Second Peter
Completed by Joseph Hill.
AN
EXPOSITION,
W I T H P R A C T I C A L O B S E
R V A T I O N S,
OF THE SECOND EPISTLE GENERAL OF
P E T E R.
The penman
of this epistle appears plainly to be the same who wrote the
foregoing; and, whatever difference some learned men apprehend they
discern in the style of this epistle from that of the former, this
cannot be a sufficient argument to assert that it was written by
Simon who succeeded the apostle James in the church at Jerusalem,
inasmuch as he who wrote this epistle calls himself Simon Peter,
and an apostle (v.
1), and says that he was one of the three apostles
that were present at Christ's transfiguration (v. 18), and says expressly
that he had written a former epistle to them, ch. iii. 1. The design of this
second epistle is the same with that of the former, as is evident
from the first verse of the third
chapter, whence observe that, in the things of God, we
have need of precept upon precept, and line upon line, and
all little enough to keep them in remembrance; and yet these are
the things which should be most faithfully recorded and frequently
remembered by us.