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Text -- 1 John 1:5 (NET)

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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
And (
Mutual fellowship depends on mutual knowledge (Westcott).

Robertson: 1Jo 1:5 - -- Message ( aggelia ).
Old word (from aggelos , messenger), in N.T. only here and 1Jo 3:11, and note ap' autou (from God like apaggellō in 1Jo 1:...

Robertson: 1Jo 1:5 - -- God is light ( ho theos phōs estin ).
Precisely so the Logos is light (Joh 1:4-9) and what Jesus claimed to be (Joh 8:12). John repeats it in neg...
Vincent: 1Jo 1:5 - -- This then is ( καὶ αὕτη ἐστὶν )
Rev., correctly and literally, and this . According to the proper reading the verb stand...
This then is (
Rev., correctly and literally, and this . According to the proper reading the verb stands first in order (

Vincent: 1Jo 1:5 - -- Message ( ἐπαγγελία )
This word, however, is invariably used in the New Testament in the sense of promise . The best texts read α...

Vincent: 1Jo 1:5 - -- We have heard of Him ( ἀκηκόαμεν ἀπ ' αὐτοῦ )
A form of expression not found elsewhere in John, who commonly uses πα...
We have heard of Him (
A form of expression not found elsewhere in John, who commonly uses

Vincent: 1Jo 1:5 - -- Declare ( ἀναγγέλλομεν )
Compare the simple verb ἀγγέλλειν to bring tidings , Joh 20:18, and only there. Ἀν...
Declare (
Compare the simple verb

Vincent: 1Jo 1:5 - -- God is Light ( Θεὸς φῶς ἐστὶν )
A statement of the absolute nature of God. Not a light, nor the light, with reference to ...
God is Light (
A statement of the absolute nature of God. Not a light, nor the light, with reference to created beings, as the light of men , the light of the world , but simply and absolutely God is light , in His very nature. Compare God is spirit , and see on Joh 4:24 : God is love , 1Jo 4:8, 1Jo 4:16. The expression is not a metaphor. " All that we are accustomed to term light in the domain of the creature, whether with a physical or metaphysical meaning, is only an effluence of that one and only primitive Light which appears in the nature of God" (Ebrard). Light is immaterial, diffusive, pure, and glorious. It is the condition of life.
Physically, it represents glory ; intellectually, truth ; morally, holiness . As immaterial it corresponds to God as spirit ; as diffusive, to God as love ; as the condition of life, to God as life ; as pure and illuminating, to God as holiness and truth . In the Old Testament, light is often the medium of God's visible revelations to men. It was the first manifestation of God in creation. The burning lamp passed between the pieces of the parted victim in God's covenant with Abraham. God went before Israel in a pillar of fire, descended in fire upon Sinai, and appeared in the luminons cloud which rested on the mercy-seat in the most holy place. In classical Greek
" The glory of Him who moveth everything
Doth penetrate the universe, and shine
In one part more and in another less.
Within that heaven which most His light receives
Was I."
" Paradiso ," i ., 1-5 .
In the final, beatific vision, God Himself is imagined as a luminous point which pours its rays through all the spheres, upon which the spirits gazed, and in which they read the past, the present, and the future.
" O grace abundant, by which I presumed
To fix my sight upon the Light Eternal,
So that the seeing I consumed therein!
I saw that in its depth far down is lying
Bound up with love together in one volume,
What through the universe in leaves is scattered;
Substance, and accident, and their operations,
All interfused together in such wise
That what I speak of is one simple light."
" Paradiso ," xxxiii ., 82-90 .
" In presence of that light one such becomes,
That to withdraw therefrom for other prospect
It is impossible he e'er consent;
Because the good, which object of will,
Is gathered all in this, and out of it
That is defective which is perfect there."
" Paradiso ," xxxiii ., 100-105 .
" O Light eterne, sole in thyself that dwellest,
Sole knowest thyself, and, know unto thyself
And knowing, lovest and smilest on thyself!
" Paradiso xxxiii ., 124-126 .
Light enkindles love.
" If in the heat of love I flame upon thee
Beyond the measure that on earth is seen,
So that the valor of thine eyes I vanquish,
Marvel thou not thereat; for this proceeds
From perfect sight, which, as it apprehends,
To the good apprehended moves its feet.
Well I perceive how is already shining
Into thine intellect the eternal Light,
That only seen enkindles always love."
" Paradiso ," v ., 1-9
See also " Paradiso," cantos xxx., xxxi.

Vincent: 1Jo 1:5 - -- In Him is no darkness at all ( καὶ σκοτία οὐκ ἔστιν ἐν αὐτῷ οὐδεμία )
It is characteristic of...
In Him is no darkness at all (
It is characteristic of John to express the same idea positively and negatively. See Joh 1:7, Joh 1:8, Joh 1:20; Joh 3:15, Joh 3:17, Joh 3:20; Joh 4:42; Joh 5:24; Joh 8:35; Joh 10:28; 1Jo 1:6, 1Jo 1:8; 1Jo 2:4, 1Jo 2:27; 1Jo 5:12. According to the Greek order, the rendering is: " And darkness there is not in Him, no, not in any way." For a similar addition of
The Son of God.

Wesley: 1Jo 1:5 - -- The light of wisdom, love, holiness, glory. What light is to the natural eye, that God is to the spiritual eye.
The light of wisdom, love, holiness, glory. What light is to the natural eye, that God is to the spiritual eye.

No contrary principle. He is pure, unmixed light.
First division of the body of the Epistle (compare Introduction).

JFB: 1Jo 1:5 - -- Greek, "announce"; report in turn; a different Greek word from 1Jo 1:3. As the Son announced the message heard from the Father as His apostle, so the ...
Greek, "announce"; report in turn; a different Greek word from 1Jo 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.

JFB: 1Jo 1:5 - -- 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...
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 1Jo 2:8, is called "the true light."

JFB: 1Jo 1:5 - -- Strong negation; Greek, "No, not even one speck of darkness"; no ignorance, error, untruthfulness, sin, or death. John heard this from Christ, not onl...
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.
Clarke: 1Jo 1:5 - -- This then is the message - This is the grand principle on which all depends, which we have heard of απ ’ αυτου, From him; for neither...
This then is the message - This is the grand principle on which all depends, which we have heard of

Clarke: 1Jo 1:5 - -- God is light - The source of wisdom, knowledge, holiness, and happiness; and in him is no darkness at all - no ignorance, no imperfection, no sinful...
God is light - The source of wisdom, knowledge, holiness, and happiness; and in him is no darkness at all - no ignorance, no imperfection, no sinfulness, no misery. And from him wisdom, knowledge, holiness, and happiness are received by every believing soul. This is the grand message of the Gospel, the great principle on which the happiness of man depends. Light implies every essential excellence, especially wisdom, holiness, and happiness. Darkness implies all imperfection, and principally ignorance, sinfulness, and misery. Light is the purest, the most subtile, the most useful, and the most diffusive of all God’ s creatures; it is, therefore, a very proper emblem of the purity, perfection, and goodness of the Divine nature. God is to human soul, what the light is to the world; without the latter all would be dismal and uncomfortable, and terror and death would universally prevail: and without an indwelling God what is religion? Without his all-penetrating and diffusive light, what is the soul of man? Religion would be an empty science, a dead letter, a system unauthoritated and uninfluencing, and the soul a trackless wilderness, a howling waste, full of evil, of terror and dismay, and ever racked with realizing anticipations of future, successive, permanent, substantial, and endless misery. No wonder the apostle lays this down as a first and grand principle, stating it to be the essential message which he had received from Christ to deliver to the world.
Calvin -> 1Jo 1:5
Calvin: 1Jo 1:5 - -- 5.This then is the message, or promise. I do not disapprove of the rendering of the old interpreter, “This is the annunciation,” or message; fo...
5.This then is the message, or promise. I do not disapprove of the rendering of the old interpreter, “This is the annunciation,” or message; for though
But he calls God light, and says that he is in the light; such expressions are not to be too strictly taken. Why Satan is called the prince of darkness is sufficiently evident. When, therefore, God on the other hand is called the Father of light, and also light, we first understand that there is nothing in him but what is bright, pure, and unalloyed; and, secondly, that he makes all things so manifest by his brightness, that he suffers nothing vicious or perverted, no spots or filth, no hypocrisy or fraud, to lie hid. Then the sum of what is said is, that since there is no union between light and darkness, there is a separation between us and God as long as we walk in darkness; and that the fellowship which he mentions, cannot exist except we also become pure and holy.
In him is no darkness at all This mode of speaking is commonly used by John, to amplify what he has affirmed by a contrary negation. Then, the meaning is, that God is such a light, that no darkness belongs to him. It hence follows, that he hates an evil conscience, pollution, and wickedness, and everything that pertains to darkness.
Defender -> 1Jo 1:5
Defender: 1Jo 1:5 - -- Since God is light, dwelling in light (1Ti 6:16), He did not have to "create" light, but simply say: "Let there be light." (Gen 1:3). On the other han...
Since God is light, dwelling in light (1Ti 6:16), He did not have to "create" light, but simply say: "Let there be light." (Gen 1:3). On the other hand, He did create darkness (Isa 45:7) as the initial state of the unformed and uninhabited earth (Gen 1:2). When light appeared to disperse the darkness, it could, thereby, become a model of the shining of spiritual light into a soul born in the darkness of innate sin (2Co 4:6). Physically, God is the light of shining glory, intellectually He is the light of truth, and morally He is the light of holiness. He is also the light of life (Joh 1:4) and of true guidance (Joh 8:12)."
TSK -> 1Jo 1:5
TSK: 1Jo 1:5 - -- the message : 1Jo 3:11; 1Co 11:23
that God : Psa 27:1, Psa 36:9, Psa 84:11; Isa 60:19; Joh 1:4, Joh 1:9, Joh 8:12, Joh 9:5, Joh 12:35, Joh 12:36; 1Ti ...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 1Jo 1:5
Barnes: 1Jo 1:5 - -- This then is the message which we have heard of him - This is the substance of the announcement ( ἐπαγγελία epangelia ) which ...
This then is the message which we have heard of him - This is the substance of the announcement (
That God is light - Light, in the Scriptures, is the emblem of purity, truth, knowledge, prosperity, and happiness - as darkness is of the opposite. John here says that "God is light"-
And in him is no darkness at all - This language is much in the manner of John, not only affirming that a thing is so, but guarding it so that no mistake could possibly be made as to what he meant. Compare Joh 1:1-3. The expression here is designed to affirm that God is absolutely perfect; that there is nothing in him which is in any way imperfect, or which would dim or mar the pure splendor of his character, not even as much as the smallest spot would on the sun. The language is probably designed to guard the mind from an error to which it is prone, that of charging God with being the Author of the sin and misery which exist on the earth; and the apostle seems to design to teach that whatever was the source of sin and misery, it was not in any sense to be charged on God. This doctrine that God is a pure light, John lays down as the substance of all that he had to teach; of all that he had learned from him who was made flesh. It is, in fact, the fountain of all just views of truth on the subject of religion, and all proper views of religion take their origin from this.
Poole -> 1Jo 1:5
Poole: 1Jo 1:5 - -- It being the professed scope and design of his writing, to draw men to a final participation and communion with God in his own blessedness, he recko...
It being the professed scope and design of his writing, to draw men to a final participation and communion with God in his own blessedness, he reckons nothing more necessary to it, than to settle in their minds a right notion of God. Which, that it might be the more regarded, he introduces with a solemn preface;
This then is the message & c., (though the word also signifies promise, it here more fitly bears this rendering), to notify:
1. That this which follows was not an imagination of his own concerning God, but his true representation of himself.
2. That it was given him in charge to be delivered and communicated to others; a message a man neither hath of himself, nor is to reserve to himself,
we have heard it of him, and declare it to you as (consonantly hereto) he speaks. It is the Divine pleasure it should be published to the world, and that all men should know that as from him, i.e. that he is not a Being of mere power, as some, or of mere mercy, as others, are apt to fancy of him, either whereof were a very maimed and most disagreeable notion of the Deity: power without goodness were apt to run into fury; goodness without wisdom and righteousness would as naturally turn to a supine indifferency, and neglect of distinguishing judicially between good and bad; things neither suitable to the Governor of the world, nor possible to the absolutely perfect Being.
God is light in God all true perfections and excellencies must be understood eminently to concur; and of them more could not have been comprehended under one word, (especially that belong to him considered relatively to his creatures, of which perfections it concerns us to have more distinct, formed, positive conceptions in all our applications to him), than are here some way represented or resembled by light, viz. that he is a Being of most lively, penetrative vigour, absolute simplicity, immutability, knowledge, wisdom, sincerity, righteousness, serenity, benignity, joy, and felicity, and especially of most bright and glorious holiness and purity; and in whom
is no darkness at all nothing contrary or repugnant hereto.
PBC -> 1Jo 1:5
PBC: 1Jo 1:5 - -- One of the best ways to test any doctrine with which you are not familiar is to examine its view of God. Error views God inconsistently. You need only...
One of the best ways to test any doctrine with which you are not familiar is to examine its view of God. Error views God inconsistently. You need only examine it carefully to discover the flaw. John introduces us to the basic dishonesty of the Docetic gnostic error in this passage. Those whose teachings he opposed said, " God is both light and darkness." John said God is light only. Remember their essential error in denying that Jesus had a material body. But He " appeared" to have a physical body. The whole of ancient Christian doctrine built itself on the reality of the Incarnation. For them God is not a phantom. He is not a remote uninvolved deity. He is real. He is constantly and intimately involved in the operation of the universe, especially in the lives of His people. The Incarnation proves that to be so. But if in this ultimate act of self-revelation, God worked deceitfully and dishonestly, what does that say about God? He must be both light and darkness. He is involved and He is uninvolved. He is faithful and He is deceptive. At the core, the Docetic god is unpredictable, not to be trusted! If he acted deceptively in his most direct act of self-disclosure, what does that say about his essential character?
John doesn’t simply say that God has light, that He is an " enlightened" being. He says He is light. If He is light, He cannot be darkness too. Light and darkness are opposites. The Docetic god appeared to be human, but Docetists said he was not actually human. He appeared to live in a flesh-body, but they said it was merely appearance, not a real body at all. Reflect on what this means to a believer in such a god. You face a terrible problem and you pray. Your god answers with warm assurances of concern and promises to intervene on your behalf. But the nagging question looms in your mind. Will he follow through with his promise? Or is he playing this deceptive game with you, just as he did in the apparent, but not real, incarnation? How will you leave this encounter with your god? Will you find any comfort? Will you find any relief from your problem? Such a god is worse than no god at all!
In our systematic theology mindset we grab verses here and there, reconstructing the Bible in our neat theological outline of major doctrinal issues. But God didn’t give us the Bible in that form. Systematizing major Bible doctrines serves a valuable purpose. However, for the average believer in the ordinary course of events, the Bible in its real form, the form in which God gave it to us, serves our needs far better. Take this lesson as an example. John begins the letter with the foundational truth of the incarnation. Then he touches on some rather practical implications to our theological perspective. If we reconstruct the Bible in the form of a systematic theology book, we might find one or two of these verses, but not all of them. We’d grasp one truth, but miss others in the context. This approach to Bible study and thinking tends to sterilize important Bible doctrines. They are great brainteasers. They challenge our minds. We find them amazingly interesting. But they contain no essential practical value whatever in the real world where we live! How often have you heard a sermon on a major doctrine of Scripture, but because of the manner in which it was preached, you left the sermon wondering what value that doctrine held for your life? We’ve all heard those sermons. The problem lies with the sermon, not the doctrine. Review the Docetic error. What implications does it have for you? How might it impact your personal discipleship? At first glance, you might think it has little impact at all. As we broaden the context of this passage, John shows us what an amazing impact it really does have on us. Those who worship a god should imitate the object they worship. If the god we worshipped were the Docetic god, we should follow his example. Or should we?
If we say one thing and act differently, we imitate the Doectic god, but we fail miserably to follow the true God of the Bible. If we say we walk in the light, we must actually walk in the light. The true God of Scripture frowns intensely on deceptive conduct. To say you walk in the light while knowingly walking in fact in darkness follows the practice of this false god.
We live in an age where appearance has taken on far more value than substance. In so many circles of human activity nowadays you can safely do whatever you wish so long as no one sees you or discovers what you are doing. Men and women often feel there is no moral problem at all in engaging in affairs as long as their spouse doesn’t discover it. They consider the wrong to be in the discovery, not in the act itself. You can cheat on your spouse, steal from your employer and generally do just about anything you wish; just don’t let anyone know. Then you can go to church on Sunday and put on a grand performance. Pretend to be a pure Christian full of faith. I recently spoke with a very conscientious pastor of a growing church in another denomination. He confessed that he was under a doctor’s care for high blood pressure. It was dangerously high. After a few minutes he revealed the reason. This man’s heart was breaking over the impact of sinful choices among the people to whom he ministers. Do you see this concern in John’s comment? What you actually do, not what you say, carries the day. You may put on the best image and convey the best pretense imaginable. But if your conduct does not walk in honorable stride with you words and pretenses, you deceive yourself, but God knows. And your God is not a dishonest gnostic god. He knows all about you and all about your lifestyle. He cannot be deceived! You may succeed at deceiving those around you, even those in your own church and in your own family. But you will never deceive God. And He does not accept rationalizations for sin.
41
Haydock -> 1Jo 1:5
Haydock: 1Jo 1:5 - -- God is light, [3] &c. We cannot have this fellowship with God the Father and his Son Jesus Christ, if we walk in the darkness of sin: we must walk as...
God is light, [3] &c. We cannot have this fellowship with God the Father and his Son Jesus Christ, if we walk in the darkness of sin: we must walk as the children of light. (Witham)
===============================
[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Deus lux est; (John i.) erat lux vera. [that was the true light. (John i. 9.)]
Gill -> 1Jo 1:5
Gill: 1Jo 1:5 - -- This then is the message,.... Of God by his Son the Word, or from Christ by his apostles. The Syriac version renders it, "this is the Gospel"; which i...
This then is the message,.... Of God by his Son the Word, or from Christ by his apostles. The Syriac version renders it, "this is the Gospel"; which is good news from a far country, a message sent from the King of kings to sinful men: or this is the annunciation, or declaration; that is, the thing declared, or showed. Some render it, "this is the promise", that whereas God is light, such who walk in the light shall have communion with him, and others shall not:
which we have heard of him; of Christ, who has declared him, that he is light without any mixture of darkness; that is a pure Spirit, and must be worshipped in a spiritual way; and that only spiritual worshippers are such as he seeks, and admits to communion with him. Moreover, they might hear and learn this of Christ, by his telling them that he himself was light, who is the image of the invisible God, insomuch, that he that has seen the Son, has seen the Father also. Wherefore, if the one is light, the other must be likewise; nor is there any coming to the Father, and enjoying communion with him, but through Christ; all which our Lord told his disciples. The Ethiopic version reads, "which ye have heard", very wrongly; for the words regard the apostles, who made a faithful declaration of the message they heard, and had from Christ, which is as follows:
and declare unto you that God is light; that is, God the Father, as distinguished from "him", Christ, of whom they had heard this message, and from Jesus Christ his Son, 1Jo 1:7, what is declared of him, agreeably to the report of Christ, is, that he is "light"; that is, as light is opposed to the darkness of sin; he is pure and holy in his nature and works, and of such pure eyes as not to behold iniquity; and so perfectly holy, that angels cover their times before him, when they speak of his holiness: and as light is opposed to the darkness of ignorance, he is wise and knowing; he knows himself, his own nature, being, and perfections, his Son and Spirit, and their distinct modes of subsisting; he sees clearly all things in himself, all things he could do, or has determined shall be done; he has perfect knowledge of all creatures and things, and the darkness and the light are alike unto him, nor can the former hide from him: he is knowable, and to be discerned; he is clothed with light, and dwells in it; he may be known by the works of creation and providence; even the invisible things of him, his eternal power and Godhead, may be clearly seen and understood by them, and especially in his word, and most clearly in his Son; it is owing to the darkness of men, and not to any in and about God, who is light, that he is so little known as he is: and, like the light, he illuminates others; he is the Father of lights, the author and giver of all light; of the light of reason to men in general; and of grace here, and glory hereafter, to his own people, which are both signified by light; in whose light they see light; and he refreshes and delights their souls with the light of his countenance now, and with his glorious presence in the other world:
and in him is no darkness at all; no darkness of sin; nothing is more contrary to him, or more distant from him: nor any darkness of error and ignorance; what is unknown to men, as the times and seasons; what angels were ignorant of, and even Christ, as man, as the day and hour of Jerusalem's destruction, were known to the Father; in him is no ignorance of anything whatever; nor is there any variableness or shadow of turning in him, as there is in the luminous body of the sun; but God is always the same pure and holy, wise and knowing Being. It is usual with the Cabalistic Jews e, to call the supreme Being

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: 1Jo 1:5 Following the theme statement in 1:5, God is light and in him there is no darkness at all, the author presents a series of three claims and countercla...
Geneva Bible -> 1Jo 1:5
Geneva Bible: 1Jo 1:5 ( 3 ) 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.
( 3 ) Now he en...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Jo 1:1-10
TSK Synopsis: 1Jo 1:1-10 - --1 He describes the person of Christ, in whom we have eternal life, by a communion with God;5 to which we must adjoin holiness of life, to testify the ...
Maclaren -> 1Jo 1:5
Maclaren: 1Jo 1:5 - --The Message And Its Practical Results
"This then is the message which we have heard of Him, and declare unto you, that God is light, and in Him is no...
MHCC -> 1Jo 1:5-10
MHCC: 1Jo 1:5-10 - --A message from the Lord Jesus, the Word of life, the eternal Word, we should all gladly receive. The great God should be represented to this dark worl...
Matthew Henry -> 1Jo 1:5-7
Matthew Henry: 1Jo 1:5-7 - -- The apostle, having declared the truth and dignity of the author of the gospel, brings a message or report from him, from which a just conclusion is...
Barclay: 1Jo 1:5 - --A man's own character will necessarily be determined by the character of the god whom he worships; and, therefore, John begins by laying down the n...

Barclay: 1Jo 1:5 - --In God, says John, there is no darkness at all. Throughout the New Testament darkness stands for the very opposite of the Christian life.
(i) Darkn...
Constable -> 1Jo 1:5--3:1; 1Jo 1:5-7
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 ...




