John is not a writer who softens his conclusions.
When he has something hard to say, he says it plainly and expects you to sit with the weight of it.
First John 4:20 is one of the hardest things he says.
“If anyone says, ‘I love God,’ and hates his brother, he is a liar; for he who does not love his brother whom he has seen cannot love God whom he has not seen.” (1 John 4:20, ESV)
“Whoever claims to love God yet hates a brother or sister is a liar. For whoever does not love their brother and sister, whom they have seen, cannot love God, whom they have not seen.” (1 John 4:20, NIV)
The verse is not a pastoral suggestion.
It is a logical argument, structured deliberately: a claim is made, a contradiction is named, and a verdict is delivered.
To understand what John means, you have to follow the argument rather than receive the conclusion.
The Claim Being Examined
“If Anyone Says, I Love God”
John opens with a conditional: if anyone says.
He is quoting a claim people make, perhaps a claim he has heard in the specific communities he is writing to.
The claim sounds unimpeachable.
“I love God” is a statement no religious person would expect to be interrogated.
It sounds like the heart of the faith.
John treats it as a claim that needs to be tested rather than accepted at face value.
This is not cynicism about faith.
It is John’s consistent method throughout the letter: he applies a series of tests to the claim of knowing God, and love for the brothers and sisters is one of the most important tests he uses.
First John 2:9 has already stated that anyone claiming to be in the light while hating a brother is still in the darkness.
First John 3:17 has already stated that if anyone has the world’s goods and sees a brother in need yet closes their heart, the love of God does not abide in them.
First John 4:20 is the sharpest formulation of an argument John has been building across the entire letter.
Why the Claim Needs Testing
Religion produces a particular danger: it can give a person confidence that they are close to God while their relationships with people tell a different story.
A person can pray, attend worship, speak well of God, and feel genuinely devout, while simultaneously carrying resentment, contempt, or cold indifference toward the people around them.
John is not writing about obvious frauds who say they love God to gain social credibility.
He is writing about the sincere person who has compartmentalized their devotion to God away from their treatment of people.
He argues that no such compartment exists.
The Contradiction John Names
The Seen and the Unseen
The second part of the verse introduces the logical structure of the argument.
If you do not love your brother, whom you have seen, how can you love God, whom you have not seen?
The argument moves from the lesser to the greater.
If love cannot be present in the easier case, it cannot be present in the harder one.
Loving a visible, tangible person whom you encounter daily is in one sense simpler than loving an invisible God.
You know their face.
You know their history.
You share meals, conversations, disappointments.
The human brother is present in a way God is not present to the physical senses.
If love cannot be sustained toward that visible, knowable person, the claim that it reaches upward to the invisible God is not credible.
Why This Is Not Simply a Logical Trick
The argument is not merely rhetorical.
It rests on a deeper theological claim: that love for God and love for people are not two separate exercises that happen to share a name.
They are a single reality that flows from a single source.
First John 4:7–8 has already laid the foundation: love is from God, and everyone who loves has been born of God and knows God, because God is love.
If love originates in God, and if a person genuinely knows that God, the love will not stay contained to vertical religious expression.
It will flow.
The absence of horizontal love does not simply mean the person is inconsistent.
It means the source that produces love has not been genuinely encountered.
Hating a brother is therefore not merely a moral failure that coexists with genuine love for God.
It is evidence that something in the claimed love for God is missing at its root.
The Verdict John Delivers
“He Is a Liar”
John uses the word liar five times in 1 John.
A liar in John’s usage is not necessarily a calculating deceiver.
It includes the person who is deceiving themselves.
The person who says “I love God” while hating their brother may genuinely believe the claim.
But the claim is false regardless of the sincerity with which it is made.
John’s verdict is that the claim does not correspond to reality.
This is not the harshest thing John says about such a person.
Earlier in the letter, 1 John 3:15 states that anyone who hates a brother is a murderer, carrying the language of the sixth commandment into the internal world of the heart.
The verdict of 1 John 4:20 stands within that broader context.
The stakes of the diagnosis are not minor.
What Hate Means in This Context
The word translated as hate is not restricted to active animosity or burning resentment alone.
In John’s usage throughout the letter, hate is contrasted with love as its opposite, and love is defined in active, practical terms.
First John 3:16–18 defines love as laying down one’s life, and as practically sharing with a brother in need.
Hate in that framework includes indifference, withholding, refusal to serve, and the cold absence of concern for another’s well-being.
This broadens the application of the verse considerably.
The person who does not actively hate anyone but equally does not actively love the people around them is still under the weight of John’s argument.
The Implications That Follow
The Commandment That Closes the Chapter
Verse 21 completes the thought: “And this commandment we have from him: whoever loves God must also love his brother.”
John does not leave the verdict without a mandate.
Jesus gave it explicitly in John 13:34–35 when he told his disciples to love one another as he had loved them, and that the world would know them by that love.
Matthew 22:37–40 places love for God and love for neighbor as the two commandments on which the entire law and prophets hang.
What 1 John 4:20 adds to that familiar framework is the diagnostic logic: love for God without love for people is not a partial fulfillment of the two commandments.
It is evidence that the first has not been genuinely fulfilled either.
What This Means for the Christian Community
First John is a letter written to a specific community dealing with the aftermath of a schism.
False teachers had left, and their departure had left relational damage behind.
Some people in John’s community were carrying wounds, divisions, and the particular coldness that follows broken trust.
John’s argument lands in that specific situation: you cannot process the fractures of the Christian community by retreating to a private devotion to God while you carry contempt or indifference toward the people the fracture affected.
The letter is not abstract theology.
It is pastoral triage for a community where love for the brothers had become genuinely difficult.
And John does not soften the demand because the difficulty is real.
What the Proof Demands Personally
John’s argument is not primarily about identifying hypocrites in other people’s lives.
It is a mirror held up to every person who reads it.
The question it generates is not: who in my life is failing this test?
The question is: am I?
Is there a person in my church, my family, my community toward whom I feel not love but contempt, indifference, or the particular coldness that says their pain or needs are not my concern?
If the answer is yes, then the self-assessment that follows is not: I am failing to love people enough.
The self-assessment is: my claim to love God requires examination.
The verse does not conclude with despair.
It concludes with a commandment, which means the situation is addressable.
The commandment to love both God and brother is not a description of something that happens automatically.
It is a command, which means it can be obeyed.
And obeying it begins with taking John’s argument seriously enough to let it reach the places in the heart where the unseen brothers and sisters are not being loved.
A Prayer Against Hypocrisy in the Heart
Lord, this verse does not let me look away.
I know how to say I love You. I know how to mean it in worship, in prayer, in the moments when my heart is drawn toward You.
But the people I have seen today: the ones who are difficult, the ones who have wounded me, the ones I have quietly written off. John says those people are the test.
Where I am failing the test, show me. Where my love for You has stayed private and vertical and never reached the visible person in front of me, break that open.
Let me not be a liar.
In Jesus’ Name, Amen.
Frequently Asked Questions About 1 John 4:20
What does 1 John 4:20 mean?
The verse argues that love for God and love for people cannot be separated. Anyone who claims to love the invisible God while hating a visible brother makes a false claim: if love cannot reach someone you see, it cannot genuinely reach the God you cannot see.
Why does John call someone who hates their brother a liar?
Calling yourself a lover of God while hating your brother is a contradiction John refuses to let stand. The love of God, when genuinely received, produces love for people. Where that fruit is absent, the root claim is suspect. A sincere false belief is still false.
Who is “brother” in 1 John 4:20, fellow Christians or everyone?
The immediate context focuses on love within the Christian community. However, the principle connects to Jesus’s broader teaching on neighbor-love in Matthew 22 and Luke 10. The verse applies at minimum to fellow believers; its logic extends to anyone whose visible need creates an opportunity for love.
Does 1 John 4:20 mean Christians must love perfectly before claiming to love God?
No. The contrast John draws is between love and hate, not between perfect and imperfect love. The issue is whether love is genuinely present or replaced by hatred and contempt. Struggling to love is different from harboring active hatred or cold indifference.
How does 1 John 4:20 connect to what Jesus taught about love?
It extends John 13:34–35, where Jesus commands disciples to love one another as he loved them, and Matthew 22:37–40, where love for God and love for neighbor hold all other commandments together. First John 4:20 adds the diagnostic point: you cannot claim the first without living the second.
Passage and Commentary Sources
Stott, John R. W. The Letters of John. Tyndale New Testament Commentaries. IVP Academic, 1988.
Marshall, I. Howard. The Epistles of John. New International Commentary on the New Testament. Eerdmans, 1978.
What Does 1 John 4:20 Mean? GotQuestions.org.
What Does 1 John 4:20 Mean? BibleRef.com.
1 John 4:20 Commentary. Bible Study Tools.
1 John 4:20 Commentary. Precept Austin.
1 John 4:20 Explained. Crosswalk.
Love for God and Love for Others. The Gospel Coalition.
1 John 4:20 Meaning. Video Bible Blog.
Bruce, F. F. The Epistles of John. Eerdmans, 1979.
