That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled, of the Word of life;
That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled, of the Word of life;
1. Instead of a formal, John
adopts a virtual address (compare ). To wish joy to the reader was the ancient customary
address. The sentence begun in is broken off by the parenthetic , and is resumed at 1 John 1:3
with the repetition of some words from 1 John 1:3.
That which was—not
"began to be," but was essentially (Greek,
"een," not "egeneto") before He was
manifested (1 John 1:2);
answering to "Him that is from the beginning" (1 John 1:2); so John's Gospel, 1 John 1:2, "In the beginning was the Word." 1 John 1:2, "I was set up from everlasting, from the beginning,
or ever the earth was."
we—apostles.
heard . . . seen . . . looked
upon . . . handled—a series rising in gradation. Seeing
is a more convincing proof than hearing of; handling,
than even seeing. "Have heard . . . have
seen" (perfect tenses), as a possession still abiding
with us; but in Greek (not as English Version "have,"
but simply) "looked upon" (not perfect tense, as of a
continuing thing, but aorist, past time) while Christ
the incarnate Word was still with us. "Seen," namely, His
glory, as revealed in the Transfiguration and in His miracles; and
His passion and death in a real body of flesh and blood. "Looked
upon" as a wondrous spectacle steadfastly, deeply,
contemplatively; so the Greek. Appropriate to John's
contemplative character.
hands . . . handled—Thomas
and the other disciples on distinct occasions after the resurrection.
John himself had leaned on Jesus' breast at the last supper. Contrast
the wisest of the heathen feeling after (the same Greek
as here; groping after WITH
THE HANDS") if haply they might find God (see 1 John 1:2). This proves against Socinians he is here speaking of the
personal incarnate Word, not of Christ's teaching from
the beginning of His official life.
of—"concerning";
following "heard." "Heard" is the verb most
applying to the purpose of the Epistle, namely the truth which John
had heard concerning the Word of life, that is, (Christ) the
Word who is the life. "Heard," namely, from
Christ Himself, including all Christ's teachings about Himself.
Therefore he puts "of," or "concerning," before
"the word of life," which is inapplicable to any of the
verbs except "heard"; also "heard" is the only
one of the verbs which he resumes at 1 John 1:2.
(For the life was manifested, and we have seen it, and bear witness, and shew unto you that eternal life, which was with the Father, and was manifested unto us;)
2. the life—Jesus, "the
Word of life."
was manifested—who had
previously been "with the Father."
show—Translate as in
1 John 1:3, "declare"
(compare 1 John 1:5). Declare
is the general term; write is the particular (1 John 1:5).
that eternal life—Greek,
"the life which is eternal." As the Epistle begins, so it
ends with "eternal life," which we shall ever enjoy with,
and in, Him who is "the life eternal."
which—Greek,
"the which." the before-mentioned (1 John 1:5) life which was with the Father "from the
beginning" (compare John 1:1).
This proves the distinctness of the First and Second Persons in the
one Godhead.
That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you, that ye also may have fellowship with us: and truly our fellowship is with the Father, and with his Son Jesus Christ.
3. That which we have seen and
heard—resumed from 1 John 1:1,
wherein the sentence, being interrupted by 1 John 1:1, parenthesis, was left incomplete.
declare we unto you—Oldest
manuscripts add also; unto you also who have not seen
or heard Him.
that ye also may have
fellowship with us—that ye also who have not seen, may
have the fellowship with us which we who have seen enjoy; what
that fellowship consists in he proceeds to state, "Our
fellowship is with the Father and with His Son." Faith realizes
what we have not seen as spiritually visible; not till by faith we
too have seen, do we know all the excellency of the true Solomon. He
Himself is ours; He in us and we in Him. We are "partakers of
the divine nature." We know God only by having fellowship with
Him; He may thus be known, but not comprehended. The
repetition of "with" before the "Son,"
distinguishes the persons, while the fellowship or
communion with both Father and Son, implies
their unity. It is not added "and with the Holy Ghost"; for
it is by the Holy Ghost or Spirit of the Father and Son in us,
that we are enabled to have fellowship with the Father and Son
(compare 1 John 3:24). Believers
enjoy the fellowship OF,
but not WITH, the Holy
Ghost. "Through Christ God closes up the chasm that separated
Him from the human race, and imparts Himself to them in the communion
of the divine life" [NEANDER].
And these things write we unto you, that your joy may be full.
4. these things—and none
other, namely, this whole Epistle.
write we unto you—Some
oldest manuscripts omit "unto you," and emphasize "we."
Thus the antithesis is between "we" (apostles and
eye-witnesses) and "your." We write thus that your
joy may be full. Other oldest manuscripts and versions read "OUR
joy," namely, that our joy may be filled full by bringing
you also into fellowship with the Father and Son. (Compare , end; Philippians 2:2, "Fulfil
ye my joy," Philippians 2:16;
Philippians 4:1; 2 John 1:8).
It is possible that "your" may be a correction of
transcribers to make this verse harmonize with John 15:11;
John 16:24; however, as John often
repeats favorite phrases, he may do so here, so "your" may
be from himself. So 2 John 1:12,
"your" in oldest manuscripts. The authority of manuscripts
and versions on both sides here is almost evenly balanced. Christ
Himself is the source, object, and center of His people's joy
(compare 1 John 1:3, end); it is in
fellowship with Him that we have joy, the fruit of
faith.
This then is the message which we have heard of him, and declare unto you, that God is light, and in him is no darkness at all.
5. First division of the body of
the Epistle (compare ).
declare—Greek,
"announce"; report in turn; a different Greek word
from 1 John 1:3. As the Son
announced the message heard from the Father as His apostle, so the
Son's apostles announce what they have heard from the Son. John
nowhere uses the term "Gospel"; but the witness or
testimony, the word, the truth, and here the message.
God is light—What light
is in the natural world, that God, the source of even material light,
is in the spiritual, the fountain of wisdom, purity, beauty, joy, and
glory. As all material life and growth depends on light, so
all spiritual life and growth depends on GOD.
As God here, so Christ, in 1 John 2:8,
is called "the true light."
no darkness at all—strong
negation; Greek, "No, not even one speck of darkness";
no ignorance, error, untruthfulness, sin, or death. John heard this
from Christ, not only in express words, but in His acted words,
namely, His is whole manifestation in the flesh as "the
brightness of the Father's glory." Christ Himself was the
embodiment of "the message," representing fully in all His
sayings, doings, and sufferings, Him who is LIGHT.
If we say that we have fellowship with him, and walk in darkness, we lie, and do not the truth:
6. say—profess.
have fellowship with him—
(1 John 1:3). The essence of the
Christian life.
walk—in inward and
outward action, whithersoever we turn ourselves [BENGEL].
in darkness—Greek,
"in the darkness"; opposed to "the light"
(compare 1 John 2:8; 1 John 2:11).
lie— (1 John 2:11).
do not—in practice,
whatever we say.
the truth— (Ephesians 4:21;
John 3:21).
But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin.
7. Compare Ephesians 5:8;
Ephesians 5:11-14. "WE
WALK"; "God is (essentially in His very
nature as 'the light,' 1 John 1:5)
in the light." WALKING
in the light, the element in which God Himself is, constitutes
the test of fellowship with Him. Christ, like us, walked in
the light (1 John 2:6). ALFORD
notices, Walking in the light as He is in the light, is no mere
imitation of God, but an identity in the essential element of
our daily walk with the essential element of God's eternal being.
we have fellowship one with
another—and of course with God (to be understood from
1 John 1:6). Without having
fellowship with God there can be no true and Christian fellowship one
with another (compare 1 John 1:3).
and—as the result of
"walking in the light, as He is in the light."
the blood of Jesus . . .
cleanseth us from all sin—daily contracted through the sinful
weakness of the flesh, and the power of Satan and the world. He is
speaking not of justification through His blood once for all, but of
the present sanctification ("cleanseth" is present
tense) which the believer, walking in the light and having
fellowship with God and the saints, enjoys as His privilege.
Compare John 13:10, Greek,
"He that has been bathed, needeth not save to wash
his feet, but is clean every whit." Compare John 13:10, "cleanse us from all unrighteousness," a
further step besides "forgiving us our sins."
Christ's blood is the cleansing mean, whereby gradually, being
already justified and in fellowship with God, we become clean
from all sin which would mar our fellowship with God. Faith applies
the cleansing, purifying blood. Some oldest manuscripts omit
"Christ"; others retain it.
If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.
8. The confession of sins
is a necessary consequence of "walking in the light" (). "If thou shalt confess thyself a sinner, the truth
is in thee; for the truth is itself light. Not yet has
thy life become perfectly light, as sins are still in thee, but yet
thou hast already begun to be illuminated, because there is in thee
confession of sins" [AUGUSTINE].
that we have no sin—"HAVE,"
not "have had," must refer not to the past sinful
life while unconverted, but to the present state wherein
believers have sin even still. Observe, "sin" is in
the singular; "(confess our) sins" () in the plural. Sin refers to the corruption of the
old man still present in us, and the stain created by the
actual sins flowing from that old nature in us. To confess our
need of cleansing from present sin is essential to "walking
in the light"; so far is the presence of some sin incompatible
with our in the main "walking in light." But the
believer hates, confesses, and longs to be delivered from all sin,
which is darkness. "They who defend their sins, will see
in the great day whether their sins can defend them."
deceive ourselves—We
cannot deceive God; we only make ourselves to err from the right
path.
the truth— (). True faith. "The truth respecting God's holiness and
our sinfulness, which is the very first spark of light in us, has no
place in us" [ALFORD].
If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.
9. confess—with the lips,
speaking from a contrite heart; involving also confession to our
fellow men of offenses committed against them.
he—God.
faithful—to His own
promises; "true" to His word.
just—Not merely the
mercy, but the justice or righteousness of God is set
forth in the redemption of the penitent believer in Christ. God's
promises of mercy, to which He is faithful, are in accordance
with His justice.
to—Greek, "in
order that." His forgiving us our sins and cleansing us,
c., is in furtherance of the ends of His eternal faithfulness
and justice.
forgive—remitting the
guilt.
cleanse—purify from all
filthiness, so that henceforth we more and more become free from the
presence of sin through the Spirit of sanctification (compare and above, see on 1 John 1:7).
unrighteousness—offensive
to Him who "is just" or righteous; called "sin,"
1 John 1:7, because "sin is
the transgression of the law," and the law is the expression of
God's righteousness, so that sin is unrighteousness.
If we say that we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us.
10. Parallel to .
we have not sinned—referring
to the commission of actual sins, even after regeneration and
conversion; whereas in 1 John 1:8,
"we have no sin," refers to the present GUILT
remaining (until cleansed) from the actual sins committed, and
to the SIN of our corrupt
old nature still adhering to us. The perfect "have . . . sinned"
brings down the commission of sins to the present time, not merely
sins committed before, but since, conversion.
we make him a liar—a
gradation; 1 John 1:6, "we
lie"; 1 John 1:8, "we
deceive ourselves"; worst of all, "we make Him a liar,"
by denying His word that all men are sinners (compare 1 John 1:8).
his word is not in us—"His
word," which is "the truth" (1 John 1:8), accuses us truly; by denying it we drive it from our hearts
(compare John 5:38). Our
rejection of "His word" in respect to our being sinners,
implies as the consequence our rejection of His word and will
revealed in the law and Gospel as a whole; for these
throughout rest on the fact that we have sinned, and have
sin.