Living Studies
“Study
to shew thyself approved unto God,
a
workman that needeth not to be ashamed,
rightly
dividing the word of truth” (2 Timothy 2:15).
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The First General Epistle of John the Apostle
(Part 2)
Study
Session Five, continued
Who would
tend to profit if there is contention and division in the household of
faith?
In verses
12-14 what two commendations does John give to those who are
referred to as “children”? Refer
back to 2:1. List the two statements made about
"fathers". What are the statements
made about “young men”?
In verse 15,
John commends his readers not to love the world not the things that
pertain to the world system. It can
also be understood in the imperative mood.
“Stop loving the world” if you have begun
to and don't start if you haven't. Why do
you think John is dealing with worldly
matters and attitudes in the church? Aren't
Christians above that sort of thing?
Verse 16 shows
the world system is a failed system, related to the flesh not the
Spirit. Christianity feeds the spirit
of man and demands control of the flesh.
In verse 17,
the world is passing away continually, progressively. It isn't that
it
will pass but that it is passing, declining.
The world system, the cosmos will once
and for all end, as we know it to allow
for the kingdom of Christ. Then, there will be
an unfailing system in place.
Not so at this present hour. But, in spite of all this the
Word of God is constant, as He is.
The contrast is this, that the will of God is con-
tinually, steadfastly abiding or standing
strong.
When does
verse 18 say is the last time?
Where does
verse 19 say these antichrists came from?
What other
information do we have here about them?
Note the
contrast between John's intended readers and the antichrists.
How are his
readers, the Christians contrasted to the antichrists?
What does
he mean by an “unction”? From what source does it come?
What does
he mean about believers knowing “all things”?
Is this “all
things” limited to anything specific or is it everything about every-
thing?
In verses
21-23 Why has he written to these young Christians? What is it they
know? Who is referred to here as
a liar? What else is this person besides a liar?
Can one truly have a relationship with
God the Father and deny that Jesus Christ is
Who He claimed Himself to be? What
does he say about one who claims or pro-
fesses faith in God and also accepts that
Jesus is the Christ (Messiah, One sent from
and by God)?
What does
verse 24 suggest is our continuing course as believers?
What is the
reward for our faith according to verse 25?
Why does
he state that he has issued such an intense warning to believers in
verse 26?
In verse 27
the “anointing” is the same word as the “unction” above. It has to
do
with the ministry of the Holy Spirit to
us as believers. What does it supply to us?
What specific knowledge does it bring about?
Consider also John 14:22-31; John
15:25-27 and Acts 1:8.
Considering
verses 28-29, why should we remain constant and unchanging in our
faith (i. e., in both our profession, attitudes,
and actions or works)? What is it that
we know about Christ in verse 29?
What does this say about one who trusts Him
(Jesus Christ) without compromise?
Study
Session Six
1 John, chapter
three. What is the indication that God loves us (verse 1)?
Why
does not the world see and recognize us
for who and what we are as Christians?
Note:
a righteous man or woman is always seen as a curiosity. We are generally
viewed as abnormal because we stand out
from the rest of the world at large. The
truth is that the Christian mind-set is
the one that God wants to be extant in the
world.
What do verses
2-3 mean that we shall be like Him? Are we the sons of God in
the same sense as Jesus is the Son of God?
What do you see as the primary differ-
ence?
If we shall
see Him as He is, how shall we see Him? What does John hold forth
as
hope in verse 3? What does this hope
produce?
Considering
verses 4-9, what is sin in verse 4?
What two truths
does John rehearse in verse five?
What does
verse six teach about those who are continually abiding in Christ?
What does
it mean to abide in Christ?
What is said
about those who are continually abiding in sin? What is meant by
“abiding
in sin”?
Who is righteous
(verse 7)? What is the standard?
In verse
8 whose children are they who continually practice sin?
Notice 9-10.
Observe them. Now, remember that we are dealing with present,
active, indicative verbs in the Greek text.
They show continual and progressive
action. These verses do not teach
that Christians do not ever sin or that they no
longer can.
The emphasis
is upon continuous practice rather than the possibility of practice.
The Christian seeks continually to please
God in his life. He does not continually
seek to practice sin, but the continual
theme of his life is to practice righteousness.
May he sometimes lapse into sin?
Of course he may. It is entirely within the realm
of possibility. It may even be probable,
depending on his level of spiritual maturity.
He cannot
continually seek to practice sin and still demonstrate a clear Christian
testimony before the church and the world.
It is impossible. One who can contin-
ually seek, practice and follow after sinful
behavior and not be under constant con-
viction is not born of God.
He is not
a child of God but a child of the devil. A woman once told me that
she
didn't believe in hell. She said
she didn't believe God would ever send one of His
children to hell.
NUMBER
1, God doesn't send anyone to hell, their sin does.
NUMBER
2, God does not send any of His children to hell but hell is
full of
people who have rejected Him and His plan of salvation.
NUMBER
3, Everyone is not a child of God. That is what that woman
did not
take into account. Those who reject Him and His Word (John 12:
48) is a child of the devil and remains so.
See also John's
Gospel chapter 8, verses 37-47. These are the words of Jesus
Himself about this very same subject.
Also, one
who can continually hate can't be a Christian in abiding fellowship with
God. We have been brought into the
house of God through a selfless demonstration
of love. We have in love been established
to allow the love of God to be made evi-
dent through us. God would not allow
us to remain on earth and represent Him or
His Word in any other way.
What do verses
11-12 say the message was from the beginning of the Christian
faith?
What is the
example given as a contrast between true Christianity and the false
love of the world? What are we not
to be surprised about in verse 14?
We have passed
entirely out of the realm of death into the realm of life in Christ
(Romans 8). Where is the one who
continually hates his brother? With what does
the apostle equate hatred in verse 15?
How do we know that God loves us (verse
16)? How is that to be an example
to us?
What do we
show when we fail to help a brother in deed (verse 17)?
How does
verse 18 tell us to put feet to our faith? How may we have a confident
heart
before God (verse 19)?
Suppose we
do what is required of us and we still don't feel that it
measures up to God's requirement (verses
20-21)?
In verse 22,
what does consistently keeping His commandments do for our
prayer life?
What two elements
make up God's command to believers in verse 23?
Where do
we who are obedient to Christ abide; and how does He abide in or
with
us according to verse 24?
Study
Session Seven
1 John chapter
four. According to verse 1, is it a safe thing to accept every
spiritual message that purports to be from
God? How can we know if the message
is real or not?
How do we
try the spirits and with what do we compare their messages? Why
must we try the spirits?
In verse 2
what is the test for determining who is of God?
Then, in
verse 3, what is the test for determining who is an antichrist?
When did
John say these antichrists will come along?
Look at verse
4. Who has overcome these antichrists and by what power?
Why is their
ungodly message so readily received by the world at large?
Who receives
the apostolic message of John (verse 6)?
Remember,
whoever hears willingly and gladly the message of the Word of God,
penned by holy men of God shows the division
or delineation between the spirit of
truth and the spirit of error (verse 6).
The absolutely
clear and definitive test of whether or not we love God is what
according to verse 7?
How does John
say the love of God was manifested toward us in verse 9?
Why did the
Son of God come into the world?
What does
it mean that Jesus Christ came to be the propitiation for our sins?
What is a
propitiation? How did He become the propitiation for our sins (verse
10)?
We many times
get the cart ahead of the horse in our thinking, but from what
source did godly love actually originate
(verses 10-11)? With this correction in our
perspective, what does this example of
divine love teach us in regard to our hori-
zontal relationships, those with other
imperfect people of faith? The operative
word in the statement above is not “imperfect”
but the word “other”, for an hon-
est look into the spiritual mirror will
readily reveal our many flaws and insufficien-
cies. Even if that may be a bit more
honest than most of us want to be. It pays to
deal with realities realistically.
I have heard
a little ditty, a poem quoted by many men of God and have used it
myself. I don't know where it came
from or who wrote it, or even if it may be from
a song. But I used to hear Dr. J.
Vernon McGee quote it on the radio and it goes like
this:
“To dwell above with saints we love,
Oh, that would be glory!
But to live below with saints we know,
well, that's a different story.”
This brings
us to verse 12. How do we know that God lives in us?
Can He be
seen today?
How is He
seen today?
Verses 13-17.
How do we know He abides in us (verse 13)?
How do we
know to testify that God has sent His Son into the world (verse 14)?
Read through
verses 15-17. What does the confession of Jesus tell about us?
In the remaining
verses, 18-21, What is noticeably absent if we are constantly
abiding in godly love (verse 18)?
What final exhortation or commandment do we
have from God (19-21)?
Study
Session Eight
First John
chapter 5.
What does
verse 1 teach about the one who believes that Jesus is the Christ?
What is said
of the one who loves God the Father (the One Who begat)?
What is the
proof that we love the children of God?
In verse 4,
who has overcome the world? By what?
Verse 5 states
that Jesus is the Son of God.
What does
verse 6 say about how Jesus came to us?
What is here
represented by water?
What is indicated
by blood?
What character
trait is attributed to God the Holy Spirit in this verse?
In spite of
the argument some make about a problem here in older manuscripts,
we are going to abrogate any such idea
at this time. What three witnesses are
mentioned as corroboration in heaven for
the message John preached here (verse
7)? What three witnesses does
he cite in verse 8, as being on the earth? Can you
find support for these ideas elsewhere
in Scripture?
John is comparing
and contrasting the word of men and the Word of God in his
statement made in verse 9. Of what
does he hope to persuade his readers?
How does one
obtain the internal witness addressed in verse 10? By disbelieving
God's testimony God is equated with what?
By rejecting
God's Word, on anything, man is setting himself up as one who is
greater than God, his knowledge greater
than God's, his wisdom greater than God's,
his will more perfect and important than
God's. What is God's testimony in verse
11? How did Jesus address this attitude
in John 12:48? Look at Revelation 21: 8.
At what cost does one disbelieve the Word
of God -- the Word of Christ?
In verse 12
we see that one who is trusting Jesus Christ for salvation has life
within himself. He is not expecting
to come to life at the end of this earthly exis-
tence, but already has, is experiencing
eternal life now. Heaven, then is a continua-
tion of his spiritual relationship, which
he has in Christ right now, carried beyond
this worldly dimension into eternity with
Christ.
Likewise,
one who is in the state of rejection toward God and His Word is abiding
in death. He will not just enter
into eternal death at the end of his earthly life, but is
already experiencing eternal death within
himself. Then, of course, will continue to
experience it as the second death for eternity,
because of unbelief.
That's why
“There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ
Jesus,” because they “walk” and live “after
the Spirit” of God and not the desires of
human flesh. If you are a Christian
then you are “born of God”, born again from
above (John 3:3, 5, 16-19) and indwelt
by the Holy Spirit of God Who is to lead you
into all truth.
To be fleshly
(“carnally”) minded we separate ourselves from the very nature,
purpose and plan of God in our lives through
Christ Jesus. We thwart the plan of
God for us as living witnesses of His grace
to the world. See if you can support this
principle from other portions of Scripture.
A Bible Concordance would be of great
help with this.
“For they
that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh: but they
that
are after the Spirit the things of the
Spirit. For to be carnally minded is death; but
to be spiritually minded is life and peace.
Because the carnal mind is enmity
[hatred] against God: for
it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be.
So then they that are in the flesh cannot
please God. But ye are not in the flesh but
in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit
of God dwell in you. Now if any man have not
the Spirit of Christ, he is none of is.
And if Christ
be in you the body is dead because of sin but the Spirit is life
because of righteousness. But
if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the
dead dwell in you, he that raised up Christ
from the dead shall also quicken your
mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth
in you. Therefore, brethren, we are
debtors, not to the flesh, to live after
the flesh. For if ye live after the flesh, ye shall
[continually be dying]: but if ye
through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the
body, ye shall [continually be living]”
(Romans 8:5-14).
I boxed in
the the few words above not because they differ from the KJV text in
this instance, but because the changes
show the progressive nature of the future,
active participles used in the Greek New
Testament.
In 1 John
5:13-15, for what two purposes does John write concerning those who
“believe on the name of the Son of God”?
What is the stated confidence we have in
Christ? Of what are we to be assured
if we are continually confident that God is
continually hearing us?
What should
be our posture if we witness our brother sinning a sin that does not
require death as a judgment (verse 16)?
This may be seen as a trick question, but
what if we see our brother (or, sister)
sinning a sin that does require death as a
judgment, are required to pray for him
(or her)? Are we abrogated from that res-
ponsibility or are we just not to pray
for the inevitable end of such an action? Let
me make it plainer. Are we
not to pray for him (her) at all? Or, are we not to pray
for the death that sin brings as a punishment
for that sin? Just what is it that we
are relieved of in this verse?
According
to verse 17, is all unrighteous wrong? Is there any such thing as
sin
that does not require death?
Does verse
18 say that a Christian does not or cannot sin (now, consider all the
territory we have already covered up to
this point in formulating your answer)?
The one who is born of God is unaffected
by the wiles of the devil in the latter part
of verse, but because of what action on
his (the believer's) part? The word
“keepeth” means “guardeth” (that's a hint).
What is our
two-part knowledge in verse 19? The word translated “wickedness”
would be better translated as “wicked one”
[tJ ponhrJ].
In the original Greek text
it is simply “the wicked” and implies a
personal application rather than essence.
Verse 20 lists
several things that we now know with assurance. What are they?
The number could vary depending upon where
you see the divisions.
Consider verse
21 and write out what may have been the reason for the apostle
to have ended his letter in this way.
Then, go back and look for whatever helps you
may have available and compare your answers
with the commentator's.
Click
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To
The Index
© September 27, 2001
Rev. C. David Coyle
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