607 lines
44 KiB
XML
607 lines
44 KiB
XML
<div2 id="iJo.v" n="v" next="iJo.vi" prev="iJo.iv" progress="91.24%" title="Chapter IV">
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<h2 id="iJo.v-p0.1">F I R S T J O H N.</h2>
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<h3 id="iJo.v-p0.2">CHAP. IV.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="iJo.v-p1">In this chapter the apostle exhorts to try spirits
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(<scripRef id="iJo.v-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.1" parsed="|1John|4|1|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:1">ver. 1</scripRef>), gives a note to
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try by (<scripRef id="iJo.v-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.2-1John.4.3" parsed="|1John|4|2|4|3" passage="1Jo 4:2,3">ver. 2, 3</scripRef>), shows
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who are of the world and who of God (<scripRef id="iJo.v-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.4-1John.4.6" parsed="|1John|4|4|4|6" passage="1Jo 4:4-6">ver. 4-6</scripRef>), urges Christian love by divers
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considerations (<scripRef id="iJo.v-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.7-1John.4.16" parsed="|1John|4|7|4|16" passage="1Jo 4:7-16">ver.
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7-16</scripRef>), describes our love to God, and the effect of it,
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<scripRef id="iJo.v-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.17-1John.4.21" parsed="|1John|4|17|4|21" passage="1Jo 4:17-21">ver. 17-21</scripRef>.</p>
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<scripCom id="iJo.v-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:1John.4" parsed="|1John|4|0|0|0" passage="1Jo 4" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="iJo.v-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.1-1John.4.3" parsed="|1John|4|1|4|3" passage="1Jo 4:1-3" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:1John.4.1-1John.4.3">
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<h4 id="iJo.v-p1.8">Concerning Antichrist. (<span class="smallcaps" id="iJo.v-p1.9">a.
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d.</span> 80.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="iJo.v-p2">1 Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the
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spirits whether they are of God: because many false prophets are
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gone out into the world. 2 Hereby know ye the Spirit of God:
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Every spirit that confesseth that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh
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is of God: 3 And every spirit that confesseth not that Jesus
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Christ is come in the flesh is not of God: and this is that
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<i>spirit</i> of antichrist, whereof ye have heard that it should
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come; and even now already is it in the world.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p3">The apostle, having said that God's
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dwelling in and with us may be known by <i>the Spirit that he hath
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given us,</i> intimates that that Spirit may be discerned and
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distinguished from other spirits that appear in the world; and so
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here,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p4">I. He calls the disciples, to whom he
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writes, to caution and scrutiny about the spirits and spiritual
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professors that had now risen. 1. To caution: "<i>Beloved, believe
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not every spirit;</i> regard not, trust not, follow not, every
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pretender to the Spirit of God, or every professor of vision, or
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inspiration, or revelation from God." Truth is the foundation of
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simulation and counterfeits; there had been real communications
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from the divine Spirit, and therefore others pretended thereto. God
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will take the way of his own wisdom and goodness, though it may be
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liable to abuse; he has sent inspired teachers to the world, and
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given us a supernatural revelation, though others may be so evil
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and so impudent as to pretend the same; every pretender to the
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divine Spirit, or to inspiration, and extraordinary illumination
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thereby, is not to be believed. Time was when the spiritual man
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(the man of the Spirit, who made a great noise about, and boast of,
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the Spirit) was mad, <scripRef id="iJo.v-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Hos.9.7" parsed="|Hos|9|7|0|0" passage="Ho 9:7">Hos. ix.
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7</scripRef>. 2. To scrutiny, to examination of the claims that are
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laid to the Spirit: <i>But try the spirits, whether they be of
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God,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p4.2" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.1" parsed="|1John|4|1|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:1"><i>v.</i> 1</scripRef>. God
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has given of his Spirit in these latter ages of the world, but not
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to all who profess to come furnished therewith; to the disciples is
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allowed a judgment of discretion, in reference to the spirits that
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would be believed and trusted in the affairs of religion. A reason
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is given for this trial: <i>Because many false prophets have gone
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out into the world,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p4.3" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.1" parsed="|1John|4|1|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:1"><i>v.</i>
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1</scripRef>. There being much about the time of our Saviour's
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appearance in the world a general expectation among the Jews of a
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Redeemer to Israel, and the humiliation, spiritual reformation, and
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sufferings of the Saviour being taken as a prejudice against him,
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others were induced to set up as prophets and messiahs to Israel,
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according to the Saviour's prediction, <scripRef id="iJo.v-p4.4" osisRef="Bible:Matt.24.23-Matt.24.24" parsed="|Matt|24|23|24|24" passage="Mt 24:23,24">Matt. xxiv. 23, 24</scripRef>. It should not seem
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strange to us that false teachers set themselves up in the church:
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it was so in the apostles' times; fatal is the spirit of delusion,
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sad that men should vaunt themselves for prophets and inspired
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preachers that are by no means so!</p>
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<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p5">II. He gives a test whereby the disciples
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may try these pretending spirits. These spirits set up for
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prophets, doctors, or dictators in religion, and so they were to be
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tried by their doctrine; and the test whereby in that day, or in
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that part of the world where the apostle now resided (for in
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various seasons, and in various churches, tests were different),
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must be this: <i>Hereby know you the Spirit of God, Every spirit
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that confesseth that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh</i> (or
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<i>that confesseth Jesus Christ that came in the flesh), is of
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God,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.2" parsed="|1John|4|2|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:2"><i>v.</i> 2</scripRef>. Jesus
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Christ is to be confessed as the Son of God, the eternal life and
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Word, that was with the Father from the beginning; as the Son of
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God that came into, and came in, our human mortal nature, and
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therein suffered and died at Jerusalem. He who confesses and
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preaches this, by a mind supernaturally instructed and enlightened
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therein, does it by the Spirit of God, or God is the author of that
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illumination. On the contrary, "<i>Every spirit that confesseth not
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that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh</i> (or <i>Jesus Christ
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that came in the flesh) is not of God,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p5.2" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.3" parsed="|1John|4|3|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>. God has given so much testimony
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to Jesus Christ, who was lately here in the world, and in <i>the
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flesh</i> (or in a fleshly body like ours), though now in heaven,
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that you may be assured that any impulse or pretended inspiration
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that contradicts this is far from being from heaven and of God."
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The sum of revealed religion is comprehended in the doctrine
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concerning Christ, his person and office. We see then the
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aggravation of a systematic opposition to him and it. <i>And this
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is that spirit of antichrist whereof you have heard that it should
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come, and even now already is it in the world,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p5.3" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.3" parsed="|1John|4|3|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>. It was foreknown by God
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that antichrists would arise, and antichristian spirits oppose his
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Spirit and his truth; it was foreknown also that one eminent
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antichrist would arise, and make a long and fatal war against the
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Christ of God, and his institution, and honour, and kingdom in the
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world. This great antichrist would have his way prepared, and his
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rise facilitated, by other less antichrists, and the spirit of
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error working and disposing men's minds for him: the antichristian
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spirit began betimes, even in the apostles' days. Dreadful and
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unsearchable is the judgment of God, that persons should be given
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over to an antichristian spirit, and to such darkness and delusion
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as to set themselves against the Son of God and all the testimony
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that the Father hath given to the Son! But we have been forewarned
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that such opposition would arise; we should therefore cease to be
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offended, and the more we see the word of Christ fulfilled the more
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confirmed we should be in the truth of it.</p>
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</div><scripCom id="iJo.v-p5.4" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.4-1John.4.6" parsed="|1John|4|4|4|6" passage="1Jo 4:4-6" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:1John.4.4-1John.4.6">
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<h4 id="iJo.v-p5.5">Danger of Antichristian
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Spirit. (<span class="smallcaps" id="iJo.v-p5.6">a.
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d.</span> 80.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="iJo.v-p6">4 Ye are of God, little children, and have
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overcome them: because greater is he that is in you, than he that
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is in the world. 5 They are of the world: therefore speak
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they of the world, and the world heareth them. 6 We are of
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God: he that knoweth God heareth us; he that is not of God heareth
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not us. Hereby know we the spirit of truth, and the spirit of
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error.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p7">In these verses the apostle encourages the
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disciples against the fear and danger of this seducing
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antichristian spirit, and that by such methods as these:—1. He
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assures them of a more divine principle in them: "<i>You are of
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God, little children,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.4" parsed="|1John|4|4|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:4"><i>v.</i>
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4</scripRef>. <i>You are God's little children. We are of God,</i>
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<scripRef id="iJo.v-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.6" parsed="|1John|4|6|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>. <i>We are born
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of God,</i> taught of God, anointed of God, and so secured against
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infectious fatal delusions. God has his chosen, who shall not be
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mortally seduced." 2. He gives them hope of victory: "<i>And have
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overcome them,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p7.3" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.4" parsed="|1John|4|4|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:4"><i>v.</i>
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4</scripRef>. You have hitherto overcome these deceivers and their
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temptations, and there is good ground of hope that you will do so
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still, and that upon these two accounts:"—(1.) "There is a strong
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preserver within you: <i>Because greater is he that is in you than
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he that is in the world,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p7.4" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.4" parsed="|1John|4|4|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:4"><i>v.</i>
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4</scripRef>. The Spirit of God dwells in you, and that Spirit is
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more mighty than men of devils." It is a great happiness to be
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under the influence of the Holy Ghost. (2.) "You are not of the
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same temper with these deceivers. The Spirit of God hath framed
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your mind for God and heaven; <i>but they are of the world.</i> The
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spirit that prevails in them leads them to this world; their heart
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is addicted thereto; they study the pomp, the pleasure, and
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interest of the world: <i>and therefore speak they of the
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world;</i> they profess a worldly messiah and saviour; they project
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a worldly kingdom and dominion; the possessions and treasures of
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the world would they engross to themselves, forgetting that the
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true Redeemer's <i>kingdom is not of this world.</i> This worldly
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design procures them proselytes: <i>The world heareth them,</i>
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<scripRef id="iJo.v-p7.5" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.5" parsed="|1John|4|5|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:5"><i>v.</i> 5</scripRef>. They are
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followed by such as themselves: the world will love its own, and
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its own will love it. But those are in a fair way to conquer
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pernicious seductions who have conquered the love of this seducing
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world." Then, 3. He represents to them that though their company
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might be the smaller, yet it was the better; they had more divine
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and holy knowledge: "<i>He that knoweth God heareth us.</i> He who
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knows the purity and holiness of God, the love and grace of God,
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the truth and faithfulness of God, the ancient word and prophecies
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of God, the signals and testimonials of God, must know that he is
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with us; and he who knows this will attend to us, and abide with
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us." He that is well furnished with natural religion will the more
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faithfully cleave to Christianity. <i>He that knoweth God</i> (in
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his natural and moral excellences, revelations, and works)
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<i>heareth us,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p7.6" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.6" parsed="|1John|4|6|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:6"><i>v.</i>
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6</scripRef>. As, on the contrary, "<i>He that is not of God
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heareth not us.</i> He who knows not God regards not us. He that is
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not <i>born of God</i> (walking according to his natural
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disposition) walks not with us. The further any are from God (as
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appears in all ages) the further they are from Christ and his
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faithful servants; and the more addicted persons are to this world
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the more remote they are from the spirit of Christianity. Thus you
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have a distinction between us and others: <i>Hereby know we the
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Spirit of truth and the spirit of error,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p7.7" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.6" parsed="|1John|4|6|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>. This doctrine concerning the
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Saviour's person leading you from the world to God is a signature
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of <i>the Spirit of truth,</i> in opposition to <i>the spirit of
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error.</i> The more pure and holy any doctrine is the more likely
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is it to be of God."</p>
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</div><scripCom id="iJo.v-p7.8" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.7-1John.4.13" parsed="|1John|4|7|4|13" passage="1Jo 4:7-13" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:1John.4.7-1John.4.13">
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<h4 id="iJo.v-p7.9">Brotherly Love. (<span class="smallcaps" id="iJo.v-p7.10">a.
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d.</span> 80.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="iJo.v-p8">7 Beloved, let us love one another: for love is
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of God; and every one that loveth is born of God, and knoweth God.
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8 He that loveth not knoweth not God; for God is love.
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9 In this was manifested the love of God toward us, because
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that God sent his only begotten Son into the world, that we might
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live through him. 10 Herein is love, not that we loved God,
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but that he loved us, and sent his Son <i>to be</i> the
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propitiation for our sins. 11 Beloved, if God so loved us,
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we ought also to love one another. 12 No man hath seen God
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at any time. If we love one another, God dwelleth in us, and his
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love is perfected in us. 13 Hereby know we that we dwell in
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him, and he in us, because he hath given us of his Spirit.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p9">As <i>the Spirit of truth</i> is known by
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doctrine (thus spirits are to be tried), it is known by love
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likewise; and so here follows a strong fervent exhortation to holy
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Christian love: <i>Beloved, let us love one another,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.7" parsed="|1John|4|7|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>. The apostle would unite
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them in his love, that he might unite them in love to each other:
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"<i>Beloved,</i> I beseech you, by the love I bear to you, that you
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put on unfeigned mutual love." This exhortation is pressed and
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urged with variety of argument: as,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p10">I. From the high and heavenly descent of
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love: <i>For love is of God.</i> He is the fountain, author,
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parent, and commander of love; it is the sum of his law and gospel:
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<i>And every one that loveth</i> (whose spirit is framed to
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judicious holy love) <i>is born of God,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.7" parsed="|1John|4|7|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>. The Spirit of God is the Spirit
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of love. The new nature in the children of God is the offspring of
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his love: and the temper and complexion of it is love. <i>The fruit
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of the Spirit is love,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:Gal.5.22" parsed="|Gal|5|22|0|0" passage="Ga 5:22">Gal. v.
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22</scripRef>. Love comes down from heaven.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p11">II. Love argues a true and just
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apprehension of the divine nature: <i>He that loveth knoweth
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God,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.7" parsed="|1John|4|7|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>. <i>He
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that loveth not knoweth not God,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p11.2" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.8" parsed="|1John|4|8|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>. What attribute of the divine
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Majesty so clearly shines in all the world as his communicative
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goodness, which is love. The wisdom, the greatness, the harmony,
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and usefulness of the vast creation, which so fully demonstrate his
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being, do at the same time show and prove his love; and natural
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reason, inferring and collecting the nature and excellence of the
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most absolute perfect being, must collect and find that he is most
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highly good: and <i>he that loveth not</i> (is not quickened by the
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knowledge he hath of God to the affection and practice of love)
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<i>knoweth not God;</i> it is a convictive evidence that the sound
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and due knowledge of God dwells not in such a soul; his love must
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needs shine among his primary brightest perfections; <i>for God is
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love</i> (<scripRef id="iJo.v-p11.3" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.8" parsed="|1John|4|8|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>), his
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nature and essence are love, his will and works are primarily love.
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Not that this is the only conception we ought to have of him; we
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have found that he <i>is light as well as love</i> (<scripRef id="iJo.v-p11.4" osisRef="Bible:1John.1.5" parsed="|1John|1|5|0|0" passage="1Jo 1:5"><i>ch.</i> i. 5</scripRef>), and God is
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principally love to himself, and he has such perfections as arise
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from the necessary love he must bear to his necessary existence,
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excellence, and glory; but love is natural and essential to the
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divine Majesty: <i>God is love.</i> This is argued from the display
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and demonstration that he hath given of it; as, 1. That he hath
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loved us, such as we are: <i>In this was manifest the love of God
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towards us</i> (<scripRef id="iJo.v-p11.5" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.9" parsed="|1John|4|9|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:9"><i>v.</i>
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9</scripRef>), towards us mortals, us ungrateful rebels. <i>God
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commandeth his love towards us, in that, while we were yet sinners,
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Christ died for us,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p11.6" osisRef="Bible:Rom.5.8" parsed="|Rom|5|8|0|0" passage="Ro 5:8">Rom. v.
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8</scripRef>. Strange that God should love impure, vain, vile, dust
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and ashes! 2. That he has loved us at such a rate, at such an
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incomparable value as he has given for us; he has given his own,
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only-beloved, blessed Son for us: <i>Because that God sent his
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only-begotten Son into the world, that we might live through
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him,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p11.7" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.9" parsed="|1John|4|9|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:9"><i>v.</i> 9</scripRef>. This
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person is in some peculiar distinguishing way the Son of God; he is
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the only-begotten. Should we suppose him begotten as a creature or
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created being, he is not the only-begotten. Should we suppose him a
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natural necessary eradication from the Father's glory or glorious
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essence, or substance, he must be the only-begotten: and then it
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will be a mystery and miracle of divine love that such a Son should
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be sent into our world for us! It may well be said, <i>So</i>
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(wonderfully, so amazingly, so incredibly) <i>God loved the
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world.</i> 3. That God loved us first, and in the circumstances in
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which we lay: <i>Herein is love</i> (unusual unprecedented love),
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<i>not that we loved God, but that he loved us,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p11.8" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.10" parsed="|1John|4|10|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>. He loved us, when we
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had no love for him, when we lay in our guilt, misery, and blood,
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when we were undeserving, ill-deserving, polluted, and unclean, and
|
||
wanted to be washed from our sins in sacred blood. 4. That he gave
|
||
us his Son for such service and such an end. (1.) For such service,
|
||
<i>to be the propitiation for our sins;</i> consequently to die for
|
||
us, to die under the law and curse of God, to <i>bear our sins in
|
||
his own body,</i> to be crucified, to be wounded in his soul, and
|
||
pierced in his side, to be dead and buried for us (<scripRef id="iJo.v-p11.9" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.10" parsed="|1John|4|10|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>); and then, (2.) For
|
||
such an end, for such a good and beneficial end to us—<i>that we
|
||
might live through him</i> (<scripRef id="iJo.v-p11.10" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.9" parsed="|1John|4|9|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:9"><i>v.</i>
|
||
9</scripRef>), might live for ever through him, might live in
|
||
heaven, live with God, and live in eternal glory and blessedness
|
||
with him and through him: O what love is here! Then,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p12">III. Divine love to the brethren should
|
||
constrain ours: <i>Beloved</i> (I would adjure you by your interest
|
||
in my love to remember), <i>if God so loved us, we ought also to
|
||
love one another,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.11" parsed="|1John|4|11|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:11"><i>v.</i>
|
||
11</scripRef>. This should be an invincible argument. The example
|
||
of God should press us. <i>We should be followers</i> (or
|
||
imitators) <i>of him, as his dear children.</i> The objects of the
|
||
divine love should be the objects of ours. Shall we refuse to love
|
||
those whom the eternal God hath loved? We should be admirers of his
|
||
love, and lovers of his love (of the benevolence and complacency
|
||
that are in him), and consequently lovers of those whom he loves.
|
||
The general love of God to the world should induce a universal love
|
||
among mankind. <i>That you may be the children of your Father who
|
||
is in heaven; for he maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the
|
||
good, and sendeth his rain on the just and on the unjust,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="iJo.v-p12.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.5.45" parsed="|Matt|5|45|0|0" passage="Mt 5:45">Matt. v. 45</scripRef>. The peculiar
|
||
love of God to the church and to the saints should be productive of
|
||
a peculiar love there: <i>If God so loved us, we ought</i> surely
|
||
(in some measure suitably thereto) <i>to love one another.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p13">IV. The Christian love is an assurance of
|
||
the divine inhabitation: <i>If we love one another, God dwelleth in
|
||
us,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.12" parsed="|1John|4|12|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:12"><i>v.</i> 12</scripRef>. Now
|
||
God dwelleth in us, not by any visible presence, or immediate
|
||
appearance to the eye (<i>no man hath seen God at any time,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="iJo.v-p13.2" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.12" parsed="|1John|4|12|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:12"><i>v.</i> 12</scripRef>), but by his
|
||
Spirit (<scripRef id="iJo.v-p13.3" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.13" parsed="|1John|4|13|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>); or,
|
||
"<i>No man hath seen God at any time;</i> he does not here present
|
||
himself to our eye or to our immediate intuition, and so he does
|
||
not in this way demand and exact our love; but he demands and
|
||
expects it in that way in which he has thought meet to deserve and
|
||
claim it, and that is in the illustration that he has given of
|
||
himself and of his love (and thereupon of his loveliness too) in
|
||
the catholic church, and particularly in the brethren, the members
|
||
of that church. In them, and in his appearance for them and with
|
||
them, is God to be loved; and thus, <i>if we love one another, God
|
||
dwelleth in us.</i> The sacred lovers of the brethren are the
|
||
temples of God; the divine Majesty has a peculiar residence
|
||
there."</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p14">V. Herein the divine love attains a
|
||
considerable end and accomplishment in us: "<i>And his love is
|
||
perfected in us,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.12" parsed="|1John|4|12|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:12"><i>v.</i>
|
||
12</scripRef>. It has obtained its completion in and upon us. God's
|
||
love is not perfected in him, but in and with us. His love could
|
||
not be designed to be ineffectual and fruitless upon us; when its
|
||
proper genuine end and issue are attained and produced thereby, it
|
||
may be said to be perfected; so faith is perfected by its works,
|
||
and love perfected by its operations. When the divine love has
|
||
wrought us to the same image, to the love of God, and thereupon to
|
||
the love of the brethren, the children of God, for his sake, it is
|
||
therein and so far perfected and completed, though this love of
|
||
ours is not at present perfect, nor the ultimate end of the divine
|
||
love to us." How ambitious should we be of this fraternal Christian
|
||
love, when God reckons his own love to us perfected thereby! To
|
||
this the apostle, having mentioned the high favour of God's
|
||
dwelling in us, subjoins the note and character thereof: <i>Hereby
|
||
know we that we dwell in him, and he in us, because he hath given
|
||
us of his Spirit,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p14.2" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.13" parsed="|1John|4|13|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:13"><i>v.</i>
|
||
13</scripRef>. Certainly this mutual inhabitation is something more
|
||
noble and great than we are well acquainted with or can declare.
|
||
One would think that to speak of God dwelling in us, and we in him,
|
||
were to use words too high for mortals, had not God gone before us
|
||
therein. What this indwelling imports has been briefly explained on
|
||
<scripRef id="iJo.v-p14.3" osisRef="Bible:1John.3.24" parsed="|1John|3|24|0|0" passage="1Jo 3:24"><i>ch.</i> iii. 24</scripRef>. What it
|
||
fully is must be left to the revelation of the blessed world. But
|
||
this mutual inhabitation we know, says the apostle, <i>because he
|
||
hath given us of his spirit;</i> he has lodged the image and fruit
|
||
of his Spirit in our hearts (<scripRef id="iJo.v-p14.4" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.13" parsed="|1John|4|13|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:13"><i>v.</i>
|
||
13</scripRef>), and <i>the Spirit that he hath given us</i> appears
|
||
to be his, or of him, since it is <i>the Spirit of power,</i> of
|
||
zeal and magnanimity for God, <i>of love</i> to God and man, <i>and
|
||
of a sound mind,</i> of an understanding well instructed in the
|
||
affairs of God and religion, and his kingdom among men, <scripRef id="iJo.v-p14.5" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.1.7" parsed="|2Tim|1|7|0|0" passage="2Ti 1:7">2 Tim. i. 7</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="iJo.v-p14.6" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.14-1John.4.16" parsed="|1John|4|14|4|16" passage="1Jo 4:14-16" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:1John.4.14-1John.4.16">
|
||
<h4 id="iJo.v-p14.7">The Divine Love. (<span class="smallcaps" id="iJo.v-p14.8">a.
|
||
d.</span> 80.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="iJo.v-p15">14 And we have seen and do testify that the
|
||
Father sent the Son <i>to be</i> the Saviour of the world.
|
||
15 Whosoever shall confess that Jesus is the Son of God, God
|
||
dwelleth in him, and he in God. 16 And we have known and
|
||
believed the love that God hath to us. God is love; and he that
|
||
dwelleth in love dwelleth in God, and God in him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p16">Since faith in Christ works love to God,
|
||
and love to God must kindle love to the brethren, the apostle here
|
||
confirms the prime article of the Christian faith as the foundation
|
||
of such love. Here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p17">I. He proclaims the fundamental article of
|
||
the Christian religion, which is so representative of the love of
|
||
God: <i>And we have seen, and do testify, that the Father sent the
|
||
Son to be the Saviour of the world,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.14" parsed="|1John|4|14|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>. We here see, 1. The Lord
|
||
Jesus's relation to God; he is Son to the Father, such a Son as no
|
||
one else is, and so as to be God with the Father. 2. His relation
|
||
and office towards us—<i>the Saviour of the world;</i> he saves us
|
||
by his death, example, intercession, Spirit, and power against the
|
||
enemies of our salvation. 3. The ground on which he became so—by
|
||
the mission of him: <i>The Father sent the Son,</i> he decreed and
|
||
willed his coming hither, in and with the consent of the Son. 4.
|
||
The apostle's assurance of this—he and his brethren had seen it;
|
||
they had seen the Son of God in his human nature, in his holy
|
||
converse and works, in his transfiguration on the mount, and in his
|
||
death, resurrection from the dead, and royal ascent to heaven; they
|
||
had so seen him as to be satisfied that he was the <i>only-begotten
|
||
of the Father, full of grace and truth.</i> 5. The apostle's
|
||
attestation of this, in pursuance of such evidence: "<i>We have
|
||
seen and do testify.</i> The weight of this truth obliges us to
|
||
testify it; the salvation of the world lies upon it. The evidence
|
||
of the truth warrants us to testify it; our eyes, and ears, and
|
||
hands, have been witnesses of it." Thereupon,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p18">II. The apostle states the excellency, or
|
||
the excellent privilege attending the due acknowledgment of this
|
||
truth: <i>Whosoever shall confess that Jesus is the Son of God, God
|
||
dwelleth in him, and he in God,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.15" parsed="|1John|4|15|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>. This confession seems to
|
||
include faith in the heart as the foundation of it, acknowledgment
|
||
with the mouth to the glory of God and Christ, and profession in
|
||
the life and conduct, in opposition to the flatteries or frowns of
|
||
the world. Thus <i>no man says that Jesus is the Lord but by the
|
||
Holy Ghost,</i> by the external attestation and internal operation
|
||
of the Holy Ghost, <scripRef id="iJo.v-p18.2" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.12.3" parsed="|1Cor|12|3|0|0" passage="1Co 12:3">1 Cor. xii.
|
||
3</scripRef>. And so he who thus confesses Christ, and God in him,
|
||
is enriched with or possessed by the Spirit of God, and has a
|
||
complacential knowledge of God and much holy enjoyment of him.
|
||
Then,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p19">III. The apostle applies this in order to
|
||
the excitation of holy love. God's love is thus seen and exerted in
|
||
Christ Jesus; <i>and</i> thus <i>have we known and believed the
|
||
love that God hath to us,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.16" parsed="|1John|4|16|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>. The Christian revelation is,
|
||
what should endear it to us, the revelation of the divine love; the
|
||
articles of our revealed faith are but so many articles relating to
|
||
the divine love. The history of the Lord Christ is the history of
|
||
God's love to us; all his transactions in and with his Son were but
|
||
testifications of his love to us, and means to advance us to the
|
||
love of God: <i>God was in Christ reconciling the world unto
|
||
himself,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p19.2" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.5.19" parsed="|2Cor|5|19|0|0" passage="2Co 5:19">2 Cor. v. 19</scripRef>.
|
||
Hence we may learn,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p20">1. That <i>God is love</i> (<scripRef id="iJo.v-p20.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.16" parsed="|1John|4|16|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>); he is essential
|
||
boundless love; he has incomparable incomprehensible love for us of
|
||
this world, which he has demonstrated in the mission and mediation
|
||
of his beloved Son. It is the great objection and prejudice against
|
||
the Christian revelation that the love of God should be so strange
|
||
and unaccountable as to give his own eternal Son for us; it is the
|
||
prejudice of many against the eternity and the deity of the Son
|
||
that so great a person should be given for us. It is, I confess,
|
||
mysterious and unsearchable; but there are <i>unsearchable riches
|
||
in Christ.</i> It is a pity that the vastness of the divine love
|
||
should be made a prejudice against the revelation and the belief of
|
||
it. But what will not God do when he designs to demonstrate the
|
||
height of any perfection of his? When he would show somewhat of his
|
||
power and wisdom, he makes such a world as this; when he would show
|
||
more of his grandeur and glory, he makes heaven for the ministering
|
||
spirits that are before the throne. What will he not do then when
|
||
he designs to demonstrate his love, and to demonstrate his highest
|
||
love, or that he himself is love, or that love is one of the most
|
||
bright, dear, transcendent, operative excellencies of his unbounded
|
||
nature; and to demonstrate this not only to us, but to the angelic
|
||
world, and to the principalities and powers above, and this not for
|
||
our surprise for a while, but for the admiration, and praise, and
|
||
adoration, and felicity, of our most exalted powers to all
|
||
eternity? What will not God then do? Surely then it will look more
|
||
agreeable to the design, and grandeur, and pregnancy of his love
|
||
(if I may so call it) to give an eternal Son for us, than to make a
|
||
Son on purpose for our relief. In such a dispensation as that of
|
||
giving a natural, essential, eternal Son for us and to us, he will
|
||
commend his love to us indeed; and what will not the God of love do
|
||
when he designs to commend his love, and to commend it in the view
|
||
of heaven, and earth, and hell, and when he will commend himself
|
||
and recommend himself to us, and to our highest conviction, and
|
||
also affection, as love itself? And what if it should appear at
|
||
last (which I shall only offer to the consideration of the
|
||
judicious) that the divine love, and particularly God's love in
|
||
Christ, should be the foundation of the glories of heaven, in the
|
||
present enjoyment of those ministering spirits that comported with
|
||
it, and of the salvation of this world, and of the torments of
|
||
hell? This last will seem most strange. But what if therein it
|
||
should appear not only that God is love to himself, in vindicating
|
||
his own law, and government, and love, and glory, but that the
|
||
damned ones are made so, or are so punished, (1.) Because they
|
||
despised the love of God already manifested and exhibited. (2.)
|
||
Because they refused to be beloved in what was further proposed and
|
||
promised. (3.) Because they made themselves unmeet to be the
|
||
objects of divine complacency and delight? If the conscience of the
|
||
damned should accuse them of these things, and especially of
|
||
rejecting the highest instance of divine love, and if the far
|
||
greatest part of the intelligent creation should be everlastingly
|
||
blessed through the highest instance of the divine love, then may
|
||
it well be inscribed upon the whole creation of God, <i>God is
|
||
love.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p21">2. That hereupon <i>he that dwelleth in
|
||
love dwelleth in God, and God in him,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p21.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.16" parsed="|1John|4|16|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>. There is great communion
|
||
between the God of love and the loving soul; that is, him who loves
|
||
the creation of God, according to its different relation to God,
|
||
and reception from him and interest in him. He that dwells in
|
||
sacred love has <i>the love God shed abroad upon his heart,</i> has
|
||
the impress of God upon his spirit, the Spirit of God sanctifying
|
||
and sealing him, lives in the meditation, views, and tastes of the
|
||
divine love, and will ere long go to dwell with God for ever.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="iJo.v-p21.2" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.17-1John.4.21" parsed="|1John|4|17|4|21" passage="1Jo 4:17-21" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:1John.4.17-1John.4.21">
|
||
<h4 id="iJo.v-p21.3">The Divine Love. (<span class="smallcaps" id="iJo.v-p21.4">a.
|
||
d.</span> 80.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="iJo.v-p22">17 Herein is our love made perfect, that we may
|
||
have boldness in the day of judgment: because as he is, so are we
|
||
in this world. 18 There is no fear in love; but perfect love
|
||
casteth out fear: because fear hath torment. He that feareth is not
|
||
made perfect in love. 19 We love him, because he first loved
|
||
us. 20 If a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother, he
|
||
is a liar: for he that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen,
|
||
how can he love God whom he hath not seen? 21 And this
|
||
commandment have we from him, That he who loveth God love his
|
||
brother also.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p23">The apostle, having thus excited and
|
||
enforced sacred love from the great pattern and motive of it, the
|
||
love that is and dwells in God himself, proceeds to recommend it
|
||
further by other considerations; and he recommends it in both the
|
||
branches of it, both as love to God, and love to our brother or
|
||
Christian neighbour.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p24">I. As love to God, to the <i>primum
|
||
amabile—the first and chief of all amiable beings and objects,</i>
|
||
who has the confluence of all beauty, excellence, and loveliness,
|
||
in himself, and confers on all other beings whatever renders them
|
||
good and amiable. Love to God seems here to be recommended on these
|
||
accounts:—1. It will give us peace and satisfaction of spirit in
|
||
the day when it will be most needed, or when it will be the
|
||
greatest pleasure and blessing imaginable: <i>Herein is our love
|
||
made perfect, that we may have boldness in the day of judgment,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="iJo.v-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.17" parsed="|1John|4|17|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>. There must be
|
||
a day of universal judgment. Happy they who shall have holy
|
||
fiducial boldness before the Judge at that day, who shall be able
|
||
to lift up their heads, and to look him in the face, as knowing he
|
||
is their friend and advocate! Happy they who have holy boldness and
|
||
assurance in the prospect of that day, who look and wait for it,
|
||
and for the Judge's appearance! So do, and so may do, the lovers of
|
||
God. Their love to God assures them of God's love to them, and
|
||
consequently of the friendship of the Son of God; the more we love
|
||
our friend, especially when we are sure that he knows it, the more
|
||
we can trust his love. As God is good and loving, and faithful to
|
||
his promise, so we can easily be persuaded of his love, and the
|
||
happy fruits of his love, when we can say, <i>Thou that knowest all
|
||
things knowest that we love thee. And hope maketh not ashamed;</i>
|
||
our hope, conceived by the consideration of God's love, will not
|
||
disappoint us, <i>because the love of God is shed abroad in our
|
||
hearts by the Holy Ghost that is given to us,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p24.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.5.5" parsed="|Rom|5|5|0|0" passage="Ro 5:5">Rom. v. 5</scripRef>. Possibly here by the love of
|
||
God may be meant our <i>love to God,</i> which is <i>shed abroad
|
||
upon our hearts by the Holy Ghost;</i> this is the foundation of
|
||
our hope, or of our assurance that our hope will hold good at last.
|
||
Or, if by the love of God be meant the sense and apprehension of
|
||
his love to us, yet this must suppose or include us as lovers of
|
||
him in this case; and indeed the sense and evidence of his love to
|
||
us do shed abroad upon our hearts love to him; and thereupon we
|
||
have confidence towards him and peace and joy in him. He will give
|
||
the crown of righteousness to all that love his appearing. And we
|
||
have this boldness towards Christ because of our conformity to him:
|
||
<i>Because as he is so are we in this world,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p24.3" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.17" parsed="|1John|4|17|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>. Love hath conformed us to him;
|
||
as he was the great lover of God and man, he has taught us in our
|
||
measure to be so too, and he will not deny his own image. Love
|
||
teaches us to conform in sufferings too; we suffer for him and with
|
||
him, and therefore cannot but hope and trust that we shall also be
|
||
glorified together with him, <scripRef id="iJo.v-p24.4" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.2.12" parsed="|2Tim|2|12|0|0" passage="2Ti 2:12">2 Tim.
|
||
ii. 12</scripRef>. 2. It prevents or removes the uncomfortable
|
||
result and fruit of servile fear: <i>There is no fear in love</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="iJo.v-p24.5" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.18" parsed="|1John|4|18|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:18"><i>v.</i> 18</scripRef>); so far as
|
||
love prevails, fear ceases. We must here distinguish, I judge,
|
||
between fear and being afraid; or, in this case, between the fear
|
||
of God and being afraid of him. The fear of God is often mentioned
|
||
and commanded as the substance of religion (<scripRef id="iJo.v-p24.6" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.2.17 Bible:Rev.14.7" parsed="|1Pet|2|17|0|0;|Rev|14|7|0|0" passage="1Pe 2:17,Re 14:7">1 Pet. ii. 17; Rev. xiv. 7</scripRef>); and so
|
||
it imports the high regard and veneration we have for God and his
|
||
authority and government. Such fear is constant with love, yea,
|
||
with perfect love, as being in the angels themselves. But then
|
||
there is a being afraid of God, which arises from a sense of guilt,
|
||
and a view of his vindictive perfections; in the view of them, God
|
||
is represented as a consuming fire; and so fear here may be
|
||
rendered <i>dread; There is no dread in love.</i> Love considers
|
||
its object as good and excellent, and therefore amiable, and worthy
|
||
to be beloved. Love considers God as most eminently good, and most
|
||
eminently loving us in Christ, and so puts off dread, and puts on
|
||
joy in him; and, as love grows, joy grows too; so that <i>perfect
|
||
love casteth out fear</i> or dread. Those who perfectly love God
|
||
are, from his nature, and counsel, and covenant, perfectly assured
|
||
of his love, and consequently are perfectly free from any dismal
|
||
dreadful suspicions of his punitive power and justice, as armed
|
||
against them; they well know that God loves them, and they
|
||
thereupon triumph in his love. That <i>perfect love casteth out
|
||
fear</i> the apostle thus sensibly argues: that which casteth out
|
||
torment casteth out fear or dread: <i>Because fear hath torment</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="iJo.v-p24.7" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.18" parsed="|1John|4|18|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:18"><i>v.</i> 18</scripRef>)—fear is
|
||
known to be a disquieting torturing passion, especially such a fear
|
||
as is the dread of an almighty avenging God; but perfect love
|
||
casteth out torment, for it teaches the mind a perfect acquiescence
|
||
and complacency in the beloved, and therefore <i>perfect love
|
||
casteth out fear.</i> Or, which is here equivalent, <i>he that
|
||
feareth is not made perfect in love</i> (<scripRef id="iJo.v-p24.8" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.18" parsed="|1John|4|18|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:18"><i>v.</i> 18</scripRef>); it is a sign that our love is
|
||
far from being perfect, since our doubts, and fears, and dismal
|
||
apprehensions of God, are so many. Let us long for, and hasten to,
|
||
the world of perfect love, where our serenity and joy in God will
|
||
be as perfect as our love! 3. From the source and rise of it, which
|
||
is the antecedent love of God: <i>We love him, because he first
|
||
loved us,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p24.9" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.19" parsed="|1John|4|19|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>.
|
||
His love is the incentive, the motive, and moral cause of ours. We
|
||
cannot but love so good a God, who was first in the act and work of
|
||
love, who loved us when we were both unloving and unlovely, who
|
||
loved us at so great a rate, who has been seeking and soliciting
|
||
our love at the expense of his Son's blood; and has condescended to
|
||
beseech us to be reconciled unto him. Let heaven and earth stand
|
||
amazed at such love! His love is the productive cause of ours:
|
||
<i>Of his own will</i> (of his own free loving will) <i>begat he
|
||
us. To those that love him all things work together for good, to
|
||
those who are the called according to his purpose.</i> Those
|
||
<i>that love God are the called</i> thereto <i>according to his
|
||
purpose</i> (<scripRef id="iJo.v-p24.10" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.28" parsed="|Rom|8|28|0|0" passage="Ro 8:28">Rom. viii. 28</scripRef>);
|
||
according to whose purpose they are called is sufficiently
|
||
intimated in the following clauses: <i>whom he did predestinate</i>
|
||
(or antecedently purpose, to the image of his Son) <i>those he also
|
||
called,</i> effectually recovered thereto. The divine love stamped
|
||
love upon our souls; may the Lord still and further direct our
|
||
hearts into the love of God! <scripRef id="iJo.v-p24.11" osisRef="Bible:2Thess.3.5" parsed="|2Thess|3|5|0|0" passage="2Th 3:5">2 Thess.
|
||
iii. 5</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="iJo.v-p25">II. As love to our brother and neighbour in
|
||
Christ; such love is argued and urged on these accounts:—1. As
|
||
suitable and consonant to our Christian profession. In the
|
||
profession of Christianity we profess to love God as the root of
|
||
religion: "<i>If then a man say,</i> or profess as much as thereby
|
||
to say, <i>I love God,</i> I am a lover of his name, and house, and
|
||
worship, <i>and</i> yet <i>hate his brother,</i> whom he should
|
||
love for God's sake, <i>he is a liar</i> (<scripRef id="iJo.v-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.20" parsed="|1John|4|20|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>), he therein gives his
|
||
profession the lie." That such a one loves not God the apostle
|
||
proves by the usual facility of loving what is seen rather than
|
||
what is unseen: <i>For he that loveth not his brother, whom he hath
|
||
seen, how can he love God, whom he hath not seen?</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p25.2" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.20" parsed="|1John|4|20|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>. The eye is wont to
|
||
affect the heart; things unseen less catch the mind, and thereby
|
||
the heart. The incomprehensibleness of God very much arises from
|
||
his invisibility; the member of Christ has much of God visible in
|
||
him. How then shall the hater of a visible image of God pretend to
|
||
love the unseen original, the invisible God himself? 2. As suitable
|
||
to the express law of God, and the just reason of it: <i>And this
|
||
commandment have we from him, that he who loveth God love his
|
||
brother also,</i> <scripRef id="iJo.v-p25.3" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.21" parsed="|1John|4|21|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:21"><i>v.</i>
|
||
21</scripRef>. As God has communicated his image in nature and in
|
||
grace, so he would have our love to be suitably diffused. We must
|
||
love God originally and supremely, and others in him, on the
|
||
account of their derivation and reception from him, and of his
|
||
interest in them. Now, our Christian brethren having a new nature
|
||
and excellent privileges derived from God, and God having his
|
||
interest in them as well as in us, it cannot but be a natural
|
||
suitable obligation <i>that he who loves God should love his
|
||
brother also.</i></p>
|
||
</div></div2> |