Grace Evangelical Society

P.O. Box 1308, Denton, TX 76202
  • About
    • Home
    • Beliefs
    • Staff
    • Board of Directors
  • Resources
    • Grace in Focus Blog
    • Grace in Focus International Blogs
    • Grace in Focus Radio
    • Grace in Focus Magazine
    • Free eBooks
    • Journal of the GES
    • Book Reviews
    • Partners in Grace Newsletter
    • Audio Messages
    • Videos
    • Email Subscription
    • Bookstore
    • Online Tracts
  • Store
    • Main Page
    • On Sale
    • Return Policy
    • Your Cart
    • Your Account
  • Events
  • Connect
    • Contact Us
    • Free Grace Church and Bible Study Tracker
    • Free Grace Jobs
    • Ministry Links
  • Donate
    • One Time Donation
    • Monthly Donation
    • Your Account
  • Search
Home
→
Blog
→
Getting to Know Christ, 1 John 2:4

Getting to Know Christ, 1 John 2:4

July 12, 2016 by Zane Hodges in Blog

by Zane Hodges, originally published in the June, 1990 edition of “Grace in Focus”.

First John 2:4 is a verse that has often been misunderstood. In the New King James Version it reads like this:

He who says, “I know Him,” and does not keep His
commandments,is a liar, and the truth is not in him.

Many evangelical Christians today read these words as though they meant that if a person is living a disobedient life he is not a Christian at all. But there is no good reason to take these words in that sense.

It is true, of course, that a saved person can be said to know God or Christ. In John 17:3 we are told: “And this is eternal life, that they may know You, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom You have sent.” So salvation brings with it the knowledge of God.

But eternal life in the Bible is not just a static entity. It is not merely a measurable essence whose parameters can be precisely defined. Instead, eternal life is the very life of an infinite God. It follows, then, that eternal life can be possessed in varying measures and degrees. This becomes clear to us from our Lord’s words in John 10:10, “I have come that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly.”

But if eternal life is knowing God, then having that “more abundantly” must mean knowing Him better. Or perhaps we should say that it means knowing Him in a larger number of ways; i.e.,knowing Him at various levels of experience or in various facets of His character and nature. Thus, the New Testament concept of eternal life is fluid enough to allow for various conceptions of what it means to know God.

We should also point out here that in most languages the idea of “knowing” someone tends to be multi-faceted. Thus, I once heard a husband addressing other husbands and saying, “Men, get to know your wife.” No one misunderstood him. Of course, all the married men in his audience already knew their wives. Presumably none of them had married a stranger. But, obviously, this husband’s exhortation really meant: “Get to know your wife in depth.”

There is such a thing as knowing God “in depth,” too. Obviously, such knowledge should spring out of fellowship with Him, just as fellowship with other human beings enables us to know them in depth.

It was clearly about such knowledge of Himself that our Lord was speaking when He said to Philip: “If you had known Me, you would haveknown My Father also; and from now on you know Him and have seen Him” (John 14:7). And when Philip responds with a request to be shown the Father, our Lord gently rebukes his ignorance by saying, “Have I been with you so long, and yet you have not known Me, Philip?” (14:9).

But Philip did know Christ in one sense. He was a saved man and possessed eternal life. Thus, he knew Jesus as God’s appointed Savior. But in the deeper sense in which our Lord was speaking to him, Philip did not know Jesus. Thus he could not perceive how perfectly the Father was reflected to him in the Son. Later on in this chapter (verses 19-24) Jesus speaks to Philip and to the other disciples in terms of a disclosure of Himself to them which is contingent on obedience to His commands.

And it is precisely in a passage like the one in John 14 that we meet the seed-bed for the idea expressed in 1 John 2:4. For in 1 John 2:4 we have the Epistle’s first reference to knowing Christ, and it follows immediately a passage about fellowship with God and with Christ (1 John 1:5–2:2).

Thus, the experience of “knowing” Christ in 1 John 2:4 should not be taken as a reference to the knowledge of God which all born-again people possess. Instead, it refers to that deeper knowledge of our Lord and Master which can arise only out of a life of fellowship with Him and out of obedience to His commands.

Thus, 1 John 2:4 is a warning that any claim a man may make to intimate knowledge of God is a false claim if his life is not a life of obedience to his Lord’s commands.

Getting to know Christ intimately is a great privilege and joy. But it is a privilege and joy which is reserved for the obedient believer.

[mp_quote cite=”Zane Hodges” cite_url=”#” quote_content=”But eternal life in the Bible is not just a static entity. It is not merely a measurable essence whose parameters can be precisely defined. Instead, eternal life is the very life of an infinite God. It follows, then, that eternal life can be possessed in varying measures and degrees.” margin=”15,none,none,none”] [/mp_quote]

Subscribe by Email

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
Zane Hodges

by Zane Hodges

Zane Hodges taught New Testament Greek and Exegesis at Dallas Theological Seminary.

If you wish to ask a question about a given blog, email us your question at ges@faithalone.org.

Cart

Recently Added

March 27, 2023

1 Peter–Part 06–5:1-11 Epilogue

Welcome to Grace in Focus radio. Today, Ken Yates, Philippe Sterling and Bob Wilkin are winding down an excellent short study of the NT book...
March 27, 2023

Is My Testimony Common or Uncommon?

I’ve been teaching a Sunday school class entitled “Answering Your Bible Questions.” Each week I answer four or five questions. One of them was this...
March 24, 2023

1 Peter–Part 05–3:8-4:19

Welcome to Grace in Focus radio. Today, Bob Wilkin, Philippe Sterling and Ken Yates continue their study and discussion of 1 Peter. Suffering is a...

Grace in Focus Radio

All Episodes

Listen to Stitcher

Listen on Spotify

Grace In Focus Magazine

Grace In Focus is sent to subscribers in the United States free of charge.

Subscribe for Free

The primary source of Grace Evangelical Society's funding is through charitable contributions. GES uses all contributions and proceeds from the sales of our resources to further the gospel of grace in the United States and abroad.

Donate

Bookstore Specials

  • Absolutely Free, 2nd Edition $20.00 $12.00
  • The Road to Reward, 2nd Edition $9.95 $5.00
  • A Free Grace Primer: The Hungry Inherit, The Gospel Under Siege, and Grace in Eclipse $20.00 $12.00
  • Hebrews: Partners with Christ $22.00 $15.00
  • Here Walks My Enemy: The Story of Luis (Hardcover) $13.95 $5.00
Grace Evangelical Society

(940) 270-8827 / ges@faithalone.org

4851 S I-35E Suite 203, Corinth, TX 76210
P.O. Box 1308, Denton, TX 76202

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube