Scripture Teaching

2 Peter Teaching

A teaching guide through 2 Peter, shaped by biblical, Christ-centered, and cross-centered reading.

Overview

A teaching guide through 2 Peter, shaped by biblical, Christ-centered, and cross-centered reading.

Teaching Guide

Teaching paths help you move through the book with a clear purpose. Use the right rail to focus the chapter plan, or stay in the full book view to read every passage in canonical order.

Best for: church-wide formation, short series, discipleship.

Each week can point to Study, and some weeks also link to an outline when one is available.

Chapter Plan
Godliness, Apostolic Witness, and the Sure Prophetic Word

Peter's argument is that grace does not leave believers passive, unstable, or vulnerable to deception. God has given saving faith, multiplied grace and peace through knowledge, granted everything needed for life and godliness, and provided promises through which believers escape corruption. Therefore, believers must exercise diligent, grace-grounded effort in visible virtue. This fruitful growth strengthens assurance and keeps the believer from spiritual barrenness. Since Peter's death is near, He writes to secure the church in remembrance. The faith He calls them to live is not built on myth but on apostolic eyewitness testimony and the prophetic word given by the Holy Spirit.

2 Peter 1:1-4

Precious Faith: Receiving a Surpassing Knowledge of Christ

Study

Peter opens by grounding believers in a shared saving faith and in the lavish grace of God given through Jesus Christ, then declares that God's divine power has already supplied everything necessary for life and godliness through the true knowledge of Him, so that believers may live as those called out of corruption and into participation in the life that flows from God's promise.

2 Peter 1:5-11

Growing in Grace: The Ladder of Christian Virtue

Study

Because God has already granted everything necessary for life and godliness, believers must make diligent, grace-shaped effort to cultivate the visible qualities of Christian maturity, so that their lives become fruitful, their assurance strengthened, and their future entrance into Christ's eternal kingdom increasingly confirmed.

2 Peter 1:12-15

Remembering and Stirring Up Your Faith Until the End

Study

Because believers are prone to forget gospel truth, Peter commits Himself to continual reminder, even to the end of His life, so that the church would remain established in the truth and spiritually stable after His departure.

2 Peter 1:16–18

Eyewitness to Divine Glory: The Transfiguration Confirmed

Study

Peter grounds the church's confidence in the power and coming of Jesus Christ not in fabricated religious stories but in apostolic eyewitness testimony, declaring that He personally witnessed Christ's majesty and heard the Father's heavenly affirmation, so that believers would rest in a historically revealed and divinely authenticated gospel.

2 Peter 1:19–21

The Reliability of Scripture: A More Sure Word Than Experience

Study

Because the prophetic word has been made firm and stands as a divinely given light in a dark world, believers must pay careful attention to Scripture with patient expectancy until the full day of Christ dawns, knowing that biblical prophecy does not arise from human initiative but from men carried along by the Holy Spirit.

False Teachers, Corruption, and the Certainty of Judgment

Peter argues that false teaching is both doctrinally destructive and morally corrupt. It is not merely mistaken information but rebellion against the Master, exploitation of the church, and enslavement through corrupted desire. The chapter's theological logic rests on God's moral government: if God did not spare rebellious angels, the ancient world, or Sodom and Gomorrah, then corrupt teachers will not escape judgment. Yet the same God who judges the wicked also knows how to rescue the godly, as shown through Noah and Lot. Peter therefore strips false teachers of their persuasive disguise. Their liberty is slavery, their confidence is arrogance, their spirituality is corruption, their promise is emptiness, and their end is destruction.

2 Peter 2:1-3

False Teachers and the Peril of Destructive Heresies

Study

Peter warns that just as false prophets arose among God's people in earlier times, false teachers will also arise within the church, secretly introducing destructive heresies, denying the Master who bought them, exploiting people for gain, and drawing many into ruin, yet their judgment is certain and their destruction is not asleep.

2 Peter 2:4-10a

God's Judgment on False Teachers: Certainty and Deliverance

Study

Peter proves from God's past acts that the Lord unfailingly judges rebellion and preserves the godly, so the church must not doubt that false teachers, sensual rebels, and all who despise rightful authority will face certain punishment, while those who belong to God will be known, preserved, and finally delivered by Him.

2 Peter 2:10b-16

Fearless Blasphemy and Its Reckoning: The Judgment of False Teachers

Study

Peter exposes false teachers as bold, arrogant, pleasure-driven, morally unrestrained, and greed-governed men who revile what they do not understand, prey on unstable souls, and follow the path of Balaam, proving that corrupt doctrine produces corrupt character and that those who reject God's order are headed toward ruin.

2 Peter 2:17-22

Empty Promises and the Peril of Apostasy

Study

Peter declares that false teachers are empty and dangerous men, promising freedom while enslaved to corruption themselves, so that those who follow them are drawn toward deeper ruin; their final condition is worse because exposure to the way of righteousness without true transformation only intensifies the tragedy of returning to defilement.

The Day of the Lord, Patient Mercy, and Holy Readiness

Peter argues that the promise of Christ's coming must govern Christian thinking, holiness, endurance, and hope. Scoffers deny future judgment by appealing to apparent continuity, but they suppress the testimony of creation and flood. The same divine word that made the world and judged the ancient world now guarantees the coming judgment of the present order. The delay of the day of the Lord is not evidence against God's promise but evidence of God's patience, extending mercy and calling for repentance. Since the present order will be dissolved, believers must not live for what will pass away but for the promised new creation where righteousness dwells. The church must therefore be diligent, at peace, careful with Scripture, guarded against error, and continually growing in Christ.

2 Peter 3:1-7

Awakening to God's Promise: The Return of Christ and Final Judgment

Study

Peter writes again to awaken sincere minds through remembrance, urging believers to hold fast to the prophetic word and apostolic command because mockers will arise in the last days, deliberately dismissing the promise of Christ's coming; yet their skepticism collapses before the God whose word created the world, judged it by flood, and now reserves the present heavens and earth for final judgment by fire.

2 Peter 3:8-13

The Patience of God: Awaiting the Day of His Judgment and Renewal

Study

Peter answers the mockers by declaring that the apparent delay of Christ's return is not failure but divine patience, for the Lord stands above human measures of time and is mercifully withholding final judgment so that sinners may come to repentance; yet the day of the Lord will certainly arrive with sudden, world-shaking finality, and because believers await new heavens and a new earth where righteousness dwells, they must live now in holiness, godliness, and eager expectation.

2 Peter 3:14-18

Growing in Grace: Steadfastness in the Last Days

Study

Because believers are awaiting the coming day and the promised new creation, Peter calls them to diligent, peace-shaped holiness, to interpret the Lord's patience as salvation, to receive the apostolic writings rightly rather than twist them destructively, to guard themselves from being carried away by lawless error, and to keep growing in the grace and knowledge of Jesus Christ, to whom belongs eternal glory.