Digital Logos Edition
First Peter addresses a church facing social pressure and ostracization, yet the letter’s message is one of hope based on the foundation of Jesus Christ. These churches can rest assured that God has marked them out as a holy nation—a unique people group that ignores ethnic identity markers in favor of a unity forged through the blood of Jesus Christ.
The Lexham Research Commentary is your starting point for study and research. Each volume gives you the tools you need to find answers quickly. This commentary is designed to do the time-consuming work of searching through commentaries, journal articles, and monographs to find the information you need, saving you valuable time by curating all of the best literature in one place—it’s a commentary on the commentaries. The annotated notes on the various viewpoints and interpretive options within the text allow you to quickly synthesize a broad range of views on a particular passage. Dense, jargon-filled research is distilled into easy-to-understand comments. As you critically study the text, the contextual notes help you place the passage within the narrow context of the biblical book and the broader context of the entire canon.
The Lexham Research Commentaries were formerly known as the Lexham Bible Guides.
“In other words, sometime after Jesus’ crucifixion (and, possibly, resurrection), he proclaimed victory to the sinful spirits who had instigated the sin that resulted in the flood and were now imprisoned (i.e., the ‘sons of God’ of Gen 6:1–4).” (1 Peter 3:19–22)
“This is not a statement about where the inheritance is located; it is a statement about its divine origin and quality.” (1 Peter 1:4–5)
“‘Peter’s point is that one sets one’s hope on future grace, not by idle wishfulness or unfounded optimism, but by a mental resolve to live in such a way as to manifest the ‘living hope’ of the Christian believer.” (1 Peter 1:13)
“Second, Peter calls his audience to embrace their calling by being holy (hagioi … genēthēte) rather than reverting to their previous lifestyle.” (1 Peter 1:13–25)
“Furthermore, in the process of grappling with the believer’s identity in relation to both the world and Christ, 1 Peter seizes on the term Christianos. First Peter is the only book in the New Testament where Christians use the term to describe themselves; significantly, from here onward the term becomes Christianity’s ‘standard self-designation’ (Horrell 2007, 381).” (source)
The Lexham Research Commentary provides the following for each literary unit:
Paul Himes (PhD, New Testament, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary) is the author of Foreknowledge and Social Identity in 1 Peter. He has published several articles and essays on the General Letters, especially the text and theology of 1–2 Peter.
Douglas Mangum is an academic editor for Lexham Press. He holds a PhD in Hebrew from the University of Free State and holds an MA in Hebrew and Semitic Studies from the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He is a Lexham English Bible and Lexham Research Commentary editor, a Faithlife Study Bible contributing editor, a Studies in Faithful Living co-author, a regular Bible Study Magazine contributor, and a frequently consulted specialist for the Lexham Bible Dictionary.
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