Verse 1
1 John 4:1. Because the Gnostics
and other heretics, in the first
age, to gain the greater credit
to their erroneous doctrines,
assumed to themselves the
character and authority of
inspired teachers, John put his
disciples in mind, (1 John
2:27,) that they had an unction
from the Holy Spirit, by which
they were enabled to judge with
certainty, both of teachers and
of their doctrine. He therefore,
in this chapter, commands them
not to believe rashly every
teacher who pretended to be
inspired, but to try the
inspiration by which any
preacher professed to speak,
whether it was from God or from
evil spirits; that after trial
they might know whom it was
their duty to attend to, and
whom they ought to disregard and
reject. And to secure them, as
far as possible, from being
deceived, he especially desires
them to consider whether the
teacher, who came to them,
pretending to inspiration, held
the great and fundamental
doctrines of the gospel, which
all the teachers, really
inspired of God, regularly and
uniformly maintained. His words
may be paraphrased as follows:
Believe not every spirit — By
which any teacher is, or
professes to be, actuated: or,
believe not every teacher who
pretends to be inspired by the
Spirit of God; but try the
spirits — Namely, whether they
are of God — By the rule which
God hath given. We are to try
all spirits by the written word:
To the law and to the testimony!
If any man speak not according
to these, the spirit which
actuates him is not of God.
Because many false prophets — Or
false teachers; are gone forth
into the world — With an
intention to draw disciples
after them.
Verse 2
1 John 4:2. Hereby — By the
following plain mark; know ye
the Spirit of God — In a
teacher. Every spirit — Of a
teacher; that confesseth that
Jesus Christ is come in the
flesh, is of God — Doddridge,
with many other commentators,
reads this clause, Every spirit
that confesseth Jesus Christ,
who is come in the flesh, is of
God: that is, that confesseth
him to be the Messiah, the Son
of God, the Saviour of the
world, and that both with heart
and voice, sincerely believing
him to be such, and behaving to
him and confessing him as such,
though this might expose them to
the loss of all things, even of
their property, liberty, and
lives. This must be acknowledged
to be a perfectly Scriptural and
very proper mark of trial,
proving those in whom it was
found to be possessed of the
Spirit of God and of Christ.
Nevertheless, it must be
acknowledged, though the
original words, ο ομολογει
ιησουν χριστον εν σαρκι
εληλυθοτα, might bear this
rendering, they much more favour
the sense given them in our
translation, signifying,
literally and exactly, that
confesseth Jesus Christ hath
come in the flesh. This imports
two things: 1st, That Jesus is
the Christ, whose coming was
foretold by the Jewish prophets,
in opposition to the unbelieving
Jews; a truth which those who
confessed, whether in Judea or
in the Gentile countries,
exposed themselves to the danger
of having their goods spoiled,
and their bodies imprisoned, if
not also tortured and put to
death. So that those who
voluntarily made this
confession, manifested that they
preferred Christ and his gospel
to all other things whatever.
The clause imports, 2d, That
this great personage, the
Messiah, the Son of God, had
really come in the flesh, and
had a real human nature, in
opposition to a sect which arose
very early in the Christian
Church, called the Docetæ, who
would not allow that Christ had
a real body, and that he really
suffered, died, and rose again.
This sect St. John seems to have
had in his eye throughout this
epistle. Hence, in the very
beginning of it, he speaks of
seeing, hearing, and handling
Christ; and here, to the
fundamental article of Jesus’s
being the Messiah, he adds, that
he came in the flesh; with which
doctrine his atoning for sin by
the sacrifice of himself, and
his rising from the dead, the
first-fruits of them that sleep,
were closely and necessarily
connected, and therefore the
acknowledgment of it was a point
of the greatest importance.
The Socinians indeed contend,
that to confess Jesus Christ
hath come in the flesh, means
simply to confess that he was a
mere man: and from this they
infer that he had no existence
before he was conceived of his
mother. In proof of their sense
of the clause, they cite Hebrews
2:14, where the writer says he
partook of our flesh and blood.
Now, though it may be true that
these words import nothing more
than that Christ was a man, like
other men, St. John’s words,
hath come in the flesh, have
evidently a more extensive
meaning. For, as Bishop Horsley
observes, the sense of a
proposition ariseth, not from
the meaning of a single word
contained in it, but from the
union of the whole into one
sentence, especially if that
union suggests any circumstance
by which the sense of the
proposition is modified. This is
the case of the clause, hath
come in the flesh; words which,
while they specify the manner of
his coming, imply that he might
have come in a different manner
if he had pleased. Accordingly
the apostle hath used the verb
to come in that sense 1 John
5:6. This is he who came by
water and blood, even Jesus
Christ; not by water only, but
by the water and the blood. For
his meaning plainly is, that
Jesus came attested as the
Christ by water and blood
jointly, although he might have
come attested by either of these
separately; and that Jesus
existed as the Christ before he
came attested by the water and
the blood. Thus the clause, hath
come in the flesh, implies that
he might have come in another
manner than in the flesh,
namely, in the form of God, as
mentioned Philippians 2:6-7. It
implies that he existed before
he came in the flesh, and chose
to come in that manner, rather
than in any other; consequently
that he is more than a mere man.
That Jesus Christ might have
come in another manner, was the
opinion of Clemens Romanus, one
of the apostolical fathers
mentioned Philippians 4:3 : for
in his epistle to the
Corinthians, he saith, “The
sceptre of the majesty of God,
our Lord Jesus Christ, came not
in the pride of pomp and
arrogance, although he had it in
his power; but in humility, as
the Holy Spirit spake concerning
him.” See Macknight, and Bishop
Horsley’s 5th letter to
Priestley.
Verse 3
1 John 4:3. Every spirit that
confesseth not that Jesus Christ
is come in the flesh — That doth
not acknowledge him to be the
true Messiah, as above observed,
and that he came in that
particular manner, though he
might have come otherwise; is
not of Gods — “To determine
whether the Socinian
interpretation of the clause,
hath come in the flesh,
expresses the apostle’s meaning,
let that interpretation be
substituted for the expression
of which it is the
interpretation, and the passages
under consideration will run
thus: 1 John 4:2, Every spirit,
every teacher, calling himself
inspired, who confesseth Jesus
Christ hath come a mere man, is
from God; 1 John 4:3, And every
spirit who doth not confess
Jesus Christ hath come a mere
man, is not from God. Wherefore,
as St. John is here giving marks
by which true and false teachers
were to be distinguished, if the
Socinian sense of the phrase,
hath come in the flesh, be just,
he hath made it the mark of a
true teacher, that he confesseth
Jesus Christ as a mere man; and
the mark of a false teacher,
that he doth not confess Jesus
Christ as a mere man, but
affirmeth that he is more than a
mere man; consequently, by so
doing, St. John has condemned
himself as a false teacher;
because, having declared (1 John
4:15; 1 John 5:5) that Jesus
Christ is the Son of God, he
hath confessed that he is more
than a mere man.” And also in
his gospel, having told us,
(John 1:14,) that the Word (who
he had said, 1 John 4:1, was
with God and was God) was made
flesh and dwelt among us, and
they beheld his glory, the glory
as of the only-begotten of the
Father, “he hath certainly
confessed that Jesus Christ is
more than a mere man: for whose
glory did the apostles behold,
if it was not the glory of the
Word made flesh, the
only-begotten of the Father,
full of grace and truth?
Wherefore, John having confessed
that Jesus is the only-begotten
Son of God, he cannot be
supposed to have branded those
teachers as deceivers, who did
not confess Jesus Christ to be a
mere man, but affirmed him to be
more than a man; because, by so
doing, he would have condemned
himself as a false teacher.” And
this is that spirit of
antichrist which ye have heard,
&c. — “From this, as well as
from John 2:18, it appears that
antichrist is not any particular
person, nor any particular
succession of persons in the
church, but a general name for
all false teachers in every age,
who disseminate doctrines
contrary to those taught by the
apostles; especially if these
doctrines have a tendency to
derogate from Christ’s character
and actions as the Saviour of
the world.” — Macknight.
Verses 4-6
1 John 4:4-6. Ye — Who abide in
the truth taught you from the
beginning; are of God, and have
overcome them — Namely, these
seducers, in all their snares
and delusions: that is, the
doctrine to which you adhere has
prevailed against those who
deserve the name of antichrist,
(as undoubtedly all who oppose
the Christian interest in some
measure did,) and as you have
the true miraculous gifts of the
Spirit among you, to which they
falsely pretend, it is soon seen
that the advantage is clearly on
your side. Because greater is he
that is in you — Namely, the
Spirit of Christ; than he — The
spirit of antichrist; that is in
the world — The Son of God, who
stands at the head of that
interest in which you are
embarked, and who aids you by
the mighty communications of his
Spirit, is infinitely too strong
for Satan, the great head of the
apostacy, and for all his
confederates. Thus, the issue of
the divine government will be,
that truth and virtue shall be
finally victorious over error
and wickedness, because God, the
Patron of truth and virtue,
possesseth far greater power and
wisdom than the evil spirits who
promote error and wickedness.
They — Those false teachers; are
of the world — Of the number of
those that know not God;
therefore speak they of the
world — From the principle,
wisdom, and spirit, that actuate
worldly men; and, of
consequence, the world heareth
them — Namely, with approbation.
“Lest the faithful should be
discouraged by the success which
false teachers oftentimes have
in spreading their errors, the
apostle observes that their
success arises generally from
their accommodating their
doctrines to the prejudices and
evil inclinations of the world.
Wherefore, from the prevalence
of any doctrine no argument can
be drawn in favour of its
truth.” We — Apostles; are of
God — Immediately taught and
sent by him, and have approved
ourselves to be so by such
irresistible evidence, that I
may now venture to say, he who
knoweth God — And experiences
the governing influence of his
fear and love, heareth and
regardeth us; but he who is not
of God heareth not us — Neither
believes nor obeys our word;
but, by rejecting our testimony,
attended as it is with such
evidence, he proves himself
destitute of all true religion.
Hereby we know — From what is
said 1 John 4:2-6; the spirit of
truth, and the spirit of error —
“This mark, by which St. John
directed his disciples to judge
of teachers, is not to be
understood of their hearkening
to the apostles personally, but
of their receiving their
doctrine with that submission
which was due to persons
inspired by the Spirit of God.
Wherefore, though the apostles
be all dead, yet as they still
speak in their divinely-inspired
writings, John, in this passage,
declares that their writings are
the test by which the disciples
of Christ are to judge both of
teachers and of their doctrine.”
Verse 7-8
1 John 4:7-8. Let us love one
another — From the doctrine he
has just been defending, he
draws this exhortation: as if he
had said, Think it not enough
speculatively to admit the
Christian doctrine, but let it
be your great care to
acknowledge it practically, and
especially with respect to that
most important article,
brotherly love. The frequency
and earnestness with which the
apostle, in the present epistle,
inculcates this love, is very
remarkable. The greatest part of
this chapter, and of chapter 3.,
is employed in pressing this
duty. See also 1 John 2:8-11.
For love is of God — Is from him
as its source, and particularly
enjoined by him as a duty of the
greatest importance, and of
absolute necessity, in order to
our pleasing and imitating him.
And every one that loveth is
born of God — Every one, in
whose heart this divine
principle reigns, and conquers
the selfish and contrary
passions, shows by it that he is
regenerated and transformed into
the divine image; and that he
knoweth God — By the teaching of
his Holy Spirit, as the God of
love, infinitely amiable in
himself, and infinitely loving
to his people. On the other
hand, he that loveth not,
whatever he may pretend, knoweth
not God — Has no experimental
and saving knowledge of him; for
God is love — Its great fountain
and exemplar. He enjoins it by
his law, and produces and
cherishes it by the influences
of his Spirit; and the due
contemplation of him will
naturally inflame our hearts
with love to his divine majesty,
and to our fellow-creatures for
his sake, whose creatures they
are, and especially to his
children, who love him, bear his
image, and are peculiarly dear
to him. This little sentence,
God is love, brought St. John
more sweetness, even in the time
he was writing it, says
Bengelius, than the whole world
can bring. God is often styled
holy, righteous, wise; but not
holiness, righteousness, or
wisdom, in the abstract, as he
is said to be love: intimating
that this is his darling, his
reigning attribute; the
attribute that sheds an amiable
glory on all his other
perfections.
Verse 9
1 John 4:9. In this was
manifested the love of God —
Namely, most eminently above all
other instances thereof; because
that God sent his only-begotten
Son into the world — That is,
evidently, sent him, who was his
only-begotten Son before he was
sent. “This,” as Macknight
justly observes. “is an allusion
to our Lord’s words, John 3:16,
God so loved the world that he
gave his only-begotten Son, &c.
Christ is called God’s
only-begotten Son, to
distinguish him from all others,
who in Scripture are called the
sons of God; and to heighten our
idea of God’s love to us, in
giving a person of such dignity,
and so beloved of God, to die
for us. It is supposed, that by
giving Christ the title of God’s
only-begotten Son in this
passage, the apostle intended to
overturn the error of Ebion and
Cerinthus, who affirmed that
Christ was not God’s Son by
nature, but that, like other
good men, he was honoured with
the title of God’s Son on
account of his virtues; in which
opinion these heresiarchs have
been followed by some in modern
times. They, however, who hold
this opinion ought to show a
reason why the epithet of the
only begotten is appropriated to
Christ.” That we might live
through him — That the sentence
of condemnation to the second
death, to which we were
obnoxious, might be reversed,
and that being justified by
living faith, and regenerated by
the quickening Spirit of God, we
might live a spiritual life in
the divine favour, and in union
with Christ here, and might be
conducted to eternal life
hereafter.
Verses 10-12
1 John 4:10-12. Herein is love —
Worthy of our highest
admiration; not that we loved
God — First; for we were, on the
contrary, in a state of enmity
to him, in which, if we had
remained unsolicited and
untouched by his love and grace,
we should have persisted and
perished; but that he loved us —
First, (1 John 4:19,) without
any merit or motive in us to
induce him to do it; and, in his
boundless compassion to our
necessities and miseries; sent
his Son to be the propitiation
for our sins — That is, to make
atonement to his injured justice
for them by offering himself as
a sacrifice, and so to introduce
us into his favour on honourable
terms. If God so loved us — With
such a transcendent, free, and
inconceivable love; we ought
also to love one another — In
imitation of his divine example,
from a sense of the happy state
into which we are brought, and
in gratitude to him for so
inestimable a favour. And it is
of the greater importance that
we should do this, because it is
absolutely necessary in order to
our having fellowship with him.
For no man hath seen God at any
time — Nor indeed can see him,
since he is in his own nature
invisible; nor can any one have
any knowledge of him, or
intercourse with him by his
senses, or any information
concerning his will and the way
of pleasing him by any visible
appearance of him, or converse
with him; yet, from what his
only-begotten Son hath taught
us, we know that if we love one
another — In consequence of
first loving him; God dwelleth
μενει, abideth, in us — This is
treated of 1 John 4:13-16; and
his love is perfected — Has its
full effect; in us — This is
treated of 1 John 4:17-19.
Verse 13-14
1 John 4:13-14. Hereby — εν
τουτω, by this, we know — Have
full proof; that we dwell,
μενομεν, we abide in him, and he
in us, because he hath given us
of his Spirit — In the
enlightening, quickening,
renewing, and comforting
influences thereof. Some
commentators understand the
apostle as speaking here of the
extraordinary gifts of the
Spirit; but surely these gifts,
of whatever kind they might be,
never were to any man a certain
evidence of his possessing real
piety and union with God, as is
manifest from our Lord’s words,
(Matthew 7:22,) Many will say to
me in that day of final
judgment, We have prophesied in
thy name, &c.; then will I
profess unto them, I never knew
you, &c. And St. Paul (1
Corinthians 13:2) declares, that
though a man had such a measure
of miracle-working faith, that
he could remove mountains, yet
if he had not love to God and
mankind, it would profit him
nothing. The ordinary graces of
the Spirit, such as are
enumerated Galatians 5:22-23;
Ephesians 5:9; Colossians
3:12-17; Romans 12:9-21, are
certain evidences of a person’s
being a child of God; but the
extraordinary gifts of the
Spirit are not, inasmuch as they
sometimes have been and still
may be possessed by persons
destitute of true religion. And
we have seen — Or known; by
undoubted evidence, ourselves;
and therefore do boldly testify
to others; that the Father sent
the Son to be the Saviour of the
world — And that it is in and by
him alone, how proudly soever
the unbelieving and carnal world
may reject and disdain him, that
present and eternal salvation
can be obtained. These things
are the foundation and the
criteria of our abiding in God
and God in us, namely, the
communion of the Spirit, spoken
of 1 John 4:13, and the
confession of the Son, 1 John
4:15.
Verses 15-17
1 John 4:15-17. Whosoever shall
— From a principle of loving
faith, openly confess — In the
face of all opposition and
danger, maintaining this
profession with resolution and
zeal, and acting in conformity
to it; that Jesus is the Son of
God — The Christ, the Saviour of
the world; God abideth in him,
and he in God — There is a
blessed union between God and
his soul, so that it is, in the
language of Scripture, the
habitation of God; who, as it
were, lives and walks in him,
Ephesians 2:22; 1 Corinthians
3:16; 2 Corinthians 6:18. And we
have known and believed — By the
influence of the same Spirit;
the love that God hath to us —
And hath manifested, not only by
giving his Son to die for us, (1
John 4:9-10,) but by making us
his children in and through his
Son, 1 John 3:1. God is love —
The apostle repeats what he had
declared 1 John 4:8, where see
the note; and he that abideth in
love — Namely, in love to God,
his people, and all mankind;
abideth in God, and God in him —
His union and communion with God
are hereby continued and
increased. Herein — Or hereby,
that is, by the continuance of
this communion with God; is our
love made perfect — We are
brought to love him with all our
hearts, and our neighbour as
ourselves; that we may have —
That is, so that we shall have;
boldness in the day of judgment
— When all the stout-hearted
shall tremble; because as he,
Christ, is, so are we — Who are
fathers in Christ; in this world
— Even while we live on earth,
so far as the imperfections of
this mortal life, to which we
are here confined, will admit.
Verse 18-19
1 John 4:18-19. There is no fear
in love — No slavish or
tormenting fear, diffidence, or
distrust, can be where love
reigns; but perfect, mature love
casteth out such fear, because
such fear hath torment — And so
is inconsistent with the
happiness of love. He that
feareth is not made perfect in
love — In the sense above
explained. Study therefore to
increase more and more in that
noble affection of love to God,
and you will find your happiness
increasing in proportion to it.
Observe, reader, a mere natural
man has neither the fear nor
love of God; one that is
awakened and convinced of sin,
has fear without love; a babe in
Christ, love and fear; a father
in Christ, love without fear. We
love him, because he first loved
us — This is the sum of all
religion, the genuine model of
Christianity. None can say more;
why should any one say less, or
speak less intelligibly?
Verse 20-21
1 John 4:20-21. If any man say,
I love God — And even say it
with the utmost confidence; and
hateth his brother — Which he
will do more or less, if he do
not love him; he is a liar — He
affirms what is false, although,
perhaps, he may not know it to
be so; for he that loveth not
his brother, whom he hath seen —
Who is daily presented to his
senses to raise his esteem, or
move his kindness or compassion
toward him; how can he love God,
whom he hath not seen? — Whose
excellences are not the objects
of his senses, but are
discovered imperfectly from his
works of creation, providence,
and grace, or from the
declarations and promises of his
word; his invisible nature being
an obstacle to our loving him,
which our weak and carnal minds
cannot be expected easily to
conquer. Indeed, we never could
love him unless, as the apostle
observes, his love were shed
abroad in our hearts by the Holy
Ghost given to us. And this
commandment have we from him —
Both from God and Christ; that
he who loveth God, love his
brother in Christ also — That
is, every one, whatever his
opinions or modes of worship may
be, purely because he is the
child and bears the image of
God. Bigotry is properly the
want of this pure and universal
love. A bigot only loves those
who embrace his opinions, and he
loves them for that, not for
Christ’s sake. |