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THE FIRST GENERAL EPISTLE OF
JOHN
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
CHAPTER 2
@1Jo
2:1-29. THE
ADVOCACY OF CHRIST
IS OUR
ANTIDOTE TO SIN
WHILE WALKING
IN THE LIGHT;
FOR TO KNOW
GOD, WE
MUST KEEP
HIS COMMANDMENTS
AND LOVE THE
BRETHREN, AND
NOT LOVE
THE WORLD,
NOR GIVE
HEED TO ANTICHRISTS,
AGAINST WHOM
OUR SAFETY
IS THROUGH THE
INWARD ANOINTING
OF GOD TO
ABIDE IN GOD:
SO AT CHRIST'S
COMING WE
SHALL NOT
BE ASHAMED.
1. (@1Jo
5:18.)
My little children--The diminutive expresses
the tender affection of an aged pastor and spiritual
father. My own dear children, that is, sons and
daughters (see on 1Jo 2:12).
these things--(@1Jo
1:6-10). My purpose in writing what I have just
written is not that you should abuse them as giving a
license to sin but, on the contrary, "in order that ye may
not sin at all" (the Greek aorist, implying the
absence not only of the habit, but of single acts
of sin [ALFORD]).
In order to "walk in the light" (@1Jo
1:5,7), the first step is confession of sin (@1Jo
1:9), the next (@1Jo
2:1) is that we should forsake all sin. The
divine purpose has for its aim, either to prevent the
commission of, or to destroy sin [BENGEL].
And, &c.--connected with the former;
Furthermore, "if any man sin," let him, while loathing
and condemning it, not fear to go at once to God, the
Judge, confessing it, for "we have an Advocate with Him."
He is speaking of a BELIEVER'S
occasional sins of infirmity through Satan's fraud
and malice. The use of "we" immediately afterwards implies
that we all are liable to this, though not
necessarily constrained to sin.
we have an advocate--Advocacy is God's family
blessing; other blessings He grants to good and bad alike,
but justification, sanctification, continued intercession,
and peace, He grants to His children alone.
advocate--Greek, "paraclete,"
the same term as is applied to the Holy Ghost, as the
"other Comforter"; showing the unity of the Second and
Third Persons of the Trinity. Christ is the Intercessor
for us above; and, in His absence, here below the Holy
Ghost is the other Intercessor in us. Christ's
advocacy is inseparable from the Holy Spirit's
comfort and working in us, as the spirit of
intercessory prayer.
righteous--As our "advocate," Christ is not a
mere suppliant petitioner. He pleads for us on the ground
of justice, or righteousness, as well as
mercy. Though He can say nothing good of us, He can
say much for us. It is His righteousness, or
obedience to the law, and endurance of its full penalty
for us, on which He grounds His claim for our acquittal.
The sense therefore is, "in that He is righteous";
in contrast to our sin ("if any man sin").
The Father, by raising Him from the dead, and setting Him
at His own right, has once for all accepted Christ's claim
for us. Therefore the accuser's charges against God's
children are vain. "The righteousness of Christ stands on
our side; for God's righteousness is, in Jesus Christ,
ours" [LUTHER].
2. And he--Greek,
"And Himself." He is our all-prevailing Advocate,
because He is Himself "the propitiation";
abstract, as in @1Co
1:30: He is to us all that is needed for
propitiation "in behalf of our sins"; the
propitiatory sacrifice, provided by the Father's love,
removing the estrangement, and appeasing the righteous
wrath, on God's part, against the sinner. "There is no
incongruity that a father should be offended with
that son whom he loveth, and at that time offended with
him when he loveth him" [BISHOP
PEARSON]. The
only other place in the New Testament where Greek
"propitiation" occurs, is @1Jo
4:10; it answers in the Septuagint to
Hebrew, "caphar," to effect an atonement
or reconciliation with God; and in @Eze
44:29, to the sin offering. In @Ro
3:25, Greek, it is "propitiatory," that is, the
mercy seat, or lid of the ark whereon God, represented by
the Shekinah glory above it, met His people, represented
by the high priest who sprinkled the blood of the
sacrifice on it.
and--Greek, "yet."
ours--believers: not Jews, in contrast
to Gentiles; for he is not writing to Jews (@1Jo
5:21).
also for the sins of the whole world--Christ's
"advocacy" is limited to believers (@1Jo
2:1 1Jo 1:7): His propitiation extends as
widely as sin extends: see on 2Pe 2:1, "denying the
Lord that bought them." "The whole world" cannot be
restricted to the believing portion of the world
(compare @1Jo
4:14; and "the whole world," @1Jo
5:19). "Thou, too, art part of the world, so that
thine heart cannot deceive itself and think, The Lord died
for Peter and Paul, but not for me" [LUTHER].
3. hereby--Greek,
"in this." "It is herein," and herein only, that we
know (present tense) that we have knowledge of (perfect
tense, once-for-all obtained and continuing knowledge
of) Him" (@1Jo
2:4,13,14). Tokens whereby to discern grace are
frequently given in this Epistle. The Gnostics, by the
Spirit's prescient forewarning, are refuted, who boasted
of knowledge, but set aside obedience. "Know
Him," namely, as "the righteous" (@1Jo
2:1,29); our "Advocate and Intercessor."
keep--John's favorite word, instead of "do,"
literally, "watch," "guard," and "keep safe" as a precious
thing; observing so as to keep. So Christ Himself. Not
faultless conformity, but hearty acceptance of, and
willing subjection to, God's whole revealed will, is
meant.
commandments--injunctions of faith,
love, and obedience. John never uses "the law" to express
the rule of Christian obedience: he uses it as the Mosaic
law.
4. I know--Greek, "I
have knowledge of (perfect) Him." Compare with this
verse @1Jo
1:8.
5. Not merely repeating the
proposition, @1Jo
2:3, or asserting the merely opposite alternative to @1Jo
2:4, but expanding the "know Him" of @1Jo
2:3, into "in Him, verily (not as a matter of vain
boasting) is the love of (that is towards) God perfected,"
and "we are in Him." Love here answers to
knowledge in @1Jo
2:3. In proportion as we love God, in that same
proportion we know Him, and vice versa, until our
love and knowledge shall attain their full maturity
of perfection.
his word--His word is one (see on 1Jo
1:5), and comprises His "commandments," which are
many (@1Jo
2:3).
hereby--in our progressing towards this ideal
of perfected love and obedience. There is a gradation: @1Jo
2:3, "know Him"; @1Jo
2:5, "we are in Him"; @1Jo
2:6, "abideth in Him"; respectively,
knowledge, fellowship, abiding constancy. [BENGEL].
6. abideth--implying a
condition lasting, without intermission, and without end.
He that saith . . . ought--so that his deeds
may be consistent with his words.
even as he--Believers readily supply the
name, their hearts being full of Him (compare @Joh
20:15). "Even as He walked" when on earth, especially
in respect to love. John delights in referring to
Christ as the model man, with the words, "Even as He," &c.
"It is not Christ's walking on the sea, but His ordinary
walk, that we are called on to imitate" [LUTHER].
7. Brethren--The oldest
manuscripts and versions read instead, "Beloved,"
appropriate to the subject here, love.
no new commandment--namely, love, the
main principle of walking as Christ walked (@1Jo
2:6), and that commandment, of which one
exemplification is presently given, @1Jo
2:9,10, the love of brethren.
ye had from the beginning--from the time that
ye first heard the Gospel word preached.
8. a new commandment--It
was "old," in that Christians as such had heard it
from the first; but "new" (Greek, "kaine,"
not "nea": new and different from the old
legal precept) in that it was first clearly
promulgated with Christianity; though the inner spirit
of the law was love even to enemies, yet it was
enveloped in some bitter precepts which caused it to be
temporarily almost unrecognized, till the Gospel came.
Christianity first put love to brethren on the
new and highest MOTIVE,
instinctive love to Him who first loved us, constraining
us to love all, even enemies, thereby walking in the steps
of Him who loved us when enemies. So Jesus calls it "new,"
@Joh
13:34,35, "Love one another as I have loved you"
(the new motive); @Joh
15:12.
which thing is true in him and in you--"In
Christ all things are always true, and were so from
the beginning; but in Christ and in us conjointly
the commandment [the love of brethren] is then
true when we acknowledge the truth which is in Him,
and have the same flourishing in us" [BENGEL].
ALFORD
explains, "Which thing (the fact that the commandment
is a new one) is true in Him and in you because the
darkness is passing away, and the true light is now
shining; that is, the commandment is a new one, and
this is true both in the case of Christ and in the case of
you; because in you the darkness is passing away,
and in Him the true light is shining; therefore, on
both accounts, the command is a new one: new as
regards you, because you are newly come from darkness into
light; new as regards Him, because He uttered it when He
came into the world to lighten every man, and began that
shining which even now continues." I prefer, as BENGEL,
to explain, The new commandment finds its truth
in its practical realization in the walk of
Christians in union with Christ. Compare the use of
"verily," @1Jo
2:5. @Joh
4:42, "indeed"; @Joh
6:55. The repetition of "in" before "you," "in Him and
in you," not "in Him and you" implies that the love
commandment finds its realization separately: first
it did so "in Him," and then it does so "in us," in
so far as we now "also walk even as He walked"; and yet it
finds its realization also conjointly, by the two
being united in one sentence, even as it is by virtue of
the love commandment having been first fulfilled in
Him, that it is also now fulfilled in us,
through His Spirit in us: compare a similar case, @Joh
20:17, "My Father and your Father"; by
virtue of His being "My Father," He is also your
Father.
darkness is past--rather, as in @1Jo
2:17, "is passing away." It shall not be wholly "past"
until "the Sun of righteousness" shall arise visibly;
"the light is now shining" already, though but
partially until the day bursts forth.
9-11. There is no mean
between light and darkness, love and hatred,
life and death, God and the world:
wherever spiritual life is, however weak, there
darkness and death no longer reign, and love
supplants hatred; and @Lu
9:50 holds good: wherever life is not, there
death, darkness, the flesh, the world, and
hatred, however glossed over and hidden from man's
observation, prevail; and @Lu
11:23 holds good. "Where love is not, there hatred is;
for the heart cannot remain a void" [BENGEL].
in the light--as his proper element.
his brother--his neighbor, and especially
those of the Christian brotherhood. The very title
"brother" is a reason why love should be exercised.
even until now--notwithstanding that "the
true light already has begun to shine" (@1Jo
2:8).
10. Abiding in love
is abiding in the light; for the Gospel
light not only illumines the understanding, but warms the
heart into love.
none occasion of stumbling--In contrast to,
"He that hateth his brother is in darkness, and walketh in
darkness, and knoweth not whither he goeth, because that
darkness hath blinded his eyes." "In him who loves there
is neither blindness nor occasion of stumbling [to
himself]: in him who does not love, there is both
blindness and occasion of stumbling. He who hates his
brother, is both a stumbling-block to himself, and
stumbles against himself and everything within and
without; he who loves has an unimpeded path" [BENGEL].
John has in mind Jesus' words, @Joh
11:9,10. ALFORD
well says, "The light and the darkness are within
ourselves; admitted into us by the eye, whose singleness
fills the whole body with light."
11. is in darkness . . .
walketh--"is" marks his continuing STATE: he has never
come out of "the darkness" (so Greek); "walketh"
marks his OUTWARD WALK
and acts.
whither--Greek, "where"; including not
only the destination to which, but the way
whereby.
hath blinded--rather, as Greek aorist,
"blinded" of old. Darkness not only surrounds, but blinds
him, and that a blindness of long standing.
12. little children--Greek,
"little sons," or "dear sons and daughters"; not
the same Greek as in @1Jo
2:13, "little children," "infants" (in age and
standing). He calls ALL
to whom he writes, "little sons" (@1Jo
2:1, Greek; @1Jo
2:28 3:18 4:4 5:21); but only in @1Jo
2:13,18 he uses the term "little children," or
"infants." Our Lord, whose Spirit John so deeply drank
into, used to His disciples (@Joh
13:33) the term "little sons," or dear sons and
daughters; but in @Joh
21:5, "little children." It is an undesigned
coincidence with the Epistle here, that in John's Gospel
somewhat similarly the classification, "lambs, sheep,
sheep," occurs.
are forgiven--"have been, and are forgiven
you": ALL
God's sons and daughters alike enjoy this
privilege.
13, 14. All three classes
are first addressed in the present. "I write"; then in the
past (aorist) tense, "I wrote" (not "I have written";
moreover, in the oldest manuscripts and versions, in the
end of @1Jo
2:13, it is past, "I wrote," not as English
Version, "I write"). Two classes, "fathers" and "young
men," are addressed with the same words each time (except
that the address to the young men has an addition
expressing the source and means of their victory); but the
"little sons" and "little children" are differently
addressed.
have known--and do know: so the Greek
perfect means. The "I wrote" refers not to a former
Epistle, but to this Epistle. It was an idiom to put the
past tense, regarding the time from the reader's
point of view; when he should receive the Epistle the
writing would be past. When he uses "I write," he
speaks from his own point of view.
him that is from the beginning--Christ:
"that which was from the beginning."
overcome--The fathers, appropriately
to their age, are characterized by knowledge. The
young men, appropriately to theirs, by activity
in conflict. The fathers, too, have
conquered; but now their active service is past, and
they and the children alike are characterized by
knowing (the fathers know Christ, "Him
that was from the beginning"; the children know the
Father). The first thing that the little children
realize is that God is their Father; answering in
the parallel clause to "little sons . . . your sins are
forgiven you for His name's sake," the universal first
privilege of all those really-dear sons of
God. Thus this latter clause includes all, whereas
the former clause refers to those more especially who are
in the first stage of spiritual life, "little
children." Of course, these can only know the Father
as theirs through the Son (@Mt
11:27). It is beautiful to see how the fathers
are characterized as reverting back to the first great
truths of spiritual childhood, and the sum and ripest
fruit of advanced experience, the knowledge of Him that
was from the beginning (twice repeated, @1Jo
2:13,14). Many of them had probably known Jesus
in person, as well as by faith.
14. young men . . . strong--made
so out of natural weakness, hence enabled to
overcome "the strong man armed" through Him that is
"stronger." Faith is the victory that overcomes the world.
This term "overcome" is peculiarly John's, adopted from
his loved Lord. It occurs sixteen times in the Apocalypse,
six times in the First Epistle, only thrice in the rest of
the New Testament. In order to overcome the world on the
ground, and in the strength, of the blood of the Saviour,
we must be willing, like Christ, to part with whatever of
the world belongs to us: whence immediately after "ye have
overcome the wicked one (the prince of the world)," it is
added, "Love not the world, neither the things . . . in
the world."
and, &c.--the secret of the young men's
strength: the Gospel word, clothed with living
power by the Spirit who abideth permanently in
them; this is "the sword of the Spirit" wielded in
prayerful waiting on God. Contrast the mere physical
strength of young men, @Isa
40:30,31. Oral teaching prepared these youths
for the profitable use of the word when written.
"Antichrist cannot endanger you (@1Jo
2:18), nor Satan tear from you the word of God."
the wicked one--who, as "prince of this
world," enthrals "the world" (@1Jo
2:15-17 5:19, Greek, "the wicked one"),
especially the young. Christ came to destroy this "prince
of the world." Believers achieve the first grand conquest
over him when they pass from darkness to light, but
afterwards they need to maintain a continual keeping
of themselves from his assaults, looking to God by whom
alone they are kept safe. BENGEL
thinks John refers specially to the remarkable constancy
exhibited by youths in Domitian's persecution. Also to the
young man whom John, after his return from Patmos, led
with gentle, loving persuasion to repentance. This youth
had been commended to the overseers of the Church by John,
in one of his tours of superintendency, as a promising
disciple; he had been, therefore, carefully watched up to
baptism. But afterwards relying too much on baptismal
grace, he joined evil associates, and fell from step to
step down, till he became a captain of robbers. When John,
some years after, revisited that Church and heard of the
youth's sad fall, he hastened to the retreat of the
robbers, suffered himself to be seized and taken into the
captain's presence. The youth, stung by conscience and the
remembrance of former years, fled away from the venerable
apostle. Full of love the aged father ran after him,
called on him to take courage, and announced to him
forgiveness of his sins in the name of Christ. The youth
was recovered to the paths of Christianity, and was the
means of inducing many of his bad associates to repent and
believe [CLEMENT OF
ALEXANDRIA,
Who Is the Rich Man Who Shall Be Saved? 4.2; EUSEBIUS,
Ecclesiastical History, 3.20; CHRYSOSTOM,
First Exhortation to Theodore, 11].
15. Love not the world--that
lieth in the wicked one (@1Jo
5:19), whom ye young men have overcome. Having
once for all, through faith, overcome the world (@1Jo
4:4 5:4), carry forward the conquest by not loving it.
"The world" here means "man, and man's world" [ALFORD],
in his and its state as fallen from God. "God loved
[with the love of compassion] the world," and we
should feel the same kind of love for the fallen world;
but we are not to love the world with
congeniality and sympathy in its alienation
from God; we cannot have this latter kind of love for the
God-estranged world, and yet have also "the love of the
Father in" us.
neither--Greek, "nor yet." A man might
deny in general that he loved the world, while
keenly following some one of THE
THINGS IN IT: its riches, honors, or
pleasures; this clause prevents him escaping from
conviction.
any man--therefore the warning, though
primarily addressed to the young, applies to all.
love of--that is, towards "the
Father." The two, God and the (sinful) world, are so
opposed, that both cannot be congenially loved at once.
16. all that is in the world--can
be classed under one or other of the three; the world
contains these and no more.
lust of the flesh--that is, the lust which
has its seat and source in our lower animal nature. Satan
tried this temptation the first on Christ: @Lu
4:3, "Command this stone that it be made bread."
Youth is especially liable to fleshly lusts.
lust of the eyes--the avenue through which
outward things of the world, riches, pomp, and beauty,
inflame us. Satan tried this temptation on Christ when he
showed Him the kingdoms of the world in a moment. By the
lust of the eyes David (@2Sa
11:2) and Achan fell (@Jos
7:21). Compare David's prayer, @Ps
119:37; Job's resolve, @Ps
31:1 Mt 5:28. The only good of worldly riches to the
possessor is the beholding them with the eyes.
Compare @Lu
14:18, "I must go and SEE
it."
pride of life--literally, "arrogant
assumption": vainglorious display. Pride was
Satan's sin whereby he fell and forms the link between the
two foes of man, the world (answering to "the lust
of the eyes") and the devil (as "the lust of the
flesh" is the third foe). Satan tried this temptation on
Christ in setting Him on the temple pinnacle that, in
spiritual pride and presumption, on the
ground of His Father's care, He should cast Himself down.
The same three foes appear in the three classes of soil on
which the divine seed falls: the wayside hearers, the
devil; the thorns, the world; the rocky
undersoil, the flesh (@Mt
13:18-23 Mr 4:3-8). The world's awful antitrinity,
the "lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the
pride of life," similarly is presented in Satan's
temptation of Eve: "When she saw that the tree was good
for food, pleasant to the eyes, and a tree
to be desired to make one wise," @Ge
3:6 (one manifestation of "the pride of life," the
desire to know above what God has revealed, @Col
2:8, the pride of unsanctified knowledge).
of--does not spring from "the Father"
(used in relation to the preceding "little children," @1Jo
2:12, or "little sons"). He who is born of God
alone turns to God; he who is of the world turns to
the world; the sources of love to God and love to the
world, are irreconcilably distinct.
17. the world--with all who
are of the world worldly.
passeth away--Greek, "is passing away"
even now.
the lust thereof--in its threefold
manifestation (@1Jo
2:16).
he that doeth the will of God--not his own
fleshly will, or the will of the world, but
that of God (@1Jo
2:3,6), especially in respect to love.
abideth for ever--"even as God also abideth
for ever" (with whom the godly is one; compare @Ps
55:19, "God, even He that abideth of old): a true
comment, which CYPRIAN
and LUCIFER
have added to the text without support of Greek
manuscripts. In contrast to the three passing lusts
of the world, the doer of God's will has three abiding
goods, "riches, honor, and life" (@Pr
22:4).
18. Little children--same
Greek as @1Jo
2:13; children in age. After the fathers
and young men were gone, "the last time" with its
"many Antichrists" was about to come suddenly on the
children. "In this last hour we all even still
live" [BENGEL].
Each successive age has had in it some of the signs of
"the last time" which precedes Christ's coming, in order
to keep the Church in continual waiting for the Lord. The
connection with @1Jo
2:15-17 is:There are coming those seducers who arc of
the world (@1Jo
4:5), and would tempt you to go out from us (@1Jo
2:19) and deny Christ (@1Jo
2:22).
as ye have heard--from the apostles,
preachers of the Gospel (for example, @2Th
2:3-10; and in the region of Ephesus, @Ac
20:29,30).
shall come--Greek, "cometh," namely,
out of his own place. Antichrist is interpreted in
two ways: a false Christ (@Mt
24:5,24), literally, "instead of Christ"; or an
adversary of Christ, literally, "against
Christ." As John never uses pseudo-Christ, or
"false Christ," for Antichrist, it is plain he
means an adversary of Christ, claiming to himself
what belongs to Christ, and wishing to substitute himself
for Christ as the supreme object of worship. He denies
the Son, not merely, like the pope, acts in the name
of the Son, @2Th
2:4, "Who opposeth himself (Greek,
"ANTI-keimenos") [to] all that is called God,"
decides this. For God's great truth, "God is man," he
would substitute his own lie, "man is God" [TRENCH].
are there--Greek, "there have begun to
be"; there have arisen. These "many Antichrists" answer to
"the spirit of lawlessness (Greek) doth already
work." The Antichristian principle appeared then, as now,
in evil men and evil teachings and writings; but still "THE
Antichrist" means a hostile person, even as "THE
Christ" is a personal Saviour. As "cometh" is used of
Christ, so here of Antichrist, the embodiment in
his own person of all the Antichristian features and
spirit of those "many Antichrists" which have been, and
are, his forerunners. John uses the singular of him. No
other New Testament writer uses the term. He probably
answers to "the little horn having the eyes of a man, and
speaking great things" (@Da
7:8,20); "the man of sin, son of perdition" (@2Th
2:3); "the beast ascending out of the bottomless pit"
(@Re
11:7 17:8), or rather, "the false prophet," the same
as "the second beast coming up out of the earth" (@Re
13:11-18 16:13).
19. out from us--from our
Christian communion. Not necessarily a formal secession or
going out: thus Rome has spiritually gone out,
though formally still of the Christian Church.
not of us--by spiritual fellowship (@1Jo
1:3). "They are like bad humors in the body of Christ,
the Church: when they are vomited out, then the body is
relieved; the body of Christ is now still under treatment,
and has not yet attained the perfect soundness which it
shall have only at the resurrection" [AUGUSTINE,
Ten Homilies on the First Epistle of John, Homily
3.4].
they would . . . have continued--implying the
indefectibility of grace in the elect. "Where God's call
is effectual, there will be sure perseverance" [CALVIN].
Still, it is no fatal necessity, but a "voluntary
necessity" [DIDYMUS],
which causes men to remain, or else go from the body of
Christ. "We are either among the members, or else among
the bad humors. It is of his own will that each is either
an Antichrist, or in Christ" [AUGUSTINE].
Still God's actings in eternal election harmonize in a way
inexplicable to us, with man's free agency and
responsibility. It is men's own evil will that chooses the
way to hell; it is God's free and sovereign grace that
draws any to Himself and to heaven. To God the latter
shall ascribe wholly their salvation from first to last:
the former shall reproach themselves alone, and not God's
decree, with their condemnation (@1Jo
3:9 5:18).
that they were not all of us--This
translation would imply that some of the Antichrists
are of us! Translate, therefore, "that all (who are
for a time among us) are not of us." Compare @1Co
11:19, "There must be heresies among you, that they
which are approved may be made manifest among you." For
"were" some of the oldest manuscripts read "are." Such
occasions test who are, and who are not, the Lord's
people.
20. But--Greek,
"And." He here states the means which they as believers
have wherewith to withstand. Antichrists (@1Jo
2:18), namely, the chrism (so the Greek:
a play upon similar sounds), or "anointing unguent,"
namely, the Holy Spirit (more plainly mentioned further
on, as in John's style, @1Jo
3:24 4:13 5:6), which they ("ye" is emphatical
in contrast to those apostates, @1Jo
2:19) have "from the Holy One, Christ" (@Joh
1:33 3:34 15:26 16:14): "the righteous" (@1Jo
2:1), "pure" (@1Jo
3:3), "the Holy One" (@Ac
3:14) "of God"; @Mr
1:24. Those anointed of God in Christ alone can
resist those anointed with the spirit of Satan,
Antichrists, who would sever them from the Father and
from the Son. Believers have the anointing Spirit from
the Father also, as well as from the Son; even as the
Son is anointed therewith by the Father. Hence the Spirit
is the token that we are in the Father and in the Son;
without it a man is none of Christ. The material unguent
of costliest ingredients, poured on the head of priests
and kings, typified this spiritual unguent, derived from
Christ, the Head, to us, His members. We can have no share
in Him as Jesus, except we become truly
Christians, and so be in Him as Christ,
anointed with that unction from the Holy One. The Spirit
poured on Christ, the Head, is by Him diffused through all
the members. "It appears that we all are the body of
Christ, because we all are anointed: and we all in Him
are both Christ's and Christ, because in
some measure the whole Christ is Head and body."
and--therefore.
ye know all things--needful for acting aright
against Antichrist's seductions, and for Christian life
and godliness. In the same measure as one hath the
Spirit, in that measure (no more and no less) he knows
all these things.
21. but because ye know it, and
that, &c.--Ye not only know what is the truth
(concerning the Son and the Father, @1Jo
2:13), but also are able to detect a lie as a thing
opposed to the truth. For right (a straight line) is the
index of itself and of what is crooked [ESTIUS].
The Greek is susceptible of ALFORD'S
translation, "Because ye know it, and because no
lie is of the truth" (literally, "every lie is excluded
from being of the truth"). I therefore wrote (in this
Epistle) to point out what the lie is, and who the liars
are.
22. a liar--Greek,
"Who is the liar?" namely, guilty of the lie just
mentioned (@1Jo
2:21).
that Jesus is the Christ--the grand central
truth.
He is Antichrist--Greek, "the
Antichrist"; not however here personal, but in the
abstract; the ideal of Antichrist is "he that denieth the
Father and the Son." To deny the latter is virtually to
deny the former. Again, the truth as to the Son must be
held in its integrity; to deny that Jesus is the Christ,
or that He is the Son of God, or that He came in the
flesh, invalidates the whole (@Mt
11:27).
23. Greek, "Every
one who denieth the Son, hath not the Father either" (@1Jo
4:2,3): "inasmuch as God hath given Himself to us
wholly to be enjoyed in Christ" [CALVIN].
he--that acknowledgeth the Son hath the
Father also. These words ought not to be in italics,
as though they were not in the original: for the oldest
Greek manuscripts have them.
hath--namely, in his abiding possession as
his "portion"; by living personal "fellowship."
acknowledgeth--by open confession of Christ.
24. Let that--truth
respecting the Father and the Son, regarded as a seed not
merely dropped in, but having taken root (@1Jo
3:9).
ye--in the Greek standing emphatically
at the beginning of the sentence. YE, therefore,
acknowledge the Son, and so shall ye have the
Father also (@1Jo
2:23).
from the beginning--from the time of your
first hearing the Gospel.
remain--Translate as before, "abide."
ye also--in your turn, as distinguished from
"that which ye have heard," the seed abiding in you.
Compare @1Jo
2:27, "the anointing abideth in you . . . ye
shall abide in Him." Having taken into us the
living seed of the truth concerning the Father and the
Son, we become transformed into the likeness of Him whose
seed we have taken into us.
25. this is the promise--Eternal
life shall be the permanent consummation of thus
abiding in the Son and in the Father (@1Jo
2:24).
he--Greek, "Himself," Christ, "the
Son" (compare @1Jo
1:1).
promised--(@Joh
3:15,36 6:40,47,57 17:2,3).
26. These things--(@1Jo
2:18-25).
have I written--resumed from @1Jo
2:21 and @1Jo
2:14.
seduce you--that is, are trying to seduce or
lead you into error.
27. But--Greek, "And
you (contrasting the believing readers with the
seducers; the words 'and you' stand prominent, the
construction of the sentence following being altered, and
no verb agreeing with 'and you' until 'need not') . . .
the anointing," &c. (resumed from @1Jo
2:20).
received of him--(@Joh
1:16). So we "are unto God a sweet savor of Christ."
abideth in you--He tacitly thus admonishes
them to say, when tempted by seducers, "The anointing
abideth in us; we do not need a teacher [for we have the
Holy Spirit as our teacher, @Jer
31:34 Joh 6:45 16:13]; it teaches us the truth; in
that teaching we will abide" [BENGEL].
and--and therefore. God is sufficient for
them who are taught of Him; they are independent of all
others, though, of course, not declining the Christian
counsel of faithful ministers. "Mutual communication is
not set aside, but approved of, in the case of those who
are partakers of the anointing in one body" [BENGEL].
the same anointing--which ye once for all
received, and which now still abides in you.
of--"concerning."
all things--essential to salvation; the point
under discussion. Not that the believer is made
infallible, for no believer here receives the Spirit in
all its fulness, but only the measure needful for keeping
him from soul-destroying error. So the Church, though
having the Spirit in her, is not infallible (for many
fallible members can never make an infallible whole), but
is kept from ever wholly losing the saving truth.
no lie--as Antichristian teaching.
ye shall abide in him--(@1Jo
2:24, end); even as "the anointing abideth in you."
The oldest manuscripts read the imperative, "abide
in Him."
28. little children--Greek,
"little sons," as in @1Jo
2:12; believers of every stage and age.
abide in him--Christ. John repeats his
monition with a loving appellation, as a father addressing
dear children.
when--literally, "if"; the uncertainty is not
as to the fact, but the time.
appear--Greek, "be manifested."
we--both writer and readers.
ashamed before him--literally, "from
Him"; shrink back from Him ashamed. Contrast
"boldness in the day of judgment," @1Jo
4:17; compare @1Jo
3:21 5:14. In the Apocalypse (written, therefore, BENGEL
thinks, subsequently), Christ's coming is represented as
put off to a greater distance.
29. The heading of the
second division of the Epistle: "God is righteous;
therefore, every one that doeth righteousness is born of
Him." Love is the grand feature and principle of
"righteousness" selected for discussion, @1Jo
2:29-3:3.
If ye know . . . ye know--distinct Greek
verbs: "if ye are aware (are in possession of the
knowledge) . . . ye discern or apprehend also
that," &c. Ye are already aware that God ("He"
includes both "the Father," of whom the believer
is born (end of this verse, and @1Jo
3:1), and "the Son," @1Jo
2:1,23) is righteous, ye must necessarily,
thereby, perceive also the consequence of that truth,
namely, "that everyone that doeth righteousness (and he
alone; literally, the righteousness such as the
righteous God approves) is born of Him." The righteous
produceth the righteous. We are never said to be born
again of Christ, but of God, with whom
Christ is one. HOLLAZ
in ALFORD
defines the righteousness of God, "It is the divine
energy by whose power God wills and does all things which
are conformable to His eternal law, prescribes suitable
laws to His creatures, fulfils His promises to men,
rewards the good, and punishes the ungodly."
doeth--"For the graces (virtues) are
practical, and have their being in being produced (in
being exercised); for when they have ceased to act, or are
only about to act, they have not even being" [ÆCUMENIUS].
"God is righteous, and therefore the source of
righteousness; when then a man doeth righteousness, we
know that the source of his righteousness is God, that
consequently he has acquired by new birth from God that
righteousness which he had not by nature. We argue from
his doing righteousness, to his being born of
God. The error of Pelagians is to conclude that
doing righteousness is a condition of becoming
a child of God" [ALFORD
most truly]. Compare @Lu
7:47,50: Her much love evinced that her sins
were already forgiven; not, were the condition
of her sins being forgiven.
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