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THE FIRST GENERAL EPISTLE OF
JOHN
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
CHAPTER 3
@1Jo
3:1-24. DISTINGUISHING
MARKS OF THE
CHILDREN OF GOD
AND THE CHILDREN
OF THE DEVIL.
BROTHERLY LOVE
THE ESSENCE
OF TRUE
RIGHTEOUSNESS.
1. Behold--calling
attention, as to some wonderful exhibition, little as the
world sees to admire. This verse is connected with the
previous @1Jo
2:29, thus: All our doing of righteousness is a
mere sign that God, of His matchless love, has adopted us
as children; it does not save us, but is a proof that we
are saved of His grace.
what manner of--of what surpassing
excellence, how gracious on His part, how precious to us.
love . . . bestowed--He does not say that God
hath given us some gift, but love itself and the
fountain of all honors, the heart itself, and that not for
our works or efforts, but of His grace [LUTHER].
that--"what manner of love"; resulting in,
proved by, our being, &c. The immediate effect aimed at
in the bestowal of this love is, "that we should be
called children of God."
should be called--should have received the
privilege of such a glorious title (though seeming
so imaginary to the world), along with the glorious
reality. With God to call is to make really
to be. Who so great as God? What nearer relationship
than that of sons? The oldest manuscripts add, "And
we ARE SO"
really.
therefore--"on this account," because "we are
(really) so."
us--the children, like the Father.
it knew him not--namely, the Father. "If they
who regard not God, hold thee in any account, feel alarmed
about thy state" [BENGEL].
Contrast @1Jo
5:1. The world's whole course is one great act of
non-recognition of God.
2. Beloved--by the Father,
and therefore by me.
now--in contrast to "not yet." We now
already are really sons, though not recognized as such by
the world, and (as the consequence) we look for the
visible manifestation of our sonship, which not yet
has taken place.
doth not yet appear--Greek, "it hath
not yet ('at any time,' Greek aorist) been visibly
manifested what we shall be"--what further glory we shall
attain by virtue of this our sonship. The "what" suggests
a something inconceivably glorious.
but--omitted in the oldest manuscripts. Its
insertion in English Version gives a wrong
antithesis. It is not, "We do not yet know manifestly
what . . . but we know," &c. Believers have some
degree of the manifestation already, though the world
has not. The connection is, The manifestation to
the world of what we shall be, has not yet taken
place; we know (in general; as a matter of
well-assured knowledge; so the Greek) that when
(literally, "if"; expressing no doubt as to the fact, but
only as to the time; also implying the coming preliminary
fact, on which the consequence follows, @Mal
1:6 Joh 14:3) He (not "it," namely, that which is not
yet manifested [ALFORD])
shall be manifested (@1Jo
3:5 2:28), we shall be like Him (Christ; all sons have
a substantial resemblance to their father, and Christ,
whom we shall be like, is "the express image of the
Father's person," so that in resembling Christ, we shall
resemble the Father). We wait for the manifestation
(literally, the "apocalypse"; the same term as is applied
to Christ's own manifestation) of the sons of God.
After our natural birth, the new birth into the life of
grace is needed, which is to be followed by the new birth
into the life of glory; the two latter alike are termed
"the regeneration" (@Mt
19:28). The resurrection of our bodies is a kind of
coming out of the womb of the earth, and being born into
another life. Our first temptation was that we should be
like God in knowledge, and by that we fell; but being
raised by Christ, we become truly like Him, by knowing Him
as we are known, and by seeing Him as He is [PEARSON,
Exposition of the Creed]. As the first immortality
which Adam lost was to be able not to die, so the last
shall be not to be able to die. As man's first free choice
or will was to be able not to sin, so our last shall be
not to be able to sin [AUGUSTINE,
The City of God, 22.30]. The devil fell by aspiring
to God's power; man, by aspiring to his
knowledge; but aspiring after God's goodness,
we shall ever grow in His likeness. The transition from
God the Father to "He," "Him," referring to Christ
(who alone is ever said in Scripture to be manifested;
not the Father, @Joh
1:18), implies the entire unity of the Father and the
Son.
for, &c.--Continual beholding generates
likeness (@2Co
3:18); as the face of the moon being always turned
towards the sun, reflects its light and glory.
see him--not in His innermost Godhead, but as
manifested in Christ. None but the pure can see the
infinitely Pure One. In all these passages the Greek
is the same verb opsomai; not denoting the action
of seeing, but the state of him to whose eye or mind the
object is presented; hence the Greek verb is always
in the middle or reflexive voice, to perceive and
inwardly appreciate [TITTMANN].
Our spiritual bodies will appreciate and recognize
spiritual beings hereafter, as our natural bodies now do
natural objects.
3. this hope--of being
hereafter "like Him." Faith and love, as
well as hope, occur in @1Jo
3:11,23.
in--rather, "(resting) upon Him";
grounded on His promises.
purifieth himself--by Christ's Spirit in him
(@Joh
15:5, end). "Thou purifiest thyself, not of thyself,
but of Him who comes that He may dwell in thee" [AUGUSTINE].
One's justification through faith is presupposed.
as he is pure--unsullied with any
uncleanness. The Second Person, by whom both the Law and
Gospel were given.
4. Sin is incompatible with
birth from God (@1Jo
3:1-3). John often sets forth the same truth
negatively, which he had before set forth
positively. He had shown, birth from God involves
self-purification; he now shows where sin, that is, the
want of self-purification, is, there is no birth from God.
Whosoever--Greek, "Every one who."
committeth sin--in contrast to @1Jo
3:3, "Every man that hath this hope in Him purifieth
himself"; and @1Jo
3:7, "He that doeth righteousness."
transgresseth . . . the law--Greek, "committeth
transgression of law." God's law of purity; and so shows
he has no such hope of being hereafter pure as God is
pure, and, therefore, that he is not born of God.
for--Greek, "and."
sin is . . . transgression of . . . law--definition
of sin in general. The Greek having the
article to both, implies that they are convertible terms.
The Greek "sin" (hamartia) is literally, "a
missing of the mark." God's will being that mark to be
ever aimed at. "By the law is the knowledge of sin." The
crookedness of a line is shown by being brought into
juxtaposition with a straight ruler.
5. Additional proof of the
incompatibility of sin and sonship; the very object of
Christ's manifestation in the flesh was to take away
(by one act, and entirely, aorist) all sins, as the
scapegoat did typically.
and--another proof of the same.
in him is no sin--not "was," but "is," as in
@1Jo
3:7, "He is righteous," and @1Jo
3:3, "He is pure." Therefore we are to be so.
6. He reasons from Christ's
own entire separation from sin, that those in him must
also be separate from it.
abideth in him--as the branch in the vine, by
vital union living by His life.
sinneth not--In so far as he abides in
Christ, so far is he free from all sin. The ideal of the
Christian. The life of sin and the life of God mutually
exclude one another, just as darkness and light. In matter
of fact, believers do fall into sins (@1Jo
1:8-10 2:1,2); but all such sins are alien from the
life of God, and need Christ's cleansing blood, without
application to which the life of God could not be
maintained. He sinneth not so long as he abideth in
Christ.
whosoever sinneth hath not seen him--Greek
perfect, "has not seen, and does not see Him." Again the
ideal of Christian intuition and knowledge is
presented (@Mt
7:23). All sin as such is at variance with the notion
of one regenerated. Not that "whosoever is betrayed into
sins has never seen nor known God"; but in so far
as sin exists, in that degree the spiritual
intuition and knowledge of God do not exist in him.
neither--"not even." To see
spiritually is a further step than to know; for by
knowing we come to seeing by vivid
realization and experimentally.
7, 8. The same truth
stated, with the addition that he who sins is, so far as
he sins, "of the devil."
let no man deceive you--as Antinomians try to
mislead men.
righteousness--Greek, "the
righteousness," namely, of Christ or God.
he that doeth . . . is righteous--Not his
doing makes him righteous, but his being
righteous (justified by the righteousness of God in
Christ, @Ro
10:3-10) makes him to do righteousness: an
inversion common in familiar language, logical in reality,
though not in form, as in @Lu
7:47 Joh 8:47. Works do not justify, but the justified
man works. We infer from his doing righteousness
that he is already righteous (that is, has the true
and only principle of doing righteousness, namely,
faith), and is therefore born of God (@1Jo
3:9); just as we might say, The tree that bears good
fruit is a good tree, and has a living root; not that the
fruit makes the tree and its root to be good, but
it shows that they are so.
he--Christ.
8. He that committeth sin is of
the devil--in contrast to "He that doeth
righteousness," @1Jo
3:7. He is a son of the devil (@1Jo
3:10 Joh 8:44). John does not, however, say, "born of
the devil." as he does "born of God," for "the devil
begets none, nor does he create any; but whoever imitates
the devil becomes a child of the devil by imitating him,
not by proper birth" [AUGUSTINE,
Ten Homilies on the First Epistle of John, Homily
4.10]. From the devil there is not generation, but
corruption [BENGEL].
sinneth from the beginning--from the time
that any began to sin [ALFORD]:
from the time that he became what he is, the devil. He
seems to have kept his first estate only a very short time
after his creation [BENGEL].
Since the fall of man [at the beginning of our
world] the devil is (ever) sinning
(this is the force of "sinneth"; he has sinned from the
beginning, is the cause of all sins, and still goes on
sinning; present). As the author of sin, and prince of
this world, he has never ceased to seduce man to sin [LUECKE].
destroy--break up and do away with; bruising
and crushing the serpent's head.
works of the devil--sin, and all its awful
consequences. John argues, Christians cannot do that which
Christ came to destroy.
9. Whosoever is born of God--literally,
"Everyone that is begotten of God."
doth not commit sin--His higher nature, as
one born or begotten of God, doth not sin. To be
begotten of God and to sin, are states mutually
excluding one another. In so far as one sins, he makes it
doubtful whether he be born of God.
his seed--the living word of God, made by the
Holy Spirit the seed in us of a new life and the continual
mean of sanctification.
remaineth--abideth in him (compare Note,
see on 1Jo 3:6; @Joh
5:38). This does not contradict @1Jo
1:8,9; the regenerate show the utter incompatibility
of sin with regeneration, by cleansing away
every sin into which they may be betrayed by the old
nature, at once in the blood of Christ.
cannot sin, because he is born of God--"because
it is of God that he is born" (so the
Greek order, as compared with the order of the same
words in the beginning of the verse); not "because he
was born of God" (the Greek is perfect tense,
which is present in meaning, not aorist); it is not
said, Because a man was once for all born of God he never
afterwards can sin; but, Because he is born of God, the
seed abiding now in Him, he cannot sin; so long as it
energetically abides, sin can have no place. Compare @Ge
39:9, Joseph, "How CAN
I do this great wickedness and sin against God?" The
principle within me is at utter variance with it. The
regenerate life is incompatible with sin, and gives the
believer a hatred for sin in every shape, and an unceasing
desire to resist it. "The child of God in this conflict
receives indeed wounds daily, but never throws away his
arms or makes peace with his deadly foe" [LUTHER].
The exceptional sins into which the regenerate are
surprised, are owing to the new life principle being for a
time suffered to lie dormant, and to the sword of the
Spirit not being drawn instantly. Sin is ever active, but
no longer reigns. The normal direction of the
believer's energies is against sin; the law of God after
the inward man is the ruling principle of his true
self though the old nature, not yet fully deadened,
rebels and sins. Contrast @1Jo
5:18 with @Joh
8:34; compare @Ps
18:22,23 32:2,3 119:113,176. The magnetic needle, the
nature of which is always to point to the pole, is easily
turned aside, but always reseeks the pole.
10. children of the devil--(See
on 1Jo 3:8; @Ac
13:10). There is no middle class between the children
of God and the children of the devil.
doeth not righteousness--Contrast @1Jo
2:29.
he that loveth not his brother--(@1Jo
4:8); a particular instance of that love which
is the sum and fulfilment of all righteousness, and the
token (not loud professions, or even seemingly good works)
that distinguishes God's children from the devil's.
11. the message--"announcement,"
as of something good; not a mere command, as the
law. The Gospel message of Him who loved us,
announced by His servants, is, that we love the
brethren; not here all mankind, but those who are our
brethren in Christ, children of the same family of God, of
whom we have been born anew.
12. who--not in the
Greek.
of that wicked one--Translate, "evil
one," to accord with "Because his own works were evil."
Compare @1Jo
3:8, "of the devil," in contrast to "of God," @1Jo
3:10.
slew he him? Because his own works were evil, and
his brother's righteous--through envy and hatred of
his brother's piety, owing to which God accepted Abel's,
but rejected Cain's offering. Enmity from the first
existed between the seed of the woman and the seed of the
serpent.
13. Marvel not--The marvel
would be if the world loved you.
the world--of whom Cain is the representative
(@1Jo
3:12).
hate you--as Cain hated even his own brother,
and that to the extent of murdering him. The world feels
its bad works tacitly reproved by your good works.
14. We--emphatical; hated
though we be by the world, we know what the world
knows not.
know--as an assured fact.
passed--changed our state. @Col
1:13, "from the power of darkness . . . translated
into the kingdom of His dear Son."
from death unto life--literally, "out of
the death (which enthrals the unregenerate) into
the life (of the regenerate)." A palpable coincidence
of language and thought, the beloved disciple adopting his
Lord's words.
because we love the brethren--the ground, not
of our passing over out of death into life, but of
our knowing that we have so. Love, on our
part, is the evidence of our justification and
regeneration, not the cause of them. "Let each go
to his own heart; if he find there love to the brethren,
let him feel assured that he has passed from death unto
life. Let him not mind that his glory is only hidden; when
the Lord shall come, then shall he appear in glory. For he
has vital energy, but it is still wintertime; the root has
vigor, but the branches are as it were dry; within there
is marrow which is vigorous, within are leaves, within
fruits, but they must wait for summer" [AUGUSTINE].
He that loveth not--Most of the oldest
manuscripts omit "his brother," which makes the statement
more general.
abideth--still.
in death--"in the (spiritual) death"
(ending in eternal death) which is the state of all by
nature. His want of love evidences that no saving
change has passed over him.
15. hateth--equivalent to "loveth
not" (@1Jo
3:14); there is no medium between the two. "Love and
hatred, like light and darkness, life and death,
necessarily replace, as well as necessarily exclude, one
another" [ALFORD].
is a murderer--because indulging in that
passion, which, if followed out to its natural
consequences, would make him one. "Whereas, @1Jo
3:16 desires us to lay down our lives for the
brethren; duels require one (awful to say!) to risk
his own life, rather than not deprive another
of life" [BENGEL].
God regards the inward disposition as tantamount to the
outward act which would flow from it. Whomsoever one
hates, one wishes to be dead.
hath--Such a one still "abideth in death." It
is not his future state, but his present,
which is referred to. He who hates (that is, loveth not)
his brother (@1Jo
3:14), cannot in this his present state have eternal
life abiding in him.
16. What true love to
the brethren is, illustrated by the love of Christ to
us.
Hereby--Greek, "Herein."
the love of God--The words "of God"
are not in the original. Translate, "We arrive at the
knowledge of love"; we apprehend what true love is.
he--Christ.
and we--on our part, if absolutely needed for
the glory of God, the good of the Church, or the salvation
of a brother.
lives--Christ alone laid down His one life
for us all; we ought to lay down our lives
severally for the lives of the brethren; if not actually,
at least virtually, by giving our time, care, labors,
prayers, substance: Non nobis, sed omnibus. Our
life ought not to be dearer to us than God's own Son was
to Him. The apostles and martyrs acted on this principle.
17. this world's good--literally,
"livelihood" or substance. If we ought to lay down our
lives for the brethren (@1Jo
3:16), how much more ought we not to withhold our
substance?
seeth--not merely casually, but
deliberately contemplates as a spectator; Greek,
"beholds."
shutteth up his bowels of compassion--which
had been momentarily opened by the spectacle of his
brother's need. The "bowels" mean the heart, the
seat of compassion.
how--How is it possible that "the love
of (that is, 'to') God dwelleth (Greek, 'abideth')
in him?" Our superfluities should yield to the
necessities; our comforts, and even our necessaries in
some measure, should yield to the extreme wants of our
brethren. "Faith gives Christ to me; love flowing from
faith gives me to my neighbor."
18. When the venerable John
could no longer walk to the meetings of the Church but was
borne thither by his disciples, he always uttered the same
address to the Church; he reminded them of that one
commandment which he had received from Christ Himself, as
comprising all the rest, and forming the distinction of
the new covenant, "My little children, love one another."
When the brethren present, wearied of hearing the same
thing so often, asked why he always repeated the same
thing, he replied, "Because it is the commandment of the
Lord, and if this one thing be attained, it is enough" [JEROME].
in word--Greek, "with word
. . . with tongue, but in deed and truth."
19. hereby--Greek,
"herein"; in our loving in deed and in truth (@1Jo
3:18).
we know--The oldest manuscripts have "we
shall know," namely, if we fulfil the command (@1Jo
3:18).
of the truth--that we are real disciples of,
and belonging to, the truth, as it is in Jesus:
begotten of God with the word of truth. Having herein
the truth radically, we shall be sure not to love
merely in word and tongue. (@1Jo
3:18).
assure--literally, "persuade," namely, so as
to cease to condemn us; satisfy the questionings and
doubts of our consciences as to whether we be accepted
before God or not (compare @Mt
28:14 Ac 12:20, "having made Blastus their
friend," literally, "persuaded"). The "heart," as the seat
of the feelings, is our inward judge; the
conscience, as the witness, acts either as our
justifying advocate, or our condemning accuser, before God
even now. @Joh
8:9, has "conscience," but the passage is omitted in
most old manuscripts. John nowhere else uses the term
"conscience." Peter and Paul alone use it.
before him--as in the sight of Him, the
omniscient Searcher of hearts. Assurance is
designed to be the ordinary experience and privilege of
the believer.
20. LUTHER
and BENGEL
take this verse as consoling the believer whom his
heart condemns; and who, therefore, like Peter,
appeals from conscience to Him who is greater than
conscience. "Lord, Thou knowest all things:
thou knowest that I love Thee." Peter's conscience, though
condemning him of his sin in denying the Lord, assured him
of his love; but fearing the possibility, owing to
his past fall, of deceiving himself, he appeals to the
all-knowing God: so Paul, @1Co
4:3,4. So if we be believers, even if our heart
condemns us of sin in general, yet having the one sign
of sonship, love, we may still assure our hearts
(some oldest manuscripts read heart, @1Jo
3:19, as well as @1Jo
3:20), as knowing that God is greater than our
heart, and knoweth all things. But thus the same
Greek is translated "because" in the beginning, and
"(we know) that" in the middle of the verse, and if
the verse were consolatory, it probably would have been,
"Because EVEN
if our heart condemn us," &c. Therefore translate, "Because
(rendering the reason why it has been stated in @1Jo
3:19 to be so important to 'assure our hearts before
Him') if our heart condemn (Greek, 'know
[aught] against us'; answering by contrast to 'we
shall know that we are of the truth') us (it is)
because God is greater than our heart and knoweth all
things." If our heart judges us unfavorably, we may be
sure that He, knowing more than our heart knows, judges us
more unfavorably still [ALFORD].
A similar ellipsis ("it is") occurs in @1Co
14:27 2Co 1:6 8:23. The condemning testimony of our
conscience is not alone, but is the echo of the voice of
Him who is greater and knoweth all things. Our hypocrisy
in loving by word and tongue, not in deed and
truth, does not escape even our conscience, though
weak and knowing but little, how much less God who knows
all things! Still the consolatory view may be the right
one. For the Greek for "we shall assure our
hearts" (see on
1Jo 3:19), is gain over, persuade so as to be
stilled, implying that there was a previous state of
self-condemnation by the heart (@1Jo
3:20), which, however, is got over by the
consolatory thought, "God is greater than my heart" which
condemns me, and "knows all things" (Greek "ginoskei,"
"knows," not "kataginoskei," "condemns"),
and therefore knows my love and desire to serve
Him, and knows my frame so as to pity my weakness
of faith. This gaining over the heart to peace is
not so advanced a stage as the having CONFIDENCE
towards God which flows from a heart condemning us
not. The first "because" thus applies to the two
alternate cases, @1Jo
3:20,21 (giving the ground of saying, that having
love we shall gain over, or assure our minds before
Him, @1Jo
3:19); the second "because" applies to the first
alternate alone, namely, "if our heart condemn us." When
he reaches the second alternate, @1Jo
3:21, he states it independently of the former
"because" which had connected it with @1Jo
3:19, inasmuch as CONFIDENCE
toward God is a farther stage than persuading
our hearts, though always preceded by it.
21. Beloved--There is no
"But" contrasting the two cases, @1Jo
3:20,21, because "Beloved" sufficiently marks the
transition to the case of the brethren walking in the full
confidence of love (@1Jo
3:18). The two results of our being able to "assure
our hearts before Him" (@1Jo
3:19), and of "our heart condemning us not" (of
insincerity as to the truth in general, and as to
LOVE in
particular) are, (1) confidence toward God; (2) a sure
answer to our prayers. John does not mean that all whose
hearts do not condemn them, are therefore safe before God;
for some have their conscience seared, others are ignorant
of the truth, and it is not only sincerity, but
sincerity in the truth which can save men. Christians
are those meant here: knowing Christ's precepts and
testing themselves by them.
22. we receive--as a matter
of fact, according to His promise. Believers, as such, ask
only what is in accordance with God's will; or if they ask
what God wills not, they bow their will to God's will, and
so God grants them either their request, or something
better than it.
because we keep his commandments--Compare @Ps
66:18 34:15 145:18,19. Not as though our merits earned
a hearing for our prayers, but when we are believers in
Christ, all our works of faith being the fruit of His
Spirit in us, are "pleasing in God's sight"; and our
prayers being the voice of the same Spirit of God in us,
naturally and necessarily are answered by Him.
23. Summing up of God's
commandments under the Gospel dispensation in one
commandment.
this is his commandment--singular: for
faith and love are not separate
commandments, but are indissolubly united. We cannot truly
love one another without faith in Christ,
nor can we truly believe in Him without love.
believe--once for all; Greek aorist.
on the name of his Son--on all that is
revealed in the Gospel concerning Him, and on Himself in
respect to His person, offices, and atoning work.
as he--as Jesus gave us commandment.
24. dwelleth in him--The
believer dwelleth in Christ.
and he in him--Christ in the believer.
Reciprocity. "Thus he returns to the great keynote of the
Epistle, abide in Him, with which the former part
concluded" (@1Jo
2:28).
hereby--herein we (believers) know that he
abideth in us, namely, from (the presence in us of) the
Spirit "which He hath given us." Thus he prepares, by the
mention of the true Spirit, for the transition to the
false "spirit," @1Jo
4:1-6; after which he returns again to the subject of
love.
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