Greek Key Terms:
Context: 2 Peter 3:3 introduces the epistle's climactic eschatological oracle: "Most importantly, you must understand that in the last days scoffers will come (ep' eschatōn tōn hēmerōn empaiktai), scoffing and following their own evil desires." The scoffers' signature question follows in v. 4: "Where is the promise of his coming? For ever since the fathers fell asleep, all things are continuing as they were from the beginning of creation"—the church-age objection to the delay of the parousia. Peter answers with three theological moves stretching through vv. 5-13. First, the objectors "deliberately overlook" that the world already underwent one cataclysmic judgment (the flood, vv. 5-7); God's patience is not a sign of inaction but of mercy (v. 9). Second, "the Day of the Lord (hēmera kyriou) will come like a thief" (v. 10)—Peter draws on the OT yôm YHWH tradition (Joel 2; Amos 5; Zephaniah 1) and Christ's own thief-imagery (Matthew 24:43) to insist that the apparent delay conceals imminent judgment: the heavens will "pass away with a roar" and the elements "will be dissolved" in fire (v. 10). Third, Peter concludes with the new-creation promise: "according to his promise we are waiting for new heavens and a new earth in which righteousness dwells" (v. 13). This verse cluster (3:3, 10-13) is the trajectory's Stage 11 "Not Yet"—the consummation from the vantage point of the waiting church, encompassing both the scoffers' challenge and the cosmic renewal that answers it.
Connections:
Christological Connection: 2 Peter 3:3 and its surrounding verses (10-13) function as the climactic "Not Yet" pole of the Last Days trajectory—the eschatological waiting of the church between Christ's ascension and His return. Peter's oracle accomplishes three decisive theological moves, each of which shapes the vault's entire treatment of unfulfilled eschatology. First: the scoffers prove Peter's point. Peter opens by saying "know this first" (touto prōton ginōskontes)—this is the priority datum for the last-days community. The very existence of scoffers who mock the delayed parousia is itself prophesied as a feature of the last days. So when the church encounters 21st-century scoffers asking "where is the promise of his coming?", their scoffing is not evidence against the NT eschatology; it is evidence for it. Peter inverts the scoffers' argument against itself: they demonstrate by their scoffing that Peter was right about the last days. Jude 18 makes the same move with almost identical vocabulary. Second: the already/not-yet structure is defended. The scoffers' implicit logic is that the absence of cataclysmic judgment proves no judgment is coming—"all things continue as they were from the beginning of creation" (v. 4). Peter rebuts this on two grounds. (a) They have "deliberately overlooked" (v. 5, lanthanei gar autous touto thelontas) the flood, which demonstrates that the apparent uniformity of natural processes does not exclude divine intervention. (b) "With the Lord one day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day" (v. 8, quoting Psalms 90:4)—divine patience, not divine inaction, explains the "delay." The intervening centuries are the interval of grace during which "the Lord is not slow to fulfill his promise... but is patient toward you, not wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentance" (v. 9). The already/not-yet structure is therefore not a theological embarrassment but a theological necessity: the delay is the space for the gospel to run its course. Third: the Day of the Lord will come—and when it comes, it reshapes the cosmos. Verses 10-13 give the most graphic description of the eschatological consummation in the NT corpus: the heavens "pass away with a roar" (roizēdon pareleusontai), the elements "are dissolved with fire" (stoicheia de kausoumena lyēthsontai), the earth and its works "will be exposed" or "burned up." This is the cosmic counterpart to the personal Day of the Lord imagery of the OT prophets (Joel 2:31; Zephaniah 1:14-18; Malachi 4:1). Peter then declares the positive side (v. 13): "according to his promise we are waiting for new heavens and a new earth in which righteousness dwells" (kainous de ouranous kai gēn kainēn kata to epangelma autou prosdokōmen). The OT promise (Isaiah 65:17; 66:22) is still outstanding; it awaits the Day of the Lord for its fulfillment. Peter's "according to his promise" (kata to epangelma) explicitly grounds the new-creation hope in Isaiah. The ethical bridge. Crucially, Peter does not leave the oracle in cosmology. Verses 11 and 14 draw the moral conclusion: "Since all these things are thus to be dissolved, what sort of people ought you to be in lives of holiness and godliness?" (v. 11); "Therefore, beloved, since you are waiting for these, be diligent to be found by him without spot or blemish, and at peace" (v. 14). Eschatology issues in ethics: knowing the Day of the Lord is coming, the church lives in holiness, patience, and mission. Peter's instruction mirrors 2 Timothy 3:1 ("in the last days perilous times will come") and 1 Timothy 4:1 ("in later times some will depart from the faith")—the dual character of the church age (blessing and apostasy, powers of the age to come and ongoing tribulation). The trajectory's Stage 11 anchoring. The last days inaugurated at Pentecost (Acts 2:17) must terminate at the Day of the Lord. Peter holds these two poles together more explicitly than any other NT writer. The scoffers' question ("where is the promise?") presupposes the gap between Stage 8 (inauguration) and Stage 11 (consummation). Peter's answer presupposes the gap is (a) prophesied, (b) purposeful (grace-giving, repentance-inviting), and (c) decisively terminated at the appointed hēmera kyriou. Revelation 21:1-5 gives the cosmic consummation vision that 2 Peter 3:13 anticipates—"new heaven and new earth" connect the two texts directly. Romans 8:19-23 completes the picture: the creation itself awaits the revealing of the sons of God and its own liberation from the bondage of decay. The trajectory. Pentecost inaugurates the last days (Stage 8-10) → Scoffers arise to mock the delay (2 Peter 3:3) → God's patience gives space for repentance (v. 9) → the Day of the Lord comes as a thief (v. 10) → the cosmos is dissolved in fire → new heavens and new earth appear (v. 13) → Revelation 21 consummates the vision → eschatological righteousness dwells. 2 Peter 3:3 is not a marginal verse; it is the church-age anchor for how the "not yet" relates to the "already"—the theological glue that holds inaugurated eschatology together across the long interval between Christ's ascension and His return.
Connection Method(s): Longitudinal Theme, Promise-Fulfillment, Redemptive-Historical Progression — The last-days scoffers, the Day of the Lord, and the new heavens/new earth together form the consummation pole of the trajectory: the OT's yôm YHWH and new-creation promises reach their unfulfilled climax in the eschatological judgment and renewal that the waiting church still anticipates.
Trajectory Table: 093 - Last Days Eschatology