Bible Commentary

Jude 1:3

The Pulpit Commentary on Jude 1:3

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

The author's reason for writing. The statement of this is introduced by the conciliatory address, beloved—a form of address found twice again in this short Epistle (, ). It occurs at great turning-points in all the Catholic Epistles, except for an obvious reason in 2 John.

) It is frequent also in the Pauline Epistles. It is only here, however, and in that it is introduced so near the beginning of an Epistle. The statement itself contains several expressions which demand notice.

The phrase which the Authorized Version renders, When I gave all diligence, is better rendered, while I was giving all diligence, with the Revised Version. In this particular form it occurs nowhere else in the New Testament; but it has close parallels in and .

The noun is the same as is translated "diligence" in , and "business" in . It is not certain whether the phrase expresses action here as well as earnest desire; but it indicates the position of the author, whether as seriously bethinking himself to write, or actually engaged in the task, when he had occasion to send the counsels given in this Epistle.

The subject on which he had thought of addressing them was the common salvation—the term "salvation" meaning here neither the doctrine nor the means of redemption, but the grace of redemption itself.

And this grace is designated "common," or, as the better reading gives it, "our common salvation;'' not with reference to any contrast of Jew with Gentile, but simply as a grace open to all, and in which writer and readers had an equal interest (comp.

; ; and especially the "common faith" of ). The "like precious faith' of is a stronger expression, and probably points to a distinction, formerly existent, but now removed, between Jew and Gentile.

The next phrase is rendered too weakly by the Authorized Version, It was needful for me to write unto you. Neither does the Revised Version quite bring out the idea when it substitutes, I was constrained to write unto you.

What is in view is an objective necessity; certain circumstances which had arisen and imperatively demanded writing. So that we might translate it, "necessity arose for me to write," or, "an emergency occurred constraining me to write."

He was thus induced to write in the way of exhorting them. The particular subject of the exhortation is described as the duty of contending earnestly for the faith; the contention being expressed by a strong term somewhat analogous to that used by Paul in , and the "faith" being taken, not in the subjective sense of the quality or grace of belief, but in the objective sense of the things believed.

This "faith" is declared to have been delivered once for all (so, with the Revised Version; not once delivered, as the Authorized Version puts it, which might mean "once on a time") to the saints. It is not stated by whom the deliverance was made.

The unexpressed subject may be God, as some suppose who point to the analogy of and ; or it may be the apostles, as others hold who look to the analogy of such passages as ; , and especially the seventeenth verse of the present Epistle itself.

The main point is, not the author or the instruments of the deliverance, but the fact that such a deliverance has taken place. What has been transmitted is carefully defined, not, indeed, as a system of doctrine, but at least as a sum or deposit of things necessary to be believed.

This is said to have been given once for all, so that there is no repetition or extension of the gift. It is described; further, as committed, not to the Church as an organization, nor to any particular office-bearers, but to the saints in general.

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