freeatlast
New Member
This is so off topic;
The book and this passage is dealing with Gnostics who had crept into the church and spread their false doctrine. Now John in the 5th chapter is finishing the letter and telling them to pray for these brothers. The passage is not speaking about one who is saved and one who is lost. In both cases the person is lost. However the passage is speaking of a person who claims to be saved, (Again keep in mind John was dealing with the problem of Gnosticism and they did not hold that Jesus actually had flesh and blood.) You might want to study their many false beliefs as they denied the actual living breathing Christ.
So John says if they see someone who is in sin ( that sin would be related to the Gnostics teaching which John has been dealing with) they can be prayed for, this is not a real brother but someone who calls themself a brother but really needs saved by the evidence of their sin and they are still alive, but if someone who calls themself a brother and rejects everything about Christ while claiming to be a brother and they die they are not to pray for them. By the way praying for the dead is still alive and well and wrong. This way we can know the sin because it is what John has been writing about in the letter.
Both the one with sin not unto death and the one with sin unto death are both lost. They were calling themselves brothers and seen as brothers because of the confusion in the Gnostic's teachings. One thing that caught my attention while studying this was the word "life". In just about every case the word related to eternal life unless there is some modifier to make it clear it is speaking of earthly life. In this case it is speaking of eternal life.
The book and this passage is dealing with Gnostics who had crept into the church and spread their false doctrine. Now John in the 5th chapter is finishing the letter and telling them to pray for these brothers. The passage is not speaking about one who is saved and one who is lost. In both cases the person is lost. However the passage is speaking of a person who claims to be saved, (Again keep in mind John was dealing with the problem of Gnosticism and they did not hold that Jesus actually had flesh and blood.) You might want to study their many false beliefs as they denied the actual living breathing Christ.
So John says if they see someone who is in sin ( that sin would be related to the Gnostics teaching which John has been dealing with) they can be prayed for, this is not a real brother but someone who calls themself a brother but really needs saved by the evidence of their sin and they are still alive, but if someone who calls themself a brother and rejects everything about Christ while claiming to be a brother and they die they are not to pray for them. By the way praying for the dead is still alive and well and wrong. This way we can know the sin because it is what John has been writing about in the letter.
Both the one with sin not unto death and the one with sin unto death are both lost. They were calling themselves brothers and seen as brothers because of the confusion in the Gnostic's teachings. One thing that caught my attention while studying this was the word "life". In just about every case the word related to eternal life unless there is some modifier to make it clear it is speaking of earthly life. In this case it is speaking of eternal life.