When a man becomes a true disciple under the influence of the teaching of the Spirit of God, he is drawn out of this great system.
If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him." The apparent difiiculty is explained by the words things that are in the world. What does 1 John 2:15 mean? xxxii., p. 406; J. Keble, Sermons from Septuagesima to Ash Wednesday, p. 230.
Let the love of the world retire and that of God inhabit, let the better get room.… Shut out the evil love of the world, that thou mayest be filled by the love of God.
It was ongoing when John was writing this to the church in the first century.
1870. If any one loves the world, love for the Father is not in him.
There is a simple reason why this continual reality exists. The lust of the eyes indicates "inordinate desires after finery of every kind, gaudy dress, splendid houses, superb furniture, expensive equipage, trappings, and decorations of all sorts."
Go to. As a mass of depravities and errors, of immoralities and false doctrines, there is a world of thought and character for which we must have no moral approving love. Considered with reference to the first sense of the word, it is not improper to love the world as the work of God, and as illustrating his perfections; for we may suppose that God loves his own works, and it is not wrong that we should find pleasure in their contemplation. It is that simple! Only John records this detail. Some find in this the etymology of skein.
Morris pointed out what he called John's little trick of "emphasizing a word by simply repeating it. The specific thing in this case is love for the world. Help me to live righteously in Your eyes. What does this verse really mean?
If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him." The apparent difiiculty is explained by the words things that are in the world. What does 1 John 2:15 mean? xxxii., p. 406; J. Keble, Sermons from Septuagesima to Ash Wednesday, p. 230.
Let the love of the world retire and that of God inhabit, let the better get room.… Shut out the evil love of the world, that thou mayest be filled by the love of God.
It was ongoing when John was writing this to the church in the first century.
1870. If any one loves the world, love for the Father is not in him.
There is a simple reason why this continual reality exists. The lust of the eyes indicates "inordinate desires after finery of every kind, gaudy dress, splendid houses, superb furniture, expensive equipage, trappings, and decorations of all sorts."
Go to. As a mass of depravities and errors, of immoralities and false doctrines, there is a world of thought and character for which we must have no moral approving love. Considered with reference to the first sense of the word, it is not improper to love the world as the work of God, and as illustrating his perfections; for we may suppose that God loves his own works, and it is not wrong that we should find pleasure in their contemplation. It is that simple! Only John records this detail. Some find in this the etymology of skein.
Morris pointed out what he called John's little trick of "emphasizing a word by simply repeating it. The specific thing in this case is love for the world. Help me to live righteously in Your eyes. What does this verse really mean?
If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him." The apparent difiiculty is explained by the words things that are in the world. What does 1 John 2:15 mean? xxxii., p. 406; J. Keble, Sermons from Septuagesima to Ash Wednesday, p. 230.
Let the love of the world retire and that of God inhabit, let the better get room.… Shut out the evil love of the world, that thou mayest be filled by the love of God.
It was ongoing when John was writing this to the church in the first century.
1870. If any one loves the world, love for the Father is not in him.
There is a simple reason why this continual reality exists. The lust of the eyes indicates "inordinate desires after finery of every kind, gaudy dress, splendid houses, superb furniture, expensive equipage, trappings, and decorations of all sorts."
Go to. As a mass of depravities and errors, of immoralities and false doctrines, there is a world of thought and character for which we must have no moral approving love. Considered with reference to the first sense of the word, it is not improper to love the world as the work of God, and as illustrating his perfections; for we may suppose that God loves his own works, and it is not wrong that we should find pleasure in their contemplation. It is that simple! Only John records this detail. Some find in this the etymology of skein.
Morris pointed out what he called John's little trick of "emphasizing a word by simply repeating it. The specific thing in this case is love for the world. Help me to live righteously in Your eyes. What does this verse really mean?
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