Introduction To 1 Peter

Similar documents
THE BOOK OF 1 PETER The Epistle of Living Hope

If we can pick up on this theme of being exiles in a godless and hostile world, we will be able to appreciate the main thrust of Peter s letter.

New Testament Survey The Book of Galatians

What stands out to you as you read the gospel of Mark, especially when you compare it to the other three Gospel accounts? Here are some things

JOURNEYS THROUGH THE BIBLE

WHERE DID THE NEW TESTAMENT COME FROM?

This evening we ll be looking at another of the epistles, in this case 1 Peter.

The Nature and Formation of the New Testament

New Testament Survey #5

Important Dates in Early Christianity

All rights reserved. This free ebook has been adapted from articles and graphics found in the NIV Faithlife Illustrated Study Bible.

From Dust to Destiny NT Epistles

1 Peter Be Holy. The Epistles are written to the church, further explaining doctrine.

We Rely On The New Testament

BY DAN KRAH. 1 st John - Dan Krah

Early Church Prison Epistles Pastorals General 1 General 2 Revelation. General Epistles 2. 1 Peter 1. Authorship. 1 Peter

New Testament Survey The Book of Ephesians

The Book of Acts. Study Guide THE BACKGROUND OF ACTS LESSON ONE. The Book of Acts by Third Millennium Ministries

Dr. Mike Chapman City Church Chattanooga

In Christ Jesus In Ephesus. Ephesians 1:1-2

Abstracts of Powerpoint Talks - newmanlib.ibri.org - Hebrews. Robert C. Newman

Boyce College. Spring Semester, 2008 Monday 11:30 AM-2:15 PM Monday 6:30 PM-9:15 PM

April 26, 2013 Persecutions, Heresies & the Book Lecture Lakeside Institute of Theology Ross Arnold, Spring 2013

Investigating the Word of God. First Peter. Gene Taylor. Gene Taylor, All Rights Reserved.

Our Lord Jesus is our merciful and faithful high priest and this elegant and rich truth about Jesus is one that Christians

Introduction and Background

1 Peter 1:1-2 (Part I)

CHAPTER 3 1 PETER. Especially to Ephesians (household duties) and Romans (civil magistrate)

We Rely on the New Testament

Advent Course 2. How did the New Testament come to be in its Current Form?

As Peter continued to preach, the number of converts grew to over Persecution toward the church slowly started at this stage.

Chapter Seven. When Was the New Testament Written?

BOOK OVERVIEW. Romans

WHO WROTE HEBREWS? Three common theories. 1) Paul wrote it (perhaps still held by the majority)

This Exiled Life Part 5

New Testament Survey. 20s and 30s

INTRODUCTORY MATTERS

STUDY QUESTIONS. 2. List the six periods of rule that cover the intertestament period, with dates. (12)

The Prison Epistles. Written by Richard Thompson Monday, 12 March :38 - Last Updated Monday, 12 March :16. The Prison Epistles

1 JOHN 1:1 1:1,4,14 2:5 14:23 2:6 15:4 2:8; 3:11 13:34 2:13,14 17:3 3:1 1:12 3:2 17:24 3:8 8:44 3:13 15:20 4:9 3:16 4:12 1:18 5:13 20:31 5:14 14:14

The Church Reaches Out

CJIAPTER ll. Practical Writings

Overview of the Book of Hebrews

New Testament Survey Hebrews

2 PETER. Simon Peter is the stated author of this letter (1:1). This affirmation is

New Testament Survey. Philippians (Partnership in the Gospel) FCBC February 17, 2013

The Gospel of Mark Lesson 1 Introduction. Why study the second Gospel? 1) There is nothing better in this world than to know Jesus!

The Story (27) Paul's Final Days By Ashby Camp

OPEN IT. READ IT. LAID UP FOR YOU IN HEAVEN

Session 8. Those Early Believers

LAST GENERATION VERSION

How the Books of the New Testament Were Chosen

ACTS (Luke s 2 nd Volume)

The Light and the Life. Revealed!

Class #17. 1st & 2nd THESSALONIANS

Table of Contents. Introduction.

Colossians (A Prison Epistle)

Authorship of 2 Peter

1 PETER (Student Edition) Part One: The Salvation of the Believer (1:1--2:12) Part Two: The Submission of the Believer (2:13--3:12)

Contents. 1: The Beginning of the Story 10. 3: Jesus and His Message 66. 4: Stories and Signs 86. 2: Jesus Birth and Early Years 46

Session #10 ROMANS TO REVELATION

1 PETER (Teacher s Edition) Part One: The Salvation of the Believer (1:1--2:12) Part Two: The Submission of the Believer (2:13--3:12)

The Evolution of God

Introduction to Colossians. Clay Norwood. Superior Avenue Baptist Church

Revelation: Introductory. Robert C. Newman

Revelation. The Letter to Smyrna Chapter 2:8-11

THE Gospel Part 1 THE Gospel Is Addressed ONLY To God s Redeemed

The Gospel According to St. Mark

The Early Life of Paul

epistle of paul called ephesians

Todd Konkel June 26, 2016

Lesson 6 Early Church History: Paul Establishes Local

Ephesians 4:11 Structure of the universal church

Per the majority of scholars, the first credible list of NT books accepted by early Christians is the 'Muratorian Fragment', a Latin fragment

Disciplers Bible Studies

Revelation: Contextual Decisions. Contextual Decisions. Historical Setting. Literary Setting. Contextual Decisions. Contextual Decisions

1Thessalonians, Chapter One, Lesson One

REL 202 (01:840:202:01): INTRODUCTION TO THE NEW TESTAMENT/EARLY CHRISTIANITY

Session #1: Acts of the Apostles

Remember when Peter told Jesus that he would never suffer and be killed and Jesus rebuked him and called him Satan.

The Book of Revelation Study Notes: 1

Brief Contents. Section I: The Old Testament

Acts of the Apostles

BIBLE STUDY TEXTBOOK SERIES STUDIES IN SECOND CORINTHIANS. by Paul T. Butler. College Press Publishing Company, Joplin, Missouri

Ephesians 1:1-2. God s Grace and Peace to Holy Ones

Lesson 8 April 24 Acts of the Apostles in the Early Church Selfless

100 AD 313 AD UNIT 2: THE PERSECUTED CHURCH

B. FF Bruce 1. a list of writings acknowledged by the church as documents of divine revelation 2. a series or list, a rule of faith or rule of truth

Book of Revelation Explained

Apostolic Canonization (Part 2) Duplication, Circulation, & Collection of the NT Canon Copyright 2013 by Edward E. Stevens. All rights reserved.

THE BIBLE. Where did the bible come from? Neither Jesus nor the apostles said anything about writing a New Testament consisting of 27 books.

THE GOSPEL OF GOD: ROMANS

Didn t Make the Cut: Books that Didn t Make the Bible Session 1

A Chronology of Events Affecting the Church of Christ from the First Century to the Restoration

GULF SHORES CHURCH OF CHRIST Bible Class Study Guide

St. Luke the Physician

New Testament Survey The Book of 1 Corinthians

Structure of the New Testament

Sample file. Part 3: Beyond the New Testament.

Speaking of hope, on a more serious note - happens to be a theme of Peter s first letter ==> Hope for the Hurting

Transcription:

Introduction To 1 Peter I. Purpose A. Evidently Peter s object is to cheer and strengthen the Christians in these five provinces who are undergoing fiery trials. The fiery trials referred to are those which often come to Christians as they live faithfully in a pagan and hostile society. B. Persecution took the forms of slander, riots, local police action, and social ostracism. The readers are encouraged to rejoice and live above such reproach. II. Authorship A. This letter, consider pseudonymous by many and genuine by others, is believed to come either from late in Peter s life or late in the first century, written by someone else in his name. There are several issues to be considered in making a decision between the alternative suggestions. 1. Reference to Jesus. a) Peter does refer to the fact that he is a witness of the sufferings of Christ (5:1). Critics often want it both ways; 2 Peter is full of these kinds of references, including a reference to the Transfiguration, and many say the pseudonymist is overdoing it there, i.e., that he has too many references to his experience with the historical Jesus. How many is too many? How few is too few? One suspects that this argument is brought in to bolster a conception already held. b) Remember that 1 Peter is an epistle, not a gospel. In Mark s gospel we probably have Peter s reminiscences of his experience with Jesus. The argument for pseudonymity based on what an author should or would have said is tenuous at best. 2. Similarity with Paul s teaching. a) Because 1 Peter shows similarity of thought with Paul, critics have speculated that either Paul wrote the epistle or a follower of Paul wrote the epistle and attributed it to Peter. b) If one examines Acts, they will see Peter agreeing with Paul in principle on the Gentile question. Peter takes the gospel first to the Gentiles (Cornelius, Acts 10-11). In fact, Peter says later that God chose him for that purpose (Acts 15:7). c) When Peter later refuses fellowship with the Gentiles (Galatians 2:11-14), he has already been eating with them. He only draws back when some believers of a stricter view come down from Jerusalem. This means that Peter was in agreement with Paul in

essence, but through a failure of nerve he did not put into practice what he believed. d) The purpose of all this is to show that Peter and Paul did not hold to significantly different teachings. To look at 1 Peter and say that it is like Paul is assuming too much difference between them. It would be fairer to say that what Peter and Paul write is of the common faith. 3. Language. a) Could Peter, the Galilean fisherman, have written the impeccable Greek of this epistle, including its various rhetorical devices? This is a real difficulty to the idea that Peter himself sat down and wrote the epistle with his own hand, or that he dictated it verbatim to a scribe. The church father Papias made the statement that Peter needed an interpreter when he preached in Rome. Did he speak Aramaic and have it interpreted into Latin or Greek? Did he speak Greek and have it interpreted into Latin? We do not know, but this may be a hint that his Greek was not very good. (1) Many scholars believe that Silas/Silvanus was more than a courier (1 Peter 5:12); they believe that he was in fact a coauthor or a scribe give considerable freedom. Paul made use of an amanuensis in his writings (Romans 16:22; cf. 1 Corinthians 16:21; Colossians 4:18; 2 Thessalonians 3:17). (2) The phrase, By Silvanus could mean no more than his being a courier, but we see Silas named as joint author (in some sense) in 1 and 2 Thessalonians. Wrote letters by them (referring to Paul, Barnabas, Judas Barsabbas, and Silas) in Acts 15:22-23 may refer to a simple courier job, but writing By Silvanus might mean more. Paul never says he writes by anyone; he typically mentions the courier by name and says he will tell you more or receive him well. (3) If Silas is the joint author or a scribe with a free hand, this could account for the good Greek, and also for the similar elements of Paul in 1 Peter. The Today s English Version accepts this idea and makes it explicit: I write you this brief letter with the help of Silas b) On the other hand, Greek, along with Aramaic and Hebrew, was commonly spoken throughout Palestine. That was especially true in Galilee, where Hellenistic influence was strong. As a businessman in Galilee, Peter would almost certainly have been fluent in Greek. Peter even had a Greek name (Acts 15:14). Matthew and James, also Galileans, wrote New Testament books in excellent Greek. In addition, Peter wrote this epistle after

three decades of traveling and working among largely Greekspeaking people, which would have given him even greater proficiency in Greek. c) There are also several striking parallels to Peter s sermons recorded in Acts (cf. 1:10-12 with Acts 3:18; 1:17 with Acts 10:34; 1:20 with Acts 2:23; 1:21 with Acts 2:32; 2:4, 7 with Acts 4:11; 3:22 with Acts 2:33; 4:5 with Acts 10:42; the use of xulon [ tree ] in 2:24 and Acts 5:30 and 10:39). 4. Church situation. a) When was there a persecution that could be called a fiery trial (4:12)? Some say Domitian s persecution in the nineties, or Trajan s in the early second century, are the only ones that fit the qualification of a persecution that reached to Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia. Nero s persecution of A.D. 64-65 was localized in Rome. b) But notice that the persecution is not necessarily legal. There is nothing in the letter that demands such an understanding. Insults are in view (2:12, 23; 4:14), but not necessarily legal persecution. Furthermore, the letter assures the readers that normally good conduct will bring them praise and not blame from political leaders (2:13-14; 3:13-14). c) This evidence shows that a date within Peter s lifetime is not ruled out, because the persecution in view does not have to be any official persecution that we know about from history. In fact, several statements indicate that there was not a unified, governmental persecution, but a persecution by a decadent society. B. External evidence for Peter s authorship is strong all the way back, with the exception of the Muratorian Canon, whose text is corrupt at that point and may originally have included 1 Peter. Despite the circulation of forgeries purporting to be written by Peter (e.g., the Gospel of Peter, the Acts of Peter, and the Apocalypse of Peter), the early church never doubted that the apostle wrote 1 Peter. The earliest affirmation of that comes in 2 Peter, which Peter himself described as the second letter he had addressed to his readers (3:1). 1. There are similarities of 1 Peter s words and phrases in such late first- and early second-century writings as the Epistle of Barnabas, the First Epistle of Clement, the Shepherd of Hermas, and the Letters of Ignatius. 2. The earliest extant work that actually quotes from 1 Peter is Polycarp s Epistle of the Philippians, likely written in the second decade of the second century.

3. In the late second and early third centuries, Irenaeus, Tertullian, and Clement of Alexandria definitely attributed 1 Peter to the apostle Peter. C. Peter states that he is in Babylon (5:13), perhaps with his wife (1 Corinthians 9:5). There have been several theories concerning the identity of Babylon. 1. Some argue for the ancient city of Babylon in Mesopotamia, but that region was sparsely populated in Peter s day. It is unlikely that he, Mark, and Silvanus would all have been there at the same time. 2. Others point to a Babylon on the Nile River in Egypt. It, however, was little more than a Roman military outpost, and again it is highly improbable that Peter (along with Mark and Silvanus) would have taken up residence there. 3. Babylon is most likely a cryptic name for Rome, chosen because of the Imperial capital s debauchery and idolatry (cf. Revelation 18-19). a) With persecution looming on the horizon, Peter took care not to endanger the Christians in Rome, who might have forced further difficulties if his letter had been discovered by the Roman authorities. b) It also fits in with the traditional view that Peter ended his life and ministry in Rome (accompanied by Mark, which is another point of contact with later tradition). III. Date And Addressees A. Assuming the genuineness of the epistle and the death of Peter about A.D. 67 or 68, the date can be assumed to be just before Nero s persecution, which followed the great fire that ravaged Rome in the summer of A.D. 64. B. The absence of any reference to martyrdom makes it less likely that the epistle was written after the persecution began, since numerous Christians would by then have been put to death. 1. Peter was evidently not in Rome when Paul wrote Romans (A.D. 57 or 58). 2. It is also unlikely that Peter was in Rome during Paul s first imprisonment, since he is not mentioned in any of the prison epistles. C. Peter was addressing the Jewish Christians in Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia. It has been shown that the order of the provinces goes roughly in a circle. The courier might have traveled the route and circulated the letter. Even though the letter seems aimed at Jewish Christians, it must not be thought that the Gentiles were

excluded. Peter clearly expresses the familiar idea that the gospel is the true Judaism of God s promise (1 Peter 2:4-10).