Terrance Callan, «Comparison of Humans to Animals in 2 Peter 2,10b-22», Vol. 90 (2009) 101-113
A striking feature of 2 Peter 2,10b-22 is the author’s multiple references to similarities and differences between humans and animals. This essay illuminates this aspect of 2 Peter 2,10b-22 by investigating comparison of humans to animals by writers older than, and (roughly) contemporary with, 2 Peter. Comparison of humans to animals is very common in the ancient world. Such comparison can be neutral, positive, or negative. 2 Peter’s comparison of humans with animals is of this last kind. Although 2 Peter’s negative comparison of humans to animals is generally similar to comparisons made by others, the specific ways 2 Peter compares them are unique.
Comparison of Humans to Animals in 2 Peter 2,10b-22
A striking feature of 2 Peter 2,10b-22 is the author’s multiple references to
similarities and differences between humans and animals. In this passage the
author of 2 Peter continues and concludes the criticism of the people he calls
“false teachers†that he began in 2,1. In 2,12 the author compares the false
teachers to irrational animals. In 2,16 he develops the point that the false
teachers are followers of Balaam by observing that a voiceless donkey
prevented the madness of Balaam, implicitly contrasting the false teachers
with the donkey. And finally in 2,22 the author says that a proverb about the
behavior of a dog and a sow applies to those who follow the false teachers
and by implication to the false teachers themselves.
In his critique of the false teachers in 2,1-22, the author of 2 Peter is
dependent on Jude 4-16 (1). He has taken the comparison of the false teachers
to irrational animals from Jude 10. He has also taken the connection of the
false teachers to Balaam from Jude 11. Jude, however, mentions Balaam very
briefly and makes no reference to Balaam’s donkey; the author of 2 Peter has
described Balaam more fully and specifically included the behavior of the
donkey. The author of 2 Peter has added the proverb to the material he took
from Jude. Thus, by comparison with Jude the author of 2 Peter has greatly
increased the use of animal references in his polemic. This use of animals was
probably suggested to him by Jude 10, but he has made it much more
prominent than it was in Jude.
In what follows I will illuminate this aspect of 2 Peter 2,10b-22 by
investigating comparison of humans to animals by writers older than, and
(roughly) contemporary with, 2 Peter. This will bring 2 Peter’s references to
animals into sharper focus.
1. Like irrational animals (2 Pet 2,12)
In Jude 10 the author says that those he criticizes are like irrational
animals in that they know some things naturally (o{sa de; fusikw'" wJ" ta; a[loga
zw/'a ejpivstantai). The author also says that his opponents are destroyed by
these things they know naturally. It is unclear whether or not this is also true
of the irrational animals. If it is, this is another way that the opponents
resemble irrational animals. 2 Peter’s revision of this in 2,12 explicitly says
that the false teachers are like irrational animals in being destined by their
nature for destruction. The author of 2 Peter eliminated any reference to
irrational animals’ knowing things naturally; perhaps he did not think it
appropriate to speak of irrational animals as having knowledge. Instead he
says that they are begotten naturally for capture and corruption (wJ" a[loga zw/'a
gegennhmevna fusika; eij" a{lwsin kai; fqoravn). To this the author adds that the
(1) On this see T. CALLAN, “Use of the Letter of Jude by the Second Letter of Peterâ€,
Bib 85 (2004) 42-64.