Chapter 3:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 James 2 Peter
1 Peter 3
Verse 1. If any - He speaks tenderly. Won - Gained over to Christ.
Verse
2. Joined with a loving fear of displeasing them.
Verse
3. Three things are here expressly forbidden: curling the hair,
wearing gold, (by way of ornament,) and putting on costly or gay
apparel. These, therefore, ought never to be allowed, much less
defended, by Christians.
Verse
4. The hidden man of the heart - Complete inward holiness, which
implies a meek and quiet spirit. A meek spirit gives no trouble
willingly to any: a quiet spirit bears all wrongs without being
troubled. In the sight of God - Who looks at the heart. All
superfluity of dress contributes more to pride and anger than is
generally supposed. The apostle seems to have his eye to this by
substituting meekness and quietness in the room of the ornaments
he forbids. "I do not regard these things," is often said by those
whose hearts are wrapped up in them: but offer to take them
away, and you touch the very idol of their soul. Some, indeed only
dress elegantly that they may be looked on; that is, they squander
away their Lord's talent to gain applause: thus making sin to beget
sin, and then plead one in excuse of the other.
Verse
5. The adorning of those holy women, who trusted in God, and
therefore did not act thus from servile fear, was,
1. Their meek subjection to their husbands:
2. Their quiet spirit, "not afraid," or amazed: and
3. Their unblamable behaviour, "doing" all things "well."
Verse
6. Whose children ye are - In a spiritual as well as natural sense,
and entitled to the same inheritance, while ye discharge your
conjugal duties, not out of fear, but for conscience' sake. Gen.
xviii, 12.
Verse
7. Dwell with the woman according to knowledge - Knowing they
are weak, and therefore to be used with all tenderness. Yet do not
despise them for this, but give them honour - Both in heart, in
word, and in action; as those who are called to be joint-heirs of
that eternal life which ye and they hope to receive by the free
grace of God. That your prayers be not hindered - On the one part
or the other. All sin hinders prayer; particularly anger. Anything
at which we are angry is never more apt to come into our mind
than when we are at prayer; and those who do not forgive will
find no forgiveness from God.
Verse
8. Finally - This part of the epistle reaches to chap. iv, 11. The
apostle seems to have added the rest afterwards. Sympathizing -
Rejoicing and sorrowing together. Love all believers as brethren.
Be pitiful - Toward the afflicted. Be courteous - To all men.
Courtesy is such a behaviour toward equals and inferiors as shows
respect mixed with love.
Verse
9. Ye are called to inherit a blessing - Therefore their railing
cannot hurt you; and, by blessing them, you imitate God, who
blesses you.
Verse
10. For he that desireth to love life, and to see good days - That
would make life amiable and desirable. Psalm xxxiv, 12, &c.
Verse
11. Let him seek - To live peaceably with all men. And pursue it -
Even when it seems to flee from him.
Verse
12. The eyes of the Lord are over the righteous - For good. Anger
appears in the whole face; love, chiefly in the eyes.
Verse
13. Who is he that will harm you - None can.
Verse
14. But if ye should suffer - This is no harm to you, but a good.
Fear ye not their fear - The very words of the Septuagint, Isaiah
viii, 12, 13. Let not that fear be in you which the wicked feel.
Verse
15. But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts - Have an holy fear,
and a full trust in his wise providence. The hope - Of eternal life.
With meekness - For anger would hurt your cause as well as your
soul. And fear - A filial fear of offending God, and a jealousy over
yourselves, lest ye speak amiss.
Verse
16. Having a good conscience - So much the more beware of
anger, to which the very consciousness of your innocence may
betray you. Join with a good conscience meekness and fear, and
you obtain a complete victory. Your good conversation in Christ -
That is, which flows from faith in him.
Verse
17. It is infinitely better, if it be the will of God, ye should suffer.
His permissive will appears from his providence.
Verse
18. For - This is undoubtedly best, whereby we are most
conformed to Christ. Now Christ suffered once - To suffer no
more. For sins - Not his own, but ours. The just for the unjust -
The word signifies, not only them who have wronged their
neighbours, but those who have transgressed any of the
commands of God; as the preceding word, just, denotes a person
who has fulfilled, not barely social duties, but all kind of
righteousness. That he might bring us to God - Now to his
gracious favour, hereafter to his blissful presence, by the same
steps of suffering and of glory. Being put to death in the flesh - As
man. But raised to life by the Spirit - Both by his own divine
power, and by the power of the Holy Ghost.
Verse
19. By which Spirit he preached - Through the ministry of Noah.
To the spirits in prison - The unholy men before the flood, who
were then reserved by the justice of God, as in a prison, till he
executed the sentence upon them all; and are now also reserved to
the judgment of the great day.
Verse
20. When the longsuffering of God waited - For an hundred and
twenty years; all the time the ark was preparing: during which
Noah warned them all to flee from the wrath to come.
Verse
21. The antitype whereof - The thing typified by the ark, even
baptism, now saveth us - That is, through the water of baptism we
are saved from the sin which overwhelms the world as a flood:
not, indeed, the bare outward sign, but the inward grace; a divine
consciousness that both our persons and our actions are accepted
through him who died and rose again for us.
Verse
22. Angels and authorities and powers - That is, all orders both of
angels and men.
Chapter 3:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 James 2 Peter
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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