knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation The true meaning of the passage turns partly on the actual significance of the last word, partly on the sequence of thought as connected with the foregoing. The noun itself does not occur elsewhere in the New Testament nor in the LXX., but in Aquila's version of Genesis 40:8 it is given as the equivalent of "interpretation." The corresponding verb meets us, however, in Mark 4:34 ("he explainedall things to his disciples") and in Acts 19:39 ("it shall be determined"), and this leaves no doubt that "interpretation" or "solution" is the right rendering. Nor again is there much room for doubt as to the meaning of "prophecy of scripture." The words can only point to a "prophetic word" embodied in a writing and recognised as Scripture. We have seen, however (see note on 1 Peter 1:10-12), that the gift of prophecy was thought of as belonging to the present as fully as to the past, and chap. 2 Peter 3:16; 1 Timothy 5:18, and possibly Romans 16:26 and 1 Corinthians 15:3-4, shew that the word Scripture had come to have a wider range of meaning than that which limited its use to the Old Testament writings, and may therefore be taken here in its most comprehensive sense. Stress must also be laid on the Greek verb rendered "is," which might better be translated cometh, or cometh into being. With these data the true explanation of the passage is not far to seek. The Apostle calls on men to give heed to the prophetic word on the ground that no prophecy, authenticated as such by being recognised as part of Scripture, whether that Scripture belongs to the Old, or the New Covenant, comes by the prophet's own interpretation of the facts with which he has to deal, whether those facts concern the outer history of the world, or the unfolding of the eternal truths of God's Kingdom. It is borne to him, as he proceeds to shew in the next verse, from a higher source, from that which is, in the truest sense of the word, an inspiration. The views held by some commentators, (1) that St Peter is protesting against the application of private judgment to the interpretation of prophecy, and (2) that he is contending that no single prophecy can be interpreted apart from the whole body of prophetic teaching contained in Scripture, are, it is believed, less satisfactory explanations of the Apostle's meaning.

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