Chapter 5:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 2 Peter 2 John
1 John 5
Verse 1. The scope and sum of this whole paragraph appears from the
conclusion of it, 1 John v, xiii, "These things have I written to
you who believe, that ye may know that ye who believe have
eternal life." So faith is the first and last point with St. John also.
Every one who loveth - God that begat loveth him also that is
begotten of him - Hath a natural affection to all his brethren.
Verse
2. Hereby we know - This is a plain proof. That we love the
children of God - As his children.
Verse
3. For this is the love of God - The only sure proof of it. That we
keep his commandments: and his commandments are not grievous
- To any that are born of God.
Verse
4. For whatsoever - This expression implies the most unlimited
universality. Is born of God overcometh the world - Conquers
whatever it can lay in the way, either to allure or fright the
children of God from keeping his commandments. And this is the
victory - The grand means of overcoming. Even our faith - Seeing
all things are possible to him that believeth.
Verse
5. Who is he that overcometh the world - That is superior to all
worldly care, desire, fear? Every believer, and none else. The
seventh verse(usually so reckoned) is a brief recapitulation of all
which has been before advanced concerning the Father, the Son,
and the Spirit. It is cited, in conjunction with the sixth and eighth,
1 John v, 6, 8 by Tertullian, Cyprian, and an uninterrupted train of
Fathers. And, indeed, what the sun is in the world, what the heart
is in a man, what the needle is in the mariner's compass, this verse
is in the epistle. By this the sixth, eighth, and ninth verses 1 John
v, 6, 8, 9 are indissolubly connected; as will be evident, beyond
all contradiction, when they are accurately considered.
Verse
6. This is he - St. John here shows the immovable foundation of
that faith that Jesus is the Son of God; not only the testimony of
man, but the firm, indubitable testimony of God. Who came -
Jesus is he of whom it was promised that he should come; and
who accordingly, is come. And this the Spirit, and the water, and
the blood testify. Even Jesus - Who, coming by water and blood,
is by this very thing demonstrated to be the Christ. Not by the
water only - Wherein he was baptized. But by the water and the
blood - Which he shed when he had finished the work his Father
had given him to do. He not only undertook at his baptism "to
fulfil all righteousness," but on the cross accomplished what he
had undertaken; in token whereof, when all was finished, blood
and water came out of his side. And it is the Spirit who likewise
testifieth - Of Jesus Christ, namely, by Moses and all the prophets,
by John the Baptist, by all the apostles, and in all the writings of
the New Testament. And against his testimony there can be no
exception, because the Spirit is truth - The very God of truth.
Verse
7. What Bengelius has advanced, both concerning the
transposition of these two verses, and the authority of the
controverted verse, partly in his "Gnomon," and partly in his
"Apparatus Criticus," will abundantly satisfy any impartial
person. For there are three that testify - Literally, testifying, or
bearing witness. The participle is put for the noun witnesses, to
intimate that the act of testifying, and the effect of it, are
continually present. Properly, persons only can testify; and that
three are described testifying on earth, as if they were persons, is
elegantly subservient to the three persons testifying in heaven.
The Spirit - In the word, confirmed by miracles. The water - Of
baptism, wherein we are dedicated to the Son, (with the Father
and Spirit,) typifying his spotless purity, and the inward purifying
of our nature. And the blood - Represented in the Lord's supper,
and applied to the consciences of believer. And these three
harmoniously agree in one - In bearing the same testimony, - that
Jesus Christ is the divine, the complete, the only saviour of the
world.
Verse
8. And there are three that testify in heaven - The testimony of the
Spirit, the water, and the blood, is by an eminent gradation
corroborated by three, who give a still greater testimony. The
Father - Who clearly testified of the Son, both at his baptism and
at his transfiguration. The Word - Who testified of himself on
many occasions, while he was on earth; and again, with still
greater solemnity, after his ascension into heaven, Rev. i, 5; Rev.
xix, 13. And the Spirit - Whose testimony was added chiefly after
his glorification, chap. ii, 27; John xv, 26; Acts v, 32; Rom. viii,
16. And these three are one - Even as those two, the Father and
the Son, are one, John x, 30. Nothing can separate the Spirit from
the Father and the Son. If he were not one with the Father and the
Son, the apostle ought to have said, The Father and the Word,
who are one, and the Spirit, are two. But this is contrary to the
whole tenor of Revelation. It remains that these three are one.
They are one in essence, in knowledge, in will, and in their
testimony. It is observable, the three in the one verse are opposed,
not conjointly, but severally, to the three in the other: as if he had
said, Not only the Spirit testifies, but also the Father, John v, 37;
not only the water, but also the Word, John iii, 11, John x, 41; not
only the blood, but also the Holy Ghost, John xv, 26, &c. It must
now appear, to every reasonable man, how absolutely necessary
the eighth verse is 1 John v, 8. St. John could not think of the
testimony of the Spirit, and water, and blood, and subjoin, "The
testimony of God is greater," without thinking also of the
testimony of the Son and Holy Ghost; yea, and mentioning it in so
solemn an enumeration. Nor can any possible reason be devised,
why, without three testifying in heaven, he should enumerate
three, and no more, who testify on earth. The testimony of all is
given on earth, not in heaven; but they who testify are part on
earth, part in heaven. The witnesses who are on earth testify
chiefly concerning his abode on earth, though not excluding his
state of exaltation: the witnesses who are in heaven testify chiefly
concerning his glory at God's right hand, though not excluding his
state of humiliation. The seventh verse, therefore, with the sixth,
contains a recapitulation of the whole economy of Christ, from his
baptism to pentecost; the eighth, the sum of the divine economy,
from the time of his exaltation. Hence it farther appears, that this
position of the seventh 1 John v, 7, 8 and eighth verses, which
places those who testify on earth before those who testify in
heaven, is abundantly preferable to the other, and affords a
gradation admirably suited to the subject.
Verse
9. If we receive the testimony of men - As we do continually, and
must do in a thousand instances. The testimony of God is greater -
Of higher authority, and much more worthy to be received;
namely, this very testimony which God the Father, together with
the Word and the Spirit, hath testified of the Son, as the saviour of
the world.
Verse
10. He that believeth on the Son of God hath the testimony - The
dear evidence of this, in himself: he that believeth not God, in
this, hath made him a liar; because he supposes that to be false
which God has expressly testified.
Verse
11. And this is the sum of that testimony, that God hath given us a
title to, and the real beginning of, eternal life; and that this is
purchased by, and treasured up in, his Son, who has all the springs
and the fulness of it in himself, to communicate to his body, the
church, first in grace and then in glory.
Verse
12. It plainly follows, he that hath the Son - Living and reigning in
him by faith. Hath this life; he that hath not the Son of God hath
not this life - Hath no part or lot therein. In the former clause, the
apostle says simply, the Son; because believers know him: in the
latter, the Son of God; that unbelievers may know how great a
blessing they fall short of.
Verse
13. These things have I written - In the introduction, chap. i, 4, he
said, I write: now, in the close, I have written. That ye may know
- With a fuller and stronger assurance, that ye have eternal life.
Verse
14. And we - Who believe. Have this farther confidence in him,
that he heareth - That is, favourably regards, whatever prayer we
offer in faith, according to his revealed will.
Verse
15. We have - Faith anticipates the blessings. The petitions which
we asked of him - Even before the event. And when the event
comes, we know it comes in answer to our prayer.
Verse
16. This extends to things of the greatest importance. If any one
see his brother - That is. any man. Sin a sin which is not unto
death - That is, any sin but total apostasy from both the power and
form of godliness. Let him ask, and God will give him life -
Pardon and spiritual life, for that sinner. There is a sin unto death:
I do not say that he shall pray for that - That is, let him not pray
for it. A sin unto death may likewise mean, one which God has
determined to punish with death.
Verse
17. All deviation from perfect holiness is sin; but all sin is not
unpardonable.
Verse
18. Yet this gives us no encouragement to sin: on the contrary, it
is an indisputable truth, he that is born of God - That sees and
loves God. Sinneth not - So long as that loving faith abides in
him, he neither speaks nor does anything which God hath
forbidden. He keepeth himself - Watching unto prayer. And,
while he does this, the wicked one toucheth him not - So as to hurt
him.
Verse
19. We know that we are children of God - By the witness and the
fruit of his Spirit, chap. iii, 24. But the whole world - All who
have not his Spirit, not only is "touched" by him, but by idolatry,
fraud, violence lasciviousness, impiety, all manner of wickedness.
Lieth in the wicked one - Void of life, void of sense. In this short
expression the horrible state of the world is painted in the most
lively colours; a comment on which we have in the actions,
conversations, contracts, quarrels, and friendships of worldly men.
Verse
20. And we know - By all these infallible proofs. That the Son of
God is come - Into the world. And he hath given us a spiritual
understanding, that we may know him, the true one -"The faithful
and true witness." And we are in the true one - As branches in the
vine, even in Jesus Christ, the eternal Son of God. This Jesus is
the only living and true God, together with the father and the
Spirit, and the original fountain of eternal life. So the beginning
and the end of the epistle agree.
Verse
21. Keep yourselves from idols - From all worship of false gods,
from all worship of images or of any creature, and from every
inward idol; from loving, desiring, fearing anything more than
God. Seek all help and defense from evil, all happiness in the true
God alone.
Chapter 5:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 2 Peter 2 John
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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