Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 John 2:6
He that saith he abideth in him ought himself also so to walk, even as he walked.
6. He that saith ] He who declares his position is morally bound to act up to the declaration which he has made. To profess to abide in God involves an obligation to imitate the Son, who is the concrete expression of God’s will. ‘To abide’ is another of the Apostle’s very favourite expressions, a fact greatly obscured in A. V. by capricious changes of rendering: see on 1Jn 2:24. ‘To abide in’ implies habitual fellowship. Note the climax; to know Him ( 1Jn 2:3), to be in Him ( 1Jn 2:5), to abide in Him ( 1Jn 2:6): cognitio, communio, constantia (Bengel).
ought ] It is a debt which he owes ( , debet). S. John does not say ‘must’ ( , oportet) which might seem to imply constraint. The obligation is internal and personal. ‘Must’ ( ), frequent in the Gospel, does not occur in these Epistles.
even as He walked ] Not simply ‘as’ ( ) but ‘even as’ ( ): the imitation must be exact. The ‘He’ is a different pronoun ( ) from the preceding ‘Him’ ( ), and this with the context makes it almost certain that while ‘in Him’ means ‘in God’, ‘even as He walked’ refers to Christ. Comp. 1Jn 3:3; 1Jn 3:5; 1Jn 3:7; 1Jn 3:16, 1Jn 4:17. For ‘even as’ comp. 1Jn 2:18 ; 1Jn 2:27, 1Jn 3:2 ; 1Jn 3:12; 1Jn 3:23; Luk 6:36, &c. &c. and for ‘even as He’ comp. 1Jn 3:3; 1Jn 3:7, 1Jn 4:17. S. Peter declares that Christ has ‘left us an example, that we should follow His steps’ (1Pe 2:21).
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
He that saith, he abideth in him – Greek, remains in him; that is, abides or remains in the belief of his doctrines, and in the comfort and practice of religion. The expression is one of those which refer to the intimate union between Christ and his people. A great variety of phrase is employed to denote that. For the meaning of this word in John, see the notes at 1Jo 3:6.
Ought himself also so to walk, even as he walked – Ought to live and act as he did. If he is one with him, or professes to be united to him, he ought to imitate him in all things. Compare Joh 13:15. See also the notes at 1Jo 1:6.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
1Jn 2:6
He that saith he abideth in Him ought himself also so to walk, even as He walked
The Christlike walk of one with guileless spirit abiding in God
To walk as Christ walked is essential to our abiding in God; not merely being in God, as it is put in the previous verse, but being in Him permanently.
It is therefore the test of our truth when we say that we abide in God; it is the very means by which we abide in Him.
I. It is sometimes said of Christ simply that He walked, without anything to define or qualify the expression (Joh 7:1; Luk 13:33; Joh 12:9-10). Jesus then walked. His life was a walk. The idea of earnestness, of definiteness of purpose, of decision and progress, is thus suggested. Now, he that saith he abideth in God, ought himself also so to walk even as Jesus walked. It was as always abiding in God that He walked. While His feet were busy walking, His soul was resting in God. Outward movement, inward repose; the whole man Christ Jesus–mind, spirit, heart, all bent upon the road; and yet ever, at the same time, the whole man Christ Jesus dwelling in the Fathers bosom, as calmly as in that unbroken eternity, ere He became man, He had been wont to dwell there: so he walked, abiding in God. So you also ought to walk even as He walked, abiding in God. But some one may say, Is not this too high an ideal? Is it not the setting up of an inimitable model? Not so. For, first, He fully shares with us whatever disadvantage as regards His walking, may be implied in His being a son of man. And, secondly, He would have us fully to share with Him whatever advantage there is in His being the Son of God. For both reasons our life may be as much and as truly a walk as His was.
II. Let some particulars about this walk be noticed.
1. If we say that we abide in God, we ought to walk as seeing God in all things and all things in God; for so Christ walked.
2. He that saith he abideth in God ought to walk as one subordinating himself always in all things to God, submitting himself to God, committing himself to God.
3. He that saith he abideth in God ought to walk in love. If we abide in God, we abide in the great source and fountain of love–in the infinite ocean of pure and perfect benevolence.
4. He that saith he abideth in God ought, in a word, to walk in unity with God, as being of one mind with God and of one heart. So Jesus walked. (R. S. Candlish, D. D.)
In Him: like Him
The first thing about a Christian is initiation into Christ; the next thing is the imitation of Christ. We cannot be Christians unless we are in Christ; and we are not truly in Christ unless the life of Christ is lived over again by us according to our measure.
I. Consider how this obligation is proved. Why ought we to walk as Jesus did?
1. First, it is the design of God that those who are in Christ should walk as Christ walked. It is a part of the original covenant purpose; for whom He did foreknow He also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of His Son.
2. Observe, again, another point of this necessity: it is necessary to the mystical Christ that we should walk as He walked, for we are joined unto the Lord Jesus in one body.
3. And this, again, must all be the fruit of the one Spirit that is in Christ and in us. The Father anointed Christ of old with the same anointing which rests on us in our measure. The Holy Spirit descended upon Him, and we have an unction from the same Holy One.
4. I would have true Christians remember that this is one article of the agreement which we make with Christ when we become His disciples. We put ourselves into Christs hands unreservedly, and we said, Lord, sanctify me, and then use me. Reign in me; rule me absolutely, sovereignly, always and alone. I do not ask to be my own, for I am not my own, I am bought with a price.
II. Consider wherein this walking with Christ as He walked consists.
1. To put it all together in one word, the first thing that every Christian has to see to is holiness. You know what wholeness is–a thing without a crack, or flaw, or break; complete, entire, uninjured whole. Well, that is the main meaning of holy. If you wish to see holiness, look at Christ. In Him you see a perfect character, an all-round character. He is the perfect one; be ye like Him in all holiness.
2. We must go a little into detail; so I say, next, one main point in which we ought to walk according to the walk of our great Exemplar is obedience. It is the Lords will that in His house His word should be the supreme law, for so only can our fallen natures be restored to their original glory. It is ours to walk in cheerful subservience to the mind of the Father, even as Jesus did. Does this strike you as an easy thing? It is childs work, certainly; but assuredly it is not childs play.
3. Such a life would necessarily be one of great activity, for the life of Jesus was intensely energetic. There is never an idle hour in the life of Christ. It is wonderful how He sustained the toil. Perhaps He measured out His zeal and His open industry by the fact that He was only to be for a short time here below.
4. Next we ought to walk as Christ did in the matter of self-denial. So walk as He did who made Himself of no reputation, but took upon Himself the form of a servant, and who, though He was rich, brought Himself down to poverty for our sakes, that we might be rich unto God. Think of that.
5. Another point in which we ought to imitate Christ most certainly is that of lowliness. You never detect in the Lord Jesus Christ any tendency towards pride or self-exaltation. Quite the reverse: He is ever compassionate and condescending to men of low estate.
6. And then note again another point, and that is His great tenderness, and gentleness, and readiness to forgive. Did He not set us an example of bearing and forbearing?
7. There is one word which tells us more than all this about how Christ walked, and that is the word love. Jesus was incarnate love. Only he that loves can live in heaven, for heaven is love; and you cannot go to glory unless you have learned to love and to find it your very life to do good to those about you. Let me add to all this, that he who says that Christ is in him ought also to live as Christ lived in secret. And how was this?
8. His life was spent in abounding devotion. He was pure and holy, and yet He must needs wait upon God all day long, and often speak with His Father; and then when the night came, and others went to their beds, He withdrew Himself into the wilderness and prayed. If the Lord Jesus be in you, you must walk as He walked in that matter. And then think of His delight in God. He was, it is true, a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief; but still there was a deep spring of wondrous happiness in the midst of His heart, which made Him always blessed. And you and I also must delight in God. This charming duty is far too much neglected. Strange that this honey should so seldom be in mens mouths!
9. We ought to walk in holy contentment. The cravings of covetousness and pinings of ambition never touched our Lord. In a word, Christ lived above this world; let us walk as He walked. Christ lived for God, and for God alone; let us live after His fashion. And Christ persevered in such living; He never turned aside from it at all; but as He lived so He died, obedient to His Fathers will. May our lives be a mosaic of perfect obedience, and our deaths the completion of the fair design.
III. Consider what is needful to all this.
1. It is needful to have a nature like that of Christ. You cannot give out sweet waters so long as the fountains are impure. Ye must be born again.
2. That being done, the next thing that is necessary is a constant anointing of the Holy Spirit.
3. Then, again, there must be in us a strong resolve that we will walk as Christ walked; for our Lord Himself did not lead that holy life without stern resolution.
4. I add that if we want to walk as Christ walked we must have much communion with Him. We cannot possibly get to be like Christ except by being with Him. A person has written to me to say that he has painted my portrait, but that he cannot finish it until he sees me. I should think not, Certainly you cannot paint a portrait of Christ in your own life unless you see Him–see Him clearly, see Him continually. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The example of Christ
Example, it has often been remarked, exerts a much more powerful influence upon men than precept. The nature and excellence of Gods commandments are more perfectly seen in those actions which are conformed to His law than in the abstract contemplation of the commandments themselves. To this peculiarity in our mental constitution God hath kindly accommodated His holy Word. Although the example of holy men of ancient times is made use of as a motive to particular excellences, yet none of them is proposed in general terms as a pattern for our imitation. This honour is given to Christ alone. Not only are particular virtues enforced by a reference to His character and conduct, but His conversation in general among men, or the whole of His life on earth is exhibited as a pattern to be imitated by all His disciples.
I. The example of Christ is perfect. Neither positive evil nor negative defect can be laid to His charge. In contemplating the pattern which it presents we are never perplexed by the necessity of separating the good from the bad, that which should be imitated from that which should be avoided.
II. The example of Christ is easy of imitation. It is calculated to allure rather than to repel the attempts of the meek and humble to copy it. The incidents by which it was diversified are such as frequently occur in the ordinary lot of man, and His conduct in reference to them was in every respect such as we might desire and expect any pious and benevolent individual to exemplify. It was human, devoid of everything impracticable.
III. The example of Christ is highly influential. It is fitted to extract the attention and command the imitation of men. Who will refuse to imitate the pattern furnished in His obedience and sufferings when he recollects that He obeyed and suffered in our room? The example of a Divine person is indeed of infinite authority to all creatures; but the obligation of gratitude has an attractive influence which the consideration of duty alone does not possess.
IV. The example of Christ is of universal application. It is suited to men of all classes and of every peculiarity of natural disposition. Had He come in all the glory of temporal royalty His example, however conspicuous and however perfect, could have been useful to but a limited extent. (D. Duncan.)
Of the imitation of Christ in holiness of life, and the necessity of it in believers
I. What the saints imitation of Christ supposes and comprises.
1. That no Christian is, or may pretend to be, a rule to himself; for as no man hath wisdom enough to direct himself, so if his own will were made the rule of his own actions it would be the highest invasion of the Divine prerogative.
2. That as no man is his own guide, so no mere man, how wise or holy soever, may pretend to be a rule to other men; but Christ is the rule of every mans walking.
3. The necessity of sanctification in all His followers, forasmuch as it is impossible there should be a practical conformity in point of obedience where there is not a conformity in spirit and in principle.
4. That the Christian religion is a very precise and strict religion, no way countenancing licentiousness; it allows no man to walk loosely and inordinately.
5. The imperfection of the best of men in this life; for if the life of Christ be our pattern, the holiest of men must confess they come short of the rule of their duty.
6. The transcending holiness of the Lord Jesus; His holiness is greater than the holiness of all creatures, For only that which is first and best in every kind is the rule and measure of all the rest.
7. It necessarily implies sanctification and obedience to be the evidences of our justification and interest in Christ: assurance is unattainable without obedience; we can never be comfortable Christians except we be strict and regular Christians.
II. In what things all who profess Christ are obliged to the imitation of him.
1. And first of all, the purity and holiness of the life of Christ is proposed as a glorious pattern for the saints imitation (1Pe 1:15).
(1) He was truly and sincerely holy, without fiction or simulation; and this appeared in the greatest trial of the truth of holiness that ever was made in this world (Joh 14:30).
(2) Christ was uniformly holy at one time as well as another, in one place and company as well as another. So must His people be holy in all manner of conversation.
(3) Christ was exemplarily holy; a pattern of holiness to all that came nigh Him, and conversed with Him: oh, imitate Christ in this.
(4) Christ was strictly and precisely holy: Which of you convinceth Me of sin? The most envious eyes could not pick a hole or find a flaw in any of His words or actions (Php 2:15).
(5) Christ was perseveringly holy–holy to the last breath; as He began, so He finished His whole life. It becomes not any of His people to begin in the spirit and end in the flesh.
(6) In a word, the delight of Christ was only in holy things and holy persons–they were His chosen companions; even so it becometh His people to have all their delights in the saints and in the excellent of the earth (Psa 16:3).
2. The obedience of Christ to His Fathers will is a pattern for the imitation of all Christians.
(1) Christs obedience was free and voluntary, not forced or compulsory; it was so from the very first undertaking of the work of our redemption (Pro 8:30-31).
(2) The obedience of Christ was universal and complete; He was obedient to all the will of God, making no demur to the hardest service (Php 2:8).
(3) The obedience of Christ was sincere and pure, without any base or by-end, purely aiming at the glory of God (Joh 17:4).
(4) The streams of Christs obedience flowed from the fountain of ardent love to God (Joh 14:31).
(5) The obedience of Christ was constant (Rom 2:7).
3. The self-denial of Christ is the pattern of believers, and their conformity unto it is their indispensable duty (Php 2:4-6; 2Co 8:9).
4. The activity and diligence of Christ in finishing the work of God which was committed to Him was a pattern for all believers to imitate.
(1) His heart was intently set upon it (Psa 4:8).
(2) He never fainted under great discouragements (Isa 43:4).
(3) The shortness of His time provoked Him to the greatest diligence (Joh 9:4).
(4) He improved all opportunities, companies, and occurrences to further the great work which was under His hand (Joh 4:6-10).
(5) Nothing more displeased Him than when He met with dissuasions in His work (Mat 8:33).
(6) Nothing rejoiced His soul more than the prosperity and success of His work (Luk 10:20-21).
5. Delight in God and in His service was eminently conspicuous in the life of Christ, and is a rare pattern for believers imitation (Joh 4:32; Joh 4:34).
(1) The nature of it, which consisteth in the complacency, rest, and satisfaction of the mind in God and spiritual things,
(2) The object of spiritual delight, which is God Himself and the things which relate to Him (Psa 73:25).
(3) The subject of spiritual delight, which is a renewed heart, and that only so far as it is renewed (Rom 7:22).
(4) The principle and spring of this delight, which is the agreeableness of spiritual things to the temper and frame of a renewed mind.
6. The inoffensiveness of the life of Christ upon earth is an excellent pattern to all His people; He injured none, offended none (Heb 7:26). He denied His own liberty to avoid occasion of offence; as in the case of the tribute money (Mat 19:27).
(1) For the honour of Jesus Christ be you inoffensive–His name is called upon you (Jam 2:7). Your inoffensive carriage is the only means to stop the mouths of detractors (1Pe 2:15).
(2) For the sake of souls be wary that you give no offence (Mat 13:7).
(3) By the holiness and harmlessness of your lives many may be won to Christ (1Pe 3:1).
7. The humility and lowliness of Christ is propounded by Himself as a pattern for His peoples imitation (Mat 11:29).
8. The contentation of Christ in a low and mean condition in the world is an excellent pattern for His peoples imitation.
(1) The meanest and most afflicted Christian is owner of many rich, invaluable mercies (Eph 1:3; 1Co 3:33).
(2) You have many precious promises that God will not forsake you in your straits (Heb 13:5; Isa 41:17).
(3) How useful and beneficial are all your afflictions to you! They purge your sins, prevent your temptations, wean you from the world, and turn to your salvation; and how unreasonable, then, must your discontentedness at them be?
(4) The time of your relief and full deliverance from all your troubles is at hand (1Co 7:26).
(5) Your lot falls by Divine direction upon you, and as bad as it is it is much easier and sweeter than the condition of Christ in this world was. Yet He was contented, and why not you?
III. The necessity of this imitation of Christ will convincingly appear divers ways.
1. From the established order of salvation, which is fixed and unalterable. God that hath appointed the end hath also established the means and order by which men shall attain the ultimate end. Now conformity to Christ is the established method in which God will bring souls to glory (Rom 8:29).
2. The nature of Christ-mystical requires this conformity, and renders it indispensably necessary. Otherwise the body of Christ must be heterogeneous, of a nature different from the head; and how uncomely would this be?
3. This resemblance and conformity to Christ appears necessary from the communion which all believers have with Christ in the same spirit of grace and holiness. Believers are called Christs fellows, or co-partners (Psa 45:7), from their participation with Him of the same spirit (1Th 4:8).
4. The necessity of this imitation of Christ may be argued from the design and end of Christs exhibition to the world in a body of flesh. For though we detest that doctrine which makes the exemplary life of Christ to be the whole end of His incarnation, yet we must not run so far from an error as to lose a precious truth.
5. Our imitation of Christ is one of those great articles which every man is to subscribe whom Christ will admit into the number of His disciples (Luk 14:27).
6. The honour of Christ necessitates the conformity of Christians to His example.
How can wisdom be justified of her children except it be this way? Inferences:
1. If all that profess interest in Christ be strictly bound to imitate His holy example, then it follows that religion is very unjustly charged by the world with the scandals and evils of them that profess it.
2. If all men forfeit their claim to Christ who endeavour not to imitate Him in the holiness of His life, then how small a number of real Christians are there in the world!
3. What blessed times should we all see if true religion did once generally obtain and prevail in the world!
4. Hence it also follows that real Christians are the sweetest companions.
5. In a word, if no mens claim to Christ be warranted but theirs that walk as He walked.
How vain and groundless then are the hopes and expectations of all unsanctified men who walk after their own lusts?
1. Christ hath conformed Himself to you by His abasing incarnation; how reasonable therefore is it that you conform yourselves to Him in the way of obedience and sanctification!
2. You shall be conformed to Christ in glory; how reasonable therefore is it you should now conform yourselves to Him in holiness! (chap. 3:2).
3. The conformity of your lives to Christ, your pattern, is your highest excellency in this world: the measure of your grace is to be estimated by this rule.
4. So far as you imitate Christ in your lives, and no farther, you will be beneficial to the world in which you live; so far as God helps you to follow Christ you will be helpful to bring others to Christ, or build them up in Christ.
5. To walk as Christ walked is a walk only worthy of a Christian; this is to walk worthy of the Lord (1Th 2:12; Col 1:10).
6. How comfortable will the close of your life be at death if you have walked after Christs example in this world! A comfortable death is ordinarily the close of a holy life (Psa 37:37).
Lastly, I would leave a few words of support to such as sincerely endeavour, according to the tendency of their new nature, to follow Christs example, but being weak in grace and meeting with strong temptations are frequently carried aside from the holy purposes of their well-meaning hearts.
1. Such defects in obedience make no flaw in your justification; for your justification is not built upon your obedience, but upon Christs (Rom 3:24).
2. Your deep troubles for the defectiveness of your obedience do not argue you to be less, but more sanctified, than those who make no such complaints.
3. The Lord makes excellent uses even of your failings to do you good; for by these defects He hides pride from your eyes, He beats you off from self-dependence, He makes you to admire the riches of free grace, He makes you to long more ardently for heaven and entertain the sweeter thoughts of death.
4. Your bewailed infirmities do not break the bond of the everlasting covenant.
5. Though the defects of your obedience are grievous to God, yet your deep sorrows for them are well-pleasing in His eyes (Psa 51:17).
6. Though God has left many defects to humble you, yet He hath given many things to comfort you. This is a comfort, that the desire of thy soul is to God. This is a comfort, that thy sins are not thy delight as once they were. (John Flavel.)
Abiding in Christ to be demonstrated by walking as Christ did
I. The apostles do on all occasions assume the practice of Christ as an unquestionable ground of obligation and an effectual inducement thereto.
II. Doing so hath a reasonableness grounded on our relations to Christ–it is comely that the manners of the disciple should be regulated by those of his Master; that the servant should not, in his garb and demeanour, dissent or vary from his Lord; that the subject should conform his humour to the fashion of his Prince.
III. Following Christs example is requisite to demonstrate the sincerity of our faith, love, and reverence to Him.
IV. By pretending to be Christians we acknowledge the transcendent goodness, worth, and excellency of our Saviour; that He was incomparably better and wiser than any person ever was or could be; that He always acted with the highest reason, out of the most excellent disposition of mind, in order to the best purposes; and that His practice, therefore, reasonably should be the rule of ours.
V. The practice of our Saviour did thoroughly agree with His doctrine and Law–He required nothing of us which He did not eminently perform Himself. He fulfilled in deed, as well as taught in word, all righteousness.
VI. It being the design of Divine goodness, in sending our Saviour, to render us good and happy, to deliver us from sin and misery, there could not be devised any more powerful means or more convenient method of accomplishing those excellent purposes than by propounding such an example and obliging us to comply therewith.
1. Good example is naturally an effectual instrument of good practice; for that it doth most compendiously, pleasantly, and easily instruct; representing things to be done at one view, in a full body, clothed with all their modes and circumstances; it kindleth mens courage by a kind of contagion, as one flame doth kindle another; it raiseth a worthy emulation of doing laudable things which we see done, or of obtaining a share in the commendations of virtue.
2. More especially the example of Christ doth, inefficacy and influence on good practice, surpass all others.
(1) In that it is a sure and infallible rule, a perfect rule of practice: deficient in no part, swerving in no circumstance from truth and right, which privileges are competent to no other example.
(2) In that He was, by the Divine providence, to this very purpose designed and sent into the world, as well by His practice as by His doctrine to be the guide and master of holy life.
(3) In that it was, by an admirable temperament, more accommodated for imitation than any others have been; for though it were written with an incomparable fairness, delicacy, and evenness, not slurred with any foul blot, not anywhere declining from exact straightness, yet were the lineaments thereof exceedingly plain and simple, not by any gaudy flourishes or impertinent intrigues rendered difficult to studious imitation; so that even women and children, the weakest and meanest sort of people, as well as the most wise and ingenious, might easily perceive its design, and with good success write after it.
(4) In that it is attended with the greatest obligations (of gratitude and ingenuity, of justice, of interest, of duty), mightily engaging us to follow it. (Isaac Barrow, D. D.)
Imitation of the example of Christ in His temper and life
I. In what respects Christ is an example to Christians and they are to imitate Him. Christ is only our example as to those things that are common between Him and us, but not as to those in which we can have no participation with Him or He with us. His part was to become our mediator with God.
II. How suitable an example Christ is to us and how expedient it is for us to have such an example.
1. The example of Christ is exceedingly suitable to mankind.
(1) From the humanity of it.
(2) The notoriety of Christs example makes it fit for general use. The most exemplary transactions of His holy life are transmitted to us in exact narratives.
(3) His example was very extensive. It either directly exemplifies or contains a lively instruction into the duties of almost every station and relation in human life.
(4) Christs example is absolutely perfect.
2. How very expedient it is for mankind to have such an example set before them.
(1) This use and expediency appears in that it tends to impress the mind with a strong sense of the reasonableness and excellency of that universal rectitude which the law requires, and to guard us against light and favourable thoughts of any deviation or iniquity.
(2) It still adds more weight to this use of Christs example, to consider the Divinity of His person. In this way God has glorified a state of obedience to Himself.
III. The obligations and engagements which Christians are under to imitate this so suitable and expedient example. This is the natural tendency of all Christian graces; so that where they are in truth they cannot but work this way, and otherwise they are only in appearance, not in reality. (John Hubbard.)
The Christians imitation of Christ
First, for the conditional If. Is it not a precedent condition of life; for a man cannot first walk as Christ walked, and then be in Christ. A graft cannot live the life of the stock and then be inoculated into the stock. The first act is before the latter act: life before the actions of life–so walk as Christ walked, this notes the actions of life. Now a man must first be in Christ before he can walk as Christ walked. Indeed, this condition is first to our knowledge: but it is not first in its own nature. So, then, to walk as Christ walked, being a necessary consequence of being in Christ, we cannot be in Christ if we walk not as Christ walked. If there be any commandment of Christ in all the gospel that you will not conform to, it is an evident sign that ye abide not in Christs love. Secondly, for the exemplary, As, even as He walked. Can any man walk as Christ walked? Is it possible that dust and ashes, that is corrupt with sin, can walk as He walked? This word as hath a twofold signification–
(1) such as imports equality, or
(2) similitude.
As this as imports an equality, so it is impossible that any flesh can walk as Christ walked–so purely, so unspottedly, so steadily, so effectually as He lived. A scholar writes as his masters copy directs him. Though there be no equality, he cannot write one stroke or dash with his pen so well as his master, yet he doth write as his master sets his copy: his hand follows his masters hand. Even as less white is like more white, though not alike in the same degree, yet in the same nature, there is the same nature in the lesser that there is in the bigger. So we must have the same life, obey the same commandments, be guided by the same rule, swayed by the same motions, led by the same Spirit that was in Christ (Rom 8:9). Thus you see the explanation of the doctrine; come we now to the reasons, which are principally these four:–
1. The first reason is taken from the scope and end for which the Lord did send His Son into the world: as to justify the ungodly, so also to conform all those that are justified to the image of Christ.
2. The second reason is taken from the practice of Christianity. In vain are we called Christians if we be not imitators of Christ. The disciples are called Christians (Act 11:26); the very name tells us that we must be followers of Christ.
3. The third reason is taken from the essential, or rather from the integral union that is between Christ and all those that are in Christ; they are all members of His most gracious body.
4. The last reason is taken from the near relation that is to be between Christ and every member of Christ. If all that are in Christ are the children of Christ they must needs walk as Christ walked. Like begets like. Dost thou say thou hast put on Christ? Why, then, show me the signs of Christ in thee. How canst thou then demonstrate that thou art a Christian? It may be now and then thou wilt give a prayer unto Christ. Is this to be in Christ? If thou be in Christ, then thou must live the life of Christ in all thy ways. He that saith he abideth in Him, etc. In this word he there are three notes. First, indication. The apostle doth, as it were, point at a certain man in his congregation, as if there had been some man that he knew was not in Christ. So preachers must not only preach the Word of God in general, but they must preach in particular. Secondly, discrimination. As if he should say, there are some that are in Him and some that are not in Him. Hence observe this point, that every minister is bound to preach so as to make a difference between the precious and the vile. Here are two things–
1. They shall teach them the difference between the holy and profane.
2. They shall not only show it before them, but if they will not see it they shall cause them to see it; that is, they must beat it into them and rub it into their consciences. You that have heard the Word of God apply it to your souls, it is a blessed plaister; let it lie on your souls. Thirdly, scrutiny. It is not only an outward word, but a word of the heart: If any man say, that is, if any man think, that he is in Christ, he ought to walk as Christ did. Hence we observe, that a minister is bound to preach to mens thoughts. (Wm. Fenner.)
The Christian walk
It was one of the last sayings of a famous divine that there were three things which were essential to healthy Christian teaching–doctrine, experience, and practice. He said that if doctrine alone were brought forward to a people there was a danger lest they should turn out Antinomians; that if experience alone were brought forward to a people there was a danger lest they should turn out enthusiasts and sentimentalists; and that if practice alone were brought forward, there was a danger that they would turn out legalists. I know not whether we have sufficient attention given in the present day to the third of the three great essentials spoken of, I mean the essential of Christian practice.
I. The true believers profession–He saith that he abideth in Christ. He rests all his hope on the Lord Jesus Christ; he feels that he is a sinner, but he sees in Christ an all-sufficient Saviour. Time there was when he abode himself in carelessness; he was a thoughtless, an unconcerned person, travel ling down the stream of time and thinking nothing of the gulf of eternity. Now, old things are passed away and all things are become new.
II. The standard of the true believers practice. The apostle speaks of the believers walk. By that he means his daily course of life, his behaviour, that may be seen of men, as a persons walking may be seen by the eye. The man of the world cannot move without being seen; so the walk of the Christian is that behaviour which others around him can observe. It is not merely a spasmodic rushing forward, but an equable daily walk. He speaks of what that walk ought to be; he speaks of it as a debt, as an obligation. The believer is bound by the strongest of all ties and obligations to walk even as Christ walked. Who that has ever seen a young painter in his first efforts to paint, when he has set the canvas before him and endeavoured to copy some mighty masterpiece of Rubens, or Rembrandt, or Titian, has not been struck with the difference between his first essay and the wonderful copy before him? Yet that painter does the same kind of thing that Rubens, or Titian,or Rembrandt did; he is working upon canvas, he has the colours, he holds the brush; though he may not like them lay on the colours and trace the outline in the same way, yet, after all, he is following their steps, he is imitating them, and is far more likely to bring forth an excellent work than if he copied that which was not equal in perfection. But in what is it that we are endeavouring to walk even as Christ walked? In His demeanour towards those with whom He had to do–in all His relations, as a son unto His mother, as a friend among His friends–in all His dealings with His enemies and with His disciples. (Bp. Ryle.)
Imitation of Christ
I. Particulars in which Christians ought to live as Christ lived.
1. Those who profess to be Christs disciples ought to take Him as their example in bearing their appointed sufferings.
(1) In the first place, contentedly to bear whatever sufferings God by His providence imposes on us; not to be discontented, irritable, and despondent.
(2) There was another characteristic in Christs endurance of sufferings, perhaps yet more important to us, because it relates to a temper still more constantly to be in exercise. Jesus foresaw all those sufferings which He afterwards so patiently bore. He steadfastly set His face to go up to Jerusalem; He pursued the great end of His mission into this world without deviation by one single step or for one single moment. He, then, who walks as Christ walked, will, without fear, without despondency, without impetuosity and passion, without enthusiasm, with calm deliberation and steady purpose, determine to pursue the course of duty God has called him to pursue, whatever the consequences may be.
2. In this course, however, it is impossible but that Christians should meet, as Christ met, with those who would oppose this course.
II. Reasons why we should walk thus.
1. Those who are redeemed ought to live as their Redeemer lived, because they recognise Him to be the pattern of all excel lence.
2. Those who are redeemed ought to endeavour to please their Redeemer.
3. Those who have been redeemed ought to count it one of the highest objects of their existence to glorify and serve Him who has been their Redeemer. (B. W. Noel, M. A.)
Inward grace manifest in the life
There is an inward germinant power which must make itself felt in a life like his. If a man abide in Christ and Christ dwells within him, then must the heavenly forms of grace and truth which Christ unfolded in His life be manifested, to some extent at least, in His followers, The life of the rose unfolds itself in the fragrance and beauty of the queen of flowers; the life of the lily in immaculate purity; the life of Christ in love, joy, peace, long suffering, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance, which are the fruits of the Spirit. Christ is the great archetype of redeemed humanity, and the life of each believer is an aspect of the image of the Son of God. The conformity of the life to the model of Christ is the test of fellowship with the Father. (A. R. Cocke, D. D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 6. Abideth in him] He who not only professes to have known Christ, but also that he has communion with him, and abides in his favour, should prove the truth of his profession by walking as Christ walked; living a life of devotion and obedience to God, and of benevolence and beneficence to his neighbour. Thus Christ walked; and he has left us an example that we should follow his steps.
To be in Christ, 1Jo 2:5, is to be converted to the Christian faith, and to have received the remission of sins. To abide in Christ, 1Jo 2:6, is to continue in that state of salvation, growing in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
And this proof we ought to give. For whereas our Lord Jesus Christ was not only our Lawgiver, but our pattern, and practised himself what he commanded us; if indeed we have an abiding, real union with him, we partake of his Spirit, Rom 8:9, which must be understood to work uniformly, and enable us
to walk (in the main of our course, according to our measure of that Spirit)
as he walked.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
6. abidethimplying acondition lasting, without intermission, and without end.
He that saith . . . oughtsothat his deeds may be consistent with his words.
even as heBelieversreadily supply the name, their hearts being full of Him (compare Joh20:15). “Even as He walked” when on earth, especiallyin respect to love. John delights in referring to Christ asthe model man, with the words, “Even as He,” &c. “Itis not Christ’s walking on the sea, but His ordinary walk, that weare called on to imitate” [LUTHER].
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
He that saith he abideth in him,…. As all do that are in him; once in Christ, and always in Christ; they are set as a seal on his arm and heart, which can never be removed; they are in his arms, and can never be plucked from thence; and are members of him, and can never be disunited from him: or dwelleth in him, as in Joh 6:56; that is, by faith; who under a sense of sin and danger have fled to Christ, as to a strong tower and place of defence, where they dwell safely, peaceably, pleasantly, and comfortably, enjoying whatever is necessary for them. The Syriac and Ethiopic versions read, “he that saith I am in him”; loved by him, chosen in him, united to him, a member of his, and have communion with him:
ought himself also to walk even as he walked; as Christ walked, lived, and acted, so ought he; that is, to imitate him and follow him, as he has him for an example; not in his miraculous works in raising the dead, healing the sick, and walking upon the waters, c. which were wrought as proofs of his deity and of his Messiahship, and not intended for imitation nor in his mediatorial performances, as in his propitiatory sacrifice and advocacy; but in the exercise of grace, and duties of religion as a man, and in a private way; and may chiefly regard walking in love, as he walked, see Eph 5:2; and is what is in the following verses insisted on, namely, the new commandment of love to the brethren; which should be to all as his was, and, like his, constant and lasting; and, when the case requires, should be shown by laying down life for them. The “as” is not a note of equality, but of likeness; for it cannot be thought that saints should walk in that degree of perfection, in humility, patience, love, and in the exercise of every other grace, and in the discharge of duty, as Christ did; only that they should copy after him, and make his obedience and life the rule of theirs.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Himself also to walk ( ). Present active infinitive after (ought), “Himself also to keep on walking,” a continuous performance, not a spasmodic spurt.
Even as he walked ( ). Constative aorist active indicative summing up the life of Christ on earth with the emphatic use of the demonstrative in reference to Christ as in 1John 3:3; 1John 3:5; 1John 3:7; 1John 3:16; 1John 4:17; John 7:11; John 9:12; John 9:28; John 19:21.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
He abideth in Him [ ] . To abide in God is a more common expression with John than to be in God, and marks an advance in thought. The phrase is a favorite one with John. See Joh 14:4 sqq.; Joh 6:56; 1Jo 2:24, 27, 28; 1Jo 3:6, 24; 1Jo 4:12 sq.; 15 sq. Bengel notes the gradation in the three phrases “to know Him, to be in Him, to abide in Him; knowledge, fellowship, constancy.”
Ought [] . An obligation, put as a debt. See Luk 27:10, and on debts, Mt 6:12. The word expresses a special, personal obligation, and not as dei must, an obligation in the nature of things. See Joh 20:9, and compare 1Jo 3:16; 1Jo 4:11; 3Jo 1:8.
He [] . Always of Christ in the Epistles of John. See ejkeinhv, referring to aJmartia sin, 1Jo 5:16.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “He that saith he abideth in him.” The one claiming (Greek menein) to remain, abide, or dwell in Jesus Christ, Joh 15:4-5; Joh 15:10.
2) “Ought himself also so to walk.” (Greek ofeilei) ought or is morally obligated – himself (reflexively), just as that one (Jesus Christ) walked. Mat 17:27; Luk 9:51-56; Joh 8:29-31.
3) “Even as he walked”. (houtos peripatein) thus, as, or like (He walked) to walk or to deport himself. As Jesus came to do, not His own, but the Father’s will, so should the believer seek to do the will of Jesus. Genuine joy and fellowship with God is contingent or conditioned upon one’s doing the will of God in his daily life – the avenue to true joy and fellowship. Joh 4:34; Psa 40:8.
Hymn -When we walk with the Lord In the light of His word
What a glory he sheds on our way. When we do his good will,
He abides with us still And with all who will trust and obey.
Trust and obey, for there is no other way To be happy in Jesus, but to trust and obey.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
6 He that saith he abideth in him As he has before set before us God as light for an example, he now calls us also to Christ, that we may imitate him. Yet he does not simply exhort us to imitate Christ; but from the union we have with him, he proves that we ought to be like him. A likeness in life and deeds, he says, will prove that we abide in Christ. But from these words he passes on to the next clause, which he immediately adds respecting love to the brethren.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
6. Abideth The summit of the grades, know him, in him, and abideth in him. This abiding is Christian perseverance reverse of apostasy.
He walked The word he has thus far in the paragraph been the Greek ; here it is . From this change Alford infers that the first refers to God, (note on 1Jn 2:3,) and this last to Christ. But both refer to Christ; the former as our divine advocate and propitiation before the Father in heaven, (1Jn 2:1-2,) the latter to the man Jesus as he walked on earth for our example.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
1Jn 2:6 gives the more particular definition of what the of God’s commandments, and therefore the Christian’s walk in light, consists in.
] as in 1Jn 2:4 ; here, however, with the infinitive construction.
] does not refer to Christ (Augustin, Hornejus, Wolf, Lange, Neander, etc.), but to God.
] instead of , 1Jn 2:5 . Both expressions are synonymous, it is true, but not identical (Beza); in the unchangeableness of the being is brought out. Bengel: Synonyma cum gradatione: ilium nosse, in illo esse, in illo manere. Frommann (p. 187): “The being and abiding in God signifies one and the same fellowship with God. The latter describes it merely as something constant, lasting, which accessory notion is not contained in the former expression.”
] comp. chap. 1Jn 3:16 , 1Jn 4:11 , “is in duty bound,” refers back to ; it is not meant to be indicated here what is demanded in regard to the , but what is the duty of him who says that he abides in God if he does not want to be a liar, in whom the truth is not, 1Jn 2:4 .
, [ ] ] By these words Christ is placed as a pattern before Christians, i.e. in regard to His whole walk (which is elsewhere done in the N. T. only in regard to His self-abasement and to His conduct in suffering; see this commentary on 1Pe 2:21 ); of what sort this was, John does not here say; from the connection with what precedes, however, it is clear that the apostle points to Him in so far as He kept the commandments of God, and therefore walked in the light. [101] This reference to Christ as an example is frequently found in the same form ( ) in our Epistle; so 1Jn 3:3 ; 1Jn 3:7 ; 1Jn 4:17 ; comp. also Joh 13:15 ; Joh 15:10 , and passim.
describes not merely the disposition, but the action resulting from it. In the fact that John brings just this out (comp. especially chap. 1Jn 3:17-18 ), it is evident how far his mysticism is removed from mere fanaticism.
On , see the critical notes.
[101] Semler paraphrases: Si quis gloriatur, se suamque doctrinam semper convenisse cum doctrina ilia Christi, is sane debet etiam in humanae vitae modo non Judaismum praeferre (!).
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
DISCOURSE: 2435
CHRIST AN EXAMPLE TO HIS FOLLOWERS
1Jn 2:6. He that saith he abideth in him ought himself also so to walk, even as he walked.
AMONG the various excellencies which distinguish Christianity from all other religions, one of very considerable importance is, that the Author of it condescended to exemplify in his own person every thing which it required of its most faithful adherents. Different philosophers established rules for their followers: but no one ever professed himself a pattern, and much less a perfect pattern, of all that under any circumstances could be required of him. But the Lord Jesus Christ has perfectly fulfilled his own law, as for other ends, so also that he might set us an example to follow his steps. True it is indeed that He is the sole Author of our salvation from first to last: but he does not on that account dispense with our obedience to his law: on the contrary, he says, that all who abide in him, must walk as he walked.
There are some who deny that the law is to the believer a rule of life. But supposing this error could not be refuted by direct testimony, which it easily and abundantly may, what would the advocates of it gain, if once they admitted, what I suppose no man would deny, that Christ is an example for us to follow? Did not he fulfil all righteousness, even to the utmost extent of the moral law? And if he did, and is an example to us, must not we obey the law in the same manner, and to the same extent? We are not indeed to fulfil it for the same ends; because he alone, as the Mediator between God and man, can save men by his obedience unto death: but in all that he did as a man, we are to follow his steps: and if we neglect to do so, we shew, that we have no part or lot in his salvation.
The words I have read will lead me to set before you the principles, and the practice, of every true Christian.
I.
His principles
The Christian is united unto Christ by faith, as a branch to the vine; and his one great concern is to abide in Christ.
For this he labours as the one ground of his hope
[He knows that he has nothing, and can have nothing, in himself. He needs no one to tell him this: he has learned it, as from the inspired volume, so also from his own experience. He has found on numberless occasions how weak and sinful a creature he is: and is well assured, that, if he had not Jehovah himself for his righteousness and strength, it would be impossible for him ever to be saved. Hence he views with complacency the Lord Jesus Christ as the great Head of the Church. It has pleased the Father, that in Christ should all fulness dwell [Note: Col 1:19.]: and in this respect he is altogether like-minded with the Father: for it pleases him in his inmost soul to have such a Head of vital influence, and such a Depository of all spiritual blessings. He is sensible that the branch derives all its life and fertility from its union with the vine: and that, if once separated from the stem, it would wither and die [Note: Joh 15:1-5.]. This idea he endeavours to realize: and the life which he lives in the flesh, he lives altogether by faith in the Son of God [Note: Gal 2:21.], receiving out of his fulness [Note: Joh 1:16.] a constant supply of grace and peace. If, as a blind and ignorant creature, he need wisdom; or as a guilty creature, he need righteousness; or as a polluted creature, he need sanctification; or as an enslaved creature, he need redemption: he looks for it all in Christ, whom he regards as furnished with all for the use of his Church, and as empowered to communicate it all to every one that trusts in him [Note: 1Co 1:30.].]
In this he glories as his most exalted privilege
[Humiliating as this life of dependence at first sight appears, he considers it as his highest honour, and as raising him even above Adam in Paradise. Adam, when in Paradise, was indeed perfect: but to him was committed the task of working out a righteousness for himself, and of maintaining by his own inherent powers his steadfastness in the divine life. And hence he fell, and died, and involved both himself and all his posterity in ruin. But the believer has a righteousness wrought out for him by his incarnate God; and his life, instead of being committed to his own keeping, is hid with Christ in God, where Satan cannot reach it; and therefore, since Christ has engaged that none shall ever pluck out of his hands those whom the Father hath committed to him, he shall endure unto the end: and, when Christ, who is his life, shall appear, shall assuredly appear with him in glory [Note: Col 3:3-4.]. Thus, in respect both of honour and security, is the believer elevated even above Adam himself; since he has not a creature-righteousness wherein to stand before God, or a created power to uphold him; but a righteousness that is divine, and an arm that is omnipotent. To form a right judgment of his state, we must attend to what our blessed Lord himself has spoken on this subject. Indeed his words are so strong, that no man would dare to utter them if not warranted by his authority. What would you say, if I were to affirm, that the life of faith resembles the very life which the Lord Jesus Christ lived when on earth; and that the believer has the same dependence on the Lord Jesus Christ, as Christ himself, during his incarnate state, had on the Father; and the same security in him too; would you not be almost ready to shut your ears, and to accuse the preacher of blasphemy? Yet is this what we are authorized by Christ himself to declare. Hear his own words: He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood, dwelleth in me, and 1 in him. As the living Father hath sent me, and I live by the Father, even so he that eateth me, even he shall live by me [Note: Joh 6:56-57]. Say, beloved, is not here a ground of glorying? and, if the believer did not glory in this privilege, would not the very stones cry out against him?]
Whilst with confidence we affirm these to be the Christians principles, we with no less confidence proceed to declare,
II.
His practice
It is thought by many that a life of faith is unfriendly to morality; since if all our righteousness is in Him, what need have we of any of our own? and, if he be engaged to keep us, what need have we of any care or watchfulness to keep ourselves? But this reasoning is altogether fallacious: since every one who by faith abides in Christ, acknowledges it his bounden duty to walk as he walked.
He acknowledges it, I say, as his bounden duty
[He does not conceive of Christ as liberating him from the obligations of morality: for though he is free from the law as a covenant, he is not free from it, nor would wish to be freed from it, as a rule of life. He considers himself as not without law, but under the law to Christ. Were he permitted to violate the commands of God, he would account it a curse rather than a privilege. Such a liberty would appear to him only like a permission to drink poison, which, however sweet to the taste, would prove the gall of asps within him. So far from imagining himself freed from the restraints of the law, he considers all that Christ has done for him as laying him under ten-fold obligations to holiness both of heart and life. His motives to obedience are changed indeed: but his obligations to it are not a whit diminished, yea, rather, are greatly heightened; because he well knows, that the very end for which his Saviour died was, to redeem us from all iniquity, and to purify unto himself a peculiar people zealous of good works.]
He makes it his constant and determined aim
[The true believer is not a mere follower of Christ, but an imitator also [Note: 1Co 11:1. the Greek.]: and it is his delight to set the Saviour before him as his great Exemplar. When he sees how entirely the soul of Jesus was wrapped up in his work, and that it was his meat and drink to do his Fathers will, he pants, and sighs, and with shame and sorrow of heart exclaims, O that there were in me the mind that was in Christ Jesus! When he beholds the ardour of Christs love to man, his unwearied labours, his patient sufferings, his exertions in every possible way, he girds up his loins, and follows the footsteps of his Lord; and though he knows that he can never attain to his perfection, yet he proposes to himself no object short of that, and strives to be holy as he was holy, and perfect as he was perfect: nor does the glory of heaven itself appear more desirable in his eyes, than does a conformity to the Saviours image in righteousness and true holiness. In a peculiar manner, he notices the tempers of his Divine Master; his meekness, his patience, his forbearance, his love to enemies, his compassion even to his very murderers: he sees what a fallen creature he himself is, and he cries mightily to God for grace and strength, that he may be enabled to mortify every feeling that is opposite to love, and to purify himself even as his Lord and Master was pure [Note: 1Jn 3:3.].]
Now as this subject gives us a deep insight into the whole of the Gospel system, I will embrace this opportunity,
1.
Of establishing the principles of those who are in doubt
[The Christian world has been much divided on the subject of faith and works: and we may easily conceive that some, who are well affected towards the Gospel, may feel a doubt, whether in our statements of the truth we do not elevate faith too high, and sink morality below its proper level. But the text, I conceive, will settle this point at once. I grant, that they who require good works in whole or in part to justify us before God, do in appearance shew a high sense of their value: and that they who decry them in this point of view, and declare that such a dependence on them will invalidate the whole Gospel, and sink us into perdition, do in appearance betray an indifference towards them. But I would ask, Does any advocate for the merit of good works ever propose to himself so high a standard as that in my text? and, if any one inculcate the necessity of walking to the very uttermost as Christ walked, do they not account him righteous overmuch? Yes assuredly, they always have a lower standard than that which is proposed to them in the Gospel. On the other hand, they who exalt the Lord Jesus Christ, and live by faith on him, will admit of no rule of conduct which does not embrace the whole law, and lead to a perfect conformity to the Lord Jesus Christ. And hence it is, that the followers of Christ are as much condemned for their unnecessary zeal and strictness, as for the supposed licentiousness of their principles. Here then the point is brought to the very test, which the advocates of human merit profess to approve. Let the two opposite systems be tried by this touchstone; Which requires of its votaries the sublimer and more enlarged morality? and we consent, that this issue, fairly tried, shall determine the point for ever. They who live in any measure of self-righteousness and self-sufficiency, will walk as the world walketh; but they who abide in Christ as their only hope, will with all their might endeavour to walk as Christ walked.]
2.
Of directing the energies of those who have embraced the Gospel
[Be not faint or weary in well-doing: but set the Lord ever before you, and endeavour to resemble him in the whole spirit of his mind, and the whole course of his conduct. Of course, what he spake as the Great Prophet of the Church, or did as the Redeemer of the world, was peculiar to himself, and can be no pattern for us: but in all that he either spake or did as man, we are to follow him without reserve. If we propose to ourselves any lower standard, or except any one of Gods commandments from our rule of duty, we are not Christs disciples. See what is said in our text, He that saith he abideth in him, ought himself also so to walk, even as he walked: and again in the following chapter: Whosoever abideth in him, sinneth not. Whosoever sinneth, hath not seen him, neither known him [Note: 1Jn 3:6. See also 1Jn 2:4.]. Here then you see what all your profession of faith will amount to, if it do not approve itself by its fruits: it will be a self-delusion, and a lie altogether. Come then, beloved, and address yourselves to your high and heavenly work. Ye see your calling: O strive to walk worthy of it! yea, worthy of the Lord, whose you are, and whom you profess to serve. Thus will you vindicate the Gospel from the charges which ignorant and ungodly men bring against it; and will prove to all around you that it is indeed the wisdom of God, and the power of God unto salvation.]
Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)
6 He that saith he abideth in him ought himself also so to walk, even as he walked.
Ver. 6. To walk even as he walked ] This is the same with that Col 2:6 , to walk in Christ; and with that,1Pe 2:211Pe 2:21 , to follow his steps. See Trapp on “ 1Pe 2:21 “
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
6 .] The state of being in Him is carried forward a step further by the expression “abide in Him:” (“Synonyma cum gradatione: Illum nosse: in Illo esse: in Illo manere : cognitio: communio: constantia.” Bengel:) and the way is prepared, by what follows, for the coming exhortation 1Jn 2:7-11 , to walk in love. The man saying that He abideth in Him (God, as above) ought (see reff. Huther well remarks, that the obligation is grounded on the , the profession, being one of consistency with it; not on the , which would imply that which follows, as matter of necessity), even as He (Christ: by (see above) a third person is introduced: not necessarily, see 2Ti 2:26 and note, but apparently by the requirements of this passage, having come down all the way from ch. 1Jn 1:5 as referred to God. I say apparently : because I do not regard it as by any means a settled matter that this does not throughout apply to Christ, and then this will merely refer to a different phase of predication respecting the same person as the designates, as in the examples produced in the note as above) walked (during His life upon earth: see below), himself also thus to walk (not any one particular of Christ’s walk upon earth is here pointed at, but the whole of his life of holiness and purity and love. This latter, as including all the rest, is most in the Apostle’s mind. So in Eph 5:1-2 , where St. Paul exhorts us to be followers of God, he adds, , . Luther simply but appositely remarks, that it is not Christ’s walking on the sea, but His ordinary walk, that we are called on here to imitate).
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
abideth. See p. 1511.
even as. Greek. kathos. The expression “as He”, referring to the Son, Occurs six times in this epistle. See 1Jn 3:2, 1Jn 3:3, 1Jn 3:7, 1Jn 3:23; 1Jn 4:17, and Compare 1Jn 1:7.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
6.] The state of being in Him is carried forward a step further by the expression abide in Him: (Synonyma cum gradatione: Illum nosse: in Illo esse: in Illo manere: cognitio: communio: constantia. Bengel:) and the way is prepared, by what follows, for the coming exhortation 1Jn 2:7-11, to walk in love. The man saying that He abideth in Him (God, as above) ought (see reff. Huther well remarks, that the obligation is grounded on the , the profession, being one of consistency with it; not on the , which would imply that which follows, as matter of necessity), even as He (Christ: by (see above) a third person is introduced: not necessarily, see 2Ti 2:26 and note, but apparently by the requirements of this passage, having come down all the way from ch. 1Jn 1:5 as referred to God. I say apparently: because I do not regard it as by any means a settled matter that this does not throughout apply to Christ, and then this will merely refer to a different phase of predication respecting the same person as the designates, as in the examples produced in the note as above) walked (during His life upon earth: see below), himself also thus to walk (not any one particular of Christs walk upon earth is here pointed at, but the whole of his life of holiness and purity and love. This latter, as including all the rest, is most in the Apostles mind. So in Eph 5:1-2, where St. Paul exhorts us to be followers of God, he adds, , . Luther simply but appositely remarks, that it is not Christs walking on the sea, but His ordinary walk, that we are called on here to imitate).
Fuente: The Greek Testament
1Jn 2:6. , that he abideth) This word is of frequent occurrence in ch. 2, 3 and 4. It implies a condition which is lasting, without intermission and without end.-, he ought) by the force of that Divine example. Thus, we ought, ch. 1Jn 3:16, 1Jn 4:11.- , even as He) He, whom we formerly saw. Thus, as He, etc., ch. 1Jn 3:3; 1Jn 3:5; 1Jn 3:7; 1Jn 3:16, 1Jn 4:17. Believers readily supply the name; since they have a breast filled with the remembrance of the Lord.-, walked) while He was in the world.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
that saith: 1Jo 2:4, 1Jo 1:6
he: 1Jo 2:28, 1Jo 3:6, Joh 15:4-6
to walk: 1Jo 1:7, Psa 85:13, Mat 11:29, Joh 13:15, 1Co 11:1, Eph 5:2, 1Pe 2:21
Reciprocal: Psa 15:2 – He Eze 37:24 – they shall Mat 3:15 – for Rom 6:4 – even Rom 13:13 – us Eph 2:10 – walk Phi 2:5 – General Col 2:6 – walk 1Th 2:12 – walk Tit 2:12 – live 1Jo 3:3 – even 1Jo 3:16 – and we 1Jo 5:20 – and we 2Jo 1:4 – walking
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
1Jn 2:6. To abide in Christ is equivalent to walking with Him, for Christ is an active being and no person can continue with Him and not walk in the same way. “Can two walk together except they be agreed?” (Amo 3:3.)
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Observe here, 1. An high and honorable privilege supposed to be claimed, and that is union with Christ, and abiding in him; he that saith he abideth in him. The abiding in Christ is a great privilege, and the true and real Christian doth truly and really abide in Christ.
Observe, 2. A great and important duty belonging to all those that do abide in Christ, and that is to walk as Christ walked; to set his example daily before them, and to be continually correcting and reforming of their lives by that glorious pattern. Every Christian is bound to an imitation of Christ, under penalty of forfeiting his claim to Christ; for no claim to Christ is or can be valid without a careful imitation of him. The temper of our minds, and the actions of our lives, must be a lively transcript of the mind and life of the holy and innocent Jesus; we must be like him, or we can never love him, nor hope another day to live with him.
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
6. Christ Himself is our only exemplar. Regeneration saves us from diabolical, and sanctification from human leadership, turning us over to God alone for time and eternity.
Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament
Verse 6
To walk; to live and act.
Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament
2:6 {5} He that saith he abideth in him ought himself also so to walk, even as he walked.
(5) He that is one with Christ, must live his life, that is, must walk in his steps.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
Chapter 9
THE INFLUENCE OF THE GREAT LIFE WALK A PERSONAL INFLUENCE
1Jn 2:6
THIS verse is one of those in reading which we may easily fall into the fallacy of mistaking familiarity for knowledge.
Let us bring out its meaning with accuracy.
St. Johns hatred of unreality, of lying in every form, leads him to claim in Christians a perfect correspondence between the outward profession and the inward life, as well as the visible manifestation of it. “He that saith” always marks a danger to those who are outwardly in Christian communion. It is the “take notice” of a hidden falsity. He whose claim, possibly whose vaunt, is that he abideth in Christ, has contracted a moral debt of far reaching significance. St. John seems to pause for a moment. He points to a picture in a page of the scroll which is beside him-the picture of Christ in the Gospel drawn by himself; not a vague magnificence, a mere harmony of colour, but a likeness of absolute historical truth. Every pilgrim of time in the continuous course of his daily walk, outward and inward, has by the possession of that Gospel contracted an obligation to be walking by the one great life walk of the Pilgrim of eternity. The very depth and intensity of feeling half hushes the Apostles voice. Instead of the beloved Name which all who love it will easily supply, St. John uses the reverential He, the pronoun which specially belongs to Christ in the vocabulary of the Epistle. “He that saith he abideth in Him” is bound, even as He once walked, to be ever walking.
I The importance of example in the moral and spiritual life gives emphasis to this canon of St. John.
Such an example as can be sufficient for creatures like ourselves should be at once manifested in concrete form and susceptible of ideal application.
This was felt by a great, but unhappily antichristian, thinker, the exponent of a severe and lofty morality. Mr. Mill fully confesses that there may be an elevating and an ennobling influence in a Divine ideal; and thus justifies the apparently startling precept-“be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in Heaven is perfect.” But he considered that some more human model was necessary for the moral striver. He recommends novel readers, when they are charmed or strengthened by some conception of pure manhood or womanhood, to carry that conception with them into their own lives. He would have them ask themselves in difficult positions, how that strong and lofty man, that tender and unselfish woman, would have behaved in similar circumstances, and so bear about with them a standard of duty at once compendious and affecting. But to this there is one fatal objection-that such an elaborate process of make believe is practically impossible. A fantastic morality, if it were possible at all, must be a feeble morality. Surely an authentic example will be greatly more valuable.
But example, however precious, is made indefinitely more powerful when it is living example, example crowned by personal influence.
So far as the stain of a guilty past can be removed from those who have contracted it, they are improvable and capable of restoration, chiefly, perhaps almost exclusively, by personal influence in some form. When a process of deterioration and decay has set in in any human soul, the germ of a more wholesome growth is introduced in nearly every case, by the transfusion and transplantation of healthier life. We test the soundness or the putrefaction of a soul by its capacity of receiving and assimilating this germ of restoration. A parent is in doubt whether is susceptible of renovation, whether the son has not become wholly evil. He tries to bring the young man under the personal influence of a friend of noble and sympathetic character. Has his son any capacity left for being touched by such a character; of admiring its strength on one side, its softness on another? When he is in contact with it, when he perceives how pure, how self-sacrificing, how true and straight it is, is there a glow in his face, a trembling of his voice, a moisture in his eye, a wholesome self-humiliation? Or does he repel all this with a sneer and a bitter gibe? Has he that evil attitude which is possessed only by the most deeply corrupt-“they blaspheme, rail at glories.” The Chaplain of a penitentiary records that among the most degraded of its inmates was one miserable creature. The Matron met her with firmness, but with a good will which no hardness could break down, no insolence overcome. One evening after prayers the Chaplain observed this poor outcast stealthily kissing the shadow of the Matron thrown by her candle upon the wall. He saw that the diseased nature was beginning to be capable of assimilating new life, that the victory of wholesome personal influence had begun. He found reason for concluding that his judgment was well founded.
The law of restoration by living example through personal influence pervades the whole of our human relations under Gods natural and moral government as truly as the principle of mediation. This law also pervades the system of restoration revealed to us by Christianity. It is one of the chief results of the Incarnation itself. It begins to act upon us first, when the Gospels become something more to us than a mere history, when we realise in some degree how He walked. But it is not complete until we know that all this is not merely of the past, but of the present; that He is not dead, but living; that we may therefore use that little word “is” about Christ in the lofty sense of St. John-“even as He is pure; in Him is no sin”; “even as He is righteous; He is the propitiation for our sins.” If this is true, as it undoubtedly is, of all good human influence personal and living, is it not true of the Personal and living Christ in an infinitely higher degree? If the shadow of Peter overshadowing the sick had some strange efficacy; if handkerchiefs or aprons from the body of Paul wrought upon the sick and possessed; what may be the spiritual result of contact with Christ Himself? Of one of those men specially gifted to raise struggling natures and of others like him, a true poet lately taken from us has sung in one of his most glorious strains. Matthew Arnold likens mankind to a host inexorably bound by divine appointment to march over mountain and desert to the city of God. But they become entangled in the wilderness through which they march, split into mutinous factions, and are in danger of “battering on the rocks” forever in vain, of dying one by one in the waste. Then comes the poets appeal to the “Servants of God”:-
“Then in the hour of need
Of your fainting, dispirited race,
Ye like angels appear!
Languor is not in your heart,
Weakness is not in your word,
Weariness not on your brow.
Eyes rekindling, and prayers
Follow your steps as ye go.
Ye fill up the gaps in our file,
Strengthen the wavering line,
Stablish, continue our march-
On, to the bound of the waste-
On to the City of God.”
If all this be true of the personal influence of good and strong men-true in proportion to their goodness and strength-it must be true of the influence of the Strongest and Best with Whom we are brought into personal relation by prayer and sacraments, and by meditation upon the sacred record which tells us what His one life walk was. Strength is not wanting upon His part, for He is able to save to the uttermost. Pity is not wanting; for to use touching words (attributed to St. Paul in a very ancient apocryphal document), “He alone sympathised with a world that has lost its way.”
Let it not be forgotten that in that of which St. John speaks lies the true answer to an objection, formulated by the great antichristian writer above quoted, and constantly repeated by others. “The ideal of Christian morality,” says Mr. Mill, “is negative rather than positive; passive rather than active; innocence rather than nobleness; abstinence from evil, rather” than energetic pursuit of good; in its precepts (as has been well said), thou shalt not predominates unduly over thou shalt. The answer is this.
(1) A true religious system must have a distinct moral code. If not, it would be justly condemned for “expressing itself” (in the words of Mr. Mills own accusation against Christianity elsewhere) “in language most general, and possessing rather the impressiveness of poetry or eloquence than the precision of legislation.” But the necessary formula of precise legislation is, “thou shalt not”; and without this it cannot be precise.
(2) But further. To say that Christian legislation is negative, a mere string of “thou shalt nots,” is just such a superficial accusation as might be expected from a man who should enter a church upon some rare occasion, and happen to listen to the Ten Commandments, but fall asleep before he could hear the Epistle and Gospel. The philosopher of duty, Kant, has told us that the peculiarity of a moral principle, of any proposition which states what duty is, is to convey the meaning of an imperative through the form of an indicative. In his own expressive, if pedantic, language-“its categorical form involves an epitactic meaning.” St. John asserts that the Christian “ought to walk even as Christ walked.” To everyone who receives it, that proposition is therefore precisely equivalent to a command -” walk as Christ walked.” Is it a negative, passive morality, a mere system of “thou shalt not,” which contains such a precept as that? Does not the Christian religion in virtue of this alone enforce a great “thou shalt”; which every man who brings himself within its range will find rising with him in the morning, following him like his shadow all day long, and lying down with him when he goes to rest?
II It should be clearly understood that in the words “even as He walked,” the Gospel of St. John is both referred to and attested.
For surely, to point with any degree of moral seriousness to an example, is to presuppose some clear knowledge and definite record of it. No example can be beautiful or instructive when its shape is lost in darkness. It has indeed been said by a deeply religious writer, “that the likeness of the Christian to Christ is to His character, not to the particular form in which it was historically manifested.” And this, of course, is in one sense a truism. But how else except by this historical manifestation can we know the character of Christ in any true sense of the word knowledge? For those who are familiar with the fourth Gospel, the term “walk” was tenderly significant. For if it was used with a reminiscence of the Old Testament and of the language of our Lord, to denote the whole continuous activity of the life of any man inward and outward, there was another signification which became entwined with it. St. John had used the word historically in his Gospel, not without allusion to the Saviours homelessness on earth, to His itinerant life of beneficence and of teaching. Those who first received this Epistle with deepest reverence as the utterance of the Apostle whom they loved, when they came to the precept-“walk even as He walked”-would ask themselves how did He walk? What do we know of the great rule of life thus proposed to us? The Gospel which accompanied this letter, and with which it was in some way closely connected, was a sufficient and definite answer.
III The character of Christ in his Gospel is thus, according to St. John, the loftiest ideal of purity, peace, self-sacrifice, unbroken communion with God; the inexhaustible fountain of regulated thoughts, high aims, holy action, constant prayer. We may advert to one aspect of this perfection as delineated in the fourth Gospel- our Lords way of doing small things, or at least things which in human estimation appear to be small.
The fourth chapter of that Gospel contains a marvellous record of word and work. Let us trace that record back to its beginning. There are seeds of spiritual life scattered in many hearts which were destined to yield a rich harvest in due time; there is the account of one sensuous nature, quickened and spiritualised; there are promises which have been for successive centuries as a river of God to weary natures. All these results issue from three words spoken by a tired traveller, sitting naturally over a well-“give me to drink.”
We take another instance. There is one passage in St. Johns Gospel which divides with the procemium of his Epistle the glory of being the loftiest, the most prolonged, the most sustained, in the Apostles writings.
It is the prelude of a work which might have seemed to be of little moment. Yet all the height of a great ideal is over it, like the vault of heaven; all the power of a Divine purpose is under it, like the strength of the great deep; all the consciousness of His death, of His ascension, of His coming dominion, of His Divine origin, of His session at Gods right hand-all the hoarded love in His heart for His own which were in the world-passes by some mysterious transference into that little incident of tenderness and of humiliation. He sets an everlasting mark upon it, not by a basin of gold crusted with gems, nor by mixing precious scents with the water which He poured out, nor by using linen of the finest tissue, but by the absolute perfection of love and dutiful humility in the spirit and in every detail of the whole action. It is one more of those little chinks through which the whole sunshine of heaven streams in upon those who have eyes to see. {Joh 13:1-6}
The underlying secret of this feature of our Lords character is told by Himself. “My meat is to be ever doing the will of Him that sent Me, and so, when the times come, by one great decisive act to finish His work.” All along the course of that life walk there were smaller preludes to the great act which won our redemption- multitudinous daily little perfect epitomes of love and sacrifice, without which the crowning sacrifice would not have been what it was. The plan of our life must, of course, be constructed on a scale as different as the human from the Divine. Yet there is a true sense in which this lesson of the great life may be applied to us. The apparently small things of life must not be despised or neglected on account of their smallness, by those who would follow the precept of St. John. Patience and diligence in petty trades, in services called menial, in waiting on the sick and old, in a hundred such works, all come within the sweep of this net, with its lines that look as thin as cobwebs, and which yet for Christian hearts are stronger than fibres of steel-“walk even as He walked.” This, too, is our only security. A French poet has told a beautiful tale. Near a river which runs between French and German territory, a blacksmith was at work one snowy night near Christmas time. He was tired out, standing by his forge, and wistfully looking towards his little home, lighted up a short quarter of a mile away, and wife and children waiting for their festal supper, when he should return. It came to the last piece of his work, a rivet which it was difficult to finish properly; for it was of peculiar shape, intended by the contractor who employed him to pin the metal work of a bridge which he was constructing over the river. The smith was sorely tempted to fail in giving honest work, to hurry over a job which seemed at once so troublesome and so trifling. But some good angel whispered to the man that he should do his best. He turned to the forge with a sigh, and never rested until the work was as complete as his skill could make it. The poet carries us on for a year or two. War breaks out. A squadron of the blacksmiths countrymen is driven over the bridge in headlong flight. Men, horses, guns, try its solidity. For a moment or two the whole weight of the mass really hangs upon the one rivet. There are times in life when the whole weight of the soul also hangs upon a rivet; the rivet of sobriety, of purity, of honesty, of command of temper. Possibly we have devoted little or no honest work to it in the years when we should have perfected the work; and so, in the day of trial, the rivet snaps, and we are lost.
There is one word of encouragement which should be finally spoken for the sake of one class of Gods servants.
Some are sick, weary, broken, paralysed, it may be slowly dying. What-they sometimes think-have we to do with this precept? Others who have hope, elasticity, capacity of service, may walk as He walked; but we can scarcely do so. Such persons should remember what walking in the Christian sense is all lifes activity inward and outward. Let them think of Christ upon His cross. He was fixed to it, nailed hand and foot. Nailed; yet never-not when He trod upon the waves, not when He moved upward through the air to His throne-never did He walk more truly, because He walked in the way of perfect love. It is just whilst looking at the moveless form upon the tree that we may hear most touchingly the great “thou shalt”-thou shalt walk even as He walked.
IV As there is a literal, so there is a mystical walking as Christ walked. This is an idea which deeply pervades St. Pauls writings. Is it His birth? We are born again. Is it His life? We walk with Him in newness of life. Is it His death? We are crucified with Him. Is it His burial? We are buried with Him. Is it His resurrection? We are risen again with Him. Is it His ascension-His very session at Gods right hand? “He hath raised us up and made us sit together with Him in heavenly places.” They know nothing of St. Pauls mind who know nothing of this image of a soul seen in the very dust of death, loved, pardoned, quickened, elevated, crowned, throned. It was this conception at work from the beginning in the general consciousness of Christians which moulded round itself the order of the Christian year.
It will illustrate this idea for us if we think of the difference between the outside and the inside of a church.
Outside on some high spire we see the light just lingering far up, while the shadows are coldly gathering in the streets below; and we know that it is winter. Again the evening falls warm and golden on the churchyard, and we recognise the touch of summer. But inside it is always Gods weather; it is Christ all the year long. Now the Babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, or circumcised with the knife of the law, manifested to the Gentiles, or manifesting Himself with a glory that breaks through the veil; now the Man tempted in the wilderness; now the victim dying on the cross; now the Victor risen, ascended, sending the Holy Spirit; now for twenty-five Sundays worshipped as the Everlasting Word with the Father and the Holy Ghost. In this mystical following of Christ also, the one perpetual lesson is -“he that saith he abideth in Him, ought himself also so to walk even as He walked.”