Before tackling the specific
text from which this study commenced and provided the title of the study, it
will be appropriate to take the opportunity to bolster the conjecture in which this
effort has been engaged concerning second Peter. To get there, one must first
look to Matthew. As Jesus continues on
with His discourse about the fall of the Temple, he says to “stay alert,
because you do not know on what day your Lord will come. But understand
this: If the owner of the house had known at what time of night the thief was
coming, He would have been alert and would not have let his house be broken
into” (Matthew 24:42-43). Because of what has been determined, that the
author of second Peter is referencing the prediction that the Temple would
indeed fall, it is not at all surprising to hear him say “But the day of the
Lord will come like a thief” (3:10a), as the analogy is drafted into use.
Along the same lines,
if second Peter is being written with a knowledge of that which will eventually
come to be communicated in Matthew twenty-four, then it is also unsurprising to
hear the regular references to Noah and the judgment of the flood, especially
considering what Jesus can be heard to say with “For just like the days of Noah
were, so the coming of the Son of Man will be. For in those days before
the flood, people were eating and drinking, marrying and given in marriage,
until the day Noah entered the ark” (24:37-38). To that, Jesus adds “And
they knew nothing until the flood came and took them all away. It will be
the same at the coming of the Son of Man” (24:39).
If Jesus’ prediction
is, in fact, in mind, and if questions concerning the legitimacy of His
prediction and therefore His ministry and therefore the church and its
proclamation concerning Him, then this provides an interesting avenue by which
to approach something to be found in the first chapter of the letter, which is
“Moreover, we possess the prophetic word as an altogether reliable thing.
You do well to pay attention to this as you would to a light shining in a murky
place” (1:19a).
In the third chapter
of the letter, after insisting that the day of the Lord will come like a thief,
a question is proffered: “Since all these things are to melt away in this
manner,” as one remembers the three uses of “these things” in the synoptic
recountings of Jesus’ discourse (while also remembering that, if this is indeed
written before the Temple’s fall, that there is no access to Matthew, but
rather, only the oral tradition and possibly Mark, if it was written before the
fall, though this particular letter seems to make reference to that which would
find its way into the Matthean tradition), “what sort of people must we be?”
(3:11)
Jesus proposes an
answer to this question about the sort of people that His people must be as
they wait for the fall of the Temple and the coming of the Son of Man to
receive His kingdom. He says “Who then is the faithful and wise slave,
whom the master has put in charge of his household, to give the other slaves
their food at the proper time? Blessed is that slave whom the master
finds at work when he comes. I tell you the truth, the master will put
him in charge of all his possessions” (24:45-47). He then goes on to
provide a contrast with an evil slave.
Jesus continues,
saying “At that time,” the time when the Son of Man comes to the Ancient of
Days and the Temple falls, “the kingdom of heaven will be like ten virgins who
took their lamps and went out to meet the bridegroom” (25:1), with a further
contrast between those that were wise and foolish in their preparation in
relation to the coming of the bridegroom (who clearly stands in for the Son of
Man for purposes of this parable). Following that, Jesus offers up that
which is referred to as “the parable of the talents,” saying “For it is like a
man going on a journey, who summoned his slaves and entrusted his property to
them” (25:14). Like the previously mentioned slaves, these slaves were
all given certain responsibilities.
Continuing to seek
the answer to “what sort of people must we be?”, Jesus is heard saying “When
the Son of Man comes in His glory and all the angels with Him” (another telling
mention of angels---not even the angels in heaven know when the Son of Man is
going to come to the ancient of days), “then He will sit on His glorious
throne. All the nations will be assembled before Him,” as Daniel seven
indicates, “and He will separate people from one another like a shepherd
separates the sheep from the goats. He will put the sheep on His right
and the goats on His left. Then the King will say to those on His right,
‘Come, you who are blessed by My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you
from the foundation of the world” (25:31-34).
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