I noticed that you wrote to
rogerg the following snippet.
Your philosophy leads to a tragic end.
Relating 1 John 5:19 With 1 John 2:2 - And - Relating 1 John 2:2 with 1 John 2:1
Look at John's preceding words to
1 John 5:19 about the born of God Christian "the evil one does not touch him" (
1 John 5:18).
The "part of the whole world person" "lies in the evil one" (
1 John 5:19) means the evil one touches the person (
1 John 5:18).
1 John 5:18 and
1 John 5:19 refer to diametric polar opposite states of being for persons.
Born of God Christians "have overcome the evil one" (
1 John 2:13), yet the "part of the whole world person" "lies in the evil one" (1 John 5:19) has not overcome by being beyond the evil one. "Overcome" and "beyond" are synonyms.
The phrase "lies in" is an intimate affair which involves "touch" with an intimate nature, so the group of people that are a part of "the whole world" are intimate, even servile, with "the evil one", and "
No one can serve two masters" (
Matthew 6:24).
We born of God Christians are not part of "the whole world" in "the whole world lies in the evil one" (
1 John 5:19).
Anyone who claims to be part of "the whole world" in "the whole world lies in the evil one" (
1 John 5:19) is not a born of God Christian by their own admission.
No Christian lies in the evil one; therefore, "the whole world" in
1 John 5:19 does not include Christians.
Since "the whole world" in
1 John 5:19 does not mean everyone everywhere in all time, then other occurrences of the word "world" in the New Testament can be constrained by context.
"The whole world" in
1 John 2:2 does not mean everyone everywhere in all time similar to the fact that "the whole world" in
1 John 5:19 does not mean everyone everywhere in all time.
The Apostle John wrote "He Himself is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours only, but also for the whole world" (
1 John 2:2), and this "the whole world" mentioned by John refers only to the chosen persons of God (
John 15:16,
John 15:19) who are yet to be imparted the work of God which is faith/belief in Lord Jesus Christ whom the Father has sent (
John 6:29).
In the preceding verse John wrote "I am writing these things to you so that you may not sin. And if anyone sins, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous" (
1 John 2:1).
The free-willian philosophy that the phrase "the whole world" in
1 John 2:2 results in propitiation for everyone everywhere in all time culminates in universalism because the sins of unbelievers would be covered by Jesus Christ the Advocate at the unbelievers death because in the preceding verse John wrote "if anyone sins, we have an Advocate with the Father" (
1 John 2:1) - the word "anyone" is the pivotal point resulting in universalism for free-willian philosophy because "anyone" includes "the whole world".
Universalism is deception because the Word of God says "Not everyone who says to Me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven" (
Matthew 7:21) thus Jesus indicates that some people do not enter heaven which means those people go to hell (
Matthew 25:41).
The Advocate succeeds every single time that He advocates for the forgiveness of a person's sins with the Father.
Free-willian philosophers think that the Advocate fails in some of His advocacies with the Father because there are person's sins which are not forgiven by God among the "anyone" in "if anyone sins", so free-willian philosophers think that Christ the Advocate is faulty, error-prone, false, and untrue.
John's letter is to Christian believers; therefore, John's letter is constrained by the context of persons believing in Christ. In
1 John 2:2, the verse's first third establishes that Christ is the propitiation, the verse's second third establishes for the sins of current believers, and the verse's third third establishes for the sins of future believers. There is no extant beyond Christian believers in
1 John 2:2.
This is Apostolic doctrine because the Apostle John is among the writers of these quoted passages.