Verse explainer

What does 1 John 5:14 really mean?

A promise about prayer — but the phrase 'according to his will' is doing more work than most readers give it credit for.

KJV

And this is the confidence that we have in him, that, if we ask any thing according to his will, he heareth us:

BSB

And this is the confidence that we have before Him: If we ask anything according to His will, He hears us.

John is writing to believers who already know they have eternal life (v. 13) — and from that security he draws a further assurance: you can come to God with boldness, not timidity. The Greek word behind 'confidence' (parresia) literally means freedom of speech, the liberty a child has to speak openly to a parent. But the promise is not a blank check. The condition 'according to his will' is not a loophole John slipped in to protect God from awkward requests. It is the actual architecture of the promise — what makes it a real promise rather than a vending-machine formula. God's revealed will, expressed through Scripture and his covenant promises, is precisely what we are invited to pray into. The assurance is not that God performs whatever we name, but that when our asking is shaped by what he has already declared good, our prayers are genuinely received — heard, not merely tolerated. Verse 15 presses the point: if we know he hears us, we can know we have the petitions we asked. The confidence is grounded in relationship and alignment, not in the volume or cleverness of the request.

'Ask anything according to his will' is just God's escape clause — it means the promise isn't really a promise. This is a common and understandable frustration: the condition seems to take back with one hand what the promise offers with the other. If 'his will' can explain any unanswered prayer, what is the promise actually worth? But the commentators point to a different reading. John is not writing a contract with a buried opt-out. He is describing the shape of genuine prayer — asking that has been formed by what God has already revealed he desires to give. Adam Clarke's point is clarifying: God's revealed will is not a mystery we have to guess at; it is the body of covenant promises laid out in Scripture. The promise is real precisely because it is bounded: when asking is shaped by what God has declared good, it is heard — not maybe heard, not heard-if-convenient, but heard. The 'confidence' (parresia, free speech, open access) in verse 14 and the 'know' in verse 15 ('we know that we have the petitions') are the language of assurance, not hedging. The condition is the ground of the promise, not its undoing.
Adam Clarkeearly 19th c. · PD

Clarke reads 'according to his will' as meaning what God has already promised in his revealed word — not his hidden decrees, but his declared covenant mercies. On Clarke's reading, the condition is not a restriction that weakens the promise but a guide that sharpens it: find what God has promised, pray for that, and the ground is solid. Prayer that wanders outside the revealed will has no such footing.

John Gill18th c. · PD

Gill distinguishes God's secret will (his eternal purposes, unknown to us) from his revealed will (the covenant of grace, the promises laid up in Christ). It is the revealed will that governs prayer. When believers ask for grace, spiritual supply, or any mercy that God has openly promised in Christ, they are asking according to that revealed will — and Gill insists such askers will be heard and answered, though in God's time and way, not necessarily the petitioner's.

Jamieson, Fausset & Brown19th c. · PD

JFB observe that 'according to his will' is not experienced by the genuine believer as an external constraint but as the very content of faith-shaped desire. When we are fully abiding in God, our will and his converge — and prayer becomes the natural expression of that alignment. Where our will diverges from his, it is our wanting that is disordered, not God's hearing that is withheld.

παρρησία parresia

'Confidence' or 'boldness.' The word originally meant the freedom of speech a citizen had in public assembly — the right to speak openly without fear. In the New Testament it carries the warmth of a child addressing a father directly, without shame or hesitation. It is the same word used in 1 John 4:17 for boldness on the day of judgment. Knowing this word changes the tone of the verse: John is not describing cautious petition but free, unhurried access.