A Summary of Jude
Jude is a letter written under pressure. Its author, who identifies himself as a servant of Jesus Christ and as the brother of James, had intended to write a calm and constructive letter about the salvation that believers share. Instead, the urgency of the moment compelled him to take up a different pen entirely — a letter of alarm, calling his readers to contend earnestly for the faith once for all delivered to the saints. That phrase alone is worth pausing over. The faith is not a developing conversation or an evolving consensus. It is a fixed deposit, delivered once, held in trust by the church, and worth fighting for. The occasion is the infiltration of the congregation by ungodly persons who have turned the grace of God into sensuality and denied the only Master and Lord, Jesus Christ. Jude does not speculate about these men or treat their presence as a minor concern. He reaches deep into the Old Testament and into Jewish tradition to demonstrate that God has always deal...