1 John 4
King James Version (KJV)
FaithAmp Content on 1 John 4
Explore our studies, devotionals, and more related to this chapter.
Knowledge Without Love
1 Corinthians 13 wasn't written for weddings. It was written to a church that prized spiritual gifts over spiritual fruit, knowledge over kindness, being right over being loving. Paul wasn't writing poetry. He was issuing a warning.
Coming Home to Grace
For the recovering legalist. For the person wounded by weaponized theology. For anyone who walked away because the people who claimed to represent God were the cruelest people they knew. There is a way back. And it doesn't start with trying harder.
The Archer's Paradox
The Greek word for sin — hamartia — means 'missing the mark.' But what IS the mark? If you've been aiming at doctrinal perfection, theological precision, or moral scorekeeping, you might be the best archer in the room — and still missing everything.
One Fruit, Nine Flavors — What Actually Grows When You're Connected to the Vine
Galatians 5:22-23 has been printed on enough bookmarks and coffee mugs to paper a small church. Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control. But there's a grammatical detail sitting in the Greek that changes how the whole list works: fruit — singular. Not nine achievements. One life, expressed nine ways.
From Servants to Friends — When Jesus Rewrote the Relationship
After verse upon verse of vines, branches, fruit, and fire — Jesus steps out of the metaphor and drops a single sentence that rewrites the whole relationship. 'I no longer call you servants. I have called you friends.' In a culture where the gap between rabbi and disciple was absolute, that was a word worth dying over.