1 John 2: 3-6 | |
3. And hereby we do know that we know him, if we keep his commandments. | 3. Atque in hoc cognoscimus quod cognovimus eum, si praecepta ejus servamus. |
4. He that saith, I know him, and keepeth not his commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him | 4. Qui dicit, Novi eum, et praecepta ejus non servat, mendax est, et in eo veritas non est. |
5. But whoso keepeth his word, in him verily is the love of God perfected: hereby know we that we are in him | 5. Qui vero servat ejus sermonem, vert in ipso charitas Dei perfecta est; in hoc cognoscimus quod in ipso sumus. |
6. He that saith he abideth in him, ought himself also so to walk,even as he walked. | 6. Qui dicit se in eo manere, debet, sicut ille ambulavit, ita et ipse ambulare. |
3.
John then takes this principle as granted, that the knowledge of God is efficacious. He hence concludes, that they by no means know God who keep not his precepts or commandments. Plato, though groping in darkness, yet denied that "the beautiful" which he imagined, could be known, without filling man with the admiration of itself; so he says in his Phaedrus and in other places. How then is it possible for thee to know God, and to be moved by no feeling? Nor does it indeed proceed only from God's nature, that to know him is immediately to love him; but the Spirit also, who illuminates our minds, inspires our hearts with a feeling conformable to our knowledge. At the same time the knowledge of God leads us to fear him and to love him. For we cannot know him as Lord and Father, as he shews himself, without being dutiful children and obedient servants. In short, the doctrine of the gospel is a lively mirror in which we contemplate the image of God, and are transformed into the same, as Paul teaches us in 2 Corinthians 3:18. Where, therefore, there is no pure conscience, nothing can be there but an empty phantom of knowledge.
We must notice the order when he says,
But we are not hence to conclude that faith recumbs on works; for though every one receives a testimony to his faith from his works, yet it does not follow that it is founded on them, since they are added as an evidence. Then the certainty of faith depends on the grace of Christ alone; but piety and holiness of life distinguish true faith from theft knowledge of God which is fictitious and dead; for the truth is, that those who are in Christ, as Paul says, have put off the old man. (Colossians 3:9.)
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5.
"Now, O Israel, what does the Lord require of thee, but to fear and love him, and to walk in his precepts?"
(Deuteronomy 10:12.)
And again he says,
"Choose life, even to love the Lord thy God, to serve him and to cleave to him." (Deuteronomy 30:19, 20)
For the law, which is spiritual, does not command only external works, but enjoins this especially, to love God with the whole heart.
That no mention is here made of what is due to men, ought not to be viewed as unreasonable; for brotherly love flows immediately from the love of God, as we shall hereafter see. Whosoever, then, desires that his life should be approved by God, must have all his doings directed to this end. If any one objects and says, that no one has ever been found who loved God thus perfectly; to this I reply, that it is sufficient, provided every one aspired to this perfection according to the measure of grace given unto him. In the meantime, the definition is, that the perfect love of God is the complete keeping of his law. To make progress in this as in knowledge, is what we ought to do.
6.
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