Scroll Scroll

2 John 1

Epistolary Opening and Greeting

1The elder, to the chosen lady and her children, whom I love in truth, and not I only, but also all those who know the truth,

2for the truth’s sake, which remains in us, and it will be with us forever:

3Grace, mercy, and peace will be with us, from God the Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of the Father, in truth and love.

Joy in the Truth and Love Command

4I rejoice greatly that I have found some of your children walking in truth, even as we have been commanded by the Father.

5Now I beg you, dear lady, not as though I wrote to you a new commandment, but that which we had from the beginning, that we love one another.

6This is love, that we should walk according to his commandments. This is the commandment, even as you heard from the beginning, that you should walk in it.

Warning Against Deceivers and False Teachers

7For many deceivers have gone out into the world, those who don’t confess that Jesus Christ came in the flesh. This is the deceiver and the Antichrist.

8Watch yourselves, that we don’t lose the things which we have accomplished, but that we receive a full reward.

9Whoever transgresses and doesn’t remain in the teaching of Christ doesn’t have God. He who remains in the teaching has both the Father and the Son.

10If anyone comes to you and doesn’t bring this teaching, don’t receive him into your house, and don’t welcome him,

11for he who welcomes him participates in his evil deeds.

Epistolary Closing and Final Greetings

12Having many things to write to you, I don’t want to do so with paper and ink, but I hope to come to you and to speak face to face, that our joy may be made full.

13The children of your chosen sister greet you. Amen.

The apostle John writes a brief letter to a 'chosen lady' and her children, emphasizing the foundational importance of truth and love in Christian community. He expresses joy that some are walking in truth while issuing a stern warning against deceivers who deny Christ's incarnation, identifying them as antichrists. John instructs believers to refuse hospitality to false teachers and concludes with hope for a personal visit to complete their fellowship and joy.

Context

This brief epistle serves as a companion to 1 John, applying its theological themes about truth and love to practical church situations involving false teachers.

Key Themes

Outline

  • 1-3
    Epistolary Opening and Greeting John greets the chosen lady with emphasis on truth, love, and divine grace from Father and Son.
  • 4-6
    Joy in Truth and Love Command The apostle rejoices that some walk in truth and reaffirms the fundamental commandment to love one another.
  • 7-11
    Warning Against Deceivers and False Teachers John warns against those denying Christ's incarnation and instructs believers to refuse them hospitality.
  • 12-13
    Epistolary Closing and Final Greetings The letter concludes with hope for personal visit and greetings from the sister church's children.

Epistolary Opening and Greeting

1:1–1:3
epistle instruction tender

The elder opens his letter with a greeting to the chosen lady and her children, emphasizing truth and love while invoking grace, mercy, and peace from God the Father and Jesus Christ.

person_contrast

Unlike most New Testament letters where Jesus appears in contexts of authority or judgment, 2 John uniquely pairs Jesus with "chosen lady" language, creating an intimate familial greeting.

Joy in the Truth and Love Command

1:4–1:6
epistle exhortation joyful

The elder expresses joy that some of the lady's children are walking in truth and reminds her of the fundamental commandment to love one another, which has been given from the beginning.

theme_rarity

John's pairing of "joy" and "truth" appears in only two New Testament passages, making his celebration of the recipients' truthful living remarkably rare in biblical literature.

Warning Against Deceivers and False Teachers

1:7–1:11
epistle warning

The elder warns against deceivers who deny Christ's incarnation, identifying them as antichrists, and instructs the recipients not to welcome those who bring false teaching about Christ.

person_contrast

John uniquely links "Jesus Christ came in the flesh" with the Antichrist designation, making incarnational denial the defining heretical marker rather than moral or eschatological errors.

Epistolary Closing and Final Greetings

1:12–1:13
epistle instruction hopeful

The elder concludes his letter expressing his desire to visit in person rather than continue writing, hoping for face-to-face fellowship that will bring complete joy.

structural

The elder's preference for "face to face" conversation over "paper and ink" echoes 3 John 1:13-14 verbatim, making these the only New Testament letters sharing identical closing sentiments about written versus oral communication.

Insights

Insight Character Study

Unlike most New Testament letters where Jesus appears in contexts of authority or judgment, 2 John uniquely pairs Jesus with "chosen lady" language, creating an intimate familial greeting.

Insight Rare Theme

John's pairing of "joy" and "truth" appears in only two New Testament passages, making his celebration of the recipients' truthful living remarkably rare in biblical literature.

Insight Character Study

John uniquely links "Jesus Christ came in the flesh" with the Antichrist designation, making incarnational denial the defining heretical marker rather than moral or eschatological errors.

Insight Literary Structure

The elder's preference for "face to face" conversation over "paper and ink" echoes 3 John 1:13-14 verbatim, making these the only New Testament letters sharing identical closing sentiments about written versus oral communication.

Cross-References

Connected passages across Scripture

Interlinear

Word-by-word original language

v. 1
v. 2
v. 3
v. 4
v. 5
v. 6
v. 7
v. 8
v. 9
v. 10
v. 11
v. 12
v. 13