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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 John 5:6

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 John 5:6

This is he that came by water and blood, [even] Jesus Christ; not by water only, but by water and blood. And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is truth.

6. This is he that came ] Closely connected with what precedes: ‘This Son of God is He that came’. The identity of the historic person Jesus with the eternal Son of God is once more insisted upon as the central and indispensable truth of the Christian faith. Faith in this truth is the only faith that can overcome the world and give eternal life. And it is a truth attested by witness of the highest and most extraordinary kind.

by water and blood ] Literally, by means of or through water and blood. This is the most perplexing passage in the Epistle and one of the most perplexing in N. T. A very great variety of interpretations have been suggested. It would be simply confusing to discuss them all; but a few of the principal explanations, and the reasons for adopting the one preferred, may be stated with advantage. The water and the blood have been interpreted to mean:

(1) The Baptism by means of water in the Jordan and the Death by means of blood upon the Cross.

(2) The water and blood which flowed from Christ’s pierced side.

(3) Purification and Redemption.

(4) The Sacraments of Baptism and of the Eucharist.

These are fairly representative interpretations; the first two making the water and blood refer to facts in the earthly career of the Messiah; the last two making them symbolical of mysteries. It will be observed that these explanations are not all exclusive one of another: either of the last two may be combined with either of the first two; and in fact the fourth is not unfrequently combined with the second. The second, which is S. Augustine’s, has recently received the support of the Speaker’s Commentary and of Canon F. W. Farrar in The Early Days of Christianity: but in spite of its attractiveness it appears to be scarcely tenable. The difficult passage in Joh 19:34 and the difficult passage before us do not really explain one another. That “ in these two passages alone, of all Scripture, are blood and water placed together,” would, if true, amount to nothing more than a presumption that one may be connected with the other. And such a presumption would be at once weakened by the change of order: instead of the ‘blood and water’ of the Gospel we have ‘water and blood’ here. But the statement is not true; e.g. ‘He shall cleanse the house with the blood of the bird, and with the running water ’ (Lev 14:52); ‘He took the blood of the calves and the goats, with water and scarlet wool and hyssop, &c.’ (Heb 9:19). And is it credible that S. John would speak of effusions from the dead body of Jesus as the Son of God ‘coming through water and blood’? Moreover, what, on this interpretation, can be the point of the emphatic addition, ‘not in the water only, but in the water and in the blood’? At the piercing of the side it was the water, not the blood, that was so marvellous. So that, to make the reference clear, the whole ought to run somewhat in this manner: ‘This is He that shed forth blood and water, even Jesus Christ; not the blood only, but the blood and the water’.

The first of the four explanations is far more tenable, and is adopted by Bede, but not to the entire exclusion of the second. So also Dr Westcott, who thinks the additional reference to Joh 19:34 “beyond question”. The Baptism in the water of Jordan and the Death by the shedding of blood sum up the work of redemption. Christ’s Baptism, with the Divine proclamation of Him as the Son of God and the Divine outpouring of the Spirit upon Him, is not merely the opening but the explanation of the whole of His Ministry. The bloody death upon the Cross is not merely the close but the explanation of His Passion. ‘Coming’ when spoken of the Christ includes the notion of His mission (Joh 1:15; Joh 1:27; Joh 1:30; Joh 3:31; Joh 6:14; Joh 7:27; Joh 7:31; Joh 7:41, &c., &c.). Therefore, when we are told that the Son of God ‘ came by means of water and blood,’ we may reasonably understand this as meaning that He fulfilled His mission by the Baptism with which His public work began and the bloody Death with which He finished it (Joh 19:30). (1) This interpretation explains the order; ‘water and blood’, not ‘blood and water’. (2) It explains the first preposition; ‘through’ or ‘by means of’ ( with the genitive: comp. the remarkable parallel Heb 9:12). (3) It also explains the second preposition; ‘in’ ( , of the element in which, without the notion of means: comp. the remarkable parallel Heb 9:25). Christ’s Baptism and Death were in one sense the means by which, in another sense the spheres in which His work was accomplished. (4) Above all it explains the emphatic addition, ‘not in water only, but in the water and in the blood’. The Gnostic teachers, against whom the Apostle is writing, admitted that the Christ came ‘through’ and ‘in’ water: it was precisely at the Baptism, they said, that the Divine Word united Himself with the man Jesus. But they denied that the Divine Person had any share in what was effected ‘through’ and ‘in’ blood: for according to them the Word departed from Jesus at Gethsemane. S. John emphatically assures us that there was no such separation. It was the Son of God who was baptized; and it was the Son of God who was crucified: and it is faith in this vital truth that produces brotherly love, that overcomes the world, and is eternal life.

It may reasonably be admitted, however, that there is this large amount of connexion between the ‘water and blood’ here and the ‘blood and water’ in the Gospel. Both in a symbolical manner point to the two great sacraments. Thus Tertullian says; “He had come by means of water and blood, just as John had written; that He might be baptized by the water, glorified by the blood; to make us in like manner called by water, chosen by blood. These two baptisms He sent out from the wound in His pierced side, in order that they who believed in His blood might be bathed in the water; they who had been bathed in the water might likewise drink the blood” ( De Bapt. XVI.).

not by water only, but by water and blood ] Better as R.V., not with the water only, but with the water and the blood. ‘With’ is literally ‘in’, of the element or sphere in which a thing is done. The use of ‘in’ in this connexion both here and Heb 9:25 perhaps comes direct from LXX. In Lev 16:3 we have ‘He shall come into the holy place in a young bullock’ ( ), i.e. with one. The Hebrew may mean ‘in’, ‘with’, ‘by’. The article in all three cases simply means ‘the water’ and ‘the blood’ already mentioned.

As applied to us these words will mean, ‘Christ came not merely to purify by His baptism, but to give new life by His blood; ‘for the blood is the life’.’ In short, all that is said in the Gospel, especially in chapters 3 and 4, respecting water and blood may be included here. The Epistle is the companion treatise of the Gospel.

And it is the Spirit that beareth witness ] Here again there are great diversities of interpretation. S. Augustine, who makes the water and blood refer to the effusions of Christ’s side, takes ‘the spirit’ to mean the spirit which He committed to His Father at His death (Joh 19:30; Luk 23:46). But in what sense could Christ’s human spirit be said to be ‘the Truth’? Far more probably it is the Holy Spirit that is meant ( 1Jn 3:24 , 1Jn 4:13; Joh 1:32-33; Joh 7:39; Rev 2:7; Rev 2:11; Rev 2:17; Rev 2:29, &c.). Bede takes this view and understands the witness of the Spirit at Christ’s baptism to be meant. The form of the sentence is exactly parallel to ‘It is the spirit that giveth life’ (Joh 6:63). We might render in each case; ‘The spirit is the life-giver’, ‘And the Spirit is the witness-bearer’.

that beareth witness ] We have seen already (note on 1Jn 1:2) that witness to the truth in order to produce faith is one of S. John’s leading thoughts in Gospel, Epistles, and Revelation. Here it becomes the dominant thought: the word ‘witness’ (verb or substantive) occurs ten times in five verses. In the Gospel we have seven witnesses to Christ; scripture (Joh 5:39-47), the Baptist (1Jn 1:7), the Disciples (Joh 15:27, Joh 16:30), Christ’s works (Joh 5:36, Joh 10:25; Joh 10:38), Christ’s words (Joh 8:14; Joh 8:18, Joh 18:37), the Father (Joh 5:37, Joh 8:18), the Spirit (Joh 15:26). Of these seven three are specially mentioned in the Epistle, the Disciples in 1Jn 1:2, the Father in 1Jn 5:9-10, and the Spirit here; but to these are added two more, the water and the blood.

because the Spirit is truth ] It would be possible to translate ‘It is the Spirit that beareth witness that the Spirit is the truth’: but this self-attestation of the Spirit would have no relation to the context. It is the witnesses to Christ, to the identity of Jesus with the Son of God, that S. John is marshalling before us. It is because the Spirit is the Truth that His testimony is irrefragable: He can neither deceive nor be deceived. He is ‘the Spirit of Truth’ (Joh 14:16; Joh 15:26), and He glorifies the Christ, taking of His and declaring it unto the Church (Joh 16:14).

There is a remarkable Latin reading, quoniam Christus est veritas, ‘It is the Spirit that beareth witness that the Christ is the Truth’, but it has no authority.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

This is he – This Son of God referred to in the previous verse. The object of the apostle in this verse, in connection with 1Jo 5:8, is to state the nature of the evidence that Jesus is the Son of God. He refers to three well-known things on which he probably had insisted much in his preaching – the water, and the blood, and the Spirit. These, he says, furnished evidence on the very point which he was illustrating, by showing that that Jesus on whom they believed was the Son of God. This, says he, is the same one, the very person, to whom the well-known and important testimony is borne; to him, and him alone, these undisputed things appertain, and not to any other who should claim to be the Messiah and they all agree on the same one point, 1Jo 5:8.

That came – ho eidon. This does not mean that when he came into the world he was accompanied in some way by water and blood; but the idea is, that the water and the blood were clearly manifest during his appearing on earth, or that they were remarkable testimonials in some way to his character and work. An ambassador might be said to come with credentials; a warrior might be said to come with the spoils of victory; a prince might be said to come with the insignia of royalty; a prophet comes with signs and wonders; and the Lord Jesus might also be said to have come with power to raise the dead, and to heal disease, and to cast out devils; but John here fixes the attention on a fact so impressive and remarkable in his view as to be worthy of special remark, that he came by water and blood.

By water – There have been many opinions in regard to the meaning of this phrase. See Pools Synopsis. Compare also Lucke, in loc. A mere reference to some of these opinions may aid in ascertaining the true interpretation.

(1) Clement of Alexandria supposes that by water regeneration and faith were denoted, and by blood the public acknowledgment of that.

(2) Some, and among them Wetstein, have held that the words are used to denote the fact that the Lord Jesus was truly a man, in contradistinction from the doctrine of the Docetae; and that the apostle means to say that he had all the properties of a human being – a spirit or soul, blood, and the watery humors of the body.

(3) Grotius supposes that by his coming by water, there is reference to his pure life, as water is the emblem of purity; and he refers to Eze 36:25; Isa 1:16; Jer 4:14. As a sign of that purity, he says that John baptized him, Joh 1:28. A sufficient objection to this view is, that as in the corresponding word blood there is undoubted reference to blood literally, it cannot be supposed that the word water in the same connection would be used figuratively. Moreover, as Lucke (p. 287) has remarked, water, though a symbol of purity, is never used to denote purity itself, and therefore cannot here refer to the pure life of Jesus.

(4) Many expositors suppose that the reference is to the baptism of Jesus, and that by his coming by water and blood, as by the latter there is undoubted reference to his death, so by the former there is reference to his baptism, or to his entrance on his public work. Of this opinion were Tertullian, OEcumenius, Theophylact, among the fathers, and Capellus, Heumann, Stroth, Lange, Ziegler, A. Clarke, Bengel, Rosenmuller, Macknight, and others, among the moderns. A leading argument for this opinion, as alleged, has been that it was then that the Spirit bare witness to him, Mat 3:16, and that this is what John here refers to when he says, It is the Spirit that beareth witness, etc. To this view, Locke urges substantially the following objections:

(a) That if it refers to baptism, the phrase would much more appropriately express the fact that Jesus came baptizing others, if that were so, than that he was baptized himself. The phrase would be strictly applicable to John the Baptist, who came baptizing, and whose ministry was distinguished for that, Mat 3:1; and if Jesus had baptized in the same manner, or if this had been a prominent characteristic of his ministry, it would be applicable to him. Compare Joh 4:2. But if it means that he was baptized, and that he came in that way by water, it was equally true of all the apostles who were baptized, and of all others, and there was nothing so remarkable in the fact that he was baptized as to justify the prominence given to the phrase in this place.

(b) If reference be had here, as is supposed in this view of the passage, to the witness that was borne to the Lord Jesus on the occasion of his baptism, then the reference should have been not to the water as the witness, but to the voice that came from heaven, Mat 3:17, for it was that which was the witness in the case. Though this occurred at the time of the baptism, yet it was quite an independent thing, and was important enough to have been referred to. See Lucke, Com. in loc. These objections, however, are not insuperable. Though Jesus did not come baptizing others himself Joh 4:2, and though the phrase would have expressed that if he had, yet, as Christian baptism began with him; as this was the first act in his entrance on public life; as it was by this that he was set apart to his work; and as he designed that this should be always the initiatory rite of his religion, there was no impropriety in saying that his coming, or his advent in this world, was at the beginning characterized by water, and at the close by blood. Moreover, though the witness at his baptism was really borne by a voice from heaven, yet his baptism was the prominent thing; and if we take the baptism to denote all that in fact occurred when he was baptized, all the objections made by Lucke here vanish.

(5) Some, by the water here, have understood the ordinance of baptism as it is appointed by the Saviour to be administered to his people, meaning that the ordinance was instituted by him. So Beza, Calvin, Piscator, Calovius, Wolf, Beausobre, Knapp, Lucke, and others understand it. According to this the meaning would be, that he appointed baptism by water as a symbol of the cleansing of the heart, and shed his blood to effect the ransom of man, and that thus it might be said that he came by water and blood; to wit, by these two things as effecting the salvation of people. But it seems improbable that the apostle should have grouped these things together in this way. For.

(a) the blood is that which he shed; which pertained to him personally; which he poured out for the redemption of man; and it is clear that, whatever is meant by the phrase he came, his coming by water is to be understood in some sense similar to his coming by blood; and it seems incredible that the apostle should have joined a mere ordinance of religion in this way with the shedding of his blood, and placed them in this manner on an equality.

(b) It cannot be supposed that John meant to attach so much importance to baptism as would be implied by this. The shedding of his blood was essential to the redemption of people; can it be supposed that the apostle meant to teach that baptism by water is equally necessary?

(c) If this be understood of baptism, there is no natural connection between that and the blood referred to; nothing by which the one would suggest the other; no reason why they should be united. If he had said that he came by the appointment of two ordinances for the edification of the church, baptism and the supper, however singular such a statement might be in some respects, yet there would be a connection, a reason why they should be suggested together. But why should baptism and the blood shed by the Saviour on the cross be grouped together as designating the principal things which characterized his coming into the world?

(6) There remains, then, but one other interpretation; to wit, that he refers to the water and the blood which flowed from the side of the Saviour when he was pierced by the spear of the Roman soldier. John had himself laid great stress on this occurrence, and on the fact that he had himself witnessed it, (see the notes at Joh 19:34-35); and as, in these Epistles, he is accustomed to allude to more full statements made in his Gospel, it would seem most natural to refer the phrase to that event as furnishing a clear and undoubted proof of the death of the Saviour. This would be the obvious interpretation, and would be entirely clear, if John did not immediately speak of the water and the blood as separate witnesses, each as bearing witness to an important point, as separate as the Spirit and the water, or the Spirit and the blood; whereas, if he refers to the mingled water and blood flowing from his side, they both witness only the same fact, to wit, his death.

There was no special significancy in the water, no distinct testifying to anything different from the flowing of the blood; but together they bore witness to the one fact that he actually died. But here he seems to suppose that there is some special significancy in each. Not by water only, but by water and blood. There are three that bear witness, the Spirit, and the water, and the blood, and these three agree in one. These considerations seem to me to make it probable, on the whole, that the fourth opinion, above referred to, and that which has been commonly held in the Christian church is correct, and that by the water the baptism of the Saviour is intended; his baptism as an emblem of his own purity; as significant of the nature of his religion; as a rite which was to be observed in his church at all times. That furnished an important attestation to the fact that he was the Messiah (compare the notes at Mat 3:15), for it was by that that he entered on his public work, and it was then that a remarkable testimony was borne to his being the Son of God. He himself came thus by water as an emblem of purity; and the water used in his church in all ages in baptism, together with the blood and the Spirit bears public testimony to the pure nature of his religion.

It is possible that the mention of the water in his baptism suggested to John also the water which flowed from the side of the Saviour at his death, intermingled with blood; and that though the primary thought in his mind was the fact that Jesus was baptized, and that an important attestation was then given to his Messiahship, yet he may have instantly adverted to the fact that water performed so important a part, and was so important a symbol through all his work; water at his introduction to his work, as an ordinance in his church, as symbolical of the nature of his religion, and even at his death, as a public attestation, in connection with flowing blood, to the fact that he truly died, in reality, and not, as the Docetae pretended, in appearance only, thus completing the work of the Messiah, and making an atonement for the sins of the world. Compare the notes at Joh 19:34-35.

And blood – Referring, doubtless, to the shedding of his blood on the cross. He came by that; that is, he was manifested by that to people, or that was one of the forms in which he appeared to people, or by which his coming into the world was characterized. The apostle means to say that the blood shed at his death furnished an important evidence or witness of what he was. In what way this was done, see the notes at 1Jo 5:8.

Not by water only, but by water and blood – John the Baptist came by water only; that is, he came to baptize the people, and to prepare them for the coming of the Messiah. Jesus was distinguished from him in the fact that his ministry was characterized by the shedding of blood, or the shedding of his blood constituted one of the peculiarities of his work.

And it is the Spirit – Evidently the Holy Spirit.

That beareth witness – That is, he is the great witness in the matter, confirming all others. He bears witness to the soul that Jesus came by water and blood, for that would not be received by us without his agency. In what way he does this, see the notes at 1Jo 5:8.

Because the Spirit is truth – Is so eminently true that he may be called truth itself, as God is so eminently benevolent that he may be called love itself. See the notes at 1Jo 4:8.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

1Jn 5:6

This is He that came by water and blood, even Jesus Christ

Christ coming by water and blood

1.

There was living then at Ephesus a conspicuous and enterprising teacher, whom not a few were likely to regard as more profound and philosophical than St. John, who himself, very probably, looked down with superb indulgence on the aged Galilean as pious enough in his simple way, but quite uncultured, without any speculative ability,–with crude and unspiritual views of God and the universe, and wholly unfit to interpret Hebraic ideas to men who had breathed the air of Gnostic wisdom. One confusion, he would say, which John makes, must be most carefully avoided: you must draw a sharp distinction between Jesus and Christ. Jesus was simply a man eminent for wisdom and goodness, but not supernaturally born,–on whom, at His baptism, a heavenly power called Christ descended, to use Him as an instrument for revealing truth and working miracles, but to depart from Him before He suffered and died. Now St. John contradicts this absolutely. He insists that Jesus is Christ, that Jesus, who is Christ, is also the Son of God. You must, he says in effect, be quite clear in your minds on this point; Cerinthus has tried to break up one Person into two; you must keep no terms with that theory of separation; you must hold to the truth of the oneness. This one Jesus Christ came by water and blood; that is, His Baptism and His Passion were means to the end for which He came. The selfsame Person who stooped to the waters of Jordan gave up His blood to be shed for us on Golgotha. This is He, the one indivisible Christ, in whom to believe is to overcome the world.

2. But then comes in, we may be sure, a reference to underlying spiritual realities. Water and blood, in connection with Christ, could not but be invested in St. Johns mind with the ideas of cleansing and of propitiation, as when he saw the gush of blood and water from the side of the sacred body he was apparently struck with a combination which seemed to present in a kind of symbolical unity the purifying and the atoning aspect of Christs work. Many will accept Christ as a peerless model of conduct, and will honestly desire to guide their lives by the rule of His ethical teaching, who yet recoil from the mystery of what the apostles call propitiation, and explain away the emphasis with which apostles attribute virtue to His blood. And yet the theory which reduces the Atonement to a signal display of sympathy, whereby One who was Himself sinless identified Himself with the shame and misery of sinners in order to reclaim them, will be found to impair the belief in our Saviours personal Divinity, and fails to account for, or to justify, the mass of varied language by which Scripture conveys to us the significance of His death. No, believe it, both sides of truth are indispensable; our Lord was given to be a sacrifice; and also to be an example; and the dependence of purification on the Atonement may at least be illustrated by the order of those words, forthwith out of His side came blood and water.

3. But yet once more: when we hear that He came by water and blood, it is well-nigh impossible not to think of that great ordinance in which water is made the effectual sign, that is, the organ or instrument, of a new birth; and of that still greater rite which embodies for us, in a concrete form, the new and better covenant, and in which, as St. Augustine says, we drink that which was paid for us. By the mercifully considerate provision of Him who is God and man for us who have souls and bodies, the sacraments of the gospel, with their outward forms and inward gifts, are the chief means whereby His purifying and propitiating action is applied to those on whose behalf He came. The whole thought, then, unfolds itself symmetrically; the events of Christs baptism and death call up the idea of His two-fold spiritual activity, which again presents itself in close revealed connection with the laver or font of our regeneration, and with the cup which conveys to us the blood of the Great Sacrifice, and which, from that point of view, may naturally be taken to represent both kinds of the Holy Eucharist. And here, too, the warning sentence may be needed. The baptized Churchman who is not a communicant would do well to remember that Christ came not with water only, but with water and blood. (W. Bright, D. D.)

The water and the blood

By the form of the expression, not by water only, it is implied that there are two beliefs as to the object of Jesus Christs coming into the world–one of them going beyond the other, and taking in something that the other leaves out. There were probably those then, there are certainly those now, who would have no difficulty in accepting the main facts of Christs birth and biography, would admit Him to be a memorable teacher, a reformer of society, a leader among moralists and philanthropists; but they would allow nothing further in His claims, as the Head of the Church or the Saviour of mankind. They would probably declare that nothing further was needed to make men all that they ought to be. But they were wrong. Four thousand years of Jewish and Gentile self-righteousness had proved that there is no self-recovering power in humanity alone. First the water. Water is the emblem of spiritual purification, because it is the common instrument of outward washing. Our Lord Himself, who was able to set all symbols and all forms aside if He chose, went down into the water, at the beginning of His lifes work, in order, we are told, that He might fulfil all righteousness. He came by water. Go teach the nations of the earth and baptize them with water, was His last commission, when His work was done. So it is that each individual Christian life, as well as the whole body of Christ, after Him, came by water. Why is this? Because one great part of our Saviours work is to purify mens lives. He was baptized with their baptism, and they with His. The world was to sneer at Him, and spit upon Him, in spite of His purity: in being holy for them He will also be washed with them. He came by water. Accordingly one great part of the power of Christ among men, through the gospel and the Church, is the cleansing away of moral corruptions. He that hath this hope in Him purifieth himself. Stains on the lips, the hands, the habits; stains on social courtesies, domestic dispositions, and even on Church observances; worst of all, stains on the sacred temple walls of the soul itself–these all have to be washed away. Christ came to cleanse His followers from all unrighteousness. He came by water. But now shall we not only say, This is true, but shall we go on to say, This is all that our Saviour gives us, and this is the whole of His gospel: Christianity is a system of moral education and religious improvement; nothing more? This is He that came by water and blood; not by water only, but by water and blood. The daily sacrifice of four thousand preparatory years had presignified it to a waiting world. As the passion flower sprang out of the common earth, and held up its bright blossom and natural image of the tree at Calvary, ages before the real Cross was planted in its soil, so the passion promise of prophecy bloomed in the expectant faith of the race at the very gates of Eden. The serpent had polluted Paradise; but after all, the womans seed should bruise the serpents head. Man knew from the beginning that he must have a Saviour to look to, or humanity itself would die. Somewhere among the sons of men there must be One Perfect Obedience, One Sufficient Sacrifice, needing not, like those shadowy sacrifices which prepared the way, to be often offered, but once offered. Then a living and loving faith in Him will work out the true and healing life in every believing heart. There is a fountain opened for sin, and for uncleanness; but it is not a water fountain. Only he who doeth the deeds of the Law–so it reads–will live by them. Who of us has done them? Where are we then if there is water only, example and precept only, commandments only, sorrow upon sorrow when they are broken, and the breaking repeated still? Among the most remarkable of Overbecks striking series of pictures illustrating the life of Jesus, there is one that represents Him as a Child in the carpenters shop. Like other children, He has been playing with the tools, and has taken up the saw. A look of solemnity passes over His radiant face; and by the shadow that falls on the floor underneath you see that the block of wood He is sawing out is taking the shape of a cross. Joseph looks on in a kind of perplexed reverence, and the Virgin mother by His side with a sad admiration, as if Simeons prediction were already beginning to have its accomplishment, and the sword were piercing her own soul also. This is not imagination; it is rather interpretation. The artist is only an expositor of the evangelist. This is He that came by water and blood. From the outset of His personal ministry–as it had been from the foundation of the world–the Saviour was pointing to the sacrifice, journeying always towards Calvary. Other prophets and reformers had come by water, preaching purification for the future. He alone came by blood, giving, in Himself, atonement for past and future both. (Bp. Huntington.)

Redemption by blood


I.
This is he that came by water. Our Lord came from Galilee to Jordan, a lengthened journey, for the purpose of being baptized. This shows the importance of the ordinance.


II.
This is He that came by blood–not by water only, but by water and blood. The manner in which this announcement is made, is well fitted to impress us with its importance. The blood is noticed with peculiar emphasis. Important as it was, that Christ came by water, it was still more so that He came by blood. By the one He undertook the work, but by the other He executed it.

1. Christ came by blood that the prophecies might be fulfilled.

2. Christ came by blood, and so accomplished the design of the ancient law.

3. When Christ came by blood He secured all the blessings of redemption for His people.

4. When He came by blood He opened up a way of access for the sinner to God and to glory.


III.
The confirmation of the spirits testimony. And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is truth. The witness of the Spirit was borne to Christ during the whole period of His ministry. But the witness of which the text speaks points to that which was borne by the Spirit after the death of Christ. It began with His resurrection. He was quickened by the Spirit on the third, the appointed day. And oh, what a glorious testimony was borne to Him then (Col 2:15; Rom 1:4). This testimony was continued in His ascension. During His sojourn of forty days on earth, subsequent to His resurrection, Jesus spoke much of the Spirit to His disciples. Then, in due time, was the Spirit poured out from on high. On the Day of Pentecost He came in a rushing mighty wind, and in cloven tongues like as of fire. By the transactions of that day the triumphs of the Saviour were manifested to all. Nor did the Spirit then cease His testimony. He continued and increased it in the ministry of the apostles (Mar 16:20). (J. Morgan, D. D.)

The water and the blood; or complete purification

The design of Christs death was to procure both the justification and sanctification of the Church.


I.
The first part of this design is declared by St. John, in this epistle (1Jn 1:7). Cleansing is a term which supposes defilement; and sin is, in Scripture, represented as horribly defiling, rendering the soul impure, odious, and abominable in the sight of God, who is perfectly pure and holy. If we are duly sensible of our sinful defilement, we shall certainly be anxious for cleansing. And how can this be obtained? The tears of repentance will not wash away our sins. Nor is mere reformation and moral improvement sufficient. But, behold the Divine provision! Behold the precious blood issuing from the wounded side of the Son of God! The blood of which we speak, procures the justification of all who believe. We are said to be justified through faith in His (Christs) blood; elsewhere, to be brought nigh by His blood; and again, to be redeemed by His blood; and to be washed from our sins in His blood. But it is through faith that we are thus justified; Jesus Christ is the propitiation for our sins: but it is through faith in His blood; it must be received by every man, for himself, in particular. The perfect efficacy of this blood is frequently expressed in Scripture in very strong terms: I have blotted out, saith God, thy sins, as a thick cloud. Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow. Yea, saith the penitent psalmist, Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow; and again, As far as the east is from the west, so far hath He removed our transgressions from us. This is He that came by blood.


II.
This is he that came by water. This signifies a second blessed effect of the death of Christ, the sanctification of believers, in virtue of that death.

1. It is by the mediation of Christ, meritoriously. We owe to Jesus Christ the renovation of our nature in the image of God; for He died to bring us to God; to redeem us to God (Eph 5:25; Eph 5:27).

2. It is through faith in Christ, instrumentally.

3. But it is efficiently, by the Holy Spirit, that believers are sanctified.

4. The sanctification of believers is promoted by the means of grace, as religious ordinances of Divine appointment are properly called.

5. To these we may add, the various afflictions with which God, in His holy providence, visits His people.

Conclusion:

1. Let us reflect, with becoming humility, on our natural defilement.

2. If we are by nature thus defiled, how necessary is it that we should be cleansed?

3. Let believers in Christ, already sanctified in part, still look to Jesus for further supplies of grace. (G. Burder.)

And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is truth

Grounds of faith in the resurrection

It is natural to ask, What is the evidence that Christ did really rise from the dead? St. John says, It is the Spirit that beareth witness. St. John, indeed, is speaking immediately of that faith in our Lords eternal Sonship which overcomes the world. But since the resurrection is the main proof of our Lords Divinity, it follows that the Spirit must also bear witness to the resurrection. And He does this in two ways. It is His work, that those historical proofs of the resurrection which have come down to us, and which address themselves to our natural reasoning faculties, have been marshalled, recognised, preserved, transmitted in the Church of Christ. He bears another witness, as we shall presently see, by His action, not so much on the intelligence, as on the will of the believing Christian.


I.
In order to know that our Lord did really rise from the dead, we have to satisfy ourselves that three distinct questions can be answered.

1. Whether Jesus Christ did really die upon the Cross. The wonder is not that He died when He did, after hanging for three hours in agony, but that, after all His sufferings at the hands of the soldiers and the populace, before His crucifixion, He should have lived so long. Yet suppose that what looked like death on the Cross was only a fainting fit. Would He have survived the wound in His side, inflicted by the soldiers lance, through which the blood yet remaining in His heart and the water of the pericardium escaped? But suppose, against all this evidence, that when Jesus was taken down from the Cross, He was still living. Then He must have been suffocated by Joseph of Arimathaea and Nicodemus when they embalmed Him. The Jews carefully inspected and sealed His tomb: they had sentinels placed there; and were satisfied that the work was thoroughly done. To do them justice, the Jews have never denied the reality of our Lords death; it is impossible to do so, without paradox.

2. Whether the disciples did not take our Lords dead body out of His sepulchre.

(1) They would not have wished to do it. Why should they? They either believed that He would rise from the dead, or they did not. If they did believe it, they would have shrunk from disturbing His grave, as from an act not less unnecessary than profane. If they did not believe in it, and instead of abandoning themselves to unreflecting grief, allowed themselves to think steadily, what must have been their estimate of their dead Master? They must now have thought of Him as of one who had deceived them, or who was Himself deceived. On either supposition, why should they rouse the anger of the Jews, and incur the danger of swift and heavy punishment?

(2) But had they desired, they surely would not have dared it. Until Pentecost, they were, by their own account, very timid men.

(3) And, once more, had they desired and dared to remove our Lords body from its grave, such a feat was obviously beyond their power. The tomb was guarded by soldiers.

3. The amount of positive testimony which goes to show that Jesus Christ did rise from the dead.

(1) The witness of all the apostles. They gave their lives in attestation of this fact. Their conduct after the day of Pentecost is throughout that of men whose trustworthiness and sincerity of purpose are beyond dispute.

(2) The testimony of a large number of persons besides the apostles. Take the case of the three thousand converts on the day of Pentecost. They had unrivalled opportunities for satisfying themselves of its being a reality or a fiction. Yet at the risk of comfort, position, nay, life, they publicly professed their belief in its truth. Or consider the case of the two hundred and fifty and more persons still living when St. Paul wrote the First Epistle to the Corinthians, who had seen the risen Jesus on one occasion during the forty days. Five hundred persons could not be simultaneously deluded. Their testimony would be considered decisive as to any ordinary occurrence, where men wished only to ascertain the simple truth.


II.
The force of this body of testimony is not really weakened by objections which do not directly challenge it, and which turn on accessory or subordinate points.

1. For instance, it is said that the evangelical accounts of the resurrection itself, and of our Lords subsequent appearances, are difficult to reconcile with each other. At first sight they are; but only at first sight. In order to reconcile them two things are necessary: first, patience, and secondly, a determination to exclude everything from the narrative which does not lie in the text of the Gospels. The differences are just what might be expected in four narratives of the same event, composed at different periods, by different authors, who had distinct sources of information at command. Each says what he has to say with blunt and simple directness, without an eye to the statements of the others, or to the possible comment of hostile critics.

2. It is, further, objected that the resurrection was not sufficiently public. Jesus Christ ought to have left His grave, so it is urged, in the sight of a crowd of lookers on; and, when risen, He ought to have hastened to show Himself to the persons least likely to believe in His resurrection–to the Jews at large, to the high priests, to Pilate, to His executioners.

(1) Here it is obvious, first of all, that the guards may very well have seen Jesus leave His tomb. Scripture says nothing on the point. But they were terrified, almost to death, at the sight of the angel of the sepulchre. Any number of witnesses who had been present would have been as much frightened as were the guards.

(2) Nor is the old objection of Celsus, that Jesus Christ ought to have shown Himself to the Jews and to His judges in order to rebuke their unbelief, more reasonable. Had He appeared to the chief priests, would they have believed in Him? Would they not have denied His identity, or argued that a devil had taken His form before their eyes, just as of old they had ascribed His miracles to Beelzebub? The Jews had ample opportunities of ascertaining that the resurrection was a fact, if they had desired to do so. But as it was, they were not in a mood to be convinced, even by the evidence of their senses.

(3) Far deeper than these objections is that which really lies against all miracles whatever, as being at variance with that conception of a rigid uniformity in the processes of nature, which is one of the intellectual fashions of our day. Suffice it to say, that any idea of natural law which is held to make a miracle impossible, is also inconsistent with belief in the existence of God.


III.
Here, then, we are coming round to the point from which we started. For it is natural to ask, why, if the resurrection can be proved by evidence so generally sufficient, it was at the time, and is still, rejected by a great many intelligent men? The answer to this natural and legitimate question is of practical importance to all of us. There can, I apprehend, be no sort of doubt that if an ordinary historical occurrence, such as the death of Julius Caesar, were attested as clearly as the resurrection of our Lord–not more clearly, nor less–as having taken place nineteen centuries ago, all the world would believe it as a matter of course. The reason why the resurrection was not always believed upon the evidence of those who witnessed to it is, because to believe it means, for a consistent and thoughtful man, to believe in and to accept a great deal else. To believe the resurrection is to believe implicitly in the Christian faith. It is no mere speculative question whether Jesus Christ did or did not rise from the dead; it is an eminently practical one. The intellect is not more interested in it than the will; perhaps it is even less interested. The real difficulties of belief lie, generally speaking, with the will. And nothing is more certain, I may add, more alarming, than the power of the will to shape, check, promote, control conviction. And such is the power of the will that it can give effect to this decision. It can baulk and thwart the action of the intellect; give it a perverse twist, and even set it scheming how best to discredit or refute the truth which but now it was on the point of accepting. And thus we may understand what it is that the Spirit does to produce faith. He does not set aside or extinguish the operations of the natural reason; reason too is a guide to truth which God has given us. But He does change the temper, or the direction of the will. And thus He sets the reason free to do justice to the evidence before it. It is thus that within us the Spirit beareth witness. The evidence for the resurrection was not stronger on the Day of Pentecost than it was on the day before. But the descent of the Spirit made it morally possible for three thousand converts to do that evidence something like justice. And now we can see why St. Paul makes so much of faith–especially in a risen Christ–in his great Epistles. If the understanding were alone concerned there would be no more reason for our being justified by faith in a crucified and risen Christ than for our being justified by our assent to the conclusion of a problem in Euclid. It is because the will must endorse the verdict of the understanding, and so must mean obedience as well as assent, that by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God. (Canon Liddon.)

The Spirits witness to Christ

There are five respects in which that Divine agent may be represented as bearing witness to Christ.

(1) He bore witness by the types and prophecies of the Jewish dispensation–both of which foretold Christs advent, character, and work.

(2) He bore witness by qualifying Christ, as man, for His mediatorial offices (Isa 11:1-3).

(3) The Spirit bore witness to Christ by the signs and wonders which He enabled the apostles to perform in attestation of their Divine commission.

(4) He bears witness to Christ in that Holy Bible which so clearly and impressively unfolds His glory and His grace.

(5) He bears witness also by revealing Gods Son in the soul–by bringing the gospel practically to bear on the understanding, the conscience, and the heart. (A. S. Patterson, D. D.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 6. This is he that came by water and blood] Jesus was attested to be the Son of God and promised Messiah by water, i.e. his baptism, when the Spirit of God came down from heaven upon him, and the voice from heaven said, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. Jesus Christ came also by blood. He shed his blood for the sins of the world; and this was in accordance with all that the Jewish prophets had written concerning him. Here the apostle says that the Spirit witnesses this; that he came not by water only-being baptized, and baptizing men in his own name that they might be his followers and disciples; but by blood also-by his sacrificial death, without which the world could not be saved, and he could have had no disciples. As, therefore, the Spirit of God witnessed his being the Son of God at his baptism, and as the same Spirit in the prophets had witnessed that he should die a cruel, yet a sacrificial, death; he is said here to bear witness, because he is the Spirit of truth.

Perhaps St. John makes here a mental comparison between CHRIST, and Moses and Aaron; to both of whom he opposed our Lord, and shows his superior excellence. Moses came by water-all the Israelites were baptized unto him in the cloud and in the sea, and thus became his flock and his disciples; 1Co 10:1-2. Aaron came by blood-he entered into the holy of holies with the blood of the victim, to make atonement for sin. Moses initiated the people into the covenant of God by bringing them under the cloud and through the water. Aaron confirmed that covenant by shedding the blood, sprinkling part of it upon them, and the rest before the Lord in the holy of holies. Moses came only by water, Aaron only by blood; and both came as types. But CHRIST came both by water and blood, not typically, but really; not by the authority of another, but by his own. Jesus initiates his followers into the Christian covenant by the baptism of water, and confirms and seals to them the blessings of the covenant by an application of the blood of the atonement; thus purging their consciences, and purifying their souls.

Thus, his religion is of infinitely greater efficacy than that in which Moses and Aaron were ministers. See Schoettgen.

It may be said, also, that the Spirit bears witness of Jesus by his testimony in the souls of genuine Christians, and by the spiritual gifts and miraculous powers with which he endowed the apostles and primitive believers. This is agreeable to what St. John says in his gospel, Jo 15:26-27: When the Comforter is come, the Spirit of truth, which proceedeth from the Father, he shall testify of me; and ye also shall bear witness, because ye have been with me from the beginning. This place the apostle seems to have in his eye; and this would naturally lead him to speak concerning the three witnesses, the SPIRIT, the WATER, and the BLOOD, 1Jo 5:8.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

For the explaining of this obscure place we must proceed by degrees.

1. It is evident, that water and blood cannot be here meant literally.

2. It is therefore consequent, that they must be intended to signify somewhat or other by way of symbolical representation, or that they must have some mystical meaning.

3. They ought to have such a meaning assigned them, as will both be agreeable to the expressions themselves, and to the apostles present scope and design.

4. It will be very agreeable to the expressions, to understand by water the purity of our blessed Lord, and by blood his sufferings.

5. His manifest scope and design is, to show the abundantly sufficient credibility of the witnesses and testimony we have, to assure us that Jesus was the Christ, or the Messiah, and to induce us to believe this of him, with so efficacious and transforming a faith, as should evidence our being born of God, and make us so victorious over the world, as constantly to adhere to this Jesus by trust and obedience, against all the allurements and terrors of it.

6. This being his scope, it supposeth that the mentioned coming of Jesus, as Messiah, was for some known end, unto his accomplishment whereof these two, his purity and his sufferings, were apt and certain means, as that they were to be considered under the notion of means, his being said to have come , by them, doth intimate. And in pursuance of this scope, he must be understood to signify, that his coming so remarkably by these two, did carry with it some very convictive proof and evidence of his being the Son of God, and the Messiah, sufficient to recommend him as the most deserving object of such a faith, and render it highly reasonable we should hereupon so trust and obey him, and entirely resign ourselves to his mercy and government. Wherefore also:

7. This his coming must here be understood in a sense accommodated hereunto, and is therefore in no reason to be taken for the very act or instant, precisely, of his entrance into this world, but to signify his whole course in it, from first to last, a continued motion and agency, correspondent to the intendment of his mission. To the clearing of which notion of his coming, some light may be gained, by considering the account which is given, 2Th 2:9,10, of the coming of antichrist, which is said to be after Satan, ( as it were by his impulsion, and in pursuance of his ends and purposes), with all power, and signs, and lying wonders, and all deceivableness of unrighteottsness; where it is manifest, coming must signify a continued course of doing business. So here, our Lords coming must signify his continual employment for the despatch of the business about which he was sent.

8. The known business and end for which he was sent, was to reduce and bring back sinners to God.

9. How apt and necessary means these two, his purity and sufferings, were to this end, the whole frame of the gospel shows. His sacrifice of himself, in his sufferings, was necessary to our reconciliation; so he was to come and effect his work by blood: his purity was requisite to the acceptableness of his sacrifice; so it was to be done by water; without which, as was wont to be proverbially said among the Hebrews, there could be no sacrifice.

10. For the evidence his coming so remarkably by these two carried with it, for the inducing of us to believe him to be the Messiah, with such a faith, as whereby we should imitate his purity, and rely upon the value of his sufferings. We may see it in the note upon 1Jo 5:8, where the testimony of these two witnesses, the water and the blood, comes to be given in its own place and order.

11. Nor is it strange the apostle should use these mystical expressions to this purpose, if we consider what might lead him thereto: for we must remember, first: That he was a spectator of our Lords crucifixion, and then beheld, upon the piercing of his side, the streaming forth of the water and blood; which, it appears, at that time made a very deep impression upon his mind, as his words about it in his writing his Gospel import: There came out blood and water. And he that saw it bare record, and his record is true: and he knoweth that he saith true, that ye might believe, Joh 19:34,35.

That he there lays so great a weight on it, imports that he apprehended some great mystery, if not intended, yet very apt to be signified by it. And, secondly: That he was a Jew, and (as is probable) wrote this Epistle to Jews, among whom the so frequent ablutions with water, as well as the shedding the blood of sacrifices, were most known things, and intended to typify (what they ought to have understood, and he now intimates) these very things, the purity and dying of the Messiah. Not to insist upon what he had long ere now occasion to observe in the Christian church, baptism, and the supper of our Lord, representing in effect severally the same things. Neither was this way of teaching unusual, nor these expressions less intelligible, than our Lords calling himself (as this evangelist also records) a shepherd, a door, a vine, &c.

And it is the Spirit that beareth witness: that the Spirit is said to bear witness, see 1Jo 5:7,8.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

6. Thisthe Person mentionedin 1Jo 5:5. This Jesus.

he that came by water andblood“by water,” when His ministry was inauguratedby baptism in the Jordan, and He received the Father’s testimony toHis Messiahship and divine Sonship. Compare 1Jo5:5, “believeth that Jesus is the Son of God,“with Joh 1:33; Joh 1:34,”The Spirit . . . remaining on Him . . . I saw and bare recordthat this is the Son of God“; and 1Jo5:8, below, “there are three that bear witness inearth, the Spirit, and the water, and the blood.” Correspondingto this is the baptism of water and the Spirit which He hasinstituted as a standing seal and mean of initiatory incorporationwith Him.

and bloodHe came by”the blood of His cross” (so “by” is used, Heb9:12: “by,” that is, with, “His own bloodHe entered in once into the holy place”): a fact seen andso solemnly witnessed to by John. “These two past factsin the Lord’s life are this abiding testimony to us, by virtueof the permanent application to us of their cleansing and atoningpower.”

Jesus Christnot a mereappellation, but a solemn assertion of the Lord’s Person andMessiahship.

not by, c.Greek,“not IN thewater only, but IN thewater and IN (so oldestmanuscripts add) the blood.” As “by“implies the mean through, or with, which He came: so”in,” the element in which He came. “The”implies that the water and the blood were sacred andwell-known symbols. John Baptist came only baptizing with water, andtherefore was not the Messiah. Jesus came first to undergoHimself the double baptism of water and blood, and then to baptize uswith the Spirit-cleansing, of which water is the sacramentalseal, and with His atoning blood, the efficacy of which, oncefor all shed, is perpetual in the Church and therefore is theMessiah. It was His shed blood which first gave waterbaptism its spiritual significancy. We are baptized into Hisdeath: the grand point of union between us and Him, and, throughHim, between us and God.

it is the Spirit, c.TheHoly Spirit is an additional witness (compare 1Jo5:7), besides the water and the blood, to Jesus’Sonship and Messiahship. The Spirit attested thesetruths at Jesus’ baptism by descending on Him, and throughout Hisministry by enabling Him to speak and do what man never before orsince has spoken or, done and “it is the Spirit that bearethwitness” of Christ, now permanently in the Church: both in theinspired New Testament Scriptures, and in the hearts of believers,and in the spiritual reception of baptism and the Lord’s Supper.

because the Spirit istruthIt is His essential truth which gives His witnesssuch infallible authority.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

This is he that came by water and blood, [even] Jesus Christ,…. By “water” is not meant the ablutions or washings of the ceremonial law; Christ came not by these, but to make an end of them; his blood, which cleanseth from all sin, being the antitype, and so the fulfilling end of them: nor the purity of his nature, life, and conversation; though he came into the world that holy thing which is called the Son of God; and was holy in his nature, and harmless in his life, and did no sin, and so was fit to be a sacrifice for the sins of others: nor does it intend the washing and cleansing of his people from their sins; this is what he came to do, and has done, and not what he came by: but the ordinance of water baptism is designed; and though Christ did not come baptizing with water, he having a greater baptism to administer, yet that he might be made manifest, John came baptizing in that way; and Christ, as the Son of God, came, or was made manifest by John as such, at the waters of Jordan, and at his baptism; there he was declared to be the Son of God by his Father’s voice from heaven:

not by water only; he did not come by water only, as Moses did, who was drawn out of it, and therefore so called; or as John, who came administering water baptism externally only:

but by water and blood; by “blood” as well as water; by which is meant, not the blood of bulls and goats; Christ came to put an end unto, and lay aside the shedding of that blood; but his own blood is intended, and not reconciliation and atonement for the sins of his people, which was what he came to do, and has done, and not what he came by: but the sense is, that as at baptism, so at his sufferings and death, he was made manifest to be the Son of God; as he was to the centurion and others, that were with him, when they observed the earthquake, and the things that were done; and at his from the dead he was declared to be the Son of God with power: and this might be seen in the cleansing and atoning virtue of his blood, which is owing to his being the Son of God. There may be here an allusion to the water and blood which came out of his side, when pierced on the cross, which this Apostle John was an eyewitness of. Some copies add here, and in the former clause, “and by the Spirit”; as the Alexandrian copy, three of Beza’s copies, and the Ethiopic version: but it seems unnecessary, since it follows,

and it is the Spirit that beareth witness; by which may be meant, either the Gospel, which is the Spirit that gives life, and is so called, because by it the Spirit of God, in his gifts and graces, is received, and which is a testimony of the person, as well as of the offices, and grace of Christ; or rather those miraculous works which Christ did by the Spirit, to which he often appeals, as witnesses of his divine sonship, and equality with the Father, as well as of his being the true Messiah; or else the Holy Spirit, who bore testimony to Christ, by his descent on him at his baptism, and upon his apostles at the day of Pentecost, and by attending, succeeding, and confirming the Gospel, which is the testimony of him; and he is elsewhere, as well as here, and in the context, spoken of as a witness of Christ, Ac 5:32;

because the Spirit is truth; he is the Spirit of truth, and truth itself; he is essentially truth; his testimony is most true, and firmly to be believed. The Vulgate Latin version reads, “because Christ is the truth”.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

The Witnesses in Heaven and on Earth.

A. D. 80.

      6 This is he that came by water and blood, even Jesus Christ; not by water only, but by water and blood. And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is truth.   7 For there are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost: and these three are one.   8 And there are three that bear witness in earth, the Spirit, and the water, and the blood: and these three agree in one.   9 If we receive the witness of men, the witness of God is greater: for this is the witness of God which he hath testified of his Son.

      The faith of the Christian believer (or the believer in Christ) being thus mighty and victorious, it had need to be well founded, to be furnished with unquestionable celestial evidence concerning the divine mission, authority, and office of the Lord Jesus; and it is so; he brings his credentials along with him, and he brings them in a way by which he came and in the witness that attends him.

      I. In the way and manner by which he came; not barely by which he came into the world, but by and with which he came, and appeared, and acted, as a Saviour in the world: This is he that came by water and blood. He came to save us from our sins, to give us eternal life, and bring us to God; and, that he might the more assuredly do this, he came by, or with, water and blood. Even Jesus Christ; Jesus Christ, I say, did so; and none but he. And I say it again, not by or with water only, but by and with water and blood, v. 6. Jesus Christ came with water and blood, as the notes and signatures of the true effectual Saviour of the world; and he came by water and blood as the means by which he would heal and save us. That he must and did thus come in his saving office may appear by our remembering these things:–

      1. We are inwardly and outwardly defiled. (1.) Inwardly, by the power and pollution off sin and in our nature. For our cleansing from this we need spiritual water; such as can reach the soul and the powers of it. Accordingly, there is in and by Christ Jesus the washing of regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost. And this was intimated to the apostles by our Lord, when he washed their feet, and said to Peter, who refused to be washed, Except I wash thee, thou hast no part in me. (2.) We are defiled outwardly, by the guilt and condemning power of sin upon our persons. By this we are separated from God, and banished from his favourable, gracious, beatific presence for ever. From this we must be purged by atoning blood. It is the law or determination in the court of heaven that without shedding of blood there shall be no remission, Heb. ix. 22. The Saviour from sin therefore must come with blood.

      2. Both these ways of cleansing were represented in the old ceremonial institutions of God. Persons and things must be purified by water and blood. There were divers washings and carnal ordinances imposed till the time of reformation, Heb. ix. 10. The ashes of a heifer, mixed with water, sprinkling the unclean, sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh,Heb 9:13; Num 19:9. And likewise almost all things are, by the law, purged with blood, Heb. ix. 22. As those show us our double defilement, so they indicate the Saviour’s two-fold purgation.

      3. At and upon the death of Jesus Christ, his side being pierced with a soldier’s spear, out of the wound there immediately issued water and blood. This the beloved apostle saw, and he seems to have been affected with the sight; he alone records it, and seems to reckon himself obliged to record it, and seems to reckon himself obliged to record it, as containing something mysterious in it: And he that saw it bore record, and his record is true. And he knoweth, being an eye-witness, that he saith true, that you might believe, and that you might believe this particularly, that out of his pierced side forthwith there came water and blood,Joh 19:34; Joh 19:35. Now this water and blood are comprehensive of all that is necessary and effectual to our salvation. By the water our souls are washed and purified for heaven and the region of saints in light. By the blood God is glorified, his law is honoured, and his vindictive excellences are illustrated and displayed. Whom God hath set forth, or purposed, or proposed, a propitiation through faith in his blood, or a propitiation in or by his blood through faith, to declare his righteousness, that he may be just, and the justifier of him that believeth in Jesus,Rom 3:25; Rom 3:26. By the blood we are justified, reconciled, and presented righteous to God. By the blood, the curse of the law being satisfied, and purifying Spirit is obtained for the internal ablution of our natures. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, that the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles, that we might receive the promise of the Spirit, the promised Spirit, through faith, Gal. iii. 13, c. The water, as well as the blood, issued out of the side of the sacrificed Redeemer. The water and the blood then comprehend all things that can be requisite to our salvation. They will consecrate and sanctify to that purpose all that God shall appoint or make use of in order to that great end. He loved the church, and gave himself for it, that he might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word, that he might present it to himself a glorious church, Eph. v. 25-27. He who comes by water and blood is an accurate perfect Saviour. And this is he who comes by water and blood, even Jesus Christ! Thus we see in what way and manner, or, if you please, with what utensils, he comes. But we see his credentials also,

      II. In the witness that attends him, and that is, the divine Spirit, that Spirit to whom the perfecting of the works of God is usually attributed: And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, &lti>v. 6. It was meet that the commissioned Saviour of the world should have a constant agent to support his work, and testify of him to the world. It was meet that a divine power should attend him, his gospel, and servants; and notify to the world upon what errand and office they came, and by what authority they were sent: this was done in and by the Spirit of God, according to the Saviour’s own prediction, “He shall glorify me, even when I shall be rejected and crucified by men, for he shall receive or take of mine. He shall not receive my immediate office; he shall not die and rise again for you; but he shall receive of mine, shall proceed on the foundation I have laid, shall take up my institution, and truth, and cause, and shall further show it unto you, and by you to the world,” John xvi. 14. And then the apostle adds the commendation or the acceptableness of this witness: Because the Spirit is truth, v. 6. He is the Spirit of God, and cannot lie. There is a copy that would afford us a very suitable reading thus: because, or that, Christ is the truth. And so it indicates the matter of the Spirit’s testimony, the thing which he attests, and that is, the truth of Christ: And it is the Spirit that beareth witness that Christ is the truth; and consequently that Christianity, or the Christian religion, is the truth of the day, the truth of God. But it is meet that one or two copies should alter the text; and our present reading is very agreeable, and so we retain it. The Spirit is truth. He is indeed the Spirit of truth, John xiv. 17. And that the Spirit is truth, and a witness worthy of all acceptation, appears in that he is a heavenly witness, or one of the witnesses that in and from heaven bore testimony concerning the truth and authority of Christ. Because (or for) there are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost, and these three are one. And so v. 7 most appositely occurs, as a proof of the authenticity of the Spirit’s testimony; he must needs be true, or even truth itself, if he be not only a witness in heaven, but even one (not in testimony only, for so an angel may be, but in being and essence) with the Father and the Word. But here,

      1. We are stopped in our course by the contest there is about the genuineness of v. 7. It is alleged that many old Greek manuscripts have it not. We shall not here enter into the controversy. It should seem that the critics are not agreed what manuscripts have it and what not; nor do they sufficiently inform us of the integrity and value of the manuscripts they peruse. Some may be so faulty, as I have an old printed Greek Testament so full of errata, that one would think no critic would establish a various lection thereupon. But let the judicious collators of copies manage that business. There are some rational surmises that seem to support the present text and reading. As,

      (1.) If we admit v. 8, in the room of v. 7, it looks too like a tautology and repetition of what was included in v. 6, This is he that came by water and blood, not by water only, but by water and blood; and it is the Spirit that beareth witness. For there are three that bear witness, the Spirit, the water, and the blood. This does not assign near so noble an introduction of these three witnesses as our present reading does.

      (2.) It is observed that many copies read that distinctive clause, upon the earth: There are three that bear record upon the earth. Now this bears a visible opposition to some witness or witnesses elsewhere, and therefore we are told, by the adversaries of the text, that this clause must be supposed to be omitted in most books that want v. 7. But it should for the same reason be so in all. Take we v. 6, This is he that came by water and blood. And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is truth. It would not now naturally and properly be added, For there are three that bear record on earth, unless we should suppose that the apostle would tell us that all the witnesses are such as are on earth, when yet he would assure us that one is infallibly true, or even truth itself.

      (3.) It is observed that there is a variety of reading even in the Greek text, as in v. 7. Some copies read hen eisiare one; others (at least the Complutensian) eis to hen eisinare to one, or agree in one; and in v. 8 (in that part that it is supposed should be admitted), instead of the common en te gein earth, the Complutensian reads epi tes gesupon earth, which seems to show that that edition depended upon some Greek authority, and not merely, as some would have us believe, upon the authority either of the vulgar Latin or of Thomas Aquinas, though his testimony may be added thereto.

      (4.) The seventh verse is very agreeable to the style and the theology of our apostle; as, [1.] He delights in the title the Father, whether he indicates thereby God only, or a divine person distinguished from the Son. I and the Father are one. And Yet I am not alone; because the Father is with me. I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another comforter. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him. Grace be with you, and peace from God the Father, and from the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of the Father, 2 John 3. Then, [2.] The name the Word is known to be almost (if not quite) peculiar to this apostle. Had the text been devised by another, it had been more easy and obvious, from the form of baptism, and the common language of the church, to have used the name Son instead of that of the Word. As it is observed that Tertullian and Cyprian use that name, even when they refer to this verse; or it is made an objection against their referring to this verse, because they speak of the Son, not the Word; and yet Cyprian’s expression seems to be very clear by the citation of Facundus himself. Quod Johannis apostoli testimonium beatus Cyprianus, Carthaginensis antistes et martyr, in epistol sive libro, quem de Trinitate scripsit, de Patre, Filio, et Spiritu sancto dictum intelligit; ait enim, Dicit Dominus, Ego et Pater unum sumus; et iterum de Patre, Filio, et Spiritu sancto scriptum est, Et hi tres unum sunt.–Blessed Cyprian, the Carthaginian bishop and martyr, in the epistle or book he wrote concerning the Trinity, considered the testimony of the apostle John as relating to the Father, the Son, and Holy Spirit; for he says, the Lord says, I and the Father are one; and again, of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit it is written, And these three are one. Now it is nowhere written that these are one, but in v. 7. It is probable than that St. Cyprian, either depending on his memory, or rather intending things more than words, persons more than names, or calling persons by their names more usual in the church (both in popular and polemic discourses), called the second by the name of the Son rather than of the Word. If any man can admit Facundus’s fancy, that Cyprian meant that the Spirit, the water, and the blood, were indeed the Father, Word, and Spirit, that John said were one, he may enjoy his opinion to himself. For, First, He must suppose that Cyprian not only changed all the names, but the apostle’s order too. For the blood (the Son), which Cyprian puts second, the apostle puts last. And, Secondly, He must suppose that Cyprian thought that by the blood which issued out of the side of the Son the apostle intended the Son himself, who might as well have been denoted by the water,–that by the water, which also issued from the side of the Son, the apostle intended the person of the Holy Ghost,–that by the Spirit, which in v. 6 is said to be truth, and in the gospel is called the Spirit of truth, the apostle meant the person of the Father, though he is nowhere else so called when joined with the Son and the Holy Ghost. We require good proof that the Carthaginian father could so understand the apostle. He who so understands him must believe too that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, are said to be three witnesses on earth. Thirdly, Facundus acknowledges that Cyprian says that of his three it is written, Et hi tres unum sunt–and these three are one. Now these are the words, not of v. 8, but of v. 7. They are not used concerning the three on earth, the Spirit, the water, and the blood; but the three in heaven, the Father, and the Word, and the Holy Ghost. So we are told that the author of the book De baptismo hreticorum, allowed to be contemporary with Cyprian, cites John’s words, agreeably to the Greek manuscripts and the ancient versions, thus: Ait enim Johannes de Domino nostro in epistol nos docens, Hic es qui venit per aquam et sanguinem, Jesus Christus, non in aqu tantm, sed in aqu et sanguine; et Spiritus est qui testimonium perhibet, quia Spiritus est veritas; quia tres testimonium perhibent, Spiritus et aqua et sanguis, et isti tres in unum sunt–For John, in his epistle, says concerning our Lord, This is he, Jesus Christ, who came by water and blood, not in water only, but in water and blood; and it is the Spirit that bears witness, because the Spirit is truth; for there are three that bear witness, the Spirit, the water, and the blood, and these three agree in one. If all the Greek manuscripts and ancient versions say concerning the Spirit, the water, and the blood, that in unum sunt–they agree in one, then it was not of them that Cyprian spoke, whatever variety there might be in the copies in his time, when he said it is written, unum sunt–they are one. And therefore Cyprian’s words seem still to be a firm testimony to v. 7, and an intimation likewise that a forger of the text would have scarcely so exactly hit upon the apostolical name for the second witness in heaven, the Word. Them, [3.] As only this apostle records the history of the water and blood flowing out of the Saviour’s side, so it is he only, or he principally, who registers to us the Saviour’s promise and prediction of the Holy spirit’s coming to glorify him, and to testify of him, and to convince the world of its own unbelief and of his righteousness, as in his gospel, Joh 14:16; Joh 14:17; Joh 14:26; Joh 15:26; Joh 16:7-15. It is most suitable then to the diction and to the gospel of this apostle thus to mention the Holy Ghost as a witness for Jesus Christ. Then,

      (5.) It was far more easy for a transcriber, by turning away his eye, or by the obscurity of the copy, it being obliterated or defaced on the top or bottom of a page, or worn away in such materials as the ancients had to write upon, to lose and omit the passage, than for an interpolator to devise and insert it. He must be very bold and impudent who could hope to escape detection and shame; and profane too, who durst venture to make an addition to a supposed sacred book. And,

      (6.) It can scarcely be supposed that, when the apostle is representing the Christian’s faith in overcoming the world, and the foundation it relies upon in adhering to Jesus Christ, and the various testimony that was attended him, especially when we consider that he meant to infer, as he does (v. 9), If we receive the witness of men, the witness of God is greater; for this (which he had rehearsed before) is the witness of God which he hath testified of his Son. Now in the three witnesses on earth there is neither all the witness of God, nor indeed any witness who is truly and immediately God. The antitrinitarian opposers of the text will deny that either the Spirit, or the water, or the blood, is God himself; but, upon our present reading, here is a noble enumeration of the several witnesses and testimonies supporting the truth of the Lord Jesus and the divinity of his institution. Here is the most excellent abridgment or breviate of the motives to faith in Christ, of the credentials the Saviour brings with him, and of the evidences of our Christianity, that is to be found, I think, in the book of God, upon which single account, even waiving the doctrine of the divine Trinity, the text is worthy of all acceptation.

      2. Having these rational grounds on out side, we proceed. The apostle, having told us that the Spirit that bears witness to Christ is truth, shows us that he is so, by assuring us that he is in heaven, and that there are others also who cannot but be true, or truth itself, concurring in testimony with him: For there are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost, and these three are one, v. 7.

      (1.) Here is a trinity of heavenly witnesses, such as have testified and vouched to the world the veracity and authority of the Lord Jesus in his office and claims, where, [1.] The first that occurs in order is the Father; he set his seal to the commission of the Lord Christ all the while he was here; more especially, First, In proclaiming him at his baptism, Matt. iii. 17. Secondly, In confirming his character at the transfiguration, Matt. xvii. 5. Thirdly, In accompanying him with miraculous power and works: If I do not the works of my Father, believe me not; but if I do, though you believe not me, believe the works, that you may know and believe that the Father is in me, and I in him,Joh 10:37; Joh 10:38. Fourthly, In avouching at his death, Matt. xxvii. 54. Fifthly, In raising him from the dead, and receiving him up to his glory: He shall convince the world-of righteousness, because I go to my Father, and you see me no more,Joh 16:10; Rom 1:4. [2.] The second witness in the Word, a mysterious name, importing the highest nature that belongs to the Saviour of Jesus Christ, wherein he existed before the world was, whereby he made the world, and whereby he was truly God with the Father. He must bear witness to the human nature, or to the man Christ Jesus, in and by whom he redeemed and saved us; and he bore witness, First, By the mighty works that he wrought. John v. 17, My Father worketh hitherto, and I work. Secondly, In conferring a glory upon him at his transfiguration. And we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only-begotten of the Father, John i. 14. Thirdly, In raising him from the dead. John ii. 19, Destroy this temple, and in three days will I raise it up. [3.] The third witness is the Holy Ghost, or the Holy Spirit, and august, venerable name, the possessor, proprietor, and author of holiness. True and faithful must he be to whom the Spirit of holiness sets his seal and solemn testimony. So he did to the Lord Jesus, the head of the Christian world; and that in such instances as these:– First, In the miraculous production of his immaculate human nature in the virgin’s womb. The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, Luke i. 35, c. Secondly, In the visible descent upon him at his baptism. The Holy Ghost descended in a bodily shape, Luke iii. 22, &c. Thirdly, In an effectual conquest of the spirits of hell and darkness. If I cast out devils by the Spirit of God, then the kingdom of God has come unto you, Matt. xii. 28. Fourthly, In the visible potent descent upon the apostles, to furnish them with gifts and powers to preach him and his gospel to the world after he himself had gone to heaven, Act 1:4Act 1:5; Act 2:2-4, c. Fifthly, In supporting the name, gospel, and interest of Christ, by miraculous gifts and operations by and upon the disciples, and in the churches, for two hundred years (1 Cor. xii. 7), concerning which see Dr. Whitby’s excellent discourse in the preface to the second volume of his Commentary on the New Testament. These are witnesses in heaven and they bear record from heaven; and they are one, it should seem, not only in testimony (for that is implied in their being three witnesses to one and the same thing), but upon a higher account, as they are in heaven; they are one in their heavenly being and essence; and, if one with the Father, they must be one God.

      (2.) To these there is opposed, though with them joined, a trinity of witnesses on earth, such as continue here below: And there are three that bear witness on earth, the spirit, the water, and the blood; and these three agree in one, v. 8. [1.] Of these witnesses the first is the spirit. This must be distinguished from the person of the Holy Ghost, who is in heaven. We must say then, with the Saviour (according to what is reported by this apostle), that which is born of the Spirit is spirit, John iii. 6. The disciples of the Saviour are, as well as others, born after the flesh. They come into the world endued with a corrupt carnal disposition, which is enmity to God. This disposition must be mortified and abolished. A new nature must be communicated. Old lusts and corruptions must be eradicated, and the true disciple become a new creature. The regeneration or renovation of souls is a testimony to the Saviour. It is his actual though initial salvation. It is a testimony on earth, because it continues with the church here, and is not performed in that conspicuous astonishing manner in which signs from heaven are accomplished. To this Spirit belong not only the regeneration and conversion of the church, but its progressive sanctification, victory over the world, her peace, and love, and joy, and all that grace by which she is made meet for the inheritance of the saints in light. [2.] The second is the water. This was before considered as a means of salvation, now as a testimony to the Saviour himself, and intimates his purity and purifying power. And so it seems to comprehend, First, The purity of his own nature and conduct in the world. He was holy, harmless, and undefiled. Secondly, The testimony of John’s baptism, who bore witness of him, prepared a people for him, and referred them to him, Mar 1:4; Mar 1:7; Mar 1:8. Thirdly, The purity of his own doctrine, by which souls are purified and washed. Now you are clean through the word that I have spoken unto you, John xv. 3. Fourthly, The actual and active purity and holiness of his disciples. His body is the holy catholic church. Seeing you have purified your souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit, 1 Pet. i. 22. And this signed and sealed by, Fifthly, The baptism that he has appointed for the initiation or introduction of his disciples, in which he signally (or by that sign) says, Except I wash thee, thou hast no part in me. Not the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience towards God, 1 Pet. iii. 21. [3.] The third witness is the blood; this he shed, and this was our ransom. This testifies for Jesus Christ, First, In that it sealed up and finished the sacrifices of the Old Testament, Christ, our Passover, was sacrificed for us. Secondly, In that it confirmed his own predictions, and the truth of all his ministry and doctrine, John xviii. 37. Thirdly, In that it showed unparalleled love to God, in that he would die a sacrifice to his honour and glory, in making atonement for the sins of the world, Joh 14:30; Joh 14:31. Fourthly, In that it demonstrated unspeakable love to us; and none will deceive those whom they entirely love, John xiv. 13-15. Fifthly, In that it demonstrated the disinterestedness of the Lord Jesus as to any secular interest and advantage. No impostor and deceiver ever proposes to himself contempt and a violent cruel death, John xviii. 36. Sixthly, In that it lays obligation on his disciple to suffer and die for him. No deceiver would invite proselytes to his side and interest at the rate that the Lord Jesus did. You shall be hated of all men for my sake. They shall put you out of their synagogues; and the time comes that whosoever kills you will think that he doeth God service, John xvi. 2. He frequently calls his servants to a conformity with him in sufferings: Let us go forth therefore unto him without the camp, bearing his reproach, Heb. xiii. 13. This shows that neither he nor his kingdom is of this world. Seventhly, The benefits accruing and procured by his blood (well understood) must immediately demonstrate that he is indeed the Saviour of the world. And then, Eighthly, These are signified and sealed in the institution of his own supper: This is my blood of the New Testament (which ratifies the New Testament), which is shed for many, for the remission of sins, Matt. xxvi. 28. Such are the witnesses on earth. Such is the various testimony given to the author of our religion. No wonder if the rejector of all this evidence he judged as a blasphemer of the Spirit of God, and be left to perish without remedy in his sins. These three witnesses (being more different than the three former) are not so properly said to be one as to be for one, to be for one and the same purpose and cause, or to agree in one, in one and the same thing among themselves, and in the same testimony with those who bear record from heaven.

      III. The apostle justly concludes, If we receive the witness of men, the witness of God is greater; for this is the witness of God, that he hath testified of his Son, v. 9. Here we have, 1. A supposition well founded upon the premises. Here is the witness of God, the witness whereby God hath testified of his Son, which surely must intimate some immediate irrefragable testimony, and that of the Father concerning his Son; he has by himself proclaimed and avouched him to the world. 2. The authority and acceptableness of his testimony; and that argued from the less to the greater: If we receive the witness of men (and such testimony is and must be admitted in all judicatories and in all nations), the witness of God is greater. It is truth itself, of highest authority and most unquestionable infallibility. And then there is, 3. The application of the rule to the present case: For this is the witness, and here is the witness of God even of the Father, as well as of the Word and Spirit, which he hath testified of, and wherein he hath attested, his Son. God, that cannot lie, hath given sufficient assurance to the world that Jesus Christ is his Son, the Son of his love, and Son by office, to reconcile and recover the world unto himself; he testified therefore the truth and divine origin of the Christian religion, and that it is the sure appointed way and means of bringing us to God.

Fuente: Matthew Henry’s Whole Bible Commentary

This (). Jesus the Son of God (verse 5).

He that came ( ). Second aorist active articular participle of , referring to the Incarnation as a definite historic event, the preexistent Son of God “sent from heaven to do God’s will” (Brooke).

By water and blood (). Accompanied by ( used with the genitive both as instrument and accompaniment, as in Ga 5:13) water (as at the baptism) and blood (as on the Cross). These two incidents in the Incarnation are singled out because at the baptism Jesus was formally set apart to his Messianic work by the coming of the Holy Spirit upon him and by the Father’s audible witness, and because at the Cross his work reached its culmination (“It is finished,” Jesus said). There are other theories that do not accord with the language and the facts. It is true that at the Cross both water and blood came out of the side of Jesus when pierced by the soldier, as John bore witness (Joh 19:34), a complete refutation of the Docetic denial of an actual human body for Jesus and of the Cerinthian distinction between Jesus and Christ. There is thus a threefold witness to the fact of the Incarnation, but he repeats the twofold witness before giving the third. The repetition of both preposition ( this time rather than ) and the article ( locative case) argues for two separate events with particular emphasis on the blood (“not only” , “but” ) which the Gnostics made light of or even denied.

It is the Spirit that beareth witness ( ). Present active articular participle of with article with both subject and predicate, and so interchangeable as in 3:4. The Holy Spirit is the third and the chief witness at the baptism of Jesus and all through his ministry.

Because (). Or declarative “that.” Either makes sense. In Joh 15:26 Jesus spoke of “the Spirit of truth” (whose characteristic is truth). Here John identifies the Spirit with truth as Jesus said of himself (Joh 14:6) without denying personality for the Holy Spirit.

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

This. Jesus.

He that came [ ] . Referring to the historic fact. See Mt 11:3; Luk 7:19; Joh 1:15, 27. Compare, for the form of expression, Joh 1:33; Joh 3:13.

By water and blood [ ] . Dia by, must be taken with oJ ejlqwn He that came. It has not merey the sense of accompaniment, but also of instrumentality, i e., by, through, by means of. Water and blood are thus the media through which Jesus the Mediator wrought, and which especially characterized the coming. See especially Heb 9:12 : “Christ being come… neither by the blood [ ] of goats and calves, but by His own blood [ ” ] . Compare” we walk by faith not by sight (dia pistewv ouj dia eidouv, “2Co 5:7) : we wait with (lit., through) patience (dij uJpomonhv,” Rom 8:25).

Water refers to Christ ‘s baptism at the beginning of His Messianic work, through which He declared His purpose to fulfill all righteousness (Mt 3:15). Blood refers to His bloody death upon the cross for the sin of the world.

Other explanations are substituted for this or combined with it. Some refer the words water and blood to the incident in Joh 19:34. To this it is justly objected that these words are evidently chosen to describe something characteristic of Christ ‘s Messianic office, which could not be said of the incident in question. Nevertheless, as Alford justly remarks, “to deny all such allusion seems against probability. The apostle could hardly, both here and in that place, lay such evident stress on the water and the blood together, without having in his mind some link connecting this place and that.” The readers of the Epistle must have been familiar with the incident, from oral or from written teaching.

Others refer the words to the Christian sacraments. These, however, as Huther observes, are only the means for the appropriation of Christ ‘s atonement; whereas the subject here is the accomplishment of the atonement itself. Ai=ma blood, standing by itself, never signifies the Lord ‘s Supper in the New Testament.

The true principle of interpretation appears to be laid down in the two canons of Dusterdieck. (1.) Water and blood must point both to some purely historical facts in the life of our Lord on earth, and to some still present witnesses for Christ. (2.) They must not be interpreted symbolically, but understood of something so real and powerful, as that by them God ‘s testimony is given to believers, and eternal life assured to them. Thus the sacramental reference, though secondary, need not be excluded. Canon Westcott finds “an extension of the meaning” of water and blood in the following words : “Not in the water only, but in the water and in the blood,” followed by the reference to the present witness of the Spirit. He argues that the change of the prepositions (ejn in, for dia by), the use of the article [] , and the stress laid on actual experience (it is the Spirit that witnesseth), these, together with the fact that that which was spoken of in its unity (by water and blood) is now spoken of in its separate parts (in the water and in the blood) – “all show that St. John is speaking of a continuation of the first coming under some new but analogous form. The first proof of the Messiahship of Jesus lay in His complete historical fulfillment of Messiah ‘s work once for all, in bringing purification and salvation; that proof is continued in the experience of the Church in its two separate parts.” Thus we are led to the ideas underlying the two sacraments.

The subject opened by the word blood is too large for discussion within these limits. The student is referred to Dr. Patrick Fairbairn’s “Typology of Scripture;” Andrew Jukes, “The Law of the Offerings;” Professor William Milligan, “The Resurrection of our Lord,” note, p. 274 sqq.; Canon Westcott’s “Additional Note” on 1Jo 1:7, in his “Commentary on John’s Epistles;” and Henry Clay Trumbull, “The Blood Covenant.”

Not by water only [ ] . Lit., not in the water only Rev., with. The preposition ejn in, marks the sphere or element in which; dia by, the medium through which. For the interchange of ejn and dia see 2Co 6:7. The words are probably directed against the teaching of Cerinthus. See on 2 22. John asserts that Jesus is the Christ, and that He came by blood as well as by water.

And it is the Spirit that beareth witness [ ] . Lit., and the Spirit is that which is bearing witness. Note the present tense, beareth witness, and compare ver. 9, hath born witness. The witness is present and continuous in the Church, in the sacraments for instance, in water and in blood. Witnessing is the peculiar office of the Spirit. See Joh 14:26; Joh 16:8 sqq. See on Joh 1:7.

Because [] . Some render that, as presenting the substance of the testimony, which is absurd : the Spirit witnesseth that the Spirit is the truth. The Spirit is the Holy Ghost, not the spiritual life in man.

The truth [ ] . Just as Christ is the truth (Joh 14:6).

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1) “This is he that came.” John reaffirms that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, came into the world, a fact sustained by certain, specific, and valid evidence. Joh 1:29; Joh 3:16; Gal 4:4-5; 1Ti 3:16.

2) “By water and blood. even Jesus Christ.” His manifestation as the Son of God was audibly confirmed by the Father at His baptism. Mat 3:13-17; Joh 1:31-34; and as His blood was shed the Father of Him was satisfied. Earth’s lights were turned on again. Isa 53:10-11.

3) “Not by water only, but by water and blood.” While Jesus was declared to be the Son of God by God the Father at His baptism, manifested to men at His death by His shed blood, let it be noted that blood and water came from His side in death. Joh 19:34; Joh 19:37.

4) “And it is the Spirit that beareth Witness” The Spirit of God speaks, makes known to sinners their need of salvation and calls them to accept it, (Pro 1:22-23; Heb 3:7; Heb 4:7); and He seeks to lead the saved in the work of God, as He did Jesus. Luk 3:21-22; Luk 4:1; Luk 4:18-21; Rom 8:14; Rom 8:16.

5) “Because the spirit is truth.” Jesus is truth, Joh 14:6; His Word is truth, Joh 17:17; and His Spirit is (exists as) truth. These be trinitarian guides in the will of the Father – a) The Son, b) His Word, c) the Holy Spirit, as promised by Jesus, Joh 16:8-11. Blessed and assured in salvation is each who follows them.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

6 This is he that came That our faith may rest safely on Christ, he says the real substance of the shadows of the law appears in him. For I doubt not but that he alludes by the words water and blood to the ancient rites of the law. The comparison, moreover, is intended for this end, not only that we may know that the Law of Moses was abolished by the coming of Christ, but that we may seek in him the fulfillment of those things which the ceremonies formerly typified. And though they were of various kinds, yet under these two the Apostle denotes the whole perfection of holiness and righteousness, for by water was all filth washed away, so that men might come before God pure and clean, and by blood was expiation made, and a pledge given of a full reconciliation with God; but the law only adumbrated by external symbols what was to be really and fully performed by the Messiah.

John then fitly proves that Jesus is the Christ of the Lord formerly promised, because he brought with him that by which he sanctifies us wholly.

And, indeed, as to the blood by which Christ reconciled God, there is no doubt, but how he came by water may be questioned. But that the reference is to baptism is not probable. I certainly think that John sets forth here the fruit and effect of what he recorded in the Gospel history; for what he says there, that water and blood flowed from the side of Christ, is no doubt to be deemed a miracle. I know that such a thing does happen naturally to the dead; but it happened through God’s purpose, that Christ’s side became the fountain of blood and water, in order that the faithful may know that cleansing (of which the ancient baptisms were types) is found in him, and that they might know that what all the sprinklings of blood formerly presignified was fulfilled. On this subject we dwelt more at large on the ninth and tenth chapters of the Epistle to the Hebrews.

And it is the Spirit that beareth witness He shews in this clause how the faithful know and feel the power of Christ, even because the Spirit renders them certain; and that their faith might not vacillate, he adds, that a full and real firmness or stability is produced by the testimony of the Spirit. And he calls the Spirit truth, because his authority is indubitable, and ought to be abundantly sufficient for us.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

2. And Christ, divinely attested by the threefold, witnesses, is supremely worthy of faith, 1Jn 5:6-10.

6. This Jesus, named in previous verse.

He that came For this Jesus is truly the great he that came. He was God’s predicted COMER; and his coming was the Advent. And he came, attested by two tokens divinely appointed, namely, water and blood. There have been many fanciful interpretations of the water and blood; but the best commentators now agree that the water was the water of Christ’s baptism, and the blood the propitiating blood of his crucifixion. And thus, as Huther well notes, the commencement and the ending of our Lord’s ministry are symbolized by these two elements. The came, therefore, refers not to his birth, but to his office and earthly life, which are thus one extended coming. Yet John uses the past tense came to denote that definite historical fact, and not any continuous spiritual coming through ages. The preposition by should rather be through, and the meaning is, that he came into manifestation and proof as Son of God and Messiah through these two attesting tokens.

Not by water only blood John the Baptist came by water only; not also by blood. His water would have been of no avail but for the Propitiator’s blood. It was the blood which, with its divine self-sacrifice by the Sufferer, and its power of propitiation, gave all the value to the water. The Greek prepositions here before water and blood are neither by nor through, but are expressively changed to in with the article: in the water and in the blood. Our apostle beholds the mystical coming, the coming as of his person, enveloped in these elements.

Spirit witness At his baptism the descending Spirit, in form as a dove, identified him as the Son in whom God was “well pleased.” The same Spirit was secured by his death to be the witnessing heritage of the Church, commencing his work on the memorable day of Pentecost.

Spirit truth The Spirit is not only true, but is very truth itself, as God is very love itself. It is the Spirit whose testimony gives force to the tokens, water and blood; which elevates and transforms them into witness; by which means the witnesses are three.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Through The Coming of Jesus God’s Son, Which Was Well Testified To, We Can Know That We Have Eternal Life ( 1Jn 5:6-13 ).

‘This is he who came by water and blood, even Jesus Christ, not with the water only, but with the water and with the blood. And it is the Spirit who bears witness, because the Spirit is the truth. For there are three who bear witness, the Spirit, and the water, and the blood, and the three agree in one. If we receive the witness of men, the witness of God is greater, for the witness of God is this, that he has borne witness concerning his Son.’

Here John now establishes what he has been saying about Jesus the Son of God. Jesus Christ did not just come by water (either through His natural birth or more probably through His baptism), but through water and blood (through the water and blood that flowed from Him at His death – Joh 19:34). His natural birth/baptism was one way in which He presented Himself, but equally He presented Himself through His physical death. It was a tenet of various false teachers that ‘the Christ spirit’ had come on the body of Jesus at His baptism and had left Him before His death. No, says John, He was the Christ in His death as well as in His life. It was the Christ Who died on the cross.

Indeed this is borne witness to by the Spirit, for He is the Spirit of truth. He came on Jesus with power at Jesus’ baptism, where Jesus was testified to as the only Son and the Servant Who was pleasing to God, and He came to Him powerfully in His death when He raised Him from the dead (Rom 1:4). So all three agree in their witness to Jesus as the Christ, the Spirit, the water and the blood, and all are agreed together and are one in revealing Him as the Christ. In both His life and His death he was the Christ.

The Spirit further bears witness to Christ through God’s witnesses, first the Apostles, then those whom the Apostles appointed, and then through the leaders of the true churches.

But God Himself is also the witness to His Son. He Himself bore witness, for it was he Who sent the Holy Spirit on Him at His baptism, and made His declaration of Who He was as His Son, and how pleasing He was as His Servant, and it was He Who powerfully raised Him from the dead through His Holy Spirit at His resurrection. And His witness is greater than any witness of man.

So if we accept the witness of men, the witness of those who knew Jesus and knew Him in His life and who saw these wonderful events, we must even more accept the witness of God Who not only gave Him His Holy Spirit, Who was both with Him in His baptism and in His death and resurrection, but has also from that time given Him the power to give life to whom He will. For God’s witness is that by this He has borne witness to His Son.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

1Jn 5:6 “This is he that came by water and blood, even Jesus Christ; not by water only, but by water and blood” Comments – The testimony of Jesus Christ coming by water could refer to His physical birth, while His testimony that comes by blood could refer to His redemptive work on Calvary and His resurrection (which are symbolized through the act of water baptism). His virgin birth testified to the physical birth of the pre-incarnate the Son of God, along with other signs and miracles that are recorded in the Gospels surrounding His marvelous birth. His resurrection testifies to the Deity of the Son of Man.

1Jn 5:6 “And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is truth” Comments – That is, the Holy Spirit has born witness to these two testimonies. The Holy Spirit cannot lie because He is truth, or, everything proceeding from Him is true; he bears no false witness.

1Jn 5:7  For there are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost: and these three are one.

1Jn 5:7 Textual Criticism 1Jn 5:7 is generally referred to as the Three Heavenly Witnesses, or the Johannine Comma. Many scholars agree that the phrase “in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost: and these three are one, and there are three that bear witness in earth” was not a part of the original Greek text, while others argue in support of them. Stephen S. Smalley notes that the UBS 3 cites a number of Greek manuscripts that contain this “gloss” (61, 88 mg , 429 mg , 629, 636 mg , 918), but he says the earliest manuscript in this list only dates back to the twelfth century, and they depend upon “Latin tradition” rather than older Greek manuscripts. [36] In fact, this verse does not appear in Jerome’s original Latin Vulgate, written in A.D. 382 to 384, although it is found in the Vulgate manuscripts after the eighth century, thus the phrase found its way into later Greek manuscripts. Scholars tell us that this verse is missing from all early translations of the New Testament (Syriac, “Coptic, Armenian, Slavonic, Ethiopic, and Arabic”), [37] and it is not quoted by any of the earliest Church fathers of the second and third centuries. Erasmus omitted it from his first two printed Greek New Testament editions because it lacked support in all of the early Greek manuscripts, but added it to his third edition. [38] Smalley states the popular view that this phrase originally served as an “interpolation,” being added in the early centuries of the Church to explain the doctrine of the Trinity, which was being attacked by heretics, resulting in this gloss being added to some later Latin texts.

[36] Stephen S. Smalley, 1, 2, 3 John, in Word Biblical Commentary: 58 Volumes on CD-Rom, vol. 51, eds. Bruce M. Metzger, David A. Hubbard and Glenn W. Barker (Dallas: Word Inc., 2002), in Libronix Digital Library System, v. 3.0b [CD-ROM] (Bellingham, WA: Libronix Corp., 2004), notes on 1 John 5:5-13.

[37] Albert Barnes, The First Epistle of John, in Barnes’ Notes, Electronic Database (Seattle, WA: Hendrickson Publishers Inc., 1997), in P.C. Study Bible, v. 3.1 [CD-ROM] (Seattle, WA: Biblesoft Inc., 1993-2000), comments on 1 John 5:7.

[38] John Gill, 1 John, in John Gill’s Expositor, in OnLine Bible, v. 2.0 [CD-ROM] (Nederland: Online Bible Foundation, 1992-2005), comments on 1 John 5:7.

In contract, citations are given by the early Church fathers that provide strong support

of this text as an original part of the first epistle of John.

Athenagoras (A.D. 2 nd c.), a second century apologist, alludes to 1Jn 5:7.

“Who, then, would not be astonished to hear men who speak of God the Father, and of God the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, and who declare both their power in union and their distinction in order, called atheists?” ( A Plea for the Christians 10)

Tertullian (A.D. 160-225) alludes to 1Jn 5:7.

“Thus the connection of the Father in the Son, and of the Son in the Paraclete, produces three coherent Persons, who are yet distinct One from Another. These Three are, one essence, not one Person, as it is said, ‘I and my Father are One,’ in respect of unity of substance not singularity of number.” ( Against Praxeas 25)

Cyprian (d. A.D. 258) alludes to 1Jn 5:7.

“The Lord says, ‘I and the Father are one;’ and again it is written of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, “And these three are one.” ( Treatises 1.6) ( ANF 5)

F. F. Bruce tells us that 1Jn 5:7 first appears in the writings of the Priscillian, a Spanish Latin heretic (d. A.D. 385). [39] Priscillian writes:

[39] F. F. Bruce, The Books and the Parchments (Old Tappan, New Jersey: Fleming H. Revell Company, 1963), 210-1.

“As John says ‘and there are three which give testimony on earth, the water, the flesh the blood, and these three are in one, and there are three which give testimony in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Spirit, and these three are one in Christ Jesus.’” ( Liber Apologeticus) [40]

[40] See Priscilliani Quae Supersunt, ed. Georgius Schepss, in Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesisticorum Latinorum, vol. 18 (Vindobonae: f. Tempsky, 1889), 6. See the English translation by Don C. Hewey, Complete List of New Testament Manuscripts that Verify 1 John 5:7 (1998-99) [on-line]; accessed 17 July 2010; available from http://www.1john57.com/1john57.htm; Internet.

Jerome (A.D. 324-420) tells us that 1Jn 5:7 had been left out of some Bibles by disloyal translators, saying:

“especially at the particular passage where the unity of the Trinity in the first epistle of John is read, in which indeed disloyal translators are truly, actually guilty of calling it a common mistake.” ( Prologue to the Seven Canonical Epistles) ( PL 29 cols. 827-829) (author’s translation).

Gregory of Nazanzian (A.D. 329-389) discusses the Trinity, making an allusion to 1Jn 5:7

“but the very fact of being Unbegotten or Begotten, or Proceeding has given the name of Father to the First, of the Son to the Second, and of the Third, Him of Whom we are speaking, of the Holy Ghost that the distinction of the Three Persons may be preserved in the one nature and dignity of the Godhead. For neither is the Son Father, for the Father is One, but He is what the Father is; nor is the Spirit Son because He is of God, for the Only-begotten is One, but He is what the Son is. The Three are One in Godhead, and the One Three in properties.” ( Orations 32.9) ( NPF2 7)

Victor Vitensis (late 5 th c.), bishop of Vita, quotes 1Jn 5:7.

“There are three who bear witness in Heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Spirit, and these three are one.” ( De Persecutione Vandalica 3.13) ( PL 58 col. 227C) (author’s translation)

Vigilius (fl. A.D. 500), bishop of Thapsus, quotes 1Jn 5:7-8.

“There are three, it is said, who give a witness on earth, water, blood, and the Beloved, three are in us; and there are three who give witness in heaven, the Father, the Word and the Spirit, and these three are one.” ( Contra Varimadum 1.5) ( PL 62 col. 35 9B) (author’s translation)

Cassiodorus (A.D. 485-580), Roman author and monk, cites 1Jn 5:7-8.

“Which event testifies on earth three mysteries: water, blood, and spirit, which we read in the Lord’s Passion is fulfilled; in heaven, moreover, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, and the three are one God.” ( Epistola S. Joannis Parthos 10) ( PL 70 col. 1373A) (author’s translation)

Isidore (A.D. 560-636), the archbishop of Seville, cites 1Jn 5:7-8.

“Since there are three which give testimony on earth: the Spirit, water, and the Blood; and the three are of one in Christ Jesus; and there are three which declare a testimony in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Spirit, and the three are one” ( Testimonia divinae Scripturae 2) ( PL 83 col. 1203C) (author’s translation)

In conclusion, we have to admit that this phrase was known by the early Church as far back as the fourth century, and remained popular enough to be used by many of the later Church fathers.

Illustration – The Lord gave my wife an illustration of the Trinity in a dream in March 2001. Although this illustration has been used by others, she saw that the Father is like the sun; Jesus is like the light that radiates from the sun; and the Holy Spirit is like the heat that is produced from the light.

Fuente: Everett’s Study Notes on the Holy Scriptures

The testimony of God:

v. 6. This is He that came by water and blood, even Jesus Christ; not by water only, but by water and blood. And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is Truth.

v. 7. For there are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost; and these three are one.

v. 8. And there are three that bear witness in earth, the Spirit, and the water, and the blood; and these three agree in one.

St. John here shows that the foundation of our faith is absolutely firm and certain, since it rests upon the powerful testimony of God Himself: This is He that came through water and blood, Jesus Christ; not in water alone, but in water and in blood; and the Spirit is He that testifies, because the Spirit is the Truth. Here the two principal events in the life of Jesus are set before our eyes, namely, His baptism, by which He entered upon His public ministry, and His suffering and death, through which He crowned His work of redemption. These two events prove with special force that Jesus is the Christ, the Savior of the world. He accepted the baptism intended for sinners and thereby declared His willingness to make full satisfaction for the sins of the world. He shed His blood and gave His life into death for the reconciliation of the world. And it was not only His first willingness to undertake the work of salvation which counted, but the shedding of His blood, His suffering and death. Of these facts the Spirit of God in the Gospel bears witness, testifying without ceasing that Jesus Christ is the Savior of the world. That is the special work of the Holy Ghost, to testify regarding the truth, to teach the truth, since He Himself is the Truth, the eternally faithful God. Thus the testimony of the Spirit glorifies Christ in the hearts of the believers.

The text continues: For three there are that bear witness in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost; and these three are one. This is the great mystery of the Trinity: God the Father, God the Son, the eternal Word, and the Holy Ghost, three in persons, one in essence. These three in one testify in behalf of Jesus that He is the Christ, the Savior of the world. And with their testimony agrees that of three witnesses on earth: the Spirit and the water and the blood; and these three concur in one. Here on earth the Holy Ghost is the chief witness. As He led the disciples of Christ into all truth and inspired them to write the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Savior of the world, so He still works faith in our hearts through the Word of the Gospel, He still teaches us the value of the other witnesses for Christ’s redemption, of His baptism and of His suffering and death. Thus we have unmistakable and incontrovertible evidence for the fact that Jesus, our Savior, really completed the work of redemption, gained a perfect atonement for the whole world. Thus the three witnesses have only one object, namely, to point to Christ, to testify to the salvation which we have in Him.

Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann

1Jn 5:6. This is he that came by water and blood St. John, 1Jn 5:5 as well as often elsewhere, intimated that Jesus was the Christ, and that the belief of that article was of the highest moment. Here he is proceeding to the grand evidences of that important truth. The Spirit alone is here said to bear witness, because he was the principal witness; but, 1Jn 5:8 the water and the blood are represented as witnesses, together with the Spirit. In Joh 19:34 the water and blood which came out of Christ’s side when he was pierced with the spear, were a clear proof of the reality of his death, and might have taught the Docetae that he had a real body, and really suffered and died; and consequently that his resurrection was a real resurrection.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

1Jn 5:6 . In order to arrive at an understanding of this verse we must first of all look at the expression: . The question, what is to be understood by and , has been answered in very different ways. The explanations worthy of notice are these: 1. That the apostle means thereby the blood and water which flowed from Christ’s side on the cross, Joh 19:34 ; this explanation is found in Augustine, Vatablus, and many of the old commentators; but some of them consider that the apostle here mentions this water and blood as the proof of the actual occurrence of the death of Christ, others that he uses them as symbols of baptism and the Lord’s Supper. 2. That by and are to be understood the sacraments appointed by Christ; this is the explanation of Wolf (who, however, understands an allusion to the incident recorded in Joh 19:34 ), S. Schmid, Carpzovius, Baur, Sander, Besser, and others. [297] 3. That by John means the baptism of Christ by John the Baptist, and by the atoning death which He suffered. This is the explanation of Tertullian, Theophylact, Cappellus, Heumann, Semler, Storr, Lange, Baumgarten-Crusius, Hilgenfeld, Neander, Ewald, [298] Brckner, Lcke (3d ed. Introd. p. 160; comp. Bertheau’s note on this passage, p. 381), Erdmann, Myrberg, Weiss, Braune, etc. Not a few commentators, however, divide the explanation, understanding of the baptism appointed by Christ, and of His own death; so Hornejus, Knapp, Lcke (in the comm. on this passage; also in the 3d ed., Introd. p. 110; differently, Introd. p. 160), de Wette, Rickli, Gerlach, Frommann (p. 596), Dsterdieck, etc. [299]

By many commentators (as Bede, a Lapide, Russmeyer, Spener, Bengel, etc.) different interpretations are connected together in one or the other of these ways. [300]

[297] To this class belongs also Luther’s interpretation (in the 1st ed. of Walch), which, however, differs in this, that according to it water and blood together constitute the sacrament of baptism; he says: “Most commentators consider both sacraments ; I do not object, indeed, to this explanation, but I understand the phrase of baptism merely. Christ comes not by water only, but by water which is mixed with blood, that is, by baptism, which is coloured with blood.” So also in the interpretation of the following verse: “If you are baptized with water, the blood of Christ is sprinkled by the Word. If you are baptized in blood, you are at the same time washed by the Holy Spirit through the Word.” In his 2d ed., on the other hand, Luther understands water and blood, with reference to Joh 19:34 , of the two sacraments: “This brief summary has been kept in the Church, that out of the side of Jesus the two sacraments flowed.”

[298] Ewald understands by them, however, not merely the baptism and the death, but by the baptism “ with everything special which besides occurred in His case ,” and by “the bloody death on the cross with everything still more wonderful that was connected with it.

[299] To this class Ebrard also belongs, but he differs from the other commentators in this respect, that he understands by Christian baptism indeed, but “not the entire sacrament of baptism (consisting of symbol and thing signified), but only the symbol in the sacrament;” hence only that side of Christian baptism in which it is identical with the baptism of John. Clearly an unjustifiable division of the sacrament! The same view is no doubt that of Hofmann, who says ( Schriftbew. II. 1, p. 76): “ is, in contrast with , the blood shed by Jesus for the remission of sins, differing from the water of baptism, which John also performed;” then on p. 470 he asserts that is not the baptism which Jesus received, but that which He introduced hence it denotes that which Jesus had in common with the Baptist; and in II. 2, p. 221, he describes precisely as “the baptism with water originated by John.” But how strange it is to say, nevertheless, that the baptism which Jesus introduced is the baptism of water originated by John!

[300] Bengel: Aqua dicit baptismum, quem primum administravit Johannes; ideo in aqua baptizare missus, ut Jesus manifestaretur tanquam Filius Dei. Porro baptismus etiam per discipulos Jesu administratus est. Sanguis est utique sanguis Jesu Christi, qui effusus in passione, in coena dominica bibitur. Tertullian says: Venerat per aquam et sanguinem, sicut Joh. scripsit, ut aqua tingeretur, sanguine glorificaretur. Proinde ut nos aqua faccret vocatos, sanguine electos, hos duos baptismos de vulnere perfossi lateris emisit.

To these interpretations may be added others, the arbitrariness of which is evident at the first glance. To this class the following belong: 1. That by and John denotes the two elements of the physical life of Jesus; this is the view of Schulthess. Wetstein adds even the following , and says that the apostle wants to prove that Christ was a verus homo, who was formed ex spiritu, sanguine et aqua sive humore. [301] 2. That by both words, or at least by , the ethical nature of Christ is indicated; thus Grotius interprets = per vitam purissimam, quae per aquam significari solet. Socinus understands by : ipsa doctrina pura cum vitae puritate conjuncta. 3. That in and it is not so much the baptism and death of Christ themselves that are to be thought of, as rather the testimonies that were given in connection with them; in the testimony of the divine voice in the baptism (Wahl); in either the testimony of the good centurion (Stroth), or the events that followed the death of Jesus, namely His resurrection and ascension (Wahl, Ziegler, Lange), or even the testimony of God in Joh 12:28 (Oecumenius). [302] 4. That in these two expressions we are to consider the operations brought into exercise by Christ; in , regeneratio et fides (Clemens Al.), or purgatio (Cameron); in , cognitio (Clemens Al.), or expiatio (Cameron), or redemptio (Bullinger). To this class belongs also Calvin’s explanation: ego existimo Joannem hic fructum et effectum exprimere ejus rei, quam in historia evangelica narrat. Christi latus sanguinis et aquae fons erat, ut scirent fideles, veram munditiem (cujus figurae erant veteres baptismi) in eo sibi constare: ut scirent etiam completum, quod omnes sanguinis aspersiones olim promiserant. 5. That those expressions and are descriptive of the threefold redemptive office of Christ: that (= coelestis doctrini; Bullinger) represents Him as prophet, as priest, and as king. Here may be added the strange explanation of as the tears which Jesus shed on various occasions, and of as the blood which He shed at His circumcision. Again, some of the old commentators understood by the blood of the martyrs.

[301] Similarly Paulus in reference to ; he understands of the baptism of John.

[302] Oecumenius: , , , , , , , .

It is at all events incorrect to permit ourselves, in the interpretation of and , to be led by the question as to the nature of their testimony (Sander: “It must be maintained as the chief difficulty in the passage before us, what are the three witnesses on earth”), for that is not the subject in this verse, in which the only is mentioned as bearing witness. [303] By the words: . . ., the apostle simply states who Jesus the Son of God is.

With regard to the expression: . . ., most commentators interpret as if it were: “ ,” or: “ .” Others, it is true, have not overlooked the aorist, but they interpret it as if it expressed something present; thus Sander = “has come and comes,” against which Bengel rightly says: non dicit: in Praesenti, sed Aoristo tempore, Praeteriti vim habenti. It is true, it is further correct when, in opposition to de Wette, who takes as synonymous with , chap. 1Jn 4:2 , Brckner objects that by the aorist as a purely historic tense nothing continuous or permanent is expressed; but even then the expression does not obtain complete justice. It is to be observed that John did not write “ ,” or “ ,” but . By the participle with the definite article, it is not a verbal, but a nominal, and, if it is not in apposition to a preceding substantive (as in Joh 1:18 ; Joh 1:29 ; Joh 3:13 ; Joh 6:44 , and passim), a substantive idea that is expressed; comp. Joh 1:15 ; Joh 1:33 ; Joh 3:31 ; Joh 3:36 , and many other passages. It therefore does not mean “this came,” or “this is one who came,” but “this is he that came;” by this predicate it is not merely stated what the subject which is here spoken of (namely, ) has done , but the subject is thereby characterized as the particular person to whom this predicate is suitable as a specific characteristic; according to the analogy of Joh 1:33 ( ), 1Jn 3:13 ( ), and other passages, the expression therefore serves to state something characteristic of the Messianic office of Christ. If this is taken into consideration, the incorrectness of Augustine’s interpretation (see above) follows; for even if the flowing of the blood and water from the side of Jesus was intended by John not so much as a proof of the actual occurrence of Christ’s death (Lcke), but as a wonder proving the Messiahship of Jesus (Meyer on Joh 19:34 ), yet this would be only a very subordinate proof, which by no means states a characteristic sign of the Messiah as such.

In the life of Jesus there are two points which correspond with the expressions and , namely, His baptism at the beginning of His Messianic work, and His bloody death at the end of it; by His baptism Jesus entered on His mediatorial work; it formed the initiatio (Erdmann, Myrberg) of it, but this did not take place only by means of what happened at the baptism, but by the act of baptism itself; by His death he effected the atonement itself, inasmuch as by His blood he blotted out the guilt of the sinful world, for (Heb 9:22 ). John may with justice therefore describe Christ as the Mediator by calling Him the one who came . [304] Against the view that and are to be understood of the sacraments instituted by Christ, is not only the circumstance that these are only the means for the appropriation of the atonement effected by Him, whereas the subject here is the accomplishment of the atonement itself , but also the use of the aorist , instead of which, in that case, the present would have to be used, and also the expression , which by itself alone never in the N. T. signifies the Lord’s Supper; even in 1Co 12:13 is not an allusion to the Lord’s Supper, but to the communication of the Spirit in baptism. In opposition to the idea that indeed signifies the death which Christ suffered, but that does not denote the baptism which He received, but the baptism which He instituted, are (1) that the close connection of the two words (without repetition of before ) is only suitable if the ideas correspond with one another, which is not the case if by we understand an institution of Christ, but by , on the other hand, the blood shed by Christ; [305] (2) that the simple expression is little suited for a description of Christian baptism; [306] (3) that as the institution of baptism took place after the death of Christ, and necessarily presupposes it, John, if he had understood by Christian baptism, would certainly have put , not before , but after . Hilgenfeld and Neander have rightly shown that if signifies something pertaining to the Messiah personally, the same must be the case with . The connection must be the same in both expressions. If by is meant the death which Christ underwent, then by can therefore only be meant the baptism which He likewise underwent.

[303] This is usually too little noticed by commentators. Even Lcke who remarks on the following words: . . ., that “it was not said of the water and blood that they bear witness,” and then “it is only through the that both of them, which in themselves give no testimony, likewise become witnesses” has in his discussion of the meaning of and all along regarded them as “witnesses” for the Messiahship of Jesus. Brckner also, in his interpretation of the ideas and , has all along included the element of testimony, whereby the clearness of his statement is only too much diminished.

[304] That “Jesus in both cases proved His obedience to His Father’s will, and that His obedience proved Him to be the Son of God, the holy and innocent One” (Braune), are ideas which John here in no way suggests.

[305] This inconsistency is only apparently removed by Dsterdieck’s observation that “John regards the blood of the Lord shed at His death as something which has a substantial existence;” for even if this be correct, yet there remains the difference that the water of Christian baptism is something at present existing, but the blood which Christ shed is only regarded as such by John. It is no better with the interpretation of Hofmann, who at one time describes as “the blood of Christ shed for remission,” and at another time as “the sprinkling of blood which Christ bestows.”

[306] It is indeed just this very fact that distinguishes Christian baptism from that of John, that the former in its nature is not as the latter is, as John the Baptist himself, marking his difference from Christ, said: (Joh 1:26 ), whereas Jesus was described by him as (Joh 1:33 ).

The objection of Knapp (with whom Lcke and Sander agree), that in this sense is much more appropriately said of John the Baptist than of Christ, is untenable, for that expression may at least just as well be used of him who allowed himself to be baptized as of him who baptized; Erdmann: sane id non alius momenti, ac si quis objiceret, non posse dici de Christi sanguine et morte, sed potius de iis, qui cruentam mortem ei paraverint. There is just as little in the objection of Lcke, that Christ allowed Himself to be baptized, not in order to purify Himself, but to fulfil all righteousness; since two ideas are here placed in antagonism to one another, which are by no means mutually exclusive, as Jesus underwent the baptism of purification just for the very purpose of fulfilling all righteousness.

With regard to the expression , is not to be separated from , so that in itself would denote “the Saviour who came,” and . . . would state “in what way Jesus is the Saviour who came” (Hofmann in the Schriftbew. 2d ed. p. 469); for that Christ is called (Mat 11:4 ; Luk 7:19-20 ) does not confirm, but contradicts this interpretation; besides, John does not here want to bring out how Jesus is the Messiah, but that He is so. The preposition has been differently explained; usually it is here taken simply in the sense of accompaniment, which, however, is unjustifiable; in this commentary, with reference to Heb 9:12 (where it is indicated by that the high priest entered into the holy place by means of the blood which he had with him), the idea of instrumentality is combined with that of accompaniment, inasmuch as Jesus operated as mediator by means of ; similarly Brckner explains as a preposition of instrumentality, namely, in the passive sense, as “by which he was proved; ” , however, is here connected neither with an idea of operation nor of verification, but with . Weiss takes the preposition in this way, that . are thereby “introduced as historical elements of the life of Christ through which His career passed; ” but it might be more suitable to interpret . . . . in this way, that thereby the elements are brought out by which the was specially characterized; just as in 2Co 5:7 by the feature is mentioned by which our present is characterized; comp. also Rom 8:24 : , and Heb 12:1 ; Braune simply abides by the idea of instrumentality, without further explaining himself on the subject. The question, whether refers to or to , is to be answered in this way, that it refers to the whole idea: ; Jesus, the Son of God, is the subject of Christian faith; it is He who came by water and blood. In favour of this reference is the addition , which, as shows, is not an explanatory apposition of the predicate (“He who came by water and blood,” i.e. Christ), but is in apposition to the subject , which is more particularly defined by the predicate; the preceding, is thereby resumed, but in this way, that in consequence of . . . the idea is changed into .

The import of the preceding lies, as cannot be doubted, simply in the statement which is therein contained; Ebrard, indeed, thinks that the apostle wants thereby to express “that in the loving and merciful act of the devotion of Jesus to death lies the power by which He has overcome the world;” but although in the preceding the victory over the world is ascribed to the belief that Jesus is the Son of God, yet it is not to be inferred from this that it is Christ’s victory over the world that is the subject here, as John does not make the most remote suggestion of that.

By the words: , the apostle brings out with special emphasis the fact that Jesus did not come by water only, but by both water and blood; as the latter two , in their combination, are contrasted with the former one , the principal emphasis plainly falls on the blood , as that by which the Mediator as such has operated. This emphasis is not intended for the purpose of indicating the difference between Jesus and John the Baptist (Lcke, de Wette, Dsterdieck, Ebrard); for, on the one hand, it is self-evident to Christians that Jesus would not be the mediator if He had not acted differently from John; and, on the other hand, the feature which distinguishes Jesus from John in regard to baptism is this, that the latter baptized with water, but the former baptizes with the Holy Ghost. [307] The addition has a polemic import (not against “disciples of John,” Ewald, but) against the Docetans, who in a certain sense indeed taught that Christ came , but denied that He came , inasmuch as, according to their heresy, Christ united Himself with Jesus at His baptism, but separated from Him again before His death (Erdmann, Myrberg, Weiss, Braune); indeed, it is only by the reference to these heretics, against whom the apostle frequently directs a polemic in the Epistle, that the whole section from 1Jn 5:6 to 1Jn 5:12 can be explained.

With regard to grammar, it is to be observed that is not connected with , but with , and therefore there can be no after , which is not observed by A. Buttmann (p. 317). The preposition simply expresses the idea of accompaniment without bringing out the accessory notion which lies in ; comp. Heb 9:12 ; Heb 9:25 .

The definite article before and is explained by the fact that both have been already mentioned. Bengel correctly: Articulus habet vim relativam.

] Just as in regard to and , so in regard to the views of commentators vary very much. The following opinions are to be rejected as utterly arbitrary: (1) that it denotes the psychical element, which, with and as the physical elements, constituted the human nature of Christ (Wetstein); (2) that it is the spirit which Christ at His death committed into His Father’s hands (Augustine, etc.); (3) that it means “the teaching of Jesus” (Carpzovius); (4) that is = , whereby John means himself (Ziegler, Stroth). By can only be understood either the Holy Ghost Himself or the spiritual life produced by Him in believers. [308] Against the latter view there are, however, two reasons: (1) that never has this meaning without a more particular definition indicating it; and (2) that the , which is added, here defines the as something specifically different from the subjective life of man. We must therefore understand by it the objective Spirit of God, yet not, however, inasmuch as He descended on Christ at His baptism, and testified to Him as the Messiah, nor inasmuch as He was in Christ as the divine power which manifested itself in His miracles, [309] but (as most commentators correctly interpret) the Holy Ghost , whom Christ sent to His disciples at Pentecost, and who is the permanent possession of His Church. The predicate is not put for or for ; here also the article must not be overlooked; is a nominal idea, and, moreover, not adjectival, but substantive: “the Spirit is the witness” (Lcke). The office of witnessing belongs essentially to the Holy Ghost; comp. Joh 15:26 . [310]

As the apostle continues: , he seems thereby to state the object of ; [311] but this view is opposed to the whole context, according to which the apostle does not want to bring out that the Spirit is truth, but: “that Jesus the Son of God is the Christ.” Therefore here must, with Gerhard, Calovius, and most modern commentators (de Wette, Lcke, Dsterdieck, Erdmann, Myrberg, Braune), be taken as causal particle , so that the subordinate clause serves to strengthen the preceding thought. It is because the Spirit is the truth that the Spirit is the witness in the fullest sense of the word.

To interpret = (Grotius) is to weaken the thought; by the definite article the idea is indicated in its full concrete vividness; comp. Joh 14:6 , where Christ calls Himself . Weiss calls attention to the way in which this designation proves the personality of the Spirit, inasmuch as “the truth is the nature of God Himself made manifest.”

The object which is to be supplied with can be no other than the thought which John has previously expressed in the first half of the verse.

[307] Erdmann has rightly pointed out that the view, according to which is understood of the baptism instituted by Christ, is opposed to the idea that the addition refers to John the Baptist; this antagonism can only be removed if we explain the idea in the principal clause differently from its meaning in this subordinate clause, in the former of a baptism which was not merely a baptism of water, but also of the Spirit, but in the latter of a baptism which is only a baptism of water; but that would be an interpretation which condemns itself.

[308] Sander is very uncertain in his explanation of ; first he explains it by: “the conversion of man accomplished by the communication of the Holy Ghost,” but then he puts instead of this, without further explanation: “those who are born of the Spirit” (!).

[309] Grotius understands by even the miracles themselves: admiranda ejus opera a virtute divina manifeste procedentia.

[310] The assertion of Ebrard, that John in these words shows “how and how far our faith in Christ, in consequence of the fact that Christ bears in Himself the power that overcomes the world, is itself an overcoming power,” and that therefore “must denote an act which is in substance identical with the act of overcoming the world,” is simply to be rejected.

[311] In connection with this view, Luther takes in a different sense from that in the principal sentence, namely, as “the word which has saved us by baptism and by blood,” and of which the Spirit bears witness that it proceeds from the Spirit of truth, and is the truth itself; Besser distinguishes . in the principal clause from the . in the subordinate clause, in that he understands by the former “the Spirit bearing witness to the heart of believers,” and by the latter “the Spirit dominating in the sacraments and in the word.” Ebrard interprets: “the Spirit evidences itself by its power;” clearly the words “by its power” are a pure importation.

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

1Jn 5:6-12 . That Jesus is the Son of God, is confirmed by divine testimony.

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

DISCOURSE: 2464
JUSTIFICATION AND SANCTIFICATION BY CHRIST

1Jn 5:6. This is he that came by water and blood, even Jesus Christ; not by water only, but by water and blood. And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is truth.

THERE are in the Scriptures, and especially in the history of our blessed Lord, many circumstances recorded, which appear to have been accidental and of no moment, whilst they were in reality ordained of God, and of the utmost importance for the advancement of his glory. For instance, the soldiers offering him vinegar upon the cross, and dividing some of our Lords clothing, and casting lots for the remainder; what trifles do these circumstances appear, when compared with all the other events of that day! Yet by means of them were the most improbable prophecies fulfilled, and the strongest possible testimony given to the Messiahship of Jesus. Another circumstance I will mention as deserving of particular notice, namely, that of the soldier, without any order from his superiors, piercing our Lord with his spear after he was dead. This, as far as respected the soldier, was a mere wanton act either of cruelty or contempt; of cruelty, if he doubted whether he was not yet alive; and of contempt, if he believed him to be really dead. But that act of his, whilst it fulfilled a very remarkable prophecy, was productive of consequences which are replete with instruction to the whole world. On his inflicting the wound, there came forth from our Saviours side both water and blood, not blended together, but in streams visibly distinct from each other. St. John, who was the only Disciple present, took particular notice of this. He saw it with his own eyes: and, in his Gospel, he records it as a most remarkable event, to which he could bear the most assured testimony, and of which he was extremely anxious that every one should be informed: One of the soldiers with a spear pierced his side: and forthwith came thereout blood and water. And he that saw it bare record; and his record is true: and he knoweth that he saith true, that ye might believe [Note: Joh 19:34-35.]. It is to this that the Apostle alludes in the words of our text; This is he that came by water and blood, even Jesus Christ; not by water only, but by water and blood: and the same anxiety does he manifest to impress it deeply on our minds, when he adds, The Spirit beareth witness to it; and the Spirit is truth. Let me then, in conformity with his example, call your attention to,

I.

The truth here specified

In this event there was a deep stupendous mystery, inasmuch as it declared, in a very striking way, the great ends of our Saviours death. Take the Apostles assertion,

1.

As simply declared

[Our Lord Jesus Christ came by water and blood. He came as a teacher sent from God, to instruct us in the knowledge of his will, to lead us also by his own example, and by the gift of his grace to strengthen us for the attainment of universal holiness. This is called coming by water: for, as water is of use to cleanse and purify, so his doctrine was to cleanse and purify our souls from every species of defilement.
But it was not merely as a teacher that Jesus came, but to make an atonement also for sin. This he was to do by offering himself a sacrifice for us upon the cross: and this he did, shedding his own most precious blood, that through it we might be purged from guilt, and be reconciled to our offended God. In this he differed from all who had ever come before him. The different prophets that had been sent from God, came solely for the former purpose: and John the Baptist, who baptized such multitudes in the Wilderness, professed that the whole scope of his ministry was to lead men to repentance. But Jesus had a higher end in view. Repentance, however deep, and reformation, however extensive, would have been of no avail, if an atonement had not been offered to God for the sins of men: and this office neither men nor angels could undertake: he alone was sufficient for it: his Divine nature would give a virtue and efficacy to his blood, which no other blood could have, and would render it a sufficient propitiation for the sins of the whole world. For that end therefore he assumed our nature, and died upon the cross; so that, as my text expresses it, he came by blood.]

2.

As solemnly confirmed

[There is a peculiar emphasis to be observed in the Apostles mode of repeating his assertion. The circumstance of the blood and water flowing in distinct streams from the wounded side of our Saviour, was intended emblematically to declare the united ends of his death. The Apostle therefore would not suffer it to be overlooked, lest by a partial view of Christ, as a Prophet only, we should lose the blessings which he came to purchase for us. The mode appointed by the law for the purifying of the leper, will place this matter in a just point of view. Two birds were taken: one of them was killed over running water, and his blood was mingled with the water. The blood and water were then sprinkled seven times upon the leper, and the living bird, being dipped in the blood and water, was let loose into the open field, and the leper was pronounced clean [Note: Lev 14:4-7.]. This was intended to shew how man should be cleansed from sin. The Lord Jesus Christ should shed his blood as an atonement for sin: he should also send forth his Spirit upon man: by neither of these separately should he fulfil the office of a Saviour; and by neither of these separately should man be restored to the favour of his God. The union of the two was necessary for all; and the two united should be effectual for all: so that, however deep any ones leprosy may have been, he shall, the very instant he has been so purified, be pronounced clean.

This then all must carefully notice, if they would possess the full benefits of Christs salvation.]
In addition to his own testimony, the Apostle further confirms his assertion, by adducing,

II.

The testimony which the Holy Spirit bears to it

In two ways the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of truth, has borne witness to the doctrine inculcated in our text:

1.

By established ordinances in the Church of God

[This doctrine was not unknown to the Church of Israel in the wilderness; for there were ordinances appointed on purpose that it might be known, and be kept in everlasting remembrance. The Paschal Lamb which was slain from year to year reminded them, as indeed all the daily sacrifices did, that they were redeemed by blood. And, in their passage through the Red Sea, they were baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea, to shew them, that they must also be washed from their pollutions by the Spirit of God; as indeed all the washings and lustrations appointed by the law yet further taught them. Under the Christian dispensation, the same truths are constantly inculcated by the two sacraments appointed for our observance. Our baptismal washing reminds us, that Christ came by water; and the sacramental cup, which is emblematic of his blood which he shed for the remission of our sins, reminds us, that he came by blood. And our Apostle himself, in the second verse after my text, declares, that these ordinances were appointed for these very ends by the Spirit of God, who by them, and with them, bears testimony to the truth asserted in our text: There are three that bear record on earth; the Spirit, and the water, and the blood: and these three agree in one: they agree in attesting that the Lord Jesus Christ came by water and blood; not by water only, but by water and blood.

How can we be sufficiently thankful for such clear and unquestionable testimonies to these important truths! Here is nothing left to arbitrary interpretations of a few select passages, which an advocate for some favourite doctrine might be supposed to pervert for the purpose of establishing his own sentiments: here are ordinances which speak for themselves, and which cannot be perverted: the spiritual import of them cannot admit a doubt: so that we may consider the truth of our text as fully declared, and incontrovertibly established.]

2.

By visible operations on the souls of men

[The Holy Spirit has yet further attested this truth by his immediate agency on the soul. He came down in a visible shape, in cloven tongues, as of fire, upon the Disciples on the day of Pentecost, in order to qualify them to proclaim these truths in all manner of languages; and, in confirmation of their word, he converted not less than three thousand souls to God in one day, enlightening all their minds, renewing all their souls, and filling them all with the richest consolations. When Peter opened the Gospel to the Gentiles also in the house of Cornelius, the Holy Spirit again bore witness to the truth in the same manner. The manner in which this is noticed by the historian, is worthy of particular observation. St. Peter, in his discourse respecting Christ, said, To him give all the prophets witness, that through his name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sins. Then we are told, While Peter yet spake these words, the Holy Ghost fell on all them which heard the word. Here you perceive, it was at the very moment when Peter was proclaiming Jesus as a Saviour, not as a teacher, but as a Saviour, who was come not by water only, but by water and blood, that the Holy Spirit descended visibly upon all to attest that blessed truth. So, in like manner, at the present day, the Holy Spirit bears witness to this truth in every place: he works by it to the conversion of men to God, to the enriching of them with peace and joy, to the transforming of them into the Divine image, and to the bringing of them safely to glory. No other doctrine is ever honoured by him for these ends; but this is invariably, wherever it is proclaimed with that fidelity which becomes a servant of Christ. The people, who receive this doctrine into their hearts, are themselves made living witnesses of its truth, being enabled by it to live as no other persons can live, and to shine as lights in a dark benighted world. In every age this doctrine has been, and to the end of the world it shall be, preached with the Holy Ghost sent down from heaven [Note: 1Pe 1:12.].]

Address
1.

Be careful to receive these truths into your hearts

[It cannot be that, when so much care has been taken to reveal them to us, we should be at liberty to neglect them: yet are they most grievously neglected by the great majority of the Christian world. The blood of Christ is actually denied by many as an atonement for sin: and of those who do not systematically deny its virtue, many are yet unmindful of it as a source of salvation to their own souls. And as for the influences of the Holy Spirit, they are derided by the generality as the dreams of a heated imagination. Ah! brethren, let it not be thus with you. Trample not in this ungodly manner upon the blood of the covenant, whereby alone you can be purged from guilt: and do not such despite to the Spirit of God, by whose all-powerful influence alone you can ever be truly sanctified and saved But rather seek to be yourselves living witnesses of their truth and efficacy. Seek by the sprinkling of the blood of Christ upon your souls to obtain peace with God and in your own consciences: and seek by the effusion of the Spirit of God upon your souls to be renewed in your inward man, and rendered meet for heaven. So shall you in this world be epistles of Christ, known and read of all men; and in the world to come be everlasting trophies of his redeeming love.]

2.

Beware that you never attempt to separate what God has joined together

[Some there are of a self-righteous turn, who look to sanctification only as the means of recommending them to God; whilst others of an Antinomian cast think of little but of justification through the Redeemers blood. But both of these are involved in most grievous errors; and, if they obtain not juster views of Gospel truth, will perish for ever: for, on the one hand, there is no fountain opened for sin and for uncleanness, but that which was opened on Mount Calvary; nor, on the other hand, can any one that is unsanctified behold the face of God in peace: for without holiness no man shall see the Lord. If any take refuge in the doctrines of predestination and election, let them know, that God has ordained the means as well as the end; and that, if we are elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, it is through sanctification of the Spirit unto obedience, and the sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ [Note: 1Pe 1:2.]. Whichever of these truths any man confide in as of exclusive importance, we would say to him, as our Lord said to the self-deceiving Pharisees, These ought ye to have done, and not to leave the other undone.]


Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)

6 This is he that came by water and blood, even Jesus Christ; not by water only, but by water and blood. And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is truth.

Ver. 6. That came by water and blood ] So to fulfil and answer the legal washings and sacrifices; so to signify that he justifieth none by his merit but whom he sanctifieth by his Spirit; and so to set forth the two sacraments of the New Testament. See Trapp on “ Joh 19:34

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

6 21 .] THE THIRD AND LAST DIVISION OF THE EPISTLE. This portion falls naturally into two parts: 1Jn 5:6-13 , and 1Jn 5:14-21 ; the former of which treats of the concluding part of the argument, and the latter forms the close of the Epistle.

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

6 13 .] As in the former portions, our communion with God who is light (ch. 1Jn 1:5 ff.) was treated, and our birth in righteousness from God who is righteous (1Jn 2:29 ff.), by faith in Jesus the Son of God, so now we have another most important element of the Christian life set before us: the testimony to it arising from that life itself: the witness of the spiritual life to its own reality . This witness rests not on apostolic testimony alone, but on the Holy Spirit, which the believer has in himself ( 1Jn 5:10 ), and which is God’s testimony respecting His Son ( 1Jn 5:9-10 ), and our assurance that we have eternal life ( 1Jn 5:13 ).

There is hardly a passage in the N. T. which has given rise to more variety of interpretation: certainly none which (on account of the apparent importance of the words interpolated after 1Jn 5:7 ) has been the field of so much critical controversy. Complete accounts of both the exegesis and the criticism will be found in the recent monographs on the Epistle: more especially in that of Dsterdieck. I shall indicate the more salient points of the divergent interpretations as I proceed.

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

6 .] This (viz. the person spoken of in the last verse; Jesus. This, which is maintained by most Commentators, is denied by Knapp and Huther, who refer to : “This Son of God is he &c.:” making the proposition assert the identity of the Son of God with the historical Jesus, not the converse. This Huther supports on two grounds: 1) that the fact that Jesus came by water and blood needed no proof even to Heretics: 2) that on the ordinary interpretation the following words, . ( ) , become altogether superfluous. But to these it is easily replied, 1) that although the fact might be confessed, that was not confessed to which the fact bore testimony, viz. that Jesus who came in the flesh was the Son of God: 2) that the appositional clause . ( ) is by no means superfluous, being only a solemn reassertion of our Lord’s Person and Office as testified by these signs.

The main objection to Huther’s view is, that, as well stated by Dsterd., it makes the coming by water and blood, which, by the context, is evidently in the Apostle’s argument a substantiating consideration, to be merely an exceptional one: “this Son of God is Jesus (the) Christ, though He came by water and blood.” Therefore the other interpretation must stand fast. It is well defended also by Lcke) is he that came by water and blood (the words . have been universally and rightly taken with . Only Hofmann, in the Schriftbeweis, ii. 1, p. 331, maintains the joining . . . to , understanding , “He that has come,” in the sense of . But this latter idea is wholly without N. T. precedent, and condemns the whole. It indeed, without Hofmann’s construction, is token by several Commentators, Corn.-a-lap., Tirinus, Calov., Bengel (“Jesus est is quem propter promissiones venire oportuit, et qui venit revera”), Knapp, &c. But if this meaning is in , then it cannot be the mere exponent of . . ., but must take an emphatic place of its own, and . . . must stand awkwardly alone, “and that by water and blood,” or must, as Hofmann, belong to .

Taking then the generally received construction, we may observe that the article before the aor. part. , makes to be the identification of with , i. e. with one who as an historical fact, , precluding such renderings as “came” for ; also forbidding the making the aor. into a present, “this is He that cometh,” as Luther, Seb.-Schmidt, J. Lange, Rickli, Sander, al., and perhaps c., as has been inferred from his understanding and of present means of grace and salvation: . But he may have been misunderstood: the in this comment, and the circumstance that he afterwards dwells on the historical facts of the Baptism and the Crucifixion, seem to shew that he understood the participle aoristically. We may clearly do so, and still regard the water and blood as present in their effects and testimony. All Commentators, except Hofmann (see above), regard as referring, not to the Lord’s birth in the flesh, but to His open manifestation of himself before the world. See above on ch. 1Jn 4:2 .

The prep. , which passes into in the next sentence, is thereby explained to bear its very usual sense of through or by means of, as said of that which accompanies, as the medium through which, or the element in which. We have an example of passing into , 2Co 6:6-7 ; and the very same phrases, and , are used of our Lord in Heb 9:12 ; Heb 9:25 , which chapter is the best of all comments on this difficult expression.

. has been very variously understood. Two canons of interpretation have been laid down by Dsterd., and may safely be adopted: 1) “Water” and “blood” must point both to some purely historical facts in the life of our Lord on earth, and to some still present witnesses for Christ: and 2) they must not be interpreted symbolically, but understood of something so real and powerful, as that by them God’s testimony given to believers, and eternal life assured to them. These canons at once exclude such interpretations as that of Wetst., al., “probavit se non phantasma sed verum hominem esse qui ex spiritu (sive are, 1Jn 5:8 ) sanguine et aqua seu humore constaret, Joh 19:34 :” as the purely symbolical interpretation, of which there are two kinds: 1) that of Socinus and his school, in which stands for the purity and innocence of the life and doctrine of Christ, Heb 10:22 , Eph 5:26 , and of the death of Christ as His testimony of Himself. So Schlichting and Grotius: 2) that given by Clement of Alex., Adumbrationes ad h. 1. 1011 P (not in Migne), in which represents regeneration and faith, and , knowledge (cognitionem): by Beza, in which is “ablutio a peccati labe, cujus nunc tessera est Baptismus,” , “expiatio et persolutio pro peccatis:” by Calvin, in which he explains both and by “summatim ostendit quorsum prcipue tenderent ceremoni veteres: nempe ut homines ab inquinamentis purgati et soluti omnibus piaculis, Deum haberent propitium et illi consecrarentur.” By the latter of our two canons is excluded also the idea of mere symbolic reference to the sacraments, as e. g. Beza (see above), Luther, Calvin, al.

Dsterdieck observes that it is remarkable that the best R.-Cath. expositor, Estius (whose commentary is unfortunately broken off at this verse), does not as some have done, interpret of the Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper, but puts together and , as Calvin and Luther: “per sanguinem vivificat tum in baptismo aqu, tum in aliis sacramentis, tum etiam extra sacramenta.” So that, as Dsterdieck proceeds, the great leaders of the three schools of theology have had the tact to see that which their less skilful followers have missed seeing, that cannot by any means be understood of the Lord’s Supper, as has been done by Hunnius, Seb.-Schmidt, Calov., Wolf, Bengel, Carpzov., Sander, al.

The next point which comes before us is, to enquire whether at all, or how far, our passage is connected with Joh 19:34 ? It occurs here, because many Commentators, e. g., Bed [76] , Hunnius, Seb.-Schmidt, Calov., Wolf, Bengel, &c., have seen in the incident there related a miraculous symbolizing of the two sacraments, and in this passage an allusion to that incident. To deny all such allusion, as is done by Dsterdieck, seems against probability. The Apostle could hardly both here and in that place lay such evident stress on the water and blood together, without having in his mind some link connecting this place and that. That in the Gospel it is and , in this place and , a difference of which Dsterd. makes much, is surely not worth mentioning. The idea that we have here nothing more than a reference to the fact of Joh 19:34 , is against our 2nd canon above: but that Joh 19:34 and this refer to the same fundamental truth, is I conceive hardly to be doubted.

[76] 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 rests now then that we enquire into the meaning of each expression. On , there cannot surely be much uncertainty. The blood of His Cross must, by all Scripture analogy, be that intended. The pouring out of this blood was the completion of the baptism which He had to be baptized with, Mar 10:38-39 , Luk 12:50 . And if this is so, to what can be referred so simply, as to that baptism with water, which inaugurated the Lord’s ministry? It might indeed be said that the baptism which He instituted for His followers, better satisfies the test of our 2nd canon, that viz. of being an abiding testimony in the Christian Church. But to this there lies the objection, that as signifies something which happened to Christ Himself, so must likewise, at least primarily, whatever permanent testimony such event may have left in the Christian Church. And thus some modern Commentators have taken it: as uniting the historical fact of the Lord’s baptism with the ordinance of baptism, grounded on it, and abiding in the Christian Church. So Semler, Rosenm., Baumg.-Crus., Brckner, Neander, Huther. Dsterd. refuses to accept this view, denying that our Lord’s Baptism was any proof or testimony of His Messiahship, and understanding of the ordinance of baptism only. But surely we are not right in interpreting , He that ordained baptism : nor, whatever Dsterd. may say, in giving the two, and , an entirely different reference. For his endeavour to escape from this by making not Christ’s death but His blood, applied to us, cannot be accepted, as giving a “non-natural” sense to likewise.

All this being considered, it seems impossible to avoid giving both to and the combined senses above indicated, and believing that such were before the Apostle’s mind. They represent, , the baptism of water which the Lord Himself underwent and instituted for His followers, , the baptism of blood, which He Himself underwent, and instituted for His followers. And it is equally impossible to sever, as Dsterd. does, from these words, the historical accompaniments and associations which arise on their mention. The Lord’s baptism, of itself, was indeed rather a result than a proof of his Messiahship: but in it, taking St. John’s account only, a testimony to His divine Sonship was given, by which the Baptist knew Him to be the Son of God: . , are his words, Joh 1:34 ; and when that blood was poured from His “riven side,” he that saw it again uses the same formula, . It cannot be that the word being thus referred to two definite points of our Lord’s life, should not apply to these two, connected as they are with and here mentioned, and associated by St. John himself with the remarkable preterite , of an abiding in both cases. But these past facts in the Lord’s life are this abiding testimony to us, by virtue of the permanent application to us of their cleansing and atoning power. And thus both our canons are satisfied, which certainly is not the case in Dsterdieck’s interpretation, though they were laid down by himself), Jesus Christ (see above on . As now, with the art. omitted, the words are merely the name, “Jesus Christ:” if it were inserted, the adjunct would be an appositional predicate, and would necessarily send the thought back to the . . . as a proof of the Messiahship of Jesus. It may be remarked, however, that in all the places where St. John uses this Name, it has a solemn meaning, and is by the emphasis thus thrown on the official designation of our Lord, nearly = . Cf. Joh 1:17 ; Joh 17:3 ; 1Jn 1:3 ; 1Jn 2:1 ; 1Jn 3:23 ; 1Jn 4:2 ; 1Jn 5:20 ; 2Jn 1:3 ; 2Jn 1:7 ): not in the water only, but in the water and in the blood ( , see above on . The sense of the two is there shewn to be closely allied, giving rather the “element in which,” , the medium through which. The art. before each dative shews not merely, as Huther, that and have been before named, but that they are well-known and solemn ideas. It is inserted not as matter of course, but as giving solemnity.

But why has the Apostle added this sentence? Schttgen thought that it is to give Christ the preference over Moses, who came only by water ( 1Co 10:2 ), and Aaron, who came only by blood (of sacrifice), whereas Christ united both. But this is too far-fetched. Baumgarten-Crusius again regards the words as directed against those who despised the Cross of Christ ( 1Co 1:23 ): but a more definite explanation than this is required. And those can hardly be wrong, who find it in such words as those of the Baptist in Joh 1:25 , , : cf. the emphatic repetitions below, ib. Joh 1:31 , , and Joh 1:33 , . The baptism of Jesus was not one of water only, but one of blood, and something more than that, which follows in the next clause): and the Spirit is that which witnesseth, because the Spirit is the truth (that is, as explained by the next verse, the Spirit is an additional witness, besides those already mentioned, to the Messiahship of Jesus, and in that, to the eternal life which God has given us in Him. This at once removes the meaning “that,” which some have given to . It is not to the fact that the Spirit is the truth, that the Spirit gives witness: but the fact, that He is the truth, is that which makes Him so weighty a witness; which makes the giving of witness so especially His office.

Very various however have been the meanings here given to . The scholium in Matthi understands, the spirit of our Lord ( . ) which He when dying commended into His Father’s hands. Augusti, who explains and of the two Sacraments of Baptism and the Lord’s Supper, sees in , in connexion with Joh 20:22 ff., a third Sacrament of absolution . Ziegler and Stroth regard it as = , i. e. St. John himself. c. and Knapp regard it as = , , . : thus making the threefold witness to the of Jesus, , , . Then again Socinus, Schlichting, Grot., Whitby, al., interpret it of the Divine power by which Christ wrought His miracles: “id est,” says Grot., “per , admiranda ejus opera, a virtute divina manifeste procedentia.” But this, as well as Bede’ [77] interpretation, that the Spirit which descended on the Lord at His baptism is meant, inasmuch as it testified to His being “verus Dei filius,” fails, in giving no present abiding testimony such as the context requires. Others again understand by the ministry of the word: so Aretius, J. Lange, Hunnius (“Spiritus per externam prdicationem verbi testificator de Jesu Christo, atque simul intrinsecus in cordibus fidelium hanc Christi notitiam obsignat”), Luther, Piscator, Carpzov., Rosenmller (the Gospel), Seb.-Schmidt (“verbum evangelii et cum eo ministerium ecclesiasticum”), &c. Most of these, as well as Bengel, whose whole interpretation is confused by his attempt to force the interpolated words in 1Jn 5:7 into the context, understand here and in 1Jn 5:8 differently. But nothing can be plainer than that we must not alter the meaning, where the binds together the sentences so closely.

[77] 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.

The above interpretations (to which we may add that of Sander, that . = , the transformation of a man which takes place by the agency of the Holy Spirit) failing to give any satisfactory account of the text, we recur to the simple and obvious meaning, the Holy Spirit . This is taken by Schol. I., Estius, Corn.-a-lap., Tirinus, Calvin, Calov., Lcke, Rickli, De Wette, Huther, Neander, Dsterdieck, al. And it seems fully to satisfy all the requirements of the passage. The Holy Spirit is He, who testifies of Christ ( Joh 15:26 ), who glorifies Him, and shews of the things which belong to Him ( Joh 16:14 ). It is by the possession of Him that we know that we have Christ (ch. 1Jn 3:24 ). And the following clause, “because the Spirit is the Truth,” exactly agrees with this. He is the absolute Truth (Joh 14:17 ; Joh 15:26 ), leading into all the Truth (Joh 16:13 f.). And in this consists the all-importance and the infallibility of His witness. “Testimonium ejus hand-quaquam rejici potest, quoniam Spiritus est veritas, quum sit Deus, ideoque nec falli potest, nec fallere.” Estius).

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

1Jn 5:6-8 . The Threefold Testimony to the Incarnation. “This is He that came through water and blood, Jesus Christ; not in the water only, but in the water and in the blood. And it is the Spirit that testifieth, because the Spirit is the Truth. Because three are they that testify the Spirit and the water and the blood, and the three are for the one end.”

St. John has said that faith in the Incarnation makes the commandments easy, and now the question arises: How can we be assured that the Incarnation is a fact? He adduces a threefold attestation: the Spirit, the water and the blood. His meaning is clear when it is understood that he has the Cerinthian heresy (see Introd. pp. 156 f.) in view and states his doctrine in opposition to it. Cerinthus distinguished between Jesus and the Christ. The divine Christ descended upon the human Jesus at the Baptism, i.e. , He “came through water,” and left him at the Crucifixion, i.e. , He did not “come through blood”. Thus redemption was excluded; all that was needed was spiritual illumination. In opposition to this St. John declares that the Eternal God was incarnate in Jesus and was manifested in the entire course of His human life, not only at His Baptism, which was His consecration to His ministry of redemption, but at His Death, which was the consummation of His infinite Sacrifice: “through water and blood, not in the water only but in the water and in the blood”.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

1Jn 5:6 . , i.e. , this Jesus who is the Son of God, the Messiah whom the prophets foretold and who “came” in the fulness of the time. , not . His Advent no longer an unfulfilled hope but an historic event. , of the pathway or vehicle of His Advent. , “Jesus Christ,” one person in opposition to the Cerinthian “dissolution” ( ) of Jesus and Christ (see note on 1Jn 4:3 ). . He not only “came through” but continued “in the water and in the blood,” i.e. , His ministry comprehended both the Baptism of the Spirit and the Sacrifice for sin. Perhaps, however, the prepositions are interchangeable; cf. 2Co 6:4-8 ; Heb 9:12 ; Heb 9:25 . .: Jesus called Himself “the Truth” (Joh 14:6 ), and the Spirit came in His room, His alter ego (1Jn 5:16-18 ).

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

by. App-104. 1Jn 5:1.

water. Referring to His baptism, when witness was given to Him by the voice from heaven and the descent of the Spirit.

Jesus Christ. App-98.

blood. The texts read “in (Greek. en) the blood”.

Spirit. App-101.

beareth witness. See 1Jn 1:2.

truth. See 1Jn 1:6.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

6-21.] THE THIRD AND LAST DIVISION OF THE EPISTLE. This portion falls naturally into two parts: 1Jn 5:6-13, and 1Jn 5:14-21; the former of which treats of the concluding part of the argument, and the latter forms the close of the Epistle.

Fuente: The Greek Testament

1Jn 5:6. , this is He) We shall presently see this verse in connection with those that follow.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

is he: Joh 19:34, Joh 19:35

by water and: Isa 45:3, Isa 45:4, Eze 36:25, Joh 1:31-33, Joh 3:5, Joh 4:10, Joh 4:14, Joh 7:38, Joh 7:39, Act 8:36, Eph 5:25-27, Tit 3:5, 1Pe 3:21

blood: 1Jo 1:7, 1Jo 4:10, Lev 17:11, Zec 9:11, Mat 26:28, Mar 14:24, Luk 22:20, Joh 6:55, Rom 3:25, Eph 1:7, Col 1:4, Heb 9:7, Heb 9:14, Heb 10:29, Heb 12:24, Heb 13:20, 1Pe 1:2, Rev 1:5, Rev 5:9, Rev 7:14

the Spirit that: 1Jo 5:7, 1Jo 5:8, Joh 14:17, Joh 15:26, 1Ti 3:16

is truth: Joh 14:6, Joh 16:13

Reciprocal: Lev 14:7 – sprinkle Lev 14:29 – General Lev 23:28 – General Job 42:8 – my servant Job shall Psa 117:2 – General Zec 13:1 – a fountain Joh 3:11 – We speak Joh 5:32 – is another Joh 8:18 – and Joh 13:5 – poureth Joh 16:14 – glorify Joh 21:24 – we know 1Co 1:30 – sanctification Eph 5:26 – with Heb 10:10 – we Heb 13:12 – sanctify

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

1Jn 5:6. The pronouns this and he refer to Jesus as the Son of God. The verse deals with three items that testified to that claim. He came means his introduction to the world especially into the public ministry. The water refers to his baptism because it was then John the Baptist said he learned that Jesus was the one who was to come after him. The Spirit also is mentioned because lie appeared in the form of a dove in connection with the voice of God that acknowledged the Son. The blood was in evidence when Jesus shed it on the cross, thus concluding the long blood line that began with Adam and ran down through the ages. (Read Luke chapter 3.)

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

The Divine Testimony to Jesus Christ as the ground of faith: this is first viewed objectively, as a witness in history; then subjectively, as a witness enjoyed by the believer.

1Jn 5:6. This is he that came by water and blood, even Jesus Christ; not in the water only, but in the water and in the blood. And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is the truth. It must be remembered in the exposition of this difficult passage, first, that it is governed by the idea of testimony, human and Divine, that Jesus is the Christ (1Jn 5:1), and that Jesus is the Son of God (1Jn 5:5); secondly, that the very terms used imply a symbolical meaning underlying the literal, for we cannot understand water and blood as pointing to merely historical facts; thirdly, that the apostle has in view the errors of his own time concerning the manifestation of Jesus in the flesh. This Person Jesus Christ who came not into the world, but into His Messianic office as the Christ, by water and blood. There are two leading interpretations of those words. One of them understands by the water the baptismal institute of John, which inaugurated Jesus into His Christly office, and by the blood the passion and death. The other regards St. John as fixing his thought upon the mysterious sign that he beheld after the Saviours death: when the piercing of His side was followed by the double stream of blood and of waterthe blood of expiation and the water of lifewhich flowed together as the symbol of one eternal life from the living death of the sacrifice. The latter we hold to as the true meaning. But let us do justice to the former: it runs thus.

The error of antichrist concerning the incarnation of the Son of God has been already condemned. The witness borne to this Son of God as the perfected Christ or Saviour is now adduced; and the two great events are made prominent which rounded the Messianic history: the Baptism with its testimony to the Son of God, and the atoning death with its testimony. Jesus came by them as the accompanying media through which He discharged His ministry and the accompanying seals which authenticated Him: these being first viewed as one, giving unity to the design of His coming into His office. St. John might have said, He came in the baptism which to Him was the sealing of the Spirit, and in the atonement which finished the work to which He was sealed, but he is using symbols, and makes the word water stand for the whole transaction at the Jordan, and blood for the whole mystery of the passion and cross. The readers of this Epistle are supposed to have the Fourth Gospel in their hands, and the doctrine of the Epistle to the Hebrews in their minds: moreover, Ephesian Christians knew well the relation of Johns baptism to the baptism of Jesus (Acts 19). Not in the water only, but in the water and in the blood. The by now becomes in, to mark more impressively the essential connection between the Messiahship of Jesus and that which the water and the blood signified.

Now let us turn to the other interpretation. We mark that the two elements are separated, and each has the article: noting not merely the sacredness of the well-known symbols, but their distinction and relations. No intelligent reader could fail to think of what the writer had certainly had in his thoughts, the mysterious and miraculous effusion of blood and water when the Saviours side was pierced. That signified, not the fact of the real humanity or real death of the Redeemer, but that the fountain was now opened for the removal of guilt by the blood, and of death by the Spirit, of the crucified; baptism and the Lords Supper being the abiding emblems and pledges of these gifts. But St. John leaves these reflections to his readers and to us. He simply declares that Jesus came not by water only, but in the water and in the blood: not only was there one stream of life flowing from His death for us, but life under two essential aspects. Eternal life is the removal of the death of condemnation: that is symbolized by the blood; for it is the blood of Christ that cleanseth from all sin. Eternal life is also the well of water springing up within the soul unto everlasting life, of which the Saviour spoke to the Samaritan woman (John 4): in other words, it is the life of Christ Himself imparted, and of that the water is the symbol. It is usual to say that the water symbolizes the washing from sin, and the blood the sprinkling from guilt. But since the death of Christ the only washing both from sin and from guilt is by blood. The water signifies here the very well-spring of eternal life itself in Christ opened up within the soul.

The advocates of the other interpretation thus expound not by water only. John the Baptist bore witness to himself as baptizing only with water, and to Christ as the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world. The Redeemer was not only authenticated in His baptism as the Son of God, the revealer of the Father and His will, but as the Lamb of God who should die for mankind: not the one without the other. He came at the Jordan that He might go on to Calvary. The apostle silently protests against those in his own day who united the Christ to Jesus in His baptism, but separated them at the cross; and He openly protests against all who limit our own baptism into Christ to mere discipleship of obedience, and forget that He is our master only because as an atonement He died and revived that He might be Lord of the dead and the living.

And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is the truth. Hitherto the water and the blood have not been termed witnesses: they were facts themselves witnessed by men. But the Supreme Witness of Jesus is the Holy Ghost, to whom the Saviour Himself bore witness as the Spirit of the truth. St. John singles out His testimony as the only and abiding one, with express reference to the Lords words: not we, the Baptist, the apostles, but the Spirit. And the tense is changed: the Son of God came once in the great ministry of which water and blood were the symbols; but in the Gospels, and in the preached word, and in the sacraments, the Holy Ghost gives abiding testimony.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

Witnesses to Jesus’ Sonship

The Gnostics taught that Jesus was a man, and Christ, the Deity, came upon Him at baptism and left Him before the crucifixion. John says Jesus was the same both in the waters of baptism and at the shedding of blood in His death ( Mat 3:13-17 ; Joh 19:31-35 ). The Spirit bore witness to Jesus’ Deity by descending like a dove at His baptism ( Joh 1:32-34 ). He continued, and continues, to bear witness as to Jesus’ death and resurrection through the testimony of the apostles ( Act 2:1-47 ). His witness can be relied upon since it is true, as John personally knew and could testify ( Joh 16:13 ). Thus, it can be said there are three that testify to Jesus’ Lordship and Deity. The Father called him Son at His baptism, transfiguration and resurrection. The Spirit, by descending at Christ’s baptism and helping in the resurrection, also testified to His Sonship. Of course, Jesus also laid claim to being God’s Son ( 1Jn 5:6-8 ).

Men accept the testimony of other men and should much more readily accept that of God. God has surely testified that Jesus is His Son ( Mat 17:1-5 ). When the Christian keeps on believing on Jesus as God’s Son, the Holy Spirit abides in him as proof of his faithfulness ( Rom 8:9 ; Gal 4:6 ). God’s testimony in scripture is sufficient to prove Jesus is God. To reject that scriptural testimony is to reject God’s witness and call Him a liar ( 1Jn 5:9-10 ).

Fuente: Gary Hampton Commentary on Selected Books

1Jn 5:6. This is he that came by water and blood Here the apostle evidently alludes to the testimony borne by him in his gospel, that when the soldier pierced Christs side, forthwith there came out blood and water; a fact which the apostle represents as of great importance; adding, He that saw it bare record, and his record is true: and he knoweth that he saith true, that ye might believe. It was important, not only, 1st, As being a full proof, in opposition to the doctrine of the Docet, that Christ came in the flesh, and really died; of which see on Joh 19:34 : but, 2d, Because it was emblematical of the offices which he sustained, and of the salvation he hath procured for his people. For the water was a symbol of the purity of his doctrine, instructing men in the purest morals, and of his own pure and holy example; and, what is of still greater importance, of the purifying grace of which he is the fountain, sanctifying and cleansing such as believe in him, from all filthiness of flesh and spirit: while the blood which issued from him was an emblem both of the sufferings which awaited his followers, who were to seal the truth with their blood, and of his own sufferings, whereby he hath made atonement for the sins of the world, and procured for his followers a free and full justification. Thus, as an eminent divine observes, he also manifested himself to be the Son of God, the promised Messiah, by fulfilling those types and ceremonies of the law which were performed by water and blood: the former whereof, denoting purification from sin, he fulfilled by cleansing us by his Spirit, (signified by water, Joh 7:38-39,) from the corruption of nature, and the power and pollution of sin, and so restoring the image of God in us, Eze 36:25; Eze 36:27; Eph 5:25-26; Tit 2:14; Tit 3:5. The latter, which prefigured the expiation of our sin, he fulfilled by shedding his blood to atone for our sins, and to procure for us deliverance from the guilt and punishment of them, (Rom 5:9; Gal 3:13; Eph 1:7,) and to restore us to the favour of God again. Not by water only Not only was his doctrine pure, and his life holy, and not only may purifying grace be derived from him, but he came by blood, shed for the expiation of our guilt, for these things must go together; because it will not avail us to be enabled to avoid sin, and to live in a holy manner for the time to come, except the sins of the time past be expiated. And it is the Spirit that beareth witness To these things, namely, in the writings of the ancient prophets, who have spoken largely concerning both, and in the discourses and writings of the apostles, who have borne a still more clear and full testimony to them; and also in the hearts of all the faithful, who, as they are fully convinced of their need of both pardon and holiness, so through the merits and Spirit of Christ they receive both.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

ARGUMENT 13

GODS TRIPLE, TESTIMONY

6. This is the One having come through water and blood, Jesus Christ; not only by water, but by water and blood. Throughout the Bible the great prevailing symbolic meaning of water is regeneration. This is pertinent from the fact that water is indispensable to animal life. Consequently it is a suitable and instructive representative of spiritual life. Blood, in the Bible, means redemption. As we actually receive redemption from sin in sanctification, administered by the Holy Ghost through the blood of Christ, blood becomes the constant symbol of purification.

7, 8. There are three who bear witness, the Spirit, the water, and the blood, and these three are one. We receive the water of life in regeneration and the cleansing blood in sanctification, both being attested by the Holy Ghost. Hence God in His great mercy has made to us these three wonderful, glorious and unmistakable experimental revelations, i.e., regeneration, sanctification and the gift of the Holy Ghost, as an indwelling Illuminator, Guide and Comforter. I know perfectly well my regeneration forty-seven years ago and my sanctification twenty-eight years ago. They are especial revelations made to my soul by divine intervention. These memorable epochs, never to be forgotten, are past and gone. But the Holy Spirit dwells in my heart night and day, my constant witness to my acceptance with God, and my everlasting Comforter. Oh, the unutterable goodness of God in giving us these three grand, glorious and harmonious witnesses that we are His, born from above, sanctified wholly and kept by the power of the indwelling Spirit.

9. We constantly receive human testimony in all the interests of life, jurisprudence and litigation, with fewer and less reliable witnesses than these three who fortify the great problem of salvation, revelatory and experimental.

10. He that believeth on the Son of God hath the witness in himself. With the heart man believeth unto righteousness. Rom 10:10. Intellectual faith, exercised by wicked men and devils, has no power to save. This is the faith peculiar to popular churches where neither preachers

nor people know the Lord. Hell is full of it. If it had power to save, the pandemonium would be evacuated in a hurry. Saving faith is not intellectual, but spiritual, inspired by the Holy Ghost and bringing the human spirit to God. Since the Holy Ghost always witnesses to His own work and faith is the infallible human condition, both of regeneration and sanctification, therefore every believer receiving according to his faith, is attested by the Holy Spirit. Consequently the Christian religion is the most luminous and intelligent reality in the universe. Popular religion has always been full of fog, because Satan and his people dwell in darkness.

11. All spiritual life is in the Christhood, as God out of Christ is a consuming fire. Heb 12:18.

12. Whosoever hath the Son hath life; whosoever hath not the Son of God hath not life. Unitarianism is worse than heathenism, as the former will be judged by the whole Bible, revealing their wicked rejection of Christ, while the latter will only be judged by the laws of nature. So is all anti-Holy Ghost religion more damnable than paganism, because the Holy Ghost is the Successor and Revelator of Christ. Hence the rejection of the Holy Ghost is identical with the Unitarian heresy of repudiating Christ. The millions going down to hell with open Bibles in their hands will sink to the deepest depths of woe.

Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament

1Jn 5:6-12. Reference to the faith held by the Church concerning Christ leads John to specify in symbolic terms what that faith was and the witness by which it was sustained. The truth belongs to the sphere of revelation and so has its source in God, but it is confirmed by the spiritual experience which it creates in the believer.

1Jn 5:6. by water and blood: i.e. by the water of His baptism and the blood of His death. The reference is to two events in Christs ministry, one at its opening and the other at its consummation. The claim of John (in opposition to the false teachers) is that Jesus Christ, i.e. the full Divine-human personality of our Lord, was as present and active in the suffering of the Cross as in the baptism at the Jordan.

1Jn 5:7. the Spirit that beareth witness: the reference must be to the influence foreshadowed in Joh 15:26, which the Holy Spirit had exerted in the Church in producing an adequate view of Jesus.

1Jn 5:8. three who bear witness: the idea is suggested by a requirement of the Jewish Law (Deu 17:6).the Spirit, and the water, and the blood: these terms must obviously recall the meaning in which they have just been used, so that the interpretation which makes water and blood refer to two Christian sacraments is far-fetched. John means that Christs baptism as representing His anointing to the office of Messiah, and the Cross as the completion of the work of redemption, point to that high doctrine of Christs person which is confirmed by the teaching of the Spirit in the Church. The words in heaven . . . in earth found in the AV are no part of the original text, but are an unauthorised though early interpolation.

1Jn 5:9 b. Divine revelation in its broad content is concerned with Christ, and justifies the view that He is the Son of God.

1Jn 5:10. in him: i.e. in the experience which the evangelical faith creates. The Son is the fountain of eternal life (1Jn 5:12*), so that to have Him is to possess also the spiritual experience of which He is the source.

Fuente: Peake’s Commentary on the Bible

Verse 6

Not by water only, &c. Water is the symbol of purification,–blood, that of an atonement. The meaning, therefore, is, that this is he who came not only to imbue the heart with future purity and holiness, but to atone for its sins.

1 John 5:7,8. Whether that portion of these two verses, beginning with the words in heaven, and ending with in earth, properly belongs here, has long been a subject of dispute. The controversy respecting the triune nature of the Godhead, arose in a very early period of the church, and it is supposed that, in the unhallowed heat of it, this passage was either inserted without authority in some copies, by one party, or omitted by the other. The reason for this supposition is, that the ancient manuscripts which have come down to us, disagree, the passage being found in some of them, while it was wanting in others. The preponderating sentiment among biblical scholars is against its genuineness.–Agree in one; agree in bearing witness to one,–that is, to Christ.

Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament

5:6 {8} This is he that came by water and blood, [even] Jesus Christ; {9} not by water only, but by water and blood. And it is the {g} Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is truth.

(8) He proves the excellency of Christ, in whom only all things are given us by six witnesses, three heavenly, and three earthly, who wholly and completely agree together. The heavenly witnesses are, the Father who sent the Son, the Word itself, which became flesh, and the Holy Spirit. The earthly witnesses are water, (that is our sanctification) blood, (that is, our justification) the Spirit, (that is, acknowledging of God the Father in Christ by faith) through the testimony of the Holy Spirit.

(9) He warns us not to separate water from blood (that is sanctification from justification, or righteousness, begun from righteousness imputed) for we do not stand on sanctification, but so far as it is a witness of Christ’s righteousness imputed to us: and although this imputation of Christ’s righteousness is never separated from sanctification, yet it is the only matter of our salvation.

(g) Our spirit which is the third witness, testifies that the holy Sprit is truth, that is to say, that that is true which he tells us, that is, that we are the sons of God.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

This "water" probably refers to John the Baptist’s baptism of Jesus in water. The "blood" probably refers to His atoning death by crucifixion. [Note: See Ryrie, "The First . . .," p. 1476.]

Some false teachers in the early church taught that the divine Christ descended on the human Jesus at His baptism but left Him before His crucifixion, for example, Cerinthus and other Gnostics. [Note: See Barclay, p. 10.] John referred to this teaching in this verse. He considered this teaching untrue. Jesus Christ, one Person, came at His first advent not just to experience baptism in water but also to die.

"The true identity of Jesus, the writer appears to be saying, is only to be discovered by looking at the whole of his life, including its end." [Note: Marshall, p. 278.]

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)

Chapter 16

THE GOSPEL AS A GOSPEL OF WITNESS; THE THREE WITNESSES

1Jn 5:6-10

IT has been said that Apostles and apostolic men were as far as possible removed from common sense, and have no conception of evidence in our acceptation of the word. About this statement there is scarcely even superficial plausibility. Common sense is the measure of ordinary human tact among palpable realities. In relation to human existence it is the balance of the estimative faculties; the instinctive summary of inductions which makes us rightly credulous and rightly incredulous, which teaches us the supreme lesson of life, when to say “yes.” and when to say “no.” Uncommon sense is superhuman tact among no less real, but at present impalpable realities; the spiritual faculty of forming spiritual inductions aright. So St. John, among the three great canons of primary truth with which he closes his Epistle, writes-“we know that the Son of God hath come and is present, and hath given us understanding, that we know Him who is true.” So with evidences. Apostles did not draw them out with the same logical precision, or rather not in the same logical form. Yet they rested their conclusions upon the same abiding principle of evidence, the primary axiom of our entire social life, that there is a degree of human evidence which practically cannot deceive. “If we receive the witness of men.” The form of expression implies that we certainly do.

Peculiar difficulty has been felt in understanding the paragraph. And one portion of it remains difficult after any explanation. But we shall succeed in apprehending it as a whole only upon condition of taking one guiding principle of interpretation with us.

The word witness is St. Johns central thought here. He is determined to beat it into our thoughts by the most unsparing iteration. He repeats it ten times over, as substantive or verb, in six verses. His object is to turn our attention to his Gospel, and to this distinguishing feature of it-its being from beginning to end a Gospel of witness. This witness he declares to be fivefold.

(1) The witness of the Spirit, of which the fourth Gospel is preeminently full.

(2) The witness of the Divine Humanity, of the God-Man, who is not man deified, but God humanified. This verse is no doubt partly polemical, against heretics of the day, who would clip the great picture of the Gospel, and force it into the petty frame of their theory. This is He (the Apostle urges) who came on the stage of the worlds and the Churchs history as the Messiah, under the condition, so to speak, of water and blood; bringing with him, accompanied by, not the water only, but the water and the blood. Cerinthus separated the Christ, the divine Aeon, from Jesus the holy but mortal man. The two, the divine potency and the human existence, met at the waters of Jordan, on the day of the Baptism, when the Christ united himself to Jesus. But the union was brief and unessential. Before the crucifixion, the divine ideal Christ withdrew. The man suffered. The impassible immortal potency was far away in heaven. St. John denies the fortuitous juxtaposition of two accidentally united existences. We worship one Lord Jesus Christ, attested not only by Baptism in Jordan, the witness of water, but by the death on Calvary, the witness of blood. He came by water and blood, as the means by which His office was manifested; but with the water and with the blood, as the sphere in which He exercises that office. When we turn to the Gospel, and look at the pierced side, we read of blood and water, the order of actual history and physiological fact. Here St. John takes the ideal, mystical, sacramental order, water and blood-cleansing and redemption- and the sacraments which perpetually symbolise and convey them. Thus we have Spirit, water, blood. “Three are they who are ever witnessing.” These are three great centres round which St. Johns Gospel turns. These are the three genuine witnesses, the trinity of witness, the shadow of the Trinity in heaven.

(3) Again the fourth Gospel is a Gospel of human witness, a tissue woven out of many lines of human attestation. It records the cries of human souls overheard and noted down at the supreme crisis moment, from the Baptist, Philip, and Nathanael, to the everlasting spontaneous creed of Christendom on its knees before Jesus, the cry of Thomas ever rushing molten from a heart of fire-“My Lord and my God.”

(4) But if we receive, as we assuredly must and do receive, the overpowering and soul-subduing mass of attesting human evidence, how much more must we receive the Divine witness, the witness of God so conspicuously exhibited in the Gospel of St. John! “The witness of God is greater, because this” (even the history in the pages to which he adverts) “is the witness; because” (I say with triumphant reiteration) “He hath witnessed concerning His Son.” This witness of God in the last Gospel is given in four forms-by Scripture, by the Father, by the Son Himself, by His works.

(5) This great volume of witness is consummated and brought home by another; He who not merely coldly assents to the word of Christ, but lifts the whole burden of his belief on to the Son of God, hath the witness in him. That which was logical and external becomes internal and experimental.

In this ever-memorable passage, all know that an interpolation has taken place. The words-“in heaven the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost; and these three are one. And there are three that bear witness in earth”-are a gloss. A great sentence of one of the first of critics may well reassure any weak believers who dread the candour of Christian criticism, or suppose that it has impaired the evidence for the great dogma of the Trinity. “If the fourth century knew that text, let it come in, in Gods name; but if that age did not know it, then Arianism in its height was beaten down without the help of that verse; and, let the fact prove as it will, the doctrine is unshaken.” The human material with which they have been clamped should not blind us to the value of the heavenly jewels which seemed to be marred by their earthly setting.

It is constantly said-as we think with considerable misapprehension-that in his Epistle St. John may imply, but does not refer directly to any particular incident in, his Gospel. It is our conviction that St. John very specially includes the Resurrection -the central point of the evidences of Christianity-among the things attested by the witness of men. We propose in another chapter to examine the Resurrection from St. Johns point of view.

Fuente: Expositors Bible Commentary