The Johannine Epistles, as these three brief New Testament writings are collectively known, have occupied a peculiar place in Christian consciousness. Ask most believers to quote from the Gospel of John, and phrases tumble forth with ease: "For God so loved the world," "I am the way, the truth, and the life," "In the beginning was the Word." The Gospel's soaring prologue and intimate portrait of Jesus have captured imaginations across centuries and continents. The book of Revelation, also traditionally attributed to John, commands attention through its vivid apocalyptic imagery and its place as the final word of Christian Scripture. But the epistles? They exist in a kind of middle space, known but not quite familiar, quoted occasionally but rarely studied systematically, present in the canon but often passed over in favor of Paul's more extensive correspondence or the narrative drama of the Gospels.Understanding the Johannine Epistles requires attention to multiple dimensions of meaning. We must attempt to reconstruct, however tentatively, the historical situation that called them forth. What crisis prompted their writing? What were the false teachers claiming? How did their departure affect those who remained? At the same time, we must attend to the literary artistry of the texts themselves, recognizing how the author uses repetition, contrast, and spiral development to make his case. We must grapple with the theological claims being made, weighing how the epistles' Christology, soteriology, and ethics compare with other New Testament witnesses. And we must honestly face the hermeneutical challenge of applying ancient texts to contemporary situations that differ dramatically from their original context.This book seeks to provide readers with tools for all these tasks. It is written with the conviction that historical scholarship and devotional reading need not stand in opposition, that understanding the ancient world enriches rather than diminishes our encounter with Scripture, and that the Johannine Epistles have vital things to say to twenty-first-century Christians wrestling with questions of truth, community, love, and faithfulness. The approach taken here is neither purely academic nor purely devotional, but rather aims to inhabit that space where rigorous thinking and personal faith inform and strengthen each other.