Faith, Love, and the Victory That Overcomes
John opens the chapter by tying the two great tests of genuine Christianity — belief and love — together in a single knot. "Everyone who believes that Jesus is the Christ has been born of God, and everyone who loves the Father loves whoever has been born of him" (5:1). The Greek verb pisteuō (to believe) in John is never merely intellectual assent; it is a whole-person entrusting of oneself to Jesus as the Christ, the anointed Son of God. This faith is inseparable from love: those who love the Father will naturally love the Father's other children.
John then offers one of the New Testament's most striking definitions of what it means to love God: "this is the love of God, that we keep his commandments. And his commandments are not burdensome" (5:3). Stephen Smalley notes that "not burdensome" (ou bareiai) does not mean easy in terms of effort but rather that they are not oppressive in the way that an alien law would be — the commandments of God are the natural expression of the life that God's children already have within them (1, 2, 3 John, WBC, 1984). Obedience is not the condition for receiving love; it is the shape that love takes in the person who has already received it.
From faith and love, John moves to the extraordinary claim about victory: "everyone who has been born of God overcomes the world. And this is the victory that has overcome the world — our faith" (5:4). The Greek noun nikē (victory) appears only here in the New Testament, and the perfect tense of nenikēken (has overcome) suggests a decisive act already accomplished, not a battle still in doubt. Robert Yarbrough observes that the victory John has in mind is not the removal of difficulty or persecution but the refusal to be defined by the world's values, its denial of the Son, and its passing-away character (1–3 John, BECNT, 2008). The instrument of this victory is faith — specifically, "the one who believes that Jesus is the Son of God" (5:5).
The Three Witnesses
At the theological heart of chapter 5 is a compact but dense passage about testimony: "This is he who came by water and blood — Jesus Christ; not by the water only but by the water and the blood. And the Spirit is the one who testifies, because the Spirit is the truth" (5:6). The reference to water and blood has generated considerable scholarly discussion. Colin Kruse argues persuasively that "water" refers to Jesus's baptism — the public inauguration of his ministry at the Jordan — and "blood" refers to his death on the cross (The Letters of John, PNTC, 2000). The emphasis on "not by the water only" is almost certainly a polemical edge directed at the secessionists, who may have affirmed the heavenly Christ's presence at the baptism but denied the significance of the cross.
The three witnesses — Spirit, water, and blood — agree in their testimony (5:8), and their combined martyria (testimony or witness) is greater than any human testimony (5:9). The ultimate ground of Christian assurance, then, is not subjective feeling or even moral progress but objective testimony: what God himself has declared about his Son. "Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son of God does not have life" (5:12). The logic is tight and binary — life is in the Son, and to have the Son is to have life.
We Know
The closing verses of 1 John pulse with the repeated verb oidamen — "we know" — a kind of theological confidence that John bestows on his readers like a gift. We know that we have eternal life (5:13). We know that God hears our prayers (5:15). We know that the one born of God does not keep on sinning (5:18). We know that we are from God even though the whole world lies in the power of the evil one (5:19). We know that the Son of God has come and has given us understanding so that we may know him who is true (5:20).
This cascade of certainties is not arrogance but pastoral medicine. In a community destabilized by those who claimed superior spiritual knowledge, John insists that ordinary believers who hold to the apostolic testimony about the incarnate, crucified, risen Son of God — they are the ones who truly know. The Greek zōē aiōnios (eternal life) is not only a future inheritance; it is a present possession that can be known and rested in now. The letter that began with "what we have heard, what we have seen with our eyes" ends with "we are in him who is true, in his Son Jesus Christ. He is the true God and eternal life" (5:20).
We find the repeated "we know" one of the gifts of this letter. Not "we hope," not "we're fairly confident," not "if we've done enough." We know. John is pushing against the anxiety that false teaching creates — the sense that assurance is always just out of reach, that you need more, that you haven't quite arrived. He says: you believe in the Son of God. You have the Son. You have life. You can know it. That's the letter's final word, and it lands like grace.
Last updated: March 3, 2026.
Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers.