Diotrephes in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
3 John 1:9, loving to have the preeminence" through
ambition. A Judaizer, who opposed the missionaries when
preaching grace to the Gentiles, see 3 John 1:7. He "prated
against" John and the orthodox "with malicious words"; he
"received not" John, by not receiving with love the brethren
whom John recommended (Matthew 10:40). His influence was so
great that he "cast out" of the church such as were disposed
to receive them. But Neander thinks that the missionaries
were Christian Jews who "took nothing of the Gentiles" (3
John 1:7), in contrast to the Jews who elsewhere abused
ministers' right of maintenance (2 Corinthians 11:22;
Philemon 3:2; Philemon 3:5; Philemon 3:19); and that
Diotrephes stood at the head of an ultra-Pauline party of
anti-Jewish tendency, forerunners of Marcion. This accounts
for Diotrephes' domineering opposition to the missionaries
and to John, whose love combined with truth sought to
harmonize the various elements in the Asiatic churches.
Demetrius is praised as of the opposite spirit to
Diotrephes; as the former was to be followed, so the latter
to be shunned (3 John 1:11-12). Perhaps Diotrephes as the
local bishop simply resented the interference of John's
apostolic legates as an infringement of his personal rights.
For whereas in the 2nd Epistle of John corruption of
doctrine is spoken of as disqualifying one from the
hospitality of the church, in this 3rd Epistle no hint is
given of erroneous doctrine; but only of Diotrephes' "love
of preeminence."
Diotrephes and the presbyters influenced by him
(whether as their bishop or not) treated the apostle's
messengers as persons claiming an authority derogatory to
his own. But John (3 John 1:10) uses language implying his
own unquestionable power of restraining Diotrephes's
"prating" opposition: such as none but an apostle could
properly have employed, an indirect confirmation of the
Johannine authorship of the epistle.
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