2 John 1:5. And now this is the purport of the letter.

I beseech thee, Syria: the request has in it a tone of dignity as well as of courtesy; the mother is addressed, though some of her children who walked not in love are aimed at: the apostle urges his request, which is sheltered behind the evangelical law, not as though writing to thee a new commandment, but that which we had from the beginning, in the first person, that we love one another. ‘Let us all walk in love:' this, as well as the whole strain, shows the same exquisite courtesy which pervades St. Paul's letters to individuals.

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Old Testament