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Text -- 1 John 3:15 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
3:15 Everyone who hates his fellow Christian is a murderer, and you know that no murderer has eternal life residing in him.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Wicked | TEN COMMANDMENTS, THE | Sin | Malice | MURDER | Life | JOHANNINE THEOLOGY, 2 | Homicide | Hatred | HATE; HATRED | Commandments | Church | Brother | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College , Lapide

Other
Evidence

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: 1Jo 3:15 - -- A murderer ( anthrōpoktonos ). Old compound (Euripides) from anthrōpos (man) and kteinō (to kill), a man-killer, in N.T. only here and Joh ...

A murderer ( anthrōpoktonos ).

Old compound (Euripides) from anthrōpos (man) and kteinō (to kill), a man-killer, in N.T. only here and Joh 8:44 (of Satan).

Robertson: 1Jo 3:15 - -- No ( pās - ou ). According to current Hebraistic idiom = oudeis as in 1Jo 2:19, 1Jo 2:21.

No ( pās - ou ).

According to current Hebraistic idiom = oudeis as in 1Jo 2:19, 1Jo 2:21.

Robertson: 1Jo 3:15 - -- Abiding ( menousan ). Present active feminine accusative predicate participle of menō , "a continuous power and a communicated gift"(Westcott).

Abiding ( menousan ).

Present active feminine accusative predicate participle of menō , "a continuous power and a communicated gift"(Westcott).

Vincent: 1Jo 3:15 - -- Murderer ( ἀθρωποκτόνος ) Manslayer. Only here and Joh 8:44, of the devil .

Murderer ( ἀθρωποκτόνος )

Manslayer. Only here and Joh 8:44, of the devil .

Vincent: 1Jo 3:15 - -- Hath eternal life, etc. The contrast is suggestive between the sentiment embodied in this statement and that of Pagan antiquity respecting murder...

Hath eternal life, etc.

The contrast is suggestive between the sentiment embodied in this statement and that of Pagan antiquity respecting murder, in the Homeric age, for instance. " With regard to the practice of homicide, the ordinary Greek morality was extremely loose.... Among the Greeks, to have killed a man was considered in the light of misfortune, or, at most, a prudential error, when the perpetrator of the act had come among strangers as a fugitive for protection and hospitality. On the spot, therefore, where the crime occurred, it could stand only as in the nature of a private and civil wrong, and the fine payable was regarded, not (which it might have been) as a mode, however defective, of marking any guilt in the culprit, but as, on the whole, an equitable satisfaction to the wounded feelings of the relatives and friends, or as an actual compensation for the lost services of the dead man. The religion of the age takes no notice of the act whatever" (Gladstone " Homer and the Homeric Age," ii., 436).

Wesley: 1Jo 3:15 - -- He, I say, abideth in spiritual death, is void of the life of God. For whosoever hateth his brother, and there is no medium between loving and hating ...

He, I say, abideth in spiritual death, is void of the life of God. For whosoever hateth his brother, and there is no medium between loving and hating him, is, in God's account, a murderer: every degree of hatred being a degree of the same temper which moved Cain to murder his brother.

Wesley: 1Jo 3:15 - -- But every loving believer hath. For love is the beginning of eternal life. It is the same, in substance, with glory.

But every loving believer hath. For love is the beginning of eternal life. It is the same, in substance, with glory.

JFB: 1Jo 3:15 - -- Equivalent to "loveth not" (1Jo 3:14); there is no medium between the two. "Love and hatred, like light and darkness, life and death, necessarily repl...

Equivalent to "loveth not" (1Jo 3:14); there is no medium between the two. "Love and hatred, like light and darkness, life and death, necessarily replace, as well as necessarily exclude, one another" [ALFORD].

JFB: 1Jo 3:15 - -- Because indulging in that passion, which, if followed out to its natural consequences, would make him one. "Whereas, 1Jo 3:16 desires us to lay down o...

Because indulging in that passion, which, if followed out to its natural consequences, would make him one. "Whereas, 1Jo 3:16 desires us to lay down our lives for the brethren; duels require one (awful to say!) to risk his own life, rather than not deprive another of life" [BENGEL]. God regards the inward disposition as tantamount to the outward act which would flow from it. Whomsoever one hates, one wishes to be dead.

JFB: 1Jo 3:15 - -- Such a one still "abideth in death." It is not his future state, but his present, which is referred to. He who hates (that is, loveth not) his brother...

Such a one still "abideth in death." It is not his future state, but his present, which is referred to. He who hates (that is, loveth not) his brother (1Jo 3:14), cannot in this his present state have eternal life abiding in him.

Clarke: 1Jo 3:15 - -- Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer - He has the same principle in him which was in Cain, and it may lead to the same consequences

Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer - He has the same principle in him which was in Cain, and it may lead to the same consequences

Clarke: 1Jo 3:15 - -- No murderer hath eternal life - Eternal life springs from an indwelling God; and God cannot dwell in the heart where hatred and malice dwell. This t...

No murderer hath eternal life - Eternal life springs from an indwelling God; and God cannot dwell in the heart where hatred and malice dwell. This text has been quoted to prove that no murderer can be saved. This is not said in the text; and there have been many instances of persons who have been guilty of murder having had deep and genuine repentance, and who doubtless found mercy from his hands who prayed for his murderers, Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do! It is, however, an awful text for the consideration of those who shed human blood on frivolous pretences, or in those wars which have their origin in the worst passions of the human heart.

Calvin: 1Jo 3:15 - -- 15.Is a murderer To stimulate us still more to love, he shews how detestable before God is hatred. There is no one who dreads not a murderer; nay, we...

15.Is a murderer To stimulate us still more to love, he shews how detestable before God is hatred. There is no one who dreads not a murderer; nay, we all execrate the very name. But the Apostle declares that all who hate their brethren are murderers. He could have said nothing more atrocious; nor is what is said hyperbolical, for we wish him to perish whom we hate. It does not matter if a man keeps his hands from mischief; for the very desire to do harm, as well as the attempt, is condemned before God: nay, when we do not ourselves seek to do an injury, yet if we wish an evil to happen to our brother from some one else, we are murderers.

Then the Apostle defines the thing simply as it is, when he ascribes murder to hatred. Hence is proved the folly of men, that though they abominate the name, they yet make no account of the crime itself. Whence is this? even because the external face of things engrosses our thoughts; but the inward feeling comes to an account before God. Let no one therefore extenuate any more so grievous an evil. Let us learn to refer our judgments to the tribunal of God.

Defender: 1Jo 3:15 - -- Compare Mat 5:21, Mat 5:22.

Compare Mat 5:21, Mat 5:22.

Defender: 1Jo 3:15 - -- The meaning here is actually "be laying down." That is, for our brethren's sake we ought to serve as a daily "living sacrifice" (Rom 12:1)."

The meaning here is actually "be laying down." That is, for our brethren's sake we ought to serve as a daily "living sacrifice" (Rom 12:1)."

TSK: 1Jo 3:15 - -- hateth : Gen 27:41; Lev 19:16-18; 2Sa 13:22-28; Pro 26:24-26; Mat 5:21, Mat 5:22, Mat 5:28; Mar 6:19; Act 23:12, Act 23:14; Jam 1:15, Jam 4:1, Jam 4:2...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 1Jo 3:15 - -- Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer ... - That is, he has the spirit of a murderer; he has that which, if it were acted out, would lead ...

Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer ... - That is, he has the spirit of a murderer; he has that which, if it were acted out, would lead him to commit murder, as it did Cain. The private malice, the secret grudge, the envy which is cherished in the heart, is murderous in its tendency, and were it not for the outward restraints of human laws, and the dread of punishment, it would often lead to the act of murder. The apostle does not say that he who hates his brother, though he does not in fact commit murder, is guilty to the same degree as if he had actually done it; but he evidently means to say that the spirit which would lead to murder is there, and that God will hold him responsible for it. Nothing is missing but the removal of outward restraints to lead to the commission of the open deed, and God judges people as he sees them to be "in their hearts."What a fearful declaration, then, is this! How many real murderers there are on the earth besides those who are detected and punished, and besides those open violators of the laws of God and man who go at large! And who is them that should not feel humbled and penitent in view of his own heart, and grateful for that sovereign mercy which has restrained him from open acts of guilt - for who is there who has not at some period of his life, and perhaps often, indulged in feelings of hatred, and envy, and malice toward others, which, if acted out, would have led to the commission of the awful crime of taking human life? Any man may well shudder at the remembrance of the secret sins of his own heart, and at the thought of what he would have been but for the restraining grace of God. And how wonderful is that grace which, in the case of the true Christian, not only restrains and checks, but which effectually subdues all these feelings, and implants in their place the principles of love!

Poole: 1Jo 3:15 - -- That life into which the regenerate are begotten, is nothing else than the beginning or first principle of eternal life, Joh 4:14 , whereof they can...

That life into which the regenerate are begotten, is nothing else than the beginning or first principle of eternal life, Joh 4:14 , whereof they cannot but be destitute who hate their brethren; a thing so contrary to the Divine life, nature, and image, and which makes the person affected with it, in the temper and habit of his mind, a very murderer.

Haydock: 1Jo 3:14-15 - -- We know that we have passed from death to life; i.e. from the death of sin to the life of grace: we know it by a moral certainty, when we experience ...

We know that we have passed from death to life; i.e. from the death of sin to the life of grace: we know it by a moral certainty, when we experience in our heart a love of our neighbour. ---

He that loveth not God and his neighbour, abideth in death. He that hateth his brother with a mortal hatred, or to a considerable degree, is a murderer. (Witham)

Gill: 1Jo 3:15 - -- Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer,.... A soul murderer, as the Ethiopic version renders it; not only of himself, for every sinner, by sinning...

Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer,.... A soul murderer, as the Ethiopic version renders it; not only of himself, for every sinner, by sinning, wrongs and destroys his own soul; but of his brother whom he hates: he is a murderer of him in his heart, even as he that lusts after a woman hath committed adultery with her in his heart, out of which arise murders, as well as adulteries; it is not only taking away life, but also causeless anger, malice, and hatred, that is a breach of the sixth command; see Mat 5:21;

and ye know that no murderer hath eternal life abiding in him; he has not the grace of life, or the beginning of eternal life in him; he has no meetness for it, being unregenerate; and no right unto it, being unrighteous; nor has he the earnest and pledge of it, being destitute of the Spirit of God; all which a regenerate man has, and has them abiding in him: not but that the sin of murder may be forgiven; a man guilty of it may truly repent, and have pardoning grace applied unto him, and enjoy eternal life, through the grace of the Spirit, and the blood and righteousness of Christ; but without these he is so far from having eternal life, that he is not only punishable with a corporeal death, according to the laws of God and man; but he is exposed unto, and will die the second, or an eternal death.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 1Jo 3:15 The verb μένω (menw) in 3:15 refers to a spiritual reality (eternal life) which in this case does not reside in the person in ques...

Geneva Bible: 1Jo 3:15 ( 15 ) Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer: and ye know that no murderer hath eternal life abiding in him. ( 15 ) A confirmation: Whoever is a...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 1Jo 3:1-24 - --1 He declares the singular love of God towards us, in making us his sons;3 who therefore ought obediently to keep his commandments;11 as also to love ...

MHCC: 1Jo 3:11-15 - --We should love the Lord Jesus, value his love, and therefore love all our brethren in Christ. This love is the special fruit of our faith, and a certa...

Matthew Henry: 1Jo 3:14-19 - -- The beloved apostle can scarcely touch upon the mention of sacred love, but he must enlarge upon the enforcement of it, as here he does by divers ar...

Barclay: 1Jo 3:10-18 - --This is a passage with a closely-knit argument and a kind of parenthesis in the middle. As Westcott has it: "Life reveals the children of God." Ther...

Barclay: 1Jo 3:10-18 - --In this passage there is a parenthesis; we return to it now. The parenthesis is 1Jo 3:11and the conclusion drawn from it is in 1Jo 3:12. The Christi...

Constable: 1Jo 3:1--5:14 - --III. Living as children of God 3:1--5:13 "In the second division of this document (3:1-5:13) John concentrates o...

Constable: 1Jo 3:4--5:14 - --B. Conditions for Living as God's Children 3:4-5:13 Having stated the theme of this section of the epist...

Constable: 1Jo 3:10-24 - --2. Obeying God reaffirmed 3:10-24 This second condition for living as children of God reemphasiz...

Constable: 1Jo 3:12-15 - --Disobedience and obedience contrasted 3:12-15 3:12 Cain's murder of Abel evidenced control by Satan rather than by God. Cain was jealous because of Ab...

College: 1Jo 3:1-24 - --1 JOHN 3 B. GOD'S LOVE FOR HIS CHILDREN (3:1-3) 1 How great is the love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God! And...

Lapide: 1Jo 3:1-24 - --CHAPTER 3 Ver. 1 . — Behold what great love the Father hath bestowed on us (unworthy, enemies and sinners as we are), that we should be called, ...

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Commentary -- Other

Evidence: 1Jo 3:15 Always be ready to " earnestly contend for the faith" ( Jud 1:3 ). Learn how to prove God’s existence. Study the theory of evolution and the eviden...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: 1 John (Book Introduction) THE FIRST EPISTLE OF JOHN ABOUT a.d. 85 TO 90 By Way of Introduction Relation to the Fourth Gospel There are few scholars who deny that the Ep...

JFB: 1 John (Book Introduction) AUTHORSHIP.--POLYCARP, the disciple of John [Epistle to the Philippians, 7], quotes 1Jo 4:3. EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 3.39] says of PAPIAS, a...

JFB: 1 John (Outline) THE WRITER'S AUTHORITY AS AN EYEWITNESS TO THE GOSPEL FACTS, HAVING SEEN, HEARD, AND HANDLED HIM WHO WAS FROM THE BEGINNING: HIS OBJECT IN WRITING: H...

TSK: 1 John 3 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 1Jo 3:1, He declares the singular love of God towards us, in making us his sons; 1Jo 3:3, who therefore ought obediently to keep his comm...

Poole: 1 John 3 (Chapter Introduction) JOHN CHAPTER 3

MHCC: 1 John (Book Introduction) This epistle is a discourse upon the principles of Christianity, in doctrine and practice. The design appears to be, to refute and guard against erron...

MHCC: 1 John 3 (Chapter Introduction) (1Jo 3:1, 1Jo 3:2) The apostle admires the love of God in making believers his children. (1Jo 3:3-10) The purifying influence of the hope of seeing C...

Matthew Henry: 1 John (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The First Epistle General of John Though the continued tradition of the church attests that this epistl...

Matthew Henry: 1 John 3 (Chapter Introduction) The apostle here magnifies the love of God in our adoption (1Jo 3:1, 1Jo 3:2). He thereupon argues for holiness (1Jo 3:3), and against sin (v. 4-19...

Barclay: 1 John (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO THE FIRST LETTER OF JOHN A Personal Letter And Its Background First John is entitled a letter but it has no opening address nor c...

Barclay: 1 John 3 (Chapter Introduction) Remember The Privileges Of The Christian Life (2Jo_3:1-2) Remember The Possibilities Of The Christian Life (2Jo_3:1-2 Continued) The Obligation Of...

Constable: 1 John (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical Background This epistle does not contain the name of its write...

Constable: 1 John (Outline) Outline I. Introduction: the purpose of the epistle 1:1-4 II. Living in the light 1:5-2:29 ...

Constable: 1 John 1 John Bibliography Bailey, Mark L., and Thomas L. Constable. The New Testament Explorer. Nashville: Word Publi...

Haydock: 1 John (Book Introduction) THE FIRST EPISTLE OF ST. JOHN, THE APOSTLE. INTRODUCTION. This epistle was always acknowledged for canonical, and written by St. John, the apo...

Gill: 1 John (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 1 JOHN The author of this epistle was John, the son of Zebedee, the disciple whom Jesus loved: he was the youngest of the apostles,...

Gill: 1 John 3 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 1 JOHN 3 In this chapter the apostle exhorts to a holy life and conversation in general, and to the exercise of brotherly love in p...

College: 1 John (Book Introduction) FOREWORD It has been my pleasure to have been associated with Professor Morris Womack since the middle 1960s when we both accepted positions in the L...

College: 1 John (Outline) OUTLINE I. THE WORD OF LIFE - 1:1-4 II. LIFE WITH GOD AND THE WORLD - 1:5-2:27 A. The Way of Light and Darkness - 1:5-7 B. Admitting Our ...

Lapide: 1 John (Book Introduction) PREFACE TO THE FIRST EPISTLE OF S. JOHN. ——o—— I mention three things by way of preface. First, concerning the authority of the Epistle. Se...

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