1 Peter 4:1-19
1 Peter 4:1—“Forasmuch then as
Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves likewise with the
same mind: for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin;”
·
Forasmuch then
as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh—The
apostle having finished his digression concerning Christ’s preaching in the
ministry of Noah, to men whose spirits were now in prison, and concerning the
salvation of Noah’s family in the ark, by water, and concerning its antitype,
baptism, its nature and effect, returns to the sufferings of Christ he had
before made mention of; and argues from thence to holiness of life, and
patience in sufferings, after this manner; seeing then Christ, the eternal Son
of God, the Lord of glory, the holy and Just One, suffered such indignities,
reproaches, and persecutions from men, the wrath of God, the curses of the
law, and death itself; and that not for himself, nor for angels, but for men,
and those not all men, otherwise his death, with respect to some, must be in
vain; but for a particular number of men, in distinction from others,
described in the beginning of this epistle, as elect, according to the
foreknowledge of God; and these sufferings he endured in the room and stead of
those persons, in the days of his flesh, while here on earth, and in his human
nature, both soul and body, and was crucified through the weakness of his
flesh, and for the sins of our flesh, and which he bore in his own:
·
arm yourselves
likewise with the same mind—that
was in Christ; as he suffered for you, do ye likewise suffer for him, in his
cause, for righteousness sake, for the sake of him and his Gospel; and bear
all reproaches, afflictions, and persecutions on his account, willingly and
cheerfully, with meekness and patience, as he did, and with the same view; not
indeed to make satisfaction for sin, which was his principal design, but that
being dead unto sin, you might live unto righteousness. The apostle speaks to
the saints, in this exhortation, as to soldiers, and who had many enemies to
engage with, and therefore should put on their armor, and be in a readiness to
meet any attack upon them:
·
for he that hath
suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin—meaning
either Christ, who having suffered in human nature for the sins of his people,
whereby he has made satisfaction for them, is now clear of them; the sins that
were imputed to him being took and bore away, finished and made an end of, and
he justified from them, and freed from all the effects of them, and punishment
for them, as from all the infirmities of human nature, from mortality and
death: or the person that has suffered in and with Christ, his head and
representative, which is all one as if he had suffered himself, in person; by
virtue of which his sin ceases, and he ceases from being chargeable with it,
as if he had never sinned; which is the case of every criminal, when he has
suffered the penalty of the law for his crime: or else the person that is dead
to sin, by virtue of the death of Christ, and, in imitation of it, who has
been baptized into Christ’s death, and planted in the likeness of it; whose
old man is crucified with Christ, and he is dead with him; who has crucified
the affections with the lusts, and through the Spirit has mortified the deeds
of the body; which way the generality of interpreters go: such a man has
ceased from sin; not from the being and indwelling of it in him; nor from the
burden of it on him; nor from a continual war with it in him; nor from slips
and falls by it, and into it; no, nor from it in the most solemn and religious
services; but as from the guilt of it, and obligation to punishment by it,
through the death of Christ; so from the servitude and dominion of it, through
the power of divine grace, in consequence of Christ’s death: or rather, the
believer that suffers death in his body, for the sake of Christ, such an one
immediately ceases from the very being of sin, and all commission of it; he
becomes at once perfectly pure and holy, without spot or wrinkle, or any such
thing; and a noble argument this is to meet death without fear, and to suffer
it cheerfully and willingly, since the consequence of this will be an entire
freedom from sin, than which nothing can be more desirable by a believer: to
this agrees the Syriac version, which renders the words thus: “for whoever is
dead in his body hath ceased from all sins;” but the Arabic version more fully
confirms this sense, and is the best version of the text, and is this; “be ye
armed with this (same) thought, that (not for) he that hath suffered in the
flesh hath ceased from sin;” that is, fortify your minds against all the fears
of sufferings, and of death, for the sake of Christ, with this single thought;
that he that has suffered martyrdom for Christ, in his body, or has suffered
death for his sake, or dies in the Lord, is free from sin, and so from sorrow,
and is the most happy person imaginable; so that this last clause is not a
reason of the former, but points out, and is explanative of what that same
mind or thought is Christians should arm themselves with, against the fears of
death; and it is the best piece of armor for this service, a saint can make
use of.
1 Peter 4:2—“That he no longer
should live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men, but to the
will of God.”
·
That he no
longer should live—The Arabic
version reads, “that ye no longer should live.” This expresses the end of
being armed with the above thought, that a suffering saint after death is
clear of sin; and the use that is to be made of it in the present time of
life, and the remainder of it, that such a person who so thinks, and is thus
guarded and fortified against the fears of death, should no more, or any
longer live,
·
the rest of
[his] time in the flesh, to the lusts of men, but to the will of God—the
phrase, “his time in the flesh,” means the present time of life, in the body,
and is the same with those phrases, in the days of his flesh, to abide in the
flesh, and be at home in the body; and the words of the text suppose the
former part of this time to have been spent in sinful lusts and pleasures, as
the former part of the time of God’s elect, even that before conversion, is;
and that the remaining part of it, be it longer or shorter, ought to be spent
otherwise: “not to the lusts of men;” of wicked and unregenerate men,
unconverted Gentiles; which they are addicted to, immersed in, and serve; and
which they are desirous others should live in; and which are sometimes called
divers worldly and fleshly lusts; and are foolish, and hurtful, and deceitful,
and drown men in perdition, and therefore not to be lived unto: “but to the
will of God;” revealed in his word, and which is good, acceptable, and
perfect; one part of which is sanctification, holiness of heart, life, and
conversation, as also patient suffering all reproach, injury, and persecution,
for the sake of the Gospel; to live soberly, righteously, and godly, to study
to exercise a conscience void of offence towards God and men, and to suffer
patiently for his name’s sake, is to live to the will of God; and nothing more
strongly should engage to this than the consideration of a sinless life after
death; (see 2 Pet. 3:11). The lusts of men, and the will of God, being opposed
to each other, shows that the nature of man is sadly corrupted, and is
opposite to God; and that the will of man is depraved, and that the desires of
it are not to that which is good, but are contrary to the will of God.
1 Peter 4:3—“For the time past of
our life may suffice us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles, when we
walked in lasciviousness, lusts, excess of wine, revellings, banquetings, and
abominable idolatries:”
·
For the time
past of our life may suffice us—The
word “our” is left out in the Alexandrian copy, and in the Vulgate Latin and
Syriac versions. The Arabic version reads, “the time of your past life;” and
to the same purpose the Ethiopic version; and which seems to be the more
agreeable reading, since it can hardly be thought that the apostle would put
himself among the Jews dispersed among the Gentiles, who had walked with them
in their unregeneracy, in all the sins hereafter mentioned, and best agrees
with the following verse:
·
to have wrought
the will of the Gentiles—or “when
ye wrought,” as the Syriac, Arabic, and Ethiopic versions;
·
when we walked,
or “were walking in lasciviousness, lusts, excess of wine, revellings,
banquetings, and abominable idolatries”
— These converted persons, in the past time of their life, before conversion,
“walked” in sin; which denotes a series and course of sinning, a persisting
and progress in it, with delight and pleasure, promising themselves security
and impunity: the particular sins they walked in are reducible to these three
heads, unchastity, intemperance, and idolatry:
·
in
lasciviousness, lusts—which belong
to the head of uncleanness, and take in all kinds of it; as fornication,
adultery, incest, sodomy, and all unnatural lusts:
·
excess of wine,
revellings, banquetings— which
refer to intemperance of every sort, by eating or drinking: as gluttony,
drunkenness, surfeitings, and all luxurious feasts and entertainments,
attended with riotings, revellings, and obscene songs; and which are here
mentioned in the Syriac and Arabic versions, and which lead to lasciviousness,
and every unclean lust:
·
and abominable
idolatries—which some understand of
worshipping of angels; but they seem rather to intend the idolatries the Jews
were led into by the feasts of the Gentiles, either at their own houses, or in
the idol’s temple; by which means they were gradually brought to idolatry, and
to all the wickedness and abominations committed by them at such times: and it
is easy to observe, that the two former, uncleanness and intemperance, often
lead men into idolatry; (see Ex. 32:6). Now when they walked in these things,
they “wrought the will of the Gentiles;” they did the things which the sinners
of the Gentiles, the worst of men, that knew not God, took pleasure in, and
what they would have others do; and therefore, since the past time of their
life had been spent in such a way, it was sufficient, and more than
sufficient; (see Ezek. 44:6), for no time is allowable for sin; and therefore
it became them for the future, and in the remaining part of life, to behave in
another manner; not to do the will of the Gentiles, but the will of God; to
which that grace of God obliged them, that had made a difference between what
they were themselves formerly, and themselves now, and between themselves, and
others.
1 Peter 4:4—“Wherein they think it
strange that ye run not with them to the same excess of riot, speaking evil of
you:”
·
Wherein they
think it strange—Here the apostle
points out what the saints must expect from the men of the world, by living a
different life; and he chooses to mention it, to prevent discouragements, and
that they might not be uneasy and distressed when they observed it; as that
they would wonder at the change in their conversations, and look on it as
something unusual, new, and unheard of, and treat them as strangers, yea, as
enemies, on account of it:
·
that you run not
with them into the same excess of riot—to
their luxurious entertainments, their Bacchanalian (drunken and carousing)
feasts, and that profusion of lasciviousness, luxury, intemperance, and
wickedness of all sorts, which, with so much eagerness of mind, and bodily
haste, they rushed into; being amazed that they should not have the same taste
for these things as before, and as themselves now had; and wondering how it
was possible for them to abstain from them, and what that should be that
should give them a different cast of mind, and turn of action:
·
speaking evil of
you—and so the Syriac and Arabic
versions supply “you” as we do; but in the Greek text it is only, “speaking
evil of, or blaspheming;” God, Christ, religion, the Gospel, and the truths of
it, and all good men; hating them because different from them, and because
their lives reprove and condemn them; charging them with incivility,
unsociableness, preciseness, and hypocrisy.
1 Peter 4:5—“Who shall give
account to him that is ready to judge the quick and the dead.”
·
Who shall give
account to him—“To God himself,” as
the Syriac version reads; of all their blasphemies, and hard speeches spoken
by them against God, Christ, the Gospel, and good men, and receive their just
punishment. This the apostle says, to calm the minds of God’s people, and make
them to sit easy under all censures, reproaches, and calumnies, and not think
of avenging themselves, but commit themselves to him that will judge
righteously; even to him,
·
that is ready to
judge the quick and the dead—that
is, all men, such as will be found alive when he comes, and those that have
died before, who will then be raised from the dead, to receive their judgment;
and by whom is meant the Lord Jesus Christ, to whom all judgment is committed;
and who is ordained to be the Judge of quick and dead, and will judge both at
his appearing and kingdom; yea, the day is appointed when this judgment will
proceed by him, and he is at the door; so that he may be truly said to be
ready for it, as he is every way equal to it, and will finish it with
righteousness.
1 Peter 4:6—“For for this cause
was the gospel preached also to them that are dead, that they might be judged
according to men in the flesh, but live according to God in the spirit.”
·
For, for this
cause was the Gospel preached also—Not
for what goes before, because Christ was ready to judge quick and dead; and
because wicked men must give an account to him, and therefore the Gospel is
preached to them also, that they may be left without excuse; but for what
follows, and which does not so much design the reason of the preaching of it,
as the event consequential upon it. By the Gospel is meant the good news of
the incarnation, sufferings, and death of Christ, and salvation by him: and
includes all the doctrines of grace, as of pardon, righteousness, and eternal
life; and by its being “preached” is meant the publishing of it openly,
freely, and boldly, with faithfulness and consistence: the persons to whom it
was preached are
·
to them that are
dead—not in a figurative sense,
dead in trespasses and sins; though this is the case of all mankind, and of
God’s elect, in a state of nature, whether Jews or Gentiles; and the Gospel is
preached to such, as it is ordered to be preached to all nations, to every
creature, and is the means of quickening dead sinners; and this follows upon
it, that such as receive it are judged and condemned by men, and live
spiritually here, according to the will of God, and an eternal life hereafter;
but the word “dead” is used in the same sense as in the preceding verse, where
it manifestly signifies such who had been alive, but were now dead in a
natural sense, whom Christ would judge as well as those that will be found
alive when he comes; wherefore the Gospel has been preached also to them that
are already dead, as well as to those who are now alive. And by these are
meant, not the dead, whose souls are in hell, for to them, there, the Gospel
never was, nor never will be preached, nor they saved, as Origen, and his
followers, have vainly thought: nor the deceased patriarchs, before the coming
of Christ, whose souls, by the Papists, are said to be in “Limbus,” whither
Christ, they say, went upon his death, and preached to them, and delivered
them; but these never were in any such place, but in peace and rest; nor did
Christ, in his human soul, descend thither, but went to paradise: nor the dead
in general, before the apostle’s writing of this epistle; for though the
Gospel had been preached from the beginning, from the fall of Adam, to certain
persons, and at certain periods of time, yet not to all the individuals of
mankind who were then dead, especially in the Gentile world; nor the Old
Testament saints in general, who were now dead, though they had the Gospel
preached to them in types and figures, in promises and prophesies; nor the men
in the times of Noah, to whom the Gospel was preached by him, and who, some of
them, as supposed, though they were judged and punished in their bodies in the
view of men, being drowned in the waters of the flood, yet repenting and
believing, upon Noah’s preaching to them, they live in their spirits in
eternal life, according to the free mercy and grace of God; but though the
Gospel was preached to them, yet they remained disobedient to it, even all of
them, but Noah’s family, for anything that appears; and are styled the world
of the ungodly, and are now spirits in the prison of hell, and therefore
cannot be said to live according to God in the Spirit: but such are intended,
to whom the Gospel had been preached, and to whom it had been effectual unto
salvation; who had received it in the love of it, had sincerely professed it,
and had suffered for it even death itself; such are designed who had suffered
in the flesh, or were dead in their bodies, (1 Pet. 4:1), who either were dead
in the Lord, or especially had suffered death for his sake, as Stephen and
others: and this, with what follows, is mentioned with a general view to
encourage the saints to patient suffering for Christ; to fortify them against
the ill opinion and judgment the world have formed of them; and to assure
them, that Christ will judge his people, both quick and dead, and avenge their
cause, since the Gospel has been preached to one as well as to another, and
attended with the same power: the effect and consequence of which is,
·
that they might
be judged according to men in the flesh—
meaning, either that such persons that receive and profess the Gospel, and
suffer for it, are judged according to the judgment of men that are in the
flesh, in an unregenerate estate, that is, carnal men, to be a strange and
unaccountable sort of people, as in 1 Peter 4:4 to receive such a strange set
of notions, so strenuously to contend for them, and so constantly to abide by
them, and to debar themselves of so many pleasures of life, and expose
themselves to so much reproach and shame, to such dangers, and even to death
itself: while they are judged to be by these men enthusiasts, madmen and
fools; and at other times to be knaves and villains, hypocrites and deceivers;
and this is the common effect of the Gospel being preached and coming with
power to any, (see 1 Cor. 4:3); or the sense is, that such persons, according
to men, or in their apprehensions, are judged of God, or have the judgments of
God inflicted on them in their flesh, in their bodies, for some sins of
theirs; and therefore they suffer what they do in the flesh, vengeance
pursuing them; being ignorant that when they are judged, as they reckon it,
they are only chastened by the Lord in a fatherly way, that they might not be
eternally condemned with the world, (1 Cor. 11:32), or else to complete the
sense, for all may be taken into it, these persons, who were formerly alive,
but now dead, and had embraced and professed the Gospel preached to them, were
judged and condemned, and put to death in the flesh, according to the will of
wicked men, and which was all that they were capable of; but though this was
their case, though they were thus judged, censured, and condemned, yet
·
live according
to God in the Spirit—while they
were here on earth, the Gospel preached to them had such an effect upon them,
as to cause them to live spiritually, to live by faith on Christ, to live a
life of holiness from him, and communion with him, and to live according to
the will of God, in righteousness and true holiness; and now, though dead in
their bodies, they live in their spirits or souls an eternal life of comfort,
peace, pleasure, and happiness with God, according to his eternal purpose,
unchangeable covenant, promise, grace, and love.
1 Peter 4:7—“But the end of all
things is at hand: be ye therefore sober, and watch unto prayer.”
·
But the end of
all things is at hand—With respect
to particular persons, the end of life, and which is the end of all things in
this world to a man, is near at hand; which is but as an hand’s breadth,
passes away like a tale that is told, and is but as a vapor which appears for
a while, and then vanishes away. Or this may be said with regard to the Jews,
the end of their church and civil state was near at hand, of their sacrifices,
temple, city, and nation; or with respect to the whole universe, to the scheme
and fashion of this world, which will soon be gone, though the substance will
abide; when the heavens shall pass away, and the earth and all therein will be
burnt up; when there will be an end of all the purposes and promises of God
respecting the present state of things concerning his church and people, and
of the judgments of God upon his enemies here; when the man of sin will be
destroyed, and the wickedness of the wicked will be come to an end, and the
sorrows, afflictions, and persecutions of the saints, will be no more; and
when will be an end put to the present dispensation of things; there will be
an end of the ministry of the word, and of the administration of ordinances;
time will be no more, and the final state of both good and bad men will take
place: this may be said to be at hand in the apostle’s time, though so long
ago, because that was the last time, and the last dispensation of things; and
whereas they knew not the exact time when it would be, they frequently spoke
of it as near, in order to stir up the saints to the more diligent discharge
of duty, and fervent exercise of grace, as here:
·
be ye therefore
sober—or “temperate,” as the Arabic
version renders it; and so is opposed to intemperance in eating and drinking,
which is an abuse of the creatures of Gods, and unfits a man for the duties of
religion; when Satan easily gets an advantage, and is often the cause of other
sins, and is frequently dissuaded from, for the same reason as here; (see 1
Cor. 7:31) or chaste, as the Syriac version; and so is opposed to immodesty in
words, actions, or apparel, in which sense sobriety is used in 1 Timothy 2:9
or “prudent,” as the Vulgate Latin version; and is opposed to all self-conceit
and vanity of mind, and imprudence in conduct and conversation, (see Rom.
12:3); and to all immoderate care of the world, which has the same effect upon
the soul as surfeiting and drunkenness on the body: it hinders the soul in the
service of God, chokes the word, and makes it unprofitable, and runs men into
many sins, snares, and temptations; and the consideration of the end of all
things being at hand should draw off from it. It may also signify soundness of
mind and judgment in the doctrines of faith, which are words of truth and
soberness; and the rather this may be exhorted to, since towards the close of
time there will be little of the doctrine of faith in the earth, and men will
not be able to endure sound doctrine: it follows,
·
and watch unto
prayer—watch all opportunities of
praying, or of attendance on that ordinance, both in private and in public;
watch and observe both your present wants, and present mercies, that ye may
know what to pray for, and what to return thanks for; and that you have a due
reverence of the divine Majesty, in whose presence you are entering. The
Vulgate Latin and Arabic versions render it, “watch,” or “be awake in
prayers;” be careful that you lift up your hearts with your hands to God; that
you pray for such things as are agreeable to the revealed will of God;, that
you pray in faith, and lift up holy hands without wrath and doubting; and
watch for the Spirit of God to enlarge your hearts in prayer, and to assist
you both as to the matter and manner of praying. And persons should also watch
after prayer for a return of it; and that they do not depend upon the duty
performed; and that they are not negligent to return thanks for the mercy
prayed for, when received. Very rightly does the apostle join the above
exhortation with this, since a man that is not sober is neither fit to watch
nor pray; and a drunken man, according to the Jewish canons, might not pray:
“one that is a drinker, or in drink, let him not pray, or if he prays, his
prayer is deprecations; a drunken man, let him not pray, and if he prays his
prayer is blasphemies.’’ Or, as it is elsewhere expressed, “let not a drunken
man pray, because he has no intention; and if he prays, his prayer is an
abomination, therefore let him return and, pray when he is clear of his
drunkenness: let no one in drink pray, and if he prays, his prayer is prayer
(unless the word should rather be rendered “folly,” as it may); who is a
drunken man? he that cannot speak before a king; a man in drink can speak
before a king, and not be confounded; even though he drinks but a fourth part,
or a quarter of wine, let him not pray until his wine is departed from him.’’
1 Peter 4:8—“And above all things
have fervent charity among yourselves: for charity shall cover the multitude
of sins.”
·
And above all
things have fervent charity among yourselves—Not
but that charity, or love, is to be exercised towards all men, even towards
enemies, but more especially towards the saints, and that under such a
consideration in which it cannot be exercised towards others; namely, as their
brethren in Christ, and as belonging to him, as the children of God, as
redeemed by Christ, and sanctified by the Spirit; and these not only such as
are of the same nation, and belong to the same particular church and
community, or of the same denomination, but all the saints everywhere, whether
Jews or Gentiles, or of whatsoever name, and in whatsoever state and
condition: and this love ought to be mutual and reciprocal, and to be warm and
fervent, and not lukewarm and indifferent, as it too often is; and should be
constant, “continued,” and “perpetual,” as the Vulgate Latin and Arabic
versions here read: and this the apostle exhorts to above all things else;
since outward sobriety, and watchings, and prayer, and all other duties, are
nothing without this; this is the sum and substance of the law, and the
fulfilling of it; and without this a mere knowledge of the Gospel, and a
profession of it, are in vain, and therefore in the first place to be attended
to. And especially for the following reason,
·
for charity
shall cover the multitude of sins—referring
to Proverbs 10:12 not a man’s own sins, but the sins of others; and not from
the sight of God, for from that only the blood and righteousness of Christ
cover sins, even all the sins, the whole multitude of the sins of God’s elect;
but from the sight of men, both of those against whom they are committed, and
others; since charity, or true love, thinks no ill, but puts the best
constructions upon the words and actions of fellow Christians, and does not
take them up, and improve and exaggerate them, but lets them lie buried in
oblivion: it takes no notice of injuries, offences, and affronts, but
overlooks them, bears with them, and forgives them, so that they are never
raked up, and seen any more; which prevents much scandal, strife, and trouble.
The Alexandrian copy, and some others, and the Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and
Arabic versions, read, “covereth,” as in Proverbs 10:12.
1 Peter 4:9—“Use hospitality one
to another without grudging.”
·
Use hospitality—Or,
“be lovers of strangers,” as the phrase may be rendered, and as it is in the
Syriac version; that is, such as are of a distant country, or come from afar,
and are unknown by face, especially good men, that are obliged to remove from
their native country for the sake of religion, or by one providence or
another; and these are to be loved: and love is to be shown them, both
negatively, by not vexing them, and making them uneasy in body or mind; by not
oppressing them by violence and injustice, and making any exorbitant demands
upon them; or by not perverting judgment with respect to them; and positively,
by directing, counseling, and advising them, and if need be, by giving them
food, and raiment, and lodging: and it is what men have been led to by the
very light of nature, as in the instances of Jethro the Midianite towards
Moses, and the inhabitants of Melita with Publius, the chief man of the
island, towards the Apostle Paul and his company; and is what God enjoined the
Israelites by divers laws, since they had been strangers in the land of Egypt;
and various are the exhortations to it in the New Testament; and some, by the
practice of it, have entertained angels unawares, as Abraham, and Lot; and
even Christ himself, as the two disciples traveling to Emmaus; and is what is
highly regarded and commended by Christ, and the contrary is resented by him;
and therefore it ought to be used and practiced frequently; saints should
inure themselves to it, be given to it, pursue and follow hard after it; The
apostle adds here,
Gill’s supporting notes for 1 Peter 4:9
[Gill on Romans
12:13] Given to hospitality—or,
as it may be rendered, “pursuing,” or “following after love to strangers;”
which is properly hospitality: respect is to be shown not to such only who are
members of the same community with us, but also to such of the people of God,
that may be of another country, or of some distant parts of our own, not
before known by us; who by persecution, and distress of some sort or another,
or by some providence or another, are obliged to remove from their native
place. These we are to love, and show our love to, not only by directing and
advising, but, if need be, by giving them food and raiment, and lodging them:
this is a duty incumbent on ministers of the Gospel, and on private members,
and on all who are in any capacity to perform it; and which should be done
cheerfully, and without grudging; and what persons should use, inure, and give
themselves to, yea, should seek after, and call to objects of it; as Abraham
and Lot did, who thereby entertained angels unawares, and is what the apostle
here means by pursuing and following after it.
[Gill on Hebrews
13:2] Be not forgetful to entertain
strangers—By whom are meant, not unconverted men, who are strangers
to God and Christ, and the covenants of promise; nor saints, who are as
pilgrims and strangers in this world; but such as are of another country, and
are unknown; and even though wicked men, they are not excluded; though such as
are obliged to quit their own country for righteousness sake are chiefly
designed; all strangers in distress are meant, and hospitality is to be
exercised towards them; which lies negatively in doing nothing to distress
them, and positively in providing food, raiment, lodging, &c. for them, and in
comforting, counseling, and directing them in all matters in which they may
stand in need thereof: and that this is a duty, appears from the light of
nature, and practices of the Heathens, (Acts 28:2), from the express law of
God, (Deut. 10:19), and many others made in favor of strangers, binding on the
Jews; from the sundry exhortations to it in the New Testament, (Rom. 12:13),
and from the exhortation here not to forget it; and from the great regard
which Christ will show to such as mind it, and his disregard to others at the
last day: the persons who are to exercise it are not only the ministers of the
Gospel, who should be given to hospitality; but all the saints, even the
meaner sort are not exempted, but should use it according to their ability;
though it is chiefly binding on those that are rich. And this should not be
forgot, but pursued and followed after; it should be frequently performed; men
should be given, and used to it; it should be done without grudging, and in a
friendly and loving manner:
·
one to another—which
clause is left out in the Syriac and Ethiopic versions; the reason of which
may be, because the authors of these versions might think this not so
consistent with the duty exhorted to, since the objects of it are strangers;
but it should be observed, that so were these persons the apostle writes to,
(see 1 Pet. 1:1); they were scattered about, and lived in different countries,
and were strangers to one another, and therefore the clause is pertinent
enough; and the sense is, that as they were in foreign countries, and at a
distance one from another, whenever by any providence they were brought where
each other were, that they would be hospitable to one another: and that
·
without grudging—food,
raiment, and lodging, or what they want, whether direction or advice, thinking
it no trouble to give them either; or without murmurings, as it may be
rendered, as if they were burdensome, and they were too chargeable to them,
and their stay too long; and without complaints of them, finding fault, and
picking quarrels with them, and laying charges against them, in order to get
rid of them. This is one branch of charity before recommended.
1 Peter 4:10—“As every man hath
received the gift, even so minister the same one to another, as good stewards
of the manifold grace of God.”
·
As every man
hath received the gift—That
is, from God, as the Syriac and Ethiopic versions add. This is a general rule
laid down by the apostle, according to which, distribution of every kind,
whether in things temporal or spiritual, is to be made, even according to the
nature, quality, and quantity of the gift received: the greatest gift God
bestows on men, next to himself, Son, and Spirit, and received by them in this
life, is special grace; which God gives of his sovereign will and pleasure,
liberally, abundantly, without the deserts of men, or conditions to be
performed by them; of this kind are faith, repentance, hope, and love: the
next to this is the ministerial gift, or what qualifies men for the work of
the ministry; which is not anything in nature, or what is acquired by art and
industry, but is a gift of grace, which is bestowed on some in a higher, on
others in a lower degree: and besides these, there are the gifts of nature and
providence, as human wisdom, and the knowledge of things natural and civil,
riches and wealth, and the various good things of life; for there is nothing a
man has in nature and in grace but what is a gift to him, and what he has
received: and according to the measure of the gift received, be it what it
will, the exhortation is,
·
even so minister
the same one to another—or
to, and among yourselves; to your neighbors or companions, as the Syriac,
version renders it; if the gift be special grace though that itself cannot be
imparted from one to another, yet the knowledge of it may; and it becomes such
who have an experience of the grace of God upon their hearts to make it known,
both to particular friends in private conversation, and to the church of God
in public, for the use and edification of others, and the glory of God’s
grace: if the gift be a ministerial one, whether it be greater or less, for it
is not in all alike, it is not to be wrapped up in a napkin, and hid in the
earth, or to lie neglected, but to be stirred up, and used for the benefit of
the souls of men: and if it is a temporal one, the good things of this life,
according to the measure of them, that a man has, he is to minister to the
supply of the poor; and as God has prospered him, he is to distribute to the
necessities of others; as men freely receive, be it what it will, they should
freely minister it, according to the nature and measure of it:
·
as good stewards
of the manifold grace of God—for
they are but stewards of whatsoever gifts they have; and therefore, if they
would approve themselves good stewards, they should minister the same in
proportion to their reception of them. Manifold and various are the graces of
the Spirit of God, and the rich experiences communicated to men, which are not
only for themselves, but for the good of others also: gifts for public
usefulness are different one from another; one man has one gift, and another
has another; or the same gift is not alike in all, in some greater, and in
others less; and all are but stewards: they are accountable for them, and the
use of them, to their great Lord and master: and various are the doctrines of
the grace of God; of the grace of the Father in election, in the everlasting
covenant, in the mission of his Son, in the free justification of sinners by
his righteousness, in the free and full pardon of all their sins, in the
adoption of any into his family, and in the gift of eternal life; and of the
Son of God, in engaging as the surety of his people from everlasting, in
assuming their nature in time, in obeying, suffering, and dying in their room
and stead; and of the Spirit of God in regeneration and sanctification; and of
all these mysteries of grace the ministers of the Gospel are stewards; and it
is required of them that they be faithful. Temporal good things are given to
men, not for their own use only, but for others; and they are but stewards of
them; the original proprietor is God, and to him they must give an account of
their stewardship, and how they have used and disposed of the manifold gifts
which God of his goodness has put into their hands; so that this last clause
contains a reason or argument enforcing the above rule.
1 Peter 4:11—“If any man speak,
let him speak as the oracles of God; if any man minister, let him do it as of
the ability which God giveth: that God in all things may be glorified through
Jesus Christ, to whom be praise and dominion for ever and ever. Amen.”
·
If any man
speak, let him speak as the oracles of God—This
is an application of the above general rule to a particular case, the public
ministry of the word, for that is here meant: “if any man speak;” not in any
manner, or on any subject; not in a private way, or about things natural and
civil; but in public, and concerning divine things: “let him speak:” this is
rightly supplied in our translation; and in which it is supported and
confirmed by the Syriac and Arabic versions, who both supply the same way: “as
the oracles of God;” by which are meant the writings of the Old Testament, the
sacred Scriptures; (see Rom. 3:2) so called, because they come from God, are
breathed and spoken by him, and contain his mind and will, and are
authoritative and infallible; and according to these he is to speak who speaks
in public on divine subjects, both as to the matter and manner of his speech:
the matter of it must be agreeably to the divinely inspired word of God, must
be fetched out of it, and confirmed by it; and he is to speak every thing that
is in it, and keep back nothing, but declare the whole counsel of God, and
only what is in it, without mixing his own chaff, or the doctrines of men with
it; and it should be spoken in a manner agreeably to it, not as the word of
man, but as the word of God; and not in words which man’s wisdom teacheth, but
in the words of the Holy Ghost; and with all boldness, for so the Gospel ought
to be spoken; and with all certainty and assurance, constantly affirming the
things of it, for nothing is more sure than they are; and with all openness,
plainness, and freedom, making truth manifest, laying it plain and open before
men, as it ought to be; and that with all reverence and godly fear, which
becomes both speaker and hearer. The apostle next proceeds to mention another
case, to which the above rule is applicable;
·
if any man
minister, [let him do it] as of the ability which God giveth—that
is, if any man minister in temporal things to the supply of the poor; if a
private man, and in a private way, let him do it in proportion to his ability,
as God has prospered him in the world; or if an officer of the church, a
deacon; and which seems to be the sense, for so the word used signifies,
diakonei, if any man perform the
office, or act the part of a deacon, let him do it according to what God, in
his providence, has put into his hands; that is, of the church’s stock, which
he should minister with simplicity and cheerfulness. A like division of church
offices into public preaching of the word, and ministering to the wants of the
poor, is here made, as in Romans 12:6. The end of all this is,
·
that God in all
things may be glorified through Jesus Christ—or
by all means, as the Arabic version renders it; by all ways and methods
proper; for the glory of God should be the principal view in every action of
life: hence the Syriac version adds to the phrase, “in all things,” for the
sake of explanation, “which ye do;” by sobriety, by prayer, by watching unto
it; by exercising fervent charity, and using hospitality one to another; by
ministering the gift as it is received; by the public ministration of the
word; and by supplying the wants of the poor, whether in a personal or in a
church way: or in all gifts, whether private or public, temporal or spiritual;
since they all come from God, and men are accountable to him for them; and
therefore should be used so as to glorify him by them, and give him the glory
of them; and not glory in them, as if not received from him: or in all the
members of the church, whether officers, as pastors and deacons, or private
Christians; all should so behave in their respective stations, as God may have
glory: “through Jesus Christ:” through whom all grace is communicated, by whom
all gifts are bestowed, and by virtue of grace and strength received from him
every good work is performed to the glory of God:
·
to whom be
praise and dominion for ever and ever—meaning
either to God the Father, from whom every good gift comes; who is the God of
all grace, of whom, and through whom, and to whom, are all things; and
therefore the praise and glory of all belongs to him; and who has the dominion
over all creatures and things, and has the disposal of all in nature,
providence, and grace: or to Jesus Christ, out of whose fullness manifold
grace, grace for grace, is received; and who having ascended on high, has
received gifts for men, and gives them to them, and so is worthy of all
praise; and who, as God, has the kingdom of nature and providence equally with
the Father, and, as Mediator, the kingdom of grace, the government of the
church; and whose dominion will be from sea to sea, and from the rivers to the
ends of the earth; and of whose kingdom there will be no end. Amen; so let it
be, so shall it be.
1 Peter 4:12—“Beloved, think it
not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you, as though some
strange thing happened unto you:”
·
Beloved, think
it not strange concerning the fiery trial—By
which may be meant either the destruction of Jerusalem, which was at hand, and
of which the apostle may be thought to give the Jews he writes to notice of
before hand; that they might be prepared for it, and not be overwhelmed with
consternation and amazement when they should hear of it; who, though in other
countries, must be affected with it, and would be a trying dispensation to
them: or else the afflictions and persecutions which daily come upon them, for
the sake of Christ and his Gospel; signified by “fire” or “burning,” because
grievous to the flesh, and gave great uneasiness, distress, and pain to it;
and because of the fury of men, and the violence and fierceness of their rage,
expressed thereby; as also because the people of God under them are sometimes
ready to conceive that the wrath of God is poured out, like fire, upon them.
But the apostle would not have these saints entertain any such thoughts, and
therefore he calls them “beloved;” that is, of God, as they were
notwithstanding all the fiery trials and afflictions which were brought upon
them; or he means, that they were beloved by him, and dear unto him, and other
saints, though they were ill treated and reproached by the world: the Syriac
and Arabic versions read, “my beloved;” and the Ethiopic version, “our
brethren:” and the apostle exhorts them not to look upon their afflictions
that either did or should attend them as strange and uncommon things; since
afflictions, of whatsoever kind, are not things of chance, and do not rise up
out of the dust, but are by the appointment, and according to the will of God;
and are also the common lot of the people of God in all ages, from the
beginning of the world, the same afflictions are accomplished in others; yea,
Christ himself endured the same hatred, reproach, and contradiction of
sinners, against himself; and they are what he has given his people reason to
expect, having told them of them before hand, that they might not be offended
at them; and as they lay in his way to glory, it need not seem strange that
the saints also should, through many tribulations, enter the kingdom.
Moreover, this fiery dispensation, be it what it will, was not to destroy
them, but to try them, and that for their good, profit, and advantage; just as
gold and silver are tried in the fire, and lose their dross, and become purer
and brighter:
·
which is to try
you—afflictions try the graces of
the saints; as their faith in Christ, which becomes thereby much more precious
than of gold that perisheth; and their love to him, by which it appears that
no tribulation can separate them from it, nor many waters and floods of
afflictions drown it; and their hope of eternal life, which grows more lively
and strong, and is as an anchor, sure and steadfast, amidst the greatest
storms. These try a man’s profession of religion, whether it is took up on
good principles, and without sinister views; since, if it is not, when
persecution, because of the word, comes, he is offended and gone; and likewise
what a man’s principles are, whether worth suffering for or not; and whether
they will bear him up, and he abide by them, when called to suffer for them;
and therefore, since such ends are answered by fiery trials, they should not
be looked upon as strange and unusual things:
·
as though some
strange thing happened unto you—which
was never known and heard of before; and as if useless, and of no service, and
as foreign to the characters, cases, and circumstances of the saints in this
world. The apostle in this verse returns to his former argument, to animate
and encourage the saints in suffering afflictions patiently for righteousness
sake.
1 Peter 4:13—“But rejoice,
inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ's sufferings; that, when his glory
shall be revealed, ye may be glad also with exceeding joy.”
·
But rejoice,
inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ’s sufferings—Not
of his personal sufferings; though they were partakers of the benefits and
blessings which come through them, and result from them, such as
justification, peace, and pardon, and which are matter and ground of
rejoicing; but of the sufferings of his body, the church, which is mystically
himself; and are called his, because of the union between him and his people,
and the sympathy he bears to them, and because they are endured for the sake
of him and his Gospel, and conform the saints, and make them like unto him;
and therefore suffering saints should rejoice in this, that their sufferings
are accounted by Christ as his own, who in all their afflictions is afflicted;
and that they are honored to suffer for his name’s sake, and are hereby made
like unto him:
·
that when his
glory shall be revealed—the glory
of his divine nature, as the only begotten Son of God, in which he will come
and appear at the last day; and which, though incommunicable, will be more
manifest to all men, and especially to the saints, who will know more of him,
as the brightness of his Father’s glory, and the express image of his person;
and when the glory of his office, as Mediator, will be more conspicuous, and
shall be beheld by all that the Father has given to him; and also the glory of
his human nature, which is now crowned with glory and honor at the right hand
of God; and likewise the glory which he has in his hands for his people, even
eternal glory and happiness: this is now, in a great measure, unseen, but it
will then be revealed, both to the saints and in them; they will appear with
Christ in glory, and have a glory both upon their souls and bodies. As they
suffer with him, and for his sake, they will be glorified with him, when he
shall come in his own glory, and in his Father’s glory, and in the glory of
his holy angels: the consideration of which, as it must greatly encourage to
suffer for his sake, so must be matter of great joy; as follows:
·
ye may be glad
also with exceeding joy—a joy
unspeakable, and full of glory, being made partakers of the glory of Christ,
either in beholding, or in possessing it.
1 Peter 4:14—“If ye be reproached
for the name of Christ, happy are ye; for the spirit of glory and of God
resteth upon you: on their part he is evil spoken of, but on your part he is
glorified.”
·
If ye be
reproached for the name of Christ—For
being called by his name; for bearing the name of Christians; for believing in
him, and professing him; and for the sake of his Gospel, which is sometimes
called his name, (Acts 9:15), not that the apostle makes any doubt of this,
for nothing is more certain than that the saints shall be reproached, and all
manner of evil spoken of them falsely for Christ’s name sake; but he supposes
it, and takes it for granted, that they are, and will be reproached, and yet
pronounces them blessed persons:
·
happy are ye—
some supply it, “shall ye be,” as the Vulgate Latin version; that is, in the
other world, because the kingdom of heaven, the crown of life and glory,
belongs to such persons; they will be happy at death, in judgment, and to all
eternity: others, with our translators, supply, “are ye,” as the Syriac,
Arabic, and Ethiopic versions; for such are happy now in themselves, being
both comfortable in their frames, and honorable in their persons and
characters, however uncomfortable, miserable, and dishonorable they may appear
to the men of the world:
·
for the Spirit
of glory, and of God, resteth upon you—
alluding to Isa 11:2 that is, the glorious Spirit of God, as the Syriac
version renders it; who is glorious in himself, in the perfections of his
nature, being possessed of the same glorious divine essence with the Father
and Son; and in his works both of nature, being equally concerned with the
other Persons in the Godhead in the works of creation and providence, and also
of grace, especially the latter; and in all his gifts and graces with which he
adorns the saints, and makes them glorious: and his resting on them denotes
his inhabitation in them, and his abiding with them, and remaining in them;
and which appears by the comfort they enjoy in their souls amidst all the
reproaches and revilings of men, and by the strength which they have to bear
up under and endure shame and persecution for the sake of Christ; and which
casts an honor upon them, and makes them both glorious and cheerful. The Jews
have a saying, that the Holy Ghost does not dwell on any, but on him that has
a cheerful heart:
·
on their part he
is evil spoken of, but on your part he is glorified—on
the part of the revilers, the person, office, work, and grace, the operations
and influences of the Spirit are blasphemed and ridiculed; the power of the
Spirit, with which the saints speak, the experiences of grace they express,
the comforts of the Spirit they declare that they enjoy under suffering
circumstances, as well as their courage, patience, and cheerfulness he gives
them, are generally bantered by persecutors; and indeed all the reproaches
they cast upon the people of God fall upon the Spirit of God, by whom they are
animated and influenced: but on the part of the sufferers he is glorified;
inasmuch as they continue to bear a testimony to his grace, depend upon his
strength, and ascribe all their comfort and gracious experience unto him. This
clause is wanting in the Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and Ethiopic versions, but is
in all Beza’s Greek copies, excepting one; and is also in the Arabic version.
1 Peter 4:15—“But let none of you
suffer as a murderer, or as a thief, or as an evildoer, or as a busybody in
other men's matters.”
·
But let none of
you suffer as a murderer—The
punishment for murder was death by the law of God, (Gen. 9:6).
·
or as a thief—whose
fine or mulct, according to the Jewish law, was a fivefold or fourfold
restitution, according to the nature of the thing that was stolen, (Ex 22:1).
·
or as an
evildoer—a breaker of any of the
laws of God or men, which are of a moral nature, and for the good of civil
society:
·
or as a busybody
in other men’s matters—“or as a
bishop in another man’s diocese;” that concerns himself in things he has
nothing to do with, and neglects his own affairs, and lives in idleness, and
upon the spoil of others; or takes upon him to manage, direct, order, and
command other men’s servants, or persons that do not belong to him, to do his
business, or whatsoever he pleases. The Vulgate Latin version renders it, “a
desirer of other’s goods;” and the Ethiopic version, “a covetous desirer of
other’s things;” and so is led on by an insatiable thirst for them, to obtain
them in an evil way, either by secret fraud, or open violence and oppression.
To suffer in any such cases is scandalous and dishonorable, and unbecoming the
character of a Christian. This last clause is left out in the Syriac version.
1 Peter 4:16—“Yet if
any man suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed; but let him glorify God
on this behalf.”
·
Yet if any man
suffer as a Christian—Because he is
one, and professes himself to be one. This name was first given to the
disciples at Antioch, either by themselves, or by the Gentiles; however, it
being agreeable to them, was retained; it is only mentioned here, and in Acts
11:26,
·
let him not be
ashamed—neither of Christ, and his
Gospel, for which he suffers, nor of the name he bears, nor of the punishment
he endures, however ignominious and shameful it may be among men; but let him,
as his Lord and master did, endure the cross, and despise the shame, (Heb.
12:2).
·
but let him
glorify God on this behalf—that he
bestows this gift upon him to suffer for Christ, as well as to believe in him;
and that he does him so much honor to call him to such service, and to
strengthen him in it, so as to take it joyfully, and endure it patiently and
cheerfully. The Alexandrian copy, and some others, and also the Vulgate Latin,
Syriac, and Ethiopic versions, instead of “in this behalf,” read “in this
name;” that is, of a Christian.
1 Peter 4:17—“For the time is come
that judgment must begin at the house of God: and if it first begin at us,
what shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God?”
·
For the time is
come that judgment must begin at the house of God—By
the house of God is either meant the temple at Jerusalem, which is often so
called, because it was built for God, and where were the symbol of his
presence, and his worship; and now the time was come, or at hand, that God
would begin at his sanctuary, and leave this house desolate, and not one stone
should be left upon another, as Christ had foretold: or else the church of
God, which is frequently called the house of God, because it is of his
building, where he dwells, and grants his gracious presence, and which he
beautifies, fills, repairs, and defends; and so may design believers in
Christ, those that are of the household and family of God: and by judgment is
meant, not punishment for sin, strictly speaking, because Christ has endured
this in the room and stead of his church and people, and therefore in justice
cannot be inflicted on them; but afflictions and persecutions, and which are
fatherly chastisements, and different from God’s judgment on the world, and
condemnation with it, (see 1 Cor. 11:32); and these may be said to “begin”
with them, because it is only in this life the saints have their afflictions;
and which are in love to them, and therefore are early brought upon them to
try them, and purge them, and make them partakers of his holiness: besides,
wicked men are often made use of as instruments, by which God chastises his
people; upon which account they are reserved till last, to be the objects of
his vengeance, when they have filled up the measure of their sins; and then
what is begun in love at the house of God, will end in wrath and severe
punishment on them: and whereas it is said, “the time” is come, or at hand, it
may be observed, that as God has his set time to favor his Zion, so likewise
to chastise her; all his people’s times are in his hand, as of comfort, so of
temptation, affliction, and persecution. The first times of Christianity, or
of the preaching of the Gospel, were times of trouble and distress; for as it
was necessary the Gospel should be confirmed by signs and wonders, so that it
should be tried and proved by the sufferings of the saints for it: and the
phrase also suggests, that these sufferings and afflictions were but for a
time, and even as it were for a moment, for a little while; and is a reason
why the saints should glorify God, as these words imply, being introduced with
the causal particle, “for;” that they have their sufferings now, and not with
the wicked in the world to come, which will have no end:
·
and if [it]
first begin at us—either us Jews,
for Peter, and those he writes to, were such; or us Christians, who believe in
Christ, have embraced his Gospel, and profess his name:
·
what shall the
end be of them that obey not the Gospel of God?
—of which God is the author, and which contains things relating to him; as the
grace of God, the righteousness of God, peace with him, pardon from him,
justification before him, and acceptance with him; and which he commits to
men, and qualifies them for preaching it, and succeeds the ministry of it; and
it being his Gospel, as it makes it the more valuable in itself, so it is to
be had in the greatest reverence and esteem; and the greater is the sin of
such who despise and reject it, as did the unbelieving Jews, who seem chiefly
designed, here; it was first preached to them, but they disbelieved the
doctrines of it, and submitted not to its ordinances, and rejected Christ, the
Saviour, the sum and substance of it; and put it away from them, judging
themselves unworthy of everlasting life: and what shall the end of such be? in
this world wrath came upon them to the uttermost, ruin upon their nation,
city, and temple; and in the world to come everlasting destruction from the
presence of the Lord, and eternal vengeance in flames of fire. The Jews have
various phrases, and frequent expressions in their writings, which resemble
these, and serve to illustrate them. When Noah told the old world of the
flood, and called upon them to repent, they are represented as saying to him,
“where does punishment begin? “at the house” of that man does it “begin?” when
Methuselah died, they said unto him, does not punishment begin at the house of
that man?’’ and elsewhere, says R. Jonathan, “punishment does not come into
the world, but in the time that the wicked are in the world; and it does not
begin (i.e. at them), but it begins at the righteous;’’ and again “when God
executes judgment on the righteous, he is praised; for if he executes this on
them, how much more on the ungodly?’’ (see Isa. 10:11).
1 Peter 4:18—“And if the righteous
scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear?”
·
And if the
righteous scarcely be saved—Reference
is had to Proverbs 11:31 where in the Septuagint version are the same words as
here: the “righteous” are such, not who are so in their own opinion, or merely
in the esteem of others, nor on account of their vility, morality, and
external righteousness before men, or by the deeds of the law; but who are
made righteous by the righteousness of Christ imputed to them: and such are
“scarcely saved;” not as if they were but in part saved, for they are
completely saved; Christ has wrought out and finished a complete salvation for
them; and they are saved from all enemies, and everything that might hurt
them; from sin, Satan, the law, the world, hell, and death; and they are
completely justified, and have all their sins pardoned, and shall be perfectly
saved: nor as if their salvation was doubtful; for though they are scarcely,
yet certainly saved; for they are chosen to salvation, and Christ has obtained
it for them, and they have the application of it already made to them by the
blessed Spirit; and being justified, or made righteous persons, nothing is
more certain than that they shall be glorified: but they are said to be
“scarcely” saved, because of the difficulty of it, both with respect to
Christ, who met with difficulties in working out their salvation; by reason of
the strictness of divine justice, and the demands of the righteous law, which
would make no abatement; the sins of his people he had to bear, and make
atonement for; the many enemies he had to grapple with, and the accursed death
of the cross, he had to undergo; though they were such he was able to
surmount, and did: and especially with respect to the saints themselves; for
though their salvation is certain and complete, being finished by Christ, yet
their enjoyment of it is attended with many difficulties; by reason of the
corruptions of nature, a law in their members warring against the law of their
minds; the frequent temptations of Satan, who seeks to devour them, and their
wrestlings with principalities and powers, which are above their match; and
also by reason of various afflictions and persecutions, and many tribulations,
which make their way to eternal life a strait way, and through which they must
enter into the kingdom of heaven: and if this be their case, as it is,
·
where shall the
ungodly and the sinner appear? —the
profane sinner, the Christless, impenitent, unbelieving, and unregenerate man;
otherwise all men are sinners, in themselves; but here it means such as are
destitute of the sanctifying grace of the Spirit, and the justifying
righteousness of Christ, and that live and die in their sins: where shall such
appear? not in the congregation of the righteous; nor at the right hand of
Christ; nor in heaven, into which no defiled sinner shall enter; nor even on
earth, among and under the rocks and mountains, which will not be able to hide
them from the face of the Judge, and his wrath, when he shall come; but at
Christ’s left hand, and in hell, and among the devils and damned there.
1 Peter 4:19—“Wherefore let them
that suffer according to the will of God commit the keeping of their souls to
him in well doing, as unto a faithful Creator.”
·
Wherefore let
them that suffer according to the will of God—This
is the conclusion made from the foregoing premises; that seeing the state and
condition of the saints in this world, at worst, and which is but for a time,
is infinitely preferable to the dreadful state and condition of disobedient
persons, ungodly men, and sinners, and which will endure to all eternity; they
should not think strange of their sufferings, or complain of them, but
patiently endure them; and especially when they consider that these are not
the effects of chance, or merely owing to the malice and wickedness of men, or
to any second cause only; but they are the will of God, are by his
appointment, under his direction, and by his order, and for their good, and
his own glory; and therefore it becomes them to