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The Letters of 2 Peter and Jude is unavailable, but you can change that!

Filling a notable gap in scholarship on 2 Peter and Jude, Peter Davids artfully unpacks these two neglected but fascinating epistles that deal with the confrontation between the Greco-Roman world and the burgeoning first-century Jesus communities. Davids firmly grasps the overall structure of these oft-maligned epistles and presents a strong case for 2 Peter and Jude as coherent, consistent...

and literature, as was the idea of “participating” or “sharing” in it, although most Greek speakers used metechein rather than koinōnoi as here. The first references to the “divine nature” go back to Plato, for example, Phaedrus 230A, and they can be documented right down to the period of the NT (e.g., Epictetus, Disc. 2.19.26–27).18 What is important to note is that sometimes this participation in the divine nature was viewed as innate, a divine spark within the human being that simply needed to
Pages 173–174