2 Peter


One of the Books of the Bible in the New Testament.

  • Author: ?

(The ESV Study BibleTM, English Standard Version (ESV) by Crossway Bibles, 2007. Page ?)

Canonicity

The first three outstanding church fathers, Clement, Polycarp, and Ignatius, used the bulk of the New Testament in a revealingly casual manner, indicating authenticated Scriptures were accepted as authoritative without argument. In their writings, only Mark (which closely parallels Matthew's material), 2 John, 3 John, Jude, and 2 Peter were not clearly attested. By the early 4th century, the majority of the church accepted 2 Peter, though it was still the most contested. The Syriac version of the New Testament omits 2 Peter altogether.

(The Origin of the Bible: Newly Updated by F. F. Bruce, J. I. Packer, Philip W. Comfort, and Carl F. H. Henry, 2020. Biblical Languages by Larry Walker. Section One: The Authority and Inspiration of the Bible. Page 9-10; The Canon of the New Testament by Milton C. Fisher, Pages 68-74.)

Topics

2 Peter Summary

Figures

Peoples

Places

Other

Verses