1 João 5:18-21
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(3) SOME PRACTICAL POINTS RECAPITULATED (1 João 5:18).
(a)
God’s sons do not sin (1 João 5:18).
St. John refers back to “that ye may know” in 1 João 5:13, and sums up three points from former portions of the Epistle, describing the true consciousness of the Christian. Each begins with “We know.”
(18) Sinneth not. — There is no reason to supply “unto death.” (Comp. the Note on 1 João 3:9.) St. John means strongly to insist, in this the solemn close of his Letter, that the true ideal Christian frame is the absence of wilful sin. Stumbles there may be, even such as need the prayers of friends, but intentional lawlessness there cannot be.
But he that is begotten of God keepeth himself. — Rather, he that is begotten of God keepeth him: that is, the Son of God preserves him. (Comp. João 6:39; João 10:28; João 17:12; João 17:15.)
And that wicked one toucheth him not. — The last mention of the devil was in 1 João 3:10. The devil and his angels attack, but cannot influence so long as the Christian abides in Christ. (Comp. 1 Pedro 5:8; Efésios 6:11; Apocalipse 3:10.)
(3 b.) Personal assurance that we are God’s sons (1 João 5:19).
Next after the cardinal point that righteousness is the characteristic of the new birth comes the necessity that the Christian should make up his mind that he has been, or is being, born again, and is really different from the world. The proofs would be seen in 1 João 1:6; 1 João 2:3; 1 João 2:5; 1 João 2:29; 1 João 3:9; 1 João 3:14; 1 João 3:19; 1 João 3:24; 1 João 4:7; 1 João 4:13; 1 João 4:15; 1 João 5:1; 1 João 5:10.
(19) The whole world lieth in wickedness. — Rather, the wicked one. There is a constant danger lest Christians should forget this. (Comp. Gálatas 1:4.)
(3 c.) Personal assurance of the Incarnation, of the gift of the spiritual sense, and of abiding in the God of Truth through His Son (1 João 5:20).
The series ends with a climax: the Son is indeed come; He gave us the faculty of seeing the true God; and in that Almighty Being we actually are. through the Son. The greatest fact of all to St. John’s mind is that his Friend and Master of sixty years ago was the very Word made flesh. (Comp. 1 João 1:1; 1 João 2:13; 1 João 2:22; 1 João 3:5; 1 João 3:8; 1 João 3:16; 1 João 3:23; 1 João 4:2; 1 João 4:9; 1 João 5:1; 1 João 5:5; 1 João 5:9; 1 João 5:11.)
(20) And hath given us an understanding. — Comp. Atos 26:18; 1 Coríntios 2:12; Efésios 1:18. This spiritual faculty of discernment was one of the gifts of that Spirit which Christ was to send. (Comp. 1 João 2:20; 1 João 2:27; João 14:26; João 16:13.)
Him that is true. — The personality of God. Amid all the deceptions and fluctuations of the world, St. John felt, with the most absolute and penetrating and thankful conviction, that the followers of Christ were rooted and grounded in perfect, unshakable, unassailable truth. This could not be unless they were resting on the living Son and holding fast to Him.
This is the true God, and eternal life. — A most solemn and emphatic crown to the whole Epistle. “This God, as seen in His Son, is the true God.” If the Word had not been God, God could not have been seen in Him. “And God, seen in His Son, is eternal life.” This is only another way of putting João 17:3. (Comp. 1 João 5:11.) To make “this is the true God” refer only to the Son is equally admissible by grammar, but hardly suits the argument so well.
(4) LAST WARNING (1 João 5:21).
(21) Little children, keep yourselves from idols. — This parting word is suggested by the thought of “the true God.” Every scheme of thought, every object of affection, which is not of Him, is a rival of His empire, a false god, a delusive appearance only, without solidity or truth. We cannot conclude better than in the words of Ebrard: “This idea is a general and very comprehensive one: it embraces all things and everything which may be opposed to the God revealed in Christ and to His worship in spirit and in truth. Pre-eminently, therefore, it embraces the delusive and vain idols of the Corinthian Gnosticism, whether ancient or modern; but it includes also the idols and false mediators of superstition, to whom the confidence is transferred which is due only to God in Christ — be their name Madonna, or saints, or Pope, or priesthood, or good works, or pictures, or office, or church, or sacraments. The One Being in whom we have ‘the life eternal’ is Christ.... And this Christ we possess through the Spirit of God, whose marks and tokens are not priestly vestments, but faith and love. In this meaning, the Apostle’s cry sounds forth through all the ages, in the ears of all Christians, ‘LITTLE CHILDREN, KEEP YOURSELVES FROM IDOLS!’ The holiest things may become a snare if their letter is regarded and not their spirit. Every Christian Church has a tendency to worship its own brazen serpents. Happy are they who have a Hezekiah to call them Nehushtan!”