The Epistles of John: A Verse-by-Verse Exposition
By F. F. Bruce
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In this careful verse-by-verse exposition, F.F. Bruce brings out the message of John's three short letters, which are as relevant today as when they were written. "The one effective antidote to worldliness," Bruce says, for instance, "is to have one's heart so filled with the Father's love that it has no room for any love that is incompatible with that."
Drawing on his years of scholarship, Bruce presents the meaning of these three epistles in a straightforward and understandable way, touching only lightly on textual, critical, and linguistic questions. "An excellent guide," said Christianity Today. Bruce "speaks up with grace and clarity," said The Christian Century.
F. F. Bruce
F. F. Bruce (1910-1990) was Rylands Professor of Biblical Criticism and Exegesis at the University of Manchester. Trained as a classicist, Bruce authored more than 50 books on the New Testament and served as the editor for the New International Commentary on the New Testament from 1962 until his death in 1990.
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Reviews for The Epistles of John
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- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5An excellent work and an enjoyable read! Truly inspired, uplifting, and educational. The author truly understands John's letters and the Apostle John in general.
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The Epistles of John - F. F. Bruce
GENERAL INTRODUCTION
I. BACKGROUND AND OCCASION OF THE THREE EPISTLES
THE R OMAN PROVINCE OF A SIA OCCUPIED roughly the western third of the peninsula which we call Asia Minor. The Romans gave it the name of Asia because it was the first territory on the continent of Asia to come under the direct control of the Roman state. For a century and a half before its incorporation in the Roman Empire, this territory had constituted the kingdom of Pergamum, whose rulers were friends and allies of Rome. When the last king of Pergamum died, in 133 BC , he bequeathed his realm to the Roman senate and people, and after deliberation they decided to accept the bequest. After reorganization as a Roman province, it was governed by a senior ex-magistrate called a proconsul, who was appointed by the senate, normally for one year. The province is therefore referred to sometimes as proconsular Asia.
To begin with, the proconsul’s seat of government was at Pergamum, the capital of the former kingdom, but later it was moved to Ephesus, and there it remained throughout New Testament times. Asia was regarded as the wealthiest of the Roman provinces; its cities had been centers of Greek culture for many centuries.
Christianity may have been introduced to the province of Asia by individuals before the middle of the first century AD, but it was effectively established in the province during Paul’s Ephesian ministry, to be dated probably from the late summer of AD 52 to the spring of 55. So thoroughly did Paul and his colleagues prosecute the work of evangelization during those years that not only the people of Ephesus but all the residents of Asia heard the word of the Lord, both Jews and Greeks
(Acts 19:10). The seven churches of Revelation, and other churches besides, were founded at that time, and the continuous history of Christianity in that territory can be traced from then until the Graeco-Turkish exchange of populations in 1923.
The intellectual activity of the cities of Asia could not leave the gospel unaffected. Among the Jews of the province—especially in Asian Phrygia, its most easterly region—there is ample contemporary evidence of syncretism in life and thought, of the fusion of their ancestral beliefs and practices with features from the older ethnic religions of Asia Minor and from more recent mystery cults and philosophical trends. The same sort of thing was not long in making its appearance among the Christians of the province. There is an ominous note in Paul’s Miletus address to the elders of the Ephesian church, when they are warned that from their own ranks will arise men speaking perverse things, to draw away the disciples after them
(Acts 20:30). An outstanding example of the threat presented by syncretistic tendencies to the unique essence of Christianity is the Colossian heresy
which, only a few years after Paul’s Ephesian ministry, was rife in the church of Colossae and other cities of the Lycus valley (in Asian Phrygia) and which is refuted in the Epistle to the Colossians (c. AD 61). Worse was to follow—a landslide away from apostolic teaching¹ is implied in the words of 2 Timothy 1:15, You are aware that all who are in Asia turned away from me.
The sixties of the first century, however, saw a welcome revitalizing of apostolic Christianity in proconsular Asia. This was due to the immigration of a number of Christians from Palestine shortly before the outbreak of the Jewish War in AD 66. These were not the more Judaistic members of the Jerusalem church who around the same time migrated to Transjordan, but outward-looking members of the church of Caesarea and other churches in the tradition of those Hellenistic believers who were dispersed after the martyrdom of Stephen and inaugurated the Gentile mission in Syrian Antioch and elsewhere. Those who migrated to proconsular Asia included some very eminent Christians—Philip the evangelist and his daughters, for example, whose tombs were pointed out some generations later in Hierapolis in Asian Phrygia, and John the disciple of the Lord,
who is associated mainly with Ephesus². The identity of this John has been much discussed. Those writers who mention him regard him as a companion of our Lord and an eyewitness of His ministry. More important for our purpose is his relation to the unnamed author of the three Epistles of John. Suffice it to say that here it is accepted that the Epistles were written by this John the disciple of the Lord,
and also that he is the Fourth Evangelist.³
John lived to a great age, until the time came when he was the sole survivor of those who had been in close contact with Jesus before His death and resurrection. It needs little imagination to understand how eagerly he would be sought out and listened to by people who valued firsthand information about the deeds and words of his Master and theirs. We know of two leaders in the Asian churches in the first half of the second century who never forgot what they had heard from John— Polycarp, bishop of Smyrna, who told his own young disciples in turn of his intercourse with John and the others who had seen the Lord,
⁴ and Papias, bishop of Hierapolis, who thought that what he could get from books would not help him so much as what came from a living and abiding voice.
⁵
These men, and others before them, attached special importance to the testimony of a man like John when teachers came along presenting a new brand of doctrine with the claim that it was the original and authentic doctrine of Christ—perhaps secretly committed by Him to chosen vessels and transmitted orally by them until the time was ripe for wider publicity. What were Christians to do or say when claims like these were put before them? A decision on their validity was not so easy to reach in days before the New Testament documents were collected and in general circulation. It was not altogether satisfactory to reply, This is quite different from what we have always been taught
—such a reply might betoken an excessively conservative clinging to tradition, and the new teachers might say that the doctrine which they brought was part of all the truth
into which Jesus said the Holy Spirit would lead His followers. Moreover, the new brand of doctrine would probably be so completely in accordance with the prevailing climate of opinion that in the eyes of many thinking people this was manifestly the way in which the gospel was to be restated
for their day if it was to have any chance of acceptance and indeed survival.
One form of restating
the gospel which was very much in keeping with the current climate of opinion at the end of the first Christian century was that which its critics called Docetism.
⁶ It sprang from a dualistic interpretation of the world, widely accepted in those days, which viewed matter as essentially evil and spirit as essentially good. There could be no peaceful coexistence between the two. In particular, it was unthinkable that there could be any direct relation between the supreme God, who was pure spirit and essentially good, and the material universe, which by definition was essentially evil. The biblical doctrine of creation must therefore be jettisoned, and the material universe must be regarded as the work of some inferior power or demiurge.
⁷ The biblical doctrine of resurrection must also be jettisoned, for it was unacceptable to the Greek mind in any case, as reactions to Paul’s teaching in Athens and Corinth showed (Acts 17:32; 1 Corinthians 15:12 ff.). But the doctrine of resurrection was logically excluded by the dualistic worldview, which thought of the climax of redemption as the final liberation of the soul from its bodily shackles, not the receiving of a new (albeit spiritual
) body as its vehicle of communication with a new environment.
It is in special relation to the person of Christ that this dualistic outlook gave rise to Docetism. The first disciples of Christ knew their Master to be a real human being; they also confessed him to be the Son of God, their Divine Lord. When this confession was understood—as it was by many Greek Christians—in metaphysical terms, it raised problems which were hotly debated in the great Christological controversies of the following centuries. To thoroughgoing dualists the problem was simply this: How could the true God indwell a human body of flesh and blood? The general Docetic answer to this problem was that, since such an indwelling was plainly impossible, the human body of flesh and blood was not a real one but an imaginary one. It only seemed to be so.⁸
One special variety of Docetism is associated with the name of Cerinthus, who flourished in the nineties of the first century, and who is traditionally represented as the bête noire of John the disciple of the Lord.⁹ Cerinthus, a man trained in Egypt but resident in the province of Asia, accepted the general dualistic worldview (including the creation of matter by an inferior power), but propounded a novel Christology. He distinguished the man Jesus (the son of Joseph and Mary, endowed with greater virtue and wisdom than other men), from the Christ,
who descended on Jesus in the form of a dove after He was baptized, empowering Him to perform miracles and proclaim the unknown Father,
but who left Him before He died, so that Jesus suffered and rose again, while the Christ remained immune from suffering, since He was a spiritual being.
¹⁰ In spite of second-century tradition, however, it is not certain that it is his views exclusively that are controverted in 1 and 2 John.¹¹
John writes with conscious authority, whether he is refuting the claims of those whose teaching denies that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh
or directing churches to welcome visitors who bring the true gospel but to give no countenance to any doctrine which is inconsistent with it. If in some places there is a tendency to disregard his authority, as there was in the church ruled by Diotrephes, he is confident that a personal visit will suffice to reestablish his authority; Diotrephes will be cut down to size. John’s authority in this circle of churches is comparable to Paul’s in his Gentile mission field. I will come to you soon, if the Lord wills,
writes Paul to the Corinthians, and I will find out not the talk of these arrogant people but their power
(1 Corinthians 4:19).
But whereas Paul invokes the apostolic authority committed to him by the Lord, John does not argue in these terms. The word apostle
is absent from his Epistles, and in the Gospel it occurs only once, and that in the general sense of messenger
(John 13:16, he who is sent
). John is the bearer and representative of what we should call apostolic tradition
(although he does not describe it as apostolic
); indeed, because of his personal association with the earliest days of Christianity, he is the embodiment of that tradition¹²—more particularly, the tradition as it is set forth in his Gospel.¹³ This tradition, together with him who embodies it, is vested with the authority of the Lord Himself—not only because it stems from Him as a matter of history but also because it is continuously validated by Him as the exalted and ever-living One, who is still active in the world by His Spirit in His servants.¹⁴ This is the authority by which John acts and writes, and of those who repudiated his authority he might well say, like Paul, if I come again I will not spare them—since you desire proof that Christ is speaking in me
(2 Corinthians 13:2 f.).
II. THE THREE EPISTLES IN THE EARLY CHURCH
The first epistle of John was known in the province of Asia quite early in the second century. Ignatius, bishop of Antioch (martyred c. AD 110), has one or two possible allusions to it, especially in a passage in his letter to the Ephesian church where he speaks of the incarnation as God having become in flesh,
¹⁵ which could be a typically Ignatian paraphrase of 1 John 4:2, 3. A telescoped quotation of these same two verses appears in Polycarp’s letter to the Philippian church (c. AD 120),¹⁶ and Polycarp’s contemporary Papias is said by Eusebius to have made use of testimonies from the former epistle of John.
¹⁷ Other second-century writers in whom traces of this epistle have been recognized are the Gnostic Valentinus,¹⁸ Justin Martyr in Rome,¹⁹ and the anonymous author of the Letter to Diognetus.²⁰
Later in the century, Irenaeus of Lyons²¹ and Tertullian of Carthage²² quote it explicitly and repeatedly, ascribing it to John the apostle and according it therefore unquestioned authority.
Towards the end of the second century two, if not three, of the epistles were not only known in the Roman church but recognized as canonical. The Muratorian list of New Testament books, drawn up at Rome c. AD 190 and preserved in a single incomplete Latin manuscript of the seventh or eighth century, discovered and published in 1740 by Cardinal L. A. Muratori (whence its designation) and now in the Ambrosian Library at Milan, gives a free quotation from the opening words of 1 John in connection with its account of the Fourth Gospel. The author of the list, wishing to emphasize that this Gospel presents the evidence of an eyewitness, goes on to say,
What wonder, then, that John in his epistles also should lay such bold claim to the following experiences, one by one, saying of himself, What we have seen with our eyes and heard with our ears and our hands have handled, this is what we write to you.
For in these words he claims to be not only a spectator and hearer, but also a writer of all the Lord’s wonderful works in order.²³
Later in the list, two epistles of the aforementioned John
are said to be included in catholica,²⁴ which presumably means that they were accepted in the Catholic Church. The identity of these two is uncertain. The compiler of the list may mean two in addition to the one already quoted (i.e. 2 and 3 John in addition to 1 John);²⁵ he may mean 1 John together with one of the others; or, if 2 and 3 John were taken together as one (which is not very probable), he may mean 1 John together with 2 and 3 John. Most probably he means 1 and 2 John. There is evidence that 3 John was rendered into Latin by another (and later?) translator than 1 and 2 John.²⁶ This being so, the Muratorian author, and the church whose New Testament canon he recorded, may well have known only 1 and 2 John.
This was the situation at the same time in Alexandria. Clement of Alexandria appears to have known 1 and 2 John only,²⁷ whereas one or two generations later, in that same city, Origen and Dionysius knew 3 John as well. An African list of New Testament books of c. AD 360 (the Cheltenham or Mommsenian Canon) indicates that when it was drawn up three epistles of John
were recognized in the church of Carthage, but the added words one only
suggest that some conservative spirits were none too sure about 2 and 3 John. The evidence points to the canonical recognition of 1, 2 and 3 John in stages, one at a time.
Origen (c. AD 231) says that John has left an epistle of a very few lines and, it may be, a second and a third, for not all say that these [i.e. the second and the third] are genuine.
²⁸ According to Eusebius, writing c. AD 325, 1 John in his days belonged to the acknowledged books
(homologoumena), while 2 and 3 John were disputed
(anti-legomena), because they might be the work of the evangelist or of someone else with the same name.
²⁹ The authorized version of the Bible in Syriac (the Peshitta), published early in the fifth century, included 1 John but not 2 and 3 John. Not until the Philoxenian version of AD 508 were these two epistles (with 2 Peter, Jude and Revelation) included in an edition of the Syriac New Testament.
The first epistle belongs properly to the group of New Testament documents called Catholic (or General) Epistles, because they are not addressed to any one person or community. Origen applies the epithet catholic
to 1 John,³⁰ and his disciple Dionysius, bishop of Alexandria, also speaks of 1 John as John’s catholic epistle
³¹—perhaps in contrast to 2 and 3 John, which are addressed to specified persons.³² Later, however, 2 and 3 John were also reckoned among the seven Catholic Epistles (James, 1 and 2 Peter, 1, 2 and 3 John, Jude);³³ in this broader sense the term catholic
meant more or less canonical
³⁴—canonical, that is to say, in addition to the Pauline epistles.
All three epistles are included in Athanasius’s list of twenty-seven New Testament books issued in AD 367, and in the similar lists approved by the Councils of Hippo (393) and Carthage (397).