collapse all  

Text -- 1 John 2:15 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
2:15 Do not love the world or the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him,
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Young Men | Worldliness | WORLD (GENERAL) | Righteous | Love | JOHN, THE EPISTLES OF, PART 1-3 | Greed | God | GOD, 3 | Enmity | Commandments | more
Table of Contents

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

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , PBC , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
, Geneva Bible

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

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: 1Jo 2:15 - -- Love not the world ( mē agapāte ton kosmon ). Prohibition with mē and the present active imperative of agapaō , either stop doing it or do ...

Love not the world ( mē agapāte ton kosmon ).

Prohibition with mē and the present active imperative of agapaō , either stop doing it or do not have the habit of doing it. This use of kosmos is common in John’ s Gospel (Joh 1:10; Joh 17:14.) and appears also in 1Jo 5:19. In epitome the Roman Empire represented it. See it also in Jam 4:4. It confronts every believer today.

Robertson: 1Jo 2:15 - -- If any man love ( ean tis agapāi ). Third-class condition with ean and present active subjunctive of agapaō (same form as indicative), "if an...

If any man love ( ean tis agapāi ).

Third-class condition with ean and present active subjunctive of agapaō (same form as indicative), "if any keep on loving the world."

Robertson: 1Jo 2:15 - -- The love of the Father ( hē agapē tou patros ). Objective genitive, this phrase only here in N.T., with which compare "love of God"in 1Jo 2:5. In...

The love of the Father ( hē agapē tou patros ).

Objective genitive, this phrase only here in N.T., with which compare "love of God"in 1Jo 2:5. In antithesis to love of the world.

Vincent: 1Jo 2:15 - -- The world ( τὸν κόσμον ) See on Joh 1:9.

The world ( τὸν κόσμον )

See on Joh 1:9.

Vincent: 1Jo 2:15 - -- The love of the Father ( ἡ ἀγάπη τοῦ πατρὸς ) The phrase occurs only here in the New Testament. It means love towards ...

The love of the Father ( ἡ ἀγάπη τοῦ πατρὸς )

The phrase occurs only here in the New Testament. It means love towards the Father, yet as generated by the Father's love to man. Compare 1Jo 3:1. See on love of God , 1Jo 2:5.

Vincent: 1Jo 2:15 - -- Is not in him This means more than that he does not love God: rather that the love of God does not dwell in him as the ruling principle of his li...

Is not in him

This means more than that he does not love God: rather that the love of God does not dwell in him as the ruling principle of his life. Westcott cites a parallel from Philo: " It is impossible for love to the world to coexist with love to God, as it is impossible for light and darkness to coexist." Compare Plato. " Evils, Theodorus, can never pass away; for there must always remain something which is antagonist to good. Having no place among the gods in heaven, of necessity they hover around the earthly nature, and this mortal sphere. Wherefore we ought to fly away from earth to heaven as quickly as we can; and to fly away is to become like God, as far as this is possible; and to become like Him is to become holy and just and wise" (" Theaetetus," 176).

Wesley: 1Jo 2:15 - -- Pursue your victory by overcoming the world.

Pursue your victory by overcoming the world.

Wesley: 1Jo 2:15 - -- Seek happiness in visible things, he does not love God.

Seek happiness in visible things, he does not love God.

JFB: 1Jo 2:15 - -- That lieth in the wicked one (1Jo 5:19), whom ye young men have overcome. Having once for all, through faith, overcome the world (1Jo 4:4; 1Jo 5:4), c...

That lieth in the wicked one (1Jo 5:19), whom ye young men have overcome. Having once for all, through faith, overcome the world (1Jo 4:4; 1Jo 5:4), carry forward the conquest by not loving it. "The world" here means "man, and man's world" [ALFORD], in his and its state as fallen from God. "God loved [with the love of compassion] the world," and we should feel the same kind of love for the fallen world; but we are not to love the world with congeniality and sympathy in its alienation from God; we cannot have this latter kind of love for the God-estranged world, and yet have also "the love of the Father in" us.

JFB: 1Jo 2:15 - -- Greek, "nor yet." A man might deny in general that he loved the world, while keenly following some one of THE THINGS IN IT: its riches, honors, or ple...

Greek, "nor yet." A man might deny in general that he loved the world, while keenly following some one of THE THINGS IN IT: its riches, honors, or pleasures; this clause prevents him escaping from conviction.

JFB: 1Jo 2:15 - -- Therefore the warning, though primarily addressed to the young, applies to all.

Therefore the warning, though primarily addressed to the young, applies to all.

JFB: 1Jo 2:15 - -- That is, towards "the Father." The two, God and the (sinful) world, are so opposed, that both cannot be congenially loved at once.

That is, towards "the Father." The two, God and the (sinful) world, are so opposed, that both cannot be congenially loved at once.

Clarke: 1Jo 2:15 - -- Love not the world - Though these several classes were so well acquainted with Divine things, and had all tasted the powers of the world to come: ye...

Love not the world - Though these several classes were so well acquainted with Divine things, and had all tasted the powers of the world to come: yet so apt are men to be drawn aside by sensible things, that the Holy Spirit saw it necessary to caution these against the love of the world, the inordinate desire of earthly things. Covetousness is the predominant vice of old age: Ye fathers, love not the world. The things which are in the world, its profits, pleasures, and honors, have the strongest allurements for youth; therefore, ye young men, little children, and babes, love not the things of this world. Let those hearts abide faithful to God who have taken him for their portion

Clarke: 1Jo 2:15 - -- The love of the Father is not in him - The love of God and the love of earthly things are incompatible. If you give place to the love of the world, ...

The love of the Father is not in him - The love of God and the love of earthly things are incompatible. If you give place to the love of the world, the love of God cannot dwell in you; and if you have not his love, you can have no peace, no holiness, no heaven.

Calvin: 1Jo 2:15 - -- 15.Love not He had said before that the only rule for living religiously, is to love God; but as, when we are occupied with the vain love of the worl...

15.Love not He had said before that the only rule for living religiously, is to love God; but as, when we are occupied with the vain love of the world, we turn away all our thoughts and affections another way, this vanity must first be torn away from us, in order that the love of God may reign within us. Until our minds are cleansed, the former doctrine may be iterated a hundred times, but with no effect: it would be like pouring water on a ball; you can gather, no, not a drop, because there is no empty place to retain water. 68

By the world understand everything connected with the present life, apart from the kingdom of God and the hope of eternal life. So he includes in it corruptions of every kind, and the abyss of all evils. In the world are pleasures, delights, and all those allurements by which man is captivated, so as to withdraw himself from God. 69

Moreover, the love of the world is thus severely condemned, because we must necessarily forget God and ourselves when we regard nothing so much as the earth; and when a corrupt lust of this kind rules in man, and so holds him entangled that he thinks not of the heavenly life, he is possessed by a beastly stupidity.

If any man love the world He proves by an argument from what is contrary, how necessary it is to cast away the love of the world, if we wish to please God; and this he afterwards confirms by an argument drawn from what is inconsistent; for what belongs to the world is wholly at variance with God. We must bear in mind what I have already said, that a corrupt mode of life is here mentioned, which has nothing in common with the kingdom of God, that is, when men become so degenerated, that they are satisfied with the present life, and think no more of immortal life than mute animals. Whosoever, then, makes himself thus a slave to earthly lusts, cannot be of God.

Defender: 1Jo 2:15 - -- Note that this command is absolute, not relative. It does not say: "Don't love the world too much," but "not at all" (Rom 12:2; Gal 1:4; Jam 4:4). The...

Note that this command is absolute, not relative. It does not say: "Don't love the world too much," but "not at all" (Rom 12:2; Gal 1:4; Jam 4:4). The "world" here does not mean the earth or its people (God Himself so loved the world that He gave His Son to save its people), but rather the world as a "system," with its possessions, positions and pleasures (contrast 2Co 6:10)."

TSK: 1Jo 2:15 - -- Love not : 1Jo 4:5, 1Jo 5:4, 1Jo 5:5, 1Jo 5:10; Joh 15:19; Rom 12:2; Gal 1:10; Eph 2:2; Col 3:1, Col 3:2; 1Ti 6:10 If : Mat 6:24; Luk 16:13; Jam 4:4 t...

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 1Jo 2:15 - -- Love not the world - The term "world"seems to be used in the Scriptures in three senses: (1)    As denoting the physical univer...

Love not the world - The term "world"seems to be used in the Scriptures in three senses:

(1)    As denoting the physical universe; the world as it appears to the eye; the world considered as the work of God, as a material creation.

(2)\caps1     t\caps0 he world as applied to the people that reside in it - "the world of mankind."

(3)\caps1     a\caps0 s the dwellers on the earth are by nature without religion, and act under a set of maxims, aims, and principles that have reference only to this life, the term comes to be used with reference to that community; that is, to the objects which they especially seek, and the principles by which they are actuated.

Considered with reference to the first sense of the word, it is not improper to love the world as the work of God, and as illustrating his perfections; for we may suppose that God loves his own works, and it is not wrong that we should find pleasure in their contemplation. Considered with reference to the second sense of the word, it is not wrong to love the people of the world with a love of benevolence, and to have attachment to our kindred and friends who constitute a part of it, though they are not Christians. It is only with reference to the word as used in the third sense that the command here can be understood to be applicable, or that the love of the world is forbidden; with reference to the objects sought, the maxims that prevail, the principles that reign in that community that lives for this world as contradistinguished from the world to come. The meaning is, that we are not to fix our affections on worldly objects - on what the world can furnish - as our portion, with the spirit with which they do who live only for this world, regardless of the life to come. We are not to make this world the object of our chief affection; we are not to be influenced by the maxims and feelings which prevail among those who do. Compare the Rom 12:2 note, and Jam 4:4 note. See also Mat 16:26; Luk 9:25; 1Co 1:20; 1Co 3:19; Gal 4:3; Col 2:8.

Neither the things that are in the world - Referred to in the next verse as "the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life."This explanation shows what John meant by "the things that are in the world."He does not say that we are in no sense to love "anything"that is in the material world; that we are to feel no interest in flowers, and streams, and forests, and fountains; that we are to have no admiration for what God has done as the Creator of all things; that we are to cherish no love for any of the inhabitants of the world, our friends and kindred; or that we are to pursue none of the objects of this life in making provision for our families; but that we are not to love the things which are sought merely to pamper the appetite, to please the eye, or to promote pride in living. These are the objects sought by the people of the world; these are not the objects to be sought by the Christian.

If any man love the world ... - If, in this sense, a person loves the world, it shows that he has no true religion; that is, if characteristically he loves the world as his portion, and lives for that; if it is the ruling principle of his life to gain and enjoy that, it shows that his heart has never been renewed, and that he has no part with the children of God. See the Jam 4:4 note; Mat 6:24 note.

Poole: 1Jo 2:15 - -- What he here means by the forbidden object of our love, must be gathered from his own explication, 1Jo 2:16 . The love itself forbidden, in referenc...

What he here means by the forbidden object of our love, must be gathered from his own explication, 1Jo 2:16 . The love itself forbidden, in reference thereto, is that excess thereof, whereby any adhere to terrene things, as their best good; wherewith, as he adds, any sincere love to God is inconsistent, as Mat 6:24 Luk 14:3 : a consideration so awful and tremendous, that it is not strange the precept it enforces should have so solemn and urgent an introduction.

PBC: 1Jo 2:15 - -- See PB: 1Jo 5:4 1Jo 2:15-17 Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in...

See PB: 1Jo 5:4

1Jo 2:15-17 Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him. 16 For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world. 17 And the world passeth away, and the lust thereof: but he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever.

See Philpot: THE LOVE OF THE WORLD AND THE LOVE OF GOD

Haydock: 1Jo 2:15 - -- If any man love the world, this wicked world, or any thing in it, as pleasures, riches, honours, so that his affections be more upon these then upon ...

If any man love the world, this wicked world, or any thing in it, as pleasures, riches, honours, so that his affections be more upon these then upon God, the charity of the Father (or of God) is not in him. (Witham)

Gill: 1Jo 2:15 - -- Love not the world,.... The habitable earth, the world in which men live; this is not to be loved by saints, as if it was their habitation, where they...

Love not the world,.... The habitable earth, the world in which men live; this is not to be loved by saints, as if it was their habitation, where they are always to be, and so loath to remove from it, seeing they are but sojourners, and pilgrims, and strangers here; this is not their rest, nor dwellingplace, their continuing city, or proper country, that is heaven. Nor should they love the men of the world, who are as they came into it, are of it, and mind the things of it, and lie in wickedness, and are wicked men; for though these are to be loved, as men, as fellow creatures, and their good, both spiritual and temporal, is to be sought, and good is to be done to them, as much as lies in our power, both with respect to soul and body; yet their company is not to be chosen, and preferred to the saints, but to be shunned and avoided, as disagreeable and dangerous; their evil conversation, and wicked communications, are not to be loved, but abhorred, and their works of darkness are to be reproved; nor are their ways to be imitated, and their customs followed, or their manners to be conformed unto:

neither the things that are in the world; good men that are in the world, though they are not of the world, are to be loved; and the kingdom of Christ, though it is not of the world, yet it is in the world, and is to be regarded and promoted to the uttermost; and there are the natural and civil things of the world, called this world's goods, which may be loved within due bounds, and used in a proper manner, though they are not to be loved inordinately and abused. This is the character of worldly men; so the Jews call such, אהבי העולם הזה, "such that love world" g. Near relations and friends in the world, and the blessings of life, may be loved and enjoyed in their way, but not above God and Christ, or so as to take up satisfaction and contentment in them, to make idols of them, and put trust and confidence in them, and prefer them to spiritual and heavenly things, and be so taken with them, as to be unconcerned for, and careless about the other; but the evil things of the world, or at least the evil use of them, and affection for them, are here intended, as appears from the following verse. Now it is chiefly with respect to the fathers, and young men, that this exhortation is given; and the repetition of what is said to them before is made, to introduce this; which is exceeding suitable to their age and characters. Old men are apt to be covetous, and love the world and worldly things, just when they are going out of it, and about to leave them; and young men are apt to be carried away with lust, vanity, ambition, and pride: and therefore, from each of these, the apostle dissuades, from the following arguments,

if any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him; that is, "the love of God", as the Alexandrian copy and the Ethiopic version read; who is the Father of Christ, and of all the elect in him; and who is indeed, by creation, the Father of all men, the Father of spirits, of the souls of men, and of angels, and the Father of mercies and of lights, and by the love of him is meant, either the love with which he loves his people, and which being shed abroad in the heart, attracts the soul to himself, and causes it to love him above the world, and all things in it; and such an one esteems of it, and an interest in it, more than life, and all the enjoyments of it, and is by it loosened to the world, and sets light by it, and can part with all good things in it, and suffer all evil things cheerfully, under the constraints and influence of this love; so that it is a clear case, that when the affections of men are set upon the world, and they are glued to the things of it, their hearts are not warmed with a sense of the love of God, or, that is not sensibly in them, or shed abroad in their hearts: or else by the love of God is meant love to God, which is inconsistent with the love of the world, or with such an inordinate love of mammon, as to serve it; for a man may as soon serve two masters, as serve God and mammon, which he can never do truly, faithfully, and affectionately; and which also is not consistent with friendship with the men of the world, or a conversation and fellowship with them in things that are evil, whether superstition or profaneness; see Mat 6:24.

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

Geneva Bible: 1Jo 2:15 ( 14 ) Love not the ( l ) world, neither the things [that are] in the world. If any man love the world, the ( m ) love of the Father is not in him. (...

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 1Jo 2:1-29 - --1 He comforts them against the sins of infirmity.3 Rightly to know God is to keep his commandments;9 to love our brethren;15 and not to love the world...

MHCC: 1Jo 2:15-17 - --The things of the world may be desired and possessed for the uses and purposes which God intended, and they are to be used by his grace, and to his gl...

Matthew Henry: 1Jo 2:12-17 - -- This new command of holy love, with the incentives thereto, may possibly be directed to the several ranks of disciples that are here accosted. The s...

Barclay: 1Jo 2:15-17 - --It was characteristic of ancient thought to see the world in terms of two conflicting principles. We see this very vividly in Zoroastrianism, the re...

Barclay: 1Jo 2:15-17 - --John has two things to say about the man who loves the world and compromises with it. First, he sets out three sins which are typical of the world. (...

Constable: 1Jo 1:5--3:1 - --II. Living in the light 1:5--2:29 "The teaching of 1 John is concerned essentially with the conditions for true ...

Constable: 1Jo 1:8--3:1 - --B. Conditions for living in the light 1:8-2:29 John articulated four fundamental principles that underli...

Constable: 1Jo 2:12-17 - --3. Rejecting worldliness 2:12-17 John continued to urge his readers to cultivate intimate fellow...

Constable: 1Jo 2:15-17 - --The enticements of the world 2:15-17 John next warned his readers of worldly dangers that face the Christian as he or she seeks to get to know God bet...

College: 1Jo 2:1-29 - --1 JOHN 2 C. THE ATONING SACRIFICE (2:1-2) 1 My dear children, I write this to you so that you will not sin. But if anybody does sin, we have one who...

Lapide: 1Jo 2:1-29 - --CHAPTER 2 Ver. 1.— My little children, these things write I unto you, that ye sin not. At the end of the last chapter it was said that all who wer...

expand all
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 2 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 1Jo 2:1, He comforts them against the sins of infirmity; 1Jo 2:3, Rightly to know God is to keep his commandments; 1Jo 2:9, to love our b...

Poole: 1 John 2 (Chapter Introduction) JOHN CHAPTER 2

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 2 (Chapter Introduction) (1Jo 2:1, 1Jo 2:2) The apostle directs to the atonement of Christ for help against sinful infirmities. (1Jo 2:3-11) The effects of saving knowledge i...

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 2 (Chapter Introduction) Here the apostle encourages against sins of infirmity (1Jo 2:1, 1Jo 2:2), shows the true knowledge and love of God (1Jo 2:3-6), renews the precept ...

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 2 (Chapter Introduction) A Pastor's Concern (2Jo_2:1-2) Jesus Christ, The Paraclete (2Jo_2:1-2 Continued) Jesus Christ, The Propitiation (2Jo_2:1-2 Continued) The True...

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 2 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 1 JOHN 2 In this chapter the apostle comforts the saints under a sense of sin; urges them to an observance of the commandments of G...

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...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


TIP #31: Get rid of popup ... just cross over its boundary. [ALL]
created in 0.11 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA