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THE FIRST GENERAL EPISTLE OF
JOHN
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
INTRODUCTION
AUTHORSHIP.--POLYCARP,
the disciple of John [Epistle to the Philippians,
7], quotes @1Jo
4:3. EUSEBIUS
[Ecclesiastical History, 3.39] says of PAPIAS,
a hearer of John, and a friend of POLYCARP,
"He used testimonies from the First Epistle of John." IRENĈUS,
according to EUSEBIUS
[Ecclesiastical History, 5.8], often quoted this
Epistle. So in his work Against Heresies [3.15; 5,
8] he quotes from John by name, @1Jo
2:18, &c.; and in [3.16,7], he quotes @1Jo
4:1-3 5:1, and @2Jo
1:7:8. CLEMENT OF
ALEXANDRIA [Miscellanies,
2.66, p. 464] refers to @1Jo
5:16, as in John's larger Epistle. See other
quotations [Miscellanies, 3.32,42; 4.102]. TERTULLIAN
[Against Marcion, 5.16] refers to @1Jo
4:1, &c.; [Against Praxeas, 15], to @1Jo
1:1. See his other quotations [Against Praxeas,
28; Against the Gnostics, 12]. CYPRIAN
[Epistles, 28 (24)], quotes as John's, @1Jo
2:3,4; and [On the Lord's Prayer, 5] quotes @1Jo
2:15-17; and [On Works and Alms, 3], @1Jo
1:8; and [On the Advantage of Patience, 2]
quotes @1Jo
2:6. MURATORI'S
Fragment on the Canon of Scripture states, "There
are two of John (the Gospel and Epistle?) esteemed
Catholic," and quotes @1Jo
1:3. The Peschito Syriac contains it. ORIGEN
(in EUSEBIUS
[Ecclesiastical History, 6.25]) speaks of the First
Epistle as genuine, and "probably the second and third,
though all do not recognize the latter two"; on the Gospel
of John, [Commentary on John, 13.2], he quotes @1Jo
1:5. DIONYSIUS OF
ALEXANDRIA, ORIGEN'S
scholar, cites the words of this Epistle as those of the
Evangelist John. EUSEBIUS
[Ecclesiastical History, 3.24], says, John's first
Epistle and Gospel are acknowledged without question
by those of the present day, as well as by the ancients.
So also JEROME
[On Illustrious Men]. The opposition of COSMAS
INDICOPLEUSTES,
in the sixth century, and that of MARCION
because our Epistle was inconsistent with his views, are
of no weight against such irrefragable testimony.
The internal evidence is equally
strong. Neither the Gospel, nor this Epistle, can be
pronounced an imitation; yet both, in style and modes of
thought, are evidently of the same mind. The individual
notices are not so numerous or obvious as in Paul's
writings, as was to be expected in a Catholic
Epistle; but such as there are accord with John's
position. He implies his apostleship, and perhaps alludes
to his Gospel, and the affectionate tie which bound him as
an aged pastor to his spiritual "children"; and in
@1Jo
2:18,19 4:1-3, he alludes to the false teachers as
known to his readers; and in @1Jo
5:21 he warns them against the idols of the
surrounding world. It is no objection against its
authenticity that the doctrine of the Word, or
divine second Person, existing from everlasting, and in
due time made flesh, appears in it, as also in the Gospel,
as opposed to the heresy of the Docetĉ in the second
century, who denied that our Lord is come in the
flesh, and maintained He came only in outward
semblance; for the same doctrine appears in @Col
1:15-18 1Ti 3:16 Heb 1:1-3; and the germs of Docetism,
though not fully developed till the second century, were
in existence in the first. The Spirit, presciently through
John, puts the Church beforehand on its guard against the
coming heresy.
TO WHOM
ADDRESSED.--AUGUSTINE
[The Question of the Gospels, 2.39], says this
Epistle was written to the Parthians. BEDE,
in a prologue to the seven Catholic Epistles, says that ATHANASIUS
attests the same. By the Parthians may be meant the
Christians living beyond the Euphrates in the Parthian
territory, outside the Roman empire, "the Church at
Babylon elected together with (you)," the churches in the
Ephesian region, the quarter to which Peter addressed his
Epistles (@1Pe
5:12). As Peter addressed the flock which John
subsequently tended (and in which Paul had formerly
ministered), so John, Peter's close companion after the
ascension, addresses the flock among whom Peter had been
when he wrote. Thus "the elect lady" (@2Jo
1:1) answers "to the Church elected together" (@1Pe
5:13). See further confirmation of this view in
Introduction to Second John. It is not
necessarily an objection to this view that John never is
known to have personally ministered in the Parthian
territory. For neither did Peter personally minister to
the churches in Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia,
Bithynia, though he wrote his Epistles to them. Moreover,
in John's prolonged life, we cannot dogmatically assert
that he did not visit the Parthian Christians, after Peter
had ceased to minister to them, on the mere ground of
absence of extant testimony to that effect. This is as
probable a view as ALFORD'S,
that in the passage of AUGUSTINE,
"to the Parthians," is to be altered by conjectural
emendation; and that the Epistle is addressed to the
churches at and around Ephesus, on the ground of the
fatherly tone of affectionate address in it, implying his
personal ministry among his readers. But his position, as
probably the only surviving apostle, accords very well
with his addressing, in a Catholic Epistle, a cycle of
churches which he may not have specially ministered to in
person, with affectionate fatherly counsel, by virtue of
his general apostolic superintendence of all the churches.
TIME AND
PLACE OF WRITING.--This Epistle
seems to have been written subsequently to his Gospel as
it assumes the reader's acquaintance with the Gospel facts
and Christ's speeches, and also with the special aspect of
the incarnate Word, as God manifest in the flesh (@1Ti
3:16), set forth more fully in his Gospel. The tone of
address, as a father addressing his "little children"
(the continually recurring term, @1Jo
2:1,12,13,18,28 3:7,18 4:4 5:21), accords with the
view that this Epistle was written in John's old age,
perhaps about A.D.
90. In @1Jo
2:18, "it is the last time," probably does not refer
to any particular event (as the destruction of Jerusalem,
which was now many years past) but refers to the nearness
of the Lord's coming as proved by the rise of
Antichristian teachers, the mark of the last time.
It was the Spirit's purpose to keep the Church always
expecting Christ as ready to come at any moment. The whole
Christian age is the last time in the sense that no
other dispensation is to arise till Christ comes. Compare
"these last days," @Heb
1:2. Ephesus may be conjectured to be the place
whence it was written. The controversial allusion to the
germs of Gnostic heresy accord with Asia Minor being the
place, and the last part of the apostolic age the time,
of writing this Epistle.
CONTENTS.--The
leading subject of the whole is, fellowship with the
Father and the Son (@1Jo
1:3). Two principal divisions may be noted: (1) @1Jo
1:5-2:28: the theme of this portion is stated at the
outset, "God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all";
consequently, in order to have fellowship with Him, we
must walk in light (@1Jo
1:7); connected with which in the confession
and subsequent forgiveness of our sins through
Christ's propitiation and advocacy, without
which forgiveness there could be no light or fellowship
with God: a farther step in thus walking in the light is,
positively keeping God's commandments, the sum of
which is love, as opposed to hatred, the
acme of disobedience to God's word: negatively, he exhorts
them according to their several stages of spiritual
growth, children, fathers, young men, in consonance
with their privileges as forgiven, knowing the Father,
and having overcome the wicked one, not to love the
world, which is incompatible with the indwelling of
the love of the Father, and to be on their guard
against the Antichristian teachers already in the
world, who were not of the Church, but of the world,
against whom the true defense is, that his believing
readers who have the anointing of God, should
continue to abide in the Son and in the Father. (2)
The second division (@1Jo
2:29-5:5) discusses the theme with which it opens,
He is righteous; consequently (as in the first
division), "every one that doeth righteousness is born
of Him." Sonship in us involves our purifying
ourselves as He is pure, even as we hope to see, and
therefore to be made like our Lord when He shall appear;
in this second, as in the first division, both a positive
and a negative side are presented of "doing righteousness
as He is righteous," involving a contrast between the
children of God and the children of the devil. Hatred
marks the latter; love, the former: this love gives
assurance of acceptance with God for ourselves and our
prayers, accompanied as they are (@1Jo
3:23) with obedience to His great commandment, to
"believe on Jesus, and love one another"; the seal (@1Jo
3:24) of His dwelling in us and assuring our hearts,
is the Spirit which He hath given us. In contrast to this
(as in the first division), he warns against false
spirits, the notes of which are, denial of Christ,
and adherence to the world. Sonship, or birth of
God, is then more fully described: its essential feature
is unslavish, free love to God, because God first loved
us, and gave His Son to die for us, and
consequent love to the brethren, grounded on their
being sons of God also like ourselves, and so victory
over the world; this victory being gained only by the
man who believes in Jesus as the Son of God. (3)
The conclusion establishes this last central truth, on
which rests our fellowship with God, Christ's having
come by the water of baptism, the blood of
atonement, and the witnessing Spirit, which is
truth. As in the opening he rested this cardinal truth
on the apostles' witness of the eye, the ear, and the
touch, so now at the close he rests it on God's
witness, which is accepted by the believer, in
contrast with the unbeliever, who makes God a liar.
Then follows his closing statement of his reason for
writing (@1Jo
5:13; compare the corresponding @1Jo
1:4, at the beginning), namely, that believers in
Christ the Son of God may know that they have (now
already) eternal life (the source of "joy," @1Jo
1:4; compare similarly his object in writing the
Gospel, @Joh
20:31), and so have confidence as to their prayers
being answered (corresponding to @1Jo
3:22 in the second part); for instance, their
intercessions for a sinning brother (unless his sin
be a sin unto death). He closes with a brief
summing up of the instruction of the Epistle, the high
dignity, sanctity, and safety from evil of the children of
God in contrast to the sinful world, and a warning against
idolatry, literal and spiritual: "Keep yourselves
from idols."
Though the Epistle is not directly
polemical, the occasion which suggested his writing
was probably the rise of Antichristian teachers; and,
because he knew the spiritual character of the several
classes whom he addresses, children, youths, fathers,
he feels it necessary to write to confirm them in the
faith and joyful fellowship of the Father and Son, and to
assure them of the reality of the things they believe,
that so they may have the full privileges of believing.
STYLE.--His
peculiarity is fondness for aphorism and repetition. His
tendency to repeat his own phrase, arises partly from the
affectionate, hortatory character of the Epistle; partly,
also, from its Hebraistic forms abounding in parallel
clauses, as distinguished from the Grecian and more
logical style of Paul; also, from his childlike simplicity
of spirit, which, full of his one grand theme, repeats,
and dwells on it with fond delight and enthusiasm.
Moreover as ALFORD
well says, the appearance of uniformity is often produced
by want of deep enough exegesis to discover the real
differences in passages which seem to express the same.
Contemplative, rather than argumentative, he dwells more
on the general, than on the particular, on the inner, than
on the outer, Christian life. Certain fundamental truths
he recurs to again and again, at one time enlarging on,
and applying them, at another time repeating them in their
condensed simplicity. The thoughts do not march onward by
successive steps, as in the logical style of Paul, but
rather in circle drawn round one central thought which he
reiterates, ever reverting to it, and viewing it, now
under its positive, now under its negative, aspect. Many
terms which in the Gospel are given as Christ's, in the
Epistle appear as the favorite expressions of John,
naturally adopted from the Lord. Thus the contrasted
terms, "flesh" and "spirit," "light" and "darkness,"
"life" and "death," "abide in Him": fellowship with the
Father and Son, and with one another," is a favorite
phrase also, not found in the Gospel, but in Acts and
Paul's Epistles. In him appears the harmonious union of
opposites, adapting him for his high functions in the
kingdom of God, contemplative repose of character, and at
the same time ardent zeal, combined with burning,
all-absorbing love: less adapted for active outward work,
such as Paul's, than for spiritual service. He handles
Christian verities not as abstract dogmas, but as living
realities, personally enjoyed in fellowship with God in
Christ, and with the brethren. Simple, and at the same
time profound, his writing is in consonance with his
spirit, unrhetorical and undialectic, gentle, consolatory,
and loving: the reflection of the Spirit of Him on whose
breast he lay at the last supper, and whose beloved
disciple he was. EWALD
in ALFORD,
speaking of the "unruffled and heavenly repose" which
characterizes this Epistle, says, "It appears to be the
tone, not so much of a father talking with his beloved
children, as of a glorified saint addressing mankind from
a higher world. Never in any writing has the doctrine of
heavenly love--a love working in stillness, ever
unwearied, never exhausted--so thoroughly approved itself
as in this Epistle."
JOHN'S
PLACE IN THE BUILDING UP OF THE CHURCH.--As
Peter founded and Paul propagated, so John completed the
spiritual building. As the Old Testament puts prominently
forward the fear of God, so John, the last writer
of the New Testament, gives prominence to the love of
God. Yet, as the Old Testament is not all limited to
presenting the fear of God, but sets forth also His
love, so John, as a representative of the New
Testament, while breathing so continually the spirit of
love, gives also the plainest and most awful warnings
against sin, in accordance with his original character as
Boanerges, "son of thunder." His mother was Salome, mother
of the sons of Zebedee, probably sister to Jesus' mother
(compare @Joh
19:25, "His mother's sister," with @Mt
27:56 Mr 15:40), so that he was cousin to our Lord; to
his mother, under God, he may have owed his first serious
impressions. Expecting as she did the Messianic kingdom in
glory, as appears from her petition (@Mt
20:20-23), she doubtless tried to fill his young and
ardent mind with the same hope. NEANDER
distinguishes three leading tendencies in the development
of the Christian doctrine, the Pauline, the Jacobean
(between which the Petrine forms an intermediate link),
and the Johannean. John, in common with James, was less
disposed to the intellectual and dialectic cast of thought
which distinguishes Paul. He had not, like the apostle of
the Gentiles, been brought to faith and peace through
severe conflict; but, like James, had reached his
Christian individuality through a quiet development:
James, however, had passed through a moulding in Judaism
previously, which, under the Spirit, caused him to present
Christian truth in connection with the law, in so far as
the latter in its spirit, though not letter, is permanent,
and not abolished, but established under the Gospel. But
John, from the first, had drawn his whole spiritual
development from the personal view of Christ, the model
man, and from intercourse with Him. Hence, in his
writings, everything turns on one simple contrast: divine
life in communion with Christ; death in separation
from Him, as appears from his characteristic phrases, "life,
light, truth; death, darkness, lie." "As James and
Peter mark the gradual transition from spiritualized
Judaism to the independent development of Christianity,
and as Paul represents the independent development of
Christianity in opposition to the Jewish standpoint, so
the contemplative element of John reconciles the two, and
forms the closing point in the training of the apostolic
Church" [NEANDER].
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