Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Book Recommendation: Sons of Day & Night
Sunday, February 22, 2026
Tiny But Mighty Second John: Lesson 8 - Avoid
Read 2 John 7-11.
Focus on 2 John 10-11.
Knowledge
Answer the following
questions from the text:
v. 10 What should we see if a person brings with him or her?
If someone doesn’t bring it, what is the first thing we ought not to do?
What is the second thing we ought not to do?
v.11 What kind of deeds does this person have?
What happens if we do greet such a person?
Understanding & Wisdom
John has been providing us instructions throughout this tiny letter how we are to love one another—and how we are not to.
So he explained in verse 6 that loving one another means conducting ourselves according to the commandments of God. Agape love simply cannot be divorced from God’s truth, otherwise it ceases to be agape love.
This is important to remember because, according to verse 7, many deceivers have gone into the world. Such people will prevent true love, because they bring lies and untruths and false teaching with them. Lies and truth cannot coexist, and where there is no truth, there is no real love.
Therefore, John’s first instruction for dealing with such deceivers is to watch ourselves. We need to stay aware and observant, lest we lose the good.
John’s second instruction for dealing with deceivers is to abide in the teaching of Christ. We need to continue remain within the boundaries of the teaching about Christ as well as the teaching from Christ.
Which brings us to John’s third instruction for dealing with deceivers: avoid them.
Context
Because this last instruct from John has been misapplied and abused, let me make it clear again who is—and is not—being spoken of.
1. This is not referring to non-Christians in general. John is not advocating that we shut ourselves away from the world and associate exclusively with Christians.
2. This is not referring to Christians with whom we disagree. There are many disputable matters, as Paul refers to them, gray areas where there is no clear right and wrong. Indeed, there are areas where what is right for you may be wrong for me and vice versa. Moreover, we are not going to see eye to eye with every Christian on every matter. So these disputes are not what John is addressing here, otherwise we couldn’t fellowship with other believers.
3. This is not referring just to Christians with an erroneous belief. Again, if it did, we wouldn’t be able to associate with ourselves, much less with any other Christian. For we all carry areas of wrong beliefs, no matter how hard we might try to understand rightly. It is simply part of being a fallen human and a growing Christian.
Rather, the person in view here is the deceiver who advocates false teaching. He or she claims to be Christian, when in reality they oppose the real Christ, and the teaching they are advocating is not the teaching of Christ. Rather, they have slipped outside those boundaries to promote false teaching and heresy.
Moreover, the phrases in verse 10, “comes to you” and “receive into your house” points to the letter’s historical context of traveling teachers and preachers. At the end of the first century, before the New Testament was compiled and canonized, the churches relied heavily upon traveling teachers and prophets to provide additional instructions, much as Paul provided on his missionary journeys. Because their traveling prevented them from earning money through a normal job, church members would house, feed, and provide for the needs of these itinerate preachers. Of course, both Christians and non-Christians soon figured this out and decided this was an easy and comfortable way to live. Thus many charlatans arose.
This all reveals that John is specifically referencing deceivers who not only claim to be Christians but also are or claim to be leaders and teachers in the church. Like false prophets of the Old Testament, these people claimed to speak for God or at least speak with a certain amount of authority from God. Yet their teaching directly opposed the clear, fundamental truths of God.
So as we deal with this final instruction, please keep in mind John’s advice is for handling leaders within the body of Christ who claim to be Christian but whose teaching is false and shows them to be opposed to Christ.
Question to ponder: In view of this, what kinds of people could potentially fall into this group? That is, who qualifies as a Christian leader?
Method #3: Avoid
This brings us back to verse 10, where John provides our third instruction for dealing with these people. There it says that if this type of false-teaching leader comes to us, we aren’t to receive them into our house.
Again, the historical practice of receiving someone into a house is a little more complex than we tend to think of it today. To receive someone into a house, especially in Middle Eastern culture, was more than simply offering a room to stay. You were taking responsibility for that person to the point of treating that person as a family member during their stay, giving financial support, providing for their needs, and offering protection against outsiders if necessary.
In addition to this cultural context, the verb receive, according to Bauer’s Lexicon, can include the recognition of another’s authority (page 584). To receive them could also be an acknowledgement of their position and power, and therefore their right to a certain amount of control.
Now in 21st-century
Question to ponder: What are some of the other ways we can receive into our home these leader-deceivers?
The second half of the command in verse 10 is to not “even speak a greeting to him.” This greeting is rooted in the concept of happiness and well-being. So even though this is a formalized welcome, much like wishing someone a “good day,” it is still the speaking of a wish that the other is well and will be well, and it indicates you’re on good terms with that person (Bauer’s Lexicon, pages 1074-1075).
So in short, we’re to shun these leader-deceivers. We’re not to support them financially. We’re not to affirm them verbally. We’re not to protect or provide for them. We’re not to associate with them. We’re not even to engage in friendly conversation or wish them well. We’re to sever all contact, if possible, with them. All this from the apostle who instructed us just a few verses earlier to love one another.
Question to ponder: Why is this shunning not a violation of the command to love one another?
Evil Deeds
All this leads to verse 11, and the reason we’re to avoid and shun such people: Even simply offering a greeting makes us a participant in their evil deeds. That is, we have in common, share in, declare a mutual interest in, and indicate a close association with such a person. We create, as the verb says here, koinonia (fellowship) with them. This makes us equally responsible for those deeds.
What kinds of deeds are we becoming responsible for? Here they are called “evil,” a characteristic which is emphasized in the Greek by how the adjective is set apart: we participate in his deeds—his evil ones. This makes it very clear that partial support of such a person is not possible. We can’t claim to be supporting just the “good” part of the person’s ministry. Supporting any part of a false teacher’s ministry or any association with a deceiver is a participation in the evil. Period.
And what kind of evil is being spoken of here? This evil is that which “causes labor, pain, sorrow, malignant evil.” (Vine’s Expository Dictionary, page 212) It can refer to an unhealthy physical condition, the qualitatively worthless, and the morally destructive (Bauer’s Lexicon, pages 851-852). In short, the deceiver’s deeds are unhealthy, worthless, and destructive, only leading to trouble, pain, and sorrow.
Question to ponder: How does giving a greeting, much less receiving into our homes, such a person cause us to participate in his or her evil deeds?
Therefore, as much as our culture and even some churches might say otherwise, we must love within the bounds of Truth, which means there is a time and place for shunning certain people. To do otherwise is to foster evil, which is neither love nor truth.
Make it personal
One truth learned:
One area of conviction:
One way to correct:
Written prayer:
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
A Sceptre & Stylus Giveaway
It is hard to believe that the release of my trilogy’s second book, Perplexity, is less than two months away. Which means I should be talking up and doing all kinds of marketing for the launch.
Instead, I find myself fully occupied with writing book three, which is due to the publisher one week before Perplexity’s release. While I love watching that final part of the story unfold (because I’m still not sure how this is all going to work out!), that means I have little time and few braincells to spare for Perplexity.
So I find myself needing to rely on God and readers like you to spread the word. You would be amazed at how far a few lines about why you loved a book goes on Goodreads or Amazon. Or posting a picture on social media. Or requesting it at a library. Or whatever other ways you can dream up to share a favorite story.
Anyway, I am thankful to have this second book releasing soon, and a release of a book is worth celebrating. So, I would like to give a few books away to commemorate the event.
What do you need to do? Just fill out this Google form with a U.S. mailing address. I will pick three winners who will receive their choice of either a hardcover edition of Illuminary (book 1) or a paperback Advanced Reader Copy (ARC) of Perplexity (book 2). Because who doesn’t love reading a book before everyone else? But you’ll not want to delay, because this giveaway is short, closing on February 28, 2026.
Now it is back to writing for me.
Book Recommendation: Protector
Sunday, February 15, 2026
Tiny But Mighty Second John: Lesson 7 - Watch & Abide
Read 2 John 7-11.
Focus on 2 John 8-9.
Knowledge
Answer the following
questions from the text:
v. 8 What are we commanded to do?
In order that what might not be lost?
But in order that we might receive what?
v.9 Who does not have God? (2 attributes)
Which teaching are we to abide in?
If we abide in that teaching, what do we have? (2 answers)
Understanding & Wisdom
In verse 7, John warns us that many deceivers have infiltrated the world. While they might sound good and look good, their teaching is cracked at the very foundation and leads those who listen astray. Indeed, though these deceivers may claim to be Christ followers, they are actually opposed to Christ—antichrists.
Having clarified the danger, John now provides additional instructions for how to best deal with this.
Watch Yourselves
John’s first instruction for dealing with this danger is simply for us to watch ourselves. What does this mean?
First, watch is a command. This is not an optional action, but something imperative that we do, something we are obligated to follow. Watch is also in a form that usually indicates a repeated or continuous action. It isn’t something we do once and are done, but it is an action in which we must regularly engage. As for the word watch itself, it first refers to physical sight (as opposed to blindness). Then it is applied figuratively for intellectual and spiritual perception. (Bauer’s Lexicon, page 179; Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, Abridged, pages 706-707). So it is a word of observation coupled with insight.
Then this is coupled to the plural reflexive pronoun, yourselves. So I have an obligation to keep an eye on myself, just as you have an obligation to watch yourself. But it is likely we are to keep an eye on each other as well.
So watching ourselves implies being aware and observant. We see and notice those things which are visible—how I am acting and reacting, how you are acting and reacting. More than that, though, it also entails perception—noticing what might not be obvious and explicit, piecing together things to glimpse that which is beneath the surface. And upon noticing such things, like a watchman over a city, we sound warnings, strengthen fortifications, address vulnerabilities, and seek to protect.
And what is the purpose of this watching? John provides a twofold reason, one negative and one positive.
First, we are to watch ourselves in order that we might not lose what was accomplished. What are these things which John says “we have accomplished”? The terms used are pretty generic, making it hard to say. Accomplish is the common term for work and engaging in an activity that involves effort (Bauer’s Lexicon, page 389).
Even the we is ambiguous in this context, so it’s not clear if John is including the lady’s family as co-laborers, or whether he is referring to others he has worked with, such as the other apostles. So John could be referring to the spreading of the Gospel, the training of people in the Truth, the establishment of a church, or something completely different.
Whatever John exactly refers to, we can know that it took effort, it took time, and it took multiple people to accomplish, making the result valuable and worth guarding. Thus John warns us to watch ourselves in order that we might not lose what was accomplished. To lose isn’t merely the idea of misplacement. Rather, it refers to destruction and to something being ruined (Bauer’s Lexicon, pages 115-116; Vine’s Expository Dictionary, page 164).
This emphasizes again that deceivers and their false teachings aren’t inconsequential or harmless. They wreak destruction. They destroy what is good. They ruin the work of Christians. Thus we need to watch ourselves.
Question to ponder: How can failing to watch ourselves, especially in matters pertaining to verse 7’s deceivers, ruin or even destroy our work?
Now avoiding this destruction is a good reason to watch ourselves, but John doesn’t stop there. He not only provides us the push of the negative, but also the pull of the positive: Watching ourselves will enable us to receive a full reward.
Reward is the word for payment of work done, what we might in this context call wages today (Bauer’s Lexicon, page 652). So when we work as Christians, we aren’t doing it for free, as it often seems. We are accumulating heavenly wages which God will someday pay out to us.
These wages are then described as full, that is, the wages will be complete and lacking nothing (Bauer’s Lexicon, pages 826-827). Not one penny that we are owed will God withhold. All we’re due, He will pay.
Question to ponder: How does watching ourselves guarantee we’ll receive these complete wages?
Abide in the Teaching
Our first instruction from John on dealing with the danger of deceivers is to watch ourselves. In verse 9, he now provides a second guardrail: abide in the teaching of Christ.
Now John doesn’t tell us this through a command, as in the previous verse. Rather, he explains it through a comparison, a contrast.
First, he speaks of a person “who does not have God,” that is, he lacks a relationship with God (Bauer’s Lexicon, page 420). Why does this person lack God? Because he has gone too far and does not abide in the teaching of Christ.
Gone ahead (or too far) literally means to “go before” and refers to someone who “leads from one position to another by taking charge.” (Bauer’s Lexicon, 864) The idea seems to be of a person usurping power and taking charge of a situation that he has no right to, in order to lead in the direction he wants to go. And according to this verb’s form, this person does not do this once or twice, but repeatedly does this, over and over again.
Now by leading when he should be following, this person ends up no longer abiding in the teaching of Christ. This could refer either to the teaching about Christ, such as verse seven’s reference to the Incarnation, or the teachings received from Christ, such as verse five’s command to love one another. Or perhaps John has both in mind. Whichever one is in view, this person has abandoned those teachings. He believes he knows more than God and that his progressive thinking is better than the ageless teaching of Scripture. Such a person, John declares, has no relationship with God.
Question to ponder: How does going too far and failing to abide in the teaching of Christ destroy our relationship with God?
This person is then contrasted with the one who abides within the teaching of Christ. This one knows both the teachings about Christ and the teachings from Christ, and he or she abides in them. They acknowledge there are boundaries set by those teachings, and they choose to remain within the parameters of those teachings. Such a person, says John, has a relationship with both the Father and with Jesus.
For if we are abiding in the teaching of Christ, we are abiding in Christ. Through Christ, and only through Him, can we come to the Father (John 14:6) and know the Father (John 14:7) because Jesus is in the Father and the Father is in Him (John 14:11). So by abiding in the teaching of Christ, we gain a relationship with Jesus, and through Jesus, we gain a relationship with the Father.
Question to ponder: How, practically speaking, do we watch ourselves and abide in the teaching of Christ so that deceivers and their false teaching don’t lead us astray?
Make it personal
One truth learned:
One area of conviction:
One way to correct:
Written prayer:
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Book Recommendation: RoboTales
Reading Fiction Through the Eyes of Faith:

Sunday, February 8, 2026
Tiny But Mighty Second John: Lesson 6 - The Deceivers
Read 2 John 7-11.
Focus on 2 John 7.
Knowledge
Answer the following
questions from the text:
What word connects verses 6 and 7?
Who has gone out into the world?
Whom do these not acknowledge?
What do they not acknowledge about that one?
Those who do not acknowledge this—what are they called? (Two answers)
Understanding & Wisdom
In verses 4-6, John has affirmed to the readers of the need to love one another by walking in the truth of God’s commandments. He ends the sixth verse specifically emphasizing that his reader should continually conduct their lives according to this command. Today we see why the apostle felt it so necessary to reiterate that basic truth: There were false teachers roaming the streets.
Many deceivers
Now there is a paragraph break placed between verses six and seven in many translations. While that makes it easier for our modern eyes to read, paragraph breaks did not exist in the original manuscripts, and there is no break in John’s train of thought between verses six and seven. If anything, it is quite the opposite: The first word in verse seven, for, shows that these two verses are connected. Verse seven doesn’t mark a change of subject but continues John’s train of thought from verse six.
And what does this little conjunction tell us? The word seems to be used in a causative sense here. That is, the word for says that which follows explains the why of what went before. So here it is telling us why it’s important to conduct ourselves according to the commandment: We face the problem of many deceivers having gone out into the world.
Or to put it in the reverse, because there are many deceivers roaming the world, we ought to behave according to that which John outlined for us in verses five and six. Indeed, the implication seems to be that our first—or perhaps even our primary—defense against deceivers lays in obeying those instructions.
Question to ponder: How does loving each other by walking according to God’s commands protect us against spiritual deceivers?
Now who are these people John says we’re to guard against?
First, he calls them “deceivers.” This word is rooted in the physical concept of wandering and leading astray. It was even used in secular Greek for the labyrinth and for how it confused and led people astray geographically. The concept then came to be applied figuratively to seduction and causing someone to be mistaken. (Bauer’s Lexicon, page 821-822; Vine’s Expository Dictionary, page 151; The Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, Abridged, pages 857-860) This reveals three common attributes of deceivers:
1) These people are intentional. They know exactly what they are doing. It is not a mistake or a coincidence or an accident. They act with the purpose to mislead.
2) These people are attractive. They sound inviting. Their teaching seems right. Their words entice. They make a great first impression and initially appear quite likeable. Attracting a following is not difficult for them.
3) Most importantly, these people are untrustworthy. Like the sirens of Greek mythology, they lure you off course to your destruction. They might sound good, but they teach error. Their ways may be attractive, but they draw you away from walking according to God’s commands. Their ideas may seem reasonable, but they lead you into error. They confuse and obfuscate, fogging the mind so that you walk without a clear sense of direction, which allows them to lead you wherever they want.
Next, John describes these deceivers as having gone out into the world. This is the image of spreading and infiltration, like a cloud of smoke or a contagious virus. These deceivers are not confined to a specific locale. They are not constrained to specific environments. They are not restricted to a set route or precise path. Like spores borne upon the wind, they go wherever and everywhere in search of the perfect conditions to sprout. No one is immune or protected against their visitation. All we can do is to make conditions unfavorable for their taking root. Therefore, we all must be on our guard against them.
Question to ponder: How do we make conditions unfavorable for these deceivers and their teachings, both within our homes and our churches?
John now zeroes in on a specific error being propagated in the first century, mainly that Christ did not come bodily and was not fully human. This idea, part of the Gnostic heresy, came from a secular Greek idea that the spirit was good but matter was evil. However, Jesus was supposed to be sinless. Therefore, they concluded that Jesus couldn’t have truly come in the flesh, since that would taint him with evil. Jesus only appeared to be human. (Swindoll’s Living Insights: 2 John, page 143)
For me, this then provides two sets of applications. First, indirectly, it provides us a basic pattern for false teaching. Second, the passage then directly provides us a core belief about the nature of Christ.
A Pattern of False Teaching
Though I’m no expert in this topic, the development of this particular heresy provides a basic template that many false teaching follows. Therefore, while it is not directly found in this verse, I believe it is a worthwhile excursion to take so that we don’t follow the same path. I see three basic elements here:
1) False teaching is syncretistic. That is, it blends together the beliefs of Christianity with secular or cultural beliefs. In this case, the belief that Jesus is the sinless One, completely untainted by anything evil is biblically accurate. However, the belief that matter is evil was a completely secular idea, not rooted in Scripture. Gnosticism joined these two beliefs into one system of theology. So heresy arises when we mix our secular and cultural beliefs with our Christian faith, and this is one reason why false teaching can be so difficult to combat—it is a mixture of truth and lie.
2) False teaching appears logical. The conclusion the Gnostics arrived at is perfectly logical. If it is true that Christ is sinless, and if it is true that matter is evil, then it must be that Christ could not have a material body. The problem with false teaching often doesn’t lie with how they arrive at their conclusion, but with the foundation with which they start. Yet another reason why false teaching can be hard to detect and counter—you must return to the origins. Which leads us to:
3) False teaching has a cracked foundation. This is probably what most significantly sets apart true false teaching from the simple mistakes and the erroneous beliefs that we all have, pastors and Bible teachers included. For we all at time misapply a passage, lack the knowledge or maturity to correctly interpret, and fail to carry something through to a logical conclusion. But these erroneous beliefs don’t deal with foundational assumptions or core beliefs, but generally deal with matters of how should we live, such as keeping the Sabbath or the matter of eternal security.
Now some errors will have more problematic impact on our lives than others. Crooked wallpaper has less impact on a house than a crooked wall. Likewise, for example, your views of rapture probably won’t as impact your life as much as your views on sexuality. But a wrong view doesn’t necessarily equal the false teaching or heresy we’re talking about here.
False teaching, however, messes with the integrity of core beliefs—that is, those beliefs which primarily (though not exclusively) pertain to matters of salvation. This would include things like how we obtain salvation and the death and resurrection of Christ. You mess with these beliefs and everything else we believe is destabilized. In short, the foundation under false teaching is cracked, undermining the entire structure.
Questions to ponder: What are some of the non-negotiable, core beliefs we have as Christians? In light of all this, how do we prevent ourselves from falling into false teaching?
Doctrine of Incarnation
This leads us back to the false teaching being specifically countered here. Although incarnation is not the term John uses here, that is the basic belief being disputed: Did Jesus Christ truly come to earth as a human, not merely as an apparition that appeared human? John says those who deny the Incarnation are deceivers, so John is testifying that Jesus did absolutely take on human flesh, not merely human appearance. He had skin and blood and bones. He had muscles and organs. He had tendons and sinews and vessels. Just like the rest of us.
Why is this so important?
There are many reasons. If He did not have flesh, Scripture lied, and if it lied about this important subject, how could we trust anything else it says? And if He did not have flesh, then He couldn’t have experienced everything we experience as humans and would be unable to sympathize with our weaknesses (Hebrews 4:15). And if He did not have flesh, then He would not be able to accurately represent us as our mediator before God (1 Timothy 2:5).
But perhaps most of all, if Jesus did not have flesh, then He could not have died on the cross. If He did not die on the cross, He did not shed real blood. Without the shedding of blood, there is no forgiveness of sin (Hebrews 9:22). If there is no forgiveness, then we are still dead in our trespasses and doomed for destruction. Therefore, to deny Christ is come in the flesh is to deny our very means of salvation. But Hebrews 2:14 says, “Since the children share in flesh and blood, [Jesus] Himself likewise also partook of the same, that through death He might render powerless him who had the power of death, that is, the devil.”
Antichrist
Finally, John concludes the seventh verse by reiterating that the one who denies this truth is the deceiver—the one who leads astray. Then he adds this person is also “the antichrist.”
Now because of how we use that term, this statement could be a bit confusing, so allow me to clarify some. In modern Christianity, we often associate the term antichrist with a specific person, a ruler at the end of time who will set up himself as the ultimate opposite—the anti—of Christ.
That is not how the term is being used here. In fact, the term antichrist is only used four times in Scripture: here, in 1 John 2:18, 1 John 2:22, and 1 John 4:3. Interestingly, in none of those passages is the Antichrist of the End the main focus.
Adding to the confusion, Greek and English use the article “the” in different ways. Here, it is easy to read the English the before antichrist as referring to a specific person. However, the Greek the was more likely used categorically. That is, it was pointing out a specific type of person—a category of people—not a specific person. This is why some translations choose to use “an antichrist” instead of “the antichrist.”
All this to say, this false teacher is not merely misleading people. He or she is actually opposing Christ—that is, anti (against) Christ. If they are opposing Christ, they are not of Christ. So though they may claim to be Christians, though they may claim to follow Jesus, the reality is that they are actually His enemy and working against Him. It is this active opposition that frames John’s tough words of verse 8-11, which we will look at in the next lesson.
Question to ponder: Why is important to establish that the group John speaks of as antichrists?
Make it personal
One truth learned:
One area of conviction:
One way to correct:
Written prayer:







