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Chapter 3

The Fact of Christ’s Return

The Day of the Lord Will Come.[a] Beloved, this is now the second letter I have written to you. In both of them I have tried to stir up your memories for a clear understanding so that you might remember the words spoken in the past by the holy Prophets and by the apostles at the command of our Lord and Savior.

First of all, you must understand that in the last days scoffers will appear who have led lives of indulgence.

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Footnotes

  1. 2 Peter 3:1 We know the spectacle of an immutable universe; the days fly by and the seasons return. Could the fate of the world change someday? Christians of that day are loath to think of it and quick to deny it. To eliminate this uncertainty, the author first of all recalls the teaching of the Prophets, the Apostles, and Christ himself about the end of the world. Furthermore, in the Bible there are two or three passages that make us reflect: the manner in which the cosmos rises in the midst of the initial disorder as well as the drowning of everything at the Flood; hence, our world does not have the promises for eternity.
    What then is the reason for the long delay? There are two reasons: first, the Lord does not count time as we do; above all, his mercy is immense and he awaits the conversion of everyone. But the announcement of the end remains such as was taught by the Gospels (see Mt 24:43; Lk 12:39-40; 1 Thes 5:2). In the face of the unforeseeable character of history and the unforeseeable plan of God, there is the temptation to take refuge in the name of the perpetuity of the cosmos.