; to them he is precious
as a stone, as a foundation and corner stone, and more precious than the most
precious stones or things in nature; this he is to them that believe: next
follows, in this and the other verse, the account of what he is to them that
believe not:
·
but unto them which be disobedient—who
are not persuadable, unbelieving, and are children of disobedience; who neither
obey God and his righteous law, nor Christ and his Gospel:
·
the stone which the builders
disallowed, the same is made the head of the corner—reference
is manifestly had to Psalm 118:22 which is a passage that clearly belongs to the
Messiah, and which is suggested by Christ himself, [See Gill on Matthew 21:42];
and is by our apostle, in Acts 4:11 applied unto him: by the builders are meant
the rulers of the Jews, both civil and ecclesiastical, and especially the
latter, the Scribes, Pharisees, and chief priests; who set up for builders of
the church of God, but were miserable ones; they built themselves, and taught
others to build, on the observance of the ceremonial law, and the traditions of
the elders; on their carnal privileges, and moral righteousness; and these
disallowed of Christ in the building, rejected him as the Messiah, refused him
as the Saviour and Redeemer, and set him at nought, had him in the utmost
derision, and reckoned him as a worm, and no man; but, to their great
mortification, he is not only laid and retained as the foundation and
cornerstone, but made the head of the building, and is exalted at God’s right
hand above angels and men; he is the head of the body, the church; he is higher
than the kings of the earth, and angels are subject to him.
Gill’s supporting
notes for 1 Peter 2:7
[Gill
on Matthew 21:42] The stone which the
builders rejected, the same is become the head of the corner—this is
the Lord’s doing, and it is marvelous in our eyes. Very appropriately is this
Scripture cited, and applied to the present case; which expresses the rejection
of the Messiah by the Jewish builders, priests, and scribes: the whole Psalm may
be understood of the Messiah. R. David Kimchi owns, that there is a division
among their Rabbins about it: some say that the Psalm is spoken of David, and
others, that it is spoken of the days of the Messiah; and these are certainly in
the right; and as for this particular passage, it is applied by some of them to
the Messiah: so on mentioning Hosea 3:5 they say, “David was king in this world,
and David shall be king in the time to come: wherefore it is said, the stone
which the builders refused.” And one of their noted commentators on those words,
“though thou be little among the thousands of Judah,” has this note: “It is fit
thou shouldest be little among the families of Judah, because of the impurity of
Ruth the Moabitess, which is in thee: out of thee shall come forth unto me,
Messiah, the son of David; for so he saith, “the stone which the builders
refused.”
Christ is often in
Scripture compared to a stone, and is called the stone of Israel; is said to be
a stone of stumbling to some, and a precious tried stone to others: is
represented as a stone cut out of the mountain without hands, and on which are
seven eyes: and is fitly compared to one, for his usefulness in the spiritual
building the church, where he is as both the foundation and corner stone, and
for his strength and duration. Christ is the sure, firm, and everlasting
foundation, which God has laid in Zion, and the only one of any avail; nor can
any other be laid to any purpose; and if he is neglected, and laid aside, in the
ministration of the word, the building which men endeavor to rear, or exhort
unto, will come to nothing. Whoever build on him are safe, and on nothing else:
Christ is the foundation, on which the church, and every believer, are built,
and therefore will abide; for the gates of hell cannot prevail against them: the
covenant of grace is immoveable, being established in him; its mercies are sure,
and its promises yea and amen: the salvation of immortal souls is certain,
resting upon him; the faith and hope of the saints fail not, being directed to,
and settled on him: the house not made with hands, which is in heaven, is an
eternal one; and the city, which has foundations, is a continuing one, because
of the concern that Christ has in it; and though he is of such eminent use and
importance in the building, yet, as such, the “builders rejected” him: by the
builders are meant, the Jewish rulers, both political and ecclesiastical,
especially the latter, who pretended to instruct, and build up the people in
knowledge and understanding; but in a very bad way did they do it, and upon a
very sandy foundation, upon their fleshly privileges, their moral righteousness,
and the observance of the ceremonial law, and the traditions of the elders. The
Jews used to call their doctors and their scholars “builders” says R. Jochanan,
“the disciples of the wise men are called “builders,” because they study in the
building of the world all their days, which is the law.”
These rejected the
Messiah, refused to receive, and acknowledge him as such: they disallowed and
disapproved of him, as base and vile, and the most contemptible of mortals, and
set him at nought, and had him in the utmost scorn and derision. And so he is
rejected by some who bear the characters of builders among Christians: as when
his proper deity, and eternal sonship are denied, and he is treated as a mere
creature; when his satisfaction and atoning sacrifice are either wholly
rejected, or little regarded, lessened, and depreciated, and repentance and good
works are put in the room of them; when his imputed righteousness is opposed,
and laid aside, and the righteousness of men preferred unto it, and cried up as
the matter of justification in the sight of God; when his efficacious grace is
represented as unnecessary to regeneration, conversion, and sanctification, and
to the performance of good works; and when he is left out of public
ministrations, as the way of life and salvation, as the fountain of all grace,
and foundation of all happiness, and human power, free will, and moral
righteousness are put in his room. But notwithstanding the former and present
rejection, and ill treatment of him, he is become the head of the corner: he is
the corner stone in the building which knits and cements it together, angels and
men, Jews and Gentiles; Old and New Testament saints; saints above, and saints
below, and in all ages and places, all meet, and are united together in this
corner stone; which also strengthens and supports the building, and holds it
together, and is the ornament and beauty of it: he is the chief corner stone; he
is higher than the kings of the earth; he is superior to angels, and the
chiefest among ten thousands of his saints; he is exalted above all creatures,
angels, and men, who, by the Jewish builders, was despised and rejected, and
scarce allowed to be worthy the name of a man:
1
Peter 2:8—“And a stone of stumbling, and a rock of offence, even to them which
stumble at the word, being disobedient: whereunto also they were appointed.”
·
And a stone of stumbling, and a
rock of offence—The apostle alludes
to Isaiah 8:14 and which is a prophecy of the Messiah; [See Gill on Romans
9:33]; and had its accomplishment in the unbelieving and disobedient Jews; who
stumbled at his birth and parentage; at the manner of his birth, being born of a
virgin; at the meanness of his parents, his supposed father being a carpenter,
and his mother, Mary, a poor woman, when they expected the Messiah would have
sprung from some rich and noble family; and at the place of his birth, which
they imagined was Galilee, from his education and conversation there; they
stumbled also at his education, and could not conceive how he should know
letters, and from whence he should have his wisdom, having never been trained up
in any of their schools and academies, or at the feet of any of their doctors
and Rabbins; but, on the other hand, was brought up and employed in the trade of
a carpenter; they stumbled at his outward meanness and poverty, when they
expected the Messiah would be a rich, powerful, and glorious monarch; and so at
the obscurity of his kingdom, which was not of this world, and came not with
observation, when they dreamt of an earthly and temporal one, which should be
set up in great splendor and glory; and they stumbled likewise at the company he
kept, and the audience that attended him, being the poorer sort of the people,
and the more illiterate, and also such who had been very profane and wicked, as
publicans and harlots; moreover, they stumbled at his ministry, at the doctrine
he preached, particularly at the doctrine of his divinity, and of spiritual
communion with him, by eating his flesh, and drinking his blood, and at the
doctrines of distinguishing grace; and so at his miracles, by which he confirmed
his mission and ministry, some of these being wrought on the sabbath day, and
others they imputed to diabolical influence and assistance, in a word, they
stumbled at his death, having imbibed a notion that Christ abideth for ever, and
especially at the manner of it, the death of the cross; wherefore the preaching
of Christ crucified always was, and still is, a stumbling block unto them:
Gill’s supporting
notes for 1 Peter 2:8
[Gill
on Romans 9:33] a stumbling stone, and rock
of offence—which phrases are to be seen in Isaiah 8:14, and are
spoken of, and ascribed to a divine person, even to the Lord of hosts; and are
by the Targumist thus paraphrased, “and if ye obey not,” “his word shall be for
revenge, and for a stone smiting, and a rock of offence,” and in the Talmud, it
is said, that "the son of David (the Messiah) shall not come until the two
houses of the fathers are destroyed out of Israel; and these are the head of the
captivity which is in Babylon, and the prince in the land of Israel, as it is
said,” (Isa 8:14). So that, according to the ancient Jews, this passage belongs
to the Messiah, and is properly made use of for this purpose by the apostle, who
had seen the accomplishment of it in the Jews; who stumbled at the outward
meanness of Jesus of Nazareth, at his parentage, the manner of his birth, his
education, the mean appearance of himself and followers; at his company and
audience, his ministry, miracles, death, and the manner of it; and so believed
not in him, for righteousness, life, and salvation; and thus it came about that
they did not attain, or come up to the law of righteousness, or the
righteousness of the law:
·
even to them which stumble at the
word—either the essential Word,
Christ Jesus, as before; or rather at the doctrine of the Gospel, at that part
of it which respects a trinity of persons in the Godhead; because their carnal
reason could not comprehend it, and they refused to submit to revelation, and to
receive the witness of God, which is greater than that of men; and at that part
of it which regards the deity of Christ, and that for this reason, because he
was a man, and in order to enervate the efficacy of his blood, righteousness,
and sacrifice, and fearing too much honor should be given to him; and also at
that part of the word which concerns the distinguishing grace of God, as eternal
personal election, particular redemption, and efficacious grace in conversion;
against which the carnal mind of man is continually caviling and replying, and,
in so doing, against God himself, charging him with cruelty, injustice, and
insincerity; and particularly at that part of the word which holds forth the
doctrine of free justification, by the righteousness of Christ; this was the
grand stumbling block of the Jews, who sought for righteousness, not by faith,
but, as it were, by the works of the law, being ignorant of the righteousness of
God, and of the spirituality of the law, and of themselves, and their own
righteousness, of which they had an overweening opinion:
·
being disobedient—to
the Gospel revelation, and unwilling to submit their carnal reason to it; this
is the source and cause of their stumbling at Christ and his Gospel: it is worth
while to compare this with the paraphrase of Isaiah 8:14 which passage is here
referred to; and the paraphrase of it runs thus; ““if ye obey not,” his word
shall be among you for revenge, and for a stone smiting, and for a rock of
offence to both houses of the princes of Israel, and for destruction and offence
to those who are divided upon the house of Judah, &c.’’
·
whereunto also they were appointed—both
to stumble at the word of the Gospel, and at Christ, the sum and substance of
it, he being set in the counsel and purpose of God, as for the rising of some,
so for the stumbling and falling of others; and also to that disobedience and
infidelity which was the cause of their stumbling; for as there are some whom
God appointed and foreordained to believe in Christ, on whom he has determined
to bestow true faith in him, and who have it as a pure gift, in consequence of
such appointment; so there are others, whom he has determined to leave in that
disobedience and infidelity into which the fall brought and concluded them,
through which they stumble at Christ, and his word, and, in consequence thereof,
justly perish; but this is not the case of all; there are some who are the
objects of distinguishing grace and favor, and who are described in the
following verse.
1
Peter 2:9—“But ye are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy nation, a
peculiar people; that ye should shew forth the praises of him who hath called
you out of darkness into his marvellous light;”
·
But ye are a chosen generation—Or
“kindred;” the phrase is to be seen in the Septuagint, on Isaiah 43:20, to
which, and the following verse, the apostle refers here, and in another part of
this text. The allusion is throughout to the people of Israel in general, who,
in an external way, were all that is here said; but was only true in a spiritual
sense of such as were chosen and called among the Jews: and who were a
“generation or kindred;” being regenerate, or through abundant mercy begotten,
and of an incorruptible seed born again; and were akin to God, he being their
Father, and they his children by adopting grace, and which was made manifest by
their new birth; and also akin to Christ, he being their head, husband, Father,
and brother, and they his members, spouse, children, and brethren; and to the
saints, being of the same household and family in heaven and in earth; having
the same Father, Lord, Spirit, faith, baptism, and they all brethren: and they
were a “chosen” generation or kindred; being famous, and in high esteem with
God, and accounted by him for a generation; he having chosen them above all
kindreds, tongues, people, and nations, and that from all eternity; and of his
own sovereign good will and pleasure; and not on account of their faith,
holiness, and good works; and to special benefits, to the relation and kindred
they are in, to grace here, and glory hereafter; to regeneration and
sanctification, and to salvation and eternal life; just as Israel, as a nation,
were chosen above all others, because of the love of God to them, and for no
other reason, to many external privileges and favors, which others did not
enjoy: now the apostle mentions this character first, because God’s eternal
election is the source and spring of all spiritual blessings, which provides and
secures them, and according to which they are bestowed, and with which they are
inseparably connected:
·
a royal priesthood—referring
to Exodus 19:6, where the Israelites are called a “kingdom of priests;” which
the Chaldee paraphrase renders, kings, priests, (see Rev. 1:6); a character
which one of the Jewish commentators says shall return to the Jews “in time to
come;” and well agrees with all the people of Christ, whether Jews or Gentiles,
who are all of them kings, through their relation to Christ; and at the present
time have a kingdom which cannot be moved, or taken away from them; being not
only brought into the Gospel dispensation, the kingdom of the Messiah, and
having a right to all the privileges and immunities of it, but have also the
kingdom of grace set up within them, or grace, as a reigning principle,
implanted in them; which lies not in anything external, but in righteousness and
true holiness, in inward peace, and spiritual joy; and they have the power of
kings over sin, Satan, and the world; and the riches of kings, being possessed
of the riches of grace now, and entitled to the riches of glory in another
world; they live like kings, they wear royal apparel, the robe of Christ’s
righteousness; they sit at the king’s table, and feed on royal dainties; and are
attended on as kings, angels being their life guards, and ministering spirits to
them; and hereafter they shall reign with Christ on earth, and that for the
space of a thousand years, and, after that, for ever: being raised up from a low
estate, to inherit the crown of glory, to wear the crown of life and
righteousness, and possess the kingdom prepared for them from the foundation of
the world, of which they are now heirs: and they are “priests,” as well as
kings; being made so by Christ, and through his priestly office; are anointed
with the Holy Ghost, and sanctified by his grace, and allowed to draw near to
God, and offer up by Christ their spiritual sacrifices of prayer and praise; and
are enabled and assisted to offer up the sacrifice of a broken heart, and their
bodies also, and even their lives when called to it; the allusion is to the
kingdom and priesthood being formerly together, and which met in Christ, (Zech.
6:13), and in his people. The Jews were wont to call the priestly dignity and
office, “the crown of the priesthood:”
·
an holy nation—referring
to the same place in Exodus 19:6 where the Israelites are so called, being
separated by God from other nations, and legally and externally sanctified by
him; as all the true Israel of God are sanctified, or set apart by God the
Father, in eternal election, to real and perfect holiness; and are sanctified or
cleansed from sin, by the blood and sacrifice of Christ; and are internally
sanctified by the Spirit of God; have principles of holiness wrought in them,
from whence they live holy lives and conversations:
·
a peculiar people—as
the Israelites are called a “peculiar treasure,” (Ex. 19:5), to which the
reference is: God’s elect are a peculiar people, to whom he bears a peculiar
love; they are chosen by him to be a special people above all others, and have
peculiar blessings bestowed on them, and peculiar care is taken of them; they
are the Lord’s, his treasure, his jewels, his portion and inheritance, and
therefore he will preserve and save them; they are a people for acquisition,
purchase, and possession, as the words may be rendered; whom God has obtained,
procured, and purchased for himself, with the precious blood of his Son; hence
the Syriac version renders them, “a redeemed company:” the same with the church
God has purchased with his blood, (Acts 20:28), and the purchased possession,
(Eph. 1:14), and which are redeemed and purified to be, and appear to be a
peculiar people, zealous of good works, (Titus 2:14), the end of all which grace
being bestowed upon them in election, redemption, and regeneration, is,
·
that ye should show forth the
praises of him—that is, God, who has
chosen them into a spiritual kindred and relation, made them kings and priests,
sanctified them by his Spirit, and redeemed them by his Son, as a peculiar
people; all which laid them under obligation to show forth with their lips, and
in their lives and conversations, his “virtues:” we read, “praises;” and so the
Syriac version; that is, the power, wisdom, goodness, love, grace, and mercy of
God, and the commendations of them, displayed in the above instances: the
apostle seems to have his eye on Isaiah 43:21, where the Septuagint use the same
word for “praise,” as here: next follows a periphrasis of God, and in it an
argument, or reason for speaking of his virtues, and showing forth his praise:
·
who hath called you out of darkness
into his marvellous light—which is to
be understood, not of an external call by the ministry of the word only; for
many are called in this sense, who are not chosen, redeemed, and sanctified; but
of an internal, special, powerful, holy, and heavenly calling, by the Spirit and
grace of God: and this is, “out of darkness;” out of the darkness of the law,
under the former dispensation, which was as night, in comparison of the Gospel
day; and out of that darkness which the Jews were particularly in, in and about
the coming of Christ, being ignorant of the righteousness of God, and the
spirituality of the law; having lost all right notions of the Messiah, and the
true sense of the Scriptures, and were carried away with the traditions of the
elders, and led by blind guides, the Scribes and Pharisees; out of this
darkness, as well as what is common to men, in a state of unregeneracy, having
no sight of themselves, their sin, and misery, nor knowledge of divine things,
of God in Christ, and of salvation by him, and of the work of the Spirit upon
the heart, they were called,
·
into his marvellous light—by
which they saw the exceeding sinfulness of sin, the insufficiency of their
righteousness, their need of Christ, and salvation by him; and astonishing it
was to them, that they who were born blind, and were brought up in darkness, and
were darkness itself, should be made light in the Lord; and the objects they saw
were amazing to them; everything in a spiritual way was marvelous in their eyes;
especially the sun of righteousness, the light of the world, and also the
wonderful things out of the law, or doctrine of Christ, the Gospel, and the
surprising love and grace of God, in the whole, and in the several parts of
their salvation: it was with them, as if a child, from the moment of its birth,
was shut up in a dungeon, where there was not the least crevice to let in the
least degree of light, and should continue here till at years of maturity, and
then be brought out at once, at noonday, the sun shining in its full strength
and glory, when that particularly, and all objects about him, must strike him
with wonder and surprise. The Syriac version renders it, “his most excellent
light;” the apostle seems to refer to the form of praise and thanksgiving used
by the Jews, at the time of the passover; who say, “we are bound to confess, to
praise, to glorify, &c. him who hath done for our fathers, and for us, all these
wonders; he hath brought us out of bondage to liberty; from sorrow to joy, and
from mourning to a good day, “and out of darkness into great light;” and from
subjection unto redemption.’’ This was also part of their morning prayer; “I
confess before thee, O my God, and the God of my fathers, that thou hast brought
me out of darkness into light.’’ And it is to be observed, that the third
Sephira, or number, in the Jewish Cabalistic tree, which answers to the third
Person in the Trinity, among other names, is called, “marvellous light.”
1 Peter 2:10—“Which in time past
were not a people, but are now the people of God: which had not obtained mercy,
but now have obtained mercy.”
·
Which in time were not a people—A
“Loammi” being put upon them, (see Hosea 1:9); to which the apostle here refers:
God’s elect, whether among Jews or Gentiles, were, from eternity, his chosen
people, and his covenant people; and, as such, were given to Christ, and they
became his people, and his care and charge; and he saved them by his obedience,
sufferings, and death, and redeemed them to himself, a peculiar people: but
then, before conversion, they are not a people formed by God for himself, and
his praise; nor Christ’s willing people, either to be saved by him, or to serve
him; nor are they, nor can they be truly known by themselves, or others, to be
the people of God: the Syriac version gives the true sense of the phrase, by
rendering it “these who before were not,” “reckoned or accounted a people;” that
is, by others:
·
but are now the people of God—being
regenerated, called, and sanctified, they are avouched by God to be his people;
they have the witness of the Spirit to their spirits, that they are the people
of God; they can then claim their relation to God, and are known, acknowledged,
and called the people of God, by others:
·
which had not obtained mercy, but
now have obtained mercy—being called
formerly, Loruhamah, Hosea 1:6 which passages the apostle has in view: before
conversion there is mercy in God’s heart towards his elect, and so there is in
the covenant of grace, and which was shown in the provision of his Son, as a
Saviour, in the mission of him, and redemption by him; but this is not
manifested to them, until they are begotten again, according to abundant mercy,
and then they obtain mercy; having in their regeneration an evident display of
the mercy of God towards them, and an application of his pardoning grace and
mercy, through the blood of his Son, unto them.
1
Peter 2:11—“Dearly beloved, I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims, abstain
from fleshly lusts, which war against the soul;”
·
Dearly beloved, I beseech you—The
apostle, from characters of the saints, and which express their blessings and
privileges, with great beauty, propriety, and pertinency, passes to exhortations
to duties; he addresses the saints under this affectionate appellation, “dearly
beloved,” to express his great love to them, and to show that what he was about
to exhort them to sprung from sincere and hearty affection for them, and was
with a view to their real good; nor does he in an authoritative way command, as
he might have done, as an apostle, but, as a friend, he entreats and beseeches
them:
·
as strangers and pilgrims—not
in a literal sense, though they were in a foreign country, in a strange land,
and sojourners there, but in a spiritual and mystical sense; they were
“strangers,” not to God and Christ, and to the Spirit, to themselves, to the
saints, and to all that is good, as they had formerly been, but to the world,
the men of it, and the things in it; and therefore it became them to separate
from it, and not conform to it; to abstain from all appearance of evil, to have
no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but to deny ungodliness and
worldly lusts: and they were “pilgrims;” whose habit is Christ and his
righteousness; whose food is Christ and his fullness; whose staff is Christ and
the promises; whose guide is the blessed Spirit; the place for which they are
bound is heaven, the better country, where is their Father’s house, their
friends, and their inheritance; this world not being their country, nor their
resting place, it became them to have their conversation in heaven, and to
·
abstain from fleshly lusts—which
spring from the flesh, and are concerned about fleshly things, and are exercised
in and by the members of the flesh, or body; hence, in the Syriac version, they
are called, “the lusts of the body:” these are to be abstained from; not that
the apostle thought that they could be without them; for while the saints are in
the body, flesh, or corrupt nature will be in them, and the lusts thereof; but
then these are not to be indulged, or provision to be made for them, to fulfill
them; they are not to be obeyed and served, or lived unto, but to be denied and
crucified, being unsuitable to the character of strangers and pilgrims, and also
because of their hurtful and pernicious nature:
·
which war against the soul—(see
Rom. 7:23), these are enemies to the spiritual peace, comfort, and welfare of
the soul; and being of a man’s household, and in his heart, are the worst
enemies he has; and are to be treated as such, to be shunned and avoided,
watched and guarded against; for though they cannot destroy the souls of true
believers, they may bring much leanness upon them, and greatly distress them,
and spoil them of their inward joy, and spiritual pleasure.
1
Peter 2:12—“Having your conversation honest among the Gentiles: that, whereas
they speak against you as evildoers, they may by your good works, which they
shall behold, glorify God in the day of visitation.”
·
Having your conversation honest
among the Gentiles—To have the
conversation honest, is to provide things honest in the sight of men; to live
and walk honestly before all; to do those things which are right and honest in
the sight of God, and among men; to order the conversation aright, according to
the law of God, which is a rule of walk and conversation, and as becomes the
Gospel of Christ; and which was the more, and rather to be attended to, because
these converted Jews were “among the Gentiles,” that knew not God; idolaters,
and unbelievers, profane sinners, who were watching for their halting, and that
they might take an advantage against them, and the Gospel, and the religion they
professed, from their conversations:
·
that whereas they speak against you
as evildoers—charging them with the
grossest immoralities, as the Heathens did the Christians in the first ages;
which appears evidently from the apologies of Tertullian, Justin Martyr, and
others; though it seems that the Jewish converts are here intended, who were
accused by the Gentiles of seditious principles and practices, and of acting
contrary to the laws of civil government, refusing to yield subjection to
Gentile magistrates, and obedience to Heathen masters; and hence the apostle, in
some following verses, enlarges on those duties, and which he exhorts them to
attend unto, that they might put to silence the ignorance of such foolish
accusers: and
·
that they may, by your good works
which they shall behold, glorify God in the day of visitation—or
“trial,” or “examination,” as the Syriac version renders it; which may be
understood either of human or divine visitation; if of the former, then the
sense is, let the saints attend to all the duties of civil life, that when
Heathen magistrates come to visit their several districts, and inquire and
examine into the conduct of men, and seeing and finding that the Christians
behave well and orderly, instead of persecuting them, they will bless God that
they are such good subjects; if of divine visitation, which seems most likely,
this must either design a visitation by way of judgment, or of mercy; for as the
Jews say there is “a visitation,” for good, and a visitation for evil: God
sometimes visits in a way of punishment for sin, and sometimes in away of grace,
for the good and welfare of men; and then the sense is, that when wicked men
take notice of and observe the good works of the saints, their civil, honest,
and orderly conversation, they shall glorify God on that account, who has
enabled them to perform them; and acknowledge the goodness of them, and the
wrong judgment they have passed upon them, and the ill measure they have
measured out to them; and this will be, either when God visits them in a way of
wrath, as at the day of judgment, or at the time of some temporal calamity
before, or when he visits them in a way of mercy, calls them by his grace, and
effectually works upon them by his Spirit: the same argument for the performance
of good works is used by Christ, in Matthew 5:16.
1
Peter 2:13—“Submit yourselves to every ordinance of man for the Lord’s sake:
whether it be to the king, as supreme;”
·
Submit yourselves to every
ordinance of man—Or, “to every human
creation,” or “creature;” not to “all the sons of men,” as the Syriac version
renders it; or to all the individuals of mankind; for there are some that are in
such stations and circumstances, that they are not to be submitted to, but to be
ruled over, and governed: so kings are not to submit to their subjects, nor are
parents to be subject to their children, nor husbands to their wives, nor
masters to their servants, which would be preposterous; but submission is
limited and restrained to persons in such a place and situation: “the human
creature,” or “creation,” here designs the Gentiles, who are elsewhere called
the creature, the whole creation, every creature, and every creature under
heaven, (Rom. 8:19), and particularly Heathen magistrates, styled creation, or
creature: not as men, for all men, as such, are creatures; but as magistrates,
being created, constituted, and appointed such, and installed into, and invested
with such an office: and “human;” not only because they were men, and were taken
out from among men that bore the office of magistrates, and governed over men,
and were for the good and advantage of mankind, but because they were created
and placed in such a station by men; though government itself is of God, is a
divine institution, yet this and that particular form of government is of man;
and especially the forms of government among the Gentiles were human; and are
here so called, in distinction from the form of government among the Jews, which
was a theocracy, and was divine; wherefore the Jews, and so these converted
ones, scrupled yielding obedience to Heathen magistrates; on which account they
were spoken against, as evildoers; hence the apostle, in the first place, and as
a principal part of their honest conversation among the Gentiles, exhorts them
to submission to civil magistrates, though they were creatures of men; and to
everyone of them, though a Gentile, an unbeliever, and a wicked man: and this he
urges,
·
for the Lord’s sake—for
the sake of Christ Jesus the Lord, because of his command, who ordered to give
to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s; and in imitation of him, who paid
tribute to whom tribute was due; and for the sake of his honor and glory, who
was ill thought and spoken of by the Gentiles, because of the disregard of the
converted Jews to their magistrates; and which served to prejudice them against
Christ and his Gospel: the Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and Ethiopic versions, read,
“for God’s sake;” because civil government is of God; magistracy is of divine
appointment; the powers that he are ordained of God, though this or the other
form is of man’s prescription: it is the command of God that magistrates should
be obeyed; and it makes for his glory, as well as for the good of men, when they
are submitted to in things that do not contradict the revealed will of God; for
otherwise, not man, but God, is to be obeyed:
·
whether it be to the king—to
Caesar, the Roman emperor; and the then reigning one seems to be Nero, who,
though a wicked man, was to be submitted to in things civil and lawful; and it
holds good of any other king that has the supreme government of a nation: the
Syriac version reads it in the plural number, “to kings;” and though the name of
king was odious to the Romans, from the times of Tarquin, nor did they call
their chief governor, or governors, by this name, yet other nations did, (see
John 19:15); and subjection was to be yielded to him, “as supreme;” for the
sake, and in consideration of his being in so high and exalted a station, having
the supreme power and government of the people in his hands. The Syriac version
renders it, “because of their power;” and the Arabic version, “because of his
power;” and the Ethiopic version, “because all things are his;” the Roman
emperors were absolute monarchs, (see Rom. 13:1).
1
Peter 2:14—“Or unto governors, as unto them that are sent by him for the
punishment of evildoers, and for the praise of them that do well.”
·
Or unto governors—Inferior
magistrates, such as were under the Roman emperor; as proconsuls, procurators,
&c. such as Pontius Pilate, Felix, and Festus, who had under the emperor the
government of particular nations, provinces, and cities:
·
as unto them that are sent by him;
either by the king, the Roman emperor, by whom they were sent, from whom they
received their commission, and derived their authority, under whom they acted,
and to whom they were accountable; or by God, by whom they are ordained, and
whose ministers they are, and for the ends hereafter mentioned; so that this
contains an argument or reason why they should be submitted to:
·
for the punishment of evildoers—the
breakers of the laws of God and men, on whom punishment is to be inflicted, by
the civil magistrates, for the breach of them, by lines, scourgings,
imprisonment, and death itself, according as the crimes are:
·
and for the praise of them that do
well—who behave according to the laws
of God and nations, and are obedient to magistrates, and subject to every
ordinance; these have praise of men, of magistrates, and are rewarded by them;
by protecting their persons, defending their properties, and preserving them in
the peaceable enjoyment of their estates and possessions, (see Rom. 13:3).
1
Peter 2:15—“For so is the will of God, that with well doing ye may put to
silence the ignorance of foolish men:”
·
For so is the will of God—Which
refers not so much to what goes before; though it is a truth, that it is the
will of God that men should be subject to magistrates, and that magistrates
should encourage virtue, and discourage vice, reward the obedient, and punish
delinquents; but to what follows:
·
that with well doing—by
doing good works, and those well; by living soberly, righteously, and godly; by
having the conversation honest among the Gentiles, agreeably to the law of God,
and as becomes the Gospel of Christ; particularly, by living according to the
laws of civil society, so far as is consistent with, and not contrary to the
commands of God; and by being subject to every civil magistrate, and ordinance
of man:
·
ye may put to silence the ignorance
of foolish men—or, as the Syriac
version renders it, “that ye may stop the mouths of those foolish men who know
not God;” or, as the Ethiopic version has it, “who know not these things;” who
are ignorant of God, of his righteousness, of his law, his Gospel, and
ordinances. The Gentiles were very ignorant of these things, and very foolish in
their imaginations about religious affairs; and from this their ignorance and
folly arose calumnies, reflections, and censures upon the people of God; they
neither knew God, nor them, nor true religion, and reproached what they
understood not, and for want of knowing it: now the apostle signified, that it
was the declared will of God that his people should so behave in civil life,
that their enemies should be entirely confounded, and silenced, and have nothing
to say against them; the word signifies to be muzzled, to have the mouth shut
up, as with a bit or bridle; it is used in Matthew 22:12.
1
Peter 2:16—“As free, and not using your liberty for a cloke of maliciousness,
but as the servants of God.”
·
As free—These
converted Jews might value themselves on their freedom, partly as the
descendants of Abraham, and so freeborn, and not to be brought into bondage to
other people; and chiefly because of their liberty which they had in and by
Christ Jews. The apostle allows that they were freemen, that they were Christ’s
freemen, were free from sin, its damning and domineering power, and from the
curses and condemnation of the law, and had freedom of access to God, and a
right to all the privileges and immunities of the house of God; but then they
were not free to sin, and to live in the contempt of the laws of God and men, to
despise government, speak evil of dignities, and break in upon the rules of
civil society:
·
and not using your liberty as a
cloak of maliciousness; under a
pretence of Christian liberty, to hurt the persons, properties, and estates of
men, without looking upon themselves accountable for their conduct to their
superiors: some think the apostle alludes to the ancient custom of servants,
who, when they were made free, walked with a cap, or covering on their heads, in
token of it: it follows,
·
[but] as the servants of God;
for they that are free are the servants of God and Christ, and show themselves
to be so by submitting to and obeying those that are under them, and ordained by
them; and which is no ways inconsistent with, and contrary to their Christian
liberty, which never was designed to thwart and subvert the principles of
natural religion, laws of a moral nature, or the rules of civil government; some
instances of which are next mentioned.
1
Peter 2:17—“Honour all men. Love the brotherhood. Fear God. Honour the king.”
·
Honour all men—To
whom honor is due, according to the place, station, and circumstances in which
they are, the gifts of providence and grace bestowed on them, and the usefulness
they are of, whether they be Jews or Gentiles, rich or poor, believers or
unbelievers: it is a saying of Ben Zoma, “who is to be honored, or is worthy of
honor? “he that honoureth creatures;” meaning men in general, or the Gentiles
particularly, who were sometimes so called by the Jews; [See Gill on Mark
16:15], and may be meant by “all men” here:
Gill’s supporting
notes for 1 Peter 2:17
[Gill
on Mark 16:15] And in this sense is the phrase used, in Romans 8:22 and 2
Peter 3:4. Now to these, Christ would have the Gospel preached, as well as to
the Jews; even to all, without any distinction of people, Jews and Gentiles,
Barbarians, Scythians, bond and free, male and female, rich and poor, greater or
lesser sinners, even to all mankind; than which, nothing was more provoking to
the Jews; who would, if they could, have revoked and made null this commission
of Christ, (see 1 Thess. 2:16). It was the Gospel he would have preached to
them, the word of peace and reconciliation, by his atoning sacrifice; the
doctrine of free and full pardon by his blood; and of justification by his
righteousness; and of complete salvation by him: even every doctrine relating to
his person, as God and man; to every office of his, as prophet, priest, and
king; to his incarnation, sufferings, and death, his resurrection, ascension,
session at the right hand of God, and intercession for his people, and second
coming to judgment; with every doctrine relating to the grace of God, of the
Father in election, and the covenant of peace, of the Son in redemption, and of
the Spirit in regeneration and sanctification: all which he would have published
and declared in the most free, plain, and open manner, with all boldness,
faithfulness, and constancy. A compendium and summary of which, is given in the
next words.
·
love the brotherhood—or
“your brethren,” as the Syriac version renders it: the whole company of the
brethren in Christ, who are born of God, are members of Christ, and of the same
body, and have the same spirit, belong to the same family, and are of the
household of faith, let them be of whatsoever nation, or in whatsoever
circumstances of life. The Jews had not that good opinion of, nor that affection
for the Gentiles, but were ready to treat them with indifference, neglect, and
contempt; and not only those that knew not God, but even believing Gentiles
themselves; and which is the reason of these exhortations, that they should
despise no man, but honor all; and especially should express their love, both by
words and deeds, to those that were in the same spiritual relation with them,
and that without any difference, on account of their being of another nation:
·
fear God—
not with a servile, but a filial fear, the new covenant grace of fear; which
springs from the goodness of God, has that for its object, and is increased by
the fresh instances and discoveries of it; and which shows itself in a
reverential affection for God, a strict regard to his worship and ordinances,
and a carefulness of offending him. This is placed between what goes before, and
follows after, to show the influence it has on each of them; for where the fear
of God is, there will be due respect shown to all men, more or less, and an
hearty and affectionate love to all the saints, as brethren, and a proper regard
to those that are set in high places of dignity and power:
·
honour the king—Caesar,
the Roman emperor, though a wicked, persecuting Nero, and so any other king or
governor; who, so far as he acts the part of a civil magistrate, preserves the
peace, the property, and liberty of his subjects, is a terror to evil works, and
an encourager of good ones, and rules according to the laws of God, and civil
society, is deserving of great honor and esteem from men; and which is to be
shown by speaking well of him; by a cheerful subjection to him; by an observance
of the laws, and by payment of tribute, and doing everything to make him easy,
and honorable in his government: advice much like this is given by Isocrates;
“fear God, honor parents, revere friends, and obey the laws.’’
1
Peter 2:18—“Servants, be subject to your masters with all fear; not only to the
good and gentle, but also to the froward.”
·
Servants, be subject to your
masters—This was another notion of
the Jews, that because they were the seed of Abraham, they ought not to be the
servants of any; and particularly such as were believers in Christ thought they
ought not to serve unbelieving masters, nor indeed believing ones, because they
were equally brethren in Christ with them; hence the Apostle Peter, here, as the
Apostle Paul frequently elsewhere, inculcates this duty of servants to their
masters, (see 1 Cor. 7:20 2 Tim. 2:9); the manner in which they are to be
subject to them is,
·
with all fear—with
reverence to their persons, strict regard to their commands, faithfulness in any
trust reposed in them, diligence in the discharge of their duty, and carefulness
of offending them: and all this,
·
not only to the good and gentle—those
that are good natured, kind, beneficent, and merciful; that do not use them with
rigor and severity; are moderate in their demands of service; require no more to
be done than what is reasonable; allow them sufficient diet, give them good
wages, and pay them duly:
·
but also to the froward—the
ill natured, morose, and rigorous; who exact more labor than is requisite; give
hard words, and harder blows; withhold sufficiency of food from them, and keep
back the hire of their labors.
1
Peter 2:19—“For this is thankworthy, if a man for conscience toward God endure
grief, suffering wrongfully.”
·
For this is thankworthy—Or
“grace;” this is a fruit and effect of grace, an instance of it, in which it
shows itself: the Syriac version adds, “with God;” and so it is read in one of
Beza’s copies, and in the Alexandrian copy, and some others; that is, this is
grateful to God, and acceptable with him; as in 1 Peter 2:20.
·
if a man for conscience towards God—or,
“for a good conscience,” as the Syriac version reads it; for acting according to
his conscience, in matters of religion, in the things of God; “for the knowledge
of God,” as the Arabic version renders it; for the knowledge of God in Christ;
for the Gospel of Christ, and a profession of it: or, “for God,” as the Ethiopic
version; for the cause of God and truth, and for the sake of things appertaining
to God, and that make for his glory:
·
endure grief—what
occasions grief, as severe words, bitter reproaches, hard censures, and heavy
blows; and that with patience, and without murmuring, and with resignation to
the will of God:
·
suffering wrongfully—there
being no just cause for an ill look, word, or blow, to be given.
1
Peter 2:20—“For what glory is it, if, when ye be buffeted for your faults, ye
shall take it patiently? but if, when ye do well, and suffer for it, ye take it
patiently, this is acceptable with God.”
·
For what glory is it, if, when ye
be buffeted for your faults—Which ye
have committed, and are guilty of, and are truly such:
·
ye shall take it patiently?
—to be silent, and not murmur when beaten, within measure, for real faults, is
no great honor, nor does it deserve any praise; it is the least that can be
done:
·
but if, when ye do well—either
in their master’s service, or rather in the business of religion, and the things
of God; as when what they do is according to the will of God, and from love to
him, and in faith, and in the name and strength of Christ, and to the glory of
God; without all which there is no well doing:
·
and suffer for it—reproach
and persecution, by words or blows, in person or property:
·
ye take it patiently—without
grieving and repining, or answering again, and making any returns:
·
this is acceptable with God—is
agreeably to his will, and grateful in his sight, what he is well pleased with,
is reckoned grace with him; and though it is his own grace, and of his own
bestowing, he will reward it with glory.
1
Peter 2:21—“For even hereunto were ye called: because Christ also suffered for
us, leaving us an example, that ye should follow his steps:”
·
For even hereunto were ye called—Both
to well doing, of which none but those who are called with an holy and effectual
calling are capable; and which they are fitted for, and are under obligation to
perform, and to suffer for so doing, which they must always expect, and to
patience in suffering for it, which highly becomes them. This being then one end
of the saints’ effectual calling, is made use of as an argument to engage them
to the exercise of the grace of patience in suffering for well doing; and
another follows:
·
because Christ also suffered for us—in
our room and stead, to fulfill the law, satisfy the justice of God, and make
reconciliation for sin; and not only for our good, or merely as a martyr, to
confirm the truth of his doctrine, or barely as an example to us, though this
also is true: the Alexandrian copy, and some others, read, “for you;” for you
servants, as well as others, and therefore should cheerfully and patiently
suffer for the sake of Christ, and his Gospel; and the rather, because he
suffered,
·
leaving us,
or “you,” as the same copies, and the Vulgate Latin version read,
·
an example that ye should follow
his steps—Christ is an example to his
people in the exercise of grace, as of faith, love, zeal, meekness, and
humility; and in the discharge of duty, in his regard to the commands of the
moral law, and positive institutions of religion; in his constancy in prayer; in
frequent attendance on public worship; in his submission to the ordinance of
baptism, and his celebration of the supper; and likewise in his sufferings; and
in his meekness, patience, courage, and resignation to the will of God, which is
what is here intended, and in which his people are to fellow and imitate him.
1
Peter 2:22—“Who did no sin, neither was guile found in his mouth:”
·
Who did no sin—He
was in the likeness of sinful flesh; he looked like a sinful man, being born of
a sinful woman, and keeping company with sinful men, being himself a man of
sorrows, greatly afflicted, and at last put to death. He was traduced as a
sinner by his enemies, and had all the sins of his people on him, which he bore,
and made satisfaction for, and were the reason of his sufferings; but he had no
sin in his nature, nor did he commit any in his life:
·
neither was guile found in his
mouth—though it was diligently sought
for, by the Scribes and Pharisees; there was no deceit in his lips, no falsehood
in his doctrine, any more than there was immorality in his conversation; he was
an Israelite indeed on all accounts, and in the fullest sense of that phrase;
reference is had to Isaiah 53:9 and this is observed, partly to show that Christ
suffered not for himself, or for any sins of his own, but for the sins of
others, for which he was very fit, since he had none of his own; and partly as
an argument for patience in suffering; for since Christ suffered, who had no
sin, nor did any, nor could any be found in him, charged upon him, and proved
against him; and which sufferings of his he bore with patience; then how much
must it become sinful men to bear their sufferings patiently, though they may
not be criminal with respect to the things for which they suffer, but yet are so
in other things, whereas Christ was not criminal, nor blameworthy in anything?
1
Peter 2:23—“Who, when he was reviled, reviled not again; when he suffered, he
threatened not; but committed himself to him that judgeth righteously:”
·
Who when he was reviled, reviled
not again—When he was reproached as a
glutton, a winebibber, a friend of publicans and sinners, all the reply he made
was, that Wisdom is justified of her children; and when he was charged with
casting out devils by Beelzebub, the prince of devils, he defended himself, not
with bad language, but with strong reasonings; and when he was said to be a
Samaritan, and had a devil, his only answer was, that he had not, that he
honored his Father, and they dishonored him; and when he was reviled on the
cross, by those that passed by, by the chief priests, and Scribes, and the
thieves that were crucified with him, he made no return, he opened not his
mouth, and much less in a recriminating way.
·
When he suffered he threatened not—when
he endured buffetings, and scourgings in his body, when the officers in the
palace of the high priests spit in his face, buffeted him, and smote him with
the palms of their hands, and bid him prophesy who smote him, all which were
very provoking; yet he said not one word to them, much less threatened them with
what he would do to them for such usage another day, when he would let them
know, with vengeance, who it was that smote him; no, he took all patiently from
them, and from Pilate, and the Roman soldiers, when scourged by them; he gave
his back to the smiters, and his cheeks to them that plucked off the hair; and
when he suffered crucifixion, and was put to such distressing pains and agonies,
he did not threaten his crucifiers with a future judgment, when he would take
vengeance, and execute his wrath upon them, but prays to his Father for the
forgiveness of their sins: and, as it follows;
·
but committed [himself] to him that
judgeth righteously—he commended his
Spirit, or soul, to God his Father, and committed his cause to him, to vindicate
it in what way he should think fit, who he knew was the Judge of all the earth,
that would do right; and so the Syriac version supplies it with “his judgment:”
which he left with God, the righteous Judge, to whom vengeance belongs; and
which is an example, and an instruction to the saints to do so likewise; not to
render railing for railing, or to seek revenge, but to leave their cause with
their God, who will, in his own time, avenge the wrongs and injuries done them.
The Vulgate Latin version reads, contrary to all the Greek copies, and other
versions, “but delivered himself to him that judgeth unjustly;” the sense of
which is, that Christ delivered himself into the hands of Pilate, who unjustly
condemned him to death; but is neither the reading, nor sense of the text.
1
Peter 2:24—“Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree, that we,
being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness: by whose stripes ye were
healed.”
·
Who his own self bare our sins—As
was typified by the high priest bearing the sins of the holy things of the
people of Israel, when he went into the most holy place, and by the scape goat
bearing the iniquities of all the people unto a land not inhabited, and as was
foretold by the Prophet Isaiah. The apostle here explains the nature and end of
Christ’s sufferings, which were to make atonement for sins, and which was done
by bearing them. What Christ bore were “sins,” even all sorts of sin, original
and actual, and every act of sin of his people; and all that is in sin, all that
belongs to it, arises from it, and is the demerit of it, as both filth, guilt,
and punishment; and a multitude of sins did he bear, even all the iniquities of
all the elect; and a prodigious load and weight it was; and than which nothing
could be more nauseous and disagreeable to him, who loves righteousness, and
hates iniquity: and these sins he bore were not his own, nor the sins of angels,
but of men; and not of all men, yet of many, even as many as were ordained to
eternal life, for whom Christ gave his life a ransom, whom he justifies and
brings to glory; our sins, not the sins of the Jews only, for Peter was a Jew,
and so were those to whom he writes, but of the Gentiles also, even the sins of
all his people, for them he saves from their sins, being stricken for them. His
“bearing” them was in this manner: he becoming the surety and substitute of his
people, their sins were laid upon him by his Father, that is, they were imputed
to him, they were reckoned as his, and placed to his account; and Christ
voluntarily took them upon himself; he took them to himself, as one may take the
debt of another, and make himself answerable for it; or as a man takes up a
burden, and lays it on his shoulders; so Christ took up our sins, and “carried”
them “up,” as the word here used signifies, alluding to the priests carrying up
the sacrifice to the altar, and referring to the lifting up of Christ upon the
cross; whither he carried the sins of his people, and bore them, and did not
sink under the weight of them, being the mighty God, and the man of God’s right
hand, made strong for himself; and so made entire satisfaction for them, by
enduring the wrath of God, the curse of the law, and all that punishment which
was due unto them; and thereby bore them away, both from his people, and out of
the sight of God, and his vindictive justice; and removed them as far as the
east is from the west, and made a full end of them; and this he himself did, and
not another, nor by another, or with the help of another; not by the means of a
goat, as the high priest, but by himself; though he was assisted in bearing his
cross, yet he had no help in bearing our sins; angels could not help him; his
Father stood at a distance from him; there was none to help; his own arm brought
salvation to him; but his own self, who knew no sin, nor did any, he by himself
purged away our sins, and made reconciliation for them, by bearing them: and
which he did
·
in his own body—and
not another’s; in that body which his Father prepared for him, and which he took
of the virgin, and was free from sin; though not to the exclusion of his soul,
which also was made an offering for sin, and in which he endured great pains and
sorrows for sin: and all this
·
on the tree—the
accursed tree, the cross; which is expressive both of the shame and pain of his
sufferings and death. The end of which was,
·
that we being dead to sin—”to
our sins,” as the Alexandrian copy, and the Ethiopic version read; as all the
elect are, through bearing their sins, and suffering death for them, so as that
sin shall not be imputed to them; it is as though it never was; it is dead to
them, and they to that, as to its damning power and influence; so as that they
are entirely discharged from it, and can never come into condemnation on account
of it, and can never be hurt, so as to be destroyed by it; nor by death, either
corporeal or eternal, since the sting of death, which is sin, is taken away, and
the strength of sin, which is the law, is dead to them, and they to that: in
short, through the death of Christ they are so dead to sin, that it is not only
finished, made an end of, and put away, but the body of it is destroyed, that it
should not be served; which is an end subordinate to the former, and expressed
in the next clause:
·
should live unto righteousness;
live, and not die the second death, and live by faith on the righteousness of
Christ, for justification of life, and soberly, righteously, and godly in this
present evil world; which the grace of God teaches, and the love of Christ in
bearing sin constrains to, and the redemption by his precious blood lays under
an obligation to do; for those whose sins Christ has bore are not their own, but
being bought with the price of his blood, they are bound to live to him who has
a property in them, and a right to claim all obedience from them:
·
by whose stripes ye were healed;
the passage referred to is in Isaiah 53:5 which is a prophecy of the Messiah, as
is acknowledged by the Jews, who say, “this is the King Messiah, who was in the
generation of the ungodly, as it is said, (Isa. 53:5), “and with his stripes we
are healed;” and for this cause God saved him, that he might save Israel, and
rejoice with them in the resurrection of the dead.’’ Sin is a disease, a natural
and hereditary one, an epidemic distemper, that reaches to all men, and to all
the powers and faculties of their souls, and members of their bodies; and which
is nauseous and loathsome, and in itself mortal and incurable; nor can it be
healed by any creature, or anything that a creature can do. Christ is the only
physician, and his blood the balm and sovereign medicine; this cleanses from all
sin; through it is the remission of sin, which is meant by healing; for healing
of diseases, and forgiving iniquities, is one and the same thing; see Psalm
103:3 on which latter text a learned Jew has this note, “this interpreters
explain ‘as expressive of forgiveness;’’’ and the Jews say, there is no healing
of diseases but it signifies forgiveness: it is an uncommon way of healing by
the stripes of another. Some think the apostle alludes to the stripes which
servants receive from their masters, to whom he was now speaking; and in order
to encourage them to bear them patiently, observes, that Christ himself suffered
stripes, and that they had healing for their diseases and wounds, by means of
his stripes, or through his being wounded and bruised for them.
1
Peter 2:25—“For ye were as sheep going astray; but are now returned unto the
Shepherd and Bishop of your souls.”
·
For ye were as sheep going astray—This
is a proof of their being healed, namely, their conversion; in which an
application of the blood of Christ, and pardon, and so healing by it, was made
to their souls. The apostle has still in view the prophecy of Isaiah 53:6. God’s
elect are sheep before conversion; not that they have the agreeable properties
of sheep, as to be meek, harmless, innocent, clean, and profitable, for they are
the reverse of all this; nor can some things be said of them before conversion,
as may be after, as that they hear Christ’s voice, and follow him; nor are they
so called, because unprejudiced against, and predisposed unto the Gospel, for
the contrary is true of them; but they are so in electing grace, and were so
considered in the Father’s gift of them to Christ, and when made his care and
charge, and hence they are called the sheep of his hand; and when Christ laid
down his life, and rose again, which he did for the sheep, and as the great
Shepherd of them; and when called by grace, for their being sheep, and Christ’s
own sheep by the Father’s gift, and his own purpose, is the reason why he looks
them up, calls them by name, and returns them: but then they are not yet of his
fold; they are lost sheep, lost in Adam, and by his fall, and by their own
actual transgressions; they are as sheep going astray from the shepherd, and
from the flock, going out of the right way, and in their own ways; and are, like
sheep, stupid and insensible of their danger; and as they never return of
themselves, until they are sought for, and brought back: hence it follows,
·
but are now returned—not
returned themselves, but were returned by powerful and efficacious grace: saints
are passive, and not active in first conversion; they are turned, not by the
power of their own free will, but by the power of God’s free grace; they are
returned under the illuminations and quickenings of the blessed Spirit, and
through the efficacious drawings of the Father’s love, unto Christ:
·
unto the Shepherd and Bishop of
your souls—by whom Christ is meant,
who bears the office of a Shepherd, and fully performs it by feeding his sheep,
providing a good fold and pasture for them; by gathering the lambs in his arms,
and gently leading those that are with young; by healing their diseases, and
preserving them from beasts of prey; hence he is called the good, the great, and
chief Shepherd: and he is the “Bishop” or “Overseer” of the souls of his people,
though not to the exclusion of their bodies: he has took the oversight of them
willingly, and looks well to his flock, inspects into their cases, and often
visits them, and never forsakes them; nor will he leave them till they receive
the end of their faith, the salvation of their souls; which he has undertook and
effected by his obedience, sufferings and death. Philo the Jew observes, that
“to be a shepherd is so good a work, that it is not only a title given to kings
and wise men, and souls perfectly purified, but to God the governor of all—who,
as a Shepherd and King, leads according to justice and law, setting over them
his right Logos, “the first begotten Son,” who has taken the care of this holy
flock, as does the deputy of a great king.
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