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Does Hell Await Those Who Fall?
2 Peter 2:18-22
by Bob Wilkin
Last month we considered 2 Peter
1:10-11. This month we will consider another difficult passage in
2
Peter. Recently I received a question
from a reader about 2 Peter 2:20-22.
He felt that it dealt with unbelievers
who knew about the gospel but had
never really accepted it in their
hearts. My understanding of the passage follows.
First, notice that there is a change
in referrent. Verses 17 and preceding
refer to coming false teachers. However, verses 18 through 22
refer to
people who are duped by the false
teachers. Verses 18 and 20 indicate
that the people being drawn into sin
by the false teachers are those "who
have actually escaped from those
who live in error" and who "have
escaped the pollutions of the world
through the knowledge of the Lord
and Savior Jesus Christ." Only believers fit that
description. [N.B.
The word "knowledge" in v 20 is
the same term which is used in 1:2,3,5,6. It is a term used in 2
Peter
exclusively of believers. See also
1:1,9 and 3:1,8,14,17-18 for further
proof that 2 Peter is addressed to
believers.]
Second, it is evident in all three
chapters of 2 Peter that Peter is concerned that his readers -
believers - might fall into a sinful lifestyle as a
result of the wiles of the false
teachers whom he knows via
prophecy are coming soon. Peter
urges his believing readers to be diligent so as to keep from
stumbling and falling (1:5,10; 2:18-22; 3:14,17). We err if we
read into 2 Peter the
idea that anyone who fell away
would prove to be a false professor.
Peter never questions the faith of his
readers. Rather, he acknowledges it
(e.g. 1:1). What he questions is the
progress of their sanctification.
Third, the real question is this:
What does Peter warn his readers
will happen if they fall? Most commentators suggest that eternal
judgment - hell - is in view. They point
to verses 21 and 22 However, a
careful reading of those verses
suggest that temporal judgment, not
hell, is in view. Notice what isn't
said. Peter makes no reference to
hell, the lake of fire, unending suffering, or any similar term
or phrase.
He instead says that it would be better for a believer never to
know the way of righteousness than to have
known it and then turn away in a
licentious lifestyle.
It is a grievous mistake to understand those words to mean
hell. If
they do, Peter is teaching that believers can lose their
salvation - something he did not believe (cf. Luke
10:20; John 13:10; Acts 10:43-48;
11:16-18; 15:7-11; 1 Peter 1:23-25;
2 Peter 1:9; 3:8-13). Rather, Peter
is simply saying that if a believer
grovels in a life of sin, his life here
and now will be worse than if he
had never become a Christian.
While both non-Christians and
Christians experience the terrible
consequences of their sins here and
now, those consequences are even
worse for believers because we are
God's children with the Holy Spirit
living within us. Certainly conviction of sin is greater. So,
too, new
consequences for our sins come on
the scene (e.g., rebuke by a Christian friend, church
discipline). And,
the more a believer resists God's discipline, the more He turns
up the
heat. That is not necessarily true for
a non-Christian.
The reference to dogs and pigs in
verse 22 is often cited as proof that
false professors are in view. Actually
I think the references show that believers are in view. Notice
that the
dog and pig are said to have been
free from their filth. Only believers
are free of their sins. Surely the
reader of 2 Peter would harken back
to 1:9 where Peter refers to his readers as being purged from
their old
sins. Peter was not referring to forgiveness there. All our sins,
past,
present, and future are forgiven in
Christ. He was referring to our new
natures. Believers have a nature
which is free from the sins which
used to enslave us. Whenever a believer walks in the darkness he
has
forgotten who he is (2 Peter 1:9) and
has allowed the flesh to rear its ugly
head.
The word "better" in 2 Peter 2:21
is crucial. When explaining this passage ask your audience,
"better WHEN?" The text, properly understood, only
allows one answer: better in this life. The false
teachers
promised their potential dupes liberty (2:19). They actually
delivered
bondage and temporal judgment.
May we all take heed. Sin pays lousy
dividends.
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