
Text -- 1 John 4:19-21 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: 1Jo 4:19 - -- He first ( autos prōtos ).
Note prōtos (nominative), not prōton , as in Joh 20:4, Joh 20:8. God loved us before we loved him (Joh 3:16). Ou...
He first (
Note

Robertson: 1Jo 4:20 - -- If a man say ( ean tis eipēi ).
Condition of third class with ean and second aorist active subjunctive. Suppose one say. Cf. 1Jo 1:6.
If a man say (
Condition of third class with

Robertson: 1Jo 4:20 - -- I love God ( Agapō ton theon ).
Quoting an imaginary disputant as in 1Jo 2:4.
I love God (
Quoting an imaginary disputant as in 1Jo 2:4.

Robertson: 1Jo 4:20 - -- And hateth ( kai misei ).
Continuation of the same condition with ean and the present active subjunctive, "and keep on hating."See 1Jo 2:9; 1Jo 3:1...

Robertson: 1Jo 4:20 - -- That loveth not ( ho mē agapōn ).
"The one who does not keep on loving"(present active negative articular participle).
That loveth not (
"The one who does not keep on loving"(present active negative articular participle).

Robertson: 1Jo 4:20 - -- Hath seen ( heōraken ).
Perfect active indicative of horaō , the form in Joh 1:18 used of seeing God.
Hath seen (
Perfect active indicative of

Robertson: 1Jo 4:20 - -- Cannot love ( ou dunatai agapāin ).
"Is not able to go on loving,"with which compare 1Jo 2:9, ou dunatai hamartanein (is not able to go on sinnin...
Cannot love (
"Is not able to go on loving,"with which compare 1Jo 2:9,

Robertson: 1Jo 4:21 - -- That ( hina ).
Sub-final object clause in apposition with entolēn as in Joh 13:34; Joh 15:13.

Robertson: 1Jo 4:21 - -- From him ( ap' autou ).
Either God or Christ. See Mar 12:29-31 for this old commandment (1Jo 2:7.).
From him (
Either God or Christ. See Mar 12:29-31 for this old commandment (1Jo 2:7.).
Vincent: 1Jo 4:19 - -- We love Him ( ἡμεῖς ἀγαπῶμεν αὐτὸν )
The best texts omit Him . Some render let us love , as 1Jo 4:7. The stat...
We love Him (
The best texts omit Him . Some render let us love , as 1Jo 4:7. The statement is general, relating to the entire operation of the principle of love. All human love is preceded and generated by the love of God.

Vincent: 1Jo 4:20 - -- He that loveth not his brother, etc.
Note the striking inversion of the clauses: He that loveth not his brother whom he hath s...
He that loveth not his brother, etc.
Note the striking inversion of the clauses: He that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen , God whom he hath not seen cannot love .

How
The best tests omit, and give the direct statement cannot love . So Rev.

Vincent: 1Jo 4:21 - -- That ( ἵνα )
Not defining the contents of the commandment, but expressing intent . Compare Joh 13:34, and see on Joh 15:13.

Vincent: 1Jo 4:21 - -- His brother
" To the persecutor Saul, Christ said, 'Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou Me? I have ascended into heaven, yet still I lie upon earth....
His brother
" To the persecutor Saul, Christ said, 'Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou Me? I have ascended into heaven, yet still I lie upon earth. Here I sit at the right hand of the Father; there I still hunger, thirst, and am a stranger'" (Augustine).
Wesley: 1Jo 4:19 - -- This is the sum of all religion, the genuine model of Christianity. None can say more: why should any one say less, or less intelligibly?
This is the sum of all religion, the genuine model of Christianity. None can say more: why should any one say less, or less intelligibly?

Wesley: 1Jo 4:20 - -- Who is daily presented to his senses, to raise his esteem, and move his kindness or compassion toward him.
Who is daily presented to his senses, to raise his esteem, and move his kindness or compassion toward him.

Wesley: 1Jo 4:21 - -- Every one, whatever his opinions or mode of worship be, purely because he is the child, and bears the image, of God. Bigotry is properly the want of t...
Every one, whatever his opinions or mode of worship be, purely because he is the child, and bears the image, of God. Bigotry is properly the want of this pure and universal love. A bigot only loves those who embrace his opinions, and receive his way of worship; and he loves them for that, and not for Christ's sake.
JFB: 1Jo 4:19 - -- Omitted in the oldest manuscripts. Translate, We (emphatical: WE on our part) love (in general: love alike Him, and the brethren, and our fellow men),...
Omitted in the oldest manuscripts. Translate, We (emphatical: WE on our part) love (in general: love alike Him, and the brethren, and our fellow men), because He (emphatical: answering to "we"; because it was He who) first loved us in sending His Son (Greek aorist of a definite act at a point of time). He was the first to love us: this thought ought to create in us love casting out fear (1Jo 4:18).

JFB: 1Jo 4:20 - -- It is easier for us, influenced as we are here by sense, to direct love towards one within the range of our senses than towards One unseen, appreciabl...
It is easier for us, influenced as we are here by sense, to direct love towards one within the range of our senses than towards One unseen, appreciable only by faith. "Nature is prior to grace; and we by nature love things seen, before we love things unseen" [ESTIUS]. The eyes are our leaders in love. "Seeing is an incentive to love" [œCUMENIUS]. If we do not love the brethren, the visible representatives of God, how can we love God, the invisible One, whose children they are? The true ideal of man, lost in Adam, is realized in Christ, in whom God is revealed as He is, and man as he ought to be. Thus, by faith in Christ, we learn to love both the true God, and the true man, and so to love the brethren as bearing His image.

JFB: 1Jo 4:21 - -- Besides the argument (1Jo 4:20) from the common feeling of men, he here adds a stronger one from God's express commandment (Mat 22:39). He who loves, ...

He who wishes to be regarded by God as loving Him.
Clarke: 1Jo 4:19 - -- We love him because he first loved us - This is the foundation of our love to God
1. We love him because we find he has loved us
2...
We love him because he first loved us - This is the foundation of our love to God
1. We love him because we find he has loved us
2. We love him from a sense of obligation and gratitude
3. We love him from the influence of his own love; from his love shed abroad in our hearts, our love to him proceeds. It is the seed whence our love springs
The verse might be rendered, Let us therefore love him, because he first loved us: thus the Syriac and Vulgate.

Clarke: 1Jo 4:20 - -- If a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother - This, as well as many other parts of this epistle, seems levelled against the Jews, who pretended...
If a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother - This, as well as many other parts of this epistle, seems levelled against the Jews, who pretended much love to God while they hated the Gentiles; and even some of them who were brought into the Christian Church brought this leaven with them. It required a miracle to redeem St. Peter’ s mind from the influence of this principle. See Acts 10

Clarke: 1Jo 4:20 - -- Whom he hath seen - We may have our love excited towards our brother
1. By a consideration of his excellences or amiable qualities...
Whom he hath seen - We may have our love excited towards our brother
1. By a consideration of his excellences or amiable qualities
2. By a view of his miseries and distresses
The first will excite a love of complacency and delight; the second, a love of compassion and pity

Clarke: 1Jo 4:20 - -- Whom he hath not seen? - If he love not his brother, it is a proof that the love of God is not in him; and if he have not the love of God, he cannot...
Whom he hath not seen? - If he love not his brother, it is a proof that the love of God is not in him; and if he have not the love of God, he cannot love God, for God can be loved only through the influence of his own love. See on 1Jo 4:19 (note). The man who hates his fellow does not love God. He who does not love God has not the love of God in him, and he who has not the love of God in him can neither love God nor man.

Clarke: 1Jo 4:21 - -- This commandment have we - We should love one another, and love our neighbor as ourselves. The love of God and the love of man can never be separate...
This commandment have we - We should love one another, and love our neighbor as ourselves. The love of God and the love of man can never be separated; he who loves God will love his brother; he who loves his brother gives this proof that he loves God, because he loves with a measure of that love which, in its infinitude, dwells in God.
Calvin: 1Jo 4:19 - -- 19.We love him The verb ἀγαπῶμεν may be either in the indicative or imperative mood; but the former is the more suitable here, for the Apos...
19.We love him The verb

Calvin: 1Jo 4:20 - -- But this love cannot exist, except it generates brotherly love. Hence he says, that they are liars who boast that they love God, when they hate their...
But this love cannot exist, except it generates brotherly love. Hence he says, that they are liars who boast that they love God, when they hate their brethren.
But the reason he subjoins seems not sufficiently valid, for it is a comparison between the less and the greater: If, he says, we love not our brethren whom we see, much less can we love God who is invisible. Now there are obviously two exceptions; for the love which God has to us is from faith and does not flow from sight, as we find in 1Pe 1:8; and secondly, far different is the love of God from the love of men; for while God leads his people to love him through his infinite goodness, men are often worthy of hatred. To this I answer, that the Apostle takes here as granted what ought no doubt to appear evident to us, that God offers himself to us in those men who bear his image, and that he requires the duties, which he does not want himself, to be performed to them, according to Psa 16:2, where we read,
“My goodness reaches not to thee, O Lord;
towards the saints who are on the earth is my love.”
And surely the participation of the same nature, the need of so many things, and mutual intercourse, must allure us to mutual love, except; we are harder than iron. But John meant another thing: he meant to shew how fallacious is the boast of every one who says that he loves God, and yet loves not God’s image which is before his eyes.

Calvin: 1Jo 4:21 - -- 21.And this commandment This is a stronger argument, drawn from the authority and doctrine of Christ; for he not only gave a commandment respecting t...
21.And this commandment This is a stronger argument, drawn from the authority and doctrine of Christ; for he not only gave a commandment respecting the love of God, but bade us also to love our brethren. We must therefore so begin with God, as that there may be at the same time a transition made to men.

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 1Jo 4:19 - -- We love him, because he first loved us - This passage is susceptible of two explanations; either. (1)\caps1 t\caps0 hat the...
We love him, because he first loved us - This passage is susceptible of two explanations; either.
(1)\caps1 t\caps0 hat the fact that he first loved us is the "ground"or "reason"why we love him, or.
(2)\caps1 t\caps0 hat as a matter of fact we have been brought to love him in consequence of the love which he has manifested toward us, though the real ground of our love may be the excellency of his own character.
If the former be the meaning, and if that were the only ground of love, then it would be mere selfishness, (compare Mat 5:46-47); and it cannot be believed that John meant to teach that that is the "only"reason of our love to God. It is true, indeed, that that is a proper ground of love, or that we are bound to love God in proportion to the benefits which we have received from his Hand; but still genuine love to God is something which cannot be explained by the mere fact that we have received favors from Him. The true, the original ground of love to God, is the "excellence of His own character,"apart from the question whether we are to be benefited or not. There is that in the divine nature which a holy being will love, apart from the benefits which he is to receive, and from any thought even of his own destiny. It seems to me, therefore, that John must have meant here, in accordance with the second interpretation suggested above, that the fact that we love God is to be traced to the means which he has used to bring us to himself, but without saying that this is the sole or even the main reason why we love him. It was His love manifested to us by sending His Son to redeem us which will explain the fact that we now love Him; but still the real ground or reason why we love Him is the infinite excellence of His own character. It should be added here, that many suppose that the Greek words rendered "we love"(

Barnes: 1Jo 4:20 - -- If a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother - His Christian brother; or, in a larger sense, any man. The sense is, that no man, whatever m...
If a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother - His Christian brother; or, in a larger sense, any man. The sense is, that no man, whatever may be his professions and pretensions, can have any true love to God, unless he loves his brethren.
He is a liar - Compare the notes at 1Jo 1:6. It is not necessary, in order to a proper interpretation of this passage, to suppose that he "intentionally"deceives. The sense is, that this must be a false profession.
For he that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen ... - It is more reasonable to expect that we should love one whom we have seen and known personally, than that we should love one whom we have not seen. The apostle is arguing from human nature as it is, and everyone feels that we are more likely to love one with whom we are familiar than one who is a stranger. If a professed Christian, therefore, does not love one who bears the divine image, whom he sees and knows, how can he love that God whose image he bears, whom he has not seen? Compare the notes at 1Jo 3:17.

Barnes: 1Jo 4:21 - -- And this commandment have we from him - That is, the command to love a brother is as obligatory as that to love God. If one is obeyed, the othe...
And this commandment have we from him - That is, the command to love a brother is as obligatory as that to love God. If one is obeyed, the other ought to be also; if a man feels that one is binding on him, he should feel that the other is also; and he can never have evidence that he is a true Christian, unless he manifests love to his brethren as well as love to God. See the notes at Jam 2:10.
That he who loveth God love his brother also - See the notes at Joh 13:34-35. Compare Joh 15:12, Joh 15:17.
Poole: 1Jo 4:19 - -- His is the fountain love, ours but the stream: his love the inducement, the pattern, and the effective cause of ours. He that is first in love, love...
His is the fountain love, ours but the stream: his love the inducement, the pattern, and the effective cause of ours. He that is first in love, loves freely; the other therefore loves under obligation.

Poole: 1Jo 4:20 - -- The greater difficulty here is implied, through our present dependence upon sense, of loving the invisible God, than men that we daily see and conve...
The greater difficulty here is implied, through our present dependence upon sense, of loving the invisible God, than men that we daily see and converse familiarly with. Hence, considering the comprehensiveness of these two things, the love of God, and of our brother, that they are the roots of all that duty we owe to God and man, the fulfilling of the whole law, Mat 22:37-39 , he lets us see the falsehood and absurdity of their pretence to eminent piety and sanctity, who neglect the duties of the second table.

Both ought to be conjoined, being required both by the same authority.
Haydock -> 1Jo 4:20
Haydock: 1Jo 4:20 - -- He that loveth not his brother, whom he seeth, how can he love God, whom he seeth not? By this is signified, that it is more easy and natural to lov...
He that loveth not his brother, whom he seeth, how can he love God, whom he seeth not? By this is signified, that it is more easy and natural to love the things that we see, and that enter by the senses. Pretend not then to love the invisible God, whose perfections are hidden from you in this life, unless you love your brother whom you see. But he adds another reason to prove that no man can love God unless he love his brother; because saith he, (ver. 21.) this is God's express command, that he who loveth God love also his brother: so that a man cannot love God unless he also love his neighbour. (Witham)
Gill: 1Jo 4:19 - -- We love him, because he first loved us. Lest love to God, and so to one another, should be thought to be of ourselves, and too much be ascribed unto i...
We love him, because he first loved us. Lest love to God, and so to one another, should be thought to be of ourselves, and too much be ascribed unto it, the apostle observes, that God's love to us is prior to our love to him; his love is from everlasting, as well as to everlasting; for he loves his people as he does his Son, and he loved him before the foundation of the world; his choosing them in Christ as early, and blessing them then with all spiritual blessings, the covenant of grace made with Christ from all eternity, the gift of grace to them in him before the world began, and the promise of eternal life to them so soon, show the antiquity and priority of his love: his love shown in the mission and gift of his Son was before theirs, and when they had none to him; and his love in regeneration and conversion is previous to theirs, and is the cause of it; his grace in regeneration brings faith and love with it, and produces them in the heart; and his love shed abroad there is the moving cause of it, or what draws it first into act and exercise; and the larger the discoveries and applications of the love of God be, the more does love to him increase and abound; and nothing more animates and inflames our love to God, than the consideration of the earliness of his love to us, of its being before ours; which shows that it is free, sovereign, distinguishing, and unmerited. Some read the words as an exhortation, "let us love him"; and others as in the subjunctive mood, "we should love him", because, &c. some copies read, "we love God", and so the Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and Ethiopic versions, and the Alexandrian copy, read, "because God first loved us": and so some others.

Gill: 1Jo 4:20 - -- If a man say I love God, and hateth his brother,.... Than which profession nothing can be more contradictory, not black and white, or hot and cold in ...
If a man say I love God, and hateth his brother,.... Than which profession nothing can be more contradictory, not black and white, or hot and cold in the same degree:
he is a liar; it is not truth he speaks, it is a contradiction, and a thing impossible:
for he that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen; his person, which might have drawn out his affection to him; and something valuable and worthy in him, which might have commanded respect; or his wants and distresses, which should have moved his pity and compassion:
how can he love God whom he hath not seen? it cannot be thought he should; the thing is not reasonable to suppose; it is not possible he should; See Gill on 1Jo 4:12.

Gill: 1Jo 4:21 - -- And this commandment have we from him,.... Either "from God", as the Alexandrian copy and the Vulgate Latin version read; and that to love the brethre...
And this commandment have we from him,.... Either "from God", as the Alexandrian copy and the Vulgate Latin version read; and that to love the brethren is a commandment of God, is clear from 1Jo 3:23; or from Christ, for it is also a command of his, even his new commandment, which he has given, and his people have received from him:
that he who loveth God, love his brother also; see Joh 13:34; which is an argument persuading to attend to the one as well as to the other; for the same command that requires the one, requires the other: and he that transgresses it in one case, is a transgressor of it, as well as in the other.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: 1Jo 4:19 No object is supplied for the verb love (the author with his propensity for obscurity has left it to the readers to supply the object). The obvious ob...

NET Notes: 1Jo 4:20 In 4:20 the author again describes the opponents, who claim to love God. Their failure to show love for their fellow Christians proves their claim to ...

Geneva Bible: 1Jo 4:19 ( 14 ) We love him, because he first loved us.
( 14 ) Lest any man should think that that peace of conscience proceeds from our love as the cause, he...

Geneva Bible: 1Jo 4:20 ( 15 ) If a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother, he is a liar: ( 16 ) for he that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love Go...

Geneva Bible: 1Jo 4:21 ( 17 ) And this commandment have we from him, That he who loveth God love his brother also.
( 17 ) A second reason, why God cannot be hated and our n...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Jo 4:1-21
TSK Synopsis: 1Jo 4:1-21 - --1 He warns them not to believe all who boast of the Spirit;7 and exhorts to brotherly love.
Maclaren -> 1Jo 4:19
Maclaren: 1Jo 4:19 - --The Ray And The Reflection
"We love Him, because He first loved us.'--1 John 4:19.
Very simple words! but they go down into the depths of God, liftin...
MHCC -> 1Jo 4:14-21
MHCC: 1Jo 4:14-21 - --The Father sent the Son, he willed his coming into this world. The apostle attests this. And whosoever shall confess that Jesus is the Son of God, God...
Matthew Henry -> 1Jo 4:17-21
Matthew Henry: 1Jo 4:17-21 - -- The apostle, having thus excited and enforced sacred love from the great pattern and motive of it, the love that is and dwells in God himself, proce...
Barclay: 1Jo 4:7-21 - --This passage is so closely interwoven that we are better to read it as a whole and then bit by bit to draw out its teaching. First of all, then, le...

Barclay: 1Jo 4:7-21 - --In this passage there occurs what is probably the greatest single statement about God in the whole Bible, that God is love. It is amazing how many d...

Barclay: 1Jo 4:7-21 - --Before we leave this passage we must note that it has also great things to say about Jesus Christ.
(i) It tells us that Jesus is the bringer of life. ...
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 4:7--5:5 - --4. Practicing love 4:7-5:4
"By inserting this condition, John interrupts the symmetry which exis...

Constable: 1Jo 4:17-20 - --The practice of love 4:17-20
4:17 Our love becomes complete in the sense that we can now have confidence as we anticipate our day of judgment (i.e., t...

Constable: 1Jo 4:21--5:5 - --The command to love 4:21-5:4
4:21 Furthermore, God commanded us to love both Himself and our brothers, not just Himself (2:3; 3:23-24; 5:3). Here is a...
College -> 1Jo 4:1-21
College: 1Jo 4:1-21 - --1 JOHN 4
IV. TESTING THE SPIRITS/TRUSTING GOD (4:1-5:12)
A. TESTING THE SPIRITS (4:1-6)
1 Dear friends, do not believe every spirit, but test the s...
Lapide -> 1Jo 4:1-21
Lapide: 1Jo 4:1-21 - --Would someone please check the Psalm number in sentence formatted in blue in the 3rd note of ver. 18.
CHAPTER 4
1. Most dearly beloved, &c. By the ...
