Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 John 3:19
And hereby we know that we are of the truth, and shall assure our hearts before him.
19. And hereby we know ] Rather, Herein we shall know: the ‘and’, though well supported, is probably not genuine, and the evidence for the future as against the present is overwhelming. ‘Herein’ ( ) sometimes refers to what follows ( 1Jn 3:16, 1Jn 4:2; 1Jn 4:9), sometimes to what precedes (1Jn 2:5). Here the latter is the case: by loving in deed and truth we shall arrive at the knowledge that we are morally the children of the Truth. ‘The Truth’ here is almost equivalent to ‘God’. ‘To be of the Truth’ is to have the Truth as the source whence the guiding and formative influences of thought and conduct flow: comp. 1Jn 2:21; Joh 3:31; Joh 8:47, and especially Joh 18:37. The preposition ‘of’ here = ‘out of’ ( ), and the notion of origin must not be lost sight of any more than in 1Jn 2:16 ; 1Jn 2:19; 1Jn 2:21 , 1Jn 3:8; 1Jn 3:10 ; 1Jn 3:12, 1Jn 4:1-3, &c.
The construction and punctuation of what follows is doubtful; also the reading in the first and second clauses of 1Jn 3:20. Certainty is not attainable, and to give all possible variations of reading and rendering would take up too much space. The conclusions adopted here are given as good and tenable, but not as demonstrably right.
and shall assure our hearts ] Literally, and shall persuade our hearts. Is this clause coordinate with ‘we shall know’, or dependent upon it (‘we shall know that we shall assure’)? Probably the former. The meaning is, ‘Herein we shall know that we are of the truth, and herein we shall persuade our heart.’ Authorities are much divided between ‘heart’ (B, Peschito, Thebaic) and ‘hearts’ ( CKL); the former seems preferable. S. John elsewhere always uses the singular both in Gospel and Epistle: it “fixes the thought upon the personal trial in each case” (Westcott). In any case it obviously means, not the affections (2Co 7:3; Php 1:7), but the conscience (Act 2:37; Act 7:54). It is worth noting that the Greek word ( ) is cognate with the English ‘heart.’ The substitution of ‘assure’ for ‘persuade’ appears to be somewhat violent, for it is a meaning which the verb ( ) does not in itself possess. But if the context justifies the substitution, because the meaning plainly is ‘persuade our heart that it need not condemn us ’, then the context may speak for itself in the English, as in the Greek. Comp. ‘We will persuade him and rid you of care’ (Mat 28:14); and ‘having made Blastus their friend’, literally ‘having persuaded Blastus’ (Act 12:20).
before him ] This is placed first for emphasis in the Greek; and before Him shall assure our hearts. The important thing is that we can quiet our consciences in the sight of God. The self-deceiver, who is not ‘of the Truth’, but ‘walks in darkness’ hating his brother (1Jn 2:1), can quiet his heart, ‘because the darkness hath blinded his eyes’: but this is not done ‘before God’.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
And hereby – Greek, by this; that is, by the fact that we have true love to others, and that we manifest it by a readiness to make sacrifices to do them good.
We know that we are of the truth – That we are not deceived in what we profess to be; that is, that we are true Christians. To be of the truth stands opposed to cherishing false and delusive hopes.
And shall assure our hearts before him – Before God, or before the Saviour. In the margin, as in the Greek, the word rendered shall assure, is persuade. The Greek word is used as meaning to persuade, e. g., to the reception and belief of truth; then to persuade anyone who has unkind or prejudiced feelings toward us, or to bring over to kind feelings, to conciliate, and thus to pacify or quiet. The meaning here seems to be, that we shall in this way allay the doubts and trouble of our minds, and produce a state of quiet and peace, to wit, by the evidence that we are of the truth. Our consciences are often restless and troubled in view of past guilt; but, in thus furnishing the evidence of true piety by love to others, we shall pacify an accusing mind, and conciliate our own hearts, and persuade or convince ourselves that we are truly the children of God. See Robinson, Lexicon, sub voce peitho, I. b. In other words, though a persons heart may condemn him as guilty, and though he knows that God sees and condemns the sins of his past life, yet the agitations and alarms of his mind may be calmed down and soothed by evidence that he is a child of God, and that he will not be finally condemned. A true Christian does not attempt to conceal the fact that there is much for which his own heart and conscience might justly accuse him but he finds, notwithstanding all this, evidence that he is a child of God, and he is persuaded that all will be well.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
1Jn 3:19-22
And hereby we know that we are of the truth, and shall assure our hearts before wire
The connection between faith and the state of the heart
I.
There is a certain blessing or privilege here spoken of–then have we confidence toward God. Confidence, literally fulness of speech, because this is one of the principal ways in which confidence displays itself; the heart is enlarged, the mouth is opened, and thus the whole soul pours forth its feelings without restraint and without disguise. It is a very remarkable part of our nature this, in virtue of which we are impelled to make those whom we love and confide in the depositaries of the most sacred treasures of our breasts. As confidence is enkindled, reserve disappears, like as the winters frost that binds up the bosom of the earth is melted before the summers sun. And as it is in the intercourse between man and man, so is it in the intercourse between man and God. The degree in which we can reveal to Him all our sins, wants, and sorrows will ever be in proportion to our confidence in Him. It is a most blessed state of mind; if we are believers we must know it in some measure. There is a firm foundation laid for it in the gospel; the atonement realised by faith will produce this in the soul, and nothing else will.
II. Notice a certain hindrance spoken of as standing in the way of the enjoyment of confidence toward God. If our heart condemn us, God is greater than our heart, and knoweth all things. There is something in the very constitution of our nature which would shake our confidence toward God, if our own heart condemned us.
III. A certain indispensable qualification for the enjoyment of confidence toward God: If our heart condemn us not. This is discouraging at first sight. It seems to place us at a hopeless distance from this blessing. You say, perhaps, you look into your heart, and you see there nothing but sin, darkness, disorder, unbelief; nothing that a holy God can approve of. Indeed! Nothing? No grace evident there, no repentance, no love to the Saviour, no spirituality, no desire after communion with God? A most extraordinary kind of religion yours! And what is the tendency, and I fear actual effect of a one-sided experience like this? It is twofold: First, as affects the people of the world. They say, What difference is there between us and those who call themselves the Lords people?
2. And then as affects Christians themselves. For this exclusion of all inward evidence tends to beget a want of watchfulness, and leads more or less to the losing sight of the moral element in Christianity. It prevents them from cultivating that personal holiness which is indispensable to the fruition of a spiritual being.
IV. A certain practical test on which the hearts verdict of itself must be based, favourable or unfavourable, Hereby we know that we are of the truth, and shall assure our hearts before Him. Hereby. This carries us back to something going before. We cannot trust to mere emotions, however deep. These emotions must be brought to some practical test; and here it is. What are we doing for the brethren? We say, perhaps, we love God. But let us test the genuineness of this emotion. He that loveth God, loveth his brother also. If you lack assurance it is not a simpler faith you need, nor a freer gospel, but a faithful dealing with your conscience as to particular sins of omission and commission. You must do more for God. You must do more for your fellow creatures.
V. A certain moral or ethical ground on which God answers prayer–Whatsoever we ask we receive, because we keep His commandments, etc. I think we are too apt to view faith as the only condition of acceptable prayer. There are two elements in prayer that never must be lost sight of–the evangelical, and the ethical or moral. When we view faith only as the condition of acceptable prayer, we are keeping hold only of the evangelical element. But mark, how to correct this error, this one-sided view of prayer, the passage before us brings under our notice the ethical element, Because we keep His commandments and do those things that are well pleasing in His sight. Ah! dont we need this? We think we can do great things with our simple faith–and so we would were it the faith that worketh by love, purifieth the heart, and overcometh the world. But this bare, naked faith of ours, which looks only to promises and aims only at what we call salvation, is imperfect, and will not answer all ends. (A. L. R. Foote, D. D.)
Heartsease
I. Hereby shall we know that we are of the truth, There is no gainsaying the logic of this whole passage. The children of God, by a spiritual necessity, do justly, and love mercy.
II. And how much that is not glorious remains in every life! Oh, the iniquity of our holy things! Remove the smooth blue stone that lies in the sun with the glass blades waving round it–so clean and smooth and quiet it looks–remove it and you see creeping things innumerable–things that hate the light, that love dampness and darkness. And so in life. Beneath the surface honesty, how much dishonesty do we find! Beneath the surface truthfulness–the court of justice veracity–how much untruth–what falsity–what shams. What lies we tell ourselves–what false testimonials we give ourselves! Beneath the surface purity of life, what uncleanliness of thought, desire, imagination! Beneath the surface love, what self-love, what meannesses. Beneath our best deeds, what a mixture of motives that will not bear the light–hideous things that love darkness and dirt!
III. What appeal lies from the verdict of conscience? What answer can there be to these self-accusations? What can we say to our own heart? Hereby shall we know that we are of the truth, and shall assure–shall persuade, pacify, silence–our heart before Him whereinsoever our heart shall condemn us. We are of the truth. The imperfections are manifold. The inconsistencies are glaring, and yet the endeavour to love proves that the holy place is not empty yet. Travellers tell us that the mirage in the desert is so like a lake of water, that not until they actually enter it can the deception be discovered. But if a stream of water never so small were seen entering the lake, or a rill flowing out of it, they would know at once that what lay before them in the distance was real–was fact, and not phantom. Well, if a stream that makes for righteousness is flowing into your life, cleansing and sweetening and fertilising your thoughts, aims, and affections, and if another stream of kindness is flowing out of your lives to others, fertilising and gladdening hearts else fruitless and joyless, then you may be certain that your religion is not a make believe, not a piece of self-deception, but a reality. You are of the truth. God is there.
IV. God is greater than our heart. The heart means the whole inner moral life–the conscience. That is the greatest thing in each of us–that which, without being consulted, magisterially approves and condemns. But God is greater than our heart. The heart condemns sin. God condemns sin and forgives the sinner. God is greater! Conscience sees the flaws in our life. God sees them too, and mends them. God is greater! Conscience is the iron pen that writes down without pity all that has been in mans life. God is love, and blots out the handwriting that was against us. God is greater than our heart. This is the true heartsease–the flower whose fragrance soothes the restless soul–faith in the love of God. Let not your hearts be troubled. Believe in God. Believe also in Me.
V. Beloved, if our heart condemn us not–And there are blessed moods when the heart lies hushed and silent before God–when conscience lays its sceptre and crown at the feet of Christ, and all that is within us stands up to bless the Lord, who forgiveth all our iniquities. Now in these blessed hours we have boldness toward God, and whatsoever we ask we receive of Him, because we keep His commandments, and do the things that are pleasing in His sight. We know at such times that we are one with God. We love what He loves. We hate what He hates. His commandments are our law. And we pray to Him freely, confidently, unhesitatingly, speaking to Him as to One of whose sympathy we feel sure. (J. M. Gibbon.)
Truth
The word truth is the characteristic word in the teaching of the beloved disciple, the Apostle St. John; he always speaks of those who belong to the Lord as those who are of the truth. A Christian life is expressed by him as doing the truth, or walking in the truth. It describes the very essence of the Christian life; it describes that which is the fundamental principle, without which the Christian life is impossible. The power of the Christian life is, of course, the presence of the Lord Himself; the Lord Jesus in the soul is the power by which the Christian lives, but the form which the Christian life takes is more fully expressed by the word truth than by any other word that we can use. Let us consider, then, what is the kind of character which is shown in the man who walks in the truth and does the truth.
1. The characteristic of such a life is in the first place that openness which is described by St. John when he says that such a man cometh to the light. He dislikes concealment; he desires that he shall be fully known, he has nothing to hide, he lives frankly among his fellows, concealing nothing whatever in his actions or in his purposes.
2. The characteristic which goes along with that is the simplicity of purpose which marks the man; because the man who has two purposes, generally speaking, desires to put one in front and keep the other behind. He desires to serve God openly before his fellows, and, perhaps, to have some little consideration for something else in his own soul; but the man who is thoroughly true in his life as he is open, so is he simple; he has but one aim all through, that of pleasing his heavenly Father. He knows nothing else that can be supreme over his life.
3. A further characteristic of such a character is courage. He is the truly brave man. As he has but one purpose he is never ashamed to confess it, and is he who, at all moments, in spite of all opposition, and in spite of quiet contempt and indifference, is never ashamed of Christ, never ashamed to say that he is a Christian, never ashamed to refuse to join what he knows his Master has condemned. Now this is the character of the man whose life is true. But let us come down to details. What is it that He would have us do and say and think and feel? The characteristic of the man who is really true in his service to the true Lord, is that he is thoroughly trustworthy. Never can it be said of any true child of God that he shall be found wanting in that elementary truth which, even in those who believe not, may yet be found, and give them a standing in the eyes of all. But go a little further. Look not only at his dealings, but also at his speech. And here I wish I could use the emphasis I could desire; because most assuredly the choice by our Lord and by St. John of such a word as truth, to be the special description of the Christian life, lays upon Christians a tenfold responsibility in regard to truth of speech, of not allowing the Christian name to be lowered by giving way to all the many temptations which surround everyone to swerve from exact fact, not allowing at any time the tongue to betray the soul by uttering that which is not true, and true all through; never allowing, for instance, the impulse of vanity to make a man say a word which will bring praise to himself which he does not really deserve; never allowing, in the very slightest degree, a word to pass the lips which shall claim for us a higher Christian rank than we deserve, or any grace which we do not possess. It can be done without any word which is in itself false; it can be done in such a way as to give a false impression without exactly contravening the truth; but the Christian will scorn it in his soul for the sake of his Master Christ, whom he knows to be the very Messenger of truth, whose kingdom is the kingdom of truth. The Christian will feel that everything which is false, even if it be but a trifle, even if it be but one of those things which people are so ready to condone, mars the brightness of the Christian aspect. Need I go on to say that, whether the falsehood be prompted by vanity or by fear, it is equally abhorrent to the true Christian spirit. And then look at the thoughts. There, too, the Christian aim will be to seek the truth, and to be true to himself; he will not pretend to believe what he does not believe, and he will not pretend to disbelieve what, in his secret soul, he really does believe. Wait until you have clearer light, but never lower your Lord and Master by thinking to serve Him by any falsehood, either within you or without. Be true to your own self, true to your own convictions, and fear not. The man who is thoroughly true will inevitably find that the longer he lives, turning his soul to the Lord and casting himself on the power of Christ, the more certain does it become that the Lord is, indeed, the King of Truth, that truth belongs to Him, and that in the Lord it will be found; for the power by which men hold fast to the truth, and speak and do and live the truth, is the Lord Jesus. He alone is the source of truth. (Bp. Temple.)
For if our heart condemn us, God is greater than our heart, and knoweth all things—
Conscience condemning or acquitting
I. There is in everyone a natural conscience, which acquits or condemns him according to the tenor of his life and actions. The very heathens were sensible of this. Juvenal says of a guilty conscience: How, like so many furies, it haunts and torments the wicked man, and proves the executioner of vengeance on him in the horrors of his own breast. And agreeable to this is that observation of St. Paul (Rom 2:14). If it be objected that we see many wicked men go on without check in their sins, and, at the same time, none more gay or more happy, to this it may be answered, in the first place, that we cannot always form a judgment of the inward peace of mens minds by outward appearances; and that, for aught we know, the man who appears so outwardly happy may yet be far from being at peace within. Or, supposing a wicked man be really free from upbraidings of his conscience, yet it is not difficult to assign reasons which may help us to account for it. As,
1. It is possible that men may be able so to palliate or excuse their errors to themselves. Or,
2. It is possible that men may pursue a wicked course so long, and with so much obstinacy, as, in a great measure, to wear out the impression made upon them by their conscience, and to stifle its reflections. Yet some severe affliction or calamity, the approach of sickness or of death, is generally known to awaken in the minds of men those terrors of conscience which before seemed quite suppressed.
If it be still objected that there have been some, after all, who, after a dissolute course of life, have died without appearing to have felt any great uneasiness of conscience, I answer, supposing there may have been some few examples of this kind, yet they are so very rare that we may justly look upon them as a sort of monsters in the moral world.
1. From hence we cannot but perceive and admire the goodness of God, who, to restrain men from the ways of sin, has endued them with a natural principle of conscience–such as generally applauds them when they do their duty, and condemns them whensoever they transgress it.
2. From hence may be drawn a good argument in proof of a future judgment.
3. Hence we plainly see the folly of endeavouring to shake off the painful reflections of a bad conscience by a free indulgence to pleasure, by drink or company.
4. From what has been said we cannot but be sensible of the exceeding comfort and advantage of a good conscience.
II. If, upon a review of our past lives, our own conscience condemn us, we have reason to think that God, who knows a great deal more of us than we do of ourselves, will likewise assuredly condemn us.
1. The self-condemnation here meant is not that of the true penitent, who, though he has abandoned every sinful course, yet cannot but reflect upon his former sins with horror, and justly condemns himself for them; but that which arises from the conscience of a wicked life still followed.
2. It may not be amiss to consider the case of another sort of persons, who, though not conscious to themselves of having lived in any unrepented sin, are yet apt to entertain very perplexing doubts of their spiritual state. This is the case of some good Christians, who, through the weakness of their understandings, or the timorousness of their natures, are often subject to melancholy fears. But such as these would do well to consider that these groundless fears are not so properly the judgment of their conscience as the effect of a disordered and a weak imagination.
3. There is yet another sort of persons whose case it may be well to consider,–viz., that of those who lead such mixed, uncertain lives, that it is a matter of some difficulty to themselves, as well as others, to determine whether they are in a state of grace and salvation or not. These are such as sin and repent, and sin again, and this in a perpetual round, so that it is hard to say whether sin or religion be the most prevailing principle in them. Now such as these can have no just ground to hope well of their condition till they have brought themselves to a more steady course of life.
III. If, upon a serious and impartial examination of our lives, our own consciences acquit us, then may we hope that God will likewise graciously acquit us, and that we are entitled to his favour and forgiveness. (C. Peters. M. A.)
Reason the judge of religions actions
I. The apostles reasoning in the text supposes that there is a necessary and essential difference between good and evil, and that men are naturally conscious of this difference, and of the consequent desert of their actions accordingly. And this is true, not with regard to the dictates of natural reason only, but, in those who profess themselves Christians, it is true also with regard to the terms or conditions of the gospel of Christ.
II. The apostles argument proceeds upon this further supposition, that God who is the Judge of all, makes generally the same judgment of mens actions as their own reason does, only much more perfect in the same kind, as having a knowledge infinitely more perfect and unerring than theirs. For, whatever a mans own eyes plainly see, he cannot doubt but a person of better eyes must see the same more perfectly. And whatever a man free from passion and wilfulness, upon calm consideration, clearly discerns with his own mind, he is very sure the Infinite and All-knowing Mind cannot but discern still more clearly and distinctly.
III. How far the truth of this rule is affected by that false application which the wrong judgment of an erroneous conscience is apt to make of it. It is certain men are naturally conscious of the difference of good and evil, and of the consequent desert of their own actions. It is natural for them to apprehend that this judgment of their own consciences is the judgment that God also passes upon them; and Scripture clearly affirms that it is so. Whence then is it that many truly pious persons have been under the strongest melancholy apprehensions that God would condemn them; and on the contrary, many impious men seem to have been fully persuaded that they have been doing God service, even by unrighteous actions? It proceeds from hence; that in some cases, through innocent and pitiable weakness; in other cases, through wicked and corrupt prejudice, men set their own passions of fear or presumption in the judgment seat of reason and conscience. (S. Clarke, D. D.)
The nature and advantages of a good conscience
The advantage of having a good conscience is acknowledged both by those who possess and by those destitute of it. The one class knows its value by the solid enjoyment which it confers; the other, very frequently, by the wretchedness with which the want of it is attended.
I. With regard to the nature of a good conscience, it is properly defined in the text as one which does not condemn us.
1. There are those whose consciences do not condemn them, who yet cannot be said to have a good conscience.
(1) Those persons, for instance, who are misinformed as to the line of conduct for them to pursue, and who, in consequence of such misinformation, are led to the commission of even the most fearful enormities, may, very probably, not be condemned by their own consciences; nay, very possibly, may be perfectly acquitted by them, if not highly applauded.
(2) Again, there is another large class of persons, who, whatever attention they may occasionally pay to some of its duties, yet manifest on the great subject of religion no small measure of indifference. The conscience of these persons does not condemn them; it leaves them to conclude that all who in any measure exceed them in paying to religion that attention which its incomparable importance demands, are justly liable to the charge of enthusiasm, and of being righteous overmuch.
(3) Once more, the apostle speaks of some persons as being past feeling (Eph 4:19); and as having their conscience seared with a hot iron (1Ti 4:2). Wearied at length and exhausted by making ineffectual remonstrances, this faculty loses all its sensibility, and becomes totally obdurate.
2. There is another position, which at first view may appear equally, though in a different way, inconsistent with the representation of the apostle; namely, that there are those whose consciences do, at times more especially, condemn them, who yet are favourably regarded by the Most High, and who have ground for that confidence towards Him which yet they are not able to exercise. Whatever they read or hear, it all, as they conceive, makes against them; they are ready to regard almost every threatening of the Word of God as pronouncing their condemnation, and to consider themselves as having as little to do with the comfortable promises of the gospel. For this species of religious depression various causes may be assigned. It may possibly be ascribable to physical causes, and originate in bodily distemper. It may, perhaps, he justly attributed to the malice of Satan, who would endeavour to persuade us that God is as much our enemy as he himself is. Or, it may be owing to mistakes respecting the nature of the Christian covenant, and the grounds of our acceptance with God.
3. Who, then, we at length inquire, are those persons who may conclude that they are in a right state, from the circumstance of their conscience not condemning them? The persons who can form this conclusion are those who have acquired, among other things, a correct knowledge of what is essential to the Christian character. And having obtained this knowledge of the Christian character, they search deeply into their own. His repentance, and faith, and love, and obedience, though not perfect, are yet genuine.
II. Its advantages.
1. It is no small advantage that those who possess it are exempt from the disquiet and terror of an evil conscience.
(1) The condemnation of a mans own heart.
(2) The anticipation of a still more tremendous condemnation at the hands of God.
2. There are positive advantages also of a most important nature which belong to such persons, and which are comprehended under the expression in the text. The person who has a good conscience has confidence towards God–
(1) In prayer.
(2) In a season of suffering.
(3) In the hour of death.
Let me, in conclusion, recommend each of you to make that application of the subject.
1. Do you say that your conscience does not condemn you; and that you, therefore, if anyone can, may well entertain a confidence towards God; and that, notwithstanding you have never seriously examined whether your conscience is quiet on good grounds, and your confidence well founded? It is for you to search deeply your own hearts in order to ascertain whether traces are to be found there of that repentance, and faith, and love, and obedience, which form the only evidence of a well-founded confidence.
2. But does your conscience already condemn you, and that on good grounds? You have, indeed, reason for alarm, under the conviction that God is greater than your heart.
3. Finally, are you in the number of those who may conclude that they are in a right state, from the circumstance of their conscience not condemning them? Remember that the continuance of your peace is closely connected with the continuance of your watchfulness against sin, and of your activity in well-doing. (T. Natt, B. D.)
Self-condemnation
I. Self-condemnation. For if our heart condemn us.
1. Some possibly may stand self-condemned on the ground of indulging in particular sins.
2. Others may feel inwardly accused on account of their indifference to the interests of their souls.
3. But there are some whose hearts may condemn them on the ground of the nominal and formal character of their religion.
4. With many the guilt of unbelief may be the ground of self-accusation.
5. The hearts of some may charge them with hypocrisy.
II. Self-condemnation confirmed and augmented by Divine decisions. God is greater than our hearts and knoweth all things.
1. God is greater than our hearts in knowledge, and knows therefore the whole extent of our sin.
2. God is greater than our heart in purity, and sees therefore the utmost evil and malignity of sin.
3. God is greater than our hearts in justice, and knoweth therefore the whole amount of our desert. (Essex Remembrancer.)
The lower courts
The fault of many is that they will not lay spiritual things to heart at all, but treat them in a superficial manner. This is foolish, sinful, deadly. We ought to put our ease upon serious trial in the court of our own conscience. Certain of a better class are satisfied with the verdict of their hearts, and do not remember the higher courts; and therefore either become presumptuous, or are needlessly distressed. We are about to consider the judgments of this lower court. Here we may have–
I. A correct verdict against ourselves. Let us sum up the process.
1. The court sits under the Kings arms, to judge by royal authority. The charge against the prisoner is read. Conscience accuses, and quotes the law as applicable to the points alleged.
2. Memory gives evidence. As to the fact of sin in years past, and of sin more lately committed. Items mentioned. Transgressions of the commandments. Failure in motive, spirit, temper, etc.
3. Knowledge gives evidence that the present state of mind and heart and will is not according to the Word.
4. Self love and pride urge good intents and pious acts in stay of proceedings. Hear the defence! But alas! it is not worth hearing. The defence is but one of the refuges of lies.
5. The heart, judging by the law, condemns. Henceforth the man lives as in a condemned cell under fear of death and hell. If even our partial, half enlightened heart condemns, we may well tremble at the thought of appearing before the Lord God. The higher court is more strictly just, better informed, more authoritative, and more able to punish. God knows all. Forgotten sin, sins of ignorance, sins half seen are all before the Lord. What a terrible case is this! Condemned in the lower court, and sure to be condemned in the higher!
II. An incorrect verdict against ourselves. The case as before. The sentence apparently most clear. But when revised by the higher court it is reversed, for good reasons.
1. The debt has been discharged by the mans glorious Surety.
2. The man is not the same man; though he has sinned he has died to sin, and he now lives as one born from above.
3. The evidences in his favour, such as the atonement and the new birth, were forgotten, undervalued, or misjudged in the lower court.
4. The evidence looked for by a sickly conscience was what it could not find, for it did not exist, namely, natural goodness, perfection, unbroken joy, etc. The judge was ignorant, and legally inclined. The verdict was therefore a mistaken one.
III. A correct verdict of acquittal. Our heart sometimes justly condemns us not.
1. The argument for non-condemnation is good: the following are the chief items of evidence in proof of our being gracious–
(1) We are sincere in our profession of love to God.
(2) We are filled with love to the brethren.
(3) We are resting upon Christ, and on Him alone.
(4) We are longing after holiness.
2. The result of this happy verdict of the heart is that we have–
(1) Confidence towards God that we are really His.
(2) Confidence as to our reconciliation with God by Jesus Christ.
(3) Confidence that He will not harm us, but will bless us.
(4) Confidence in prayer that He will accept and answer.
(5) Confidence as to future judgment that we shall receive the gracious reward at the last great day.
IV. An incorrect verdict of acquittal.
1. A deceived heart may refuse to condemn, but God will judge us all the same.
2. A false heart may acquit, but this gives no confidence Godward.
3. A deceitful heart pretends to acquit while in its centre it condemns. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Self-condemnation
I. What the condemnation of a mans own heart is. It is a judicial act, and hath the accuser, witness, and judge, ready against the malefactor; which, in external judicatures, are the distinct parts of different persons. For the knowledge of the law being lodged in the heart, and the consciousness of its own transgression lying uppermost there also, nothing hinders the sentence from proceeding immediately, insomuch that the bare knowledge of evil committed is in the heart or conscience self-condemnation.
II. Do all wilful and presumptuous sinners feel and suffer this condemnation of their own hearts? Why should a mans own heart condemn him? Cannot self-love bribe off the evidence? May not the favour and partiality, which faction seldom fails of in its defence, blind the eyes or corrupt the judgment of a mans own conscience in his favour? No! the heart judges for the God of truth, and cannot but declare the truth. That there are some examples to the contrary, let these two things be considered–
1. That we cannot know what wicked men feel in their own breasts; the most cheerful countenance, to appearance, may have a very aching heart. But, if for a time he shall also cheat himself into a false peace, it must be by such opiates as lay asleep the thinking powers of the soul.
2. Nevertheless, God by His Holy Spirit takes His own time to awaken the wicked, and to bring their sins before the bar of their conscience (Psa 11:18-23). It is possible to live in sin without anxiety, but repentance will bring this self-condemnation home to our hearts before ever we can sue to God for His mercy. The longer we are without it the greater will be its torture at last. For it is not peace, but stupidity of mind; not happiness, but the delusions of Satan, that keep the conscience quiet in the ways of perdition.
III. God will judge us according to the sentence of our own hearts (Jer 17:10). If God is just in His laws, He will be just in executing their sentence, and not acquit the sinner that accuses and condemns Himself, as guilty and impenitent. And it will be the greatest aggravation of our misery, that having brought it on ourselves, we condemn ourselves to it. He that will not see his day of grace shall find his punishment in the utter despair of it.
1. Resolve to act in uprightness and integrity of heart in all we do; let us carefully consult the dictate of our own conscience, as ever we hope to avoid its merciless rebukes in the last day.
2. Let no pretence or subterfuge tempt us to sins which our conscience, informed by the law of God, must needs condemn.
3. Of all our actions our religious worship has the greatest sincerity of heart; and of all parts of our worship the Holy Sacrament calls for the utmost integrity. (W. Whitfield.)
And knoweth all things—
All things known to God
This may seem a principle, and therefore not to be doubted, and consequently needless to be proved.
I. Prove the proposition.
1. First from Scripture (Joh 21:17; Heb 4:13).
2. From reason; and here our first argument shall be drawn from His works of creation and providence. It is impossible that He that made all things should not also know all things. Who is it that cannot readily acknowledge and read his own hand? Next, His providence sufficiently declares His omniscience; if He manages, rules, and governs all things, yea sin itself, it clearly follows that He has full cognisance of those things, since all these acts presuppose knowledge.
II. The excellency of Gods knowledge above the knowledge either of men or angels.
1. Concerning its properties.
(1) The first property holding forth the excellency of this knowledge is the exceeding evidence, and consequently the certainty of it; for though a thing may be certain, and yet not evident, yet whatsover is evident, that also is certain. Evidence brings a property eminent from the essence and being of knowledge; it follows that that which includes the nature of knowledge in an infinite manner, must be also attended by a most infinitely clear evidence. He that causes that innate evidence in every object, by which it moves and strikes the faculty, shall not He see? He that gives light to the eye, by which that evidence is discerned, shall not He discern?
(2) Another property of this knowledge, showing the excellence of it, is this, that it is a knowledge independent upon the existence of the object or thing known. God beholds all things in Himself; and that both eminently, as He sees His own perfection, which eminently includes all the perfection that is scattered among the creatures, as the light of all the stars is contained eminently in the sun; and He beholds them also formally, distinctly, and according to the model of their own proper beings, without looking upon the existence of the things themselves, and that two ways–
(a) By reflecting upon His power, and what He can do, He has a perfect knowledge of all possibilities, and of things that may be produced.
(b) By reflecting upon His power and His will, He knows whatsoever shall be actually produced.
2. The excellency of Gods knowledge appears in respect of His objects; which are all things knowable. But they may be reduced to three things especially, which God alone perfectly knows, and are not to be known by men or angels.
(1) The nature of God Himself. Nothing but an infinite knowledge can comprehend an infinite being.
(2) The second sort of things only known to God are things future.
(3) The thoughts of men: it belongs to the sovereignty of Gods omniscience alone to judge and know these (Psa 139:2).
III. I proceed to make some application; and to see what uses may be deduced from the consideration of Gods omniscience: it may serve as an argument to press several duties upon us.
1. It must be a strong motive to bring us to a free confession of all our sins to God. We can commit and tell our secrets to a friend that does not know them; how much more should we do it to Him that knows them already.
2. The consideration of Gods omniscience may enforce us to an humble submission to all Gods commands and directions, and that both in respect of belief and of practice.
3. And lastly, since it is an express command of our Saviour Himself, that we should be perfect, as our heavenly Father is perfect; why should we not, according to our weak model, endeavour to copy out this Divine perfection upon our soul, as well as any of the rest? And why, as well as we are commanded to be like Him in His goodness, bounty, and mercy, we should not endeavour to resemble Him in knowledge, wisdom, and understanding, according to our weak capacity? (R. South, D. D.)
Hearts of sinners known to God
Sinners know something about their own hearts, otherwise they would never feel self condemned; but they do not know so much about them as they might know; for they endeavour to misinform, or silence conscience, which would, if properly consulted and allowed to speak, condemn them for every evil imagination of their hearts. No sinners, however, whether moral or immoral, whether secure or awakened, know so much about their own hearts as God does, who is greater than their hearts, and knows all things. For–
1. God has a more extensive view of the exercises of their hearts than they ever have. The Lord searcheth all hearts, and understandeth all imaginations of the thoughts. He knows all that passes in their hearts and drops from their lips every moment, and remembers all. This is what all sinners are extremely prone to forget, for which God justly blames them. Though they cannot remember all their sins, yet they ought to remember that God remembers them all.
2. God sees all the moral exercises of their hearts at one intuitive and comprehensive view; which is a far more perfect knowledge of them than they ever have.
3. God knows the moral quality of all the exercises which compose the hearts of sinners, as well as their connection with each other, and with the external actions which flow from them.
4. God knows how vile and guilty sinners are, for all the evil exercises of their hearts which they inwardly cherish, and outwardly express. He views the least sin as unspeakably more vile and guilty than sinners do the greatest.
5. God knows all the evils which the corrupt hearts of sinners would prompt them to do, if He did not continually restrain them. He views their hearts, therefore, as infinitely more sinful than they view them.
6. God knows the extreme obstinacy of their hearts, which they are unwilling to know, and of which they are generally very ignorant. God knows how often and how much they have refused to obey His commands, His gracious invitations, and His awful threatenings. God knows how often and how much they have resisted the strivings of His Spirit.
Improvement.
1. In the view of this subject we may see why sinners generally live so little concerned about their guilty and dangerous state by nature. They either bribe conscience by their good deeds, or sear it by their bad ones; and in either case, they flatter themselves that their hearts are pretty good, if not so good as they ought to be. But if they only saw their hearts as God sees them, they would be instantly alarmed, and all their peace and flattering hopes would forsake them.
2. This subject shows us why awakened sinners are often in so much anxiety and distress about the salvation of their souls. It is because they begin to see their hearts in the same light in which God sees them.
3. This subject shows why sinners are so ready to believe that God will not make them, nor any others of mankind, forever miserable. They think that no sinners deserve eternal punishment. The reason is that they have never seen their own hearts as God has seen them.
4. It appears from what has been said, that it is of great importance to preach the doctrine of total depravity plainly and fully.
5. It appears from what has been said, that no sinners have a right to think they are Christians, They all have the witness within themselves that they are graceless. (N. Emmons, D. D.)
Conscience and God as judges
I. Thoughts which our natural minds take from it.
1. We know, in the sense of being impressed with, but a few of our own sins–only such as are somewhat aside from our ordinary habit, or diverse from our current taste. But God, the impartial and omniscient, sees them all numerically; every grain in the growing heap.
2. We see at best but detached portions of our lives; we easily forget the past; hence, our moral equanimity differs from day to day. But God sees us altogether in our general character, the drift and meaning of our lives.
3. We do not know the sin that lies within our own purposes. No wicked man lives out the full of the wickedness that is in him; he is hedged in by a thousand fears. But God looks on the heart.
4. We see our sin in the narrow scope of its immediate effect. God sees it in all the hideousness of sins general work in the world, the diseases, poverty, crime, death, which deeds of the same kind as those that to us seem venial have accomplished.
5. We know almost nothing of the meaning of sin as seen in its consequences within the soul: blinding spiritual sight; corroding the finer sensibilities; paralysing the will: engendering eternal impotency and misery. God knows all this.
6. We have no high standard of judging our sins; conscience is generally depraved to near the level of the sinful habit. God sees our sin in contact with His infinite purity, our sins in the light of His countenance.
7. God sees all sin in the light of His purpose one day to rid the universe of it; the refiner sits at the fire, and our sin is there awaiting the process.
II. Thoughts which Bible faith puts into the text for our consolation.
1. It is especially said to be for our assurance.
2. God knows what He, the Judge, is–God is love.
3. God knows the meaning of His own infinite fatherhood.
4. God knows what He has already done for us. We do not begin to realise the meaning of the gift of the only begotten Son.
5. God knows what He has already done with our sins–blotted them out.
6. God knows what the Holy Spirits mission to a sinful soul is; we but dimly conceive it, as the sanctifying process is manifest to our experience.
7. God knows how the light of heaven will put away all darkness from the soul that He has permitted to enter there, and looks upon us as candidates for that perfection which He has decreed and prepared for us. (J. M. Ludlow.)
Beloved, if our heart condemn us not, then have we confidence toward God–
A good life the surest title to a good conscience
I. The nature of a sure or clear conscience ought to be first stated lest we should mistake shadow for substance, presumption and vain confidence for truth and soberness. The apostle points out the general nature of a good conscience by this mark, that our hearts condemn us not, and that we know that we are of the truth; know it by some certain rule, namely, that we keep Gods commandments. And if our conduct be found, upon a just examination, to square with that rule, then our consciences are clear, and we may look up with a becoming confidence to God. This is a matter of great weight, and yet there is nowhere more room for self-flattery and self-deceit. A man will often call it acting according to his conscience, when he acts according to his present persuasion, without ever examining how he came by that persuasion; whether through wrong education, custom, or example; or whether from some secret lust, pride, or prejudice, rather than from the rule of Gods written Word, or from a principle of right reason. This cannot be justly called keeping a good conscience: for we ought not to take up false persuasions at all adventures, and then to make those persuasions our rule of life, instead of that rule which God hath given us to walk by. It is deceiving ourselves to imagine that we have a good conscience when we have used no reasonable care in examining whether it be a right conscience or not. There is another common method of self-deceit, when a person who well enough understands the rule he is to go by, yet forgets to apply it to his own particular case, and so speaks peace to himself all the while that he transgresses it. No doubt but a considerate man may know when he behaves as he ought to do, and may reap the comfort of it. And though we are none of us without sin yet a good life is easily distinguished from the life of the ungodly, and a state of grace from a state of sin. And so there is room enough left for the joy of a good conscience, where men live as becometh the gospel of Christ, perfecting holiness, to such a degree as man can be perfect, in the fear of God.
II. I now proceed to discourse of the comforts of it. If our hearts condemn us not, then have we confidence towards God; and whatsoever we ask we receive of Him. What greater comfort can there be than conscious virtue drawing after it the favour of God in whom all happiness centres, and upon whom all things entirely depend? If God be with us who can be against us? What friends can we want, while in Him we have all that are truly valuable? Or what blessings can we desire, but what He is both willing and able to shower down upon us, only leaving it to Him to judge what is safest and most convenient for us? There is no pleasure in life comparable to that which arises in a good mans breast from the sense of his keeping up a friendly intercourse with God. (D. Waterland, D. D.)
An account of the nature and measures of conscience
As nothing can be of more moment, so few things, doubtless, are of more difficulty, than for men to be rationally satisfied about the estate of their souls, with reference to God and the great concerns of eternity. First of all then: he who would pass such a judgment upon his condition as shall be ratified in heaven, will find himself wofully deceived, if he judges of his spiritual estate by any of these measures.
1. The general esteem of the world concerning him. He who owes his piety to fame and hearsay, and the evidences of his salvation to popular voice and opinion, builds his house not only upon the sand, but, which is worse, upon the wind; and writes the deeds, by which he holds his estate, upon the face of a river. The favourable opinion and good word of men, to some persons especially, comes oftentimes at a very easy rate; and by a few demure looks.
2. The judgment of any casuist or learned divine, concerning the estate of a mans soul, is not sufficient to give him confidence towards God. And the reason is because no learning whatsoever can give a man the knowledge of anothers heart.
3. The absolution pronounced by a priest is not a certain, infallible ground, to give the person so absolved confidence towards God, because if absolution, as such, could of itself secure a man, as to the estate of his soul, then it would follow that every person so absolved should, by virtue thereof, be ipso facto put into such a condition of safety; which is not imaginable. In a word, if a man be penitent, his repentance stamps his absolution effectual. If not, let the priest repeat the same absolution to him ten thousand times; yet for all his being absolved in this world, God will condemn him in the other.
4. No advantages from external church membership, or profession of the true religion, can of themselves give a man confidence towards God: and yet perhaps there is hardly any one thing in the world which men, in all ages, have generally more cheated themselves with. Thus I have shown four several uncertain rules, which men are prone to judge of their spiritual estate by. But now have we any more certain to substitute and recommend in the room of them? Why, yes; if we believe the apostle, a mans own heart or conscience is that which, above all other things, is able to give him confidence towards God. And the reason is, because the heart knows that by itself, which nothing in the world besides can give it any knowledge of; and without the knowledge of which it can have no foundation to build any true confidence upon.
I. How the heart or conscience ought to be informed, in order to its founding in us a rational confidence towards God. It is not necessary for a man to be assured of the rightness of his conscience, by such an infallible certainty of persuasion, as amounts to the clearness of a demonstration; but it is sufficient if he knows it upon grounds of such a convincing probability, as shall exclude all rational grounds of doubting of it. There is an innate light in every man, discovering to him the first lines of duty in the common notions of good and evil; which by cultivation may be advanced to higher discoveries. He therefore who exerts all the faculties of his soul, and plies all means and opportunities in the search of truth, which God has vouchsafed him, may rest upon the judgment of his conscience so informed, as a warrantable guide of those actions which he must account to God for.
II. How, and by what means, we may get our heart or conscience thus informed, and afterwards preserve and keep it so.
1. Let a man carefully attend to the voice of his reason, and all the dictates of natural morality; so by no means to do anything contrary to them. For though reason is not to be relied upon, as a guide universally sufficient to direct us what to do; yet it is generally to be relied upon and obeyed, where it tells us what we are not to do. No man ever yet offended his own conscience, but first or last it was revenged upon him for it. So that it will concern a man to treat this great principle awfully and warily, by still observing what it commands, but especially what it forbids: and if he would have it always a faithful and sincere monitor to him, let him be sure never to turn a deaf ear to it; for not to hear it is the way to silence it. Let him strictly observe the first stirrings and intimations, the first hints and whispers of good and evil that pass in his heart; and this will keep conscience so quick and vigilant, and ready to give a man true alarms upon the least approach of his spiritual enemy, that he shall be hardly capable of a great surprise.
2. Let a man be very tender, and regardful of every pious motion and suggestion made by the Spirit of God in his heart.
3. Because the light of natural conscience is in many things defective and dim, and the internal voice of Gods Spirit not always distinguishable, above all, let a man attend to the mind of God uttered in His revealed Word. We shall find it a rule, both to instruct us what to do, and to assure us in what we have done. For though natural conscience ought to be listened to, yet it is revelation alone that is to be relied upon: as we may observe in the works of art, a judicious artist will indeed use his eye, but he will trust only to his rule. There is not any one action whatsoever which a man ought to do or to forbear, but the Scripture will give him a clear precept or prohibition for it.
4. The fourth and last way that I shall mention for the getting of the conscience rightly informed, and afterwards keeping it so, is frequently and impartially to account with it. It is with a man and his conscience as with one man and another, amongst whom we used to say that even reckoning makes lasting friends, and the way to make reckonings even, I am sure, is to make them often. I shall close with this twofold caution.
(1) Let no man think that every doubting or misgiving about the safety of his spiritual estate overthrows the confidence hitherto spoken of. The sincerity of our faith or confidence will not secure us against all vicissitudes of wavering or distrust; indeed, no more than a strong athletic constitution of body will secure a man always against heats, and colds, and such like indispositions.
(2) Let no man from what has been said reckon a bare silence of conscience, in not accusing or disturbing him, a sufficient argument for confidence towards God. For such a silence is so far from being always so, that it is usually worse than the fiercest and loudest accusations; since it may, and for the most part does, proceed from a kind of numbness or stupidity of conscience; and an absolute dominion obtained by sin over the soul; so that it shall not so much as dare to complain or make a stir. (R. South, D. D.)
A further account of the nature and measure of conscience
I. Whence it is that the testimony of conscience, thus informed, comes to be so authentic, and so much to be relied upon.
1. The high office which it holds immediately from God Himself, in the soul of man. It commands and dictates everything in Gods name; and stamps every word with an almighty authority. So that it is, as it were, a kind of copy or transcript of the Divine sentence, and an interpreter of the sense of heaven. Nay, and this vicegerent of God has one prerogative above all Gods other earthly vicegerents; to wit, that it can never be deposed. For a king never condemns any whom his judges have absolved, nor absolves whom his judges have condemned, whatsoever the people and republicans may.
2. Proceed we now to the second ground, from which conscience derives the credit of its testimony in judging of our spiritual estate; and that consists in those properties and qualities which so peculiarly fit it for the discharge of its forementioned office, in all things relating to the soul.
(1) The extraordinary quickness and sagacity of its sight in spying out everything which any way concern the estate of the soul. As the voice of it was as loud as thunder; so the sight of it is as piercing and quick as lightning.
(2) The tenderness of its sense. For as by the quickness of its sight, it directs us what to do or not to do; so by this tenderness of its sense it excuses or accuses us, as we have done or not done according to those directions. And it is altogether as nice, delicate and tender in feeling, as it can be perspicacious and quick in seeing.
(3) Its great and rigorous impartiality. For as its wonderful apprehensiveness made that it could not easily be deceived, so this makes that it will by no means deceive. A judge, you know, may be skilful in understanding a cause, and yet partial in giving sentence. But it is much otherwise with conscience; no artifice can induce it to accuse the innocent or to absolve the guilty. No, we may as well bribe the light and the day to represent white things black, or black white.
II. Some particular cases or instances in which this confidence towards God, suggested by a rightly informed conscience, does most eminently show and exert itself.
1. In our addresses to God by prayer. When a man shall presume to come and place himself in the presence of the great Searcher of hearts, and to ask something of Him, while his conscience is all the while smiting him on the face, and telling him what a rebel and traitor he is to the majesty which he supplicates; surely such a one should think with himself, that the God whom he prays to is greater than his conscience, and pierces into all the filth and baseness of his heart with a much clearer and more severe inspection. And if so, will he not likewise resent the provocation more deeply, and revenge it upon him more terribly, if repentance does not divert the blow? But on the other side, when a mans breast is clear, and the same heart which indites, does also encourage his prayer, when his innocence pushes on the attempt and vouches the success; such a one goes boldly to the throne of grace, and his boldness is not greater than his welcome. God recognises the voice of His own Spirit interceding with him; and his prayers are not only followed but even prevented with an answer.
2. A second instance in which this confidence towards God does so remarkably show itself is at the time of some notable trial or sharp affliction. When a mans friends shall desert him and all dependencies fail him, certainly it will then be of some moment to have a friend in the court of conscience, which shall, as it were, buoy up his sinking spirits and speak greater things for him than all these together can declaim against him.
3. At the time of death: which surely gives the grand opportunity of trying both the strength and worth of every principle. At this disconsolate time, when the busy tempter shall be more than usually apt to vex and trouble him, and the pains of a dying body to hinder and discompose him, and the settlement of worldly affairs to disturb and confound him; and in a word all things conspire to make his sick bed grievous and uneasy: nothing can then stand up against all these ruins and speak life in the midst of death, but a clear conscience. And the testimony of that shall make the comforts of heaven descend upon his weary head, like a refreshing dew or shower upon a parched ground. It shall give him some lively earnests and secret anticipations of his approaching joy. (R. South, D. D.)
What is the verdict
I. Carefully observe that this text is spoken to the people of God. It speaks to those who are called beloved. These are the people who are specially loved of God and of His people. As soon as we become children we are freed from the condemning power of the law; we are not under the principle and motive of the law of works, but yet we are not with out law unto Christ. We are dealt with not as mere subjects are ruled by a king, but as children are governed by a father. Thus they walk on blindfold to the brink of the precipice. God grant the bandage may be taken off before they have taken the final and fatal step.
1. Genuine Christians very much frequent this court of conscience. They long to have their condition put to a thorough test, lest they be deceived. Make sure work for eternity. Be certain by the witness of the Holy Ghost within you, that you are indeed the children of God. The spirit of the true man answers to this: he is always willing to set in order the court of conscience and make solemn trial of his heart and life.
2. In this court the question to be decided is a very weighty one. Am I sincere in the truth? Is my religion true, and am I true in my profession of it? Does love rule in my nature? Do I believe in the Lord Jesus Christ? Do I also keep His commandments? Do I seek to be holy as Jesus is holy? Or am I living in known sin, and tolerating that in myself which does not and cannot please God?
3. This court is guided by a mass of evidence. That evidence has not to be sought for, it is there already. Memory rises up and says, I remember all thou hast done since thy profession of conversion–thy shortcomings and breaches of covenant. The will confesses to offences which never ripened into acts for want of opportunity. The passions own to outbreaks which were concealed from human observation. The imagination is made to bear testimony, and what a sinful power that imagination is, and how difficult it is to govern it: its tale is sad to hear. Our tempers confess to evil anger, our lusts to evil longings, our hearts to evil covetousness, pride, and rebellion. Hopeful witness there is also of sin conquered, habits broken, and desires repressed; all this is honestly taken in evidence and duly weighed.
4. While the trial is going on, the deliberation causes great suspense. As long as I have to ask my heart, Heart, dost thou condemn me, or dost thou acquit me? I stand trembling. You may have seen a picture entitled, Waiting for the Verdict. The artist has put into the countenances of the waiters every form of unrest, for the suspense is terrible. Blessed be God, we are not called upon to wait long for the verdict of conscience. We ought never to let the question remain in suspense at all; we should settle it, and settle it in the light of God, and then walk in the light as God is in the light.
II. The acquittal issued from this court: If our heart condemn us not.
1. Observe that a man may get an acquittal from the court of conscience; for the question laid before the heart can be settled. It can be ascertained whether I sincerely believe in Jesus Christ; it can be ascertained whether I sincerely love God and love His people; it can be ascertained whether my heart is obedient to the commands of the Lord Jesus Christ.
2. These questions, however, must be debated with great discernment. Abundance, aye, superabundance, of temptation is no proof against the sincerity of our faith in our God; on the contrary, it may sometimes happen that the more we are tempted the more true is it that there is something in us to tempt, some good thing which Satan seeks to destroy.
3. Again, the verdict of the heart must be given with discrimination, or otherwise we may judge according to outward circumstances and so judge amiss. The fact that my child is little and feeble is no proof that he is not my son. The boy may be like his father and yet be only a tiny babe.
4. And the verdict has to be given, mark you, upon gospel principles. The question before the court of conscience is not, Have I perfectly kept the law? The question is, Am I a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ? Am I resting in him for salvation, and do I prove the truth of that faith by loving God, and loving the brethren, and by doing those things which are pleasing to God, and avoiding those things which are displeasing to Him?
5. This question in the court of the heart must never be settled by our feelings. Sinners can rejoice as well as saints, and saints can mourn as well as sinners; the point is not what we feel, but what we believe and do.
6. The question of our state ought to be settled speedily. We know the laws delays, but we must not allow any delay in this court. No, we must press for summary justice.
III. The consequence of this acquittal. Here is the man who has had his acquittal in the court of conscience. Your conscience has said, He is a sincere man; he is a believing man; he is quickened with the life of God; he is an obedient and God-fearing man; and now you have confidence toward God; or at least you have a right to such confidence. What does that confidence or boldness mean?
1. There is the confidence of truthfulness. When you kneel down to pray you know that you are praying, and not mocking God; when you sing you are making melody in your heart; when you preach you are preaching that which your soul believes.
2. The next kind of confidence towards God as to ones acceptance with Him. The Word saith, He that believeth on Me hath everlasting life. Conscience says, Yes, thou hast faith; and the heart concludes, There is therefore now no condemnation. When you know this, your life is gilded with the sunlight of the coming glory, and your heart rejoiceth exceedingly.
3. This produces, and perhaps it is that which the apostle most intended, a boldness of converse. The man who knows that he is truthful and that Cod has accepted him, then speaks freely with God.
4. This leads to great confidence in prayer. Look at the context. We have confidence toward God. And whatsoever we ask we receive, etc. If you want power in prayer you must have purity in life.
5. Our text means also that such a man shall have confidence towards God, in all service for God. Look at the man of God who has confidence towards God as to the perils encountered in faithfully following his Lord. Take Daniel, for instance. His confidence toward God is that he is safe in the path of duty.
6. Moreover, we have this confidence towards God in the way of service, so that we are sure of receiving all necessary help. An officer, if he finds himself in straits, impresses anybody that passes by, saying, In the Kings name, help me. Even so, if you do your Lords bidding, and if conscience condemns you not, you may impress into the service of the great King every angel in heaven, and every force of nature, as need requires.
7. It means rest, perfect rest. Look at your Lord when the tempest was on. Loud roaring, the billows come near to overwhelming the ship; but He is asleep. It was the best thing to do. You and I may do the same: we need not be frightened nor worried nor troubled; but just trust in the Lord and do good, so shall we dwell in the land, and verily we shall be fed.
8. This confidence often mounts up into joy till the Christian man overflows with delight in God; he cannot contain his happiness. He goes to his toil rejoicing to serve God in his calling, and he comes home at night to repose himself in the care of his God and Father. All is well and he knows it. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
An approving heart–confidence in prayer
I. Show that if our heart does not condemn us, we have and cannot but have confidence toward God that He accept us. If our heart really does not condemn us, it is because we are conscious of being conformed to all the light we have, and of doing the whole will of God as far as we know it. While in this state it is impossible that, with right views of Gods character, we should conceive of Him as condemning us. He is a Father, and He cannot but smile on His obedient and trusting children. We cannot conceive of Him as being otherwise than pleased; for, if He were displeased with a state of sincere and full obedience, He would act contrary to His own character; He would cease to be benevolent, holy, and just. Again, let it be noted that in this state with an approving conscience, we should have no self-righteousness. A man in this state would at this very moment ascribe all his obedience to the grace of God. The apostle Paul when in this state of conscious uprightness most heartily ascribes all to grace. I laboured, says he, more abundantly than they all, yet not I, but the grace of God that is in me. But observe that while the apostle was in that state, it was impossible that he should conceive of God as displeased with his state. Again, when a man prays disinterestedly, and with a heart in full and deep sympathy with God, he may and should have confidence that God hears him. Indeed no one, having right views of Gods character, can come to Him in prayer in a disinterested state of mind, and feel otherwise than that God accepts such a state of mind. Again, when we are conscious of sympathising with God Himself, we may know that God will answer our prayers. The soul, being in sympathy with God, feels as God feels; so that for God to deny its prayers is to deny His own feelings, and refuse to do the very thing He Himself desires. Since God cannot do this, He cannot fail of hearing the prayer that is in sympathy with His own heart. In the state we are now considering the Christian is conscious of praying in the Spirit, and therefore must know that his prayer is accepted before God. I say he is conscious of this fact. And this deep praying of the heart goes on while the Christian is still pursuing the common vocations of life. The team he is driving or the book he professes to study is by no means so vividly a matter of conscious recognition to him as is his communion of soul with his God. In this state the soul is fully conscious of being perfectly submissive to God. Not my will, O Lord, but Thine be done. Hence he knows that God will grant the blessing he asks.
II. We are next to consider this position, namely, that if our heart does not condemn us, we may have confidence that we shall receive the things we ask.
1. This must be so, because it is His Spirit working in us that excites these prayers.
2. It is a remarkable fact that all real prayer seems to be summed up in the Lords Prayer, and especially in those two most comprehensive petitions: Thy kingdom come; Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Now let it be observed that God desires this result infinitely more than we do.
3. Yet let it be noted here that God may not answer every prayer according to its letter; but He surely will according to its spirit.
III. Why will God certainly answer such a prayer, and how can we know that He will?
1. The text affirms that whatsoever we ask, we receive of Him, because we keep His commandments and do those things that are pleasing in His sight. The fundamental reason always of Gods bestowing blessings is His goodness–His love. All good flows down from the great fountain of infinite goodness. Our obedience is only the condition of Gods bestowing it–never the fundamental reason or ground of its bestowment. Obedience takes away the obstacle; then the mighty gushings of Divine love break forth. Obedience removes the obstacles; never merits or draws down the blessing.
2. If God were to give blessings upon any other condition, it would deceive multitudes, either respecting ourselves or Himself. If He were to answer our prayers, we being in a wrong state of mind, it would deceive others very probably; for if they did not know us well, they would presume that we were in a right state, and might be led to consider those things in us right which are in fact wrong. Or, if they knew that we were wrong, and yet knew that God answered our prayers, what must they think of God? They could not avoid the conclusion that He patronises wrong doing.
3. God is well pleased when we remove the obstacles out of the way of His benevolence, He is infinitely good, and lives to do good. Now, if it is His delight and His life to do good, how greatly must He rejoice when we remove all obstacles out of the way! Suppose the bottom of the vast Pacific should heave and pour its ocean tides over all the continents of the earth. This might illustrate the vast overflowings of the love of God; how grace and love are mounting up far and infinitely above all the mountains of your sins. How it would force its way and pour out its gushing floods wherever the least channel might be opened! And you would not need to fear that your little wants would drain it dry!
Remarks:
1. Many persons, being told that God answers prayer for Christs sake, overlook the condition of obedience. They have so loose an idea of prayer, and of our relations to God in it, and of His relations to us and to His moral government, that they think they may be disobedient and yet prevail through Christ. How little do they understand the whole subject! He that turneth away his ear from hearing the law, even his prayer shall be an abomination. The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord. If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me. When men come before God with their idols set up in their hearts, and the stumbling block of their iniquity before their face, the Lord says, Should I be inquired of at all by them (Eze 14:3-5)?
2. Persons never need hesitate, because of their past sins, to approach God with the fullest confidence.
3. Many continue the forms of prayer when they are living in sin, and do not try to reform, and even have no sincere desire to reform. All such persons should know that they grievously provoke the Lord to answer their prayers with fearful judgments.
4. It is only those that live and walk with God whose prayers are of any avail to them selves, to the Church, or to the world.
5. Sinner, if you will come back to the Lord, you may not only prevail for yourself, but for your associates and friends. Christian hearer, is it not a dreadful thing for you to be in a state in which you cannot prevail with God? Let us look around; how is it with you? Can you prevail with God? (C. G. Finney.)
Self-acquittal, and the confidence it produces
I. Self-acquittal. If our heart condemn us not. The case supposed is what may be supposed of any Christian, which is–
1. That his heart does not condemn him on the ground of allowing and cherishing sin.
2. A Christians heart does not condemn him on the ground of total insensibility to spiritual things.
3. Acquit you of a self-righteous spirit. Is it a sin, then, to be selfrighteous? Undoubtedly. Must it not be sinful to justify ourselves in the face of a righteous law which condemns us at every point?
4. The destitution of Christian graces is another point on which the judgment of a Christian will acquit him.
5. Insincerity is also one of those things of which our hearts should be prepared to acquit us.
II. The confidence which results from this self acquittal.
1. We have a persuasion of our being justified before God because the terms of our justification have been complied with.
2. We are conscious of possessing what God approves. We assure our hearts before Him, because we love indeed and in truth.
3. A persuasion of acceptableness in devotion is another part of his confidence toward God.
4. An expectation of gracious superintendence forms also a part of this confidence.
5. An assurance of preparation for judgment and eternity crowns the confidence of those whose hearts condemn them not. (Essex Remembrancer.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 19. Hereby we know that we are of the truth] That we have the true religion of the Lord Jesus, and shall assure our hearts-be persuaded in our consciences, that we have the truth as it is in Jesus; as no man can impose upon himself by imagining he loves when he does not: he may make empty professions to others, but if he loves either God or man, he knows it because he feels it; and love unfelt is not love, it is word or tongue. This the apostle lays down as a test of a man’s Christianity, and it is the strongest and most infallible test that can be given. He that loves feels that he does love; and he who feels that he loves God and man has true religion; and he who is careful to show the fruits of this love, in obedience to God and humane acts to man, gives others the fullest proof that he has the loving mind that was in Jesus.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
And hereby we know that we are of the truth; i.e. this shall demonstrate to us, that we are the children of the truth, begotten by it, Jam 1:18, when we resemble it, have the correspondent impress of the gospel (that great representation of the love of God) upon us.
And shall assure our hearts before him; so shall our hearts be quieted, and well satisfied concerning our states God-ward.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
19. herebyGreek,“herein”; in our loving in deed and in truth (1Jo3:18).
we knowThe oldestmanuscripts have “we shall know,” namely, if we fulfil thecommand (1Jo 3:18).
of the truththat weare real disciples of, and belonging to, the truth, as it isin Jesus: begotten of God with the word of truth. Having herein thetruth radically, we shall be sure not to love merely in wordand tongue. (1Jo 3:18).
assureliterally,”persuade,” namely, so as to cease to condemn us; satisfythe questionings and doubts of our consciences as to whether we beaccepted before God or not (compare Mat 28:14;Act 12:20, “having madeBlastus their friend,” literally, “persuaded”). The”heart,” as the seat of the feelings, is our inward judge;the conscience, as the witness, acts either as our justifyingadvocate, or our condemning accuser, before God even now. Joh8:9, has “conscience,” but the passage is omitted inmost old manuscripts. John nowhere else uses the term “conscience.”Peter and Paul alone use it.
before himas in thesight of Him, the omniscient Searcher of hearts. Assurance isdesigned to be the ordinary experience and privilege of the believer.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And hereby we know that we are of the truth,…. By the saints loving one another in deed and in truth, they know, as the cause is known by the effect, that they are of God, who is the true God, the God of truth, and cannot lie, and is truth itself; that they are the children of God, and are born of him, since they love those that are, and every like loves its like; and that they are of Jesus Christ, who is the way, the truth, and the life; that they belong to him, are his, since they have his Spirit, as appears by his fruits in them, and this, among the rest, love to the brethren; and that they are his disciples, which others, even all men know, as well as themselves, by their mutual brotherly love; and that they are of the Gospel, which is truth, and the word of truth; that they are begotten, and born again, according to the will and grace of God by it, and are on the side of it, and can do nothing against, but all for it; and that they are true, sincere, and upright persons, true believers in Christ, whose faith works by love, and are real lovers of him, and his, since they love not in word only, but in deed and in truth.
And shall assure our hearts before him; or “persuade our hearts”: arrive to a full assurance of faith, hope, and understanding, that we are of the truth, do belong to God, are loved by him with an everlasting love, are chosen by him unto salvation, and are his adopted and regenerated ones, having passed from death to life, of which brotherly love is a sure evidence, 1Jo 3:14. Some render the words “shall pacify”, or “make our hearts tranquil”: or “quiet”; this only the blood of Christ can do, and does, being sprinkled on the conscience: he only has a quiet mind, or true peace of conscience, that looks to the righteousness of Christ for justification, and deals with his blood for the full and free remission of his sins: it is true indeed, that one that loves his brother heartily and sincerely, has peace of mind in it, though not for it; when, on the other hand, there is no peace to the wicked man, that hates his brother; for where there is envying, malice, hatred, and strife, there is no true peace, pleasure, and comfort, but confusion, uneasiness, distraction, and every evil work. Or this passage may refer to that holy confidence before God, which true believers in Christ, and cordial lovers of the brethren, have; both now at the throne of grace, where they can come with boldness, intrepidity, and freedom, to ask for what they want, and confidently believe they shall receive what is proper and needful for them; and also hereafter, at the throne of judgment, and in the day of judgment, when they shall have boldness, and not be ashamed before the Judge at his coming; who will particularly take notice of their love in feeding, clothing, and visiting the least of his brethren, which he takes as done to himself.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Shall we know (). Future middle indicative of , at any future emergency, we shall come to know by this ( ) “that we are of the truth” ( ).
Before him ( ). In the very presence of God we shall have confident assurance ( , either we shall persuade our heart or shall assure our heart) because God understands us.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Shall assure [] . Two renderings are possible; the primitive meaning persuade (Act 19:26; Act 17:4; 2Co 5:11); or the secondary and consequent sense, assure, quiet, conciliate (Mt 28:14). Render as A. V., and Rev. as sure. See critical note at the end of the commentary on this Epistle.
Before Him [ ] . Emphatic, the order being, before Him we shall assure our heart. These words are to be kept in mind as the key – note of what follows.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “And hereby know we that we are of the truth.” John emphasizes that children of God may not only know that they are saved, have eternal life, but also that they are living according to the revealed will of God 1Jn 3:14; 1Jn 5:13; Joh 17:17; Joh 8:32.
2) “and shall assure our hearts before him.” It is God who As we live before the Lord, “doing those things that are pleasing in his sight,” His Spirit bears witness with our Spirit that we are the sons of God and the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Spirit which is given to us. 1Jn 4:13; Rom 8:16; Rom 5:5|. Both the witness of the Spirit and love for our brethren give us blessed assurance that we are now saved with an eternal salvation that should bear fruit in service to our fellowman.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
19 And hereby we know, or, by this we know. The word truth, he takes now in a different sense; but there is a striking similarity in the words, — If we, in truth, love our neighbors, we have an evidence that we are born of God, who is truth, or that the truth of God dwells in us. But we must ever remember, that we have not from love the knowledge which the Apostle mentions, as though we were to seek from it the certainty of salvation. And doubtless we know not otherwise that we are the children of God, than as he seals his free adoption on our hearts by his own Spirit., and as we receive by faith the sure pledge of it offered in Christ. Then love is accessory or an inferior aid, a prop to our faith, not a foundation on which it rests.
Why then does the Apostle say, We shall assure our hearts before God ? He reminds us by these words, that faith does not exist without a good conscience; not that assurance arises from it or depends on it, but that then only we are really and not falsely assured of our union with God, when by the efficacy of his Holy Spirit he manifests himself in our love. For it is ever meet and proper to consider what the Apostle handles; for as he condemns feigned and false profession of faith, he says that a genuine assurance before God we cannot have, except his Spirit produces in us the fruit of love. Nevertheless, though a good conscience cannot be separated from faith, yet no one should hence conclude that we must look to our works in order that our assurance may be certain.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
4. This love is evidenced to ourselves by assurance through faith in Christ and witness of the Spirit given unto us, 1Jn 3:19-24.
19. Hereby By our real good-doing in deed.
Of the truth Our deeds are seal of the truth of our religion. So that love and truth identify into one, taking external form in deeds of goodness.
Assure hearts Literally, persuade our hearts; that is, produce in our hearts the persuasion that we are all right before God our judge.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘By this we will know that we are of the truth, and will convince (persuade) our heart before him, because if our heart condemn us, God is greater than our heart, and knows all things.’
To the modern commentator these and the following verses are seen as somewhat linguistically complicated. This may possibly arise from the Greek spoken in John’s environment. What may seem to us complicated Greek may merely be colloquial. But whatever the case we must do what we can with it.
‘By this’ must surely refer back to the previous verse, for it makes little sense to look for an application for it in what follows. It is by being genuine in the outworking of love for our fellow believers in the truth that we can know that we are of the truth. It demonstrates our love for the truth.
‘And will convince (persuade) our heart before him.’ John expects that his letter will have made his readers and hearers ask themselves personal questions about their own state. He knows that their consciences will be at work. That is part of the purpose of his letter. So he wants to give them some assurance. Having examined themselves he wants them, if they are genuine Christians, to be convinced in their own hearts that all is well with them.
So he points out that once they can be satisfied that their love for their brethren who hold to the truth is genuine, and being genuinely lived out, they can know that they are of the truth, and can therefore convince themselves that all is right between them and God (‘right before Him, that is, in His presence’) in their hearts and consciences in His presence (‘Heart’ indicates the whole inner man, including reason, will, conscience and emotions). The point here is not that love for the brethren saves, but that it reveals that they are within the flow of truth, that they love the truth. It is among the true brethren that the truth is held and preached, and to love them and not the false prophets is to demonstrate a willing acceptance of the truth they teach.
‘Because if our heart condemn us, God is greater than our heart, and knows all things.’ The question here is as to whether this is intended to give further assurance, that even if we still doubt (a sign in this case of a tender conscience rather than a lack of love), our genuine self-examination is evidence that we are genuine, and we can therefore remember that God knows all things and will therefore still accept us, so that our hearts can finally be convinced even in the midst of doubt. We can take comfort from God’s all-knowing and know that He knows the genuineness of our faith. Or whether it is a caveat entered on the basis that God knows all things and knows how we really think and are, and suggests therefore that we need to look to ourselves. The context suggests that the first is in mind. John wants God’s people to have assurance. But it may be that he wanted it to be ambiguous in order to meet different cases. The one of tender conscience to take comfort from it. The more hardhearted to be made to think.
Christian confidence is a theme of John. He has previously spoken of coming to God in confident confession (1Jn 2:1), of having confidence before God at the coming of Christ (1Jn 2:28), and he later speaks of having confidence at the judgment (1Jn 4:17), and of the confidence believers have with God when they pray (1Jn 5:14-15). This would support the idea that his aim is to plant confidence here. He seeks for Christians to be confident if they have true grounds for confidence.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
The reassurance of the Spirit:
v. 19. And hereby we know that we are of the truth, and shall assure our hearts before Him.
v. 20. For if our heart condemn us, God is greater than our heart and knoweth all things.
v. 21. Beloved, if our heart condemn us not, then have we confidence toward God.
v. 22. And whatsoever we ask we receive of Him, because we keep His commandments, and do those things that are pleasing in His sight.
v. 23. And this is His commandment, That we should believe on the name of His Son, Jesus Christ, and love one another, as He gave us commandment.
v. 24. And he that keepeth His commandments dwelleth in Him and He in him. And hereby we know that He abideth in us, by the Spirit which He hath given us. This paragraph contains comfort of a singular kind, since it reassures the believer against himself: In this we shall know that we are out of the truth, and reassure our hearts before Him, that, if our heart condemns us, God is greater than our heart and knows all things. A believer naturally wants nothing to do with hypocrisy; he wants to be, rather, a child of the truth, a follower of the truth, also in the matter of brotherly love. The love shown to the brethren is in itself an evidence, a proof, of the new spiritual life in the heart of the believers. As the Christian, however, grows in sanctification, he will often find that his heart is dissatisfied with the progress made, and therefore proceeds to accuse him of lack of love. It is true, of course, that, as in all matters pertaining to the righteousness of life, so also in the matter of brotherly love, we are far from perfection. And yet we can reassure ourselves before the tribunal, in spite of the condemnation of our heart. For God is a greater, a more reliable Judge than our heart, and He has given us the definite assurance in His Word that all our shortcomings in the matter of perfect righteousness will be made up through the perfect righteousness of our Savior, as it was imputed to us by faith. He who knows all things also knows that, in spite of our faults and weaknesses, we are His children by faith in Christ Jesus, and that our imperfections are not due to our lack of spiritual willingness or to hypocrisy. Thus we may defend ourselves against the condemnations of our own heart.
The result is, as the apostle puts it: Beloved, if our heart does not condemn us, we have boldness toward God, and whatsoever we ask we receive from Him, since we keep His commandments and do what is best before Him. If we reach that stage in our spiritual life where the reassurance of the Word of God has quieted the accusations of our heart and we rely, without any self-confidence, in His promises, then we are filled with boldness, with childlike confidence toward God; we may then freely approach Him, as dear children go to their dear father. In this confidence we also lay our needs before our heavenly Father, trusting that He will give us what He thinks best. Our trust is never put to shame, for we shall receive from Him what we desire in prayer. For we are God’s children, reconciled to Him by the blood of His Son; we have His full forgiveness for all our daily sins and shortcomings, and we keep His commandments and strive, although in great weakness, to do only such things as please Him in every way. With this relation obtaining between Him and us, we are happy, though not perfect Christians. We know, of course, that all our efforts do not earn for us an answer to our prayers, but we also have the assurance that God is well pleased with us. His children, for the sake of the great and merciful love which He bears toward us, and will give us the strength for which we ask.
And this strength is truly needed for the keeping of His great commandment: And this is His commandment, that we believe in the name of His Son, Jesus Christ, and that we love one another, as He has given us a commandment. That is the first and supreme command and will of God, that we poor sinners confidently believe in the name of our Savior, Jesus Christ, His Son; that we rely without wavering upon the atonement which was made through His blood, and that we show this faith of our hearts in fervent love toward one another, just as He Himself commanded us to do, Joh 13:34; Joh 15:12. Out of the faith which God desires, which He commands, which He gives and works, the true love toward our brethren will flow so naturally that the keeping of God’s commandments will follow as a matter of course.
The apostle, therefore, concludes: And he that keeps His commandments abides in Him and He in him; and herein we know that He abides in us, from the Spirit whom He has given us. St. John once more emphasizes the glorious fruit of the fellowship which obtains by faith between the Father and Christ, on the one hand, and the believers, on the other. Keeping the Lord’s commandments and loving the brethren is a fruit of faith and an evidence of the presence of the Savior in the believer’s heart. This evidence is so sure, so reliable, because the Holy Ghost, whom He has given us, is working brotherly love in our hearts. Brotherly love could not be present if the Savior were not living in our hearts; and the Savior would never have made our hearts His abode if it had not been for the power of the Spirit. But this combination of circumstances is so strong that it drives away all doubt and fear and fills our hearts with the calm confidence of faith.
Summary. The apostle speaks at length of the glory, the privileges, and the obligations of the sonship of God, showing wherein this beauty consists, explaining that true fellowship with God implies overcoming sin and doing righteousness, and stating that the reassurance of the Spirit overcomes the very condemnation of our own heart.
Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann
1Jn 3:19. And hereby we know, &c. “And by a constant prevalence of this excellent temper and conduct, we may be well satisfied that we are begotten with the word of truth (Jam 1:18.), and are brought to understand, believe in, and live under, the government of the true principles of the gospel, as sincere Christians: and, in the consciousness of this, we shall assure our hearts before him, when we draw nigh in the exercises of devotion.”
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
1Jn 3:19-20 . Blessed result of true love.
] : simple copula.
does not refer here, as in chap. 1Jn 2:3 , 1Jn 3:16 ; 1Jn 3:24 , 1Jn 4:2 , to the following thought, but to the foregoing . . The future , which, according to the authorities, is to be read instead of (see the critical notes), “is used as in Joh 7:17 ; Joh 8:31-32 ; Joh 13:35 , where the subject is the possibility of an event which may with justice be expected” (Braune): it is the more natural here, as the form of thought is the cohortative; the sense is: If we love , we shall thereby know that, etc.
] weakening and partly erroneous explanations of the phrase: . , are those of Socinus: verc talem esse ut quis se esse profitetur; of Grotius: congruere evangelio; of Semler: ; of Baumgarten-Crusius: “to be as we ought to be;” of de Wette: “to belong to the truth; to live in it.” Bengel, on the other hand, rightly interprets the preposition of the principium or ortus; so also Lcke, Dsterdieck, Braune, etc.; comp. Joh 18:37 , and Meyer on this passage. The truth is the source of life in love. It is indeed in its deepest nature God Himself; but must not I be put instead of , for the apostle here, with reference to the preceding , arrives at the idea of truth. Love is the evidence of being born .
] This sentence is not governed by , but it is independently connected with the preceding, either depending or not depending on ; if the former is the case, “we must take combined with somewhat differently than when connected with ( ); with the latter it would be more therein , with the former more thereby ” (Lcke; so also Braune); if the latter be the case, the thought: . . ., serves as the presupposition of the following . . . in this sense: if we truly love our brethren, we shall therein know, etc., and thus (in this consciousness of being of the truth) we shall assure our hearts , etc. [234] The idea that with an entirely new thought appears, which stands in no intimate connection with the preceding (Ebrard), is contradicted by the , which closely connects the two thoughts with one another. What, then, is the meaning of ? Plainly expresses a truth which we (the subject contained in ) impress upon our hearts, so that they are thereby determined to something, which presupposes at least a relative contrast between us and our hearts. The verb means either to persuade a person to something, so that he thinks or acts as we wish, or to convince him of something so that he agrees with our opinion. Some ancient commentators have interpreted in accordance with the first signification: suadebimus corda nostra, ut studeant proficere in melius; the more particular definition which is added is here clearly quite arbitrary; it is not much better with the explanation of Fritzsche ( Comment. III. de nonnullis Pauli ad Gal. cp. locis ): animos nostros flectemus, nempe ad amorem vita factisque ostendendum, or even with the more recent one: anim. n. flectemus sc. ut veram Christi doctrinam tueamur (see Erdmann, p. 129 ff. [235] ). It is very common to explain here by placare, to calm, to compose; this, it is true, is in so far inaccurate as has not this meaning in itself, but certainly the verb is sometimes used in such a connection that the purpose of the persuasion is the calming of anger or of a similar passion; [236] hence the original meaning of the word passes into the above. This may be the case here also, for the following shows that the apostle regards our heart as affected with a passion directed against us; then the following , 1Jn 3:20 (at least the second, for the first may also be the pronoun ), is the causal particle = “ because, since. ” Taking this view, the sense is: In the consciousness that we are of the truth, we shall silence the accusation which our heart makes against us, because God is greater than our heart.
If, on the other hand, we take in the meaning of to convince , (at least the second) is = “ that; ” and the sentence is the object belonging to ; so that the sense is: If our heart accuses us, we shall bring it to the conviction that God is greater than it.
The words , i.e. , do not point to the “future judgment” (Lcke, de Wette), but to the representation of God in the devotion of the soul, which is peculiar to the Christian. By putting them first, it is brought out that the only occurs in this representation of God (Dsterdieck, Ewald, Brckner, Braune). 1Jn 3:20 . By far the most of the commentators take the with which this verse begins as the particle, either = “ because ” or “ that ,” and explain the second as epanalepsis of the first. The supposition of the epanalepsis of a particle has, considered in itself, nothing against it, although it very seldom appears in the N. T., but it is only suitable if is the objective particle (comp. Eph 2:11-12 ); [237] from this it follows that if has the meaning “ to calm ,” the first is not to be regarded as the particle. Sander, it is true, translates: “we can calm our heart, that
God is greater,” etc., but this has only sense if before “that” is supplied “with this,” or “inasmuch as we reflect;” such a supplement, however, is arbitrary. Several commentators (Hoogewen, Bengel, Morus, Baumgarten-Crusius, Ewald) regard the first as the pronoun, as also Lachmann (in his large ed.) reads . Dsterdieck erroneously asserts (as even Bertheau in the 3d ed. of Lcke’s Comm. p. 339, Ebrard, and now even Brckner and Braune, have acknowledged) that this form is never found in the N. T.; it is true that in Col 3:23 it is probably not , , but that is to be read, although D*** E J K have the former, but in Act 3:23 Tisch. reads (so also ), and in Col 3:17 , according to the overwhelming authorities, it is not , but , that must be read (which is admitted by Lachm. Tisch. and Buttm.), and similarly in Gal 5:10 , not , but (also accepted by Lachm. Tisch. 7, and Buttm.); moreover, there is nothing syntactically against reading here , , for is frequently construed with the accusative of the thing. Ebrard, however, thinks that this view is “improbable,” nay, “absolutely impossible;” “improbable,” because in 1Jn 3:22 is used, but in the 1st ed. of this comm. it was shown that is by no means the constant form with John, but that in the Gospel, Joh 2:5 , Joh 14:13 , Joh 15:16 , , also appears, [238] and that the sudden change of forms is found elsewhere also in the N. T., as in Mat 5:19 , first , and afterwards is used, and. in Mat 16:19 , in some codd. (Lachm.), first , and then is read; “absolutely impossible,” “on account of the mutual relationship of the two conditional clauses, 1Jn 3:20 and 1Jn 3:21 ;” certainly the in 1Jn 3:21 seems to form a sharp antithesis to the in 1Jn 3:20 , but it must not be unnoticed that, similar though the two clauses are to one another, they nevertheless have not the pure form of antithesis, inasmuch as in 1Jn 3:21 there is no antithetical particle, in the clauses the succession of the particular words is different, and the first conditional clause only forms an inserted intermediate clause. [239] In favour of the explanation: “ before Him shall we calm our heart, whatever it may accuse us of, because ,” etc. (or convince that , etc.), is the fact that not only is the idea thereby more closely connected with , but also the certainly strange epanalepsis of the is avoided. [240]
The verb , according to Lcke, does not signify condemnation, but only accusation; in the inner life of the heart, however, the two are not distinctly separated from one another, but the accusation of conscience rather includes the condemnation; the special is certainly the work of God. [241] The object of the of the heart is variously defined by the commentators, some understanding by it, with reference to the preceding thought, the “want of love,” others more generally the sinfulness which still adheres to believers even with all the consciousness of loving the brethren (chap. 1Jn 1:8 ). The decision as to which is the correct interpretation depends on the explanation of the following sentence: .
The old controversy is, whether God is called greater than our heart as forgiving or as judging; the former is the view of Thomas Angl., Luther, Bengel, Morus, Russmeyer, Spener, Noesselt, Steinhofer, Rickli, Baumgarten-Crusius, Sander, Besser, Dsterdieck, Erdmann, Myrberg, Ewald, Brckner, Braune, etc.; the latter is the view of Calvin, Beza, Socinus, Grotius, a Lapide, Castalio, Hornejus, Estius, Calovius, Semler, Lcke, Neander, Gerlach, de Wette, Ebrard, etc.
If is = “ to calm ,” then must refer to the forgiving love of God; Lcke, indeed, gives the following explanation: “after John has said that only if we are, in active brotherly love, conscious that we are of the truth, shall we calm our hearts in the judgment he adds: for if the contrary is the case, if our conscience accuses us of the want of genuine love, then God is greater than our heart, and before His holiness and omniscience there is no calm for the accusing conscience.” But the assumption of such a declaratio e contrario, which is in no way hinted at, is only an artificial expedient for reconciling contraries. can only be referred to God as judging, if has the meaning “ to persuade. ” As Ebrard regards this as the right view, and would begin “ a perfectly independent new sentence ” with , he states the meaning as follows: “In the sight of God we shall convince our hearts of this, that if (even) our heart (so prone to self-deception and self-excuse, and therefore small ) accuses us (namely, of not practising love), God, the all-knowing, is greater than our heart, and we shall therefore so much the less be able to stand before Him.” This interpretation is contradicted, in the first place, by the fact that it separates the second part of the 19th verse from the first, nay, even places it in antithesis to it, [242] whereas such an independence is not only not suggested as belonging to it, but is refuted by the connecting , and in the second place, by the fact that the thought is in itself inadmissible. According to the representation of the apostle, we and our heart are regarded as contrasted with one another, inasmuch as our heart brings a condemning accusation against us , which plainly refers to the fact that we by our sins have made ourselves liable to the judgment of God; it is not we therefore that hold out to our heart , but our heart that holds out to us , the judgment of God; how, then, shall we after this bring our heart to the conviction that God will condemn us, nay, will condemn us even more than our heart does already? From this it follows that whatever be the meaning of
cannot refer to the judicial activity of God. As God is called in comparison with our heart that condemns us, the comparison expresses an opposition; Erdmann: Notioni cordis condemnantis magnitudo Dei comparatur et opponitur; the heart, inasmuch as it condemns us, is like the “hostis, qui nos aggreditur, sed Deus h. e. fortior est, ut hostem illum devincere possit” (comp. 1Jn 4:4 ). As this greatness of God, which surpasses the heart, proves itself in this, that in those who are it overcomes the accusations of the heart, those commentators are right who assign to this verse a comforting tendency, and therefore refer to the forgiving love; no doubt, it is objected that the thought of God’s omniscience ( [243] ) is not able to comfort the man whom conscience accuses, but this can only hold good in reference to those who are not yet , and not in reference to those of whom John is here speaking, namely, those who in their sincere love to the brethren have the evidence that they are . [244] If this is the right interpretation, then it is clear that does not refer to the want of love, but to sin in general, from which even the is not yet free (1Jn 1:8 ff.); and this is also indicated by the apostle’s very form of expression, if is directly connected with , and if, accordingly, , is to be read (see above), in which case . . . states the objective ground of the : “ because God is greater than our heart, we therefore (in the consciousness that we are of the truth) shall calm our hearts before God, however much our heart may accuse us. ” This interpretation deserves the preference before that, according to which is = “ to convince ,” and . . . the object governed by it, because not only does the purpose of the verse thereby appear, more clearly, but it is not easy to perceive how the conviction of the greatness of God which overcomes the heart should result from the consciousness . [245]
It is further to be observed that de Wette makes the first as causal particle dependent on (= to calm), the second , on the other hand, on : “for, if our heart accuses us because God is greater than our heart, He also knows all things;” but this construction is opposed not only by the fact that the is more naturally taken as copula (Baumgarten-Crusius), but also by the fact that the thought, that our heart condemns us because God is greater than our heart, is incorrect. [246]
Without adequate ground, Erdmann thinks that in 1Jn 3:19 is used in a wider sense than in 1Jn 3:20 (“vertimus : nobis ipsis persuadebimus”), because there the plural, and here the singular, is used; this change of the number has no influence on the meaning of the word, but the apostle speaks of the as the object of , and as the subject of , inasmuch as the heart is the seat or the union of the affections; the Greek commentators explain here as synonymous with .
[234] Lcke: “Even if it be unadvisable to connect . . . directly with , so that it appears better, with Lachmann and the old commentators, to put a comma after , every one must at least admit the connection in the direct succession of the sentences. But then it must also be permitted to take the logical connection thus: In this (vv. 16 18) do we know that we are of the truth. And thus (if we in living love have the assurance that we are of the truth) we shall, etc.”
[235] This interpretation is based on the erroneous view that is = veram doctrinam tenere; the former interpretation is contradicted by the fact that if we already know from our love to the brethren that we are of the truth, we do not need for the first time to move our hearts to love.
[236] In favour of this we may appeal to the passages cited by Lcke, Mat 28:14 ; Joseph. Arch. vi. 5, 6 (Samuel), , , and the passage in Plutarch, where to , the reply runs: , , although has not in them exactly the meaning of “to calm.”
[237] Lcke himself admits that the passages adduced by him in favour of the epanalepsis “have only value for those who take both times not as causal particle, but as conjunction, belonging to ;” but thinks that the context makes it necessary to assume the epanalepsis here even for the causal particle; similarly Braune, although without even showing the grammatical justification in any way. Besides, in this construction it is quite overlooked that if the intermediate clause . . . is connected with the preceding, the first comes in disturbingly; and if it is connected with the following, the second does so. As in accordance with the thought only the former connection can be the correct one, it is incomprehensible how John should have here interrupted it by .
[238] has in chap. 1Jn 2:5 : ; Joh 14:13 : ; Joh 15:16 : .
[239] If it was the apostle’s intention to contrast sharply two different cases, he could do this more definitely if he constructed the first period thus: . , . ., . . ., and the second: . . From the fact that he did not do so, it may be concluded that such a sharp contrast was not in his purpose.
[240] That the supposition of an epanalepsis for the causal particle is improper, has been already noticed above; and for the passage before us it is further clear from the fact that if is the causal particle, the clause . . . forms, according to the thought, the conclusion of , as plainly appears in Lcke when he explains: “Then, if our conscience accuses us, God is greater than our heart,” etc. But even the epanalepsis of as objective particle may be doubted; for as the thought does not form the presupposition for . . ., but for , it is unsuitable to place it in the objective clause dependent on , instead of connecting it with .
[241] Dsterdieck, with whom also Braune agrees, appropriately remarks that occupies a middle place between , along with which an further occurs, and , which includes the judicial decree of punishment; comp. Deu 25:1-2 . Dsterdieck suitably quotes on this passage, Sir 14:2 , comp. Sir 19:5 , and Test. Gad. 5; J. A. Fabricius, Cod. pseudep. V. T. p. 681.
means: to pronounce against a person that he is guilty; , on the other hand: to pronounce the merited punishment on a person.
[242] The conviction, namely, that we cannot stand before God, plainly forms an antithesis to the conviction that we are of the truth.
[243] Several commentators find in the words the explanation of the idea , so Oecumenius, Augustine, Bede, Socinus, a Lapide, Lorinus, Hornejus, Paulus, de Wette, etc.; even Ebrard says that God is called , “because He cannot be deceived,” but its position gives no justification for that; we can at the most say that the apostle by those words brings specially out one element which is included in .
[244] Luther rightly says: “Though our conscience makes us despondent, and represents God to us as angry, yet God is greater than our heart. Conscience is a single drop, but the reconciled God is a sea full of comfort. When conscience punishes and condemns a man, he becomes alarmed; but against this darkness of the heart it is said: God knows all things. Conscience is always in fear and closes its eyes; but God is deeper and higher than thy heart, and more exactly searches the innermost parts of it.” Besser: “Our heart knows some things, and decides against us; God knows all things, and does not decide against us, but for us, because before His eyes the seed of truth, of which we have been born, is not concealed.”
[245] Ewald construes correctly, but in his explanation: “If we earnestly seek in His sight whether we really love we shall be able, even if we must sometimes accuse ourselves before God, nevertheless by the penitent (?) acknowledgment of the truth, to convince our conscience that we are men and God is God, that we may therefore sometimes fail and must be admonished by Him,” he introduces references into the thought which are not contained in it.
[246] Brckner, it is true, defends de Wette’s interpretation, but he substantially perverts it; for whilst de Wette refers the whole verse to the accusation of God (therein agreeing with Lcke), Brckner takes the in comforting sense; but it then becomes still more untenable, for it is plainly unjustifiable to refer the omniscience of God in the subordinate clause to condemnation (for both explain by: “looking more deeply, examining all the recesses of the heart”), but in the principal clause to forgiveness.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
5. The Glorious Consequences of our Adoption by God
1Jn 3:19-24
19And42 hereby we know43 that we are of the truth44, and shall assure45 our hearts before 20him. For46 if our heart condemn us47, God48 is greater than our heart, and knoweth all things. 21Beloved, if our heart condemn us not49, then have50 we confidence toward God. 22And whatsoever we ask51, we receive of52 him, because we keep53 his commandments, and do those54 things that are pleasing in his sight. 23And this is his commandment, That we should55 56 believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ, and love one another, as he gave us commandment. 24And he that keepeth his commandments dwelleth57 in him, and he in him. And hereby we know that he abideth in us, by58 the Spirit which he hath given us.
EXEGETICAL AND CRITICAL
Transition and first consequence: the assurance of being of the truth.
1Jn 3:19 a.And hereby we shall know that we are of the truth.The connection is by the copula ; the Future is occasioned by the hortatory form of 1Jn 3:18 : , the sense being: If we love , we shall know thereby that etc. (Huther); the object of our knowing, , is defined by what is said in 1Jn 3:18. Thus close is the connection of the Apostles argument with the preceding section in which he treated of obedience to the commandments of God and more particularly of brotherly love (1Jn 3:10-18). refers to what precedes, as in 1Jn 2:5 b, and not to what follows as in 1Jn 2:3.1Jn 3:19 is plainly connected with 1Jn 3:18, not with 1Jn 3:10 (Rickli, de Wette), or 1Jn 3:14 (Lucke). The Future has here the same sense as in Joh 7:17; Joh 3:31-32; Joh 13:35. denoting the possibility of a case which may justly be expected to arise. Winer, Grammar, p. 294, sq. requires to be interpreted like , both on account of the force of the preposition which signifies principium vel ortum, and of the pregnant sense which John attaches to the word . It is the truth eternal, originating in and springing from God revealed in Christ, testified to by the Holy Spirit as the Spirit of truth, the real substance of the Gospel, and designed to be expressed in the life of believers; it comes nearest to the idea of , and we ought therefore to compare the term: (Joh 12:36). Cf. Joh 18:37.It is not covered by , but should be combined with it. The truth (out) of God is the nature of those who love the brethren and a well of life in them.Hence we must not explain with Bede: ex veritate qu Deus est (so also Calvin, Rickli and others), or with Calov: ex verbo veritatis (so also Spener, Bengel, Lcke, de Wette), and still less understand with Jachmann the true religion, or with Nsselt: doctrina divina, or with Semler: perfectior vita. These definitions do not explain the idea . Nor must we weaken the force of the preposition and explain with Oecumenius: , or with a Lapide: veracem esse, veraciter ambulare, or with Socinus: vere talem esse, ut quis se esse se profitetur, or with Grotius: congruere evangelio.
Second consequence: An assured heart before God, 1Jn 3:19 b. 20.
1Jn 3:19 b. And we shall persuade our hearts before Him. either to convince or to persuade; the object points to a difference within the personality, qualified by and hence perceptible. It is an ethico-religious difference: the accusation and condemnation of our heart against our own person. The Apostle designates by the inmost seat of the emotions (Joh 14:1; Joh 14:27; Joh 16:6; Joh 16:22), the source of our actions (Joh 13:2), and here also the judge within; in John, occurs only in the spurious passage Joh 8:9, but is frequently used by Paul (Rom 2:15; Rom 9:1; Rom 13:5; 1Co 8:7; 2Co 5:11; Act 24:16) and also at 1Pe 3:16; 1Pe 3:21; Heb 13:18. Origen cites 1Jn 3:21, plainly either as: , or as . The Greeks take simply for . Although is more comprehensive than , yet the latter is contained in the former, viz., conscience is in the heart, which we must conceive to be disquieted and excited by and with the conscience. The connection requires us to construe aimed at the point ut desistant condemnare (Bengel), as at Mat 28:14 : , i.e., the and the soldiers on guard who had fled on the morning of the resurrection. According to the context and conformably to usage denotes a pacifying persuasion. The antithesis 1Jn 3:21 : likewise makes denote to pacify, to quiet as the effect of persuasion. Hence Fritsches explanation: flectemus animosad amorem ostendendum, is false and wholly repugnant to the context. The reference however is not to the last judgment when the final decision and separation will take place, but rather to the inward transactions, which though prophetical of the last judgment, precede the same during this our earthly life. Accordingly, is not coram illo in the last judgment and relates not to eternity (as Socinus, Lcke, de Wette construe), but only coram illo, in His presence, in His light. As the accusing heart on the ground of the Divine word, and in virtue of the impulse of and the fellowship with the Holy Spirit is disquieted, and the voice of God is heard in the conscience, so the heart must be quieted before God, on the ground and in virtue of His word and promise and in the fellowship with Him, so that the following words: ; explain ; imaginings of our own spirit and worldly diversions do not promote such quieting. Compare Dsterdieck. Hence we should construe the Future in cordination with and so connected with that it is also governed by , although the latter connected zeugmatically with denotes thereat, with , thereby; this is the more practicable, because intervenes and completes and introduces . It is therefore wrong to begin a new sentence with (Paulus, Fritzsche, Ebrard).
1Jn 3:20. Because, if the heart condemn us, because God is greater than our heart, and knoweth all things.The reading is so well established that neither a conjecture like that of Stephanus, who proposes to read , nor the cancelling of the second , as done by Grotius, warrants us to lessen or remove the difficulties which are also rather contained in the thought. We have now the reason specified that we shall quiet our hearts before Him in case our heart should condemn us and find a verdict against us. Hence with the Subjunctive is perfectly right. Winer, Grammar, pp. 307, 308. stands midway between , to accuse (Rom 2:15), which is still accompanied by an (Rom 2:15), and , to sentence [in a bad senseM], condemn (Joh 8:10 sq.); the latter includes the judicial punishment (Joh 8:10; Colossians 4), while denotes only the verdict found against a person accused to be followed by the punishment corresponding thereto. Cf. Deu 25:1-2. The term is therefore very significant with respect to the verdict found by our own soul against ourself, which is more than the mere accusation, because the implies also the guilt of the person accused, so that the condemnation to the punishment, the , may justly be expected (Dsterdieck). In the heart there is not only a party, but also a judge; the conscience is a court of justice. Hence it denotes here not only reprehendere or accuse (Vulgate, Augustine, Lcke, al.). Why the heart finds a verdict against us the context indicates in a relative play on the words , exactly like Joh 15:2. (Dsterdieck). Consequently [it finds the verdict against usM.] that we are not wholly of the truth, that we do not perfectly, gladly and uninterruptedly love the brethren; for these are correlates of extraordinary difference in degree up to perfection. The explanation of the Greek commentators, who think of 1Jn 3:18, and that of Dsterdieck, who connects it with 1Jn 5:19, should be combined against those of Luther and Nsselt, who think of every defect except that of brotherly love; but every other defect would also show itself with respect to brotherly love, and render it deficient. Of course, the reference cannot be to a complete relapse, to a knowingly and grossly repeated case of untruthfulness in love or of unlovingness, since the lying words of love would have no corresponding deed (Estius, Episcopius, Lcke, al.) though we may and should think not only of lesser but also of graver offences, seeing that the conscience of Christians is sufficiently tender and acute to find an adverse verdict also with respect to lesser defects of love. The repetition of before and is not peculiar to this passage but occurs also at Eph 2:11-12. Lcke cites an example from Xenophon, Anab. 7, 4, 5 and 5, 6,19 remarking, however, that while in both places signifies that, it denotes here because. The reason of the epanalepsis is not the forgetfulness of the author, but the importance of the thought which allows and requires such a rhetorical emphasis. Lcke admits the epanalepsis without hesitation, Winer, (Grammar p. 604, note 3,) is undecided, Huther hesitates and decides against it, the older and many modern commentators (Calvin, Wolf, Sander, Dsterdieck) are for it. There is hence no reason to read with Bengel, Baumgarten-Crusius, Lachmann, ed. maj. and others or =quicquid like in 1Jn 3:22 instead of . It cannot be maintained with Dsterdieck that this is not Greek, and from the circumstance that or even never occcurs in the New Testament without the variant reading , while frequently occurs without a variant reading, it cannot be inferred that cannot be read here. Cf. Winer, Grammar, p. 322, sq.Mat 8:19 occurs without the variant reading , and is as well authenticated as . But on that account it is only possible to read here which is occasioned by the reading in A; , which may have its object in the Accusative, also allows that reading. But the context forbids it; for it is hardly true that we can quiet our heart at every accusation, and the reason of such quieting to be connected with is too much separated, while the putting and assumption of the case, as stated in 1Jn 3:20, and required at 1Jn 3:21, in which the heart stands in need of such quieting, is all but wiped out.The main difficulty is, that in the circumstance of God being greater and knowing all things must be found, and that it really contains, a quieting of the heart under its accusations.The word is of frequent occurrence in the writings of John; in a similar connection at 1Jn 4:4; 1Jn 5:9; in other connections, particularly at Joh 4:12; Joh 5:36; Joh 8:53; Joh 10:29; Joh 13:16; Joh 14:28; Joh 15:20. The context invariably supplies the sense in which it is used; here the sentence furnishes the necessary explanation; He , while the heart . Dulce paregmenon in Grco (Bengel). God is here called greater in comparison with our heart; the heart accuses: it is not that He accuses more than our heart, but that He judges differently, more justly than our heart; for He knoweth all things which our heart does not perceive, know or observe in giving sentence. of course points into the heart itself and to the immediate surroundings; what is that? The context answers that question: 1Jn 3:2 : , 1Jn 3:9 : , we do not altogether know ourselves, we have only the beginnings and germs of the life from Him; Christ, His life, His bearing and taking away sin (1Jn 3:5-6), His destroying the works of the devil (1Jn 3:8), objectively completed, but subjectively to be gradually completed from a life-principle of the regeneration (1Jn 2:29), and moreover passing through mans own weakness and sin (1Jn 3:3 : ), and through the hatred of the world (1Jn 3:13 : ). God knows the whole () of the new life of man even to the (1Jn 3:2), while man knows only the particular, the particular error of which the heart accuses him; God knows the power of His gift to man and its preservation in penitence, its growth and development both in the hope and the faith in him. Therefore God is greater and knoweth all things; therefore, this greatness of the God who is our Father is a ground of quieting when the heart accuses us, and in its vitality and tenderness finds a verdict against us. So Besser: Our heart knows some things and pronounces against us: God knows all things and pronounces not against us, but for us, because the seed of the truth out of which we are born, is not concealed to Him. He knows, as Sander says, even the smallest spark of faith in the glimmering wick, or even the hidden germs of true love (Rickli). Conscientia pusilla est et scit aliquid nostri duntaxat, at Deus magnus est, novit omnia nostra, prsentia, prterita, futura, et omnium, et habet jus voluntatemque condonandi (Bengel).Hence this verse is, sensu evangelico, to be understood of the love which forgives and destroys sin (Luther, Spener, Bengel, Besser, Dsterdieck, Huther and others), and not sensu legali, of judging righteousness and omniscience (Calvin, Beza, Socinus, Grotius, Calov, Lcke, Neander, Ebrard and others). Ebrard begins a new sentence and explains thus: And before the face of God we shall convince our heart, mind, conscience, not the understanding, that if (already) our (easily deceived smaller) heart accuses us (that we do not practise love), God, the Omniscient, is greater than our heart (and that we so much the less can stand before Him, have ).Nor must we construe: For, if the heart accuses us, because God is greater than our heart, He also knoweth all things; so de Wette sensu legali, Brckner sensu evangelico. Rather the importance of the thought justifies the epanalepsis of the .
Third consequence. Filial confidence. 1Jn 3:21-22.
1Jn 3:21. Beloved, if our heart condemn us not. as in 1Jn 2:7; 1Jn 3:2; 1Jn 4:1; 1Jn 4:7; 1Jn 4:11 is here connected with the enjoyment of the forgiving love of God in order to bring out a new and other feature. The recurrence of the words indicates the connection with the foregoing (although, as Bengel maintains, , 1Jn 3:20, has the emphasis), in the same sense, in order to mark a particular case ( with conjunct.), which is sure to arise, and only the negative marks the antithesis; the word used is and not , which would make the supposed case the consequence of what goes before (as Huther supposes). A similar construction occurs at 1Jn 1:8-9.
We have confidence towards God.The words denote the state of the peace of the soul and of undisturbed confidence to God-ward which is opposed to that described before by , like at Rom 8:15. The 1Jn 2:28; 1Jn 4:17 is indeed the child-like free confidence before the Father in the time of judgment; the reference here also is to a judgment, in the court of the conscience, in ones own heart, but not to the future and final judgment. Hence Estius explains falsely: fiducia evadend damnationis in die judicii. But the limitation of to confident prayer and supplication is neither warranted by the word itself (2Co 7:4), the context, nor the construction with , which simply indicates the direction and relation as in Rom 5:1 : , nor by the parallel-passage at 1Jn 5:14. Here it denotes joyful confidence to God-ward at every moment of life (Rickli, Dsterdieck and others), but not fiducia in nostris necessitatibus recurrendi ad ipsum (Lyra), or the girdle or mendicants bag of all manner of necessaries (Luther), fiducia in rogando (Bengel). [Alford: To God-ward, in our aspect as turned towards and looking to God.It must be remembered that the words are said in the full light of the reality of the Christian State,where the heart is awakened and enlightened, and the testimony of the Spirit is active: where the hearts own deceit does not come into consideration as a disturbing element.M.]. But hereby it is not denied that the specific, yea the most significant feature of this filial confidence (Dsterdieck) is, what follows
1Jn 3:22. And whatsoever we may (perchance, German: etwa) ask, we receive from Him.The conjunction connects a particular already contained in like in 1Jn 3:10 b (Dsterdieck). is to be taken quite generally and to be limited only by the subject asking, namely the child of God and his wants (Dsterdieck, Huther). [The latter beautifully adds: The child of God asks for nothing which is contrary to the will of his FatherM.]. The same holds good of (). The Present must not be taken for the Future (Grotius); it rather denotes the present, constant intercourse between the child of God with his God. Cf. Joh 14:13; Joh 16:24. Augustine: Caritas ipsa novit, caritas ipsa orat, contra hanc aures claudere non novit, qui illam dedit; securus esto, caritas roget, et ibi sunt aures dei; non fit, quod vis, sed fit, quod tibi expedit.
Because we keep His commandments and do the things which are pleasing in His sight.Here is evidently a parallelism: and , so that the two together constitute one idea. At Joh 8:29, occurs in a connection similar to the present. Besides this also in Act 6:2; Act 12:3.The term of frequent occurrence in the Pauline writings (Rom 12:1; Rom 14:18; 2Co 5:9; Eph 5:10; Php 4:18), with the Dative or is used Col 3:20 of the fourth commandment, and the parallel passage Eph 6:1, has . Cf. 1. Tim. 1John 1Jn 5:4 : . Hence we must also connect with the commandments. But while the first clause of the parallel sentence specifies the commandments, the second clause marks that which is pleasing in His sight and the kind of obedience, because God requires not a slavish service, but filial obedience, and that an active one (). Hence we must not explain with the Roman Catholic expositors of prcepta and of consilia evangelica. The greater difficulty is the right construction of the connection with , which indicates the reason why our prayers are heard. But the ground is not necessarily causa meritoria as the Greek writers think who assume an on the part of God; and the Roman Catholics and the Rationalists of course agree with them. The context, especially with respect to 1Jn 2:29; 1Jn 3:6; 1Jn 3:9; 1Jn 3:23-24, shows that while prominence is given to their conduct the reference is to the relation in which they stand, or with the description of their activity to the ground on which they move. The relation between God and themselves which conditions and regulates their conduct is the cause why their prayers are heard, because their conduct conditioned by that relation also regulates their prayers according to the will of God ( 1Jn 5:14); the prayers as they are made, so they are heard, because we are the children of God. The expression of Hunnius, that the particle is not causalis but rationativa, is beside the mark, although the idea is correct. Cf. Dsterdieck. [Huther has multum in parvo: in close connection with the immediately preceding indicates the ground of the Divine exhibition of love in hearing prayer; this ground, which must not be taken as causa meritoria, is the filial obedience of the person asking, whereby God identifies him as His child; the idea of obedience is expressed in two cordinated sentences (resembling the Hebrew parallelism); and are synonymous; marks the obedience as being active; the second sentence points to the circumstance that it does not consist in servile subjection to the commandment, but in the filial performance of that which is well-pleasing to God. Alford, adverting to the Romish misinterpretation, excellently expounds: Out of Christ, there are no good works at all: entrance into Christ is not won or merited by them. In Christ, every work done of faith is good and is pleasing to God. The doing of such works is the working of the life of Christ in us: they are its sign, they are its fruits: they are not of us, but of it and of Him. They are the measure of our Christian life: according to their abundance, so is our access to God, so is our reward from God: for they are the steps of our likeness to God. Whatever is attributed to them as an efficient cause, is attributed not to us, but to Him whose fruits they are. Because Christ is thus manifested in us, God hears our prayers, which He only hears for Christs sake: because His Spirit works thus abundantly in us, He listens to our prayer, which in that measure has become the voice of His Spirit. So that no degree of efficacy attributed to the good works of the child of God need surprise us: it is God recognizing, God vindicating, God multiplying, God glorifying His own work in us. So that when e.g. Corn, a Lap. says, Congruum est et congrua merces obedienti et amiciti, ut si homo faciat voluntatem Dei, Deus vicissim faciat voluntatem hominis, all we can reply is that such a duality, such a reciprocity, does not exist for Christians: we are in God, He in us; and this St. John continually insists on. We have no claim ab extra: He works in us to do of His good pleasure: and the works which He works, which we work, manifest before Him, and before all, that we are His children.M.].
Fourth consequence: Fellowship of the Spirit with particular reference to the ground of these consequences, 1Jn 3:23-24.
1Jn 3:23. And this is His commandment.1Jn 1:5 : . is simply copulative and connecting with specifies the most essential contents of , which indeed embraces two commandments, faith and love, but which two commandments, being indissolubly united, contain the sum-total of the being determined by the Divine Will in Christ. refers neither to the first commandment (J. Lange), nor must it be construed in a sense it does not bear (de Wette); it is and remains the expression of the Divine Will (Dsterdieck). of course is= . [Oecumenius: , . . . Bede: Singulari numero mandatum prmisit, et duo subsequentia adjungit mandata, fidem scilicet et dilectionem, quia nimirum hc ab invicem separari nequeunt. Neque enim sine fide Christi recte nos alterutrum diligere, neque vere in nomine Jesu Christi sine dilectione possumus credere.M.].
That we should believe on the name of His Son Jesus Christ and love one another.Here indicates the purpose and not only the contents of the commandments, as Huther explains [But the strong telic sense of can hardly be pressed here; see 1Jn 3:1; 1Jn 3:11.M.]. The Aorist is not only the best authenticated and difficilior lectio, but also more thoughtful than the formed after the pattern of , and denotes by the side of the Present , that the former precedes the latter, as the pre-supposition, not as being done once for all (against Dsterdieck), but as a root of vital strength, and as the stem, as in Gal 5:6 : , or 1Ti 1:5 : . Faith conceived as an (Joh 6:29) and Joh 16:9 (, ) as the ground of a holy being, of the whole obedience, is yet mans work and hence may be required in the commandment, more especially since the construction (Joh 4:21; Joh 5:24; Joh 5:46-47; Joh 8:45) denotes the assensus with which mans agency awakes, while describes the received notitia, and the God-wrought fiducia, which embraces the least, the notitia, and also the moment next to it, the assensus. The object of faith is . This is the revelation of the being of the Son of God, and contains within itself and discloses to believers what is testified of Him and by Himself, and is to be testified; it includes both the prdicatio (Rom 10:14) as Calvin and Beza explain, and the meritum and the promissiones Christi et de Christo, as pointed out by S. Schmidt and others. Doctrina Christiana (Episcopius), and the dignity of the Messiah (S. G. Lange), are consequently insufficient. [Alford: To believe the Gospel-message concerning Him, and Him as living in it, in all His fulness.M.]. Conformably to the close connection of faith and love (Joh 16:4; Joh 16:7 sqq.) the Apostle now annexes the Present to the Aorist by the copulative .The additional clause
As He gave us commandment, being a further qualification of love (1Jn 2:7-8; 1Jn 3:16; Joh 13:34; Joh 15:12-13), belongs to the latter part of the sentence (Myrberg: non modo amandum est, sed etiam vere et recte amandum), and not to the former (), as Estius, Bengel, Sander.Hence Christ, and not God, is and remains the subject of this lateral idea. Christ, on whom, as the Son of God, we have to believe, is the origin and standard of brotherly love.
1Jn 3:24. And he that keepeth His commandments, abideth in Him and He in Him.Passing over the lateral idea and the , 1Jn 3:23, and resuming the , 1Jn 3:22, the Apostle now makes prominent the fourth consequence, the fellowship of God with us and our fellowship with God, according to which He is in us and we are in Him. Hence , , all threedescribe God and not Christ (Neander, Besser, Sander).
And hereby we know that He abideth in us, from [out of] the Spirit that He gave us.Gods abiding in us is the object of knowledge; and it is important to notice that Gods abiding in us is not specified here as res minus verisimilis (Socinus), but as the condition of our abiding in God; the two mutually include each other and must be taken in that sense. And this is known = . obviously refers to what follows, as 1Jn 2:3, and not to what precedes, as ch. 1Jn 3:5. Surprising is the transition from the formula , placed at the beginning of this sentence and so current in John, to , but the transition may be explained by the circumstance that after the clearness and beauty of the structure required substantive proof, and that this substantive proof occasioned the fine and thoughtful description of the source and origin of that knowledge by the preposition . Cf. 1Jn 4:6 : . The is the Holy Spirit who moves us, the living and powerful principle of our life from (out of) and in God. Here we should remember the , 1Jn 2:20-26. Inadequate is de Wettes explanation, that denotes the Divine appropriated in faith and life, but that the reference here is to the right knowledge and doctrine of the person of Jesus, and even more inadequate is the opinion of Socinus, that is love.In the annexed relative sentence must not be taken as a genit. partitivus, but as the result of attraction. Winer, Part III. 24.
DOCTRINAL AND ETHICAL
1. The Christian should not be or remain in a state of uncertainly whether he really is a child of God (out) of the truth; his redemption and the reconciliation of God to him and his reconciliation to God and his salvation need not be to him a doubtful or only probable state. But clear and firm knowledge on this subject he does not acquire at one stroke, over-night; he must learn it by living and exercising himself in love. The Christian in process of being [i.e., in the development of this Christian lifeM.] is in a state of fermentation, or engaged in single combat, without a survey of the whole field, the battle conducing to victory, although here and there defeats occur, and he is forced to retire even unto flightwithout being able to imperil the ultimate victory. Hence he has misgivings which he can and ought to discard, fearless and full of confidence and reliance on the Lord of hosts and of the victory.
2. The final cause of such assurance of faith and blessed certainty of salvation, constantly exposed to the danger of being disturbed by the accusations and charges of the heart discerning and reproving the ever-recurring omissions and imperfections and transgressions in thought, word and deed, lies not in ourselves, neither in the mark, in brotherly love and, generally, in obedience to the commandments of God, nor in such: acts of reproof of an anxious and contrite heart, but in God Himself, in that which He has promised and imparted to us, and that He abides by His word and work, also in our hearts, nursing and furthering the same even unto completion. Three things are clearly and distinctly asserted.
a. If the Christian looks at himself, anxiety and doubts concerning the state of grace are justified; Heb 6:4-6; Heb 10:26-31, in, which passages Luther found a hard knot, and on which see R. Stier, point to the possibility of a relapse, as also Rom 8:13; Gal 6:7-8. This is contrary to Calvins assumption of the donum perseveranti given with regeneration, and which is not taught at Joh 10:28-29. But if the Christian looks up to the mercy of God, he acquires confidence and joyfulness and the Holy Spirit bears witness of his adoption and Divine life-fellowship (1Jn 3:24, Rom 8:16-27). This is contrary to the Roman Catholic doctrine except by that the Christian, special revelation, cannot have any certainty concerning his state of grace.
b. The point in question is not a mathematical certitudo, an actus intellectus, but only fiducia as well as confidence in the pureness of a mans disposition.
c. The certain assurance of standing in Gods grace is not identical with nor to be confounded with the certainty of being predestinated. The Council of Trent was right, in opposition to the Reformed, to reject this certainty (Rom 6:15-16) but wrong in rejecting the former assurance (Rom 6:9): Sicut nemo pius de Dei misericordia, de Christi merito deque Sacramentorum virtute et efficacia dubitare potest, sic quilibet, dum se ipsum suamque propriam infirmitatem et indispositionem respicit, de sua gratia formidare it timere potest, quam nullus scire valeat certitudine fidei, cui non potest subesse falsum, se gratiam Dei esse consecutum. Here, as we may readily perceive, truth and falsehood are suspiciously mixed up. Cf. Frank, Theologie der K. F. 2. 78, 141. Thiersch, Vorlesungen ber Protestantismus und Katholizismus, 2, 149159.
3. The two cases that conscience finds a verdict against us and not against us are opposed to each other, but nevertheless facts belonging to the Christian life and perfectly compatible with it, even as 1Jn 1:8-9 and 1Jn 3:9 do not cancel each other. These propositions cannot be classed among the paradoxes, which may not be without truth, as stated by Luther, e.g. Si in fide fieri posset adulterium peccatum non esset, and Proposition 32 in Grund und Artikel, which were unjustly condemned by the Romish bull (1520, Erlangen, 24, 138): A. good work done in the very best manner, is still a daily sin, etc.Nor dare we try to aid the establishment of a morality for the people, and another morality for the saints by drawing with the Roman Catholics a distinction between prcepta and consilia evangelica, between a selfish amor concupiscenti calculating on salvation and an amor amiciti surrendering itself in pure fidelity. We may neither separate by false distinctions the objectively given commandments with the will of God nor the subjectively imposed obligations, nor, worse still, men from one another. But we ought to contemplate both truths, that our natural disposition which is sinful before God ever and again mingles without, and contrary to the Christians will with the works done by the motions of the Spirit from above and in faith, and that the Christian born of God has before his eyes and in his heart the one will of God, as revealed in the Law and in Christ, which aims not at a higher or a lower morality [but at one moralityM.], and that his obedience is well-pleasing to God, not because of his own doings or nature, but solely for the sake of Christ. Our life here on earth is made up of alternate joy and grief, of rising and falling, of forgiveness of sins and cancelling and the commission of sin. Sin, moreover, is more sinful in the children of God than in the servants of perdition, for they have a more profound and lively sense of the slightest stirrings of the wrath of God, because and though their falling is not yet a falling from grace, as at Gal 5:4 ( ). Not every falling involves the loss of grace. But obedience and patience in good works remain marks of the state of grace. Cf. C. A. 6, 20, f. C. 4, 5, 6, Frank 1, 1; 2, 177 sq.; 181 sq.; 139 sqq.; 369 sqq.
4. Filial confidence which does not begin with the entrance upon our inheritance [but here on earthM.], has a not only in the day of judgment, but already here on earth, and it evidences itself both by zealous efforts towards self-sanctification based on the assurance of the forgiveness of sins, and by confident prayer. Prayer is as essential to man as his conscience, because the conscience, in proportion to its clearness and vitality, necessarily passes into prayer (Lber, Lehre vom Gebet p. 1.). If the conscience is pacified, prayer will be sure of being heard. If man is so circumstanced that he lives and moves in Gods word, his word in prayer to God will also prevail with God, in whose being (as we may learn from the case of the praying God-man), as well as in mans being prayer has its ultimate reason. Harless, therefore, has not very judiciously classed prayer among the subjective means of Christian virtue (Ethik . 33).A limitation of prayer that may be heard beyond the pattern-prayer of the Lords Prayer is not permitted; you may in the state of grace pray for every thing assured of being heard, but equally assured that nothing is said of the time when and the manner how your prayers will be heard. God hears whatever we ask, but not exactly as we ask.
5. Faith in God, who is Love, and (in virtue of our belief in the love of God) love of the brethren are intimately connected, the reference being to faith as the transition from darkness to light and love as the walk in the light (Hofmann, Schriftbeweis XI., 2, 337, cf. 1Jn 3:14).
6. It follows from the testimony of the Holy Spirit within thee (cf. No. 2 above), that thou art a temple of God (1Co 3:16), or a tabernacle of God among men (Rev 21:3).
HOMILETICAL AND PRACTICAL
Much depends on knowledge, more on knowledge of the truth, most on the knowledge whether we are ourselves of the truth.He is to be pronounced happy in whom the difficult self-knowledge was acquired and carried out as the knowledge of sin, but more happy he in whom the knowledge of God forces itself through the knowledge of himself.Four marks of our adoption or four evidences of our being of the truth: 1. Peace of the soul under the accusations of conscience (1Jn 3:19-20); 2. Filial trust under the wants and deprivations of life (1Jn 3:21-22); 3. Assurance and decision under the manifold and different requirements (10. 23); 4. Joy of fellowship in solitude or desertion.How can you pacify your heart disquieted by the accusings of conscience? 1. Know what God has hitherto done for you not in vain: He desires to save you; 2. Feel how in such a judgment the holiness of God is working in you: He desires to purify you; 3. Hope that He will gloriously accomplish it, as He has promised: He is the Master and your life will be a masterpiece at the last.Prayer and commandment are essentially related to each other; thy word addressed to God in prayer will surely be heard, if Gods word addressed to thee in the commandment is observed. God will not be asked in vain by those who suffer themselves to be commanded by Him. The hearing of prayer is not affected by the conduct of man fixed by his relation to God, but by this relation which produces in man childlikeness, childlike obedience, childlike trust, childlike disposition and childlike ways, even as it affords paternal fidelity and paternal aid. With faith in the name of His Son Jesus Christ thou hast the love of God above all things, or the fulfilment of the commandments of the first table; and from faith in the paternal love of God revealed in Christ flows Christian brotherly love, or the fulfilment of the commandments of the second table.He is in us, this is ever the first and most important thing; His commandments are before our obedience to them; and He is with and in them. But if we do not value His commandments we do not value ourselves, we become ruins and a desert. In desert ruins He does not dwell; we must be builded up, if not into temples, at least into tabernacles. He buildseven the tabernacle into the temple, and instead of cares of the soul in indigence of the Good and the Eternal Good, jubilant hymns of praise for the inheritance of the saints swell in majestic fulness and strength.Without Christ, the Son of God, God is not thy Father but without the Spirit of the Father and the Son, thou hast neither God the Father nor the Saviour.
Luther:Although our conscience make us afraid and represent to us God as angry, yet God is greater than our heart. Conscience is but a single drop, but the reconciled God an ocean of consolation.When a man is rebuked and condemned by his conscience, he grows terrified; but against this darkness of the heart we may say, God knoweth all things. Conscience is always fearful and shuts the eyes; but God is deeper and higher than thy heart and searches its inmost state most thoroughly.
Starke:We believers do not indulge in idle imaginings and suppositions, but have sure, firm, irrefragable grounds and testimonies, wrought by the Holy Ghost Himself that we are of the truth and born of God.A man may have a great temptation and yet be a child of God.Away with forged letters and testimonials! if the inward witness of the conscience contradicts and condemns. Conscience is more than a thousand witnesses. How false is the charge that Christianity causes melancholy and gloominess! Sorrow may indeed be found among Christians but without any fault of Christianity or of God, and moreover with them true knowledge is followed by their sorrow being turned into joy.A heart rejoicing before God is a great treasure; O, the happiness of being permitted to appear before God in His majesty with joyfulness; therefore let us pray: Lord, give us a cheerful heart!The spirit of joyfulness is also a spirit of prayer. Believers will receive what they ask of God in the manner which He has promised and at the time He thinks proper.Nothing can be required of a Christian beyond faith and love: believers will not be taken captive by statutes, but they stand in liberty.Be ashamed to say or order anything without the commandment of God, and again be ashamed to do anything in opposition to the commandment of God.To live a good life requires us to abide good; it is not enough to have come into God, one must also abide in Him.The believer is a great miracle, seeing that the infinite and immeasurable God wholly dwells and walks in him.
Heubner:Is here perchance taught workconfidence? No! faith remains the ground of justification but we may hope that the genuineness and purity of our faith will follow love.The Christians prayer is never unheard; for God gives us that which is good although not always that to which we gave utterance, not that which we intended; the Christian ever desires the Good and the Good only, and the better we grow, the more do all our desires coincide with the will of God. Only those are able to ask who are in a state of grace; a serious, pious, honest mind is the condition of prayer; a braggart cannot pray.The presence and continued operation of the Spirit in keeping us in the right discipline, warning, moving, strengthening and comforting us, is the sign that we belong to Christ, if He leaves us we are separated from Christ.
Adapted from Ziel (Gesetz and Zeugniss, 4):How happy they who are of the truth! 1. They may pacify their heart before Him. 2. They have a joyful confidence toward God; 3. They are they that will receive from Him whatsoever they ask.Compare here hymns like Paul Gerhards: Ist Gott fr mich, so trete (If God is for me, etc.).
Sein Geist spricht meinem Geiste
His Spirit cheers my spirit
Manch ssses Trostwort zu;
With words of comfort sweet;
Wie Gott dem Hlfe leiste,
That they Gods help inherit
Der bei Ihm suchet Ruh;
Who rest with Him do seek.
Und wie Er hab erbauet,
And that He has upbuilded
Ein edle neue Stadt
A city fair and new,
Da Aug und Herze schauet,
Where eyes and heart forever
Was es geglaubet hat.
What they believed shall view.
Da ist mein Theil und Erbe
For there in glory lying
Mir prchtig zugerichtt;
My lot is held in store
Wenn ich gleich fall und sterbe,
With all my falls, and dying,
Fllt doch mein Himmel nicht. (1Jn 3:9.)
My heaven falls nevermore.
Also Erdmann Neumeisters: Jesus nimmt die Snder an (Jesus, sinners does receive); especially 1Jn 3:7.
Mein Gewissen qult mich nicht,
My conscience now is purified,
Moses darf mich nicht verklagen;
All plea to Moses is denied,
Der mich frei und ledig spricht,
He acquitteth me to-day
Hat die Snden abgetragen (1Jn 3:5),
Who all sin did take away;
Dass mich Nichts verdammen kann;
Nothing can condemn or grieve
Jesus nimmt die Snder an.
Jesus sinners does receive.
[Pyle: 1Jn 3:19-21.This will show us to be Christians indeed; and while the impartial testimony and inward sense of our own consciences assure us of the sincere performance of our own duty, we may safely conclude that God, the Searcher of hearts and Standard of all truth, will approve of and reward us. And on the contrary, whoever by the clear conviction of his own mind knows and feels himself to be a hypocritical transgressor of his moral duty, must be assured that God, who knows him better than he does himself, cannot fail to be his more severe judge and avenger.M.].
[Bull: 1Jn 3:20.If a man be conscious to himself of his own wickedness, yea, the very secret wickedness and hypocrisy of his heart, sure God Himself, who set up in every man this candle of conscience, as Solomon calls it, Pro 20:27, cannot be ignorant of it; He being the fountain of all knowledge, and all knowledge in the creature derivative from Him, and so knowing all things that are knowable by any creature, and infinitely more.M.].
[Macknight: 1Jn 3:22.This general declaration must be limited by the conditions, which in other passages of Scripture are made necessary to our petitions being granted by God; such as, that we ask things agreeable to His Will, 1Jn 5:14-15; and that we ask them in faith, Jam 1:6; that is, in the full persuasion of the Divine wisdom and goodness, and with sincerity and resignation. Such prayers, they who keep the commandments of God, may hope will be heard, because they keep His commandments by habitually doing the things which are well-pleasing to Him.M.].
[Pyle: 1Jn 3:23-24.These verses may be thus paraphrased; In short, true faith in the doctrine of Christ, and true charity to mankind, especially to our Christian brethren, is the sum-total of our duty. And you, that have already duly performed it, have a sufficient pledge and earnest of your acceptance with God, as true disciples of Christ, by the gifts and graces of His Holy Spirit conferred upon you.M.].
[Ridley: 1Jn 3:24.The way of the Spirit is not to be traced; the working of God is not to be perceived. The Divine Author and His operation are hidden from us, but His work is manifest. And though we cannot see God at any time, or feel the motion of the Spirit in our hearts, yet is there certain evidence whether we are brought on by Him or not. St. John gives us an infallible rule, that we may know that God, by His Spirit, dwelleth in us, if we keep His commandments.M.].
[Ezekiel Hopkins:A clear conscience gives us boldness of access unto God. Guilt abashes the soul, and makes it both ashamed and afraid to appear in the presence of God: and therefore Adam, as soon as he had sinned against his Maker, presently hides himself from Him. We may observe in ourselves, what a slavish dejectedness seizeth us when we come to God in duty, after we have wronged Him by any known sin: we come to Him suspiciously; and with such a misgiving fear, as if we would not have God take notice that we are before Him; and are still in pain, till the duty be over. But, when our consciences are clear, oh, with what delight do we haste to God, and with what content do we stay with Him! How doth the soul dilate and spread itself under the smiles of God, beating full upon it! So, O Lord, here is a heart that I labour to make and keep void of offence; do thou fill it with thy promised grace and Spirit. It is not, indeed, a mansion pure enough for the pure and holy God; yet it is such, as thou wilt accept, and in which thou wilt dwell. There are still many hidden corruptions in it, but do thou search them out; and thou, who hast kept thy servant from presumptuous sins, do thou also cleanse me from secret faults. Thus a clear conscience, with a holy and reverend boldness, addresseth itself to God; and sweetly closeth up every duty and every prayer, with full assurance of obtaining mercy from God. So the Apostle (Heb 9:22): Let us draw near . in full assurance of faith: how may we gain this full assurance, when we draw near to God? By having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience: get but a pure and clear conscience, and that will enable you to draw near to God in full assurance of faith, and so here (1Jn 3:21): Beloved, if our heart condemn us not, then have we confidence towards God: if conscience be not evil to accuse us, then have we confidence towards God: when the face of mans conscience looks cheerful, and hath not a frown or a wrinkle upon it, this makes us joyfully to apprehend that Gods face towards us is serene also, and that we shall be welcome at all times into our Fathers presence: this conscience suggests to us, and makes us come with a holy, yet with an awful boldness unto God.M.].
[Barrow:No man can otherwise found any assurance of Gods special love to him, than upon a good conscience: testifying that he doth sincerely love God, and endeavour faithfully to obey His commandments.If we desire to judge reasonably about ourselves, or to know our true state, the only way is to compare our hearts and lives with the law of God, judging ourselves by that rule according to which God will judge us. If we find in our hearts the love of God and goodness (sincere although imperfect); if we perceive ourselves disposed to keep Gods commandments (to live piously, righteously and soberly in this world); then may we have a satisfactory hope concerning our state; then we may (as St. John saith) have confidence toward God, because we keep His commandments and do those things that are pleasing to Him: but if we do not find that mind in us, and that practice, we, in conceiting well of ourselves upon any other grounds, do but flatter and impose upon ourselves; if all the world should account us good, and take us to be in a good case, we should not at all believe them, or mind them; for let no man deceive us, he that doeth righteousness, he (and he alone) is righteous, is the most faithful advice and unquestionable sentence of St. John. It is therefore (that by resting on such false bottoms we be not abused, and drawn thence to neglect the amendment of our hearts and ways, in order to our final account) a duty incumbent upon us thus to search our hearts and try our ways, and accordingly to judge ourselves: the doing which with care and conscience would dispose us to prepare for the judgment we speak of; for, if (saith St. Paul) we would judge ourselves, we should not be judged, or not condemned.M.].
[Neander:(Christ), when about to partfrom His disciples, no more to be with them in His personal bodily presence, promised that He would be invisibly near and present among them, no less truly than during His earthly manifestation. The proof of this, His actual presence among them, should be the communication to them of His Spirit. This should be the medium between believers and their Saviour, until vision takes the place of faith; till that immediate view of Christ, enjoyed by His disciples in the familiar intercourse of his earthly life, is restored in heightened glory to believers. It is to this inward experience that the Apostle makes his appeal with these Churches and to it the inward experience of believers in all ages bears witness. Here, then, are conjoined two characteristic marks of fellowship with Christ which cannot be discovered from each other; the one inward, perceptible to the immediate inner consciousness, the other belonging to the outward life, but presupposing the former, of which it is at once the outward expression and the condition of its continuance. The first is-Participation in the Spiritpromised by Christ; the second, Obedience to His commandments, which is the fruit of that Spirits agency, and in which such participation makes itself apparent. This being the Spirits work, is also, as the evidence of this work, the condition of its continuance; all Divine gifts being conditioned upon the faithful use of what is bestowed, according to the words of Christ: Whoso hath, to him shall be given.M.].
[On 1Jn 3:19-20
see De corde condemnante, Critici Sacri Thes. No 3:2, 991.
1Jn 3:20.
A Sermon by Robert South, D. D. Sermon Themes: God greater than our heart.
Conscience an earnest of the last judgment.
Use to be made of the misgivings of conscience.
1Jn 3:20-21.
Charles Simeon, A good and evil conscience, Works 20, p. 454.
1Jn 3:21.
R. South, The nature and measures of conscience, 2 Sermons.
1Jn 3:23.
Andrew Gray, The mystery of faith opened up, 6 Sermons.
Isaac Williams, The Gospel a feast of Love, Serm. 2, 67.
1Jn 3:24.
John Flavel, The Spirits indwelling, Works, 2, 328.
J. Basnage, Lunion de lme avec Jsus-Christ, Serm. 2, 501.M.].
Footnotes:
[42]1Jn 3:19. , though wanting in A. B., is found in C. G. K. Sin., many cursives and versions.
[43]1Jn 3:19. with A. B. C. Sin; G. K.; another reading is , cognoscemur. [German: We shall know.M.]
[44]1Jn 3:19. [German: Out of the truth.M.]
[45]1Jn 3:19. [German: And shall persuade our hearts before Him.M.]
[46]1Jn 3:20. , is written by Lachmann , only after A, which reads . [German: because.M.]
[47]1Jn 3:20. is the reading of the best Codd. also of Sinait; elsewhere .
[48]1Jn 3:20. before , B. C. G. K. Sin. is well authenticated [and adopted in the German which reads: Because God is greater etc.M.]
[49]1Jn 3:21. , elsewhere , Sin;, is at all events an error of the pen like 1Jn 3:19, 1Jn 3:12.Besides A. omits the first, and B. C. the second , but both occur in G. K. Sin; and B. C. testify for the former, A. for the second.
[50]1Jn 3:21. well supported instead of B, , habeamus.
[51]1Jn 3:22. German: And whatsoever we may ask.M.
[52]1Jn 3:22. A. B. C. Cod, Sin; G. K.
[53]1Jn 3:22. A. K. Sin. is probably a slip of the pen for .
[54]1Jn 3:22. [ . . . And do the things, etc.; the demonstrative pronoun is unnecessary and is not used in most of the versions, the German renders and do the well-pleasing before Him.M.]
[55]1Jn 3:23. B. G. K.A. C. Cod. Sin. .
[56]1Jn 3:23. after in Cod. Sin. before or after in the best authentic Codd.
[57]1Jn 3:24. [German: abideth to be retained to preserve the uniformity.M.]
[58]1Jn 3:24. [ =of the Spirit; so German.M.]
Fuente: A Commentary on the Holy Scriptures, Critical, Doctrinal, and Homiletical by Lange
19 And hereby we know that we are of the truth, and shall assure our hearts before him.
Ver. 19. And shall assure our hearts ] This, saith father Latimer, is the desert of the feast of a good conscience. There are other dainty dishes in this feast, but this is the banquet.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
19 24 .] See the summary at 1Jn 3:11 . The blessed effects of true brotherly love as a test of the Christian state .
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
19, 20 .] [ And ] in this (on , see above, 1Jn 3:10 ; 1Jn 3:16 . It here refers to what had gone before: viz. to the fulfilment of the exhortation in 1Jn 3:18 , as the future shews: q. d., which thing if we do, This has been very generally acknowledged: some Commentators mentioning, but only to repudiate, the connexion with what follows, . . . Some, as De W., refer back to 1Jn 3:10 ; 1Jn 3:16 ; others, as Lcke, to 1Jn 3:14 . But to whichever of these it is referred, the sense is much the same. The context which follows is best satisfied by taking it as above: see on below) we shall know (on the future , see above. It is the result consequent on the fulfilment of the condition implied in . De Wette’s idea, after Bengel, that the rec. has been altered to the future to suit the following future , is not to be thought of, in the presence of the common formula , ch. 1Jn 2:3 , 1Jn 3:24 ; 1Jn 3:4 (2, 6,) 13, 1Jn 5:2 . The prevalent form was adopted by the transcribers, regardless of the future following) that we are of the truth ( ; , ; , , , . c. But, true as this is, and self-evident, it does not reach the depth of the meaning: as of course do not the many rationalistic paraphrases which have been given: “congruere evangelio,” Grot., Whitby, &c. To be , is a different matter from to be truthful or true men. Estius approaches the meaning, understanding to be the truth of God in His promises, and so . to mean “are of the number of the elect.” Bede’ [63] interpretation, “ex veritate qu Deus est,” in which Lyra, Tirinus, Calvin agree, is nearer still: but had the Aposlte intended this, he surely would have written . The Lutheran Commentators have come nearer still, making to be “verbum veritatis” by which we are begotten anew unto God: so Luther, Seb.-Schmidt, Calov., Spener, Bengel, Lcke, De Wette. But why stop at that which after all is itself ? Why not mount up to the itself, that pure and objective Truth which is the common substratum and essential quality of the Spirit Himself, of the Word, of those who are born of the Word by the Spirit? and thus Dsterd., Huther, al.), and shall persuade our hearts before him (i. e. and in and by this same sign, shall still the questionings of our hearts before God, by the assurance that we are His true children. This meaning has been acquiesced in by almost all Commentators both ancient and modern. Fritzsche alone maintains a different one: “Et coram Deo, i. e. Deum intuiti et reveriti, animos nostros flectemus (viz. ad amorem vita factisque ostendendum), quia, si animus nos hujus officii prtermissi condemnet, quia major est, inquam, Deus animo nostro et omnia scit.” He denies that is to be referred to , and, as above, interprets that by the consideration of God’s greatness and omniscience we are to persuade our hearts to love in truth. This view is impugned and satisfactorily confuted by Lcke, on the following grounds: 1. that after so solemn an exhortation to brotherly love on the deepest grounds, it is not likely that the Apostle would subjoin another, grounded on less deep and more general motives: 2. that every thing said by way of a motive in has been included in what has been said before: 3. (And this is the weightiest objection of all, enlarged on and pressed further by Dsterdieck) in this case here must denote the heart as the seat of the affections, whereas in 1Jn 3:20 must denote the heart as the seat of the conscience. Whereas on the common view, is, throughout, the heart as the seat of the conscience, giving rise there to peace or to terror, according as it is at rest or in disquietude: nearly as Thl., , : only that this view of the identity of the conscience with the is not correct. St. John uses for the innermost seat of our feelings and passions: of alarm (Joh 14:1 ; Joh 14:27 ), of mourning ( Joh 16:6 ), of joy ( Joh 16:22 ); it was into the of Judas that the devil put the intent of betraying the Lord ( Joh 13:2 ): and the here is the inward judge of the man, whose office is, so to say, promoted by the conscience, accusing or else excusing ( Rom 2:15 ). Then, as to , there is no need to give to the verb any unusual meaning. It does not mean “quiet” or “assure,” except in so far as its ordinary import, “persuade,” takes this tinge from the context. And so it is, in every instance cited by the Commentators for this unusual meaning: e. g. in Mat 28:14 , Act 12:20 , and reff.: in Jos. Antt. vi. 5. 6, where Samuel : in the passage in Plutarch, where one says , and the other answers, .
[63] Bede, the Venerable , 731; Bedegr, a Greek MS. cited by Bede, nearly identical with Cod. “E,” mentioned in this edn only when it differs from E.
It must be plain from what has been said, that the future is not, on account of , to be taken as referring to the future day of judgment, as some (e. g. Benson, Lcke, De Wette) have done. In ch. 1Jn 4:17 , which is in some respects parallel with this, that day is expressly named: whereas in our passage, an equally clear indication is given, by the parallelism of and , that no such reference is intended. is not, at His appearing, but, in His sight , as placed before His all-seeing eye: , as c., though misunderstanding the whole: see above: so Aug [64] (“ante Deum es: interroga cor tuum si persuademus cordi nostro, coram ipso persuademus”), Bed [65] , Corn.-a-lap., Luther, Calov., Bengel, Neander, Huther, Sander, Erdmann, Dsterd. It may be remarked finally, that by being thus put first, it has evidently the emphasis: and this is important for that which follows.
[64] Augustine, Bp. of Hippo , 395 430
[65] Bede, the Venerable , 731; Bedegr, a Greek MS. cited by Bede, nearly identical with Cod. “E,” mentioned in this edn only when it differs from E.
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
1Jn 3:19-20 . A crux interpretum . Read , ( i.e. ), and take the subsequent as “because”. The foregoing exhortation may have awakened a misgiving in our minds: “Am I loving as I ought?” Our failures in duty and service rise up before us, and “our heart condemns us”. So the Apostle furnishes a grand reassurance: “Herein shall we get to know that we are of the Truth, and in His presence shall assure our heart, whereinsoever our heart may condemn us, because, etc.”. The reassurance is two-fold: (1) The worst that is in us is known to God ( cf. Aug.: Cor tuum abscondis ab homine; a Deo absconde si potes ), and still He cares for us and desires us. Our discovery has been an open secret to Him all along. (2) He “readeth everything” sees the deepest things, and these are the real things. This is the true test of a man: Is the deepest that is in him the best? Is he better than he seems? His failures lie on the surface: is there a desire for goodness deep down in his soul? Is he glad to escape from superficial judgments and be judged by God who “readeth everything,” who sees “with larger other eyes than ours, to make allowance for us all”? Cf. F. W. Robertson, Lett. lvi.: “I remember an anecdote of Thomas Scott having said to his curate, who was rather agitated on having to preach before him, ‘Well, sir, why should you be afraid before me, when you are not afraid before God?’ But how very easy it was to answer! He had only to say, God is not jealous, nor envious, nor censorious; besides, God can make allowances”. So Browning:
“Thoughts hardly to be packed
Into a narrow act,
Fancies that broke through language and escaped;
All I could never be,
All, men ignored in me,
This, I was worth to God, whose wheel the pitcher shaped.”
, and what matter how we appear (Mat 6:1 .)? , “persuade,’ i.e. pacify, win the confidence, soothe the alarm, of our heart. Cf. Mat 28:14 . Otherwise: “we shall persuade our heart that greater is God”. But how can love for the brethren yield this inference? , “readeth every secret”. Cf. Joh 2:25 . A quite different and less satisfying sense is got by punctuating . , . . . The second is then a difficulty and has been dealt with in three ways: (1) It has been ignored as redundant: “For if our heart condemn us, God is greater, etc.” (A.V. fortified by the omission of the participle in some inferior MSS.). (2) An ellipse has been assumed either of the substantive verb: “because if our heart condemns us, (it is) because God, etc.” (Alford), or of (Field, who compares 1Ti 6:7 ): “it is plain that God, etc.” (3) has been conjecturally emended into (Steph., Bez.): “still greater is God, etc.”.
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
assure. App-150.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
19-24.] See the summary at 1Jn 3:11. The blessed effects of true brotherly love as a test of the Christian state.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
1Jn 3:19. , in this) Hence depends we know and shall tranquilize; and to this refers, since He is greater, 1Jn 3:20.- , of the truth) Of expresses the beginning or origin: Rom 2:8. For the truth makes love also true: 1Jn 3:18.- ) before Him who knows all things in truth, we shall tranquilize our hearts in prayer: 1Jn 3:22.-, we shall tranquilize) so that they shall cease to condemn. The same word is used, Mat 28:14.- , our hearts) The word , conscience, is used by Peter and Paul alone of the sacred writers: nor is it used in the Septuagint more than once, and that in another sense, Ecc 10:20. For the Hebrew is rendered , the heart, for instance, 1Ki 2:44; 1Ki 8:38. And so John nowhere uses the word , conscience; but here he implies it, in making mention of the heart: for it is the conscience which is tranquilized, and which condemns. Comp. Apparatus,[10] p. 588.
[10] Lachm. reads , with ABC; Tisch. and Rec. Text, , with Vulg. alone of the oldest authorities. C Vulg. have : so Tisch. and Rec. Text. B and corrected A Syr. and Theb. have : so Lachm-E.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
V. HEREBY WE KNOW
CHAPTERS 3:19-5:13
1. Hereby we know that we are of the truth (1Jn 3:19-24)
2. Hereby know ye the Spirit of God (1Jn 4:1-4)
3. Hereby know we the Spirit of truth and of error (1Jn 4:5-6)
4. The Love manifested toward us (1Jn 4:7-19)
5. The final tests as to the possession of eternal life (1Jn 4:20-21; 1Jn 5:1-13)
1Jn 3:19-24.
If the love of God dwells in the heart of the child of God it must be manifested in a practical way. Love must be expressed in deed and in truth, which is the fruit of true faith. If the believer does this he knows that he is of the truth. If it is lacking he is but an empty professing believer. But if we know that we are of the truth, by bearing such fruit of faith, we can assure our hearts before Him, and we can draw nigh with confidence. As our hearts do not condemn us, knowing that we are of the truth, we have confidence toward God and whatsoever we ask, we receive of Him, because we keep His commandments, and do those things that are pleasing in His sight. Where there is not a good conscience and the Holy Spirit is grieved real nearness to God and the effectual prayer which availeth much are impossible. It is the same blessed truth our Lord spoke in connection with the parable of the vine. If ye abide in Me, and My words abide in you ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you (Joh 15:7).
But what is His commandment? Strange that some expositors have read into it the Ten Commandments. The context answers the question: And this is His commandment, that we should believe on the name of His Son Jesus Christ, and love one another, as He gave us commandment. And He that keepeth His commandment dwelleth in Him, and He in him. And hereby we know that He abideth in us, by the Spirit He hath given to us.
1Jn 4:1-4.
The last sentence of the preceding chapter gives the assurance that the believer has the Holy Spirit. There is no such thing as a true child of God without the Holy Spirit. The indwelling Spirit is the proof that He Himself dwells in us. But how do we know that it is the Spirit of God? How can a test be made? The sphere of the Spirit is the territory in which the spirit of error and darkness operates and where the liar from the beginning counterfeits. Many false prophets inspired by the spirit of darkness had gone out into the world and the apostle gives a warning not to believe every spirit but to try the spirits. The true test is the person of the Lord Jesus Christ. Every spirit that confesseth that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is of God.
But this means more than a mere confession with the lips, it means to own the person and lordship of Jesus Christ our Saviour. The demons know how to confess Him and yet they are demons (Mat 8:29). The spirit of antichrist denies Him, does not confess that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh. This spirit which is not the Spirit of God manifests itself in the most subtle forms. It is called true Christian charity in our days to make common cause in what is called social service with those who do not confess Christ, who do not own Him as Saviour and Lord. These many antichrists speak of Him as man, they go so far as to call Christ a manifestation of God in human form, but they deny that He is very God come in the flesh.
As stated before the most prominent form of it is today the denial of His virgin birth. Anything which denies the full glory of the Lord Jesus Christ which in any way detracts from His glory, is the spirit of antichrist. About a hundred years ago a movement was in existence which claimed to be another Pentecost, just as there are movements today which claim the same unscriptural thing. The leader of that movement, Edward Irving, put great stress upon the incarnation, that Jesus came in the flesh. But after a while the demons which stood behind the movement brought forth the horrible doctrine of the peccability of Christ, that He had a corrupt nature like any other man. Such is the subtlety of Satan, the old serpent. He always strikes at Christ and His glory.
The false prophets are certainly no fewer in number at the present time than when the apostle spoke; yet, in general, we may say they assume less divine authority. We have sunk down so far into the wisdom of the world that man is credited with a place which God has lost. Inspiration is the inspiration of genius, rather than of God. We are more and more getting to lose the reality of the last, just as we are coming more and more to believe in the former. We believe in brilliancy, in eloquence, in intellect, in whatever you please in this way, but the assumption of speaking in any direct way by the Spirit of God no more exists, for the mass, except as one may say that the Spirit of God is as liberal as men are, and speaks in very diverse fashion–in poets, philosophers, and all the acknowledged leaders among men (Numerical Bible).
1Jn 4:5-6.
The fifth verse has a good description of these antichrists and their following. These men, with their boasted learning and scholarship, their great swelling words, called eloquence, their natural amiability and cultured, courteous manners are of the world. They were never born again. If they had ever seen themselves lost and undone, and found in Christ their peace with God, they would yield complete obedience to Him and not deny His glory. When they speak they speak of the world. They speak of world conditions, and how they may be improved, of a better human society. Quite true they are even religious, but what they speak is not that which is of the Spirit, but what concerns the world system. The crowds want to hear that for it pleases the flesh, and thus the devil brings his audience to hear them. Such antichrists in cap and gown have multiplied by the thousands; they are found in the leading pulpits of all denominations.
The test as to the Spirit of truth and the spirit of error is stated in these words: We are of God; He that knoweth God heareth us; he that is not of God heareth us not. Hereby know we the Spirit of truth and of error. The test is the apostles doctrine. The Epistles are the full revelation of the doctrine of Christ, they contain the many things which the Lord spoke of when on earth, and which should be revealed when the Holy Spirit came. He has come and has made known the blessed things which eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, the things which God has prepared for them that love Him, but which are now revealed by His Spirit, the Spirit of truth (1Co 2:9-10). The spirit of error denies these doctrines. In our day the enemy has invested a most subtle slogan, Back to Christ. It sounds well but behind it stands the father of lies. These men who speak of going back to Christ charge our beloved brother Paul with having a theological system of his own, which they claim Christ, on earth, never taught. They reject the great redemption truths made known by the Lord through the apostle to the Gentiles. Their cry Back to Christ is the spirit of antichrist.
1Jn 4:7-19.
These blessed words are addressed to the beloved, true believers. The great center of this passage is God is Love. Love is of God. But how do we know that God is Love? Such an antichristian system as Christian Science babbles about the love of God, but that which alone expresses the love of God, and by which it is known that God is love, they reject completely. The question, how do we know that God is love is answered in 1Jn 4:9-10. In this was manifested the love of God toward us, because that God sent His only begotten Son into the world, that we might live through Him. Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us, and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins. Apart from this there is no knowledge of the love of God. He who is born again knows that love, for in believing it (Joh 3:16) he receives eternal life, and that love was perfect in Him when we had no love for Him–not that we loved God, but that He loved us. In His great love He has met every need.
This love, the nature of God, is in those who are born again, Every one that loveth is born of God and knoweth God. He that loveth not knoweth not God. Beloved, if God so loved us, we ought to love one another. If we love one another, God dwelleth in us, and His love is perfected in us. Love therefore is the very essence of the new nature and must be manifested towards all who are the objects of the love of God and are in the family of God by having believed that love.
His presence, Himself, dwelling in us rises in the excellency of His nature above all the barriers of circumstances, and attaches us to those who are His. It is God in the power of His nature which is the source of thought and feeling and diffuses itself among them in whom it is. One can understand this. How is it that I love strangers from another land, persons of different habits, whom I have never known, more intimately than members of my own family after the flesh? How is it that I have thoughts in common, objects infinitely loved in common, affections powerfully engaged, a stronger bond with persons whom I have never seen, than with the otherwise dear companions of my childhood? It is because there is in them and in me a source of thoughts and affections which is not human. God is in it. God dwells in us, What happiness! What a bond! Does He not communicate Himself to the soul? Does He not render it conscious of His presence in love? Assuredly, yes. And if He is thus in us, the blessed source of our thoughts, can there be fear, or distance, or uncertainty, with regarding to what He is? None at all. His love is perfect in us (John N. Darby).
His love is perfected in us by loving one another. Once more he uses the phrase Hereby we know. Hereby we know that we dwell in Him, and He in us, because He hath given us of His Spirit. The Love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the indwelling Spirit. He proceeds: We have seen and testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world. Whosoever shall confess that Jesus is the son of God, God dwelleth in Him and he in God. What wonderful words these are! Can there be anything greater and more wonderful than dwelling in God and God dwelling in us! And this is true of every believer. If we confess that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, if we rest in His finished work as well, knowing the Father sent Him to be the Saviour, and our Saviour therefore, then the Holy Spirit dwells in us and as a result God dwelleth in us and we in God. There can be no question about it for God says so.
The enjoyment of it is a different matter. If it is not real to us and if we do not enjoy it there is something which hinders it in ourselves. If a great king should pay us a visit in our home and dwell there and we do not recognize the fact of the honor and privilege bestowed upon us, and if we do not trouble about it and show our appreciation of it, we would have no enjoyment in such a visit. To have the reality of it and enjoy the wonderful truth that God dwells in us and we in Him we must practise what our Lord said in Joh 14:23, If a man love Me he will keep My words, and My Father will love him, and We will come unto him, and make Our abode in Him. We must dwell in love, the very nature of God, and that love is manifested towards Him and towards the brethren. 1Jn 4:12 and 1Jn 4:16 make this clear. And we have known and believed the love that God hath to us. God is love; and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God and God in him.
Another important fact is stated in the verses which follow: Herein hath love been perfected with us, that we have boldness in the day of judgment, because as He is, even so are we in this world. There is no fear in love but perfect love casteth out fear, because fear has torment; and he that feareth is not perfected in love. It has nothing to do with our love, as some take it nor with seeking an experience of being perfect in love. It is His love which casteth out fear, believing that love and dwelling in it. If we believe and know what God has made us in His infinite grace what Christ is, that as He is so are we, how can we fear anything! The coming day of judgment we await not only without any fear, but with boldness, for the day will only bring the full display of what Christ is and what we are in Him and with Him. The knowledge of His perfect love, the love which has reached down to us and lifted us so high, casteth out all fear.
(It is a blessed love that Christ came into the world for such sinners as we are. But then there is the day of judgment. When I think of the love, I am all happy; but when I think of the day of judgment, my conscience is not quite easy. Though the heart may have tasted the love, the conscience not being quite clear, when I think of judgment I am not quite happy. This is what is provided for here. As He is so are we in this world. The love was shown in visiting us when we were sinners; it is enjoyed in communion: but it is completed in this, that I am in Christ, and that Christ must condemn Himself in the day of judgment, if He condemns me, because He is, so am I in the world, I am glorified before I get there. He changes this vile body and makes it like to His glorious body. When I am before the judgment seat, I am in this changed and glorified body; I am like my judge Synopsis of the Bible.)
1Jn 4:20-21; 1Jn 5:1-13.
Once more brotherly love is applied as the test. If a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother, he is a liar. God is in the believer, he is the object of Gods love, if therefore the brother is not loved, but hated, it is an evidence that God does not dwell in such a heart and again the beloved disciple brands such an one as a liar.
Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God and every one that loveth Him that begat, loveth him also that is begotten of Him. This is very logical. Then he gives a counter test to show that it is genuine. By this we know, that we love the children of God, when we love God and keep His commandments. If we love God and keep His commandments, we can rest assured that we love the children of God also. If the soul goes out to Him in love, and it is shown by unreserved fidelity to His will, then love for those begotten of Him, the other members of the family of God, will be the result. For this is the love of God that we keep His commandments, and His commandments are not grievous. It is a different thing from the law which is called elsewhere a yoke which no one was able to bear (Act 15:10). Keeping His commandments means to be obedient to His Word, being subject unto Him in all things, for love to God is the spirit of obedience. But the children of God are in the world, though no longer of it. There are hindrances all about in the world which knew Him not and which know not the children of God. All in this world is opposition to God and hinders true obedience. But that which is born of God overcometh the world. Our faith is the victory which overcometh the world. What faith is it? It is the faith which is occupied with the Son of God, which yields obedience to Him, does His will. Such a faith is the victory that overcomes the world and its attractions. This is stated in 1Jn 5:5.
And He, the Son of God, even Jesus Christ, came by water and blood-not by water only, but by water and blood. And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is truth (1Jn 5:6). How beautiful is this passage and what divine perfection it reveals! Only John in his Gospel gives the account of the opened side of our adorable Saviour and that water and blood came forth out of the pierced side. And he that saw it (John) bare record and his record is true and he knoweth that he saith true that ye might believe (Joh 19:35). What the sinner needs is cleansing, a cleansing morally and a cleansing from guilt. The water is for cleansing, the blood telling of expiation cleanses from guilt. To make here of the water, baptism, and of the blood, the Lords Supper, is as false as it is ridiculous. It is purification and propitiation as accomplished and provided for in the death of Christ for the believer. As a result the Holy Spirit is here on earth. Note the Apostle John does not put forward his own testimony here as given in the above passage, but the Holy Spirit Himself beareth witness to it. He is on earth for this purpose to bear witness to Christ and the work of Christ. How awful the rejection of that witness appears in the light of these words–that rejection which is so widespread and pronounced in antichristian modernism!
The seventh verse (1Jn 5:17)has no business in our Bibles. It must be stricken out. It is an interpolation and all the historical evidences are against it. The oldest manuscripts do not contain these words which we read in 1Jn 5:7. Leaving out this inserted verse we notice the connection which exists between 1Jn 5:6 and 1Jn 5:8. And there are three that bear witness on earth, the Spirit, and the water, and the blood; and these three are one. The Spirit is the abiding witness of accomplished redemption, and He dwells in the believer.
1Jn 5:9-13 need no further detailed annotations. They are so plain and simple that only one wilfully blind can misunderstand them. Gods witness is concerning His Son. The believer who believes on the Son of God hath the witness in himself, that is, by the indwelling Spirit, and by the salvation he possesses, the new nature, the eternal life. Any man who does not believe Gods witness concerning His Son hath made Him a liar. Think of it, dear reader, the creature of the dust makes God, who cannot lie, a liar! This is the heinous sin of the great religious world. The record we have is, that God hath given to us eternal life, that this life is in His Son, that if we have the Son we have life, if we have not the Son we have not life. 1Jn 5:13 concludes the argument and teaching of the Epistle concerning eternal life.
Fuente: Gaebelein’s Annotated Bible (Commentary)
hereby: 1Jo 3:14, 1Jo 1:8, Joh 13:35, Joh 18:37
shall: 1Jo 3:21, Isa 32:17, Heb 6:10, Heb 6:11, Heb 10:22
assure: Gr. persuade, Rom 4:21, Rom 8:38, 2Ti 1:12, Heb 11:13
Reciprocal: Job 8:6 – thou wert Job 11:15 – lift up Job 31:37 – as a Psa 119:56 – because Pro 20:27 – spirit Dan 6:22 – forasmuch Mat 28:20 – them Luk 7:5 – and Joh 19:27 – took Rom 2:15 – accusing Rom 8:16 – with our Rom 9:1 – my conscience Rom 14:5 – persuaded 2Co 1:12 – our rejoicing 2Co 5:1 – we know Gal 6:4 – rejoicing Col 2:2 – of the full Heb 10:19 – Having 1Pe 3:8 – love as brethren 2Pe 1:10 – to make 1Jo 2:3 – hereby 1Jo 4:17 – we may
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
THE VOICE OF CONSCIENCE
And hereby we know that we are of the truth, and shall assure our hearts before Him. For if our heart condemn us, God is greater than our heart, and knoweth all things. Beloved, if our heart condemn us not, then have we confidence towards God.
1Jn 3:19-21
St. John refers to conscience as the supreme arbiter in this awful question. Who does not know the use of the conscience? It is to the supreme honour of Greek thought that it brought into use that word which first occurs in the Apocryphathat word which describes self-knowledge; to describe that voice of God in the heart of man, a prophet in its information, a peace in its sanctions, and a monarch in its imperativeness. The Hebrews in the Old Testament use the word for truth and spirit to convey the same meaning. And the conscience of each one of us either condemns us or condemns us not.
I. Let us take first the case of the absolving conscience.Brethren, if our hearts condemn us not, then we have confidence towards God. The Apostle defines wherein this confidence consistsit is boldness of access to God; it is a certainty that our filial prayers will, in their best and highest sense, be heard and answered. It is the consciousness of a life which leans on the arm of Christ, and, keeping His commandments, is so transformed by the spirit of Divine life as to be conscious we are one with God. Yet there is such a thing as a spurious conscience. But when the oracle of conscience has been so tried, it can neither stand Johns test nor give us peace. It may indeed say something, it may be of flattery, of self-conceit, and of self-adulation, as the Pharisee who cried in the temple, God, I thank Thee that I am not as other men are; extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as this publican. That was not the blessed assurance of a holy and humble heart; it was the very fruit of hypocrisy; it was the narcotic of formalism; it was an ambitious hypocritical cry.
II. Now turn to the other casethe case of the condemning conscience.Brethren, if our heart condemn us, God is greater than our heart, and knoweth all things. What do these words mean? Are they merely a contemplation? Do they mean to warn us? Do they mean that we stand self-condemned in that silent court of justice which we ever bear about within ourselves; ourselves the judge and jury, and ourselves the prisoner at the bar? If we stand thus self-condemned by the incorruptible judge within us, in spite of all our ingenious pleadings and infinite excuses for ourselves, how much more searching, more awful, more true, must be the judgment of Him Who is greater than our heart, and Who knoweth all things. Or, on the other hand, is it a word of hope? Is it the cry, Lord, Thou knowest all things; Thou knowest that I love Thee. Is it the affirmation that if we be but sincere we may appeal to God and not be condemned? My brethren, I believe this latter is the meaning. The position of man as regards the world and as regards God is very different. As regards the world his conscience may acquit him. Job could retain his innocence before the world. Does his heart condemn him? He only said, I abhor myself and repent in dust and ashes. St. Paul, too, could only call himself the chief of sinners because of the mighty tenderness of their consciences. The confessions of saints have always been full of self-reproach. Those are Christians who are full of self-reproach, not defiant, willing, high-handed sinners. God knows when a man is insincere. But when a man is sincere and, in spite of all his shortcomings, knows he is sincere, when he has given proof of his sincerity by love to the brethren, his life has been a witness to God: and then he may fall back on the love and mercy of One Who is greater than his heart, and therefore more tender even than his own self-condemned heart. Such a Christian is not afraid of the condemnation of men, but he is afraid when he thinks of his own unfaithfulness. Yes, it is just this, which to any Christians heart is well known, that he may turn to a gracious, pardoning Omniscience, and be comforted by the thought that his conscience is but a water-pot, whereas Gods love is a deep sea of compassion. He will look upon us with larger and other eyes than ours, and make allowance for us all.
III. Though our hearts condemn us not, so often we know they condemn us, we can still feel with humble sorrow the just compassion of Him Who is greater than our hearts, and knoweth all things. Then we may have reasonable assurance that we belong to the world of light, and not of darkness; of truth, and not of semblance; of reality, and not of illusion. And the more we can thus assure our hearts, the more we shall abide in Christ, and He in us. There is but one throne of Christ, of God, upon earth; that throne which is in the innocent heart of man. From that throne proceeds all evil thoughts; from that throne there also proceed all holy influences; all the purity and charity that binds man to man; which blesses the family, the neighbourhood, the nation, the world. That throne may be in the heart of man. Like a ruling sovereign who devotes his heart to the well-being of all his subjects; and the meanest of subjects who devotes himself to the good of his fellow-men; it may be a heart in the midst of the most pompous and splendid ceremony, which nevertheless secretly, in the consuming passions of the breast, utters a public prayer of sincerity; it may be that of the meekest missionary, laying down his unregarded life for the faith once delivered to the saints, on some foreign shore; it may be that of the heart in the most ragged home, mumbling her feeble tones in the darkest corner of the lowliest church; it may be the heart of the man of untold wealth, making of that wealth a friend of the mammon of unrighteousness; or it may be that of the Lazarus lying at his door; it may be that of the philosopher, who is following up the discoveries of science; or it may be the heart of him who in ignorance is telling his griefs at the shrine of some questionable saint, feeling there a thing he cannot understand. Yes, the throne of Christ cannot be in the evil heart and evil conscience of the worldling or the hypocrite. If we love the Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity and truth; if we are trying to keep His commandments, and to walk in His ways; then in every pure, loving, humble spirit Jesus Christ shall abide, and you with Him.
Dean Farrar.
Illustrations
(1) There is many a text concerning which it may be said that without an earnest study of the whole chapter, of the whole context, or of the whole Epistle to which it belongs, it would be impossible to get at its depth and fulness. But happily, as St. Augustine says, if Scripture hath its depths for to swim in, it hath also its shallows. Just as the geologist may mark the beauty of the crystal without attempting to set forth all the marvellous and subtle lines of its formation, so without any possibility of showing all which a text articulates, a preacher may yet be thankful if he be enabled to bring before you with it only one or two thoughts such as may serve to the building up of the Christian life.
(2) He who builds on the general esteem of the world builds not on sand, but on worseon the windand writes the title deeds of his hope upon the face of a river.
(SECOND OUTLINE)
GROUND OF ASSURANCE
In this verse the Apostle presents us with a contrast, a contrast between our own judgment of ourselves and Gods judgment. We might call it a short summing up of the doctrine of assurance. And what does it tell us about the doctrine of assurance?
I. Gods knowledge is the ground of our assurance.That is the message that the Apostle gives us in this passage. Is it not that which we hear all through the Bible? That piercing insight of which the Psalmist tells us that the God Who is about his path and about his bed, spieth out all his ways. Of which the writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews tells us when he speaks of the word of God piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart. That is the all-knowing eye of God. When we see this knowledge in human beings we find it accompanied with a sort of malicious pleasure in detecting that which is evil. But we forget that the great message that the Apostle has to give us, in this very same Epistle, is that God, Wisdom as He is, Knowledge as He is, Justice and Power, is above all these, Love; and that He knows all things; that He sees through us as no man can see, and that He brings with that insight that essential characteristic of Love. He sees all, and knows all. And yet He pardons, because He loves.
(a) That was known even to the imperfect apprehension of the Jews of old: He knoweth our frame; He remembereth that we are dust. And so the psalmist too could take refuge in the knowledge of God, for he knew that Gods knowledge, all-embracing as it was, was yet only one side and aspect of His love; and that the knowledge whereof we are made, the remembrance that we are but dust, would plead with God for pardon.
(b) And the same thing is recalled to us by that wonderful story of the man who had sinned so deeply against One to Whom he owed everything, who seemed to have sinned so irrevocably, and to whom a certain question was put after he had sinned: Lovest thou Me? And all that he could say was to appeal to that same knowledge: Lord! Thou knowest all things; Thou knowest that I love Thee.
II. Have we ever thought of contrasting, not our judgment of ourselves with the judgment of God, but our judgment of others?Have we ever thought of the way in which, while we are thinking of our own motives, and finding it impossible to say whether the motives have led to any act of good or evil, so hard is it to judge amongst the tangled and complex circumstances of our characterhave we forgot that, whilst we thus judge of ourselves, we are continually, except a few rare characters among uscontinually imputing motives to other people? People continually take upon themselves to scan our outward acts, and to reason of our motives from those which have prompted them. We are constantly speaking of men whom we have never seen, of whom we have merely read in newspapers, and imputing to them base motives, it may be great selfishness, or ambition, or some other unworthy motive of that kind. Does not a great part of our conversation consist in reasoning about the motives which have led others to such and such acts? That is a matter which ought to be left to the judgment of God, Who is greater than our hearts, and Who knoweth all things. We are not competent to judge of our own motives, far less can we judge of the motives of other men.
Bishop A. T. Lyttelton.
Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary
1Jn 3:19. Nothing can give a disciple any stronger confidence than to know that he is proving his love by actions that benefit the brethren. He thereby manifests his relationship with the truth of the Lord which requires us to show practical love.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
The privilege of confidence.
1Jn 3:19-22. Hereby: this looks back, taking up the word truth, according to the well-known habit of the writer in beginning a new theme. But he deepens the meaning of the word: as everywhere, the particle of points to a source, the streams of which flow into the soul. The truth is the life of God viewed as a perfect revelation: the truth in us and we are of the truth are counterparts. Shall we know keeps up the running thought of the chapter, the personal evidence of regeneration, but with reference to a future contingency referred to in the next verse. And shall assure our heart: shall persuade our doubting heart to give up its doubt, or our accusing heart to appeal to God against its own accusation. Before him, whereinsoever our heart condemn us. Before Him is not in His future judgment, but in His sight before whose awful presence the Christian always lives, the supreme Lord whose vicegerent conscience is in the soul. The heart as here used is the conscience of St. Paul and St. Peter; but with this difference, that they use a word which makes prominent the knowledge in the moral consciousness (which is conscience), while St. John emphasizes the feeling or the pang of that knowledge. Whereinsoever: a careful consideration (the detail of which cannot here be entered into) will lead to the conclusion that this is the right reading of the word translated For if in our Version; and that there is no stop before it, but that we shall assure runs on to the next verse.
Three things must be remembered before we proceed: first, that the word is accuse and not condemn, for there is an appeal to a higher court; secondly, that the accusation, while more or less limited to defects in brotherly love, has a universal reference, as the last words of 1Jn 3:22 show; and, thirdly, that the whole tone of the passage is consolatory from beginning to end. Because God is greater than our heart: this is a most affecting, and unique, expression of the blessed truth that God in the evangelical economy is the Controller of conscience: it is He who really persuades it, though St. John, as his manner is, gives to mans faith the office of Gods mercy. And knoweth all things. And has an obvious force: He who searcheth the heart knoweth what is the deep, hidden, inextinguishable mind of the heart. St. John heard long before an anticipatory commentary on his own words: Lord, Thou knowest all things; Thou knowest that I love Thee. Our little heart has some measure of compassion for the suffering brother; His greater heart will not fail to have compassion on us in our sincerity. It is as if the words were chosen to signify this: condemn is to know against myself; God may He said to know for us. Finally, God knoweth His own Gospel of atonement, the mystery of which is that the righteous charge of conscience is righteously silenced. But this passes from pure exposition to the function of the theologian and the preacher.
1Jn 3:21. Beloved: this appeal does not mark a change in the persons spoken of; it is St. Johns way of introducing a matter of deep experimental importance. He is approaching the inmost sanctuary of religious privilege. If our heart condemn us not: the alternative case is now marked, and it is supposed that, like St. Paul, we know nothing against ourselves; but St. John never introduces an antithesis without somewhat enlarging his meaning; and here the not accusing includes the assuring our hearts as its ground, not without an anticipation of the faith in Jesus Christ, and the testimony of the Spirit in 1Jn 3:23. It is essential to remember this. We have boldness toward God. Four times we find this word, which is the outward expression of St. Pauls full assurance: twice in a more general sense as the confidence of hope as to the day of judgment; twice with its more exact meaning of free speech in relation to prayer. Here the apostle passes from the negative soothing of the conscience to the positive and higher privilege which the children of God, approving their regeneration by works, have in Approaching God. Their confident speech in prayer is, however, omitted: the confidence is marked by the result of it. Whatsoever we ask, we receive of him. In the whole Epistle prayer is mentioned only twice. It is the privilege of sonship; and, passing over everything intermediate (though if we confess our sins underlies all), St. John in both cases leaps to the conclusion which our Lord teaches: All things, believing, ye shall receive. We receive in asking, the present asking is the present receiving: this is the confidence, of which more hereafter. Because we keep his commandments in the spirit of filial obedience, and do the things which are pleasing in his sight in the spirit of filial zeal. This is a unique combination: the latter clause is also unique, though it is an echo of the Lords words, do always the things that please Him. In the light of these it is evident that the hearts not condemning may have as its positive side such a testimony of the Fathers complacency as makes prayer very bold. Thus we have a very high testimony to the possible character of the communion of the soul with God. But we must remember the working in us that which is well-pleasing in His sight (Heb 13:21). The next verse, beginning a new section, will show that this high obedience includes faith in the Lord Jesus, and therefore is not itself the meritorious ground of our acceptance as petitioners. The same is taught by the mystical union that follows, Christ abiding in us, and we in Him: Apart from Me ye can do nothing. But, after all, St. John teaches that the Hearer of prayer has a special complacency in His childrens reverent obedience and endeavour to please Him. Wrought in Christ, our works are rewarded by His approval: we give our Lord what He is pleased to seek, and He gives us what we ask.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
ARGUMENT 8
A PURE CONSCIENCE THE CONDITION OF PREVAILING PRAYER
Heart is the word here used, the generic for the specific, the heart, spirit or soul consisting of the conscience, which is the voice of God in the soul; the will, which is the king of humanity, and the affections, the quintessence of all loves and hates.
19… And we will reconcile our hearts in His presence, i.e., our conscience, which is Gods own voice in the soul, will seal us with its perfect approval.
20. Because, if our heart [conscience] condemn us, God is greater than our heart [conscience] and knows all things. The tribunal of our own conscience, when enlightened by the Word and Spirit, is an infallible miniature of the great white throne before which we soon must stand.
21. Beloved, if our heart [conscience] condemn us not we have holiness with God.
22. And we receive whatever we ask of Him, because we keep His commandments and do the things pleasing in His sight. This Scripture brings to light a momentous reality, i.e., that a pure conscience, perfectly responsive to Gods Word and Spirit, is the grand secret of prevailing prayer. God wants to make us miracles of His grace and flood us with the wonders of His love. If you do not prevail with God in prayer, receiving into your own heart the unutterable transformations of His Spirit and enduements of His grace, it is simply because your heart is not perfectly responsive to the divine will. Of course, these wonderful promises receive their primary fulfillment in our own heart and life. We must remember that in case of others, their will must co-operate. You want your prodigal son saved. Take hold of God for his conviction. If your heart is pure and perfectly responsive to the divine will, in answer to your prayer God will send the Holy Ghost to convict him. He can yield to this conviction or resist it, grieving away the Holy Spirit. Never pray for his conversion, but constantly for his conviction, till you have reason to believe that he is convicted. Then lay hold on God for his conversion. In answer to your prayers, the Holy Spirit will convert his soul if he does not resist. We must learn rightly to divide the Word of truth, lest we waste much time and opportunity in haphazard prayer and labor.
23. The two hemispheres in salvation, the human and the divine, are represented by faith and love. We exercise the faith in Gods promises, and He gives us the love. These two graces absorb all others, constituting the complete globe of human salvation.
24. This mutual abiding, we in God and He in us, evolving the glorious reality of experimental salvation, is attended by the Holy Spirit. Hence no one need be in doubt.
Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament
Verse 19
And hereby; that is, by the habitual temper and spirit of our minds.
Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament
3:19 {19} And hereby we know that we are of the truth, {20} and shall assure our hearts before him.
(19) He commends charity, by three effects: for first of all, by it we know that we are indeed the sons of God, as he showed before.
(20) Therefore it comes that we have a quiet conscience, as on the opposite side he that thinks that he has God for a judge, because he is guilty to himself either he is never or else very rarely quiet, for God has a far sharper sight then we, and judges more severely.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
3. What Love Does for Believers 3:19-23
The practice of such self-sacrificing love for the brethren can give us boldness in God’s presence now as we pray and in the future when we stand before Him at His judgment seat.
Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)
"By this" refers to what John said in 1Jn 3:17-18. Tangible demonstrations of love for the brethren show the believer’s true character, his righteousness. They should be a comfort to us when we feel guilty that we have not met many needs, a condition that prevails no matter how generous we may be. We can overcome feelings of false guilt by remembering that God knows our real motives. He does not judge on the basis of appearance, as we often judge ourselves.
"This phrase ["before Him," 1Jn 3:19] could refer to standing in the presence of God on the day of judgment (1Jn 4:17), an occasion which might well fill the heart of a man with foreboding. But the context here is one of prayer: dare we approach God with our requests if we feel guilty before him? On the whole, it seems more likely that this is what is in John’s mind (cf. 1Th 1:3; 1Th 3:9[-10]). We then have a smooth transition to 1Jn 3:21. [Note: Marshall, p. 199.]