Book of 1 John
Summary of the Book of 1 John
This summary of the
book of 1 John provides information about the title, author(s), date of
writing, chronology, theme, theology, outline, a brief overview, and the
chapters of the Book of 1 John.
The author is John son
of Zebedee (see Mk 1:19-20) -- the apostle and the author of the Gospel
of John and Revelation (see Introductions to both books: Author). He was a fisherman,
one of Jesus' inner circle (together with James and Peter), and "the
disciple whom Jesus loved" (Jn 13:23; see note there). He may have been a
first cousin of Jesus (his mother may have been Salome, possibly a sister of
Mary; cf. Mt 27:56; Mk 15:40 and note; 16:1; Jn 19:25 -- this view assumes that "his
mother's sister" in Jn 19:25 refers to Salome; some further
assume that "Mary the wife of Clopas" there stands in apposition to
"his mother's sister," which would mean that this Mary and Salome
were one and the same person).
Unlike most NT
letters, 1 John does not tell us who its author is. The earliest identification
of him comes from the church fathers: Irenaeus (c. a.d. 140-203), Clement of
Alexandria (c. 150-215), Tertullian (c. 155-222) and Origen (c. 185-253) all
designated the writer as the apostle John. As far as we know, no one else was
suggested by the early church.
This traditional
identification is confirmed by evidence in the letter itself:
1. The style of the Gospel of John is markedly
similar to that of this letter. Both are written in simple Greek and use
contrasting figures, such as light and darkness, life and death, truth and
lies, love and hate.
2. Similar phrases and expressions, such as those
found in the following passages, are striking:
1 John
|
Gospel of John
|
3. The mention of eyewitness testimony (1:1-4) harmonizes with the fact that John was a
follower of Christ from the earliest days of his ministry.
4. The authoritative manner that pervades the
letter, seen in its commands (2:15,24,28; 4:1; 5:21), its firm assertions (2:6; 3:14; 4:12) and its pointed identification of error (1:6,8; 2:4,22) is what would be expected from an apostle.
5. The suggestions of advanced age (addressing
his readers as "children,"2:1,28; 3:7) agree with early church tradition concerning John's age when
he wrote the books known to be his.
6. The description of the heretics as antichrists
(2:18), liars (2:22) and children of the devil (3:10) is consistent with Jesus' characterization of John as a son of
thunder (Mk 3:17).
7. The indications of a close relationship with
the Lord (1:1; 2:5-6,24,27-28) fit the descriptions of "the disciple
whom Jesus loved" and the one who reclined "next to him" (Jn 13:23).
The letter is
difficult to date with precision, but factors such as (1) evidence from early
Christian writers (Irenaeus and Clement of Alexandria), (2) the early form of
Gnosticism reflected in the denunciations of the letter and (3) indications of
the advanced age of John suggest the end of the first century. Since the author
of 1 John seems to build on concepts and themes found in the fourth Gospel (1Jn 2:7-11), it is reasonable to date the letter somewhere between a.d. 85
and 95, after the writing of the Gospel, which may have been written c. 85 (see
Introduction to John: Date).
1Jn 2:12-14,19; 3:1; 5:13 make it clear that this letter was addressed to believers.
But the letter itself does not indicate who they were or where they lived. The
fact that it mentions no one by name suggests it was a circular letter sent to
Christians in a number of places. Evidence from early Christian writers places
the apostle John in Ephesus during most of his later years (c. a.d. 70-100).
The earliest confirmed use of 1 John was in the Roman province of Asia (in
modern Turkey), where Ephesus was located. Clement of Alexandria indicates that
John ministered in the various churches scattered throughout that province. It
may be assumed, therefore, that 1 John was sent to the churches of the province
of Asia (see map No. 13 at the end of this study Bible).
One of the most
dangerous heresies of the first two centuries of the church was Gnosticism. Its
central teaching was that spirit is entirely good and matter is entirely evil.
From this unbiblical dualism flowed five important errors:
1. The human body, which is matter, is therefore
evil. It is to be contrasted with God, who is wholly spirit and therefore good.
2. Salvation is the escape from the body,
achieved not by faith in Christ but by special knowledge (the Greek word for
"knowledge" is gnosis, hence Gnosticism).
3. Christ's true humanity was denied in two ways:
(1) Some said that Christ only seemed to have a body, a view called Docetism,
from the Greekdokeo ("to seem"), and (2) others said that
the divine Christ joined the man Jesus at baptism and left him before he died, a
view called Cerinthianism, after its most prominent spokesman, Cerinthus. This
view is the background of much of 1 John (1:1; 2:22; 4:2-3 and notes.
4. Since the body was considered evil, it was to
be treated harshly. This ascetic form of Gnosticism is the background of part
of the letter to the Colossians (Col 2:21,23 and notes.
5. Paradoxically, this dualism also led to
licentiousness. The reasoning was that, since matter -- and not the breaking of
God's law (1Jn 3:4) -- was considered evil, breaking his law was
of no moral consequence.
The Gnosticism
addressed in the NT was an early form of the heresy, not the intricately
developed system of the second and third centuries. In addition to that seen in
Colossians and in John's letters, acquaintance with early Gnosticism is
reflected in 1,2 Timothy, Titus, and 2 Peter and perhaps 1 Corinthians.
John's readers were
confronted with an early form of Gnostic teaching of the Cerinthian variety
(see Gnosticism above). This heresy was also libertine, throwing off all moral
restraints.
Consequently, John
wrote this letter with two basic purposes in mind: (1) to expose false teachers
(2:26 and note) and (2) to give believers
assurance of salvation (5:13and note). In keeping with his intention to combat Gnostic
teachers, John specifically struck at their total lack of morality (3:8-10); and by giving eyewitness testimony to the
incarnation, he sought to confirm his readers' belief in the incarnate Christ (1:3). Success in this would give the writer joy (1:4).
* Copyright © 1985,
the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.
From the NIV Study
Bible, Introductions to the Books of the Bible, 1 John
Copyright 2002 © Zondervan. All rights reserved. Used with permission.
Copyright 2002 © Zondervan. All rights reserved. Used with permission.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a good comment, Negative comments will not be posted.