Page 132 - New Testament Survey Student Textbook
P. 132

Purpose

               2 John is written to warn “the elect lady” (some interpret as the church) not to show hospitality toward
               itinerant preachers who cannot confess that Christ has come in the flesh (vv 7-8).
               Structure

               2 John opens with a greeting (1–3), a body (4–11), and a conclusion (12–13). The letter’s body begins
               with the command to love one another (4–6; compare John 13:34–35; 1 John 3:23). The rest of the body
               of the letter focuses on how to identify and respond to false teaching (2 John 7–11). The letter of 2 John
               concludes with John’s hope to visit the letter’s recipients (12).

               How does 2 John Impact our lives?

               Second John challenges us to use discernment as we choose to support leaders, organizations, teachers,
               and ideologies. What should you do to determine if the people you’re considering supporting show love
               for their neighbors and thus keep the commandments?
               Are you extending hospitality to someone—or something—you shouldn’t support (2 John 9–11)? Who or
               what might you support in its place?

               In what ways have you been treating love as simply an emotion and truth as mere words? How can you
               more actively express God’s truth and love in your life?


               Highlights: key passages

                   •  Practicing the Truth (4-6)
                   •  Guarding against Doubt and Defeat (7-8)
                   •  Guarding against Defection and Defectors (9-11)

               Introduction to 3 John: Living in Hospitality


               The main issue with 3 John, like 2 John, is hospitality. This time, instead of discouraging hospitality to
               false teachers (2 John 10), John wants to encourage hospitality for traveling missionaries who speak the
               truth (3 John 8). John contrasts one man’s inhospitable actions with another’s faithfulness—and in the
               process, John demonstrates the need for godly leadership like his own.  175

               Background

               Author

               The author introduces himself as John and is likely the same person
               responsible for 2 John.






                       175  Barry, J. D., et al.
                                                             131
   127   128   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137