1 John 5.6-12.
Previously I wrote about
1 John 5.7-8 KWL 7 For three are the witnesses{in heaven: The Father, the Word, and the Holy Spirit. These three are one. 8 And three are the witnesses on the earth} :- The Spirit, the water, and the blood.
- The three are in the one.
The part in brackets comes from
In verse 5, John stated, “Who’s the winner over the world, if not one who trusts that Jesus is God’s son?”
Jesus is the one who comes by water and blood; and three are witnesses of this—the water and blood, plus the Holy Spirit. And these three are in the one, i.e. Jesus.
Now, insert the Johannine Comma into the text, and suddenly “the one” in verse 8 doesn’t appear to be referring to Jesus anymore. Now it’s referring to the trinity—“the Father, the Word, and the Holy Spirit. These three are one.” John’s trying to make a point about who Jesus is, but the Johannine Comma hijacks his point and makes it about the trinity—and says the Spirit, the water, and the blood testify to the trinity, not to Jesus.
What does water and blood have to do with the Father and the Holy Spirit? They don’t, ’cause neither of these persons of the trinity became human. Only the Word, the Son, the Second Person, became the man Jesus. Only he
This is why the Johannine Comma doesn’t belong in 1 John. If you love that passage ’cause you can teach the trinity from one verse… well I can understand that; it’s handy. But it’s not what John wrote, and interferes with what John wrote. Teach the trinity from other, legitimate verses. (Jesus is God,
Historically, John’s whole water-’n-blood childbirth euphemism went right over Christians’ heads. Still does. So they either assume one of three things:
- It has something to do with the water of Jesus’s baptism and the blood of Jesus’s sacrificial death—the beginning and end of his earthly ministry.
- Or it has to do with the water and blood which poured out of Jesus’s side when the Roman soldier speared him.
Jn 19.34 - Or the water refers to the
sacrament ofwater baptism, and the blood refers to the sacrament ofholy communion. How, it’s hard to say, but Martin Luther and Jean Calvin really, really liked this interpretation.
But properly, the water and blood testify to Jesus’s humanity. And so does the Holy Spirit,
And since the Holy Spirit is God, his witness isn’t a minor witness. It’s hugely important.