2 Peter 2
New English Translation
The False Teachers’ Ungodly Lifestyle
2 But false prophets arose among the people,[a] just as there will be false teachers among you. These false teachers[b] will[c] infiltrate your midst[d] with destructive heresies,[e] even to the point of[f] denying the Master who bought them. As a result, they will bring[g] swift destruction on themselves. 2 And many will follow their debauched lifestyles.[h] Because of these false teachers,[i] the way of truth will be slandered.[j] 3 And in their greed they will exploit you with deceptive words. Their[k] condemnation pronounced long ago[l] is not sitting idly by;[m] their[n] destruction is not asleep.
4 For if God did not spare the angels who sinned,[o] but threw them into hell[p] and locked them up[q] in chains[r] in utter darkness,[s] to be kept until the judgment, 5 and if he did not spare the ancient world, but did protect Noah, a herald of righteousness, along with seven others,[t] when God[u] brought a flood on an ungodly world,[v] 6 and if he turned to ashes the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah when he condemned them to destruction,[w] having appointed[x] them to serve as an example[y] to future generations of the ungodly,[z] 7 and if he rescued Lot, a righteous man in anguish over the debauched lifestyle of lawless[aa] men,[ab] 8 (for while he lived among them day after day, that righteous man was tormented in his righteous soul[ac] by the lawless deeds he saw and heard[ad]) 9 —if so,[ae] then the Lord knows how to rescue the godly from their trials,[af] and to reserve the unrighteous for punishment[ag] at the day of judgment, 10 especially those who indulge their fleshly desires[ah] and who despise authority.
Brazen and insolent,[ai] they are not afraid to insult[aj] the glorious ones,[ak] 11 yet even[al] angels, who are much more powerful,[am] do not bring a slanderous[an] judgment against them in the presence of the Lord.[ao] 12 But[ap] these men,[aq] like irrational animals—creatures of instinct, born to be caught and destroyed[ar]—do not understand whom[as] they are insulting, and consequently[at] in their destruction they will be destroyed,[au] 13 suffering harm as the wages for their harmful ways.[av] By considering it a pleasure to carouse in broad daylight,[aw] they are stains and blemishes, indulging[ax] in their deceitful pleasures when they feast together with you. 14 Their eyes,[ay] full of adultery,[az] never stop sinning;[ba] they entice[bb] unstable people.[bc] They have trained their hearts for greed, these cursed children![bd] 15 By forsaking the right path they have gone astray, because they followed the way of Balaam son of Bosor,[be] who loved the wages of unrighteousness,[bf] 16 yet was rebuked[bg] for his own transgression (a dumb donkey,[bh] speaking with a human voice,[bi] restrained the prophet’s madness).[bj]
17 These men[bk] are waterless springs and mists driven by a storm, for whom the utter depths of darkness[bl] have been reserved. 18 For by speaking high-sounding but empty words[bm] they are able to entice,[bn] with fleshly desires and with debauchery,[bo] people[bp] who have just escaped[bq] from those who reside in error.[br] 19 Although these false teachers promise[bs] such people[bt] freedom, they themselves are enslaved to[bu] immorality.[bv] For whatever a person succumbs to, to that he is enslaved.[bw] 20 For if after they have escaped the filthy things[bx] of the world through the rich knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ,[by] they[bz] again get entangled in them and succumb to them,[ca] their last state has become worse for them than their first. 21 For it would have been better for them never to have known the way of righteousness than, having known it, to turn back from the holy commandment that had been delivered to them. 22 They are illustrations of this true proverb:[cb] “A dog returns to its own vomit,”[cc] and “A sow, after washing herself,[cd] wallows in the mire.”[ce]
Footnotes
- 2 Peter 2:1 sn But false prophets arose among the people. Peter uses the same verb, γίνομαι (ginomai), in 2 Pet 2:1 as he had used in 1:20 to describe the process of inspiration. He may well be contrasting, by way of a catchword, the two kinds of prophets.
- 2 Peter 2:1 tn Grk “who”; verse 1 is one sentence in Greek, the second half constituting a relative clause.
- 2 Peter 2:1 sn By the use of the future tense (will infiltrate), Peter is boldly prophesying the role that false teachers will have before these Gentile believers. It was necessary for him to establish both his own credentials and to anchor his audience’s faith in the written Word before he could get to this point, for these false teachers will question both.
- 2 Peter 2:1 tn Grk “will bring in,” often with the connotation of secretiveness; “your midst” is implied.
- 2 Peter 2:1 tn Or “destructive opinions,” “destructive viewpoints.” The genitive ἀπωλείας (apōleias) could be taken either attributively (“destructive”) or as a genitive of destination (“leading to destruction”). Although the preferable interpretation is a genitive of destination, especially because of the elaboration given at the end of the verse (“bringing swift destruction on themselves”), translating it attributively is less cumbersome in English. Either way, the net result is the same.
- 2 Peter 2:1 tn Grk “even.” The καί (kai) is ascensive, suggesting that the worst heresy is mentioned in the words that follow.
- 2 Peter 2:1 tn Grk “bringing.” The present participle ἐπάγοντες (epagontes) indicates the result of the preceding clause.
- 2 Peter 2:2 tn “Debauched lifestyles” is literally “licentiousnesses,” “sensualities,” “debaucheries.”
- 2 Peter 2:2 tn Grk “because of whom,” introducing a subordinate clause to the first part of the verse.
- 2 Peter 2:2 tn Or “blasphemed,” “reviled,” “treated with contempt.”
- 2 Peter 2:3 tn Grk “to whom,” introducing a subordinate relative clause.
- 2 Peter 2:3 tn Grk “the ancient judgment.”
- 2 Peter 2:3 tn Grk “is not idle.”
- 2 Peter 2:3 tn Greek has “and their.” As introducing a synonymous parallel, it is superfluous in English.
- 2 Peter 2:4 tn The participle ἁμαρτησάντων (hamartēsantōn) could either be attributive (“who sinned”) or adverbial (“when they sinned”). The relation to the judgment of the false teachers in v. 3 suggests that the objects of God’s judgment are not in question, but the time frame for the execution of justice is. If the participle is taken temporally, the point of comparison is not as acute. The objection that the illustrations following (the flood, Sodom and Gomorrah) are viewed temporally does not mitigate this translation, for in both instances only the time of executing judgment is in view. Further, in both instances the OT notes that God withheld punishment for a long time.
- 2 Peter 2:4 tn Grk “casting them into Tartarus” or “holding them captive in Tartarus.” This verb, ταρταρόω (tartaroō), occurs only here in the NT, but its meaning is clearly established in both Hellenistic and Jewish literature. “Tartarus [was] thought of by the Greeks as a subterranean place lower than Hades where divine punishment was meted out, and so regarded in Israelite apocalyptic as well” (BDAG 991 s.v.). Grammatically, it has been translated as an indicative because it is an attendant circumstance participle.
- 2 Peter 2:4 tn Grk “handed them over.”
- 2 Peter 2:4 tc The reading σειραῖς (seirais, “chains”) is found in P72 P Ψ 33 1739 M vg sy, while σιροῖς (sirois [or σειροῖς, seirois], “pits”) is found in א A B C 81. The evidence is thus fairly evenly divided. Internally, the reading adopted here (σειραῖς) is a rarer term, perhaps prompting some scribes to replace it with the more common word. However, this more common term is not a synonym and hence does not follow the normal pattern of scribes. As well, the use of the genitive ζόφου (zophou) in “chains of darkness” is a bit awkward (a rare genitive of place), perhaps prompting some scribes to change the imagery to “pits of darkness” (in which case ζόφου is an attributive genitive). A further point that complicates the issue is the relationship of 2 Peter to Jude. Jude’s parallel (v. 6) has δεσμοῖς (desmois, “chains”). Apart from the issue of whether 2 Peter used Jude or Jude used 2 Peter, this parallel suggests one of two possibilities: either (1) since these two books obviously have a literary relationship, σειραῖς is autographic, or (2) early scribes, recognizing that these two books shared their material, changed σειροῖς to σειραῖς to conform the wording, at least conceptually, to Jude 6. On balance, σειραῖς looks to be original because scribes were not prone to harmonize extensively between books other than the Gospels (although 2 Peter and Jude do display some of this harmonizing). Further, such harmonization is often, if not usually, verbally exact, but δεσμοῖς is not a variant here.
- 2 Peter 2:4 tn The genitive ζόφου (zophou) is taken as a genitive of place. See previous note for discussion.
- 2 Peter 2:5 tn “Along with seven others” is implied in the cryptic, “the eighth, Noah.” A more literal translation thus would be, “he did protect Noah [as] the eighth…”
- 2 Peter 2:5 tn Grk “he”; the referent (God) has been repeated here for clarity, although this is somewhat redundant with the beginning of v. 4.
- 2 Peter 2:5 tn Grk “a world of the ungodly.”
- 2 Peter 2:6 tc Several significant witnesses omit καταστροφῇ (katastrophē, “destruction”; such as P72* B C* 442 1175 1241 1243 1739 1881 bo), but this is probably best explained as an accidental omission due to homoioarcton (the word following is κατέκρινεν [katekrinen, “he condemned”]).tn Or “ruin,” or “extinction.” The first part of this verse more literally reads “And [if] he condemned to annihilation the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, by turning them to ashes.”sn The destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah is detailed in Gen 18:16—19:29.
- 2 Peter 2:6 tn The perfect participle τεθεικώς (tetheikōs) suggests an antecedent act. More idiomatically, the idea seems to be, “because he had already appointed them to serve as an example.”
- 2 Peter 2:6 tn “To serve as” is not in Greek but is implied in the object-complement construction.
- 2 Peter 2:6 tn Grk “an example of the things coming to the ungodly,” or perhaps “an example to the ungodly of coming [ages].”
- 2 Peter 2:7 tn Or “unprincipled.”
- 2 Peter 2:7 tn This verse more literally reads “And [if] he rescued righteous Lot, who was deeply distressed by the lifestyle of the lawless in [their] debauchery.”
- 2 Peter 2:8 tn Grk “that righteous man tormented his righteous soul.”
- 2 Peter 2:8 tn Grk “by lawless deeds, in seeing and hearing [them].”
- 2 Peter 2:9 tn The Greek is one long conditional sentence, from v. 4 to v. 10a. 2 Pet 2:4-8 constitute the protasis; vv. 9 and 10a, the apodosis. In order to show this connection more clearly, a resumptive summary protasis—“if so,” or “if God did these things”—is needed in English translation.
- 2 Peter 2:9 tn Grk “from trial,” or possibly “from temptation” (though this second meaning for πειρασμός (peirasmos) does not fit the context in which Noah and Lot are seen as in the midst of trials, not temptation).
- 2 Peter 2:9 tn The adverbial participle κολαζομένους (kolazomenous) can refer either to contemporaneous time or subsequent time. At stake is the meaning of the following prepositional phrase (at the day of judgment or until the day of judgment). If the participle is contemporaneous, the idea is “to keep the ungodly in a state of punishment until the day of judgment.” If subsequent, the meaning is “to keep the ungodly to be punished at the day of judgment.” Many commentators/translations opt for the first view, assuming that the present participle cannot be used of subsequent time. However, the present participle is the normal one used for result, and is often used of purpose (cf., e.g., for present participles suggesting result, Mark 9:7; Luke 4:15; John 5:18; Eph 2:15; 2 Pet 2:1, mentioned above; for present participles indicating purpose, note Luke 10:25; John 12:33; Acts 3:26; 2 Pet 2:10 [as even most translations render it]). Further, the context supports this: 2:1-10 forms something of an inclusio, in which the final end of the false teachers is mentioned specifically in v. 1, then as a general principle in v. 9. The point of v. 3—that the punishment of the false teachers is certain, even though the sentence has not yet been carried out, is underscored by a participle of purpose in v. 9.
- 2 Peter 2:10 tn Grk “those who go after the flesh in [its] lust.”
- 2 Peter 2:10 tn There is no “and” in Greek; it is supplied for the sake of English convention.
- 2 Peter 2:10 tn The translation takes βλασφημοῦντες (blasphēmountes) as an adverbial participle of purpose, as most translations do. However, it is also possible to see this temporally (thus, “they do not tremble when they blaspheme”).
- 2 Peter 2:10 tn Δόξας (doxas) almost certainly refers to angelic beings rather than mere human authorities, though it is difficult to tell whether good or bad angels are in view. Verse 11 seems to suggest that wicked angels is what the author intends.
- 2 Peter 2:11 tn Grk “whereas.”
- 2 Peter 2:11 tn Grk “who are greater in strength and power.” What is being compared, however, could either be the false teachers or “the glorious ones,” in which case “angels” would refer to good angels and “the glorious ones” to evil angels.
- 2 Peter 2:11 tn Or “insulting.” The word comes from the same root as the term found in v. 10 (“insult”), v. 12 (“insulting”), and v. 2 (“will be slandered”). The author is fond of building his case by the repetition of a word in a slightly different context so that the readers make the necessary connection. English usage cannot always convey this connection because a given word in one language cannot always be translated the same way in another.
- 2 Peter 2:11 tc Several witnesses lack παρὰ κυρίῳ (para kuriō; so A Ψ 33 81 436 442 1505 1611 1735 1881 2344 2464 al vg co), while others have the genitive παρὰ κυρίου (para kuriou; so P72 5 1241 al syph,mss,h**). The majority of witnesses (including א B C P 1175 1243 1739 1852 2492 M) read the dative παρὰ κυρίῳ. The genitive expression suggests that angels would not pronounce a judgment on “the glorious ones” from the Lord, while the dative indicates that angels would not pronounce such a judgment in the presence of the Lord. The parallel in Jude 9 speaks of a reviling judgment against the devil in which the prepositional phrase is entirely absent. At the same time, in that parallel Michael does say, “The Lord rebuke you.” (Hence, he is offering something of a judgment from the Lord.) The best options externally are the dative or the omission of the phrase, but a decision is difficult. Internally, the omission may possibly be a motivated reading in that it finds a parallel in Jude 9 (where no prepositional phrase is used). All things considered, the dative is to be preferred, though with much reservation. NA28 has the omission preceded by a diamond in the apparatus, indicating a toss-up as to the initial text.
- 2 Peter 2:12 tn 2 Pet 2:12 through 16 constitute one cumbersome sentence in Greek. It is difficult to tell whether a hard break belongs in the middle of v. 13, as the translation has it, or whether the compounding of participles is meant in a loosely descriptive sort of way, without strong grammatical connection. Either way, the sentence rambles in a way that often betrays a great “vehemence of spirit” (A. T. Robertson, Grammar, 435). The author is obviously agitated at these false teachers who are to come.
- 2 Peter 2:12 tn The false teachers could conceivably be men or women, but in v. 14 they are said to have eyes “full of an adulteress.” This can only refer to men. Hence, both here and in v. 17 the false teachers are described as “men.”
- 2 Peter 2:12 tn Grk “born for capture and destruction.”
- 2 Peter 2:12 tn Grk “with [reference to] whom.”
- 2 Peter 2:12 tn There is no conjunction joining this last clause of v. 12 to the preceding (i.e., no “and consequently”). The argument builds asyndetically (a powerful rhetorical device in Greek), but cannot be naturally expressed in English as such.
- 2 Peter 2:12 tn This cryptic expression has been variously interpreted. (1) It could involve a simple cognate dative in which case the idea is “they will be utterly destroyed.” But the presence of αὐτῶν (autōn; their, of them) is problematic for this view. Other, more plausible views are: (2) the false teachers will be destroyed at the same time as the irrational beasts, or (3) in the same manner as these creatures (i.e., by being caught); or (4) the false teachers will be destroyed together with the evil angels whom they insult. Because of the difficulties of the text, it was thought best to leave it ambiguous, as the Greek has it.
- 2 Peter 2:13 tn There is a play on words in Greek, but this is difficult to express adequately in English. The verb ἀδικέω (adikeō) as a passive means “to suffer harm,” or “to suffer an injustice.” The noun ἀδικία (adikia) means “unrighteousness.” Since the Greek verb has a wider field of meaning than the English, to translate it as suffer an injustice is unwarranted, for it implicitly attributes evil to God. As R. Bauckham notes, “in English it is impossible to translate ἀδικούμενοι as a morally neutral term and ἀδικίας with a morally pejorative term, while retaining the play on words” (Jude, 2 Peter [WBC], 265).
- 2 Peter 2:13 tn Grk “considering carousing in the daytime a pleasure.”
- 2 Peter 2:13 tn Or “carousing,” “reveling.” The participle ἐντρυφῶντες (entruphōntes) is a cognate to the noun τρυφή (truphē, “carousing”) used earlier in the verse.
- 2 Peter 2:14 tn Grk “having eyes.” See note on “men” at the beginning of v. 12.
- 2 Peter 2:14 tn Grk “full of an adulteress.”
- 2 Peter 2:14 tn Grk “and unceasing from sin.” Some translate this “insatiable for sin,” but such a translation is based on a textual variant with inadequate support.
- 2 Peter 2:14 tn Grk “enticing.” See note on “men” at the beginning of v. 12.
- 2 Peter 2:14 tn “People” is literally “souls.” The term ψυχή (psuchē) can refer to one’s soul, one’s life, or oneself.
- 2 Peter 2:14 tn Grk “having hearts trained in greediness, children of cursing.” The participles continue the general description of the false teachers, without strong grammatical connection. The genitive κατάρας (kataras, “of cursing”) is taken attributively here.
- 2 Peter 2:15 tn Although many modern translations (e.g., NASB, TEV, NIV, CEV, NLT) read “Beor” here, this is due to harmonization with the OT rather than following a variant textual reading. The Greek text of NA28 as well as most witnesses reads “Bosor,” an otherwise unattested form of the name of Balaam’s father. Significantly, B and א* stand out against this reading (B has Βεωρ [“Beor”] while א* reads Βεωορσορ [“Beorsor”], a nonsensical conflation of the other two variants).
- 2 Peter 2:15 tn “Wages of unrighteousness” in Greek is the same expression found in v. 13, “wages for harmful ways.” The repetition makes the link between the false teachers and Balaam more concrete.
- 2 Peter 2:16 tn Grk “but he had a rebuke.”
- 2 Peter 2:16 tn The Greek word ἄφωνος (aphōnos) means “mute, silent” or “incapable of speech.” For reasons of English style the word “dumb” was used in the translation. Despite the potential for misunderstanding (since “dumb” can refer to a lack of intellectual capability) more dynamic glosses were judged to be inelegant.
- 2 Peter 2:16 tn Grk “a voice of a (man/person).”
- 2 Peter 2:16 sn Balaam’s activities are detailed in Num 22-24 (see also Num 31:8, 16).
- 2 Peter 2:17 tn Although some translations have simply “these” or “these people,” since in v. 14 they are described as having eyes “full of an adulteress,” men are in view.
- 2 Peter 2:17 tn Grk “utter darkness of darkness.” Verse 4 speaks of wicked angels presently in “chains of utter darkness,” while the final fate of the false teachers is a darker place still.
- 2 Peter 2:18 tn Grk “high-sounding words of futility.”
- 2 Peter 2:18 tn Grk “they entice.”
- 2 Peter 2:18 tn Grk “with the lusts of the flesh, with debauchery.”
- 2 Peter 2:18 tn Grk “those.”
- 2 Peter 2:18 tn Or “those who are barely escaping.”
- 2 Peter 2:18 tn Or “deceit.”
- 2 Peter 2:19 tn Verse 19 is a subordinate clause in Greek. The masculine nominative participle “promising” (ἐπαγγελλόμενοι, epangellomenoi) refers back to the subject of vv. 17-18. At the same time, it functions subordinately to the following participle, ὑπάρχοντες (huparchontes, “while being”).
- 2 Peter 2:19 tn Grk “them.”
- 2 Peter 2:19 tn Grk “slaves of.” See the note on the word “slave” in 1:1.
- 2 Peter 2:19 tn Or “corruption,” “depravity.” Verse 19 constitutes a subordinate clause to v. 18 in Greek. The main verbal components of these two verses are: “uttering…they entice…promising…being (enslaved).” The main verb is (they) entice. The three participles are adverbial and seem to indicate an instrumental relation (by uttering), a concessive relation (although promising), and a temporal relation (while being [enslaved]). For the sake of English usage, in the translation of the text this is broken down into two sentences.
- 2 Peter 2:19 tn Grk “for by what someone is overcome, to this he is enslaved.”
- 2 Peter 2:20 tn Grk “defilements”; “contaminations”; “pollutions.”
- 2 Peter 2:20 sn Through the rich knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. The implication is not that these people necessarily knew the Lord (in the sense of being saved), but that they were in the circle of those who had embraced Christ as Lord and Savior.
- 2 Peter 2:20 tn Grk “(and/but) they.”
- 2 Peter 2:20 tn Grk “they again, after becoming entangled in them, are overcome by them.”
- 2 Peter 2:22 tn Grk “the [statement] of the true proverb has happened to them.” The idiom in Greek cannot be translated easily in English.
- 2 Peter 2:22 tn The quotation is a loose rendering of Prov 26:11. This proverb involves a participle that is translated like a finite verb (“returns”). In the LXX this line constitutes a subordinate and dependent clause. But since the line has been lifted from its original context, it has been translated as an independent statement.
- 2 Peter 2:22 tn Or “after being washed.” The middle verb may be direct (“wash oneself”) or permissive (“allow oneself to be washed”).
- 2 Peter 2:22 tn The source of this quotation is uncertain. Heraclitus has often been mentioned as a possible source, but this is doubtful. Other options on the translation of the second line include a sow, having (once) bathed herself (in mud), (returns) to wallowing in the mire, or a sow that washes herself by wallowing in the mire (BDAG 181 s.v. βόρβορος). The advantage of this last translation is that no verbs need to be supplied for it to make sense. The disadvantage is that in this context it does not make any contribution to the argument. Since the source of the quotation is not known, there is some guesswork involved in the reconstruction. Most commentators prefer a translation similar to the one in the text above.
2 Peter 2
New King James Version
Destructive Doctrines
2 But there were also false prophets among the people, even as there will be (A)false teachers among you, who will secretly bring in destructive heresies, even denying the Lord who bought them, and bring on themselves swift destruction. 2 And many will follow their destructive ways, because of whom the way of truth will be blasphemed. 3 By covetousness they will exploit you with deceptive words; for a long time their judgment has not been idle, and their destruction [a]does not slumber.
Doom of False Teachers
4 For if God did not spare the angels who sinned, but cast them down to [b]hell and delivered them into chains of darkness, to be reserved for judgment; 5 and did not spare the ancient world, but saved Noah, one of eight people, a preacher of righteousness, bringing in the flood on the world of the ungodly; 6 and turning the cities of (B)Sodom and Gomorrah into ashes, condemned them to destruction, making them an example to those who afterward would live ungodly; 7 and (C)delivered righteous Lot, who was oppressed by the filthy conduct of the wicked 8 (for that righteous man, dwelling among them, (D)tormented his righteous soul from day to day by seeing and hearing their lawless deeds)— 9 then (E)the Lord knows how to deliver the godly out of temptations and to reserve the unjust under punishment for the day of judgment, 10 and especially (F)those who walk according to the flesh in the lust of uncleanness and despise authority. (G)They are presumptuous, self-willed. They are not afraid to speak evil of [c]dignitaries, 11 whereas (H)angels, who are greater in power and might, do not bring a reviling accusation against them before the Lord.
Depravity of False Teachers
12 But these, (I)like natural brute beasts made to be caught and destroyed, speak evil of the things they do not understand, and will utterly perish in their own corruption, 13 (J)and will receive the wages of unrighteousness, as those who count it pleasure (K)to [d]carouse in the daytime. (L)They are spots and blemishes, [e]carousing in their own deceptions while (M)they feast with you, 14 having eyes full of [f]adultery and that cannot cease from sin, enticing unstable souls. (N)They have a heart trained in covetous practices, and are accursed children. 15 They have forsaken the right way and gone astray, following the way of (O)Balaam the son of Beor, who loved the wages of unrighteousness; 16 but he was rebuked for his iniquity: a dumb donkey speaking with a man’s voice restrained the madness of the prophet.
17 (P)These are wells without water, [g]clouds carried by a tempest, for whom is reserved the blackness of darkness [h]forever.
Deceptions of False Teachers
18 For when they speak great swelling words of emptiness, they allure through the lusts of the flesh, through lewdness, the ones who [i]have actually escaped from those who live in error. 19 While they promise them liberty, they themselves are slaves of [j]corruption; (Q)for by whom a person is overcome, by him also he is brought into [k]bondage. 20 For if, after they (R)have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, they are (S)again entangled in them and overcome, the latter end is worse for them than the beginning. 21 For (T)it would have been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness, than having known it, to turn from the holy commandment delivered to them. 22 But it has happened to them according to the true proverb: (U)“A dog returns to his own vomit,” and, “a sow, having washed, to her wallowing in the mire.”
Footnotes
- 2 Peter 2:3 M will not
- 2 Peter 2:4 Lit. Tartarus
- 2 Peter 2:10 glorious ones, lit. glories
- 2 Peter 2:13 revel
- 2 Peter 2:13 reveling
- 2 Peter 2:14 Lit. an adulteress
- 2 Peter 2:17 NU and mists
- 2 Peter 2:17 NU omits forever
- 2 Peter 2:18 NU are barely escaping
- 2 Peter 2:19 depravity
- 2 Peter 2:19 slavery
베드로후서 2
Korean Living Bible
거짓 선생과 그 대책
2 전에 이스라엘 백성 가운데 거짓 예언자들이 있었듯이 여러분 가운데도 거짓 선생이 나타날 것입니다. 그들은 파괴적인 이단을 몰래 끌어들여 자기들을 사신 주님을 모른다고 잡아떼며 임박한 멸망을 스스로 불러들이는 자들입니다.
2 많은 사람이 그들의 방탕한 길을 따를 것이며 그들 때문에 진리가 훼방을 받게 될 것입니다.
3 또 그들은 욕심을 채우려고 거짓말로 여러분을 착취할 것입니다. 그러나 그들은 반드시 하나님의 심판을 받아 멸망하고 말 것입니다.
4 하나님은 범죄한 천사들을 용서하지 않으시고 [a]깊은 지옥에 던져 심판 때까지 어두운 구덩이에 가두어 두셨습니다.
5 또 하나님은 옛 세상을 용서하지 않으시고 경건치 않은 사람들을 홍수로 쓸어 버리셨으나 의의 전도자 노아와 그의 일곱 식구를 구원하셨습니다.
6 그리고 죄악의 도시 소돔과 고모라 성을 잿더미가 되게 하셔서 훗날 경건치 않은 사람들에 대한 본보기로 삼으셨습니다.
7 그러나 악한 자들의 방탕으로 큰 고통을 받던 의로운 롯은 구원하셨습니다.
8 (롯은 그들의 악한 짓을 날마다 보고 들으면서 몹시 괴로워했습니다.)
9 하나님은 경건한 사람을 시험에서 건져내시고 악한 사람은 심판 날까지 계속 벌을 받게 하는 방법을 알고 계십니다.
10 특별히 육체의 정욕대로 살며 [b]하나님의 권위를 멸시하는 사람에게는 더욱 큰 벌을 내리실 것입니다. 그들은 대담하고 거만하여 두려움 없이 하늘의 존재들을 욕합니다.
11 그러나 그들보다 더 큰 힘과 능력을 가진 천사들도 주님 앞에서 그들을 헐뜯어 고소하지는 않습니다.
12 그들은 본래 잡혀 죽기 위해 태어난 이성 없는 짐승 같아서 알지도 못하는 것을 욕하니 그들도 짐승처럼 멸망하고 말 것입니다.
13 결국 그들은 악한 짓을 한 그 대가를 받을 것입니다. 그들은 대낮에 흥청대는 것을 낙으로 여기며 여러분과 함께 앉은 잔치 자리에서까지 속이고 쾌락을 즐기는 더러운 사람들입니다.
14 그들의 눈은 음란으로 가득 차서 끊임없이 죄를 짓습니다. 그들은 믿음이 약한 사람들을 꾀어 욕심을 채우는 데 단련된 저주받은 자식들인 것입니다.
15 그들은 바른 길을 버리고 잘못된 길에 빠져 브올의 아들 발람의 길을 따르고 있습니다. 발람은 악한 방법으로 얻은 재물을 사랑하다가
16 그의 잘못에 대하여 책망을 받았습니다. 말 못하는 나귀가 사람의 음성으로 말하여 이 예언자의 미친 행동을 막은 것입니다.
17 이 사람들은 물 없는 샘과 폭풍에 밀려가는 안개와 같으며 그들에게는 칠흑 같은 어두움만이 있을 뿐입니다.
18 그들은 헛된 말로 자랑하며 잘못된 길에서 겨우 빠져나온 사람들을 육체의 정욕으로 꾀어 죄를 짓게 합니다.
19 그들은 사람들에게 자유를 준다고 하면서 자신들은 [c]멸망의 종이 되어 있습니다. 누구든지 정복을 당하면 그는 정복자의 종이 되는 것입니다.
20 만일 주 예수 그리스도를 알고 세상의 더러운 것에서 해방된 사람들이 다시 거기에 빠져 정복을 당하면 그들의 마지막 형편은 처음보다 더 비참합니다.
21 바른 교훈인 줄 알면서 자신들에게 주어진 거룩한 계명을 저버린다면 그것을 모르는 편이 더 좋습니다.
22 [d]“개가 토한 것을 다시 먹고 돼지가 몸을 씻고도 다시 진탕에 뒹군다” 는 속담이 그들에게 맞는 말입니다.
彼得后书 2
Chinese New Version (Simplified)
提防假先知和假教师
2 从前在人民中,曾有假先知出来;照样,将来在你们中间,也必有假教师出现。他们偷偷把使人灭亡的异端引进来,甚至否认那曾经买赎他们的主,迅速地自取灭亡。 2 许多人会随从他们的淫行,因此真理的道,就因他们的缘故被人毁谤。 3 他们因为有贪心,就用捏造的话,想在你们身上图利;惩罚他们的,自古以来就没有松懈;毁灭他们的,也不会打盹。
4 神没有姑息犯罪的天使,反而把他们丢入地狱,囚禁在幽暗的坑里,等候审判。 5 神也没有姑息上古的世界,反而使洪水临到那不敬虔的世人,只保存了传义道的挪亚一家八口。 6 神判定了所多玛、蛾摩拉二城的罪,把它们倾覆,烧成灰烬,作为后世不敬虔的人的鉴戒; 7 只救了那因恶人的淫行而常受委屈的义人罗得; 8 (因为这义人住在他们中间,天天看见和听见他们不法的事,他正直的心就感到伤痛。) 9 主知道怎样搭救敬虔的人脱离试探,又把不义的人留下来,等候在审判的日子受刑罚, 10 尤其是那些随从肉体,生活在污秽的私欲中,和轻蔑当权的,更是这样。他们胆大任性,毫无畏惧地毁谤在尊位的。 11 就是天使,虽有更大的力量与权能,尚且不用毁谤的话在主面前控告他们。 12 但这些人,好象没有理性的牲畜,生下来就是给人捉去宰杀的;他们毁谤自己所不知道的事,必在自己的败坏中灭亡。 13 他们行不义,就得了不义的工价。他们在白昼纵情作乐,满了污点与瑕疵,和你们一同吃饭的时候,就因自己的诡诈而沾沾自喜。 14 他们满眼淫色,而且不住地犯罪。他们引诱心志不坚固的人。他们的心习惯了贪婪,是应当受咒诅的族类。 15 他们离弃正路,走入歧途,跟从了比珥的儿子巴兰的道路。这巴兰贪爱不义的工价, 16 他曾经因着自己的过犯受了责备:不能说话的驴,竟用人的声音说出话来,制止了这先知的狂妄。
17 这些人是无水的泉源,是暴风催逼的雾气,有漆黑的幽暗为他们存留。 18 因为他们说虚妄夸大的话,用肉体的私欲和邪荡的事,引诱那些刚刚逃脱了错谬生活的人。 19 他们应许给人自由,自己却作了败坏的奴仆;因为人给谁制伏了,就作谁的奴仆。 20 如果他们因为认识我们的主、救主耶稣基督,可以脱离世上的污秽,后来又在其中被缠住、受制伏,他们末了的景况,就比先前的更不好了。 21 既然认识了义路,竟又背弃传给他们的圣诫命,对他们来说,倒不如不认识好得多了。 22 他们的情形,正像俗语所说的:
“狗转过来,又吃自己所吐的;
猪洗净了,又到污泥中去打滚。”
2 Pedro 2
Biblia del Jubileo
2 ¶ Pero hubo también falsos profetas en el pueblo, como habrá entre vosotros falsos maestros, que introducirán encubiertamente sectas de perdición, y negarán al Señor que los rescató, atrayendo sobre sí mismos perdición acelerada.
2 Y muchos seguirán sus perdiciones, por los cuales el camino de la verdad será blasfemado;
3 ¶ y por avaricia harán mercadería de vosotros con palabras fingidas, sobre los cuales la condenación ya de largo tiempo no se tarda, y su perdición no se duerme.
4 Porque si Dios no perdonó a los ángeles que habían pecado, sino que habiéndolos despeñado en el abismo más profundo {Gr. tartarus} con cadenas de oscuridad, los entregó para ser reservados al juicio;
5 y si no perdonó al mundo antiguo, mas guardó a Noé, predicador de justicia, con otras siete personas, trayendo el diluvio sobre el mundo de malvados;
6 y si condenó por destrucción las ciudades de Sodoma y de Gomorra, tornándolas en ceniza, y poniéndolas por ejemplo a los que habían de vivir sin temor y reverencia de Dios,
7 ¶ y libró al justo Lot, el cual era perseguido de los abominables por la nefanda conversación de ellos;
8 (porque este justo, con ver y oír, morando entre ellos, afligía cada día su alma justa con los hechos de aquellos injustos);
9 sabe el Señor librar de tentación a los píos, y reservar a los injustos para ser atormentados en el día del juicio;
10 ¶ y principalmente a aquellos que, siguiendo la carne, andan en concupiscencia de inmundicia, y menosprecian la Potestad; atrevidos, soberbios, que no temen decir mal de las potestades superiores;
11 como quiera que los mismos ángeles, que son mayores en fuerza y en potencia, no pronuncian juicio de maldición contra ellas delante del Señor.
12 Mas éstos, diciendo mal de las cosas que no entienden, (como animales naturales sin razón, que naturalmente son hechas para presa y destrucción), perecerán en su perdición,
13 recibiendo el galardón de su injusticia, ya que estiman por delicia poder gozar de deleites cada día. Estos son suciedades y manchas, los cuales comiendo con vosotros, juntamente se recrean en sus engaños;
14 teniendo los ojos llenos de adulterio, y no saben cesar de pecar; cebando las almas inconstantes; teniendo el corazón ejercitado en codicias, siendo hijos de maldición;
15 que dejando el camino derecho han errado, habiendo seguido el camino de Balaam, hijo de Beor, el cual amó el premio de la maldad.
16 Y fue reprendido de su maldad; un animal mudo acostumbrado a yugo (sobre el cual iba sentado) hablando en voz de hombre, refrenó la locura del profeta.
17 Estos son fuentes sin agua, y nubes traídas de torbellino de viento; para los cuales está guardada eternalmente la oscuridad de las tinieblas.
18 Porque hablando arrogantes palabras de vanidad, ceban con las concupiscencias de la carne en disoluciones a los que verdaderamente habían huido de los que conversan en error;
19 prometiéndoles libertad, siendo ellos mismos esclavos de corrupción. Porque el que es de alguno vencido, es sujeto a la servidumbre del que lo venció.
20 Ciertamente, si habiéndose ellos apartado de las contaminaciones del mundo, por el conocimiento del Señor y Salvador, Jesucristo, y otra vez envolviéndose en ellas son vencidos, sus postrimerías les son hechas peores que los principios.
21 Porque mejor les hubiera sido no haber conocido el camino de la justicia, que después de haberlo conocido, tornarse atrás del santo mandamiento que les fue dado.
22 Pero les ha acontecido lo que por un verdadero proverbio se suele decir: El perro vuelve a su vómito, y la puerca lavada a revolcarse en el cieno.
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