Commentary
Peter addresses household slaves who suffer under unjust masters and says that enduring such treatment for conscience toward God meets with God's favor. He carefully separates undeserved suffering from punishment for wrongdoing, then grounds the exhortation in Christ's own path: the sinless one did not retaliate, entrusted himself to the just Judge, bore sins on the tree, and by that suffering turned straying sheep back to their shepherd. The paragraph therefore binds patient endurance to both Christ's example and His redemptive work.
Believers who suffer unjustly are called to endure without retaliation when their suffering arises from doing good before God, because Christ Himself suffered innocently, entrusted judgment to God, bore sins in His body on the tree, and through that saving work created a people who can die to sin and live for righteousness.
2:18 Slaves, be subject to your masters with all reverence, not only to those who are good and gentle, but also to those who are perverse. 2:19 For this finds God's favor, if because of conscience toward God someone endures hardships in suffering unjustly. 2:20 For what credit is it if you sin and are mistreated and endure it? But if you do good and suffer and so endure, this finds favor with God. 2:21 For to this you were called, since Christ also suffered for you, leaving an example for you to follow in his steps. 2:22 He committed no sin nor was deceit found in his mouth. 2:23 When he was maligned, he did not answer back; when he suffered, he threatened no retaliation, but committed himself to God who judges justly. 2:24 He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree, that we may cease from sinning and live for righteousness. By his wounds you were healed. 2:25 For you were going astray like sheep but now you have turned back to the shepherd and guardian of your souls.
Observation notes
- The paragraph is tightly linked to the preceding call to be subject for the Lord's sake (2:13-17), but narrows the focus to slaves within the household setting.
- Peter explicitly includes unjust authority by contrasting masters who are good and gentle with those who are perverse, so the exhortation is not limited to fair treatment.
- The phrase 'this finds God's favor' appears twice (2:19, 2:20), making divine approval of unjustly endured suffering a controlling thread.
- Peter distinguishes sharply between suffering for wrongdoing and suffering for doing good; endurance itself is not automatically praiseworthy.
- Verse 21 marks a shift from ethical instruction to christological grounding with 'for to this you were called.
- The description of Christ in 2:22-23 is dominated by innocence and non-retaliation: no sin, no deceit, no reviling in return, no threats.
- The language of 2:22-25 draws heavily from Isaiah 53, so Christ's suffering is framed as both exemplary and atoning.
- Verse 24 goes beyond example by saying Christ 'bore our sins,' preventing the paragraph from being reduced to moral imitation alone.
- The purpose clause in 2:24 links atonement to ethical transformation: Christ bore sins so that believers might break with sin and live for righteousness.
Structure
- 2:18 commands household slaves to submit to masters, including harsh ones.
- 2:19-20 explains the moral distinction between deserved suffering and unjust suffering endured for conscience toward God.
- 2:21 states that such suffering belongs to the believers' calling and introduces Christ as the controlling model.
- 2:22-23 presents Christ's innocent suffering and His refusal to retaliate, using servant-language from Isaiah 53.
- 2:24 interprets Christ's suffering redemptively: He bore sins so that believers might die to sin and live to righteousness.
- 2:25 concludes with a pastoral identity reminder: the readers were wandering sheep but have now returned to Christ their shepherd and overseer.
Key terms
hypotassomenoi
Strong's: G5293
Gloss: to place oneself under, submit
The term frames the unit as a call to voluntary ordered conduct under God's lordship, not as a declaration that all authority is morally right.
phobos
Strong's: G5401
Gloss: fear, reverence
This term ties the slaves' conduct to Godward accountability, which is then clarified in verse 19 by 'conscience toward God.'
skolios
Strong's: G4646
Gloss: crooked, harsh, unjust
The word prevents any reading that Peter's instruction only applies when authority behaves well.
charis
Strong's: G5485
Gloss: grace, favor, approval
The term here is not primarily saving grace in the abstract but divine approval, which explains why such endurance matters before God.
syneidesin theou
Strong's: G4893, G2316
Gloss: consciousness of God, conscience before God
This phrase rules out mere stoicism; the endurance Peter commends is specifically God-conscious obedience.
hypogrammon
Strong's: G5261
Gloss: copy pattern, model for imitation
The term supports imitation, but in this context the example is inseparable from the redemptive work described in verses 24-25.
Syntactical features
grounding causal chain
Textual signal: Repeated 'for' clauses in 2:19, 2:20, 2:21
Interpretive effect: Peter builds the exhortation step by step: command, reason, clarification, and christological foundation. The logic is cumulative, not a set of detached sayings.
contrastive conditional structure
Textual signal: 'if you sin... and endure' versus 'if you do good and suffer and endure' in 2:20
Interpretive effect: The syntax distinguishes deserved from undeserved suffering and limits divine approval to the latter when connected with doing good.
purpose clause
Textual signal: 'that we may cease from sinning and live for righteousness' in 2:24
Interpretive effect: Christ's bearing of sins has an intended ethical result, so the atonement in this verse is not presented as pardon without transformation.
participial depiction of Christ's response
Textual signal: 'when reviled... when suffering...' followed by 'but committed himself to the one judging justly' in 2:23
Interpretive effect: The participial sequence portrays Christ's repeated manner of response and climaxes in His entrusting Himself to God, which becomes the interpretive center of His non-retaliation.
Textual critical issues
reading in 2:25 regarding return
Variants: Some witnesses read a passive sense akin to 'you were returned,' while the dominant text reads an active middle/passive form, 'you have returned' or 'turned back.'
Preferred reading: The reading reflected by 'you have turned back to the shepherd and overseer of your souls.'
Interpretive effect: The preferred reading preserves the readers' responsive turning to Christ without denying God's prior saving initiative in the larger context.
Rationale: The external support is strong, and the reading fits Peter's pastoral appeal by contrasting former straying with present restored relation to Christ.
Old Testament background
Isaiah 53:4-9, 11-12
Connection type: quotation
Note: Verses 22-25 are saturated with servant-suffering language: no sin, no deceit, bearing sins, wounds bringing healing, and sheep gone astray. Isaiah 53 provides the controlling script for understanding Christ's innocent suffering as both exemplary and substitutionary.
Leviticus 24:19-20 / Deuteronomy 32:35
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: Christ's refusal to retaliate and His entrusting Himself to the God who judges justly resonates with the Old Testament pattern that vengeance belongs to God rather than the sufferer.
Psalm 23 / Ezekiel 34
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The closing description of Christ as shepherd and overseer evokes the Old Testament shepherd motif, now applied directly to Jesus as the one who guards the souls of the restored flock.
Interpretive options
Meaning of 'with all reverence' in 2:18
- Primarily fear or reverence toward masters within the social hierarchy.
- Primarily fear of God that governs how slaves relate to masters.
Preferred option: Primarily fear of God that governs how slaves relate to masters.
Rationale: The immediate context has already said 'fear God' (2:17), and verse 19 clarifies the motivation as 'conscience toward God,' making the reverence fundamentally God-directed even though expressed in servant conduct.
Sense of 'charis' in 2:19-20
- Saving grace in the sense of divine enabling.
- Favor or approval before God for a particular kind of endurance.
Preferred option: Favor or approval before God for a particular kind of endurance.
Rationale: The repeated question about 'what credit' and the evaluative structure point to divine commendation rather than the broader theological category of saving grace.
Function of Christ's suffering in 2:21-25
- Primarily moral example of patient endurance.
- Both moral example and substitutionary atonement, with the latter grounding the former.
- Primarily atonement, with little ethical imitation intended.
Preferred option: Both moral example and substitutionary atonement, with the latter grounding the former.
Rationale: Verse 21 explicitly calls Christ an example to follow, while verse 24 explicitly says He bore our sins. Peter intentionally joins imitation and redemption rather than allowing either to eclipse the other.
Meaning of 'by his wounds you were healed' in 2:24
- A promise of physical healing secured in the atonement as the direct focus of this verse.
- A metaphor for spiritual restoration from sin and estrangement to righteous living.
- A broad healing that includes all dimensions equally as the immediate emphasis.
Preferred option: A metaphor for spiritual restoration from sin and estrangement to righteous living.
Rationale: The surrounding clauses concern sins, dying to sin, living to righteousness, and returning from straying like sheep, so the immediate referent is moral-spiritual healing rather than physical cure as the direct emphasis.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The unit must be read within 2:13-3:22, where Peter addresses honorable conduct under pressure. This prevents isolating verses 18-25 as a timeless endorsement of oppression.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: Christ is not an illustrative add-on but the interpretive center of the exhortation. The command to endure unjust suffering is grounded in His own path and saving work.
moral
Relevance: high
Note: Peter's moral distinction between suffering for wrongdoing and suffering for doing good controls application. The text commends righteous endurance, not passive acceptance of consequences for sin.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: medium
Note: The shepherd-sheep conclusion and servant-language are not decorative imagery; they carry interpretive weight from Isaiah and the shepherd traditions and shape the readers' identity in relation to Christ.
Theological significance
- God's favor rests not on suffering in the abstract but on unjust suffering endured while doing good and remaining answerable to Him.
- The sequence from Christ's innocence in verses 22-23 to His sin-bearing in verse 24 keeps example and atonement together rather than allowing either theme to swallow the other.
- 'He bore our sins in his body on the tree' gives the exhortation a redemptive base: the cross not only pardons but aims at a real break with sin and a life ordered toward righteousness.
- Christ's refusal to retaliate does not suspend justice; it places judgment in the hands of the one who judges justly.
- The closing move from straying sheep to the shepherd and overseer presents Jesus as more than a past sufferer. He is the present guardian of the people His suffering has restored.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: Peter's argument tightens by stages: command, moral clarification, calling, then Christological grounding. The repeated causal links keep the exhortation from sounding like bare social compliance and instead locate it in God-conscious endurance shaped by Christ's death.
Biblical theological: Isaiah 53 governs the portrayal of Jesus here. Peter does not borrow servant language as ornament; he uses it to show how innocent suffering, sin-bearing, healing, and the return of wandering sheep converge in Christ.
Metaphysical: The passage assumes that crooked human power is real but not final. Moral reality is anchored in the God who judges justly, and the cross is presented as the decisive act in which sin is borne and a different mode of life becomes possible.
Psychological Spiritual: Peter addresses the instinct to answer insult with insult and threat with threat. He redirects the sufferer's inner posture from revenge to entrusting oneself to God, not by denying the wrong but by naming a truer court of judgment.
Divine Perspective: God sees the difference between deserved and undeserved suffering, regards faithful endurance, and has acted in Christ not merely to admire patience but to remove sins and restore wanderers to His care.
Category: character
Note: God is the one who judges justly, in contrast to masters who may be crooked or harsh.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: In Christ's cross God turns unjust suffering into the site of redemptive sin-bearing and ethical renewal.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: The servant-shaped suffering of Jesus reveals both God's judgment on sin and His purpose to restore the straying.
Category: personhood
Note: Christ is portrayed personally as shepherd and overseer, not merely as an ethical ideal from the past.
- The text calls for endurance under injustice without calling injustice good.
- Christ's suffering remains unique in its sin-bearing force, yet it also sets the pattern for His people.
- Refusing personal retaliation is not the same as denying that justice matters.
- Those in a socially weak position are still addressed as morally responsible agents before God.
Enrichment summary
Peter speaks to a concrete setting of vulnerability and reads it through Isaiah's servant song. That script lets him name unjust suffering without romanticizing it and explain non-retaliation without calling evil good. Christ's wounds heal in the sense demanded by the paragraph itself: sins are borne, straying sheep are brought back, and a righteous life under the shepherd's care becomes possible.
Traditions of men check
Using submission texts to demand silence from the oppressed without moral qualification.
Why it conflicts: Peter explicitly distinguishes unjust suffering from punishment for sin and roots endurance in conscience toward God, not in protecting abusive power.
Textual pressure point: The contrast in 2:19-20 and the description of masters as even 'perverse' show that Peter is addressing hardship honestly, not baptizing cruelty.
Caution: This text still does call for non-retaliatory endurance in its setting, so correction of abuse must not erase the actual demand of patient faithfulness.
Reducing Jesus here to a mere moral example of calm suffering.
Why it conflicts: Verse 24 plainly says He bore our sins in His body on the tree and ties that act to moral transformation.
Textual pressure point: The shift from example in 2:21 to substitution and healing in 2:24 prevents a purely exemplarist reading.
Caution: Affirming atonement should not erase the explicit call to follow in His steps.
Treating 'by his wounds you were healed' as a guaranteed proof-text for immediate bodily healing in every case.
Why it conflicts: Peter's immediate concern is release from sin's dominion and restoration from straying, not a direct promise of present physical recovery.
Textual pressure point: The surrounding language concerns sins, righteousness, and returning to the shepherd.
Caution: The verse need not be stripped of all broader bodily implications within biblical hope, but its local meaning is moral-spiritual restoration.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: The movement from straying sheep to return under the shepherd casts salvation as restored belonging and oversight, not merely inward comfort.
Western Misread: Treating 'healed' and 'returned' as only private emotional recovery.
Interpretive Difference: Peter depicts the cross as restoring a people to Christ's care and reordering their life toward righteousness.
Dynamic: honor_shame
Why It Matters: In a setting where insult normally invited counter-insult, Christ's silence and refusal to threaten mark a deliberate surrender of vindication to God.
Western Misread: Assuming non-retaliation means weakness, passivity, or uncertainty about whether wrong was done.
Interpretive Difference: Peter commends a Godward refusal of personal vengeance, not approval of abuse or indifference to injustice.
Idioms and figures
Expression: bore our sins in his body on the tree
Category: metaphor
Explanation: This is sacrificial and covenant-laden sin-bearing language, intensified by 'tree,' which evokes the shame of a cursed public death rather than speaking in flat clinical terms about execution.
Interpretive effect: It prevents reducing Christ to a martyr-example only; His suffering is presented as vicarious and redemptive, and the shameful death becomes the place where sins are dealt with.
Expression: by his wounds you were healed
Category: metaphor
Explanation: In this context 'healed' is governed by the surrounding language of sins, dying to sin, living to righteousness, and returning from straying like sheep.
Interpretive effect: The phrase chiefly signals moral-spiritual restoration through Christ’s suffering, not a direct blanket guarantee of immediate bodily healing in Peter’s local argument.
Expression: you were going astray like sheep
Category: simile
Explanation: The simile draws on prophetic restoration imagery in which God’s people are scattered, vulnerable, and in need of being brought back under shepherding care.
Interpretive effect: It frames conversion as return from dangerous estrangement into Christ’s active oversight, not merely adoption of a better ethic.
Application implications
- Christians should distinguish between suffering for wrongdoing and suffering that comes from doing good; Peter commends only the latter.
- Endurance in this passage is explicitly God-directed. It is not stoicism, image management, or mere conflict avoidance, but conduct shaped by conscience toward God.
- When insulted or mistreated, believers are called to renounce retaliatory speech and threats and to entrust final judgment to God.
- Pastoral use of this paragraph should present Christ as both model and sin-bearer; imitation without redemption becomes crushing, while redemption without imitation evades Peter's argument.
- Churches must not use the command to submit as cover for abuse. The paragraph openly acknowledges crooked authority and speaks to the sufferer's response, not to the moral innocence of the oppressor.
Enrichment applications
- Churches should teach this passage with its own moral precision: Peter names unjust suffering as unjust and does not ask sufferers to pretend otherwise.
- Pastoral care should hold together Christ's example and Christ's sin-bearing work, since Peter uses both to sustain endurance and to call believers into righteous living.
- Christians should treat retaliatory speech, revenge fantasies, and threat-making as out of step with the pattern of the one who entrusted Himself to the just Judge, while still pursuing truthful protection and appropriate intervention through proper means.
Warnings
- Do not treat the paragraph as an endorsement of slavery; Peter is addressing a concrete and unjust social reality pastorally.
- Do not collapse verses 21-25 into either example alone or atonement alone; Peter's argument depends on both.
- Do not read 'healed' in verse 24 apart from the immediate language of sins, righteousness, and return to the shepherd.
- Do not use non-retaliation language to block lawful protection, truthful reporting, or pastoral intervention in cases of abuse; that question lies beyond the narrow focus of the paragraph.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not turn the household setting into a timeless defense of coercive authority.
- Do not let Isaiah 53 become mere background decoration; it is the script that shapes Peter's portrayal of Christ here.
- Do not press 'healed' beyond the paragraph's immediate concern with sin, righteous living, and restored relation to Christ.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Peter is endorsing slavery or pronouncing harsh masters morally acceptable.
Why It Happens: Readers may confuse pastoral instruction within an existing social order with moral approval of that order.
Correction: The paragraph explicitly includes crooked masters and concentrates on the believer's God-conscious endurance within unjust conditions, not on justifying oppression.
Misreading: Christ is only a model of calm suffering here.
Why It Happens: Verses 22-23 highlight His innocence and non-retaliation so strongly that readers can stop before verse 24.
Correction: Verse 24 is indispensable to the argument: Christ not only suffered rightly but bore sins so that His people might die to sin and live for righteousness.
Misreading: 'By his wounds you were healed' directly guarantees immediate bodily healing in every case.
Why It Happens: The healing image is easily detached from its immediate context and inserted into later debates.
Correction: Within this paragraph, the language is governed by sin-bearing, dying to sin, righteous living, and return from straying; moral-spiritual restoration is the primary sense here.
Misreading: Non-retaliation forbids any appeal for help, protection, or church discipline in abusive situations.
Why It Happens: The command to endure can be expanded into a total rule for every pastoral or civil case.
Correction: Peter is shaping the believer's retaliatory posture before God, not supplying a complete safeguarding or legal policy.