Albert Barnes Commentary


Albert Barnes Commentary
"Greater joy have I none than this, to hear of my children walking in the truth." — 3 John 1:4 (ASV)
I have no greater joy than to hear that my children walk in truth. That is to say, they adhere steadfastly to the truth and live in accordance with it.
This is the kind of language an aged apostle would use when speaking of those who had been converted by his instrumentality, and who looked up to him as a father. We may, therefore, infer that Gaius had been converted under the ministry of John and that he was probably a much younger man than John was.
John, the aged apostle, says that he had no higher happiness than to learn, concerning those who regarded him as their spiritual father, that they were steadfast in their adherence to the doctrines of religion. The same thing may be said now:
There is no joy in a family like that when children are converted. There is no news that comes from abroad that diffuses so much happiness through the domestic circle as the intelligence that a child is truly converted to the Savior. There is nothing that would give more peace to the dying pillow of the Christian parent, than to be able to leave the world with the assurance that his children would always walk in truth.