FIRST
JOHN CHAPTER 3.
VIEW
FOOTNOTES
The
Glory, Privileges, and Obligations of Sonship.
1 John 3,1-24.
The
beauty of the sonship of God: V. 1. Behold, what manner of love the Father
hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the sons of God.
Therefore the world knoweth us not, because it knew Him. not. V. 2. Beloved,
now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be; but we
know that, when He shall appear, we shall be like Him; for we shall see Him as
He is. V. 3. And every man that hath this hope in Him purifieth himself,
even as He is pure. It was righteousness in life and conduct which the
apostle had been urging. He now introduces another motive for such conduct: See
how great a love the Father has given to us that we should be called the sons of
God, and are. The Christians should behold and see, they should use the eyes of
both body and mind, they should concentrate their attention upon that miracle,
upon that mystery, that we should be honored with the name of children of God.
To have been taken out of the state of wrath and damnation and to have been
placed into such intimate fellowship with God as to have been born anew through
the power of His Spirit in the Word, that is the experience which we have had.
Children of God, that is what we are by faith in Christ Jesus, Gal. 3, 26, sons
of God, led by the Spirit of God, heirs of God and joint-heirs with Christ, Rom.
8, 14. 17. The image of God, lost by the Fall, is being renewed in us. once
more, Christ Himself is being formed in us. Gal. 4, 19. What unspeakable,
immeasurable majesty is ours! With this assurance in our hearts we can well bear
what the apostle tells us: For this reason the world does not know us, because
it does not know Him. The children of this world will not know, will not
acknowledge us, will consider us beneath their notice, because we are the
children of God, with all that this relation implies. The world did not know,
did not acknowledge God as the Lord, did not accept Him in faith, and therefore
it cannot possibly enter into friendly relations with us. His children; the
unbelievers refuse to acknowledge the new, spiritual, divine character which the
Christians show.
For
our comfort, however, the apostle repeats and amplifies his statement: Beloved,
now are we the children of God, and not yet has it been manifested what we shall
be; we know that, when it shall be manifested, we shall be like Him; for we
shall see Him as He is. By nature we were the children of wrath and of Satan,
but now, by our conversion, we have become and are children of God. Of that fact
we are assured in so many passages of Scriptures that there can be no doubt in
our minds. This confidence is not shaken either by the statement that it has not
yet been manifested what we shall be. Although we have the certainty of our
sonship even now and enjoy many of its blessings, yet the full glory of our
future state has not yet been revealed to us. But when that revelation will take
place, on the day when Christ will appear to us in the fullness of His glory,
then we shall be like God the Lord, as nearly like Him as it is possible for
creatures to become; then the image of God will be restored in us in the
perfection of its beauty; then we shall be holy and righteous before Him. No
longer shall we then view Him through a glass, darkly, but we shall see God face
to face, as He is, in all the inexpressible beauty of His holiness and love.
This seeing of God will, at the same time, be the means by which the image of
God in us will ever again be renewed and kept in the fullness of its glory. That
is the certain hope of the believers, a confidence which cannot fail.
It
is self-evident, then, for a Christian: And every one that has this hope resting
upon Him will purify himself, just as He is pure. Every one without exception
that clings to this hope of the final glorious revelation, every one that rests
his confidence in God, as the Author and Finisher of his salvation, will find it
self-evident that he separates and cleanses himself from all defilements and
carnal allurements, from everything that is an abomination in the sight of God.
We have the example of Christ before our eyes always, as one who was perfectly
pure and holy. It is impossible for Christians that have such hope in their
hearts any longer to serve sin. This hope nourishes and strengthens the new life
which was created in us in regeneration unto the genuine righteousness of life.
To
abide in Him means not to sin: V. 4. Whosoever committeth sin transgresseth
also the Law; for sin is the transgression of the Law. V. 5. And ye know
that He was manifested to take away our sins; and in Him is no sin. V. 6. Whosoever
abideth in Him sinneth not; whosoever sinneth hath not seen Him, neither known
Him. Here the apostle shows that deliberate, malicious sinning is
incompatible with the new life of the Christians: Every one that commits sin
commits also lawlessness, and sin is lawlessness. That the apostle makes a
distinction between sins of malice and those of weakness, such as come upon a
person unawares, is seen from chap. 2, 1. Of the former he speaks in this
passage. Every one that is in the habit of committing sins thereby places
himself in lasting opposition to the Law of God. He commits lawlessness, he
deliberately does the opposite of that which the holy will of God demands of all
men; he performs what God hates, what He has threatened to punish with temporal
death and eternal damnation.
Now
it is true, in general, with regard to the sins of all men: And you know that He
was manifested to bear our sins, and sin is not in Him. This is the gist of the
Gospel-message, the great truth with which all believers are familiar. Christ
was manifested. He came into the world. He appeared in the fullness of time in
order to bear and take away our sins, to atone for all the sins of all mankind,
to offer Himself as a perfect sacrifice of propitiation for all time. The
handwriting which was against us has been completely wiped out through the
salvation of Christ. His sacrifice had such infinite worth because in Him there
is no sin; He is the innocent Lamb of God, His blood, as that of the holy Son of
God, is the complete price of ransom for all the guilt that was heaped up before
the just God.
From
this fundamental fact it follows: Every one that remains in Him does not sin;
every one that sins has not seen Him nor known Him. Our knowledge of the
salvation of Christ is a living knowledge, a living faith. It is through this
faith that we have fellowship with Christ, that we are and remain in Christ. In
this union the Christian as such does not sin, he refuses to serve sin, he keeps
his heart, mind, and thoughts away from sinful things, he will not yield his
members to be servants of unrighteousness, Rom. 6, 1-14. On the other hand,
every one that persists in sin, in lawlessness, in opposition to God's holy will
thereby gives evidence that he has not seen nor known Christ by faith. If a
person is in any way a willing servant of sin and still tries to persuade
himself and others that he is a Christian, he is merely deceiving himself. Note;
These words of the apostle do not state, as the so-called perfectionists claim,
that a Christian here on earth will reach a stage in which he, in his own
person, is sinless. Because we still have our sinful nature to contend with,
therefore we Christians are prone to stumble and even to fall. It is according
to the new man that we are pure in the sight of God, for the sake of Christ's
righteousness; it is according to our regenerated self that we do not commit sin
and keep all our members in subjection unto holiness. But our carnal self, the
old Adam, transgresses the will of God in countless instances, thus imposing
upon us the duty to wage incessant warfare against it, as St. Paul has so
clearly pictured it, Rom. 7, 14-24.
Doing
righteousness: V. 7. Little children, let no man deceive you: he that doeth.
righteousness is righteous, even as He is righteous. V. 8. He that
committeth sin is of the devil; for the devil sinneth. from the beginning. For
this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that He might destroy the works of
the devil. V. 9. Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for His
seed remaineth in Him; and he cannot sin because he is born of God. V. 10. In
this the children of God are manifest and the children of the devil: whosoever
doeth not righteousness is not of God, neither he that loveth not his brother. V.
11. For this is the message that ye heard from the beginning, that we should
love one another. V. 12. Not as Cain, who was of that Wicked One and slew
his brother. And wherefore slew he him? Because his own works were evil and his
brother's righteous. So much depends upon the genuineness of Christian
conduct that the apostle warns against every form of deceit: Little children,
let no one deceive you: he that practices righteousness is righteous, just as He
is righteous; he that commits sin is of the devil, for from the beginning the
devil sins. This clear statement is intended to remove all misunderstandings and
prevent every form of deception. The righteous disposition of the heart, the
Christian character as it is molded by faith, is bound to express itself in
righteous conduct. Christ the Lord is the type, the example, the pattern of
righteousness, of a life of perfect holiness. A spiritual child of God will have
His character, a disciple of Christ will follow the Master. On the other hand, a
person that deliberately commits sin, that is a servant of sin, thereby shows
himself an apt pupil, a very child of the devil, a workshop of Satan, for he
works in the children of disobedience, uses them as his tools for committing
every form of trespass, Eph. 2, 2; John 8, 44. For the devil sins from the
beginning. The very first sin which is recorded was caused by him, since he had
even before that rebelled against God; and he has, from that time, induced men
to sin, made them his slaves, the servants of unrighteousness and damnation. It
is a terrible picture which the apostle paints, one from which a Christian may
well turn with shuddering.
All
the greater, then, is the comfort in the next words: For this purpose was the
Son of God manifested, that He might destroy the works of the devil. This
glorious object was achieved as one of the aims of Christ's salvation. He was
manifested, He came into the world. He assumed true humanity, in order that as
our Substitute He might altogether dissolve and thus destroy every work by which
the devil exerted his power, loose the bonds of sin in which men were held
captive, take away the power and influence of the devil by which he tried to
drag us down forever into his kingdom, deliver us from his sovereignty by virtue
of which all the unconverted perform the works of darkness.
And
there is another glorious truth: Every one that is born of God does not commit
sin, for His offspring remain in Him; and he cannot sin, because he is born of
God. The birth out of God takes place through the Gospel and through the power
of the Holy Ghost in the Gospel. When this regeneration, this new birth, has
been achieved, then it is true that such a child of God, according to the new,
divine nature which he has in himself, cannot sin, cannot be forced back into
the slavery of sin. It is natural for the children, the offspring, of God to
remain in Him, and thus to do only that which is pleasing to Him. Moreover, the
seed of the Word of God, which wrought regeneration in the Christian in the
first place, continues in him, has its home in his heart, makes his heart
fruitful in all good works. The new birth in God is the reason why such a person
cannot sin; for by becoming a servant of sin, he would be guilty of deeds which
would deny and destroy the new birth. Thus the attitude of every person with
regard to sin and righteousness reveals his offspring: In this are manifest the
children of God and the children of the devil: every one that does not practice
righteousness is not of God, and he that does not love his brother. Every one
that does not make righteousness his goal, does not strive after perfection with
all the power at his command, does not make the will of God the sphere of his
activity, thereby offers unmistakable evidence of not being born of God, of
still being a child of the devil — a terrible condition!
And
the same test may be applied with regard to the practice of brotherly love: For
this is the message which you heard from the beginning, that we should love one
another. The apostle reverts to this topic time and again, To him brotherly love
is the very essence and substance of the Christian life. The tree is known by
its fruit, and the faith of the Christian must be revealed in love. That,
according to the Word of God, according to the last instructions of Jesus, is
the outstanding trait and characteristic of the believer: he must show his
appreciation of the wonderful blessings of Christ of which he has become a
partaker in his love toward his fellow-Christians and toward all men. The very
antithesis of such unselfish love is shown in the example of Cain: Not like
Cain, who was of the Evil One and slew his brother; and for what reason slew he
him? Because his works were wicked, but those of his brother just. Cain, the
first murderer, received the inspiration for his evil deed from the devil
himself, who is a murderer from the beginning, John 8, 44. Having rejected that
which was good, he became a servant of selfishness and sin. At the same time, he
was jealous of the pure character of his brother Abel, just as the unbelievers
in our days resent the fact that the Christians refuse to join them in their
blasphemy of God and in their various transgressions of the holy will of God, 1
Pet. 4, 4. That was the reason why he slew his brother, because he could not
bear the comparison in favor of Abel, because it angered him that God accepted
Abel's sacrifice rather than his own.
True
brotherly love: V. 13. Marvel not, my brethren, if the world hate you. V.
14. We know that we have passed from death unto life, because we love the
brethren. He that loveth not his brother abideth in death. V. 15. Whosoever
hateth his brother is a murderer; and ye know that no murderer hath eternal life
abiding in him. V. 16. Hereby perceive we the love of God, because He
laid down His life for us; and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren.
V. 17. But whoso hath this world's good, and seeth his brother have need, and
shutteth up his bowels of compassion from him, how dwelleth the love of God in
him? V. 18. My little children,
let us not love in word, neither
in tongue, but in deed and in truth.
The apostle, first of all, makes a general application of the thought which was
included in the last sentence: And do not wonder, brethren, if the world hates
you. What the righteous Abel experienced in the first days of the world's
history is the lot of all the righteous since his time. So it must not be a
matter of surprise to us if we incur the hatred and must bear the enmity of the
children of the world. John 15, 18. 19; 17, 14; Matt. 10, 16. Although the Christians are offering to the unbelievers the
most wonderful blessings which were ever brought to this earth, although their
one aim is to do good to all men, yet the unregenerate persistently resent the
refusal of the Christians to join them in their transgressions. But this is not
to be marveled at, because we are dealing with the world, with the children of
unbelief, with such as willingly become identified with the trespass of Cain.
Because the unbelievers prefer their life of sin and unbelief, which will
finally land them in everlasting destruction, they cannot but hate the
Christians.
The
contrast, therefore, will remain: On our part, we know that we have passed out
of death into life, because we love the brethren; he that does not love his
brother remains in death. The distinction between unbelievers and believers,
between world and Church, is clear and will remain till the end of time. So far
as we are concerned, we have the knowledge, we are sure, that we have left our
former state of spiritual death and have passed over to the true life in and
with God. Our hearts that were formerly dead in sins are now turned to God in
faith and love. We know that we have forgiveness of sins, and thus we have the
willingness and the power to do that which pleases God. It was not a case of our
choosing to embrace the truth, but of God's choosing us and drawing us to
Himself in the fullness of His mercy and grace. Of this we have evidence in the
fact that we love the brethren. If we had not been converted through the power
of God, it would be impossible for us to love the brethren. No un-regenerated
person is able to feel and to give evidence of real, genuine love. But the
absence of this love is a sure sign that such a person is still lying in the
death of sins. Moreover, he will remain in this spiritual death as long as he
continues in his uncharitable attitude. In a case of this kind all external
worship, all pretense at prayer, all churchgoing, all conversing of God and
things divine, will avail nothing whatever: he that has no true love and gives
no evidence of true love will remain in death until the Spirit of God works
spiritual life in him.
The
apostle repeats the same truth from the positive side: Every one that hates his
brother is a murderer, and you know that no murderer has eternal life abiding in
him. In the phraseology of St. John, "not to love" and
"to hate" are evidently synonyms; there is no neutral ground. That is
the condition of natural man after the Fall: he has no true love for his
neighbor in his heart, but only hatred, since being indifferent in the sight of
God is identical with hating. Natural man is selfish and loves only himself. And
therefore he is, in the judgment of God, a murderer, a homicide; for God judges
the disposition of the heart. This is one of the strongest passages in
Scriptures to throw the responsibility, also for sins of desire, of the heart,
on the sinner. And all such men, all that are guilty of hatred, of the lack of
proper love for their brother, have not the eternal life, that spiritual life
which is begun in conversion and lasts beyond the grave, abiding in them. They
belong in the kingdom of the devil, the murderer from the beginning. That is the
terrible, the fearful lot of those that do not love their brethren. What an
earnest warning to Christians not to let the love for their brethren leave their
hearts, since the new spiritual life cannot remain in their hearts under such
circumstances!
The
apostle now gives a description and example of genuine brotherly love: In this
have we known love, that He has laid down His life for us; and we should lay
down our lives for the brethren. This is the one perfect example and type of
love for all times. We Christians have realized and know what love is and means,
wherein true love consists, how it expresses itself, in the example of Christ.
For He, out of free love and merciful favor, laid down His life for us; He
suffered the death which we had earned by our sins. His own holy life He laid
down as the ransom, as the price, thus giving up the greatest, the most precious
of earth's gifts in order to deliver us. As one that was cursed of God, as a
criminal in the sight of men He gave up His life. This example of love, than
which there can be none more perfect, we Christians have before our eyes always.
It teaches us the great lesson and obligation to love our brethren to
such a degree as also to be willing to lay down our lives for them, if it will
be for their benefit, to their advantage. Naturally this greatest sacrifice
includes all the smaller services which we are called upon to perform for the
brethren, the Christians ever forgetting, denying themselves in order to help
and be of service to others.
Diametrically
opposed to such unselfishness is the conduct which the apostle describes: But
whoever has a living in this world and sees his brother have need and shuts up
his mercies from him, how does the love of God remain in him? If we are under
obligations to give up the highest and most precious gift of life for the sake
of our brother, the smaller sacrifices, the minor evidences of love, will
certainly offer no difficulties. If a person has a comfortable living in this
world, if he possesses enough of this world's goods for his own support and that
of his family, those dependent upon him, he should really have incentive enough
to share willingly with those in need. If such a one, however, sees his brother,
his neighbor, in want, lacking the actual necessities of life, if he becomes a
witness of his sorry plight, and yet closes up his heart before him, turns from
him in the hardness of his heart, surely the conclusion is justified that he has
lost the love and the faith which he might have possessed at one time. In such a
case the Lord will also turn from him, will withdraw His love from the heartless
wretch, since the love which the Lord demanded of him is no longer in evidence
in his conduct and life. He has fallen back into spiritual death.
St.
John, therefore, admonishes: Little children, let us not love with word or with
the tongue, but in deed and in truth. Talk is cheap, as St. James shows, chap.
2, 15. 16, but it does not provide warm clothing or nourishing food. The mere
expression of good will, unless backed up by real deeds, by acts which will
provide the assistance for which the need is shown to exist, is worthless, a
hollow sound. In some cases, indeed, it may be forgetfulness on the part of the
Christians when they fail to provide for needs which are shown to exist, but in
others there is danger of damnable hypocrisy, that covetousness and love of
money hinder the professed Christian from showing concrete proof of the
brotherly love of which he should give evidence. This admonition is certainly
timely in these latter days of the dying out of true love, Matt. 24, 12.4)
The
reassurance of the Spirit: V. 19. And hereby we know that we are of the
truth, and shall assure our hearts before Him. V. 20. For if our heart
condemn us, God is greater than our heart and knoweth all things. V. 21. Beloved,
if our heart condemn us not, then have we confidence toward God. V. 22. And
whatsoever we ask we receive of Him, because we keep His commandments, and do
those things that are pleasing in His sight. V. 23. And this is His
commandment, That we should believe on the name of His Son, Jesus Christ, and
love one another, as He gave us commandment.
V. 24. And he that keepeth His commandments dwelleth in Him and He in
him. And hereby we know that He abideth in us, by the Spirit which He hath given
us. This paragraph contains comfort of a singular kind, since it reassures
the believer against himself: In this we shall know that we are out of the
truth, and reassure our hearts before Him, that, if our heart condemns us, God
is greater than our heart and knows all things. A believer naturally wants
nothing to do with hypocrisy; he wants to be, rather, a child of the truth, a
follower of the truth, also in the matter of brotherly love. The love shown to
the brethren is in itself an evidence, a proof, of the new spiritual life in the
heart of the believers. As the Christian, however, grows in sanctification, he
will often find that his heart is dissatisfied with the progress made, and
therefore proceeds to accuse him of lack of love. It is true, of course, that,
as in all matters pertaining to the righteousness of life, so also in the matter
of brotherly love, we are far from perfection. And yet we can reassure ourselves
before the tribunal, in spite of the condemnation of our heart. For God is a
greater, a more reliable Judge than our heart, and He has given us the definite
assurance in His Word that all our shortcomings in the matter of perfect
righteousness will be made up through the perfect righteousness of our Savior,
as it was imputed to us by faith. He who knows all things also knows that, in
spite of our faults and weaknesses, we are His children by faith in Christ
Jesus, and that our imperfections are not due to our lack of spiritual
willingness or to hypocrisy. Thus we may defend ourselves against the
condemnations of our own heart.
The
result is, as the apostle puts it: Beloved, if our heart does not condemn us, we
have boldness toward God, and whatsoever we ask we receive from Him, since we
keep His commandments and do what is best before Him. If we reach that stage in
our spiritual life where the reassurance of the Word of God has quieted the
accusations of our heart and we rely, without any self-confidence, in His
promises, then we are filled with boldness, with childlike confidence toward
God; we may then freely approach Him, as dear children go to their dear father.
In this confidence we also lay our needs before our heavenly Father, trusting
that He will give us what He thinks best. Our trust is never put to shame, for
we shall receive from Him what we desire in prayer. For we are God's children,
reconciled to Him by the blood of His Son; we have His full forgiveness for all
our daily sins and shortcomings, and we keep His commandments and strive,
although in great weakness, to do only such things as please Him in every way.
With this relation obtaining between Him and us, we are happy, though not
perfect Christians. We know, of course, that all our efforts do not earn for us
an answer to our prayers, but we also have the assurance that God is well
pleased with us. His children, for the sake of the great and merciful love which
He bears toward us, and will give us the strength for which we ask.
And
this strength is truly needed for the keeping of His great commandment: And this
is His commandment, that we believe in the name of His Son, Jesus Christ, and
that we love one another, as He has given us a commandment. That is the first
and supreme command and will of God, that we poor sinners confidently believe in
the name of our Savior, Jesus Christ, His Son; that we rely without wavering
upon the atonement which was made through His blood, and that we show this faith
of our hearts in fervent love toward one another, just as He Himself commanded
us to do, John 13, 34; 15, 12. Out of the faith which God desires, which He
commands, which He gives and works, the true love toward our brethren will flow
so naturally that the keeping of God's commandments will follow as a matter of
course.
The
apostle, therefore, concludes: And he that keeps His commandments abides in Him
and He in him; and herein we know that He abides in us, from the Spirit whom He
has given us. St. John once more emphasizes the glorious fruit of the fellowship
which obtains by faith between the Father and Christ, on the one hand, and the
believers, on the other. Keeping the Lord's commandments and loving the brethren
is a fruit of faith and an evidence of the presence of the Savior in the
believer's heart. This evidence is so sure, so reliable, because the Holy Ghost,
whom He has given us, is working brotherly love in our hearts. Brotherly love
could not be present if the Savior were not living in our hearts; and the Savior
would never have made our hearts His abode if it had not been for the power of
the Spirit. But this combination of circumstances is so strong that it drives
away all doubt and fear and fills our hearts with the calm confidence of faith.
Summary.
The apostle speaks at
length of •the glory, the privileges, and the obligations of the sonship of
God, showing wherein this beauty consists, explaining that true fellowship with
God implies overcoming sin and doing righteousness, and stating that the
reassurance of the Spirit overcomes the very condemnation of our own heart.