Fellowship, Walking, and Abiding; 1 John
2:6
1 John 2:6 NASB “the
one who says he abides in Him ought himself to walk in the same manner as He
walked.” John adds a principle to what he has already said. He talks about knowing
God, about loving God, but now he is going to pull in another key word to
describe this active, ongoing experience of relationship of the believer. It
begins, “the one who says.” In the Greek it is an articular present active
participle of lego [legw] meaning “the one who says.” “Abides” is translated into
an English finite verb, but it is not a finite verb in the Greek, it is an
infinitive. It is a present active infinitive of meno [menw]. It
means to stay, to remain, to abide. So in the
infinitive it should be translated to remain or to abide, not as a finite verb
as “he abides” because there is no subject here. So it is just simply to claim:
“the one who claims to abide in Him.” To claim to know Him and to claim to
abide are synonymous ideas. The one who claims to abide “ought himself to walk
in the same manner as He walked.”
Let’s go back and look at the
steps that have been developed. As John is expanding his ideas he starts off
with fellowship in 1:4, 5, goes to walking in 1:6, goes to knowing in 2:3, 4,
goes to personal love for God in 2:5, goes to “in Him in 2:5, then he goes to
abide in 2:6. Then he goes right back to walking. The point is that these are
all related ideas. He is using every word in his vocabulary in order to encompass
the idea of our personal walk and relationship with Jesus Christ on a day to
day basis.
In 1:5-10 there are three
things that John emphasises. First, claiming to know God is parallel to walking
in the light, verse 4. In 1:6 John says, “If we say that we have fellowship
with Him and {yet} walk in the darkness, we lie and do not practice the truth.”
So there is a connection. The person who lies and doesn’t practice the truth in
1:6 is claiming to have fellowship, and the person who claims to know Him in
1:4 is a liar and doctrine is not in him—same thing. So that means that knowing
God and fellowship are correlated items in this passage. Second, not keeping
commandments, the emphasis of 2:3-6, is parallel then to walking in darkness
back in 1:6. That would mean that keeping commandments is parallel to walking
in the light. That gives us a conclusion, therefore, that enjoying fellowship
and walking in the light develop our knowledge of God and the barometer, the
self-test, is our obedience to divine mandates.
1 John 2:6 NASB “the
one who says he abides in Him…” Abide is a magnificent word and has become a
major battlefield in the whole area of understanding salvation and the
spiritual life. Why is that? It is because there are those who want to take 1st
John, as well as a well-known passage in John 15, as relating to believer
versus unbeliever. For example, how do you know if you are a believer? If you abide and keep His commandments. If you don’t abide and
you don’t keep His commandments you are not a believer. So for those folk abiding
becomes a functional equivalent or semantic equivalent to the word “believe.” So
we have to find out if the word “abide” is a synonym for believe or does it
mean something else?
In English the word “abide”
means a) to put up with or tolerate. That doesn’t fit the context here at all;
b) to wait patiently for something; c) to be in store for or to await
something; d) to withstand; e) in an intransitive sense it means to remain in a
place, and that is close to our Greek meaning in meno. But what we should note is looking at these meanings
that none of them listed here are what any of us would think of as synonyms for
believe. If we look abide up in a thesaurus we will not find believe listed as a
synonym.
Furthermore we have to look
at some passages to see how Jesus uses the word. It is interesting that the
word meno is used 118 times in the
New Testament. Fifty of those usages are by the apostle John—42%. If John is
going to use the word meno or to
abide 50 times in the Gospel of John, do we think it is an important doctrine
in John? He is going to be beating us over the head with this throughout most
of his epistle. This is a major theme, and that tells us that the main idea is fellowship
and that abiding is a critical aspect to the whole concept of fellowship. Furthermore,
if abide means believe then we ought be able to
somehow substitute those two words, and that doesn’t work.
John
What are the conditions,
then, for fellowship with Christ?