The main subject still continues, that GOD IS LOVE; and that from this
truth flows the moral obligation on Christians not only to love God
but one another. But, as in Chap. 3, there are subdivisions, each of
which has a unity in itself as well as intimate and subtle relations
to the whole. These sub... [ Continue Reading ]
The Spirit of Truth and the Spirit of Error
1 6. This section is an amplification of the sentence with which the
preceding chapter ends. We certainly have the Holy Spirit as an
abiding gift from God, for otherwise we could not believe and confess
the truth of the Incarnation. As usual, S. John thin... [ Continue Reading ]
1 John 2:29 to 1 John 5:12. God is Love
There seems to be no serious break in the Epistle from this point
onwards until we reach the concluding verses which form a sort of
summary (1 John 5:13-21). The key-word -love" is distributed, and not
very unevenly, over the whole, from 1 John 3:1 to 1 John... [ Continue Reading ]
_Hereby know ye_ Or, _Herein ye know_: the verb may be either
indicative or imperative (comp. 1 John 2:27; 1 John 2:29). The
indicative is preferable, in spite of the imperatives in 1 John 4:1:
comp. 1 John 3:16; 1Jn 3:19; 1 John 3:24, which are very closely
parallel to this. -Ye know" is literally... [ Continue Reading ]
_confesseth not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh_ On
overwhelming evidence (AB, Coptic, Aethiopic, Vulgate, &c.) we must
omit the words -that Christ is come in the flesh", retaining only
CONFESSETH NOT JESUS: the additional words are an obvious
interpolation by one who wished to make the two s... [ Continue Reading ]
_Ye are of God_ As in 1 John 2:20 the Apostle passes abruptly from the
false teachers to his true children with an emphatic pronoun, made
still more emphatic here by the asyndeton. _Ye_, in marked contrast to
them, _are of God_.
_and have overcome them_ By withstanding the seducers they have proved... [ Continue Reading ]
_They are of the world_ This follows, though it has not yet been
stated, from their not being -of us" (1 John 2:19): for there is no
middle position. The verse is another reminiscence of the Lord's
farewell discourses: -If ye were of the world, the world would love
its own" (John 15:19; comp. John 1... [ Continue Reading ]
_We are of God_ -We" with great emphasis, like -ye" in 1 John 4:4, in
contrast to the false prophets. -We" is probably not equivalent to
-ye", viz. all true believers: -we" means the Apostles. See on 1 John
4:14 and on 1 John 1:4. The opposition here is not between true and
false _Christians_, but b... [ Continue Reading ]
Love is the Mark of the Children of the God who is Love
7. _Beloved, let us love one another_ See on 1 John 3:2. The
transition seems abrupt, as if the Apostle had summarily dismissed an
unwelcome subject. But the connexions of thought in S. John's writings
are often so subtle, that it is rash to as... [ Continue Reading ]
_knoweth not God_ Literally, _knew not God_, i.e. never attained to a
knowledge of Him. This is a remarkable instance of S. John's habit of
not making the second part of an antithesis the exact counterpart of
the first, but an advance beyond it. Instead of saying -is not born of
God" he says -never... [ Continue Reading ]
_In this was manifested_ Or, for the sake of uniformity with 1 John
4:10_; 1Jn 4:13; 1 John 4:17_, HEREIN _was manifested:_we have the
same Greek in all four verses. -Herein" plainly refers to what
follows: comp. 1 John 3:16 and see on 1 John 3:19. For -manifest" see
on 1 John 1:2. This is a second... [ Continue Reading ]
_Herein is love_ -Herein" again refers to what follows: Love in Its
full perfection is seen, not in man's love to God, but in His to man,
which reached a climax in His sending His Son to save us from our
sins. The superiority of God's love does not lie merely in the fact of
its being Divine. It is f... [ Continue Reading ]
_Beloved_ For the sixth and last time the Apostle uses this
appropriate address: see on 1 John 3:2. No address of any kind occurs
again until the last verse of the Epistle.
_if God so loved us_ As in 1Jn 3:13, 1 John 5:9, the fact is stated
gently, but without any doubt (εἰ with the indicative): he... [ Continue Reading ]
_No man hath seen God at any time_ Better, as R. V., _No man hath_
BEHELD _God at any time_: a different verb (τεθέαται) is used
here from that used in 1 John 4:20 and in John 1:18 (ἑώρακαν)
where we have exactly the same statement. The verb used here implies
something of gazing and contemplation: o... [ Continue Reading ]
This should be compared with 1 John 3:24, to which it is closely
parallel. There, as here, the gift of the Spirit is the proof of God's
abiding presence: but there this is connected with keeping His
commandments; here it is connected with the special duty of brotherly
love.
_he hath given us of his... [ Continue Reading ]
_And we have seen and do testify_ Better, as R. V., _And we have_
BEHELD _and_ BEAR WITNESS: see on 1 John 4:12 and 1 John 1:2. -We" is
emphatic, and, as in the Prologue, means S. John and the other
Apostles. See on 1 John 1:4. With their own eyes they saw the Son
working out His mission as the Savi... [ Continue Reading ]
_Whosoever shall confess_ This was what the false prophets refused to
do: see on 1 John 4:2: also on 1 John 5:1.
_dwelleth in him_ Better, ABIDETH _in him_: see on 1 John 2:24.
_and he in God_ The communion is of the closest description: comp. 1
John 3:24; John 6:56; John 14:20; John 15:5. Even Apo... [ Continue Reading ]
_And we have known and believed_ Literally, _And we have_ COME TO KNOW
AND HAVE _believed_. This is the natural order; progressive knowledge
leads up to faith. But sometimes faith precedes knowledge (John 6:69).
In either case each completes the other. Sound faith is intelligent;
sound knowledge is... [ Continue Reading ]
_Herein is our love made perfect_ Better, as the margin, _Herein is_
LOVE WITH US _made perfect_; or, as R. V., _Herein is love_ MADE
PERFECT WITH US. Most earlier English Versions agree with the latter
collocation. The meaning seems to be that love, which is of God (1
John 4:7), takes up its abode... [ Continue Reading ]
Proof of the preceding statement that perfect love will give us
boldness, by shewing the mutually exclusive nature of love and fear.
Love moves towards others in the spirit of self-sacrifice: fear
shrinks from others in the spirit of self-preservation. The two are to
be understood quite generally; n... [ Continue Reading ]
_We love him_ Omit -Him", which is a later addition to the true text:
some authorities for -Him" add -God", and some have -God" for -He" in
the next clause. No accusative is expressed, and none, whether -God"
or -one another", is to be understood: Christian love of every kind is
meant. Authorities a... [ Continue Reading ]
_If a man say_ We return to the form of statement which was so common
at the beginning of the Epistle (1 John 1:6; 1 John 1:8; 1 John 1:10).
The case here contemplated is one form of the man that feareth _not_.
His freedom from fear is caused, however, not by the perfection of
love, but by presumpti... [ Continue Reading ]
_And this commandment have we_ The Apostle drives home his arguments
for the practice of brotherly love by the fact that God has commanded
all who love Him to love their brethren. Some take -Him" to mean
Christ. But this is unlikely, as Christ has not been mentioned for
several verses: although it m... [ Continue Reading ]