Judaism: Likely resonates strongly with “walk” language (halakhah = “the walk”)—love expressed through practiced commandments, community ethics, and covenant faithfulness.
Islam: Often affirms the idea that love of God shows up as obedience and submission in daily life; may read the verse as “faith proven by actions.”
Buddhism: May translate “walk in love” into compassion-in-action (karuṇā) and disciplined practice; “commandments” may be heard more as training/ethics than divine law.
Hinduism: Might map it to dharma (right living) and bhakti (devotion): love expressed through faithful practice and duty in family/community.
Secular humanism: Often agrees with the ethics (“love as action”), while treating “commandments” as cultural/moral frameworks rather than divine authority.