‏ 1 John 3:12-13

Practice Righteousness and Brotherly Love

1Jn 3:4. John speaks about practicing “sin” and “lawlessness”. That forms a great contrast with the hope in Him and the purifying that results from it, which you have read in the previous verses. Due to that contrast you feel the power of his argument. Purifying and practicing sin belong to two different worlds. He is talking about “everyone who practices sin”. That is not someone who once in a while commits a sin, but someone who practices sin as a way of life. He is doing it all the time, practicing sin is the nature of his life. In such a person nothing of God is present. A believer can sin indeed, but as an incident. He does not live in sin; it is not his daily practice.

If a person has sin as a life principle, he is lawless. To be lawless means that he doesn’t consider any authority at all. His unbridled will is his only driving force. He does not matter about God at all. On the contrary, he lives in rebellion against Him (Job 15:25). Therefore lawlessness goes much further than violation of the law of God. If lawlessness were limited to transgression of the law, sin would be limited to the period of the law. But also before there was the law, there was sin in the world (Rom 5:13a).

1Jn 3:5. There has been one Man, Who has never sinned, because there is no sin in Him. That is the Lord Jesus. He appeared – that is when He came to the earth – in order to take away the sins of others. He took away yours and mine and of all God’s children by taking them on Himself at the cross in the three hours of darkness. He was able to do that, precisely because there was and is no sin in Him.

1Jn 3:6. The result is that you abide in Him now, that is, that you have been made one with Him because you have received Him as your life. That is why you do not sin. This is a strong statement of course. You will immediately say that that’s not true, for you know very well that you still do sin. But the point is that you should see yourself as John presents it here. He says that you abide in Him and that implies that he see the same characteristics with you as he sees with the Lord Jesus. That what is typical for the Lord Jesus is now typical for you too.

John sees you in your new nature, regardless of the degree to which your new nature is visible. That is one side of the truth. The other side is that “who sins” has no part in God and Christ at all. No one who sins has seen or known both God and Christ. Such a person has nothing in common with God, how wonderful his confession may be. His confession of a higher knowledge of God and a deep experience with God is a lie.

As far as the practice is concerned, it is certain that you do not sin if you remain in fellowship with the Lord in your daily life, whereby you inquire of His will and obey His Word in everything. Nevertheless, that is not the issue here. It is not about two kinds of believers, faithful ones and unfaithful ones, but about two sources out of which they live. The source out of which the believer lives is a totally different one than the source out of which the unbeliever lives. That is what John is talking about.

1Jn 3:7. John is addressing his spiritual “little children” and is warning them for the deceivers. Deceivers want to sow doubt about Christ and His work and even deny it. They seek to make you uncertain about the characteristics of the children of God. Do not let yourself be influenced by them, but hold on to the clear statements of God’s Word. Do not depend on your feelings. Of course they have their place, but they are not a basis for knowing the truth of God.

You are a child of God and you have the same nature as God and the Lord Jesus. If He, that is Christ, is righteous, then you too are. Jesus Christ is the Righteous, He has laid down His life for you and you abide in Him. He is the absolute measure. If you see a person who practices righteousness, which means who does what is right according to God, you see someone who does what the Lord Jesus is. Such a person is therefore also righteous.

1Jn 3:8. The opposite of practicing righteousness is practicing sin. In someone who practices sin you recognize the devil. The origin of sin is in the devil. The devil sins from the beginning of his existence as devil. He is the father of sin. He who sins, exposes the characteristics of that father (Jn 8:44). The devil cannot do anything else than sin; it is his nature and he cannot do anything else but act accordingly. From the beginning he has men under his control through sin. Each man who is under his control, sins as he does. Therefore no man is able to escape from the control of the devil or to liberate another man from his control.

But the devil does not have the last word and he is not the victor. The victory belongs to the Son of God. What John says about Him, sounds like a victory call: “The Son of God appeared for this purpose, to destroy the works of the devil.” Every time that somewhere on earth someone comes to conversion, a work of the devil is being destroyed. You who believe are a proof of that. That’s the reason why the Son of God came to earth and finished the work on the cross.

1Jn 3:9. The opposite of ‘being of the devil’ and ‘practicing sin’ is ‘born of God’ and ‘not practicing sin’. “Who is born of God” has life that has its origin in God. That life comes in someone without any contribution of himself. That life has its own characteristics. These characteristics are typical for the seed of God. What comes out of a seed corresponds to that seed (cf. 1Cor 15:38). Sin is totally alien to the seed of God. From that seed no sin is produced; it does not cause anyone to commit sin and it cannot sin, just as in Him, the Lord Jesus, there is no sin. He could not possibly sin. He is absolutely separated from sin (Heb 4:15; Heb 7:26).

If you are born of God, it is the work of God’s Word and God’s Spirit (Jn 3:5). That is the seed John is talking about here (1Pet 1:23). The seed is the new life principle that God has planted in you. To plant that seed, God’s Word was preached and it came to and in you through the power of the Holy Spirit. In that way you were inwardly purified and the new life has come in you, where it develops and grows (cf. Jam 1:18; 21).

1Jn 3:10. Someone belongs to the children of God or to the children of the devil. Here you see two families opposite to each other. These two families make up all of humanity. Both families have their own typical family characteristics. John indicates what is not present with the children of God. If you notice that someone is lacking the practice of righteousness and also brotherly love, then it is obvious that you are not dealing with a child of God but with a child of the devil. Children of the devil have no new life and are therefore in no way able to practice righteousness and to love the brothers.

Practicing righteousness and brotherly love are two separate characteristics of the new life, but they belong together. They cannot even do without each other. Here you see the characteristics of the essence of God of Whom John says that He is light and love. Wherever righteousness and brotherly love are not present, nothing of God present, but the devil is manifested.

1Jn 3:11. To this statement John attaches the message “that we should love one another”. You have heard this message from the beginning. Nothing else has ever been told to you. In the Old Testament there was the command to love your neighbor. That raised the question of who then was the neighbor. To the Israelite it was his compatriot. The Gentiles were hated as a whole. The Israelites were not supposed to love them, but they had to eliminate them. In the New Testament you find a new order of things. There you come across the term ‘brothers’. In this term, a special dignity resounds.

The Lord Jesus speaks about His own as “My sheep” and “My friends” (Jn 10:27; Jn 15:14), but only in John 20 He speaks about “My brothers” for the first time (Jn 20:17). He does that after He has risen. He calls His disciples like that in His message which He by Mary Magdalene conveyed to them. In that way He puts them on the level before His Father and His God that He Himself has. His Father has become their Father too and His God is now their God. That is something totally new. It is no longer about ‘the neighbor’ of an earthly people, but there is mention of a new, heavenly company: the family of God.

1Jn 3:12. As an example of a lack of brotherly love and what that leads to, John quotes, as an exception, a history from the Old Testament. He refers to Cain. That man had no brotherly love, but “was of the evil one”. He revealed that too by killing his brother. His brother is Abel. John doesn’t mention that name because he wants to fully emphasize that he killed his brother. That deed was one of his evil works, while the works of his brother were righteous. He who is of the evil one, practices evil works. By also mentioning the works of his brother, which were righteous, John shows that Cain was driven by hatred.

In the New Testament you read three times about Cain: about the sacrifice of Cain (Heb 11:4), the works of Cain (here) and the way of Cain (Jude 1:11):

1. His sacrifice shows his self-willed religiosity, his indifference toward God’s holiness.

2. His works show his anger, the lack of brotherly love.

3. His way shows that he turned his back on God.

That is how it went from bad to worse with Cain. That is the result if someone who has no life from God, is confronted with righteous works. That confrontation shows the lack of these works.

Now read 1 John 3:4-12 again.

Reflection: What characteristics do you see with someone who is of God and what characteristics do you see with someone who is of the devil?

The Practice of Love

1Jn 3:13. In 1Jn 3:12 you have seen what Cain did to his brother. Just like Cain dealt with his brother, the world deals with you. You are someone who is born of God. That’s why the life of God is within you and becomes visible. That stirs up the hatred of the world, for it feels condemned thereby. Even if you do not say anything, your whole life is a testimony against the world that does not consider God. The world doesn’t want to have anything to do with God, but because of you it cannot avoid Him. You are going through the same experience as Abel and also as the Lord Jesus. The hatred mainly comes from the religious world. Cain was a religious person when he murdered his brother. The Lord Jesus was murdered by the religious leaders of His people.

The world where you will experience intolerance and hatred the most is the religious world where nominal Christians are in control. You may probably be surprised if that happens. You do not need to, John says here (cf. Rev 17:6-7), because you belong to a company he addresses here for the only time in his letter as “brethren”, with which he means both brothers and sisters. This name radiates the warmth of the family relation in contrast to the cold hatred of the world.

1Jn 3:14. Because of this family relationship and the appreciation of it you know that you have passed out of death into life. You love your brothers. That love may be put to the test at times and you may feel more affection for the one than for the other person but that love is certainly there. If you consider that the Lord Jesus has died for you as well as for your brother and that your brother also loves the Lord Jesus, then there is that ‘match’. You are on the territory of life and not on the territory of death anymore. Brotherly love belongs to life and not to death. On the territory of death, death is in control; people are murdered there. On the territory of life there is a sphere of life and you are surrounded by the sphere of love.

“He who does not love” has no part in that, but “abides in death”. Needless to say that here it is about someone who uses the word ‘brother’, but has no new life. Such a person lives in death, abides in death, the sphere and aroma of death is around him. However, he is not only surrounded by death, but death characterizes him, it is also within him.

1Jn 3:15. Someone who does not love his brother and who abides in death is also someone who hates his brother. He looks at his brother with eyes full of lethal hatred. His mind is that of a “murderer”. He does not seek the life of his brother, but he seeks his death. You know that such a person has no eternal life abiding in him. He never had, it is totally absent with him. False teachers do not seek to nourish the new life but they seek to poison the faith of God’s children with false teachings.

1Jn 3:16. With love it is totally different. Love does not seek death for the brethren but life. Love even goes that far that it even enters death to give life to others. Love is something you are to know first yourself in order to be able to love others. The only way to learn to know love is by receiving it. You are not able to love if you yourself have not received love, if another person has not shown love to you first. You have learnt to know love through the Son of God, by what He did for you on the cross (Gal 2:20). He has laid down His life for you.

An example. If you see that someone is almost drowning and another person rescues him, but in the course of rescuing him the rescuer himself drowned, you see love. However, that is love at a distance. You observe it, but you are not involved. If you, however, are almost drowning and a person rescues you at the cost of his own life, then you personally experience what love is.

The Lord Jesus has laid down His life for you. That is the highest expression of love. There is no greater proof of love possible (Jn 15:13). And what is the result of that deed of love? Life. Do you see the full contrast to what motivates Cain and the world and what is inspiring the false teachers? Their inspirer is the devil. The devil lives in the sphere of death and breathes hatred in his instruments to murder as many people as he possibly can. With Christ belongs life; He is the center of the territory of life.

Christ was killed by murderers. Yet that is not how it is presented here. Here it is said that He “laid down” His life. It is a deed of Himself. He gave His life. That is the highest and absolute proof of love that someone has for another. He is love, His nature, His Being, is love and you have experienced that love, for He had mercy on you. At the same time that is the measure for your love toward your brothers and sisters. If He is your life, then it works in you in the same way as it works in Him. Then you ought to lay down your life for your brothers and sisters as well. That goes very far, isn’t it?

1Jn 3:17. But do you think that it will really be expected of you in practice to lay down your life for a brother or sister? As far as I am concerned I assume that there is quite a little chance for that to happen, almost out of the question. It also seems that John takes that into consideration. Therefore he gives another test from which you can show what you are prepared to do for your brother or sister. You may not literally give your life for your brother or sister, but you surely can put your life at their disposal, you can commit yourself to them (1Cor 16:15; 1Thes 2:8). How do you do that?

Well, you have this world’s goods. You see your brother or sister is suffering want. The question is how you respond to that. He who has no life of God, in whom the love of God does not abide, closes his heart to it. In case there is life of God, if the love of God indeed abides in you, then you will surely respond in a totally different way. There will be a desire to provide for that want, for that lack, with the world’s goods you have.

Notice that the brother or sister doesn’t ask for help, but that love will notice and observe the want. Love acts without being requested for any help. It is also remarkable that the expression for “world’s goods” literally is ‘the livelihood of the world’. As long as we are in this world we need a livelihood and we ought to share that with others who are in need of it. James tells his readers that he who says he has faith, must show that by giving where there is lack (Jam 2:15). John takes the possession of the new, eternal life as a starting point. Here you see that the most exalted truths have their effect in the most daily circumstances.

In these truths the rules of the people of Israel toward the poor and rich Israelites are also an illustration for us (Deu 15:7-11). If there were poor Israelites, it was a test for the neighbor’s love of the rich Israelites. There was no possibility to look for excuses to escape from the obligation to give to the poor neighbor. A hardened heart kept his hand shut. He who had a hardened heart showed that he did not trust God for the promise of blessing He made. In the language of John we may say that in such a person the love of God did not abide. There was no love for God and no love for the neighbor.

1Jn 3:18. To love is not a matter of only words or of talking about it in general terms. Of course true love may become apparent from words. You can prove your love to others by what you say. However, John says this with a view to the false teachers who do have sweet talks, but without any real care for the believers. They close their heart for others and seek to obtain other people’s properties. They also want to subject them to themselves (cf. Gal 2:4-5). In this light you should see this appeal not to love “with word or with tongue, but in deed and in truth”.

Loving is a matter of deed and must be done in truth. Truth is not the doctrine here, but has to do with truth in the innermost being (Psa 51:6). The point is that love is true and sincere. One should not give on the basis of a cost-benefit analysis. If you give from the thought to get better off, you lack sincerity.

Getting better off from something can be both material and spiritual. You also may for instance give something to another person or do something for him, in order to get all the credits for it. Then also you can hardly speak of a sincere love. Even a feeling of self-satisfaction is inappropriate. That’s giving to the poor – says, that you should not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing (Mt 6:3).

If the new life is working you will love in deed and in truth without thinking of yourself. We are to learn that in practice. We can only learn that from the Lord Jesus. He gave fully and selflessly, without thinking of Himself.

Now read 1 John 3:13-18 again.

Reflection: How do you practice your love for your brother and sister?

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