"Little children, keep yourselves from idols. Amen." 1 John 5:21
I have always found this verse to be one of the oddest things in the bible. It's the closing of a letter, but it seems to have nothing to do with the rest of the book.
John, as I said yesterday, writes all about the Antichrist and about God's love. Idolatry doesn't really get all that much attention in the first letter of his. The last two chapters talk all about Jesus and how to follow him, so I'm surprised that it doesn't end with a doxology (glory be...) or some sort of closing blessing. Instead, the letter ends with a brief note. It's as if John wanted to write a P.S. before the custom was popular (I'm not sure how letter writing conventions of the first and second centuries AD were).
But, when I think about it even more, the note at the end had to be important enough for him to include it. I remember when I was in high school, playing in an orchestra rehearsal, the guest conductor was not happy with how somebody was playing Mozart. In fact, he stopped and said, "You know, back then, paper was expensive. Ink was expensive. Writing music was tedious. So, if there is a dot on each one of those notes, you'd better play each one." Perhaps the same logic can be taken here, where paper was scarce, and literacy was low. This note seems to be important.
The other thing about this note, though, is that John assumes that the readers know what exactly he's talking about. And, if we as modern day readers think about it, we know exactly what he's talking about. It seems that following Jesus does require some explanation, and the explanations that John has given us reiterate everything that Jesus has taught us: to love unconditionally. But ridding our lives of idols, now that's an easy one for us to understand. We don't need an explanation for that because we know what idols are. We know that our faith is being stretched just as our attention span is. We are drawn to money, to beauty, to celebrities, to many other things besides God. Those idols tempt us each day. The same thing has been happening all throughout history. Read any two chapters in 1 or 2 Chronicles and you'll see that. Look at the wisdom books in the bible and you'll see so much about not straying from idols. Yet, we always need a reminder.
Perhaps, John is giving us an answer to a question that we'd have after hearing his statement. It's a summary of the entire letter. We have a way out of our temptations of all those other idols. When we devote our lives to idols, we no longer have the time or the energy to love. So, when we love as Jesus taught us, as John reminds us, then we will draw ourselves ever closer to God.
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