2 Peter 1
The call to become participants in the divine nature (theias physeōs koinōnoi) through escaping the corruption that is in the world caused by evil desire represents the extraordinary promise and hope of the gospel—transformation into God's very likeness through grace. The ladder of virtues ascending from faith to love—faith, virtue, knowledge, self-control, steadfastness, godliness, brotherly affection, love—establishes progressive sanctification as the pathway to usefulness and fruitfulness in the knowledge of Christ. Making one's calling and election sure occurs not through anxious self-examination but through the diligent cultivation of these virtues, which guarantees that those who practice them will never stumble and will receive a rich welcome into the eternal kingdom. Peter grounds his eschatological exhortation in eyewitness testimony of the transfiguration, where he heard the voice from heaven declaring Jesus as the beloved Son, countering those who construct cleverly devised myths divorced from apostolic witness. The reliability of apostolic testimony stands against the seductive appeal of human-invented myths that lack genuine divine authorization. Prophecy in Scripture was never originated by human volition but was always carried along by the Holy Spirit (pheromenoi), a passive being borne by God's breath that guarantees the reliability of the prophetic word as more reliable than even personal experience.
2 Peter 1:1
Simon Peter, a servant and apostle of Jesus Christ — the humble self-identification establishes authority not through titles but through relationship and role. To those who have obtained a faith of equal standing (isotimon) with ours sets the dignity of the recipients: their faith possesses the same intrinsic worth as the apostolic faith. Peter addresses a cosmopolitan audience whose faith is not second-tier but equal in validity, grounded in the righteousness of our God and Savior Jesus Christ (an assertion of Christ's deity through predicative nominalism).
2 Peter 1:2
May grace and peace be multiplied to you — the traditional apostolic greeting carries weight beyond formality, invoking God's unmerited favor and wholeness. In the knowledge (epignōsis) of God and of Jesus our Lord — the specific term epignōsis suggests deeper, experiential knowledge rather than abstract information. The multiplication formula reflects the dynamic nature of spiritual growth: grace and peace are not static possessions but living realities that increase through deepened knowledge of the divine persons.
2 Peter 1:3
His divine power has granted to us all things that pertain to life and godliness — the startling assertion that all necessary resources for spiritual maturation already exist in the readers' possession. Through the knowledge (epignōsin) of him who called us to his own glory and excellence — knowledge of Christ is both the means and the substance of spiritual transformation. The calling (kalon) is to glory and virtue, connecting theological foundation to ethical practice in seamless progression.