Summary
Jude and 2 Peter are small letters with a sharp edge. They address false teaching, moral corruption, and the temptation to treat grace as permission to sin. They also speak to spiritual weariness, especially where scoffers mock the promise of Christ’s return. For pastors, these texts are both necessary and challenging. We want to warn without becoming harsh, and we want to contend for the faith without turning the pulpit into a quarrel. A careful technical commentary can help us handle the argument responsibly, and can protect us from using these letters as a licence for suspicion.
This volume aims to bring detailed exegesis to bear on letters that are packed with allusions, dense imagery, and strong language. Jude’s use of Old Testament examples and his striking descriptions of the ungodly require careful handling. 2 Peter’s warnings, and its emphasis on growth in godliness, require balanced preaching. We need to show that vigilance and tenderness belong together. We must also keep the gospel central. The letters do not merely tell us to fight error. They tell us to keep ourselves in the love of God, to remember the apostles’ words, and to look for mercy that leads to eternal life.
Because the subject matter can stir anxiety in a congregation, a commentary that keeps returning to the text’s intent is a gift. The goal is not to create a fearful church, but a discerning church, a hopeful church, and a holy church.
Strengths
First, the commentary is strong on the letters’ use of Scripture and tradition. Jude, in particular, is full of references that can confuse modern readers. A technical guide helps us understand what Jude is doing and why it matters for his argument. That clarity supports preaching. We are less likely to skip difficult references or to speak vaguely. Instead, we can show how Jude uses examples to expose the seriousness of rebellion against God.
Second, it provides careful help with the pastoral purpose of warnings. Warnings are not opposed to assurance. They are one of God’s means to keep His people. This volume can help us preach warnings with a shepherd’s heart, not with a censor’s spirit. It reminds us that Jude calls believers to mercy, to rescue, and to prayerful dependence. 2 Peter, likewise, calls for growth in knowledge and godliness, grounded in God’s promises and God’s power.
Third, it assists with passages that commonly generate controversy, including discussions around prophecy, memory, and the delay of Christ’s return. The commentary keeps the reader anchored in the letters’ core concerns. Scoffers do not merely raise intellectual puzzles. They reveal hearts that do not want the Lordship of Christ. Peter’s answer is not cleverness. It is the certainty of God’s Word and the certainty of God’s coming judgment, which makes holiness urgent and hope steady.
Limitations
The main limitation is that these letters require pastoral tact as much as technical precision. A technical commentary can give you the meaning, but it cannot give you the tone for your particular people. We must still read our congregation well, and we must still preach with tears as well as firmness. Also, because the letters are short, the commentary’s detailed engagement can feel heavy in places. That is not wrong, but it means this is a study tool rather than a quick reference.
How We Would Use It
We would use this volume when preaching through Jude or 2 Peter in settings where doctrinal drift and moral compromise are real concerns. It is particularly helpful in clarifying the letters’ structure and in explaining the function of their vivid imagery. We would also use it to train elders and leaders in discernment. These letters teach us to recognise patterns of false teaching, to resist them, and to respond with both courage and mercy.
When preaching, we would keep returning to the letters’ positive aims. Jude calls us to build ourselves up in the faith, to pray in the Holy Spirit, and to wait for mercy. 2 Peter calls us to make every effort to grow in virtue, knowledge, self control, steadfastness, godliness, brotherly affection, and love. Technical clarity should fuel pastoral exhortation, not replace it.
Closing Recommendation
This is a careful technical resource for two letters that the church needs to hear. It will help preachers contend for the faith with biblical precision, and it can support a ministry that warns against error while still holding out the mercy and keeping power of God in Christ.
Gene L. Green
Gene L. Green is an American New Testament scholar of the contemporary era, writing within evangelical scholarship with long experience in cross cultural ministry and theological education.
He is best known for his work on 1 and 2 Thessalonians, where he helps pastors read Paul’s letters with attention to canon, context, and the shaping of congregational hope. Green is particularly helpful on suffering, holiness, the return of Christ, and the way gospel hope produces steady, ordinary faithfulness.
He remains valued for clarity, realism, and pastoral sense, especially when handling contested questions without needless heat. Recommended titles include The Letters to the Thessalonians, his work on New Testament theology, and his writing on mission and the church in diverse settings.
Theological Perspective: Broadly Evangelical