17. But; beloved . . . ye--in contrast to those
reprobates,
Jude 20,
again.
remember--implying that his readers had been contemporaries of
the apostles. For Peter uses the very same formula in reminding the
contemporaries of himself and the other apostles.
spoken before--spoken already before now.
the apostles--Peter (see on
2Pe 3:2, 3),
and Paul before Peter
(Ac 20:29;
1Ti 4:1;
2Ti 3:1).
Jude does not exclude himself from the number of the apostles
here, for in
Jude 18,
immediately after, he says, "they told You," not us (rather as
Greek, "used to tell you" implying that Jude's readers were
contemporaries of the apostles, who used to tell them).
JFB.
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