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1 John 4:17-18 (RSVCE)
17 In this is love perfected with us, that we may have confidence for the day of judgment, because as he is so are we in this world. 18 There is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear. For fear has to do with punishment, and he who fears is not perfected in love.
A Catholic Commentary on Holy Scripture (Bernard Orchard):
Verse 15–17. By faith and love we are united to God and to one another, and if we perfect ourselves in love, we need not fear the day of judgement.
Verse 18. Just as love unites two persons, so fear separates them. There is a servile fear of God that is incompatible with perfect charity. This looks only to the punishment, and he who is influenced solely by it fears to approach a just God. He fears the punishment more than the fact of offending God. Such ‘fear is not in charity’. There is also a filial fear of God, which considers only that sin is an offence against God. Such fear springs from love and is wholesome.
The Ignatius Catholic Study Bible New Testament (Scott Hahn):
4:18 love casts out fear: The more we love God and one another, the more our ability to love increases and the closer we draw to the Source of love (4:7). Over time, the exercise of charity instills a sense of moral security that expels anxiety about our fate at the final Judgment (2:28; 4:17).
The Navarre Bible Study:
4:17-18. The perfection of charity shows itself in serene confidence in God and consequent absence of fear. Love is perfected “in us”, as a gratuitous gift from God, but it can also be said that it grows with us, thanks to our free response to grace. Confidence for the day of judgment is something we should have also in this life; a basis for it is to be found in the daring statement, “ … because as he is so are we in this world”. This is not just a reference to imitating Christ’s virtues or qualities: it means the profound identification with Christ which the Christian should attain: “it is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me” (Gal 2:20). The fear which is incompatible with charity is servile fear, which sees God only as one who punishes those who transgress his commandments. But filial fear, which is compatible with charity, is what gives a Christian a deep horror of sin because it is something which cuts him off from the love of God his Father. In the early stages of the Christian life, fear of God is very helpful (cf., e.g. Ps 111:10; Sir 1:27): the Council of Trent teaches that sinners “by turning from a salutary fear of divine justice to a consideration of God’s mercy, are encouraged to hope, confident that God will be well-disposed to them for Christ’s sake” (De iustificatione, 6).
4:18. “The solution is to love”, St J. Escriva says. “St John the Apostle wrote some words which really move me: ‘qui autem timet, non est perfectus in caritate.’ I like to translate them as follows, almost word for word: the fearful man doesn’t know how to love. You, therefore, who do love and know how to show it, you mustn’t be afraid of anything. So on you go!” (The Forge , 260)
17 In this is love perfected with us, that we may have confidence for the day of judgment, because as he is so are we in this world. 18 There is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear. For fear has to do with punishment, and he who fears is not perfected in love.
A Catholic Commentary on Holy Scripture (Bernard Orchard):
Verse 15–17. By faith and love we are united to God and to one another, and if we perfect ourselves in love, we need not fear the day of judgement.
Verse 18. Just as love unites two persons, so fear separates them. There is a servile fear of God that is incompatible with perfect charity. This looks only to the punishment, and he who is influenced solely by it fears to approach a just God. He fears the punishment more than the fact of offending God. Such ‘fear is not in charity’. There is also a filial fear of God, which considers only that sin is an offence against God. Such fear springs from love and is wholesome.
The Ignatius Catholic Study Bible New Testament (Scott Hahn):
4:18 love casts out fear: The more we love God and one another, the more our ability to love increases and the closer we draw to the Source of love (4:7). Over time, the exercise of charity instills a sense of moral security that expels anxiety about our fate at the final Judgment (2:28; 4:17).
The Navarre Bible Study:
4:17-18. The perfection of charity shows itself in serene confidence in God and consequent absence of fear. Love is perfected “in us”, as a gratuitous gift from God, but it can also be said that it grows with us, thanks to our free response to grace. Confidence for the day of judgment is something we should have also in this life; a basis for it is to be found in the daring statement, “ … because as he is so are we in this world”. This is not just a reference to imitating Christ’s virtues or qualities: it means the profound identification with Christ which the Christian should attain: “it is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me” (Gal 2:20). The fear which is incompatible with charity is servile fear, which sees God only as one who punishes those who transgress his commandments. But filial fear, which is compatible with charity, is what gives a Christian a deep horror of sin because it is something which cuts him off from the love of God his Father. In the early stages of the Christian life, fear of God is very helpful (cf., e.g. Ps 111:10; Sir 1:27): the Council of Trent teaches that sinners “by turning from a salutary fear of divine justice to a consideration of God’s mercy, are encouraged to hope, confident that God will be well-disposed to them for Christ’s sake” (De iustificatione, 6).
4:18. “The solution is to love”, St J. Escriva says. “St John the Apostle wrote some words which really move me: ‘qui autem timet, non est perfectus in caritate.’ I like to translate them as follows, almost word for word: the fearful man doesn’t know how to love. You, therefore, who do love and know how to show it, you mustn’t be afraid of anything. So on you go!” (The Forge , 260)
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