Verse explainer

What does 1 John 5:13 really mean?

John wrote so that believers could have settled assurance of eternal life — not just hope it, not earn it, but know it.

KJV

These things have I written unto you that believe on the name of the Son of God; that ye may know that ye have eternal life, and that ye may believe on the name of the Son of God.

BSB

I have written these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, so that you may know that you have eternal life.

John closes his letter by naming its purpose plainly: assurance. The whole epistle — its tests of love, obedience, and right belief — was not written to make readers anxious about whether they qualify, but to give those who already believe a solid ground for knowing they possess eternal life now. The verb is present tense: "you have" eternal life, not "you will receive it if you hold on." John anchors this to the Son of God, whose name the readers already trust. Earlier in the same chapter (v. 11–12), John had laid the foundation: God gave eternal life, and this life is in his Son — whoever has the Son has the life. Verse 13 draws the pastoral conclusion: I wrote all of this so that certainty, not perpetual doubt, would be your normal Christian experience. The Jamieson-Fausset-Brown note rightly observes that John ends his epistle here just as he ended his Gospel (John 20:30–31), stating his purpose — and that to know you have eternal life is itself the sure path to full joy.

"You can never really know if you're saved — that would be arrogance." This is perhaps the most widespread misreading of the verse, and it directly inverts John's intent. People are sometimes taught that claiming certainty about eternal life is presumptuous — that humility requires perpetual uncertainty. But John wrote the entire epistle precisely so that believers could know. The verse does not say "hope" or "trust" or "believe you might have" eternal life; it says know (Greek oida — settled, assured perception). The assurance is not grounded in the reader's worthiness or spiritual performance but in the object of faith: the Son of God and the record God gave about him (vv. 9–12). Confidence here is not arrogance about oneself — it is trust in what God testified. Adam Clarke captures it: this is not blind reliance for salvation but an actual present enjoyment of it. The tests John provides throughout the letter (love, obedience, right belief) function as evidence to confirm, not as hurdles to pass. The pastoral conclusion John draws is that uncertainty, not certainty, is the problem he is writing to correct.
Adam Clarkeearly 19th c. · PD

Clarke insists John is not pointing believers toward a blind hope but toward an actual present enjoyment of salvation — Christ living, working, and reigning in the heart. Believing on the Son is not a formal act but a living state: faith sustains itself by love, and love by obedience; the one who truly believes has the witness of it within himself.

John Gill18th c. · PD

Gill emphasizes that John wrote to show believers they have eternal life not merely in promise but in actual possession — they have it in Christ, the beginning of it in themselves, a right to it and a fitness for it. The repeated call to "believe" is a call to continue and increase in faith, since faith is imperfect and capable of growing, and nothing feeds it better than the sacred writings themselves.

Jamieson, Fausset & Brown19th c. · PD

JFB notes that John here mirrors the stated purpose at the close of his Gospel — both times he tells the reader why he wrote. To know that one has eternal life is, they observe, the very foundation of full Christian joy. The assurance is not a reward for spiritual achievement but the pastoral intent behind the entire epistle.

οἴδατε oidate

"That ye may know" — from oida, a perfect-tense verb in Greek expressing settled, completed knowledge, not ongoing investigation. Unlike ginosko (to come to know by experience), oida often carries the sense of firm, assured perception. John's goal is not that his readers keep searching for assurance but that they arrive at and rest in it. This one word shapes the whole pastoral thrust of the verse.