R. Alan Culpepper, “The Relationship between the Gospel of John and 1 John,” in Culpepper and Anderson, Communities, 95–122, repr. in idem, Designs for the Church in the Gospel of John: Collected Essays 1980–2020 (WUNT 2.465; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2021) 177–98.
Ismo Dunderberg, “Dissidents and God-Talk in the Johannine Epistles,” in Ute E. Eisen and Heidrun E. Mader, eds., Talking God in Society: Multidisciplinary (Re)constructions of Ancient (Con)texts.FS Peter Lampe (NTOA 120; Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2022) 1.455–73.
Raimo Hakola, “The Reception and Development of the Johannine Tradition in 1, 2, and 3 John,” in Tuomas Rasimus, ed., The Legacy of John: Second-Century Reception of the Fourth Gospel (NovTSup 132; Leiden, Boston: Brill, 2010) 17–47.
Mavis M. Leung, “Ethics and Imitatio Christi in 1 John,” Tyndale Bulletin (2018) 111–31.
Judith M. Lieu, “What Was from the Beginning: Scripture and Tradition in the Johannine Epistles,” New Testament Studies 39 (1993) 458–77.
Alicia D. Myers, “Remember the Greatest: Remaining in Love and Casting out Fear in 1 John,” Review and Expositor 115 (2018) 50–61.
Jan Van der Watt, “On Ethics in 1 John,” in Paul N. Anderson and R. Alan Culpepper, eds., Communities in Dispute: Current Scholarship on the Johannine Epistles (SBLECL 13; Atlanta: SBL, 2014) 197–222.
For Reference:
R. Alan Culpepper and Paul N. Anderson, Communities in Dispute: Current Scholarship on the Johannine Epistles (SBLECL 13; Atlanta: SBL, 2014).
Judith Lieu, I, II, III John: A Commentary (NTL; Louisville, London: Westminster John Knox, 2008).
George Parsenios, First, Second and Third John (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2014).