Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 John 2:9
He that saith he is in the light, and hateth his brother, is in darkness even until now.
9. For the fifth time the Apostle indicates a possible inconsistency of a very gross kind between profession and conduct ( 1Jn 1:6 ; 1Jn 1:8; 1Jn 1:10, 1Jn 2:4). We shall have a sixth in 1Jn 4:20. In most of these passages he is aiming at some of the Gnostic teaching already prevalent. And this introduces a fresh pair of contrasts. We have had light and darkness, truth and falsehood; we now have love and hate.
his brother ] Does this mean ‘his fellow-Christian’ or ‘his fellow-man’, whether Christian or not? The common meaning in N.T. is the former; and though there are passages where ‘brother’ seems to have the wider signification, e.g. Mat 5:22; Luk 6:41; Jas 4:11, yet even here the spiritual bond of brotherhood is perhaps in the background. In S. John’s writings, where it does not mean actual relationship, it seems generally if not universally to mean ‘Christians’: not that other members of the human race are excluded, but they are not under consideration. Just as in the allegories of the Fold and of the Good Shepherd, nothing is said about goats, and in that of the Vine nothing is said about the branches of other trees; so here in the great family of the Father nothing is said about those who do not know Him. They are not shut out, but they are not definitely included. In this Epistle this passage, 1Jn 3:10; 1Jn 3:14-17 and 1Jn 4:20-21, are somewhat open to doubt: but 1Jn 5:1-2 seems very distinctly in favour of the more limited meaning; and in 1Jn 5:16 the sinning ‘brother’ is certainly a fellow-Christian. In 2 John the word does not occur: 3Jn 1:3 ; 3Jn 1:5; 3Jn 1:10 confirm the view here taken. In the Gospel the word is generally used of actual relationship: but in the two passages where it is used otherwise it means Christians: in Joh 20:17, Christ speaks of the disciples as ‘My brethren’, and in Joh 21:23, Christians are called ‘the brethren’. In the Apocalypse, omitting Rev 22:9 as doubtful, all the passages where the word occurs require the meaning ‘Christian’ (1Jn 1:9, Joh 6:11, Joh 12:10, Joh 19:10). Note that throughout this Epistle the singular is used; ‘his brother ’, not ‘his brethren ’.
is in darkness even until now ] Or, as in 1Jn 1:6, in order to bring out the full contrast with the light, is in the darkness. ‘Even until now’, i.e. in spite of the light which ‘is already shining’, and of which he has so little real experience that he believes light and hatred to be compatible. Years before this S. Paul had declared (1Co 13:2), ‘If I have the gift of prophecy, and know all mysteries and all knowledge, but have not love, I am nothing.’ The light in a man is darkness until it is warmed by love. The convert from heathendom who professes Christianity and hates his brother, says S. Augustine, is in darkness even until now. “There is no need to expound; but to rejoice if it be not so, to bewail, if it be.” The word for ‘now’ ( ) is specially frequent in S. John’s Gospel: it indicates the present moment not absolutely, but in relation to the past or the future. The peculiar combination, ‘even until now’ ( ) occurs Joh 2:10; Joh 5:17; Joh 16:24; Mat 11:12 ; 1Co 4:13; 1Co 8:7; 1Co 15:6, a fact much obscured in A.V. by the variety of renderings; ‘until now’, ‘hitherto’, ‘unto this day’, ‘unto this hour’, ‘unto this present’.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
9 11. The form of these three verses is similar to that of 1Jn 2:3-5, and still more so to 1Jn 1:8-10. In each of these three triplets a case is placed between two statements of the opposite to it; confession of sin, obedience, and love, between two statements of denial of sin, disobedience, and hate. But in none of the triplets do we go from one opposite to the other and back again: in each case the side from which we start is restated in such a way as to constitute a distinct advance upon the original position. There is no weak tautology or barren see-saw. The emphasis grows and is marked by the increase in the predicates. In 1Jn 2:9 we have one; ‘is in darkness even until now’; in 1Jn 2:10, two; ‘abideth in the light, and there is none, &c.’; in 1Jn 2:11, three; ‘is in the darkness, and walketh &c., and knoweth not &c.’.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
He that saith he is in the light – That he has true religion, or is a Christian. See 1Jo 1:7.
And hateth his brother – The word brother seems here to refer to those who professed the same religion. The word is indeed sometimes used in a larger sense, but the reference here appears to be to that which is properly brotherly love among Christians. Compare Lucke, in loc.
Is in darkness even until now – That is, he cannot have true religion unless he has love to the brethren. The command to love one another was one of the most solemn and earnest which Christ ever enjoined, Joh 15:17; he made it the special badge of discipleship, or that by which his followers were to be everywhere known, Joh 13:35; and it is, therefore, impossible to have any true religion without love to those who are sincerely and truly his followers. If a man has not that, he is in deep darkness, whatever else he may have, on the whole subject of religion. Compare the notes at 1Th 4:9.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
1Jn 2:9-11
He that hateth his brother is in darkness
Brotherly love a test and means of being and abiding with guileless spirit in the light instead of walking in darkness
I.
Brotherly love consists in this–that they in whom, as in Christ, this thing is true, that the darkness is passing and the true light is shining, recognise one another as, in that character and on that account, brethren. For, first, in Christ, our position with reference to that darkness is changed from what it naturally is. It is reversed. The terrible flood is not now carrying us away; we stem it holding Him–He holding us. We see it passing. Now all is changed. By grace in Christ I am in a new way. As I feebly open my heavy eyes in the upper atmosphere I am now beginning to breathe, what bright warm beam is that which lightens up the face of Him in whose arms I am, and lightens up my heart as I look and gaze on Him and cling and grow to Him? It is the Father loving me as He loveth Him. It is the darkness passing and the true light now shining. Then, as the first confused and rapturous joy of my own narrow escape becomes collected and calm, I look around. And I see Him–for He multiplies Himself and is everywhere–I see Him doing the same kind office to one, and another, and another still, that He is doing to me, I see Him embracing them because He loved them and gave Himself for them. Shall I not hail them as my brethren? Can I hate, or refuse to love, one who is my brother on such a footing as that?
II. Hence it is that the existence of this brotherly love is a fitting test of our being in the light. At all events, the absence of it is conclusive proof that we are not. Light is in itself–in its very nature and bare shining–a great extinguisher of hatred, especially of hatred among those who should be brethren. It is in the darkness that mistakes occur and misunderstandings arise. It is in the darkness that injuries are brooded over and angry passions nursed. If you, brother, and I, are at variance, it is almost certain to be because there is some darkness about us that hinders us from seeing one another clearly. Hence we imagine evil of one another and impute evil to one another. Let in the light. Let us see one another clearly. Differences between us may still remain; our views of many things may be wide as the poles asunder. But we see that we are men of like passions and like affections with one another. The light shows us that we are true brethren in spite of all.
III. The exercise of brotherly love is fitted to be the means of our continuing in the light, So as to avoid the risk of falling (1Jn 2:10). Two benefits are here. First, positively, by means of brotherly love we abide in the light. The law of action and reaction is here very noticeable. Being in the light begets brotherly love, and brotherly love secures abiding in the light. For this brotherly love is simply love to the true light, as I see it shining in my brother as it shines in Christ. And such love to the true light, wherever and in whomsoever it is seen shining as it shines in Christ, must needs cause me to grow up more and more into the true light myself; to grow up into Christ and God in Christ. Secondly, there is none occasion of stumbling in Him. This is a negative advantage; but it is great. Saved yourselves by grace, gratuitous and rich and full; loved with an everlasting love; grasped in the arms, in the bosom, of Him in whom and in you, as now one, the darkness is passing and the true light is now shining–your spirit is free, your heart enlarged. Being loved, you love. The scales of selfishness fall from off your eyes. Christ sends you to His brethren: Go tell My brethren. And as you go to them with Christs message and on Christs errand, and make them more and more your brethren as they are His, you clearly see your way. He makes it clear. And you walk at liberty when you have respect to all His commandments, loving your brother, and so abiding in the light. (R. S. Candlish, D. D.)
He that loveth his brother abideth in the light—
Moral darkness
Note the solemn and picturesque eloquence of the accessional parallelism in this verse. The inner condition of him who hates his brother–is in darkness; the outward life–walketh in darkness (Psa 82:5; Ecc 2:14). He has lost his point of orientation–he knoweth not whither he goeth, to what unsurmised guilt and punishment. Something follows, worse than darkness above–the darkness has not only blinded him, but blinded his very eyes once for all. He has lost the very faculty of sight! Could the apostle have thought of creatures who, in dark caverns, not only lose the faculty of sight, but have the visive organs atrophied? Tennyson has presentedthe same image, applying it, however, not to sin, but to sorrow–
But the night has crept into my heart,
And begun to darken my eyes.
(Abp. Wm. Alexander.)
Hatred causes stumbling
He who hates his brother stumbles against himself and everything within and without; he who loves has an unimpeded path. (A. J. Bechtel.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 9. He that saith he is in the light] He that professes to be a convert to Christianity, even in the lowest degree; and hateth his brother-not only does not love him, but wills and does him evil, as the Jews did the Gentiles; is in darkness-has received no saving knowledge of the truth; and, whatever he may pretend, is in heathen ignorance, or even worse than heathen ignorance, to the present time, notwithstanding the clear shining of the light of the Gospel.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
To be in the light, signifies to be under the transforming, governing power of it, as the phrases import of being in the flesh, and in the Spirit, Rom 8:9, being expounded by walking after the flesh, and after the Spirit, 1Jo 2:1. He therefore that
hateth his brother, a thing so contrary to the design of the gospel, whatever he pretends,
is still in darkness, under the power of the unregenerate principle of impure and malignant darkness: the gospel hath done him no good, is to him but an impotent and ineffectual light, in the midst whereof, by stiff winking, and an obstinate resistance, an exclusion of that pure and holy light, he creates to himself a dark and a hellish night.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
9-11. There is no mean betweenlight and darkness, love and hatred, life and death,God and the world: wherever spiritual life is,however weak, there darkness and death no longer reign,and love supplants hatred; and Lu9:50 holds good: wherever life is not, there death,darkness, the flesh, the world, and hatred, howeverglossed over and hidden from man’s observation, prevail; and Lu11:23 holds good. “Where love is not, there hatred is; forthe heart cannot remain a void” [BENGEL].
in the lightas hisproper element.
his brotherhisneighbor, and especially those of the Christian brotherhood. The verytitle “brother” is a reason why love should be exercised.
even untilnownotwithstanding that “the true light already has begunto shine” (1Jo 2:8).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
He that saith he is in the light,…. Is in Christ the light, or has the true knowledge of the light of the Gospel, or is illuminated by the Spirit of God; for persons may profess to be enlightened ones, and not be so: wherefore the apostle does not say, he that is in the light, but he that says he is,
and hateth his brother; who is so either by creation, as all men are brethren, having one Father, that has made them, and brought them up; or by regeneration, being born of God the Father, and in the same family and household of faith; and so regards such who are in a spiritual relation, whom to hate internally, or not to love, is inconsistent with being in the light, or having faith, which is always naturally and necessarily accompanied with the heat of love; for as light and heat, so faith and love go together: wherefore, let a man’s profession of light be what it will, if love to his brother is wanting, he
is in darkness even until now; he is in a state of nature and unregeneracy, which is a state of darkness and ignorance; he is under the power of darkness, and in the kingdom of Satan; who is the ruler of the darkness of this world; he ever was so from his birth; he never was called nor delivered out of it, but is still in it to this moment, and so remains. This seems to be very much levelled against the Jews, who make hatred of the brother in some cases lawful: for they say d,
“if one man observes sin in another, and reproves him for it, and he does not receive his reproof, , “it is lawful to hate him”;”
[See comments on Mt 5:43].
d Moses Kotsensis Mitzvot Tora, pr. neg. 5.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
And hateth his brother ( ). Sharp contrast between the love just described and hate. The only way to walk in the light (1:7) is to have fellowship with God who is light (1John 1:3; 1John 1:5). So the claim to be in the light is nullified by hating a brother.
Even until now ( ). Up till this moment. In spite of the increasing light and his own boast he is in the dark.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Hateth [] . The sharp issue is maintained here as in Christ ‘s words, “He that is not with me is against me” (Luk 11:23). Men fall into two classes, those who are in fellowship with God, and therefore walk in light and love, and those who are not in fellowship with God, and therefore walk in darkness and hatred. “A direct opposition,” says Bengel; where love is not, there is hatred. “The heart is not empty.” See Joh 3:20; Joh 7:7; Joh 14:18 sqq.; Joh 17:14. The word hate is opposed both to the love of natural affection [] , and to the more discriminating sentiment – love founded on a just estimate [] . For the former see Joh 12:25; Joh 14:18, 19; compare Luk 14:26. For the latter, 1Jo 3:14, 15; 1Jo 4:20, Mt 5:43; Mt 6:24; Eph 5:28, 29. “In the former case, hatred, which may become a moral duty, involves the subjection of an instinct. In the latter case it expresses a general determination of character” (Westcott).
His brother [ ] . His fellow – Christian. The singular, brother, is characteristic of this Epistle. See vv. 10, 11; 1Joh 3:10, 15, 17; Joh 4:20, 21; Joh 5:16. Christians are called in the New Testament, Christians (Act 11:26; Act 26:28; 1Pe 4:16), mainly by those outside of the Christian circle. Disciples, applied to all followers of Christ (Joh 2:11; Joh 6:61) and strictly to the twelve (Joh 13:5 sqq.). In Act 19:1, to those who had received only John’s baptism. Not found in John’s Epistles nor in Revelation. Brethren. The first title given to the body of believers after the Ascension (Act 1:15, where the true reading is aJudelfwn brethren, for maqhtwn disciples). See Act 9:30; Act 10:23; Act 11:29; 1Th 4:10; 1Th 5:26; 1Jo 3:14; 3Jo 1:5, 10; Joh 21:23. Peter has hJ aJudelfothv the brotherhood (1Pe 2:17; 1Pe 5:9). The believers. Under three forms : The believers (oiJ pistoi; Act 10:45; 1Ti 4:12); they that believe (oiJ pisteuontev; 1Pe 2:7; 1Th 1:7; Eph 1:19); they that believed (oiJ pisteusantev; Act 2:44; Act 4:32; Heb 4:3). The saints [ ] ; characteristic of Paul and Revelation. Four times in the Act 13:32, 41; Act 26:10), and once in Jude 1:3. Also Heb 6:10; Heb 13:24. In Paul, 1Co 6:1; 1Co 14:33; Eph 1:1, 15, etc. In Rev 5:8; Rev 8:3, 4; Rev 11:18, etc.
Until now [ ] . Though the light has been increasing, and though he may claim that he has been in the light from the first. The phrase occurs in Joh 2:10; Joh 5:17; Joh 26:24; and is used by Paul, 1Co 4:13; 1Co 8:7; 1Co 15:6.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “He that saith he is in the light. ‘ “ho legon” (the one claiming) in the (Greek photi) light to be or exist.
2) “And hateth his brother,” – while or even the brother of him (Greek mison) progressively hating or despising or holding in disdain. 1Jn 3:14-15.
3) “Is in darkness”. (lives or exists) in a state or condition of darkness, judgement, and separation from the will and way of God. For God is light and in Him is or exists no darkness at all. 1Jn 1:5.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
9 He that saith he is in the light He pursues the same metaphor. He said that love is the only true rule according to which our life is to be formed; he said that this rule or law is presented to us in the Gospel; he said, lastly, that it is there as the meridian light, which ought to be continually looked on. Now, on the other hand, he concludes that all are blind and walk in darkness who are strangers to love. But that he mentioned before the love of God and now the love of the brethren, involves no more contrariety than there is between the effect and its cause. Besides, these are so connected together that they cannot be separated.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(6) Here (1Jn. 2:9-11) is the chief way in which the old commandment, the new commandment, the word from the beginning, the walk in light would be manifested: brotherly love towards those with whom we have fellowship in Jesus Christ, Gods Son. And as He, by being the propitiation for the sins of the whole world, had declared the universality of Gods family and kingdom, so the sympathy of believers would extend in different degrees as far as the whole human race; to those first who were conscious of the same hopes as themselves; to those next who might be brought to share them; to those, perhaps, in a less degree, who in every nation feared God and worked righteousness without knowing the Saviour personally; and so on, finally, to all who did not wilfully excommunicate themselves. But the brotherly love would be chiefly amongst Christian friends, else it would be diffused into nothingness.
(9) He that saith . . .The whole history of religious rancour has been a deplorable illustration of these words. Controversy for principles honestly and reasonably held is one thing: prejudice, spite, private censures and condemnations, harsh words, suspicions, jealousies, misunderstandings and misrepresentations are the chief props of the kingdom of darkness among Christian churches and nations. (Comp. Joh. 13:34; Joh. 15:12; 1Co. 13:2; 1Pe. 1:22; 2Pe. 1:7-9.)
Hateth means not merely the absence of love, but the presence, in ever so small a degree, of dislike or any of the feelings already described, or those kindred to them.
(10) He that loveth.From the associations connected with love in poetry and romance this saying sounds strange. But all such love is tinged with passion, and the desire of satisfying some personal lack; this is the pure disinterested seeking for anothers welfare, of which Christ was the great example. It is that which the modern scientific non-Christian world is trying to make its religion; but without the Christian motive, and cultivated for its own sake instead of by the working of the Spirit of God, it seems artificial and powerless.
Occasion of stumbling.Stumbling – blok. (Comp. Isa. 8:14; Isa. 28:16; Psa. 119:165; Joh. 11:9-10; Rom. 9:33; Rom. 14:13; 1Co. 1:23; 1Pe. 2:7.) When love such as Christs is the ruling principle of life, then the stumbling-blocks of human nature are removedsuch as impurity, pride, selfishness, anger, envy, suspicion, unsympathetic coldness, censoriousness.
(11) But he that hateth.1Jn. 2:10 was an antithesis to 1Jn. 2:9; 1Jn. 2:11 is, after St. Johns manner, an antithesis again to 1Jn. 2:10, putting the matter of 1Jn. 2:9 more strongly and fully, and forcibly concluding the section which describes the walk in the light.
Walketh in darkness.This describes the acts of the man whose selfishness or other sins interfere with his love. Such are all insisting upon class distinctions; all ambitions, political, social, or personal; everything that savours of shrinking from in honour preferring one another.
Knoweth not whither he goeth.This refers to the occasion of stumbling in 1Jn. 2:10. He is sure to stumble; is like a blind man groping his way among pitfalls; has all the snares of human nature within him. (Comp. Isa. 6:9 et seq.; Mat. 13:14 et seq.; Joh. 12:40; Act. 28:26; 2Co. 4:4.)
Hath blinded.Just as it is we ourselves who make the gate strait and the way narrow, so it is our own fault if the darkness settles down on our eyes.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
9. The 1Jn 2:9-11 are a resumption of the thread of thought from 1Jn 2:6, after the parenthetic 7, 8.
In the light Namely, the true light of the last verse, Jesus the propitiator. It is under the imagery of light and darkness, now, (in 9-11,) that the antithesis between the Christian and the errorist is presented. The light is the emblem of truth and purity blended in one; the darkness is the unity of error and sin.
Hateth his brother His brother, in the various degrees in which that title can be applied to his fellow-man. Love of various degrees and kinds is due to the brother in each sense, as fellow-believer, as child of the same human parent, as child of the same all-Father. As John is expounding the fellowship of the believer with Christ and God, it is in the first sense that the word brother is here primarily used.
In darkness Destitute of the divine light and love. He is spiritually dark and cold.
Until now How much soever he may have professed to be in the light.
10, 11, restate strongly the antithesis between fraternal love and hatred, presenting it as the prominent test of our moral condition.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
1Jn 2:9-11 . Further definition of the life of light as life in love. 1Jn 2:9 . ] the same form as in 1Jn 2:4 , to which the structure of the whole verse is very similar. ] stands in close relation to what immediately precedes; although he alone is in the light who lives in fellowship with Christ, and belongs to the church of Christ, yet describes neither Christ Himself (Spener, etc.) nor “the church, as the sphere within which the light has operated as illuminating power” (Ebrard). Chap. 1Jn 1:6-7 may be compared.
In contrast with teal is 1Jn 2:10 , . , in which the apostle states the substance of the after the example of Christ. As and , so . . and . . exclude each other; they are tendencies diametrically opposed to one another; human action belongs either to the one or to the other; that which does not belong to the sphere of the one falls into that of the other; Bengel: ubi non est amor, odium est: cor non est vacuum. Here also John speaks absolutely, without taking into consideration the imperfect state of the Christian, as is seen in the hesitations between love and hatred.
Grotius interprets: sive Judaeum, sive aliegenam; fratres omnes in Adamo sumus; similarly Calov, J. Lange, etc.; by far the greatest number of commentators understand thereby fellow-Christians. Apart from its exact meaning and the wider meaning = brethren of the same nation (Act 23:1 ; Heb 7:5 ), is used in the N. T. generally, in Acts and in the Pauline Epistles always, to denote Christians; but in many passages it is also = or ; thus in Mat 5:22 ff; Mat 7:3 ff; Mat 18:35 ; Luk 6:41 ff.; Jas 4:11-12 (in Mat 5:47 it describes our friendly neighbour). In the Gospel of John it is only used in the sense of relationship, except in chap. Joh 20:17 , where Christ calls His “ ,” and in Joh 21:23 , where . is a name of Christians. If, therefore, according to the usus loquendi of the N. T., may certainly be = , yet in the Epistles of John, according to chap. 1Jn 3:11 (comp. Gospel of Joh 13:34 ; Joh 15:12 ; besides, especially with chap. 1Jn 3:16 , comp. Gospel of Joh 15:13 ; there: ; here: ), and according to chap. 1Jn 5:1 (where the . is specifically called a ), we must understand by it the Christian brother; so that John, therefore, is speaking, not of the general love towards men, but of the special relationship of Christians to one another; comp. the distinction in 2Pe 1:7 ; Gal 6:10 .
] “until now,” refers back to , 1Jn 2:9 ; the meaning is: although the darkness is already shining, such an one is nevertheless still (adhuc) in darkness; on this peculiarly N. T. expression, see Winer, p. 418, VII. p. 439; A. Buttmann, p. 275; there is no reason for supplying “even if he were a long time a Christian” (Ewald). “With the . . is contrasted, 1Jn 2:10 : ; see on this 1Jn 2:6 . [117] That the “exercise of brotherly love is itself a means of strengthening the new life” (Ebrard), is not contained in the idea . Even if the idea of 1Jn 2:10 in relation to that of the 9th verse is brought out more distinctly by , this is much more done by the words: . appears in the N. T. only in the ethical signification = “offence,” i.e. that which entices and tempts to sin; in the case of , the preposition is generally either left unnoticed by the commentators (Grotius says, appealing to Psalms 119 : est metonymia et abundat. Sensus: ille non impingit) or changed in meaning; de Wette: “ in his case (for him) there is no stumbling; comp. Joh 11:9 ff.;” similarly Baumgarten-Crusius, Neander, etc.; Lcke even says: “ can here only signify the outer circle of life,” because “the for the Christian lie in the world, and not in him;” with him Sander agrees. For such changes there is no ground, since in the usage of the word the figure (the snare, or rather the wood that falls in the snare) has quite given place to the thing, and it is therefore unnecessary to say, with Dsterdieck, that “in the expression the thing itself penetrates into the otherwise figurative form of speech;” the offence may be outside a man, but it may be in him also; comp. Mat 5:29-30 . The preposition is here to be retained in its proper meaning (Dsterdieck, Ewald, Braune). The sense is: In him who loves his brother and thus remains in the light, there is nothing which entices him to sin. Some commentators refer to the temptation of others to sinning; so Vatablus: nemini offendiculo est; Johannsen: “he gives no offence;” Ebrard: “there is nothing in them by which they would give offence to the brethren,” etc.; but in the context there is no reference to the influence which the Christian exercises upon others, and if John had had this relationship in his mind, he would certainly have expressed it; [118] this is decisive also against Braune, who would retain both references. Paulus quite unwarrantably refers to : “in that light nothing is a stumbling-block.”
The beginning of the 11th verse repeats in a form antithetical to 1Jn 2:10 that which was said in 1Jn 2:9 ; but with further continuation of the .
The first subordinate clause runs: . The difference of the two clauses does not consist in this, that the representation passes over from the less figurative ( ) to the more figurative ( ) (Lcke); for, on the one hand, is so often used of the ethical relationship of man, that it is scarcely any longer found as a figurative expression; and, on the other hand, the connection by shows that there is a difference of idea between the two expressions; this has been correctly thus described by Grotius: priori membro affectus (or better: habitus, Sander), altero actus denotatur (similarly de Wette, Baumgarten-Crusius, Braune). Both: the being (the condition) and the doing (the result) of the unloving one belong to darkness; comp. Gal 5:25 . The second subordinate clause: , is closely connected with ; , properly a particle of rest, is in the N. T. frequently connected with verbs of motion; comp. Joh 7:35 ; Joh 20:2 ; Joh 20:13 ; Heb 11:8 ; in the Gospel of John especially, as here, with ; see Joh 3:8 ; Joh 8:14 , etc.; in Joh 12:35 it runs exactly as here: . The translation: “where he is going,” is false, for is not: “to go,” but: “ to go to. ” To the unloving one, the goal whither he is going on his dark way, and therefore the direction of his way, is unknown. By this goal it is not exactly the final goal, i.e. condemnation (Cyprian: it nescius in gehennam, ignarus et caecus praecipitatur in poenam), that is to be thought of, for the subject according to the context is not punishment; but by the figurative expression the apostle wants to bring out that the unloving one, not knowing whither, follows the impulse of his own selfish desire: he does not know what he is doing, and whither it tends. As a confirmation of this last idea, the apostle further adds: ; does not mean “to darken,” but “ to make blind, to blind; ” this idea is to be retained, and is not, with Lcke and others, to be enfeebled by an interpolated “tamquam, as” (“in the darkness they are as if blind”), by which the clause loses its meaning; the apostle wants to bring out that, inasmuch as the unloving one walks in the darkness, the sight of his eyes is taken from him by this darkness, so that he does not know, etc. He who lives in sin is blinded by sin, and therefore does not know whither his sin is leading him; comp. Joh 12:40 and 2Co 4:4 .
[117] Kstlin incorrectly finds the reason why he who loves his brother remains in the light, in this, “that the Christian life of the individual requires for its own existence the support of all others.” Of such a support the apostle is not speaking here at all, but the truth of his statement lies rather in this, that love and light are essentially connected with one another.
[118] When Ebrard finds no obstacle in the thought that he who loves his brother does not by any act give offence to others, he should find no obstacle in the thought that there is nothing in him which becomes an offence to himself.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
9 He that saith he is in the light, and hateth his brother, is in darkness even until now.
Ver. 9. And hateth, his brother ] As Paul presseth faith, and Peter hope, so John love, those three cardinal virtues,1Co 13:131Co 13:13 . See Trapp on “ 1Jn 2:5 “
Is in darkness ] Yea, in the prince of darkness, who acteth and agitateth him, as he did Cain. Holy Greenham often prayed, that he might keep up his young zeal with his old discretion.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
9, 10 .] We now come to the enunciation of the law of brotherly love , and in a form resembling that used in ch. 1Jn 1:8 ; 1Jn 1:10 ; and in 1Jn 2:4 f. First is asserted the incompatibility of living in hatred and walking in the light: then the identity of walking in love and walking in the light: then lastly as a contrast to the last ( . ), the same fact with regard to hatred and the darkness, and the blinding effect on him who walks in it. The is as before, the light of Christ, now partially shining, but one day to be fully revealed: the is the darkness of this present world, now passing away). He that saith that he is in the light, and hateth his brother, is in the darkness until now (Dsterd. has very properly protested against the softening down of into “minus diligere, posthabere, non colere,” &c. “Nothing,” he says, “can be more shallow and weak as compared with the ethics of the whole Scripture. All the truth, depth, and power of Christian ethics rests on the ‘aut aut,’ so distinctly insisted on by St. John. On the one side is God, on the other the world: here is life, there is death (ch. 1Jn 3:14 ): here, love; there, hate, i. e. murder (ch. 1Jn 3:14 ff.), there is no medium. In the space between, is nothing. Life may as yet be merely elementary and fragmentary. Love may be as yet weak and poor, but still, life in God and its necessary demonstration in love is present really and truly, and the word of our Lord is true, ‘He that is not against me is with me,’ Luk 9:50 ; and on the other side, the life according to the flesh, the attachment to the world, and the necessary action of this selfishness by means of hatred, may be much hidden, may be craftily covered and with splendid outer surface; but in the secret depth of the man, there where spring the real fountains of his moral life, is not God but the world; the man is yet in death, and can consequently love nothing but himself and must hate his brother: and then that other word of the Lord is true, ‘He that is not for me is against me,’ Luk 11:23 . For a man can only be either for or against Christ, and consequently can only have either love or hate towards his brother.” Bengel says well, on 1Jn 2:11 , “oppositio immediata: ubi non est amor, odium est: cor enim non est vacuum.”
It has been questioned, who is meant by . It seems plain that the expression here is not = , seeing that St. John is writing to Christians, and treating of their . On the other hand, if we are to restrict the meaning, as is done by most modern Commentators, to Christian brotherhood, it is plain that we cannot understand strictly in 1Jn 2:9 ; 1Jn 2:11 , seeing that the man there spoken of is in reality not a Christian at all. So that either we must enlarge the sense of , or suppose some impropriety of language in the use of the term in these verses, q. d. him who ought to be loved by him as a Christian brother, supposing himself to be really a Christian. This difficulty does not seem to have struck any of the Commentators: but it is one which certainly will not allow us to confine the term to its utmost strictness of meaning.
, up to this moment : notwithstanding any apparent change which may have taken place in him when he passed into the ranks of nominal Christians).
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
1Jn 2:9 . He says and perhaps thinks he is in the light, but he has never seen the light; it has never shone on him. , on the lips of Jesus a fellow-man ( cf. Mat 5:45 ; Luk 15:30 ; Luk 15:32 ), in the apostolic writings a fellow-Christian ( cf. 1Jn 2:1-2 ; 1Jn 2:16 ) one of the apostolic narrowings of the Lord’s teaching. Cf. “neighbour” with the Rabbis, a fellow-Jew; with Jesus, a fellow-man ( cf. Luk 10:25-37 ). There is no contradiction between this passage and Luk 14:26 . The best commentary on the latter is Joh 12:25 .
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
even until. Greek. heos.
now. Greek. arti.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
9, 10.] We now come to the enunciation of the law of brotherly love, and in a form resembling that used in ch. 1Jn 1:8; 1Jn 1:10; and in 1Jn 2:4 f. First is asserted the incompatibility of living in hatred and walking in the light: then the identity of walking in love and walking in the light: then lastly as a contrast to the last ( . ), the same fact with regard to hatred and the darkness, and the blinding effect on him who walks in it. The is as before, the light of Christ, now partially shining, but one day to be fully revealed: the is the darkness of this present world, now passing away). He that saith that he is in the light, and hateth his brother, is in the darkness until now (Dsterd. has very properly protested against the softening down of into minus diligere, posthabere, non colere, &c. Nothing, he says, can be more shallow and weak as compared with the ethics of the whole Scripture. All the truth, depth, and power of Christian ethics rests on the aut aut, so distinctly insisted on by St. John. On the one side is God, on the other the world: here is life, there is death (ch. 1Jn 3:14): here, love; there, hate, i. e. murder (ch. 1Jn 3:14 ff.), there is no medium. In the space between, is nothing. Life may as yet be merely elementary and fragmentary. Love may be as yet weak and poor, but still, life in God and its necessary demonstration in love is present really and truly, and the word of our Lord is true, He that is not against me is with me, Luk 9:50; and on the other side, the life according to the flesh, the attachment to the world, and the necessary action of this selfishness by means of hatred, may be much hidden, may be craftily covered and with splendid outer surface; but in the secret depth of the man, there where spring the real fountains of his moral life, is not God but the world; the man is yet in death, and can consequently love nothing but himself and must hate his brother: and then that other word of the Lord is true, He that is not for me is against me, Luk 11:23. For a man can only be either for or against Christ, and consequently can only have either love or hate towards his brother. Bengel says well, on 1Jn 2:11, oppositio immediata: ubi non est amor, odium est: cor enim non est vacuum.
It has been questioned, who is meant by . It seems plain that the expression here is not = , seeing that St. John is writing to Christians, and treating of their . On the other hand, if we are to restrict the meaning, as is done by most modern Commentators, to Christian brotherhood, it is plain that we cannot understand strictly in 1Jn 2:9; 1Jn 2:11, seeing that the man there spoken of is in reality not a Christian at all. So that either we must enlarge the sense of , or suppose some impropriety of language in the use of the term in these verses, q. d. him who ought to be loved by him as a Christian brother, supposing himself to be really a Christian. This difficulty does not seem to have struck any of the Commentators: but it is one which certainly will not allow us to confine the term to its utmost strictness of meaning.
, up to this moment: notwithstanding any apparent change which may have taken place in him when he passed into the ranks of nominal Christians).
Fuente: The Greek Testament
1Jn 2:9. , in the light) as it were in his own element. Thus in, 1Jn 2:11.-, a brother) a believer: 3Jn 1:3; 3Jn 1:5; 3Jn 1:10. The very title contains the cause of love.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
that saith: 1Jo 2:4
he is: 1Jo 1:6, Joh 9:41, Rom 2:18-21
and hateth: 1Jo 3:13-17
is in: 1Jo 2:11, Psa 82:5, 1Co 13:1-3, 2Pe 1:9
Reciprocal: Gen 13:8 – brethren Lev 19:17 – hate Jos 23:12 – go back Mat 5:22 – his brother Joh 12:36 – the children Joh 12:46 – am Act 26:18 – and to Rom 12:10 – kindly Rom 13:12 – works 1Co 6:6 – brother Eph 5:8 – but Heb 13:1 – General 1Jo 1:7 – If we 1Jo 3:10 – neither 1Jo 3:14 – that loveth 1Jo 4:8 – knoweth
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
1Jn 2:9. This is the same in thought as several preceding verses, namely, that true love is manifested by showing an obedient spirit toward the law of God, and that law requires a disciple to love his brother.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Two things are here to be considered, namely, the grace and duty proposed and enforced, and the sin or vice specified and opposed.
Observe, 1. The grace proposed, or the duty recommended, namely, the love of our brother: He that loveth his brother abideth in the light, and there is no occasion of stumbling in him.
Where note, 1. The nature of brotherly love; it is a gracious propensity of heart, which a Christian bears, for Christ’s sake, to his neighbour, whereby he wills, and, to his power, procures all good for him; or it is that brotherly affection which every true Christian chiefly bears to all his fellow-members in Christ, for grace sake.
Note, 2. The benefits attending the practice of this grace and duty.
1. His condition is happy, he abideth in the light: that is, he is in a state of grace. Charity is an evident demonstration of sanctity; and accordingly St. Paul, Gal 5:1 reckoning up the fruits of the spirit, placeth love in the front of them.
2. His conversation is holy, there is no occasion of stumbling in him; that is, he walketh inoffensively in a state of grace, and neither stumbleth himself, neither is there occasion given by him that others should stumble, or be drawn into any sin.
Observe, 2. The sin specified, and the vice opposed, namely, hating of our brother: He that hateth his brother is in darkness, and walketh in darkness.
Where note, 1. It is not any hurting, but hating our brother, that is forbidden, and that this hatred is not only forbidden whilst he is our friend, but when he becomes our enemy. To hate a friend is unhuman; to hate an enemy is unchristian. And further, it must be noted, that whatever falls short of the duty of loving, cometh within the compass of hating our brother: from every departure from love is a degree of hatred.
Note, 2. The dismal character given of those persons who hate their brother; they are described by their wicked disposition; they are in darkness: by their vicious conversation; they walk in darkness: by their miserable condition; they know not whither they go, because that darkness hath blinded their eyes.
From the whole learn, That we must love all, in the various measures and degrees, according to which God appeareth in them: That is, we must love all men, as men, above the brutes; and we must love all professed Christians, above all other men; and we must love real Christians, especially such of them as are eminent for wisdom, goodness, and usefulness, above all other Christians. The light of knowledge and the heat of love must be inseparable.
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
Those In the Light Love the Brethren
The love we are to have for our brethren is agape love, or the commitment to act for the good of others. One who loves his brother will be careful not to put a pit or snare in his way ( Mat 18:6-7 ; Rom 14:15-21 ; 1Co 8:4-13 ). However, John may here be talking about our putting a snare in our own way. Notice the next verse and consider the possibility that John is saying the lack of proper concern for one’s brethren places him in darkness and makes him subject to fall into pits and snares because he cannot see ( 1Jn 2:10 ).
Those who hate their brethren are inwardly darkened, walk in darkness and do not know where they are going. Sadly, they are blinded to their own condition ( 1Jn 2:11 ; Psa 82:5 ; 2Co 4:3-4 ).
1Jn 2:12-14
John’s Purpose InWriting
They had come to have an intimate understanding of the eternal Christ (1:1). He was also writing to those just reaching the age of maturity. They had grown wiser in the faith because they had successfully met and overcome some of the challenges of the devil ( Eph 6:11-12 ; 1Pe 5:8-9 ).
Then, he follows with a second group of sentences which describe the reader’s viewpoint of John’s purpose in writing. He had written to babes ( Paddy ) in Christ ( 2Pe 2:2 ) because they had come to know God as their Father ( Rom 8:13-16 ; Eph 1:3-6 ). He had written to the most mature Christians who through study had come to fully appreciate their Lord and better understand His eternal nature. He had written to those just maturing in Christian service because they were realizing their strength and best defense against Satan was God’s word and had used it to overcome him ( Col 3:16 ; Eph 6:10 ; Heb 4:12 ).
Fuente: Gary Hampton Commentary on Selected Books
1Jn 2:9-11. He that saith he is in the light In Christ; united to him, and truly enlightened by the gospel and the grace of God; and yet hateth his brother (The very name shows the love due to him;) is in darkness until now Void of Christ, and of all true light. He that loveth his brother See 1Jn 3:14; abideth in the light Thereby shows that he possesses the saving knowledge of God and of Christ, and that he is truly enlightened with the doctrine of the gospel. And there is none occasion of stumbling in him He walks so as neither to give nor take offence. The apostle alludes here to Christs words, (Joh 11:9,) If any one walk in the day he doth not stumble, &c. By expelling ill-will, pride, anger, immoderate selfishness, and all other evil passions, which are occasions of sin, love removes every stumbling-block lying in our way, and enables us to do our duty to our brethren in Christ, or to mankind in general, with ease and pleasure. But he that hateth his brother And he must hate if he does not love him; there is no medium; is in darkness In a state of spiritual blindness, of sin, perplexity, and entanglement. For his malevolence blinds his reason to such a degree that he does not see what is right, and it extinguishes every virtuous inclination which would lead him to practise what in right, and puts him wholly under the power of bad passions; so that, in this darkness, he is in danger not only of stumbling, but of destroying himself; not knowing whither he goeth Whether to heaven or hell, or how near he is to destruction; while he that loves his brother has a free, disencumbered journey.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
9-11. These verses follow a legitimate sequence from the definition of divine law in contradistinction to human. God loves His enemies enough to die for them. So do you when you have His nature unencumbered with depravity.
Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament
2:9 {8} He that saith he is in the light, and hateth his brother, is in darkness even until now.
(8) Now he comes to the second table, that is, to charity towards one another, and denies that a man has true light in him, or is indeed regenerate and the son of God, who hates his brother: and such a one wanders miserably in darkness, may he never brag of great knowledge of God for he knowingly and willingly casts himself headlong into hell.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
This verse contains a concrete example of what John had been talking about. It is another claim to intimate fellowship with God that behavior shows is spurious (1Jn 1:6; 1Jn 1:8; 1Jn 1:10; 1Jn 2:4; 1Jn 2:6). Hatred of other Christians is a sure sign that one is not walking with God in close fellowship.
"Hate is the absence of the deeds of love. . . . Love unexpressed is not love at all. Love has no neutral capabilities. When it is absent, hate is present." [Note: Barker, p. 317.]
Obviously genuine Christians have hated other Christians. It is naive to claim, as some expositors have, that the one hating must be an unbeliever. Moreover John regarded the hater and the one hated as brothers. In this letter the community of Christians is in view, so John meant a "brother" Christian rather than an unsaved neighbor. [Note: Ibid.; Hodges, The Epistles . . ., p. 86.]
"If the Bible taught that feelings of hatred were a sure sign of an unsaved condition, then virtually no one in the whole church would be saved! But the Bible does not teach this." [Note: Ibid., p. 87.]
However it is likely that John was speaking of hatred in a comparative sense, as Jesus sometimes did (Mat 6:24; Mat 24:10; Luk 14:26; Luk 16:13). Hyperbolically, to fail to show love is to demonstrate hate.