1, 2 Peter and Jude Through the Centuries. Rebecca Skaggs

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу 1, 2 Peter and Jude Through the Centuries - Rebecca Skaggs страница 17

1, 2 Peter and Jude Through the Centuries - Rebecca Skaggs

Скачать книгу

three negatives, it “can never perish, spoil or fade”; several early writers address this, further supporting the understanding that it is spiritual rather than physical. Didymus the Blind (313–398) is one of the earliest to comment:

      Peter calls it incorruptible and unfading, demonstrating by this that it is a pure and divine inheritance which will remain uncontaminated. (Comm. on 1 Peter, PG 1756: my tr.; Hilary of Arles agrees, Intro. Comm. on 1 Peter)

      In contrast, Bede reads “hope” in relation to our anticipation of the resurrection in the time to come, rather than as an earthly physical inheritance (Comm., 1985: 71–72). He adds a practical application to the description:

      [Our inheritance is] imperishable because the heavenly life is untouched by age or disease or any sorrow … unfading, because the heavenly way of life cannot at last become worthless. (Comm., 1985: 72)

      Andreas also emphasizes that the inheritance is heavenly, not earthly (Catena). Clearly, for these early writers, inheritance involves a future state of existence; it is not merely a present mental state.

      By the Middle Ages, the issue shifts from the nature to the location of the inheritance, to where the soul goes after death. St. Thomas Aquinas particularly addresses the issue at some length; in fact there are kernels of thought here which would eventually develop into the theory of purgatory, the place where souls abide until they are appropriately cleansed:

      after the body’s dissolution, the soul has an abode, which had been reserved for it in heaven … as soon as the soul is set free from the body it is either plunged into hell or soars to heaven, unless it be held back by some debt, for which its flight must needs be delayed until the soul is first of all cleansed. (ST XP [Sup. TP] Q [62] A [2]: “Whether souls are conveyed to heaven or hell immediately after death?” For additional discussion on this, see Gregory, Dial. IV, 25, and in De Eccl. Dogm. xlvi)

      Other Interpretations

      Several churches use these verses in their confessional or catechetical statements. For example, the Heidelberg Catechism (1563) is not concerned with the location of the future inheritance, but focuses on the means by which it is attained (Pelikan II, VI: 437). The Westminster Confession of Faith (1647) is similar; while omitting some details of v.4, it declares that we are “heirs of everlasting salvation” (ibid.: 622). The Second Vatican Council likewise expresses hope for a future place in heaven: “the church … serves all humanity … as it makes its pilgrim way toward the homeland which is its goal” (Pelikan III, V: 637).

      The Confessional Statement of the United Presbyterian Church (1925) is more expansive:

      We believe in … the consummation and bliss of the life everlasting, wherein the people of God, freed from sin and sorrow, shall receive their inheritance of glory in the kingdom of their Father, and with capacities and powers exalted and enlarged, shall be made fully blessed in the fellowship of Christ, in the perfected communion of saints, and in the service of God, whom they shall enjoy forever and ever. (Pelikan III, V: 69)

      It does not become clear until later in the passage (vv.6–9) that the believers are being protected during “trials”: they are “kept” “by the power of God through faith.” It also emerges that this protection is not eradication of the trials; rather, God, being the initiator of these, “preserves” the faith of those undergoing them.

      Faith is Preserved During Trials (vv.7–9)

      Early writers as well as modern scholars are interested in Peter’s “faith during trials.” Didymus the Blind is one of the earliest to explain, “Those who are afflicted in various ways because of Christ and who persevere to the end have their faith tested and proved” (Comm. on 1 Peter, PG 39: 1756: my tr.). Others interpret these trials as the persecution being experienced by Peter’s church community. For example, the Shepherd of Hermas says:

      Just as gold is tried by fire and becomes useful, so also you who live in the world are tried in it. So then, you who remain in it and pass through the flames will be purified. (Shepherd, “Visions” 3.1. FC 1:259: ccel.org)

      It is noteworthy that since, most likely, the Shepherd of Hermas was written in Rome around the second century, this author may have had the severe persecution by Nero in mind here.

      Athanasius of Alexandria (c. 296–298) has a similar understanding of suffering as present persecution in fire (Festal Letters, 10: CWS: 70). Also see Bede, Comm., 1985: 72). It should be noted that there is a hint here of the concept to be developed later in the epistle about the special nature of suffering as a Christian. The concept of suffering is a recurring theme in 1 Peter.

      Reformation

      By the time of the Reformation, Luther further explicates the meaning and consequences of being “kept” or “guarded”:

      This is his [Peter’s] meaning: So tender and precious a matter is that which pertains to the faith which the power of God (that is with us and with which we are filled) produces in us, that He gives us a correct, clear understanding of all things that respect salvation, so that we may judge all that is on earth, and say, this doctrine is true, that is false; this conduct is right, that is not; this work is good and acceptable, that is evil. (Luther, Comm.: ccel.org)

      Arminius addresses the notion of “being kept”: perseverance in good is not from ourselves, it necessitates an action

Скачать книгу