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Text -- John 1:22-51 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson -> Joh 1:22; Joh 1:22; Joh 1:22; Joh 1:22; Joh 1:22; Joh 1:23; Joh 1:23; Joh 1:23; Joh 1:24; Joh 1:24; Joh 1:25; Joh 1:25; Joh 1:26; Joh 1:26; Joh 1:27; Joh 1:27; Joh 1:28; Joh 1:28; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:30; Joh 1:31; Joh 1:31; Joh 1:32; Joh 1:32; Joh 1:33; Joh 1:33; Joh 1:34; Joh 1:34; Joh 1:34; Joh 1:35; Joh 1:35; Joh 1:35; Joh 1:36; Joh 1:36; Joh 1:36; Joh 1:37; Joh 1:37; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:40; Joh 1:40; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:44; Joh 1:45; Joh 1:45; Joh 1:45; Joh 1:46; Joh 1:46; Joh 1:47; Joh 1:47; Joh 1:48; Joh 1:48; Joh 1:48; Joh 1:49; Joh 1:49; Joh 1:50; Joh 1:50; Joh 1:50; Joh 1:51; Joh 1:51
Robertson: Joh 1:22 - -- They said therefore ( eipan oun ).
Second aorist active indicative of defective verb eipon with a instead of usual o . Note oun , inferential her...
They said therefore (
Second aorist active indicative of defective verb
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Robertson: Joh 1:22 - -- Who art thou? ( Tis ei ).
Same question as at first (Joh 1:19), but briefer.
Who art thou? (
Same question as at first (Joh 1:19), but briefer.
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Robertson: Joh 1:22 - -- That we give answer ( hina apokrisin dōmen ).
Final use of hina with second aorist active subjunctive of didōmi with apokrisin from apokrin...
That we give answer (
Final use of
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Robertson: Joh 1:22 - -- To those that sent ( tois pempsasin ).
Dative case plural of the articular participle first aorist active of pempō .
To those that sent (
Dative case plural of the articular participle first aorist active of
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Robertson: Joh 1:22 - -- What sayest thou of thyself? ( Ti legeis peri seautou ).
This time they opened wide the door without giving any hint at all.
What sayest thou of thyself? (
This time they opened wide the door without giving any hint at all.
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Robertson: Joh 1:23 - -- He said ( ephē ).
Common imperfect active (or second aorist active) of phēmi , to say, old defective verb.
He said (
Common imperfect active (or second aorist active) of
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Robertson: Joh 1:23 - -- I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness ( Egō phōnē boōntos en tēi erēmōi ).
For his answer John quotes Isa 40:3. The Synoptics ...
I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness (
For his answer John quotes Isa 40:3. The Synoptics (Mar 1:3; Mat 3:3; Luk 3:4) quote this language from Isaiah as descriptive of John, but do not say that he also applied it to himself. There is no reason to think that he did not do so. John also refers to Isaiah as the author of the words and also of the message,
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Robertson: Joh 1:23 - --
" Make straight the way of the Lord "(Euthunate tēn hodon tou kuriou ). By this language (euthunō in N.T. only here and Jam 3:4, first aorist...
" Make straight the way of the Lord "(
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Robertson: Joh 1:24 - -- They had been sent ( apestalmenoi ēsan ).
Periphrastic past perfect passive of apostellō .
They had been sent (
Periphrastic past perfect passive of
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Robertson: Joh 1:24 - -- From the Pharisees ( ek tōn Pharisaiōn ).
As the source (ek ) of the committee of Sadducees (Joh 1:19).
From the Pharisees (
As the source (
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Robertson: Joh 1:25 - -- Why then baptizest thou? ( Ti oun baptizeis ).
In view of his repeated denials (three here mentioned).
Why then baptizest thou? (
In view of his repeated denials (three here mentioned).
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Robertson: Joh 1:25 - -- If thou art not ( ei su ouk ei ).
Condition of first class. They did not interpret his claim to be "the voice"to be important enough to justify the o...
If thou art not (
Condition of first class. They did not interpret his claim to be "the voice"to be important enough to justify the ordinance of baptism. Abrahams ( Studies in Pharisaism and the Gospels ) shows that proselyte baptism was probably practised before John’ s time, but its use by John was treating the Jews as if they were themselves Gentiles.
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Robertson: Joh 1:26 - -- In the midst of you standeth ( mesos humōn stēkei ).
Adjective as in Joh 19:18, not en mesōi humōn . Present active indicative of late verb s...
In the midst of you standeth (
Adjective as in Joh 19:18, not
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Robertson: Joh 1:26 - -- Whom ye know not ( hon humeis ouk oidate ).
This was the tragedy of the situation (Joh 1:11). Apparently this startling declaration excited no furthe...
Whom ye know not (
This was the tragedy of the situation (Joh 1:11). Apparently this startling declaration excited no further inquiry from the committee.
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Robertson: Joh 1:27 - -- Coming after me ( opisō mou erchomenos ).
No article (ho ) in Aleph B. John as the forerunner of the Messiah has preceded him in time, but not in ...
Coming after me (
No article (
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Robertson: Joh 1:27 - -- The latchet of whose shoe I am not worthy to unloose ( hou ouk eimi axios hina lusō autou ton himanta tou hupodēmatos ).
Literally, "of whom I am...
The latchet of whose shoe I am not worthy to unloose (
Literally, "of whom I am not worthy that I unloose the latchet (see Mar 1:7 for
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Robertson: Joh 1:28 - -- In Bethany beyond Jordan ( en Bēthaniāi peran tou Iordanou ).
Undoubtedly the correct text, not "in Bethabara"as Origen suggested instead of "in ...
In Bethany beyond Jordan (
Undoubtedly the correct text, not "in Bethabara"as Origen suggested instead of "in Bethany"of all the known Greek manuscripts under the mistaken notion that the only Bethany was that near Jerusalem.
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Robertson: Joh 1:28 - -- Was baptizing ( ēn baptizōn ).
Periphrastic imperfect, common idiom in John.
Was baptizing (
Periphrastic imperfect, common idiom in John.
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Robertson: Joh 1:29 - -- On the morrow ( tēi epaurion ).
Locative case with hēmērāi (day) understood after the adverb epaurion . "Second day of this spiritual diary...
On the morrow (
Locative case with
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Robertson: Joh 1:29 - -- Seeth Jesus coming ( blepei ton Iēsoun erchomenon ).
Dramatic historical present indicative (blepei ) with vivid present middle participle (erchom...
Seeth Jesus coming (
Dramatic historical present indicative (
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Robertson: Joh 1:29 - -- Behold the Lamb of God ( ide ho amnos tou theou ).
Exclamation ide like idou , not verb, and so nominative amnos . Common idiom in John (Joh 1:36; ...
Behold the Lamb of God (
Exclamation
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Robertson: Joh 1:29 - -- Which taketh away the sin of the world ( ho airōn tēn hamartian tou kosmou ).
Note singular hamartian not plural hamartias (1Jo 3:5) where sa...
Which taketh away the sin of the world (
Note singular
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Robertson: Joh 1:30 - -- Of whom ( huper hou ).
Not peri , but huper . "On behalf of whom."John points to Jesus as he speaks: "This is he."There he is. See Joh 1:15 for discu...
Of whom (
Not
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Robertson: Joh 1:31 - -- And I knew him not ( kagō ouk ēidein auton ).
Repeated in Joh 1:33. Second past perfect of oida as imperfect. He had predicted the Messiah and ...
And I knew him not (
Repeated in Joh 1:33. Second past perfect of
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Robertson: Joh 1:31 - -- But that he should be made manifest to Israel ( all' hina phanerōthēi tōi Israēl ).
Final clause with hina and first aorist passive subjunc...
But that he should be made manifest to Israel (
Final clause with
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Robertson: Joh 1:32 - -- Bare witness ( emarturēsen ).
First aorist active indicative of martureō . Another specimen of John’ s witness to the Messiah (Joh 1:7, Joh ...
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Robertson: Joh 1:32 - -- I have beheld ( tetheamai ).
Perfect middle indicative of theaomai , the realization of the promise of the sign (Joh 1:33) by which he should recogni...
I have beheld (
Perfect middle indicative of
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Robertson: Joh 1:33 - -- He said ( ekeinos eipen ).
Explicit and emphatic pronoun as in Joh 1:8, referring to God as the one who sent John (Joh 1:6).
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Robertson: Joh 1:33 - -- With the Holy Spirit ( en pneumati hagiōi ).
"In the Holy Spirit."Here again one needs the background of the Synoptics for the contrast between Joh...
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Robertson: Joh 1:34 - -- I have seen ( heōraka ).
Present perfect active of horaō . John repeats the statement of Joh 1:32 (tetheamai ).
I have seen (
Present perfect active of
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Robertson: Joh 1:34 - -- Have borne witness ( memarturēka ).
Perfect active indicative of martureō for which verb see Joh 1:32.
Have borne witness (
Perfect active indicative of
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Robertson: Joh 1:34 - -- This is the Son of God ( ho huios tou theou ).
The Baptist saw the Spirit come on Jesus at his baptism and undoubtedly heard the Father’ s voice...
This is the Son of God (
The Baptist saw the Spirit come on Jesus at his baptism and undoubtedly heard the Father’ s voice hail him as "My Beloved Son"(Mar 1:11; Mat 3:17; Luk 3:22). Nathanael uses it as a Messianic title (Joh 1:49) as does Martha (Joh 11:27). The Synoptics use it also of Christ (Mar 3:11; Mat 14:33; Luk 22:70). Caiaphas employs it to Christ as a Messianic title (Mat 26:63) and Jesus confessed under oath that he was (verse Mat 26:64), thus applying the term to himself as he does in John’ s Gospel (Joh 5:25; Joh 10:36; Joh 11:4) and by implication (the Father, the Son) in Mat 11:27 (Luk 10:22). Hence in the Synoptics also Jesus calls himself the Son of God. The phrase means more than just Messiah and expresses the peculiar relation of the Son to the Father (Joh 3:18; Joh 5:25; Joh 17:5; Joh 19:7; Joh 20:31) like that of the Logos with God in Joh 1:1.
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Robertson: Joh 1:35 - -- Was standing ( histēkei ).
Past perfect of histēmi , intransitive, and used as imperfect in sense. See same form in Joh 7:37.
Was standing (
Past perfect of
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Robertson: Joh 1:35 - -- Two ( duo ).
One was Andrew (Joh 1:40), the other the Beloved Disciple (the Apostle John), who records this incident with happy memories.
Two (
One was Andrew (Joh 1:40), the other the Beloved Disciple (the Apostle John), who records this incident with happy memories.
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Robertson: Joh 1:36 - -- He looked ( emblepsas ).
First aorist active participle of emblepō , antecedent action before legei (says).
He looked (
First aorist active participle of
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Robertson: Joh 1:36 - -- As he walked ( peripatounti ).
Present active participle in dative case after emblepsas and like erchomenon in Joh 1:29 vividly pictures the rapt...
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Robertson: Joh 1:36 - -- Saith ( legei ).
Historical present, change from histēkei before. He repeats part of the tribute in Joh 1:29.
Saith (
Historical present, change from
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Robertson: Joh 1:37 - -- Heard him speak ( ēkousan autou lalountos ).
First active indicative of akouō and present active participle of laleō in genitive case agree...
Heard him speak (
First active indicative of
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Robertson: Joh 1:37 - -- They followed Jesus ( ēkolouthēsan tōi Iēsou ).
Associative instrumental case after verb (first aorist active indicative, ingressive aorist, ...
They followed Jesus (
Associative instrumental case after verb (first aorist active indicative, ingressive aorist, of
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Robertson: Joh 1:38 - -- Turned ( strapheis ).
Second aorist passive participle of strephō , vividly picturing the sudden act of Jesus on hearing their steps behind him.
Turned (
Second aorist passive participle of
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Robertson: Joh 1:38 - -- Beheld ( theasamenos ).
First aorist middle participle of theaomai (Joh 1:32). Both participles here express antecedent action to legei (saith).
Beheld (
First aorist middle participle of
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Robertson: Joh 1:38 - -- Following ( akolothountas ).
Present active participle of akoloutheō (Joh 1:37). It was Christ’ s first experience of this kind and the two ...
Following (
Present active participle of
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Robertson: Joh 1:38 - -- What seek ye? ( Ti zēteite ).
Not "whom"(tina Joh 18:4; Joh 20:15), but "what purpose have you."The first words of Jesus preserved in this Gospel...
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Robertson: Joh 1:38 - -- Rabbi ( Rabbei ).
Aramaic title for "Teacher"which John here translates by Didaskale as he is writing late and for general readers. Luke, a Greek C...
Rabbi (
Aramaic title for "Teacher"which John here translates by
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Robertson: Joh 1:38 - -- Being interpreted ( methermēmeuomenon ).
Present passive participle of methermēneuō , late compound of meta and hermēneuō , to explain (J...
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Robertson: Joh 1:38 - -- Where abidest thou? ( Pou meneis ).
They wished a place for quiet converse with Jesus.
Where abidest thou? (
They wished a place for quiet converse with Jesus.
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Robertson: Joh 1:39 - -- Come and ye shall see ( erchesthe kai opsesthe ).
Polite invitation and definite promise (future middle indicative opsesthe from horaō , correct ...
Come and ye shall see (
Polite invitation and definite promise (future middle indicative
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Robertson: Joh 1:39 - -- Where he abode ( pou menei ).
Indirect question preserving the present active indicative after secondary tense (eidan , saw) according to regular Gre...
Where he abode (
Indirect question preserving the present active indicative after secondary tense (
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With him (
"By his side,""beside him."
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Robertson: Joh 1:39 - -- That day ( tēn hēmeran ekeinēn ).
Accusative of extent of time, all during that day.
That day (
Accusative of extent of time, all during that day.
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Robertson: Joh 1:39 - -- About the tenth hour ( hōra hōs dekatē ).
Roman time and so ten o’ clock in the morning. John in Ephesus at the close of the century natur...
About the tenth hour (
Roman time and so ten o’ clock in the morning. John in Ephesus at the close of the century naturally uses Roman time. See Joh 20:19 "evening on that day,"clearly Roman time. Thus also Joh 19:14 (sixth hour, morning) and Mar 15:25 (third hour, nine a.m.) suit. To his latest day John never forgot the hour when first he met Jesus.
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Robertson: Joh 1:40 - -- Andrew ( Andreas ).
Explained by John as one of the two disciples of the Baptist and identified as the brother of the famous Simon Peter (cf. also Jo...
Andrew (
Explained by John as one of the two disciples of the Baptist and identified as the brother of the famous Simon Peter (cf. also Joh 6:8; Joh 12:22). The more formal call of Andrew and Simon, James and John, comes later (Mar 1:16.; Mat 4:18.; Luk 3:1-11).
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Robertson: Joh 1:40 - -- That heard John speak ( tōn akousantōn para Iōanou ).
"That heard from John,"a classical idiom (para with ablative after akouō ) seen also...
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Robertson: Joh 1:41 - -- He findeth first ( heuriskei houtos prōton ).
"This one finds (vivid dramatic present) first"(protōn ). Protōn (adverb supported by Aleph A ...
He findeth first (
"This one finds (vivid dramatic present) first"(
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Robertson: Joh 1:41 - -- We have found the Messiah ( Heurēkamen ton Messian ).
First aorist active indicative of heuriskō . Andrew and John had made the greatest discover...
We have found the Messiah (
First aorist active indicative of
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Robertson: Joh 1:41 - -- Which is ( ho estin ).
Same explanatory neuter relative as in Joh 1:38, "which word is."This Aramaic title Messiah is preserved in the N.T. only here...
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Robertson: Joh 1:42 - -- Looked upon him ( emblepsas autōi ).
See Joh 1:36 for same word and form of John’ s eager gaze at Jesus. Luke uses this word of Jesus when Pet...
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Robertson: Joh 1:42 - -- He brought him ( ēgagen auton ).
Effective second aorist active indicative of ago as if Andrew had to overcome some resistance on Simon’ s p...
He brought him (
Effective second aorist active indicative of
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Robertson: Joh 1:42 - -- Thou shalt be called Cephas ( su klēthēsēi Kēphās ).
Apparently before Simon spoke. We do not know whether Jesus had seen Simon before or n...
Thou shalt be called Cephas (
Apparently before Simon spoke. We do not know whether Jesus had seen Simon before or not, but he at once gives him a nickname that will characterize him some day, though not yet, when he makes the noble confession (Mat 16:17.), and Jesus will say, "Thou art Peter."Here the future passive indicative of
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Robertson: Joh 1:43 - -- He findeth Philip ( heuriskei Philippon ).
Vivid dramatic present as in Joh 1:41, though ēthelēsen (was minded, wished) is aorist active indica...
He findeth Philip (
Vivid dramatic present as in Joh 1:41, though
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Robertson: Joh 1:43 - -- Follow me ( akolouthei moi ).
Present active imperative, a direct challenge to Philip. Often Jesus uses this verb to win disciples (Mar 2:14; Mat 8:2...
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Robertson: Joh 1:44 - -- From Bethsaida ( apo Bēthsaida ).
Same expression in Joh 12:21 with the added words "of Galilee,"which locates it in Galilee, not in Iturea. There ...
From Bethsaida (
Same expression in Joh 12:21 with the added words "of Galilee,"which locates it in Galilee, not in Iturea. There were two Bethsaidas, one called Bethsaida Julias in Iturea (that in Luk 9:10) or the Eastern Bethsaida, the other the Western Bethsaida in Galilee (Mar 6:45), perhaps somewhere near Capernaum. This is the town of Andrew and Peter and Philip. Hence Philip would be inclined to follow the example of his townsmen.
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Robertson: Joh 1:45 - -- Philip findeth ( heuriskei Philippos ).
Dramatic present again. Philip carries on the work. One wins one. If that glorious beginning had only kept on...
Philip findeth (
Dramatic present again. Philip carries on the work. One wins one. If that glorious beginning had only kept on! Now it takes a hundred to win one.
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Robertson: Joh 1:45 - -- Nathaniel ( ton Nathanaēl ).
It is a Hebrew name meaning "God has given"like the Greek Theodore (Gift of God). He was from Cana of Galilee (Joh 2...
Nathaniel (
It is a Hebrew name meaning "God has given"like the Greek
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Robertson: Joh 1:45 - -- Jesus of Nazareth the son of Joseph ( Iēsoun huion tou Iōsēph ton apo Nazaret ).
More exactly, "Jesus, son of Joseph, the one from Nazareth."Je...
Jesus of Nazareth the son of Joseph (
More exactly, "Jesus, son of Joseph, the one from Nazareth."Jesus passed as son (no article in the Greek) of Joseph, though John has just described him as "God-only Begotten"in Joh 1:18, but certainly Philip could not know this. Bernard terms this part "the irony of St. John"for he is sure that his readers will agree with him as to the real deity of Jesus Christ. These details were probably meant to interest Nathanael.
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Robertson: Joh 1:46 - -- Can any good thing come out of Nazareth? ( Ek Nazaret dunatai ti agathon einai ).
Literally, "Out of Nazareth can anything good be."There is a tinge ...
Can any good thing come out of Nazareth? (
Literally, "Out of Nazareth can anything good be."There is a tinge of scorn in the question as if Nazareth (note position at beginning of sentence) had a bad name. Town rivalry may account to some extent for it since Cana (home of Nathanael) was near Nazareth. Clearly he had never heard of Jesus. The best thing in all the world came out of Nazareth, but Philip does not argue the point. A saying had arisen that no prophet comes out of Galilee (Joh 7:52), untrue like many such sayings.
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Robertson: Joh 1:46 - -- Come and see ( erchou kai ide ).
Present middle imperative (come on) and second active imperative (and see at once). Philip followed the method of Je...
Come and see (
Present middle imperative (come on) and second active imperative (and see at once). Philip followed the method of Jesus with Andrew and John (Joh 1:39), probably without knowing it. Wise is the one who knows how to deal with the sceptic.
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Robertson: Joh 1:47 - -- An Israelite indeed ( alēthōs Israēleitēs ).
"Truly an Israelite,"one living up to the covenant name, Israel at its best (Rom 2:29), without ...
An Israelite indeed (
"Truly an Israelite,"one living up to the covenant name, Israel at its best (Rom 2:29), without the guile (
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Robertson: Joh 1:48 - -- Whence knowest thou me? ( Pothen me ginōskeis ).
Nathanael is astonished at this tribute, at any knowledge about himself by Jesus. He had overheard...
Whence knowest thou me? (
Nathanael is astonished at this tribute, at any knowledge about himself by Jesus. He had overheard Christ’ s comment and longed to know its source.
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Robertson: Joh 1:48 - -- Before Philip called thee ( Pro tou se Philippon phōnēsai ).
Idiomatic Greek, pro and the ablative case of the articular aorist active infiniti...
Before Philip called thee (
Idiomatic Greek,
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Robertson: Joh 1:48 - -- When thou wast under the fig tree ( onta hupo tēn sukēn ).
"Being under the fig tree,"accusative present participle agreeing with se . The fig tr...
When thou wast under the fig tree (
"Being under the fig tree,"accusative present participle agreeing with
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Robertson: Joh 1:49 - -- Thou art the Son of God ( su ei ho huios tou theou ).
Whether Nathanael had heard the Baptist say this of Jesus (Joh 1:34) we do not know, apparently...
Thou art the Son of God (
Whether Nathanael had heard the Baptist say this of Jesus (Joh 1:34) we do not know, apparently not, but Nathanael was a student of the Old Testament as Philip implied (Joh 1:45) and was quick to put together his knowledge, the statement of Philip, and the manifest supernatural knowledge of Jesus as just shown. There is no reason for toning down the noble confession of Nathanael in the light of Christ’ s claim in Joh 1:51. Cf. the confession of Peter in Joh 6:69; Mat 16:16 and Martha’ s in Joh 11:27. Nathanael goes further.
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Robertson: Joh 1:49 - -- Thou art King of Israel ( Basileus ei tou Israēl ).
To us this seems an anti-climax, but not so to Nathanael for both are Messianic titles in Psa 2...
Thou art King of Israel (
To us this seems an anti-climax, but not so to Nathanael for both are Messianic titles in Psa 2:1-12 and Jesus is greeted in the Triumphal Entry as the King of Israel (Joh 12:13).
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Robertson: Joh 1:50 - -- Answered and said ( apekrithē kai eipen ).
This redundant use of both verbs (cf. Joh 1:26) occurs in the Synoptics also and in the lxx also. It is ...
Answered and said (
This redundant use of both verbs (cf. Joh 1:26) occurs in the Synoptics also and in the lxx also. It is Aramaic also and vernacular. It is not proof of an Aramaic original as Burney argues ( Aramaic Origin , etc., p. 53).
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Robertson: Joh 1:50 - -- Because ( hoti ).
Causal use of hoti at beginning of the sentence as in Joh 14:19; Joh 15:19; Joh 16:6. The second hoti before eidon (I saw) is...
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Robertson: Joh 1:50 - -- Thou shalt see greater things than these ( meizō toutōn opsēi ).
Perhaps volitive future middle indicative of horaō (though merely futurist...
Thou shalt see greater things than these (
Perhaps volitive future middle indicative of
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Robertson: Joh 1:51 - -- Verily, Verily ( Amēn ,amēn ).
Hebrew word transliterated into Greek and then into English, our "amen."John always repeats it, not singly as in ...
Verily, Verily (
Hebrew word transliterated into Greek and then into English, our "amen."John always repeats it, not singly as in the Synoptics, and only in the words of Jesus, an illustration of Christ’ s authoritative manner of speaking as shown also by
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Robertson: Joh 1:51 - -- The heaven opened ( ton ouranon aneōigota ).
Second perfect active participle of anoigō with double reduplication, standing open. The words rem...
The heaven opened (
Second perfect active participle of
Vincent -> Joh 1:23; Joh 1:23; Joh 1:23; Joh 1:24; Joh 1:26; Joh 1:26; Joh 1:26; Joh 1:26; Joh 1:27; Joh 1:27; Joh 1:27; Joh 1:28; Joh 1:28; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:30; Joh 1:30; Joh 1:31; Joh 1:31; Joh 1:31; Joh 1:32; Joh 1:32; Joh 1:32; Joh 1:33; Joh 1:33; Joh 1:34; Joh 1:34; Joh 1:34; Joh 1:35; Joh 1:35; Joh 1:36; Joh 1:36; Joh 1:37; Joh 1:37; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:40; Joh 1:40; Joh 1:40; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:44; Joh 1:45; Joh 1:45; Joh 1:46; Joh 1:47; Joh 1:47; Joh 1:48; Joh 1:48; Joh 1:49; Joh 1:50; Joh 1:50; Joh 1:51; Joh 1:51; Joh 1:51; Joh 1:51; Joh 1:51; Joh 1:51
The voice (
Or, a voice. There is no article. See on Mat 3:5.
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Vincent: Joh 1:23 - -- Crying in the wilderness
Some join in the wilderness with make straight , as in the Hebrew. The quotation is from Isa 40:3. In the other...
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Vincent: Joh 1:23 - -- Make straight the way ( εὐθύνατε τὴν ὁδὸν )
For ὁδὸν , way , all the Synoptists have τϼίβους , beat...
Make straight the way (
For
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Vincent: Joh 1:24 - -- They which were sent were ( εὐθύνατε τὴν ὁδον )
Literally, those having been sent were . But the best texts omit ...
They which were sent were (
Literally, those having been sent were . But the best texts omit the article, so that the remaining words form the pluperfect passive: " they had been sent from the Pharisees." This addition of an explanatory circumstance is characteristic of John. Compare Joh 1:41, Joh 1:45; Joh 9:14; Joh 11:5, Joh 11:18; Joh 13:23.
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Vincent: Joh 1:26 - -- I baptize with water: but there standeth
The best texts omit but; so that the two clauses illustrate John's characteristic parallelism, and bri...
I baptize with water: but there standeth
The best texts omit but; so that the two clauses illustrate John's characteristic parallelism, and bring out the sharp contrast between the Baptist and his successor.
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Vincent: Joh 1:26 - -- Among you ( μέσος ὑμῶν )
The Greek idiom is a mid one in respect of you . Ἑγὼ , I , and μέσος , a m...
Among you (
The Greek idiom is a mid one in respect of you .
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Vincent: Joh 1:26 - -- Standeth ( ἕστηκεν )
The best texts read στήκει , a verb which is kindred to ἕστηκεν , but with the added sense of ...
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Vincent: Joh 1:27 - -- He it is who, coming after me ( αὐτός ἐστιν ὁ ὀπίσω μοῦ ἐρχούμενος )
The best texts omit the first...
He it is who, coming after me (
The best texts omit the first two words. Westcott and Hort also omit
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Was preferred before me
The best texts omit.
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Vincent: Joh 1:27 - -- To unloose ( ἵνα λύσω )
Literally, that I should unloose . Mark (Mar 1:7) and Luke (Luk 3:16) have unloose . Matthew (Mat 3:...
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Vincent: Joh 1:28 - -- Bethabara ( βηθαναρᾷ )
The correct reading is βηθανία , Bethany . Not the Bethany of Joh 11:18, but an unknown village. It ...
Bethabara (
The correct reading is
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Vincent: Joh 1:28 - -- Was baptizing ( ἦν βαπτίζων )
The participle with the substantive verb indicating continued action; was engaged in baptizi...
Was baptizing (
The participle with the substantive verb indicating continued action; was engaged in baptizing .
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Vincent: Joh 1:29 - -- Seeth ( βλέπει )
Both ὁράω and βλέπω denote the physical act of seeing, the former seeing in general , the latter ...
Seeth (
Both
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Vincent: Joh 1:29 - -- Behold ( ἴδε )
The imperative in the singular number, though the company of his followers is addressed. This construction, however, is n...
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Vincent: Joh 1:29 - -- The Lamb ( ὁ ἀμνὸς )
The word occurs in John only here and in Joh 1:36. Also in Act 8:32; 1Pe 1:19. The diminutive ἀρνίον ,...
The Lamb (
The word occurs in John only here and in Joh 1:36. Also in Act 8:32; 1Pe 1:19. The diminutive
The term, the Lamb of God (note the article), is evidently used here by the Baptist in some sense understood by his hearers, and points to Isa 53:7; compare Act 8:32. The reference is probably to the Paschal lamb, though commentators differ.
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Vincent: Joh 1:29 - -- That taketh away ( ὁ αἴρων )
Either takes away or takes upon himself , in order to bear: either removal or expiation of ...
That taketh away (
Either takes away or takes upon himself , in order to bear: either removal or expiation of sin. The one idea, however, is included in the other. The taking away of the sin is through His bearing it. In Isa 53:1-12 (Sept.),
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The sin (
Collectively regarded.
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Vincent: Joh 1:30 - -- Of whom ( περὶ οὗ )
i.e., " concerning whom;" but the proper reading is ὑπὲρ οὗ, " on behalf of whom;" in vin...
Of whom (
i.e., " concerning whom;" but the proper reading is
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Vincent: Joh 1:30 - -- A man ( ἀνὴρ )
Three words are used in the New Testament for man : ἄῤῥην , or ἄρσην , ἀνήρ , and ἄν...
A man (
Three words are used in the New Testament for man :
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Vincent: Joh 1:31 - -- And I ( κἀγὼ )
Emphatic. " And I , though I predicted His coming (Joh 1:30), knew Him not."
And I (
Emphatic. " And I , though I predicted His coming (Joh 1:30), knew Him not."
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Vincent: Joh 1:31 - -- Knew Him not
Officially, as the Messiah. There is no reference to personal acquaintance. It is inconceivable that, with the intimate relations be...
Knew Him not
Officially, as the Messiah. There is no reference to personal acquaintance. It is inconceivable that, with the intimate relations between the two families, the Baptist should have been personally unacquainted with Jesus.
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Israel
Always with the idea of the spiritual privilege of the race.
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Vincent: Joh 1:32 - -- I saw ( τεθέαμαι )
Rev., more correctly, gives the force of the perfect tense, I have beheld . Calmly and thoughtfully; see on Joh...
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Vincent: Joh 1:33 - -- The same ( ἐκεῖνος )
Rev., He . See on Joh 1:18. Emphasizing the personal communication of Christ to the Baptist.
The same (
Rev., He . See on Joh 1:18. Emphasizing the personal communication of Christ to the Baptist.
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Vincent: Joh 1:33 - -- With the Holy Ghost ( ἐν Πνεύματι Ἁγίῳ )
Better, as Rev., Holy Spirit . The preposition ἐν , in (Rev., in margin...
With the Holy Ghost (
Better, as Rev., Holy Spirit . The preposition
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Vincent: Joh 1:34 - -- I saw ( ἑώρακα )
Rev., more strictly, according to the perfect tense, I have seen . See on Joh 1:32, and note the different verb f...
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Vincent: Joh 1:34 - -- Bare record ( μεμαρτύρηκα )
Rev., have born witness . Also the perfect tense.
Bare record (
Rev., have born witness . Also the perfect tense.
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Vincent: Joh 1:34 - -- The Son of God
This is the proper reading, but one very important manuscript reads ὁ ἐκλεκτὸς , the chosen . By the phrase John...
The Son of God
This is the proper reading, but one very important manuscript reads
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Vincent: Joh 1:35 - -- Stood ( εἱστήκει )
Rev., more correctly, was standing , since the imperfect tense denotes something in progress. Here, therefore, ...
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Vincent: Joh 1:35 - -- Two of his disciples
The one was Andrew (Joh 1:41), the other the Evangelist himself, who studiously refrains from mentioning his own name throug...
Two of his disciples
The one was Andrew (Joh 1:41), the other the Evangelist himself, who studiously refrains from mentioning his own name throughout the narrative. The name of James the elder also does not appear, nor that of Salome, the Evangelist's mother, who is mentioned by name in Mark's Gospel (Mar 15:40; Mar 16:1). The omission of his own name is the more significant from the fact that he is habitually exact in defining the names in his narrative. Compare the simple designation Simon (Joh 1:42) with subsequent occurrences of his name after his call, as Joh 1:42; Joh 13:6; Joh 21:15, etc. Also Thomas (Joh 11:16; Joh 20:24; Joh 21:2); Judas Iscariot (Joh 6:71; Joh 12:4; Joh 13:2, Joh 13:26); the other Judas (Joh 14:22). Note also that he never speaks of the Baptist as John the Baptist , like the other three Evangelists, but always as John .
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Vincent: Joh 1:36 - -- Looking ( ἐμβλέψας )
Rev., giving the force of the aorist, and he looked . See on Joh 1:29. The verb is used by John only here a...
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Vincent: Joh 1:36 - -- As He walked ( περιπατοῦντι )
The verb literally means to walk about (περί ). Here, possibly, walking along . Westcott, " ...
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Speak (
Literally, speaking .
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They followed
Bengel says, " The origin of the Christian Church."
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Vincent: Joh 1:38 - -- Saw ( θεασάμενος )
Better, as Rev., beheld : looked steadfastly upon them as if studying them.
Saw (
Better, as Rev., beheld : looked steadfastly upon them as if studying them.
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Vincent: Joh 1:38 - -- What seek ye?
The first words of Christ as recorded by John. Compare Mat 3:15; Mar 1:15; Luk 2:49.
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Vincent: Joh 1:38 - -- Rabbi
My great one; my honorable sir . Explained by Jesus himself as διδάσκαλος , teacher (Mat 23:8, where the proper re...
Rabbi
My great one; my honorable sir . Explained by Jesus himself as
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Vincent: Joh 1:38 - -- Being interpreted
John frequently adds explanatory remarks. See Joh 1:42, Joh 1:43; Joh 9:7.
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Vincent: Joh 1:38 - -- Dwellest thou ( μένεις )
Rev., abidest . Jesus had asked " What seek ye?" not whom . They reply, " Where dost thou abide?"
Dwellest thou (
Rev., abidest . Jesus had asked " What seek ye?" not whom . They reply, " Where dost thou abide?"
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See (
But the correct reading is
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Vincent: Joh 1:39 - -- They came
The best texts add οὖν , therefore . So Rev. This connecting particle is found in John's Gospel as often as in the other three ...
They came
The best texts add
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Vincent: Joh 1:39 - -- He dwelt ( μένει )
The present tense. Literally, they saw where he dwelleth . For a similar construction see Joh 2:9; Joh 4:1; Act 10:18,...
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Vincent: Joh 1:39 - -- Tenth hour
The question is whether this is to be reckoned according to the Jewish or the Roman method of computation. The Jewish method, employed...
Tenth hour
The question is whether this is to be reckoned according to the Jewish or the Roman method of computation. The Jewish method, employed by the other Evangelists, begins the day at sunrise; so that, according to this, the tenth hour would be four o'clock in the afternoon. The Roman method, like our own, reckons from midnight; according to which the tenth hour would be ten o'clock in the morning. The weight of the argument seems, on the whole, to be in favor of the Jewish method, which is undoubtedly assumed by John in Joh 11:9. The Greeks of Asia Minor, for whom John wrote, had the Jewish method, received from the Babylonians. Godet cites an incident from the " Sacred Discourses" of Aelius Aristides, a Greek sophist of the second century, and a contemporary of Polycarp. God having commanded him to take a bath, he chose the sixth hour as the most favorable to health. It being winter, and the bath a cold one, the hour was midday; for he said to his friend who kept him waiting, " Seest thou the shadow is already turning?" Even Canon Westcott, who advocates the Roman method, admits that " this mode of reckoning was unusual in ancient times," and that " the Romans and Greeks, no less than the Jews, reckoned their hours from sunrise," though the Romans reckoned their civil days from midnight, and the tenth hour is named as a late hour, when soldiers took their repast or were allowed to rest. Thus Livy, in his account of the Roman attack on Sutrium says, " About the tenth hour the consul ordered his men a repast, and gave directions that they should be ready in arms at whatever time of the day or night he should give the signal.... After refreshing themselves, they consigned themselves to rest" (9, 37).
Aristophanes says, " When the shadow on the dial is ten feet long, then go to dinner" (" Ecclesiazusae," 648), and Horace, " You will dine with me today. Come after the ninth hour" (" Epistle," Bk. 1., vii., 69). It is objected that the time from four o'clock to the close of the day would not have been described as that day; but beyond the marking of the specific hour of accompanying Jesus as the first hour of his Christian life, John would not have been unlikely to use a looser and more popular form of speech in indicating the length of the stay with Jesus, meaning simply that they remained with him during the remainder of the day, and, no doubt, prolonged their conversation into the night.
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Vincent: Joh 1:40 - -- Simon Peter's brother
The mention of Simon Peter before he has appeared in the narrative indicates the importance which the Evangelist attaches t...
Simon Peter's brother
The mention of Simon Peter before he has appeared in the narrative indicates the importance which the Evangelist attaches to him. It seems to assume a knowledge of the evangelic narrative on the part of the readers. See a similar instance of anticipating what is subsequently explained, in the mention of Mary, Joh 11:2.
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Vincent: Joh 1:41 - -- He first findeth ( εὑρίσκαι οὗτος πρῶτος )
Rev., findeth first . He is the demonstrative pronoun, this one ,...
He first findeth (
Rev., findeth first . He is the demonstrative pronoun, this one , which, with first , seems to point to the later finding of his brother by the other disciple, i . e ., of James by John. Bengel says: " With the festival freshness of those days beautifully corresponds the word findeth , which is frequently used here."
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Vincent: Joh 1:41 - -- His own ( τὸν ἴδιον )
See on Mat 22:5; see on Mat 25:15; see on Act 1:7; see on 1Pe 1:3.
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Vincent: Joh 1:41 - -- We have found ( εὑρήκαμεν )
This has been called the chapter of the Eurekas.
We have found (
This has been called the chapter of the Eurekas.
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Thou art
Some read interrogatively: art thou .
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Jona (
The correct reading is
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Vincent: Joh 1:42 - -- A stone ( Πέτρος )
See on Mat 16:18. A detached mass of rock. Cephas is the Aramaic name, occurring 1Co 1:12; 1Co 3:22; 1Co 9:5; 1Co 15...
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Vincent: Joh 1:43 - -- Would go forth ( ἠθέλησεν ἐξελθεῖν )
Rev., better, was minded to go . On the construction see on Mat 20:14. On the...
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Vincent: Joh 1:43 - -- And findeth
Note the graphic interchange of tenses: was minded , findeth . The coordination of the two clauses, which by other writers would ...
And findeth
Note the graphic interchange of tenses: was minded , findeth . The coordination of the two clauses, which by other writers would be placed in logical dependence, is characteristic of John. Even where there is a real inner dependence he uses only the simple connective particles. Compare Joh 2:13 sqq.
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Vincent: Joh 1:43 - -- Philip
See on Mar 3:18. For hints of his character see Joh 6:5, Joh 6:7; Joh 12:21 sqq.; Joh 14:8, Joh 14:9.
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Saith
The best texts insert Jesus: " And Jesus said unto him."
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Vincent: Joh 1:43 - -- Follow ( ἀκολούθει )
Often used in the New Testament with the special sense of following as a disciple or partisan. See Mat 4:20, Ma...
Follow (
Often used in the New Testament with the special sense of following as a disciple or partisan. See Mat 4:20, Mat 4:22; Mat 9:9; Mar 1:18; Joh 8:12. Also with the meaning of cleaving steadfastly to one and conforming to his example. See Mat 10:38; Mat 16:24; Joh 12:26. The verb occurs but once outside of the writings of the Evangelists, 1Co 10:4. It appears in the noun acolyte , or acolyth , or acolothist , a church-servant ranking next below a subdeacon, whose duty it was to trim the lamps, light the church, prepare the sacramental elements, etc. Under the Byzantine emperors the captain of the emperor's bodyguard was called Acolouthos, or the Follower . See Scott's " Count Robert of Paris."
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Vincent: Joh 1:44 - -- Of Bethsaida
Rev., more literally, from (ἀπό ). Bethsaida of Galilee. See Joh 12:21, and on Joh 1:28. Philip, being of the same city as ...
Of Bethsaida
Rev., more literally, from (
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Vincent: Joh 1:45 - -- Moses in the law, etc.
Note the circumstantial detail of this confession as compared with Andrew's (Joh 1:42).
Moses in the law, etc.
Note the circumstantial detail of this confession as compared with Andrew's (Joh 1:42).
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Vincent: Joh 1:46 - -- Come out of Nazareth ( ἐκ Ναζαρὲτ εἶναι )
Literally, " be out of;" a characteristic expression of John. See Joh 3:31; Jo...
Come out of Nazareth (
Literally, " be out of;" a characteristic expression of John. See Joh 3:31; Joh 4:22; Joh 7:17, Joh 7:22; Joh 8:23; Joh 15:19; Joh 18:36, Joh 18:38, etc. It means more than to come out of: rather to come out of as that which is of; to be identified with something so as to come forth bearing its impress, moral or otherwise. See especially Joh 3:31 : " He that is of the earth is of the earth;" i . e ., partakes of its quality. Compare Christ's words to Nicodemus (Joh 3:6), and 1Co 15:47.
In the Greek order, out of Nazareth stands first in the sentence as expressing the prominent thought in Nathanael's mind, surprise that Jesus should have come from Nazareth, a poor village, even the name of which does not occur in the Old Testament. Contrary to the popular explanation, there is no evidence that Nazareth was worse than other places, beyond the fact of the violence offered to Jesus by its people (Luk 4:28, Luk 4:29), and their obstinate unbelief in Him (Mat 13:58; Mar 6:6). It was a proverb, however, that no prophet was to come from Galilee (Joh 7:52).
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Vincent: Joh 1:47 - -- An Israelite indeed ( ἀληθῶς Ἱσραηλίτης )
Literally, truly an Israelite . An Israelite not merely in descent, but in...
An Israelite indeed (
Literally, truly an Israelite . An Israelite not merely in descent, but in character, according to the ideal laid down in God's law. The word Israelite itself was an honorable designation. See on men of Israel , Act 3:12, and compare remarks on Jews , Joh 1:19.
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Vincent: Joh 1:47 - -- Guile ( δόλος )
Properly, a bait for fish , and related at the root to δελεάζω , to catch with a bait , or beguile...
Guile (
Properly, a bait for fish , and related at the root to
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Vincent: Joh 1:48 - -- Under the fig tree ( ὑπὸ τὴν συκῆν )
To be construed with εἶδον σε , I saw thee; i.e., I saw thee unde...
Under the fig tree (
To be construed with
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Vincent: Joh 1:49 - -- Rabbi
Nathanael here gives the title, which he had withheld in his first address.
Rabbi
Nathanael here gives the title, which he had withheld in his first address.
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Vincent: Joh 1:50 - -- Under the fig tree ( ὑπὸ τῆς συκῆς )
Compare Joh 1:48. Here the same preposition is used with the genitive case, indicating re...
Under the fig tree (
Compare Joh 1:48. Here the same preposition is used with the genitive case, indicating rest, without the suggestion of withdrawal to .
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Vincent: Joh 1:50 - -- Believest thou?
Rightly so, though some render affirmatively, thou believest .
Believest thou?
Rightly so, though some render affirmatively, thou believest .
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Vincent: Joh 1:51 - -- Verily, verily ( ἀμὴν, ἀμὴν )
The word is transcribed into our Amen . John never, like the other Evangelists, uses the single v...
Verily, verily (
The word is transcribed into our Amen . John never, like the other Evangelists, uses the single verily , and, like the single word in the Synoptists, it is used only by Christ.
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Vincent: Joh 1:51 - -- Hereafter ( ἀπ ' ἄρτι )
The best texts omit. The words literally mean, from henceforth; and therefore, as Canon Westcott aptly re...
Hereafter (
The best texts omit. The words literally mean, from henceforth; and therefore, as Canon Westcott aptly remarks, " if genuine, would describe the communion between earth and heaven as established from the time when the Lord entered upon His public ministry."
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Heaven (
Rev., giving the article, the heaven .
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Vincent: Joh 1:51 - -- Open ( ἀνεῳγότα )
The perfect participle. Hence Rev., rightly, opened . The participle signifies standing open, and is used in t...
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Vincent: Joh 1:51 - -- Angels
With the exception of Joh 12:29 and Joh 20:12, John does not use the word " angel" elsewhere in the Gospel or in the Epistles, and does n...
Angels
With the exception of Joh 12:29 and Joh 20:12, John does not use the word " angel" elsewhere in the Gospel or in the Epistles, and does not refer to their being or ministry. Trench (" Studies in the Gospels" ) cites a beautiful passage of Plato as suggestive of our Lord's words. Plato is speaking of Love. " He is a great spirit, and like all spirits he is intermediate between the divine and the mortal. He interprets between gods and men, conveying to the gods the prayers and sacrifices of men, and to men the commands and replies of the gods; he is the mediator who spans the chasm which divides them, and in him all is bound together, and through him the acts of the prophet and the priest, their sacrifices and mysteries and charms, and all prophecy and incantation find their way. For God mingles not with man, but through Love all the intercourse and speech of God with man, whether awake or asleep, is carried on" (" Symposium," 203).
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Vincent: Joh 1:51 - -- Son of man
See on Luk 6:22. Notice the titles successively applied to our Lord in this chapter: the greater Successor of the Baptist, the Lamb of...
Son of man
See on Luk 6:22. Notice the titles successively applied to our Lord in this chapter: the greater Successor of the Baptist, the Lamb of God, the Son of God, the Messiah, the King of Israel. These were all given by others. The title Son of man He applies to Himself.
In John's Gospel, as in the Synoptists, this phrase is used only by Christ in speaking of Himself; and elsewhere only in Act 7:56, where the name is applied to Him by Stephen. It occurs less frequently in John than in the Synoptists, being found in Matthew thirty times, in Mark thirteen, and in John twelve.
Jesus' use of the term here is explained in two ways.
I. That He borrows the title from the Old Testament to designate Himself either: ( a ) as a prophet , as in Eze 2:1-3; Eze 3:1, etc.; or ( b ) as the Messiah , as prefigured in Dan 7:13. This prophecy of Daniel had obtained such wide currency that the Messiah was called Anani , or the man of the clouds .
( a .) This is untenable, because in Ezekiel, as everywhere in the Old Testament, the phrase Son of man , or Sons of men , is used to describe man under his human limitations, as weak, fallible, and incompetent by himself to be a divine agent.
( b .) The allusion to Daniel's prophecy is admitted; but Jesus does not mean to say, " I am the Messiah who is prefigured by Daniel." A political meaning attached in popular conception to the term Messiah; and it is noticeable throughout John's Gospel that Jesus carefully avoids using that term before the people, but expresses the thing itself by circumlocution, in order to avoid the complication which the popular understanding would have introduced into his work. See Joh 8:24, Joh 8:25; Joh 10:24, Joh 10:25.
Moreover, the phrase Son of man was not generally applied to the Messiah. On the contrary, Joh 5:27 and Joh 12:34 show that it was set off against that term. Compare Mat 16:13, Mat 16:15. Son of God is the Messianic title, which, with one exception, appears in confessions (Joh 1:34, Joh 1:49; Joh 11:27; Joh 20:31).
In Daniel the reference is exclusively to the final stage of human affairs. The point is the final establishment of the divine kingdom. Moreover, Daniel does not say " the Son of man," but " one like a Son of man." Compare Rev 1:13; Rev 14:14, where also the article is omitted.
II. The second, and correct explanation is that the phrase Son of man is the expression of Christ's self-consciousness as being related to humanity as a whole: denoting His real participation in human nature, and designating Himself as the representative man. It thus corresponds with the passage in Daniel, where the earthly kingdoms are represented by beasts, but the divine kingdom by a Son of man. Hence, too, the word
While the human element was thus emphasized in the phrase, the consciousness of Jesus, as thus expressed, did not exclude His divine nature and claims, but rather regarded these through the medium of His humanity. He showed Himself divine in being thus profoundly human. Hence two aspects of the phrase appear in John, as in the Synoptists. The one regards His earthly life and work, and involves His being despised; His accommodation to the conditions of human life; the partial veiling of His divine nature; the loving character of His mission; His liability to misinterpretation; and His outlook upon a consummation of agony. On the other hand, He is possessed of supreme authority; He is about His Father's work; He reveals glimpses of His divine nature through His humanity; His presence and mission entail serious responsibility upon those to whom He appeals; and He foresees a consummation of glory no less than of agony. See Mat 8:20; Mat 11:19; Mat 12:8, Mat 12:32; Mat 13:37; Mat 16:13; Mat 20:18; Mat 26:64; Mar 8:31, Mar 8:38; Mar 14:21; Luk 9:26, Luk 9:58; Luk 12:8; Luk 17:22; Luk 19:10; Luk 22:69.
The other aspect is related to the future. He has visions of another life of glory and dominion; though present in the flesh, His coming is still future, and will be followed by a judgment which is committed to Him, and by the final glory of His redeemed in His heavenly kingdom. See Mat 10:23; Mat 13:40 sqq.; Mat 16:27 sqq.; Mat 19:28; Mat 24:27, Mat 24:37, Mat 24:44; Mat 25:31 sqq.; Mar 13:26; Luk 6:22; Luk 17:24, Luk 17:30; Luk 18:8; Luk 21:27.
I am that forerunner of Christ of whom Isaiah speaks.
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Wesley: Joh 1:23 - -- As if he had said, Far from being Christ, or even Elijah, I am nothing but a voice: a sound that so soon as it has expressed the thought of which it i...
As if he had said, Far from being Christ, or even Elijah, I am nothing but a voice: a sound that so soon as it has expressed the thought of which it is the sign, dies into air, and is known no more. Isa 40:3.
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Wesley: Joh 1:24 - -- Who were peculiarly tenacious of old customs, and jealous of any innovation (except those brought in by their own scribes) unless the innovator had un...
Who were peculiarly tenacious of old customs, and jealous of any innovation (except those brought in by their own scribes) unless the innovator had unquestionable proofs of Divine authority.
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Wesley: Joh 1:25 - -- Without any commission from the sanhedrim? And not only heathens (who were always baptized before they were admitted to circumcision) but Jews also?
Without any commission from the sanhedrim? And not only heathens (who were always baptized before they were admitted to circumcision) but Jews also?
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Wesley: Joh 1:26 - -- To prepare for the Messiah; and indeed to show that Jews, as well as Gentiles, must be proselytes to Christ, and that these as well as those stand in ...
To prepare for the Messiah; and indeed to show that Jews, as well as Gentiles, must be proselytes to Christ, and that these as well as those stand in need of being washed from their sins.
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Wesley: Joh 1:29 - -- Innocent; to be offered up; prophesied of by Isaiah, Isa 53:7, typified by the paschal lamb, and by the daily sacrifice: The Lamb of God - Whom God ga...
Innocent; to be offered up; prophesied of by Isaiah, Isa 53:7, typified by the paschal lamb, and by the daily sacrifice: The Lamb of God - Whom God gave, approves, accepts of; who taketh away - Atoneth for; the sin - That is, all the sins: of the world - Of all mankind. Sin and the world are of equal extent.
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Wesley: Joh 1:31 - -- Till he came to be baptized. How surprising is this; considering how nearly they were related, and how remarkable the conception and birth of both had...
Till he came to be baptized. How surprising is this; considering how nearly they were related, and how remarkable the conception and birth of both had been. But there was a peculiar providence visible in our Saviour's living, from his infancy to his baptism, at Nazareth: John all the time living the life of a hermit in the deserts of Judea, Luk 1:80, ninety or more miles from Nazareth: hereby that acquaintance was prevented which might have made John's testimony of Christ suspected.
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That is, the Spirit so descending and abiding on him.
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They walked after him, but had not the courage to speak to him.
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Wesley: Joh 1:41 - -- Probably both of them sought him: Which is, being interpreted, the Christ - This the evangelist adds, as likewise those words in Joh 1:38, that is, be...
Probably both of them sought him: Which is, being interpreted, the Christ - This the evangelist adds, as likewise those words in Joh 1:38, that is, being interpreted, Master.
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Wesley: Joh 1:42 - -- As none had told our Lord these names, this could not but strike Peter. Cephas, which is Peter - Moaning the same in Syriacts which Peter does in Gree...
As none had told our Lord these names, this could not but strike Peter. Cephas, which is Peter - Moaning the same in Syriacts which Peter does in Greek, namely, a rock.
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Wesley: Joh 1:45 - -- So Philip thought, not knowing he was born in Bethlehem. Nathanael was probably the same with Bartholomew, that is, the son of Tholomew. St. Matthew j...
So Philip thought, not knowing he was born in Bethlehem. Nathanael was probably the same with Bartholomew, that is, the son of Tholomew. St. Matthew joins Bartholomew with Philip, Mat 10:3, and St. John places Nathanael in the midst of the apostles, immediately after Thomas, Joh 21:2, just as Bartholomew is placed, Act 1:13.
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Wesley: Joh 1:46 - -- How cautiously should we guard against popular prejudices? When these had once possessed so honest a heart as that of Nathanael, they led him to suspe...
How cautiously should we guard against popular prejudices? When these had once possessed so honest a heart as that of Nathanael, they led him to suspect the blessed Jesus himself for an impostor, because he had been brought up at Nazareth. But his integrity prevailed over that foolish bias, and laid him open to the force of evidence, which a candid inquirer will always be glad to admit, even when it brings the most unexpected discoveries.
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Wesley: Joh 1:46 - -- That is, have we ground from Scripture to expect the Messiah, or any eminent prophet from Nazareth? Philip saith, Come and see - The same answer which...
That is, have we ground from Scripture to expect the Messiah, or any eminent prophet from Nazareth? Philip saith, Come and see - The same answer which he had received himself from our Lord the day before.
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Wesley: Joh 1:49 - -- Happy are they that are ready to believe, swift to receive the truth and grace of God.
Happy are they that are ready to believe, swift to receive the truth and grace of God.
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Wesley: Joh 1:49 - -- So he acknowledges now more than he had heard from Philip: The Son of God, the king of Israel - A confession both of the person and office of Christ.
So he acknowledges now more than he had heard from Philip: The Son of God, the king of Israel - A confession both of the person and office of Christ.
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Wesley: Joh 1:51 - -- All of these, as well as thou, who believe on me now in my state of humiliation, shall hereafter see me come in my glory, and all the angels of God wi...
All of these, as well as thou, who believe on me now in my state of humiliation, shall hereafter see me come in my glory, and all the angels of God with me. This seems the most natural sense of the words, though they may also refer to his ascension.
JFB -> Joh 1:25; Joh 1:26; Joh 1:28; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:31-34; Joh 1:35; Joh 1:36; Joh 1:36; Joh 1:36; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:40; Joh 1:40; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:44; Joh 1:45; Joh 1:45; Joh 1:45; Joh 1:46; Joh 1:46; Joh 1:47; Joh 1:48; Joh 1:48; Joh 1:48; Joh 1:49; Joh 1:50-51; Joh 1:51
JFB: Joh 1:25 - -- Thinking he disclaimed any special connection with Messiah's kingdom, they demand his right to gather disciples by baptism.
Thinking he disclaimed any special connection with Messiah's kingdom, they demand his right to gather disciples by baptism.
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JFB: Joh 1:26 - -- This must have been spoken after the baptism of Christ, and possibly just after His temptation (see on Joh 1:29).
This must have been spoken after the baptism of Christ, and possibly just after His temptation (see on Joh 1:29).
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JFB: Joh 1:28 - -- Rather, "Bethany" (according to nearly all the best and most ancient manuscripts); not the Bethany of Lazarus, but another of the same name, and disti...
Rather, "Bethany" (according to nearly all the best and most ancient manuscripts); not the Bethany of Lazarus, but another of the same name, and distinguished from it as lying "beyond Jordan," on the east.
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Fresh, probably, from the scene of the temptation.
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Catching a sublime inspiration at the sight of Him approaching.
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The one God-ordained, God-gifted sacrificial offering.
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JFB: Joh 1:29 - -- Taketh up and taketh away. The word signifies both, as does the corresponding Hebrew word. Applied to sin, it means to be chargeable with the guilt of...
Taketh up and taketh away. The word signifies both, as does the corresponding Hebrew word. Applied to sin, it means to be chargeable with the guilt of it (Exo 28:38; Lev 5:1; Eze 18:20), and to bear it away (as often). In the Levitical victims both ideas met, as they do in Christ, the people's guilt being viewed as transferred to them, avenged in their death, and so borne away by them (Lev 4:15; Lev 16:15, Lev 16:21-22; and compare Isa 53:6-12; 2Co 5:21).
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JFB: Joh 1:29 - -- The singular number being used to mark the collective burden and all-embracing efficacy.
The singular number being used to mark the collective burden and all-embracing efficacy.
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JFB: Joh 1:29 - -- Not of Israel only, for whom the typical victims were exclusively offered. Wherever there shall live a sinner throughout the wide world, sinking under...
Not of Israel only, for whom the typical victims were exclusively offered. Wherever there shall live a sinner throughout the wide world, sinking under that burden too heavy for him to bear, he shall find in this "Lamb of God," a shoulder equal to the weight. The right note was struck at the first--balm, doubtless, to Christ's own spirit; nor was ever after, or ever will be, a more glorious utterance.
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JFB: Joh 1:31-34 - -- Living mostly apart, the one at Nazareth, the other in the Judean desert--to prevent all appearance of collusion, John only knew that at a definite ti...
Living mostly apart, the one at Nazareth, the other in the Judean desert--to prevent all appearance of collusion, John only knew that at a definite time after his own call, his Master would show Himself. As He drew near for baptism one day, the last of all the crowd, the spirit of the Baptist heaving under a divine presentiment that the moment had at length arrived, and an air of unwonted serenity and dignity, not without traits, probably, of the family features, appearing in this Stranger, the Spirit said to him as to Samuel of his youthful type, "Arise, anoint Him, for this is He!" (1Sa 16:12). But the sign which he was told to expect was the visible descent of the Spirit upon Him as He emerged out of the baptismal water. Then, catching up the voice from heaven, "he saw and bare record that this is the Son of God."
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"was standing," at his accustomed place.
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Having fixed his eyes, with significant gaze, on Jesus.
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JFB: Joh 1:36 - -- But not now to him. To have done this once (see on Joh 1:29) was humility enough [BENGEL].
But not now to him. To have done this once (see on Joh 1:29) was humility enough [BENGEL].
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JFB: Joh 1:36 - -- The repetition of that wonderful proclamation, in identical terms and without another word, could only have been meant as a gentle hint to go after Hi...
The repetition of that wonderful proclamation, in identical terms and without another word, could only have been meant as a gentle hint to go after Him--as they did.
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JFB: Joh 1:38 - -- Gentle, winning question, remarkable as the Redeemer's first public utterance. (See on Mat 12:18-20.)
Gentle, winning question, remarkable as the Redeemer's first public utterance. (See on Mat 12:18-20.)
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JFB: Joh 1:38 - -- That is, "That is a question we cannot answer in a moment; but had we Thy company for a calm hour in private, gladly should we open our burden."
That is, "That is a question we cannot answer in a moment; but had we Thy company for a calm hour in private, gladly should we open our burden."
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His second utterance, more winning still.
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JFB: Joh 1:39 - -- Not ten A.M. (as some), according to Roman, but four P.M., according to Jewish reckoning, which John follows. The hour is mentioned to show why they s...
Not ten A.M. (as some), according to Roman, but four P.M., according to Jewish reckoning, which John follows. The hour is mentioned to show why they stayed out the day with him--because little of it remained.
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JFB: Joh 1:40 - -- The other was doubtless our Evangelist himself. His great sensitiveness is touchingly shown in his representation of this first contact with the Lord;...
The other was doubtless our Evangelist himself. His great sensitiveness is touchingly shown in his representation of this first contact with the Lord; the circumstances are present to him in the minutest details; he still remembers the Very hour. But "he reports no particulars of those discourses of the Lord by which he was bound to Him for the whole of His life; he allows everything personal to retire" [OLSHAUSEN].
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JFB: Joh 1:41 - -- The previous preparation of their simple hearts under the Baptist's ministry, made quick work of this blessed conviction, while others hesitated till ...
The previous preparation of their simple hearts under the Baptist's ministry, made quick work of this blessed conviction, while others hesitated till doubt settled into obduracy. So it is still.
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Happy brothers that thus do to each other!
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JFB: Joh 1:43 - -- For from His baptism He had sojourned in Judea (showing that the calling at the Sea of Galilee [Mat 4:18] was a subsequent one, see on Luk 5:1).
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The first express call given, the former three having come to Him spontaneously.
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JFB: Joh 1:46 - -- Remembering Bethlehem, perhaps, as Messiah's predicted birthplace, and Nazareth having no express prophetic place at all, besides being in no repute. ...
Remembering Bethlehem, perhaps, as Messiah's predicted birthplace, and Nazareth having no express prophetic place at all, besides being in no repute. The question sprang from mere dread of mistake in a matter so vital.
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JFB: Joh 1:46 - -- Noble remedy against preconceived opinions [BENGEL]. Philip, though he could not perhaps solve his difficulty, could show him how to get rid of it. (S...
Noble remedy against preconceived opinions [BENGEL]. Philip, though he could not perhaps solve his difficulty, could show him how to get rid of it. (See on Joh 6:68).
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JFB: Joh 1:47 - -- Not only no hypocrite, but with a guileless simplicity not always found even in God's own people, ready to follow wherever truth might lead him, sayin...
Not only no hypocrite, but with a guileless simplicity not always found even in God's own people, ready to follow wherever truth might lead him, saying, Samuel-like, "Speak, Lord, for Thy servant heareth" (1Sa 3:10).
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JFB: Joh 1:48 - -- Conscious that his very heart had been read, and at this critical moment more than ever before.
Conscious that his very heart had been read, and at this critical moment more than ever before.
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Showing He knew all that passed between Philip and him at a distance.
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JFB: Joh 1:48 - -- Where retirement for meditation and prayer was not uncommon [LIGHTFOOT]. Thither, probably--hearing that his master's Master had at length appeared, a...
Where retirement for meditation and prayer was not uncommon [LIGHTFOOT]. Thither, probably--hearing that his master's Master had at length appeared, and heaving with mingled eagerness to behold Him and dread of deception--he had retired to pour out his guileless heart for light and guidance, ending with such a prayer as this, "Show me a token for good!" (See on Luk 2:8). Now he has it, "Thou guileless one, that fig tree scene, with all its heaving anxieties, deep pleadings and tremulous hopes--I saw it all." The first words of Jesus had astonished, but this quite overpowered and won him.
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JFB: Joh 1:49 - -- The one denoting His person, the other His office. How much loftier this than anything Philip had said to him! But just as the earth's vital powers, t...
The one denoting His person, the other His office. How much loftier this than anything Philip had said to him! But just as the earth's vital powers, the longer they are frost-bound, take the greater spring when at length set free, so souls, like Nathanael and Thomas (see on Joh 20:28), the outgoings of whose faith are hindered for a time, take the start of their more easy-going brethren when loosed and let go.
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JFB: Joh 1:50-51 - -- "So quickly convinced, and on this evidence only?"--an expression of admiration.
"So quickly convinced, and on this evidence only?"--an expression of admiration.
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JFB: Joh 1:51 - -- The key to this great saying is Jacob's vision (Gen 28:12-22), to which the allusion plainly is. To show the patriarch that though alone and friendles...
The key to this great saying is Jacob's vision (Gen 28:12-22), to which the allusion plainly is. To show the patriarch that though alone and friendless on earth his interests were busying all heaven, he was made to see "heaven opened and the angels of God ascending and descending upon a" mystic "ladder reaching from heaven to earth." "By and by," says Jesus here, "ye shall see this communication between heaven and earth thrown wide open, and the Son of man the real Ladder of this intercourse."
Clarke -> Joh 1:22; Joh 1:23; Joh 1:25; Joh 1:26; Joh 1:26; Joh 1:27; Joh 1:28; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:31; Joh 1:31; Joh 1:32; Joh 1:33; Joh 1:35; Joh 1:35; Joh 1:36; Joh 1:36; Joh 1:37; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:45; Joh 1:45; Joh 1:45; Joh 1:46; Joh 1:46; Joh 1:47; Joh 1:47; Joh 1:48; Joh 1:48; Joh 1:49; Joh 1:49; Joh 1:49; Joh 1:50; Joh 1:51; Joh 1:51
Clarke: Joh 1:22 - -- That we may give an answer to them that sent us - These Pharisees were probably a deputation from the grand Sanhedrin; the members of which, hearing...
That we may give an answer to them that sent us - These Pharisees were probably a deputation from the grand Sanhedrin; the members of which, hearing of the success of the Baptist’ s preaching, were puzzled to know what to make of him, and seriously desired to hear from himself what he professed to be.
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Clarke: Joh 1:25 - -- Why baptizest thou then? - Baptism was a very common ceremony among the Jews, who never received a proselyte into the full enjoyment of a Jew’ ...
Why baptizest thou then? - Baptism was a very common ceremony among the Jews, who never received a proselyte into the full enjoyment of a Jew’ s privileges, till he was both baptized and circumcised. But such baptisms were never performed except by an ordinance of the Sanhedrin, or in the presence of three magistrates: besides, they never baptized any Jew or Jewess, nor even those who were the children of their proselytes; for, as all these were considered as born in the covenant, they had no need of baptism, which was used only as an introductory rite. Now, as John had, in this respect, altered the common custom so very essentially, admitting to his baptism the Jews in general, the Sanhedrin took it for granted that no man had authority to make such changes, unless especially commissioned from on high; and that only the prophet, or Elijah, or the Messiah himself; could have authority to act as John did. See the observations at the conclusion of Mark.
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Clarke: Joh 1:26 - -- I baptize with water - See on Mar 1:8 (note). I use the common form, though I direct the baptized to a different end, viz. that they shall repent of...
I baptize with water - See on Mar 1:8 (note). I use the common form, though I direct the baptized to a different end, viz. that they shall repent of their sins, and believe in the Messiah
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Clarke: Joh 1:26 - -- There standeth one among you - That is, the person whose forerunner I am is now dwelling in the land of Judea, and will shortly make his appearance ...
There standeth one among you - That is, the person whose forerunner I am is now dwelling in the land of Judea, and will shortly make his appearance among you. Christ was not present when John spoke thus, as may be seen from Joh 1:29.
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Clarke: Joh 1:27 - -- Is preferred before me - Ὁς εμπροσθεν μου γεγονεν, Who was before me. This clause is wanting in BC*L, four others, the Copti...
Is preferred before me -
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Clarke: Joh 1:28 - -- These things were done in Bethabara - It is very probable that the word Bethany should be inserted here, instead of Bethabara. This reading, in the ...
These things were done in Bethabara - It is very probable that the word Bethany should be inserted here, instead of Bethabara. This reading, in the judgment of the best critics, is the genuine one. The following are the authorities by which it is supported: ABCEGHLMSX, BV, of Matthai, upwards of a hundred others, Syriac, Armenian, Persic, Coptic, Slavonic, Vulgate, Saxon, and all the Itala, with some of the most eminent of the primitive fathers, before the time of Origen, who is supposed to have first changed the reading. Bethabara signifies literally the house of passage, and is thought to be the place where the Israelites passed the river Jordan under Joshua. There was a place called Bethany, about two miles from Jerusalem, at the foot of the mount of Olives. But there was another of the same name, beyond Jordan, in the tribe of Reuben. It was probably of this that the evangelist speaks; and Origen, not knowing of this second Bethany, altered the reading to Bethabara. See Rosenmuller.
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Clarke: Joh 1:29 - -- The next day - The day after that on which the Jews had been with John, Joh 1:19
The next day - The day after that on which the Jews had been with John, Joh 1:19
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Clarke: Joh 1:29 - -- Behold the Lamb of God, etc. - This was said in allusion to what was spoken Isa 53:7. Jesus was the true Lamb or Sacrifice required and appointed by...
Behold the Lamb of God, etc. - This was said in allusion to what was spoken Isa 53:7. Jesus was the true Lamb or Sacrifice required and appointed by God, of which those offered daily in the tabernacle and temple, Exo 29:38, Exo 29:39, and especially the paschal lamb, were only the types and representatives. See Exo 12:4, Exo 12:5; 1Co 5:7. The continual morning and evening sacrifice of a lamb, under the Jewish law, was intended to point out the continual efficacy of the blood of atonement: for even at the throne of God, Jesus Christ is ever represented as a lamb newly slain, Rev 5:6. But John, pointing to Christ, calls him emphatically, the Lamb of God: - all the lambs which had been hitherto offered had been furnished by men: this was provided by God, as the only sufficient and available sacrifice for the sin of the world. In three essential respects, this lamb differed from those by which it was represented
1st. It was the Lamb of God; the most excellent, and the most available
2nd. It made an atonement for sin: it carried sin away in reality, the others only representatively
3rd. It carried away the sin of the World, whereas the other was offered only on behalf of the Jewish people. In Yalcut Rubeni, fol. 30, it is said, "The Messiah shall bear the sins of the Israelites."But this salvation was now to be extended to the whole world.
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Clarke: Joh 1:31 - -- And I knew him not, etc. - John did not know our Lord personally, and perhaps had never seen him, at the time he spoke the words in Joh 1:15. Nor is...
And I knew him not, etc. - John did not know our Lord personally, and perhaps had never seen him, at the time he spoke the words in Joh 1:15. Nor is it any wonder that the Baptist should have been unacquainted with Christ, as he had spent thirty years in the hill country of Hebron, and our Lord remained in a state of great privacy in the obscure city of Nazareth, in the extreme borders of Galilee
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Clarke: Joh 1:31 - -- But that he should be made manifest to Israel - One design of my publicly baptizing was, that he, coming to my baptism, should be shown to be what h...
But that he should be made manifest to Israel - One design of my publicly baptizing was, that he, coming to my baptism, should be shown to be what he is, by some extraordinary sign from heaven.
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Clarke: Joh 1:33 - -- He that sent me - said unto me - From this we may clearly perceive that John had a most intimate acquaintance with the Divine Being; and received no...
He that sent me - said unto me - From this we may clearly perceive that John had a most intimate acquaintance with the Divine Being; and received not only his call and mission at first, but every subsequent direction, by immediate, unequivocal inspiration. Who is fit to proclaim Jesus, but he who has continual intercourse with God; who is constantly receiving light and life from Christ their fountain; who bears a steady, uniform testimony to Jesus, even in the presence of his enemies; and who at all times abases himself, that Jesus alone may be magnified! Reformation of manners, and salvation of souls, will accompany such a person’ s labors whithersoever he goeth.
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Clarke: Joh 1:35 - -- Two of his disciples - One of them was Andrew, Joh 1:40, and it is very likely that John himself was the other; in every thing in which he might rec...
Two of his disciples - One of them was Andrew, Joh 1:40, and it is very likely that John himself was the other; in every thing in which he might receive honor he studiously endeavors to conceal his own name.
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Clarke: Joh 1:36 - -- And looking upon Jesus - Attentively beholding, εμβλεψας, from εν, into, and βλεπω, to look - to view with steadfastness and atten...
And looking upon Jesus - Attentively beholding,
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Clarke: Joh 1:36 - -- Behold the Lamb of God! - By this the Baptist designed to direct the attention of his own disciples to Jesus, not only as the great sacrifice for th...
Behold the Lamb of God! - By this the Baptist designed to direct the attention of his own disciples to Jesus, not only as the great sacrifice for the sin of the world, but also as the complete teacher of heavenly truth.
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Clarke: Joh 1:37 - -- And the two disciples heard him - And they perfectly understood their master’ s meaning; in consequence of which, they followed Jesus. Happy th...
And the two disciples heard him - And they perfectly understood their master’ s meaning; in consequence of which, they followed Jesus. Happy they who, on hearing of the salvation of Christ, immediately attach themselves to its author! Delays are always dangerous; and, in this case, often fatal. Reader! hast thou ever had Christ as a sacrifice for thy sin pointed out unto thee? If so, hast thou followed him? If not, thou art not in the way to the kingdom of God. Lose not another moment! Eternity is at hand! and thou art not prepared to meet thy God. Pray that he may alarm thy conscience, and stir up thy soul to seek till thou have found.
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Clarke: Joh 1:38 - -- What seek ye? - These disciples might have felt some embarrassment in addressing our blessed Lord, after hearing the character which the Baptist gav...
What seek ye? - These disciples might have felt some embarrassment in addressing our blessed Lord, after hearing the character which the Baptist gave of him; to remove or prevent this, he graciously accosts them, and gives them an opportunity of explaining themselves to him. Such questions, we may conceive, the blessed Jesus still puts to those who in simplicity of heart desire an acquaintance with him. A question of this nature we may profitably ask ourselves: What seek ye? In this place! In the company you frequent? In the conversation you engage in? In the affairs with which you are occupied? In the works which you perform? Do you seek the humiliation, illumination, justification, edification, or sanctification of your soul? The edification of your neighbor? The good of the Church of Christ? Or, The glory of God? Questions of this nature often put to our hearts, in the fear of God, would induce us to do many things which we now leave undone, and to leave undone many things which we now perform
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Clarke: Joh 1:38 - -- Rabbi - Teacher. Behold the modesty of these disciples - we wish to be scholars, we are ignorant - we desire to be taught; we believe thou art a tea...
Rabbi - Teacher. Behold the modesty of these disciples - we wish to be scholars, we are ignorant - we desire to be taught; we believe thou art a teacher come from God
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Where dwellest thou? - That we may come and receive thy instructions.
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Clarke: Joh 1:39 - -- Come and see - If those who know not the salvation of God would come at the command of Christ, they should soon see that with him is the fountain of...
Come and see - If those who know not the salvation of God would come at the command of Christ, they should soon see that with him is the fountain of life, and in his light they should see light. Reader, if thou art seriously inquiring where Christ dwelleth, take the following for answer: He dwells not in the tumult of worldly affairs, nor in profane assemblies, nor in worldly pleasures, nor in the place where drunkards proclaim their shame, nor in carelessness and indolence. But he is found in his temple, wherever two or three are gathered together in his name, in secret prayer, in self-denial, in fasting, in self-examination. He also dwells in the humble, contrite spirit, in the spirit of faith, of love, of forgiveness, of universal obedience; in a word, he dwells in the heaven of heavens, whither he graciously purposes to bring thee, if thou wilt come and learn of him, and receive the salvation which he has bought for thee by his own blood
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Clarke: Joh 1:39 - -- The tenth hour - Generally supposed to be about what we call four o’ clock in the afternoon. According to Joh 11:9, the Jews reckoned twelve ho...
The tenth hour - Generally supposed to be about what we call four o’ clock in the afternoon. According to Joh 11:9, the Jews reckoned twelve hours in the day; and of course each hour of the day, thus reckoned, must have been something longer or shorter, according to the different times of the year in that climate. The sixth hour with them answered to our twelve o’ clock, as appears from what Josephus says in his life, chap. liv
That on the Sabbath day it was the rule for the Jews to go to dinner at the sixth hour, (
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Clarke: Joh 1:41 - -- Findeth his own brother Simon - Every discovery of the Gospel of the Son of God produces benevolence, and leads those to whom it is made to communic...
Findeth his own brother Simon - Every discovery of the Gospel of the Son of God produces benevolence, and leads those to whom it is made to communicate it to others. Those who find Jesus find in him a treasure of wisdom and knowledge, through which they may not only become rich themselves, but be instruments, in the hand of God, of enriching others. These disciples, having tasted the good word of Christ, were not willing to eat their bread alone, but went and invited others to partake with them. Thus the knowledge of Christ became diffused - one invited another to come and see: Jesus received all, and the number of disciples was increased, and the attentive hearers were innumerable. Every man who has been brought to an acquaintance with God should endeavor to bring, at least, another with him; and his first attention should be fixed upon those of his own household.
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Clarke: Joh 1:42 - -- Cephas, which is by interpretation, A stone - Πετρος signifies a stone, or fragment of a rock. The reason why this name was given to Simon, ...
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Clarke: Joh 1:43 - -- Philip - This apostle was a native of Bethsaida in Galilee. Eusebius says he was a married man, and had several daughters. Clemens Alexandrinus ment...
Philip - This apostle was a native of Bethsaida in Galilee. Eusebius says he was a married man, and had several daughters. Clemens Alexandrinus mentions it as a thing universally acknowledged that it was this apostle who, when commanded by our Lord to follow him, said, Let me first go and bury my father, Mat 8:21, Mat 8:22. Theodoret says he preached in the two Phrygias; and Eusebius says he was buried in Phrygia Pacatiana. He must not be confounded with Philip the deacon, spoken of Act 6:5.
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Clarke: Joh 1:45 - -- Nathanael - This apostle is supposed to be the same with Bartholomew, which is very likely, for these reason
1. That the evangelis...
Nathanael - This apostle is supposed to be the same with Bartholomew, which is very likely, for these reason
1. That the evangelists who mention Bartholomew say nothing of Nathanael; and that St. John, who speaks of Nathanael, says nothing of Bartholomew
2. No notice is taken any where of Bartholomew’ s vocation, unless his and that of Nathanael mentioned here be the same
3. The name of Bartholomew is not a proper name; it signifies the son of Ptolomy; and Nathanael might have been his own name
4. St. John seems to rank Nathanael with the apostles, when he says that Peter and Thomas, the two sons of Zebedee, Nathanael, and two other disciples, being gone a fishing, Jesus showed himself to them, Joh 21:2-4
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Clarke: Joh 1:45 - -- And the prophets - See Isa 4:2; Isa 7:14; Isa 9:5; Isa 40:10; Isa 53:1, etc.; Jer 23:5; Jer 33:14, Jer 33:15; Eze 34:23; Eze 37:24; Dan 9:24; Mic 5:...
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Clarke: Joh 1:46 - -- Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth? - Bp. Pearce supposes that the τι αγαθον of the evangelist has some particular force in it:...
Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth? - Bp. Pearce supposes that the
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Clarke: Joh 1:46 - -- Come and see - He who candidly examines the evidences of the religion of Christ will infallibly become a believer. No history ever published among m...
Come and see - He who candidly examines the evidences of the religion of Christ will infallibly become a believer. No history ever published among men has so many external and internal proofs of authenticity as this has. A man should judge of nothing by first appearances, or human prejudices. Who are they who cry out, The Bible is a fable? Those who have never read it, or read it only with the fixed purpose to gainsay it. I once met with a person who professed to disbelieve every tittle of the New Testament, a chapter of which, he acknowledged, he had never read. I asked him, had he ever read the Old? He answered, No! And yet this man had the assurance to reject the whole as an imposture! God has mercy on those whose ignorance leads them to form prejudices against the truth; but he confounds those who take them up through envy and malice, and endeavor to communicate them to others.
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Clarke: Joh 1:47 - -- Behold an Israelite indeed - A worthy descendant of the patriarch Jacob, who not only professes to believe in Israel’ s God, but who worships h...
Behold an Israelite indeed - A worthy descendant of the patriarch Jacob, who not only professes to believe in Israel’ s God, but who worships him in sincerity and truth, according to his light
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Clarke: Joh 1:47 - -- In whom is no guile! - Deceitfulness ever has been, and still is, the deeply marked characteristic of the Jewish people. To find a man, living in th...
In whom is no guile! - Deceitfulness ever has been, and still is, the deeply marked characteristic of the Jewish people. To find a man, living in the midst of so much corruption, walking in uprightness before his Maker, was a subject worthy the attention of God himself. Behold this man! and, while you see and admire, imitate his conduct.
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Clarke: Joh 1:48 - -- Whence knowest thou me? - He was not yet acquainted with the divinity of Christ, could not conceive that he could search his heart, and therefore as...
Whence knowest thou me? - He was not yet acquainted with the divinity of Christ, could not conceive that he could search his heart, and therefore asks how he could acquire this knowledge of him, or who had given him that character. It is the comfort of the sincere and upright, that God knows their hearts; and it should be the terror of the deceitful and of the hypocrite, that their false dealing is ever noticed by the all-seeing eye of God
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Clarke: Joh 1:48 - -- Under the fig tree - Probably engaged in prayer with God, for the speedy appearing of the salvation of Israel; and the shade of this fig tree was pe...
Under the fig tree - Probably engaged in prayer with God, for the speedy appearing of the salvation of Israel; and the shade of this fig tree was perhaps the ordinary place of retreat for this upright man. It is not A fig tree, but
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Rabbi - That is, Teacher! and so this word should be translated
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Thou art the Son of God - The promised Messiah
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Clarke: Joh 1:49 - -- Thou art the King of Israel - The real descendant of David, who art to sit on that spiritual throne of which the throne of David was the type.
Thou art the King of Israel - The real descendant of David, who art to sit on that spiritual throne of which the throne of David was the type.
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Clarke: Joh 1:50 - -- Because I said - I saw thee, etc. - As thou hast credited my Divine mission on this simple proof, that I saw thee when and where no human eye, place...
Because I said - I saw thee, etc. - As thou hast credited my Divine mission on this simple proof, that I saw thee when and where no human eye, placed where mine was, could see thee, thy faith shall not rest merely upon this, for thou shalt see greater things than these - more numerous and express proofs of my eternal power and Godhead.
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Clarke: Joh 1:51 - -- Verily, verily - Amen, amen. The doubling of this word probably came from this circumstance: that it was written both in Hebrew אמן and in Gree...
Verily, verily - Amen, amen. The doubling of this word probably came from this circumstance: that it was written both in Hebrew
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Clarke: Joh 1:51 - -- Heaven open - This seems to be a figurative expression
1. Christ may be understood by this saying to mean, that a clear and abunda...
Heaven open - This seems to be a figurative expression
1. Christ may be understood by this saying to mean, that a clear and abundant revelation of God’ s will should be now made unto men; that heaven itself should be laid as it were open, and all the mysteries which had been shut up and hidden in it from eternity, relative to the salvation and glorification of man; should be now fully revealed
2. That by the angels of God ascending and descending, is to be understood, that a perpetual intercourse should now be opened between heaven and earth, through the medium of Christ, who was God manifested in the flesh. Our blessed Lord is represented in his mediatorial capacity as the ambassador of God to men; and the angels ascending and descending upon the Son of man, is a metaphor taken from the custom of despatching couriers or messengers from the prince to his ambassador in a foreign court, and from the ambassador back to the prince
This metaphor will receive considerable light when compared with 2Co 5:19, 2Co 5:20 : God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself: - We are ambassadors for Christ, as though God did beseech you by us, we pray you in Christ’ s stead to be reconciled to God. The whole concerns of human salvation shall be carried on, from henceforth, through the Son of man; and an incessant intercourse be established between heaven and earth. Some have illustrated this passage by the account of Jacob’ s vision, Gen 28:12. But though that vision may intimate that God had established at that time a communication between heaven and earth, through the medium of angels, yet it does not appear that our Lord’ s saying here has any reference to it; but that it should be understood as stated above
What a glorious view does this give us of the Gospel dispensation! It is heaven opened to earth; and heaven opened on earth. The Church militant and the Church triumphant become one, and the whole heavenly family, in both, see and adore their common Lord. Neither the world nor the Church is left to the caprices of time or chance. The Son of man governs as he upholds all. Wherever we are praying, studying, hearing, meditating, his gracious eye is upon us. He notes our wants, our weakness, and our petitions; and his eye affects his heart. Let us be without guile, deeply, habitually sincere, serious, and upright; and then we may rest assured, that not only the eye, but the hand, of our Lord shall be ever upon us for good
Happy the man whose heart can rejoice in the reflection, Thou God seest me
Calvin: Joh 1:23 - -- 23.The voice of him who crieth. As he would have been chargeable with rashness in undertaking the office of teaching, if he had not received a commis...
23.The voice of him who crieth. As he would have been chargeable with rashness in undertaking the office of teaching, if he had not received a commission, he shows what was the duty which he had to perform, and proves it by a quotation from the Prophet Isa 60:3. Hence it follows that he does nothing but what God commanded him to do. Isaiah does not, indeed, speak there of John alone, but, promising the restoration of the Church, he predicts that there will yet be heard joyful voices, commanding to prepare the way for the Lord. Though he points out the coming of God, when he brought back the people from their captivity in Babylon, yet the true accomplishment was the manifestation of Christ in flesh. Among the heralds who announced that the Lord was at hand, John held the chief place.
To enter into ingenious inquiries, as some have done, into the meaning of the word Voice, would be frivolous. John is called a Voice, because he was enjoined to cry. It is in a figurative sense, undoubtedly, that Isaiah gives the name wilderness to the miserable desolation of the Church, which seemed to preclude the return of the people; as if he had said, that a passage would indeed be opened up for the captive people, but that the Lord would find a road through regions in which there was no road. But that visible wilderness, in which John preached, was a figure or image of the awful desolation which took away all hope of deliverance. If this comparison be considered, it will be easily seen that no torture has been given to the words of the prophet in this application of them; for God arranged everything in such a manner, as to place before the eyes of his people, who were overwhelmed with their calamities, a mirror of this prediction.
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Calvin: Joh 1:24 - -- 24.Were of the Pharisees. He says that they were Pharisees, who at that time held the highest rank in the Church; and he says so in order to inform ...
24.Were of the Pharisees. He says that they were Pharisees, who at that time held the highest rank in the Church; and he says so in order to inform us, that they were not some contemptible persons of the order of the Levites, but men clothed with authority. This is the reason why they raise a question about his baptism. Ordinary ministers would have been satisfied with any kind of answer; but those men, because they cannot draw from John what they desired, accuse him of rashness for venturing to introduce a new religious observance.
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Calvin: Joh 1:25 - -- 25.Why then dost thou baptize ? By laying down those three degrees, they appear to form a very conclusive argument : if thou art not the Christ, nor ...
25.Why then dost thou baptize ? By laying down those three degrees, they appear to form a very conclusive argument : if thou art not the Christ, nor Elijah, nor a prophet; for it does not belong to every man to institute the practice of baptism. The Messiah was to be one who possessed all authority. Of Elijah who was to come, they had formed this opinion, that he would commence the restoration both of the royal authority and of the Church. The prophets of God, they readily grant, have a right to discharge the office committed to them. They conclude, therefore, that for John to baptize is an unlawful novelty, since he has received from God no public station. But they are wrong in not acknowledging him to be that Elijah who is mentioned by Mal 4:5; though he denies that he is that Elijah of whom they foolishly dreamed.
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Calvin: Joh 1:26 - -- 26.I baptize with water. This ought to have been abundantly sufficient for the correction of their mistake, but a reproof otherwise clear is of no ad...
26.I baptize with water. This ought to have been abundantly sufficient for the correction of their mistake, but a reproof otherwise clear is of no advantage to the deaf; for, when he sends them to Christ, and declares that Christ is present, this is a clear proof not only that he was divinely appointed to be a minister of Christ, but that he is the true Elijah, who is sent to testify that the time is come 36 for the renovation of the Church. There is a contrast here which is not fully stated; for the spiritual baptism of Christ is not expressly contrasted with the external baptism of John, but that latter clause about the baptism of the Spirit might easily be supplied, and shortly afterwards both are set down by the Evangelist.
This answer may be reduced to two heads: first, that John claims nothing for himself but what he has a right to claim, because he has Christ for the Author of his baptism, in which consists the truth of the sign; and, secondly, that he has nothing but the administration of the outward sign, while the whole power and efficacy is in the hands of Christ alone. Thus he defends his baptism so far as its truth depends on anything else; but, at the same time, by declaring that he has not the power of the Spirit, he exalts the dignity of Christ, that the eyes of men may be fixed on him alone. This is the highest and best regulated moderation, when a minister borrows from Christ whatever authority he claims for himself, in such a manner as to trace it to him, ascribing to him alone all that he possesses.
It is a foolish mistake, however, into which some people have been led, of supposing that John’s baptism was different from ours; for John does not argue here about the advantage and usefulness of his baptism, but merely compares his own person with the person of Christ. In like manner, if we were inquiring, at the present day, what part belongs to us, and what belongs to Christ, in baptism, we must acknowledge that Christ alone performs what baptism figuratively represents, and that we have nothing beyond the bare administration of the sign. There is a twofold way of speaking in Scripture about the sacraments; for sometimes it tells us that they are the laver of regeneration, ( Titus 3:5;) that by them our sins are washed away, (1Pe 3:21;) that we
are in-grafted into the body of Christ, that our old man is crucified, and that we rise again to newness of life, (Rom 6:4;)
and, in those cases, Scripture joins the power of Christ with the ministry of man; as, indeed, man is nothing else than the hand of Christ. Such modes of expression show, not what man can of himself accomplish, but what Christ performs by man, and by the sign, as his instruments. But as there is a strong tendency to fall into superstition, and as men, through the pride which is natural to them, take from God the honor due to him, and basely appropriate it to themselves; so Scripture, in order to restrain this blasphemous arrogance, sometimes distinguishes ministers from Christ, as in this passage, that we may learn that ministers are nothing and can do nothing.
One standeth in the midst of you. He indirectly charges them with stupidity, in not knowing Christ, to whom their minds ought to have been earnestly directed; and he always insists earnestly on this point, that nothing can be known about his ministry, until men have come to him who is the Author of it. When he says that Christ standeth in the midst of, them, it is that he may excite their desire and their exertion to know him. The amount of what he says is, that he wishes to place himself as low as possible, lest any degree of honor improperly bestowed on him might obscure the excellence of Christ. It is probable that he had these sentences frequently in his mouth, when he saw himself immoderately extolled by the perverse opinions of men.
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Calvin: Joh 1:27 - -- 27.Who coming after me. Here he says two things; first, that Christ was behind him in the order of time; but, secondly, that he was far before him in...
27.Who coming after me. Here he says two things; first, that Christ was behind him in the order of time; but, secondly, that he was far before him in rank and dignity, because the rather preferred him to all. Soon after he will add a third statement, that Christ was preferred to all others, because he is in reality more exalted than all others.
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Calvin: Joh 1:28 - -- 28.These things were done in Bethabara. The place is mentioned, not only to authenticate the narrative, but also to inform us that this answer was gi...
28.These things were done in Bethabara. The place is mentioned, not only to authenticate the narrative, but also to inform us that this answer was given amidst a numerous assembly of people; for there were many who flocked to John’s baptism, and this was his ordinary place for baptizing. It is likewise supposed by some to be a passage across Jordan, and, from this circumstance, they derive the name, for they interpret it the house of passage; unless, perhaps, some may prefer the opinion of those who refer to the memorable passage of the people, (Jos 3:13,) when God opened up a way for them in the midst of the waters, under the direction of Joshua. Others say that it ought rather to be read Betharaba. Instead of Bethabara, some have inserted here the name Bethany, but this is a mistake; for we shall afterwards see how near Bethany was to Jerusalem. The situation of Bethabara, as laid down by those who have described the country, agrees best with the words of the Evangelist; though I have no wish to dispute about the pronunciation of the word.
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Calvin: Joh 1:29 - -- 29.The next day. There can be no doubt that John had already spoken about the manifestation of the Messiah; but when Christ began to appear, he wishe...
29.The next day. There can be no doubt that John had already spoken about the manifestation of the Messiah; but when Christ began to appear, he wished that his announcement of him should quickly become known, and the time was now at hand when Christ would put an end to John’s ministry, as, when the sun is risen, the dawn suddenly disappears. After having testified to the priests who were sent to him, that he from whom they ought to seek the truth and power of baptism was already present, and was conversing in the midst of the people, the next day he pointed him out to the view of all. For these two acts, following each other in close succession, must have powerfully affected their minds. This too is the reason why Christ appeared in the presence of John.
Behold the Lamb of God. The principal office of Christ is briefly but clearly stated; that he takes away the sins of the world by the sacrifice of his death, and reconciles men to God. There are other favors, indeed, which Christ bestows upon us, but this is the chief favor, and the rest depend on it; that, by appeasing the wrath of God, he makes us to be reckoned holy and righteous. For from this source flow all the streams of blessings, that, by not imputing our sins, he receives us into favor. Accordingly, John, in order to conduct us to Christ, commences with the gratuitous forgiveness of sins which we obtain through him.
By the word Lamb he alludes to the ancient sacrifices of the Law. He had to do with Jews who, having been accustomed to sacrifices, could not be instructed about atonement for sins in any other way than by holding out to them a sacrifice. As there were various kinds of them, he makes one, by a figure of speech, to stand for the whole; and it is probable that John alluded to the paschal lamb. It must be observed, in general, that John employed this mode of expression, which was better adapted to instruct the Jews, and possessed greater force; as in our own day, in consequence of baptism being generally practiced, we understand better what is meant by obtaining forgiveness of sins through the blood of Christ, when we are told that we are washed and cleansed by it from our pollutions. At the same time, as the Jews commonly held superstitious notions about sacrifices, he corrects this fault in passing, by reminding them of the object to which all the sacrifices were directed. It was a very wicked abuse of the institution of sacrifice, that they had their confidence fixed on the outward signs; and therefore John, holding out Christ, testifies that he is the Lamb of God; by which he means that all the sacrifices, which the Jews were accustomed to offer under the Law, had no power whatever to atone for sins, but that they were only figures, the truth of which was manifested in Christ himself.
Who taketh away the sin of the world. He uses the word sin in the singular number, for any kind of iniquity; as if he had said, that every kind of unrighteousness which alienates men from God is taken away by Christ. And when he says, the sin Of The World, he extends this favor indiscriminately to the whole human race; that the Jews might not think that he had been sent to them alone. But hence we infer that the whole world is involved in the same condemnation; and that as all men without exception are guilty of unrighteousness before God, they need to be reconciled to him. John the Baptist, therefore, by speaking generally of the sin of the world, intended to impress upon us the conviction of our own misery, and to exhort us to seek the remedy. Now our duty is, to embrace the benefit which is offered to all, that each of us may be convinced that there is nothing to hinder him from obtaining reconciliation in Christ, provided that he comes to him by the guidance of faith.
Besides, he lays down but one method of taking away sins We know that from the beginning of the world, when their own consciences held them convinced, men labored anxiously to procure forgiveness. Hence the vast number of propitiatory offerings, by which they falsely imagined that they appeased God. I own, indeed, that all the spurious rites of a propitiatory nature drew their existence from a holy origin, which was, that God had appointed the sacrifices which directed men to Christ; but yet every man contrived for himself his own method of appeasing God. But John leads us back to Christ alone, and informs us that there is no other way in which God is reconciled to us than through his agency, because he alone takes away sin. He therefore leaves no other refuge for sinners than to flee to Christ; by which he overturns all satisfactions, and purifications, and redemptions, that are invented by men; as, indeed, they are nothing else than base inventions framed by the subtlety of the devil.
The verb
the chastisement of our peace was laid on him, (Isa 53:5;)
or that he blots out sins. But as the latter statement depends on the former, I gladly embrace both; namely, that Christ, by bearing our sins, takes them away. Although, therefore, sin continually dwells in us, yet there is none in the judgment of God, because when it has been annulled by the grace of Christ, it is not imputed to us. Nor do I dislike the remark of Chrysostom, that the verb in the present tense —
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Calvin: Joh 1:30 - -- 30.This is he of whom I said He comprehends every thing in a few words, when he declares that Christ is the person who, he said, was to be preferred ...
30.This is he of whom I said He comprehends every thing in a few words, when he declares that Christ is the person who, he said, was to be preferred to him; for hence it follows that John is nothing more than a herald sent on his account; and hence again it is evident that Christ is the Messiah. Three things are here stated; for when he says that a man cometh after him, he means that he himself was before him in the order of time, to prepare the way for Christ, according to the testimony of Malachi,
Behold, I send my messenger before my face, (Mal 3:1.)
Again, when he says that he was preferred to himself, this relates to the glory with which God adorned his Son, when he came into the world to fulfill the office of a Redeemer. At last, the reason is added, which is, that Christ is far superior in dignity to John the Baptist. That honor, therefore, which the Father bestowed upon him was not accidental, but was due to his eternal majesty. But of this expression, he was preferred to me, because he was before me, I have already Spoken. 37
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Calvin: Joh 1:31 - -- 31.And I knew him not That his testimony may not be suspected of having been given either from friendship or favor, he anticipates such a doubt, by a...
31.And I knew him not That his testimony may not be suspected of having been given either from friendship or favor, he anticipates such a doubt, by affirming that he had no other knowledge of Christ than what he had obtained by divine inspiration. The meaning, therefore, amounts to this, that John does not speak at his own suggestion, nor for the favor of man, but by the inspiration of the Spirit and the command of God.
I came baptizing with water; that is, I was called and appointed to this office, that I might manifest him to Israel; which the Evangelist afterwards explains more fully, and confirms, when he introduces John the Baptist, testifying that he had no knowledge of Christ but what he had obtained by oracle; that is, by information or revelation from God. 38 Instead of what we find here, I came to baptize, he there states expressly (verse 33) that he was sent; for it is only the calling of God that makes lawful ministers, because every person who of his own accord, thrusts himself forward, whatever learning or eloquence he may possess, is not entitled to any authority, and the reason is, that he is not authorized by God. Now since it was necessary that John, in order that he might lawfully baptize, should be sent by God, let it be inferred from this, that it is not in the power of any man whatever to institute sacraments, but that this right belongs to God alone, as Christ, on another occasion, in order to prove the baptism of John, asks if it was from heaven, or from men, (Mat 21:25.)
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Calvin: Joh 1:32 - -- 32.I saw the Spirit, descending like a dove This is not a literal but a figurative mode of expression; for with what eyes could he see the Spirit ?...
32.I saw the Spirit, descending like a dove This is not a literal but a figurative mode of expression; for with what eyes could he see the Spirit ? But as the dove was a certain and infallible sign of the presence of the Spirit, it is called the Spirit, by a figure of speech in which one name is substituted for another; not that he is in reality the Spirit, but that he points him out, as far as human capacity can admit. And this metaphorical language is frequently employed in the sacraments; for why does Christ call the bread his body, but because the name of the thing is properly transferred to the sign? especially when the sign is, at the same time, a true and efficacious pledge, by which we are made certain that the thing itself which is signified is bestowed on us. Yet it must not be understood that the dove contained the Spirit who fills heaven and earth, (Jer 23:24,) but that he was present by his power, so that John knew that such an exhibition was not presented to his eyes in vain. In like manner, we know that the body of Christ is not connected with the bread, and yet we are partakers of his body.
A question now arises, why did the Spirit at that time appear in the form of a dove ? We must always hold that there is a correspondence between the sign and the reality. When the Spirit was given to the apostles, they saw cloven tongues of fire, (Act 2:3,) because the preaching of the gospel was to be spread through all tongues, and was to possess the power of fire. But in this passage God intended to make a public representation of that mildness of Christ of which Isaiah speaks in lofty terms,
The smoking flax he will not quench, and the bruised reed he will not break, (Isa 42:3.)
It was then, for the first time, that the Spirit was seen descending on him; not that he had formerly been destitute of him, but because he might be said to be then consecrated by a solemn rite. For we know that he remained in concealment, during thirty years, like a private individual, because the time for his manifestation was not yet come; but when he intended to make himself known to the world, he began with his baptism. At that time, therefore, he received the Spirit not only for himself, but for his people; and on that account his descent was visible, that we may know that there dwells in him an abundance of all gifts of which we are empty and destitute. This may easily be inferred from the words of the Baptist; for when he says, Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending, and remaining on him, it is he who baptizeth with the Spirit, his meaning is, that the reason why the Spirit was beheld in a visible form, and remained on Christ, was, that he might water all his people with his fullness. What it is to baptize with the Spirit I have already noticed in a few words; namely, that he imparts its efficacy to baptism, that it may not be vain or useless, and this he accomplishes by the power of his Spirit.
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Calvin: Joh 1:33 - -- 33.Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending Here a difficult question arises; for if John did not know Christ, why does he refuse to admit him...
33.Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending Here a difficult question arises; for if John did not know Christ, why does he refuse to admit him to baptism? To a person whom he did not know he would not say, I ought rather to be baptized by thee, (Mat 3:14.) Some reply, that he knew him to such an extent as to regard him with the reverence due to a distinguished Prophet, but was not aware that he was the Son of God. But this is a poor solution of the difficulty, for every man ought to obey the calling of God without any respect of persons. No rank or excellence of man ought to prevent us from doing our duty, and therefore John would have shown disrespect to God and to his baptism, if he had spoken in this manner to any other person than the Son of God. it follows that he must have previously known Christ.
In the first place, it ought to be observed, that the knowledge here mentioned is that which arises from personal and long acquaintance. Although he recognizes Christ whenever he sees him, still it does not cease to be true that they were not known to each other according to the ordinary custom of men, for the commencement of his knowledge proceeded from God. But the question is not yet fully answered; for he says that the sight of the Holy Spirit was the mark by which he was pointed out to him. Now he had not yet seen the Spirit, when he had addressed Christ as the Son of God. For my own part, I willingly embrace the opinion of those who think that this sign was added for confirmation, and that it was not so much for the sake of John as for the sake of us all. John indeed saw it, but it was rather for others than for himself. Bucer appropriately quotes that saying of Moses,
This shall be a sign to you, that after three days journey, you shall sacrifice to me on the mountain, (Exo 3:12.)
Undoubtedly, when they were going out, they already knew that God would conduct and watch over their deliverance; but this was a confirmation a posteriori, as the phrase is; that is, from the event, after it had taken place. In like manner, this came as an addition to the former revelation which had been given to John.
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Calvin: Joh 1:34 - -- 34.I saw and testified He means that what he declares is not doubtful; because God was pleased to make him fully and thoroughly acquainted with those...
34.I saw and testified He means that what he declares is not doubtful; because God was pleased to make him fully and thoroughly acquainted with those things of which he was to be the witness to the world; and it is worthy of notice, that he testified that Christ was the Son of God, because he who gives the Holy Spirit must be the Christ, for to no other belongs the honor and the office of reconciling men to God.
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Calvin: Joh 1:36 - -- 36.Behold the Lamb of God! Hence appears more clearly what I have already stated, that when John perceived that he was approaching the end of his cou...
36.Behold the Lamb of God! Hence appears more clearly what I have already stated, that when John perceived that he was approaching the end of his course, he labored incessantly to resign his office to Christ. His firmness too gives greater credit to his testimony. But by insisting so earnestly, during many successive days, in repeating the commendation of Christ, he shows that his own course was nearly finished. Here we see also how small and low the beginning of the Church was. John, indeed, prepared disciples for Christ, but it is only now that Christ begins to collect a Church. He has no more than two men who are mean and unknown, but this even contributes to illustrate his glory, that within a short period, without human aid, and without a strong hand, he spreads his kingdom in a wonderful and incredible manner. We ought also to observe what is the chief object to which John directs the attention of men; it is, to find in Christ the forgiveness of sins. And as Christ had presented himself to the disciples for the express purpose that they might come to him, so no when they come, he gently encourages and exhorts them; for he does not wait until they first address him, but asks, What do you seek? This kind and gracious invitation, which was once made to two persons, now belongs to all. We ought not therefore to fear that Christ will withdraw from us or refuse to us easy access, provided that he sees us desirous to come to him; but, on the contrary, he will stretch out his hand to assist our endeavors. And how will not he meet those who come to him, who seeks at a distance those who are wandering and astray, that he may bring them back to the right road?
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Calvin: Joh 1:38 - -- 38.Rabbi This name was commonly given to persons of high rank, or who possessed any kind of honor. But the Evangelist here points out another use of ...
38.Rabbi This name was commonly given to persons of high rank, or who possessed any kind of honor. But the Evangelist here points out another use of it which was made in his own age, which was, that they addressed by this name the teachers and expounders of the word of God. Although, therefore, those two disciples do not yet recognize Christ as the only Teacher of the Church, yet, moved by the commendation bestowed on him by John the Baptist, they hold him to be a Prophet and teacher, which is the first step towards receiving instruction.
Where dwellest thou? By this example we are taught that from the first, rudiments of the Church we ought to draw such a relish for Christ as will excite our desire to profit; and next, that we ought not to be satisfied with a mere passing look, but that we ought to seek his dwelling, that he may receive us as guests. For there are very many who smell the gospel at a distance only, and thus allow Christ suddenly to disappear, and all that they have learned concerning him to pass away. And though those two persons did not at that time become his ordinary disciples, yet there can be no doubt that, during that night, he instructed them more fully, so that they soon afterwards became entirely devoted to him.
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Calvin: Joh 1:39 - -- 39.It was about the tenth hour; that is, the evening was approaching, for it was not more than two hours till sunset. The day was at that time divide...
39.It was about the tenth hour; that is, the evening was approaching, for it was not more than two hours till sunset. The day was at that time divided by them into twelve hours, which were longer in summer and shorter in winter. But from this circumstance we infer that those disciples were so eagerly desirous to hear Christ, and to gain a more intimate knowledge of him, that they gave themselves no concern about a night’s lodging. On the contrary, we are, for the most part, very unlike them, for we incessantly delay, because it is not convenient for us to follow Christ.
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Calvin: Joh 1:40 - -- 40.Andrew, Simon Peter’s brother The design of the Evangelist, down to the end of the chapter, is to inform us how gradually the disciples were bro...
40.Andrew, Simon Peter’s brother The design of the Evangelist, down to the end of the chapter, is to inform us how gradually the disciples were brought to Christ. Here he relates about Peter, and afterwards he will mention Philip and Nathanael. The circumstance of Andrew immediately bringing his brother expresses the nature of faith, which does not conceal or quench the light, but rather spreads it in every direction. Andrew has scarcely a spark, and yet, by means of it, he enlightens his brother. Woe to our indolence, therefore, if we do not, after having been fully enlightened, endeavor to make others partakers of the same grace. We may observe in Andrew two things which Isaiah requires from the children of God; namely, that each should take his neighbor by the hand, and next, that he should say,
Come, let us go up into the mountain of the Lord,
and he will teach us, (Isa 2:3.)
For Andrew stretches out the hand to his brother, but at the same time he has this object in view, that he may become a fellow-disciple with him in the school of Christ. We ought also to observe the purpose of God, which determined that Peter, who was to be far more eminent, was brought to the knowledge of Christ by the agency and ministry of Andrew; that none of us, however excellent, may refuse to be taught by an inferior; for that man will be severely punished for his peevishness, or rather for his pride, who, through his contempt of a man, will not deign to come to Christ.
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Calvin: Joh 1:41 - -- 41.We have found the Messiah The Evangelist has interpreted the Hebrew word Messiah ( Anointed) by the Greek word Christ, in order to publish to ...
41.We have found the Messiah The Evangelist has interpreted the Hebrew word Messiah ( Anointed) by the Greek word Christ, in order to publish to the whole world what was secretly known to the Jews. It was the ordinary designation of kings, 39 as anointing was observed by them as a solemn rite. But still they were aware that one King would be anointed by God, under whom they might hope to obtain perfect and eternal happiness; especially when they should learn that the earthly kingdom of David would not be permanent. And as God raised their minds, when subdued and weighed down by various calamities, to the expectation of the Messiah, so he more clearly revealed to them that his coming was at hand. The prediction of Daniel is more clear and forcible than all the rest, so far as relates to the name of Christ; for he does not, like the earlier Prophets, ascribe it to kings, but appropriates it exclusively to the Redeemer, (Dan 9:25.) Hence this mode of expression became prevalent, so that when the Messiah or Christ was mentioned, it was understood that no other than the Redeemer was meant. Thus we shall find the woman of Samaria saying, the Messiah will come, (Joh 4:25;) which makes it the more wonderful that he who was so eagerly desired by all, and whom they had constantly in their mouths, should be received by so small a number of persons.
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Calvin: Joh 1:42 - -- 42.Thou art Simon Christ gives a name to Simon, not as men commonly do, from some past event, or from what is now perceived in them, but because he...
42.Thou art Simon Christ gives a name to Simon, not as men commonly do, from some past event, or from what is now perceived in them, but because he was to make him Peter, ( a stone.) First, he says, Thou art Simon, the son of Jonah. He repeats the name of his father in an abridged form; which is common enough when names are translated into other languages; for it will plainly appear from the last chapter that he was the son of Johanna or John. But all this amounts to nothing more than that he will be a very different person from what he now is. For it is not For the sake of honor that he mentions his father; but as he was descended from a family which was obscure, and which was held in no estimation among men, Christ declares that this will not prevent him from making Simon a man of unshaken courage. The Evangelist, therefore, mentions this as a prediction, that Simon received a new name. I look upon it as a prediction, not only because Christ foresaw the future steadfastness of faith in Peter, but because he foretold what he would give to him. He now magnifies the grace which he determined afterwards to bestow upon him; and therefore he does not say that this is now his name, but delays it till a future time.
Thou shalt be called Cephas All the godly, indeed, may justly be called Peters ( stones,) which, having been Sounded on Christ, are fitted for building the temple of God; but he alone is so called on account of his singular excellence. Yet the Papists act a ridiculous part, when they substitute him in the place of Christ; so as to be the foundation of the Church, as if he too were not founded on Christ along with the rest of the disciples; and they are doubly ridiculous when out of a stone they make him a head. For among the rhapsodies of Gratian there is a foolish canon under the name of Anacletus, who, exchanging a Hebrew word for a Greek one, and not distinguishing the Greek word
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Calvin: Joh 1:43 - -- 43.Follow me When Philip was inflamed by this single word to follow Christ, we infer from it how great is the efficacy of the word of God; but it d...
43.Follow me When Philip was inflamed by this single word to follow Christ, we infer from it how great is the efficacy of the word of God; but it does not appear indiscriminately in all, for God addresses many without any advantage, just as if he struck their ears with a sound which vanished into air. So then the external preaching of the word is in itself unfruitful, except that it inflicts a deadly wound on the reprobate, so as to render them inexcusable before God. But when the secret grace of God quickens it, all the senses must be affected in such a manner that men will be prepared to follow wherever God calls them. We ought, therefore, to pray to Christ that he may display in us the same power of the Gospel. In the case of Philip, there was no doubt a peculiarity about his following Christ; for he is commanded to follow, not like one of us, but as a domestic, and as a familiar companion. But still the calling of all of us is illustrated by this calling of Philip.
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Calvin: Joh 1:44 - -- 44.Was of Bethsaida The name of the city appears to have been mentioned on purpose, that the goodness of God to the three Apostles may be more illust...
44.Was of Bethsaida The name of the city appears to have been mentioned on purpose, that the goodness of God to the three Apostles may be more illustriously displayed. We know how severely, on other occasions, Christ threatens and curses that city, (Mat 11:21; Luk 10:13.) Accordingly, when God brought into favor with him some out of a nation so ungodly and wicked, we ought to view it in the same light as if they had been brought out of the lowest hell. And when Christ, after having drawn them out of that deep gulf, honors them so highly as to make them Apostles, it is a distinguished favor and worthy of being recorded.
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Calvin: Joh 1:45 - -- 45.Philip findeth Nathanael Though proud men despise these feeble beginnings of the Church, yet we ought to perceive in them a brighter display of th...
45.Philip findeth Nathanael Though proud men despise these feeble beginnings of the Church, yet we ought to perceive in them a brighter display of the divine glory, than if the condition of the Kingdom of Christ had been in every respect, from the outset, splendid and magnificent; for we know to how rich a harvest this small seed afterwards grew. Again, we see in Philip the same desire of building which formerly appeared in Andrew. His modesty, too, is remarkable, in desiring and seeking nothing else than to have others to learn along with him, from Him who is a Teacher common to all.
We have found Jesus How small was the measure of Philip’s faith appears from this circumstance, that he cannot utter a few words about Christ without mingling with them two gross errors. He calls him the son of Joseph, and says, that Nazareth was his native town, both of which statements were false; and yet, because he is sincerely desirous to do good to his brother, and to make Christ known, God approves of this instance of his diligence, and even crowns it with good success. Each of us ought, no doubt, to endeavor to keep soberly within his own limits; and, certainly, the Evangelist does not mention it as worthy of commendation in Philip, that he twice disgraces Christ, but relates that his doctrine, though faulty and involved in error, was useful, because it nevertheless had this for its object, that Christ might be truly known. He foolishly says that he was the son of Joseph, and ignorantly calls him a native of Nazareth, but yet he leads Nathanael to no other than the Son of God who was born in Bethlehem, (Mat 2:1,) and does not contrive a false Christ, but only wishes that they should know him as he was exhibited by Moses and the Prophets. We see, then, that the chief design of doctrine is, that those who hear us should come to Christ in some way or other.
There are many who engage in abstruse inquiries about Christ, but who throw such darkness and intricacy around him by their subtleties that they can never find him. The Papists, for example, will not say that Christ is the son of Joseph, for they distinctly know what is his name; but yet they annihilate his power, so as to hold out a phantom in the room of Christ. Would it not be better to stammer ridiculously, like Philip, and to hold by the true Christ, than by eloquent and ingenious language to introduce a false Christ? On the other hand, there are many poor dunces in the present day, who, though ignorant and unskilled in the use of language, make known Christ more faithfully than all the theologians of the Pope with their lofty speculations. This passage, therefore, warns us that, if any unsuitable language has been employed concerning Christ by ignorant and unlearned men, we ought not to reject such persons with disdain, provided they direct us to Christ; but that we may not be withdrawn from Christ by the false imaginations of men, let us always have this remedy at hand, to seek the pure knowledge of him from the Law and the Prophets.
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Calvin: Joh 1:46 - -- 46.Can any good thing come out of Nazareth? At first, Nathanael refuses, the place of Christ’s nativity (as described by Philip) having given hi...
46.Can any good thing come out of Nazareth? At first, Nathanael refuses, the place of Christ’s nativity (as described by Philip) having given him offense. But, first of all, he is deceived by the inconsiderate discourse of Philip; for what Philip foolishly believed Nathanael receives as certain. Next, there is added a foolish judgment arising from hatred or contempt of the place. Both of these points ought to be carefully observed by us. This holy man was not far from shutting out against himself all approach to Christ. Why was this? Because he rashly believes what Philip spoke incorrectly about Christ; and next, because his mind was under the influence of a preconceived opinion that no good thing could come out of Nazareth. If then we are not carefully on our guard, we shall be liable to the same danger; and Satan labors every day, by similar obstacles, to hinder us from coming to Christ; for he has the dexterity to spread many falsehoods, the tendency of which is to excite our hatred or suspicion against the Gospel, that we may not venture to taste it. And next, he ceases not to try another method, namely, to make us look on Christ with contempt; for we see how many there are who take offense at the degradation of the cross, which appears both in Christ the head and in his members. But as we can hardly be so cautious as not to be tempted by those stratagems of Satan, let us at least remember immediately this caution:
Come and see Nathanael allowed his twofold error to be corrected by this expression which Philip uttered. Following his example, let us first show ourselves to be submissive and obedient; and next, let us not shrink from inquiry, when Christ himself is ready to remove the doubts which harass us. Those who read these words not as a question, but as an affirmation, Some good thing may come out of Nazareth, are greatly mistaken. For, in the first place, how trivial would such an observation be? And next, we know that the city Nazareth was not at that time held in estimation; and Philip’s reply shows plainly enough that it was expressive of hesitation and distrust.
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Calvin: Joh 1:47 - -- 47.Behold, one truly an Israelite It is not on Nathanael’s own account that Christ bestows on him this commendation, but under his person he holds ...
47.Behold, one truly an Israelite It is not on Nathanael’s own account that Christ bestows on him this commendation, but under his person he holds out a general doctrine. For, since many who boast of being believers are very far from being actually believers, it is of great importance that some mark should be found for distinguishing the true and genuine from the false. We know how haughtily the Jews gloried in their father Abraham, and how presumptuously they boasted of the holiness of their descent; and yet there was scarcely one in a hundred among them who was not utterly degenerate and alienated from the faith of the Fathers. For this reason, Christ, in order to tear the mask from hypocrites, gives a short definition of a true Israelite, and, at the same time, removes the offense which would afterwards arise from the wicked obstinacy of the nation. For those who wished to be accounted the children of Abraham, and the holy people of God, were shortly afterwards to become the deadly enemies of the Gospel. That none may be discouraged or alarmed by the impiety which was generally found in almost all ranks, he gives a timely warning, that of those by whom the name of Israelites is assumed there are few who are true Israelites.
Again, as this passage contains a definition of Christianity, we must not pass by it slightly. To sum up the meaning of Christ in a few words, it ought to be observed that deceit is contrasted with uprightness and sincerity; 41 so that he calls those persons sly 42 and deceitful who are called in other parts of Scripture double in heart, (Psa 12:2.) Nor is it only that gross hypocrisy by which those who are conscious of their wickedness pretend to be good men, but likewise another inward hypocrisy, when men are so blinded by their vices that they not only deceive others but themselves. So then it is integrity of heart before God, and uprightness before men, that makes a Christian; but Christ points out chiefly that kind of deceit which is mentioned in Psa 32:2. In this passage
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Calvin: Joh 1:48 - -- 48.Whence knowest thou? Though Christ did not intend to flatter him, yet he wished to be heard by him, in order to draw forth a new question, by the ...
48.Whence knowest thou? Though Christ did not intend to flatter him, yet he wished to be heard by him, in order to draw forth a new question, by the reply to which he would prove himself to be the Son of God. Nor is it without a good reason that Nathanael asks whence Christ knew him; for to meet with a man of such uprightness as to be free from all deceit is an uncommon case, and to know such purity of heart belongs to God alone. The reply of Christ, however, appears to be inappropriate; for though he saw Nathanael under the fig-tree, it does not follow from this that he could penetrate into the deep secrets of the heart. But there is another reason; for as it belongs to God to know men when they are not seen, so also does it belong to Him to see what is not visible to the eyes. As Nathanael knew that Christ did not see him after the manner of men, but by a look truly divine, this might lead him to conclude that Christ did not now speak as a man. The proof, therefore, is taken from things which are of the same class; for not less does it belong to God to see what lies beyond our view than to judge concerning purity of heart. We ought also to gather from this passage a useful doctrine, that when we are not thinking of Christ, we are observed by him; and it is necessary that it should be so, that he may bring us back, when we have wandered from the right path.
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Calvin: Joh 1:49 - -- 49.Thou art the Son of God That he acknowledges him to be the Son of God from his divine power is not wonderful; but on what ground does he call hi...
49.Thou art the Son of God That he acknowledges him to be the Son of God from his divine power is not wonderful; but on what ground does he call him King of Israel ? for the two things do not appear to be necessarily connected. But Nathanael takes a loftier view. He had already heard that he is the Messiah, and to this doctrine he adds the confirmation which had been given him. He holds also another principle, that the Son of God will not come without exercising the office of King over the people of God. Justly, therefore, does he acknowledge that he who is the Son of God is also King of Israel And, indeed, faith ought not to be fixed on the essence of Christ alone, (so to speak,) but ought to attend to his power and office; for it would be of little advantage to know who Christ is, if this second point were not added, what he wishes to be towards us, and for what purpose the Father sent him. The reason why the Papists have nothing more than a shadow of Christ is, that they have been careful to look at his mere essence, but have disregarded his kingdom, which consists in the power to save.
Again, when Nathanael calls him King of Israel, though his kingdom extends to the remotest bounds of the earth, the confession is limited to the measure of faith. For he had not yet advanced so far as to know that Christ was appointed to be King over the whole world, or rather, that from every quarter would be collected the children of Abraham, so that the whole world would be the Israel of God. We to whom the wide extent of Christ’s kingdom has been revealed ought to go beyond those narrow limits. Yet following the example of Nathanael, let us exercise our faith in hearing the word, and let us strengthen it by all the means that are in our power; and let it not remain buried, but break out into confession.
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Calvin: Joh 1:50 - -- 50.Jesus answered. He does not reprove Nathanael as if he had been too easy of belief, but rather approving of his faith, promises to him and to othe...
50.Jesus answered. He does not reprove Nathanael as if he had been too easy of belief, but rather approving of his faith, promises to him and to others that he will confirm it by stronger arguments. Besides, it was peculiar to one man that he was seen under a fig-tree by Christ, when absent and at a distance from him; but now Christ brings forward a proof which would be common to all, and thus — as if he had broken off from what he originally intended — instead of addressing one man, he turns to address all.
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Calvin: Joh 1:51 - -- 51.You shall see heaven opened They are greatly mistaken, in my opinion, who anxiously inquire into the place where, and the time when, Nathanael and...
51.You shall see heaven opened They are greatly mistaken, in my opinion, who anxiously inquire into the place where, and the time when, Nathanael and others saw heaven opened; for he rather points out something perpetual which was always to exist in his kingdom. I acknowledge indeed, that the disciples sometimes saw angels, who are not seen in the present day; and I acknowledge also that the manifestation of the heavenly glory, when Christ ascended to heaven, was different from what we now behold. But if we duly consider what took place at that time, it is of perpetual duration; for the kingdom of God, which was formerly closed against us, is actually opened in Christ. A visible instance of this was shown to Stephen, (Act 7:55,) to the three disciples on the mountain, (Mat 17:5,) and to the other disciples at Christ’s ascension, (Luk 24:51; Act 1:9.) But all the signs by which God shows himself present with us depend on this opening of heaven, more especially when God communicates himself to us to be our life.
Ascending and descending on the Son of man This second clause refers to angels. They are said to ascend and descend, so as to be ministers of God’s kindness towards us; and therefore this mode of expression points out the mutual intercourse which exists between God and men. Now we must acknowledge that this benefit was received through Christ, because without him the angels have rather a deadly enmity against us than a friendly care to help us. They are said to ascend and descend on the son of man, not because they minister to him, but because — in reference to him, and for his honor — they include the whole body of the Church in their kindly regard. Nor have I any doubt that he alludes to the ladder which was exhibited to the patriarch Jacob in a dream, (Gen 28:12;) for what was prefigured by that vision is actually fulfilled in Christ. In short, this passage teaches us, that though the whole human race was banished from the kingdom of God, the gate of heaven is now opened to us, so that we are fellow-citizens of the saints, and companions of the angels, (Eph 2:19;) and that they, having been appointed to be guardians of our salvation, descend from the blessed rest of the heavenly glory 43 to relieve our distresses.
Defender: Joh 1:23 - -- John is here quoting Isa 40:3, applying it to the very soon appearance of Jesus to his listeners. In that connection, it is significant that this Mess...
John is here quoting Isa 40:3, applying it to the very soon appearance of Jesus to his listeners. In that connection, it is significant that this Messianic prophecy in Isaiah calls the coming One both "Lord" (Jehovah) and "God" (
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Defender: Joh 1:25 - -- This question indicates that the baptism ritual was what concerned the Jewish leaders rather than John's preaching of repentance. They recognized bapt...
This question indicates that the baptism ritual was what concerned the Jewish leaders rather than John's preaching of repentance. They recognized baptism as indicating some kind of new beginning, a change of belief and life-style and were fearful it might undermine their own authority and privileges. There is no indication of such a practice in the Old Testament, nor any firm evidence of so-called "proselyte baptism" in the inter-Testamental period. Indications suggest baptism as something entirely new, symbolizing somehow that the coming Messiah would begin a new kingdom with those who would follow Him, indicating their new life by submission to baptism. All John's converts were "baptized of him in Jordan, confessing their sins" (Mat 3:6). All of this, especially the fact that it was done "in Jordan," together with the literal meaning of
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Defender: Joh 1:26 - -- Nor did they want to know (Joh 1:10, Joh 1:11). This conversation evidently occurred sometime after Jesus' baptism, but either they had not been prese...
Nor did they want to know (Joh 1:10, Joh 1:11). This conversation evidently occurred sometime after Jesus' baptism, but either they had not been present on that day or had not understood what was happening. Jesus had now returned, however, and was there standing among them as they interrogated John."
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Defender: Joh 1:28 - -- Bethabara was about twenty miles east of Jerusalem on the Jordan, representing quite a trip for the throngs which came out from Jerusalem to hear him ...
Bethabara was about twenty miles east of Jerusalem on the Jordan, representing quite a trip for the throngs which came out from Jerusalem to hear him preach, including these Pharisees.
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Defender: Joh 1:28 - -- This may have been about six weeks after Jesus' baptism following the forty day testing in the wilderness (Mar 1:11, Mar 1:12) and shortly before Pass...
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Defender: Joh 1:28 - -- Jesus is called "the Lamb" by the Apostle John twice in his gospel (Joh 1:29, Joh 1:36) and 28 times in Revelation. The title is derived from the mult...
Jesus is called "the Lamb" by the Apostle John twice in his gospel (Joh 1:29, Joh 1:36) and 28 times in Revelation. The title is derived from the multitude of sacrificial lambs offered in atonement for sins in the old dispensation, soon to be superseded by Christ's "one sacrifice for sins for ever" (Heb 10:12). Note also Isa 53:7; Act 8:32; and 1Pe 1:19, where Christ's substitutionary sacrifice is also compared to the shedding of the innocent blood of a lamb.
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Defender: Joh 1:28 - -- The figure here is that of the two goats (Leviticus 16:7-22) offered on the annual Day of Atonement. One would die for the sins of the people, the oth...
The figure here is that of the two goats (Leviticus 16:7-22) offered on the annual Day of Atonement. One would die for the sins of the people, the other ("the scapegoat") would carry away all their sins into the wilderness. But "it is not possible that the blood of bulls and of goats should take away sins" (Heb 10:4). Sacrifices were offered every day, but they could "never take away sins" (Heb 10:11). Their blood could only provide a temporary "atonement" (or "covering") until the one capable Lamb of God could come to take away, not just "sins," but "the sin" of the whole world."
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Defender: Joh 1:34 - -- John gives his final, definitive answer to the Pharisees who were challenging his right to baptize in water. God Himself had sent him to do so (Joh 1:...
John gives his final, definitive answer to the Pharisees who were challenging his right to baptize in water. God Himself had sent him to do so (Joh 1:33), so that when Jesus also would come for baptism (Luk 3:21, Luk 3:22) to "fulfill all righteousness" (Mat 3:15), God could identify Him by sending the Holy Spirit upon Him in the form of a dove (Joh 1:32, Joh 1:33), in order that "he should be made manifest to Israel" (Joh 1:31).
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Defender: Joh 1:34 - -- Six times in this first chapter, John the Baptist "bears witness" concerning Christ (Joh 1:7, Joh 1:8, Joh 1:15, Joh 1:19, Joh 1:32, Joh 1:34).
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Defender: Joh 1:34 - -- John thus recognizes Jesus Christ as Creator (Joh 1:1), as the life and light of all men (Joh 1:4, Joh 1:9), as the Word incarnate (Joh 1:14), as pree...
John thus recognizes Jesus Christ as Creator (Joh 1:1), as the life and light of all men (Joh 1:4, Joh 1:9), as the Word incarnate (Joh 1:14), as preexistent (Joh 1:15, Joh 1:30), as the One bringing God's grace and truth into the world (Joh 1:14, Joh 1:17), as the Savior of those who believe (Joh 1:12), as the One in whom sinners could be "born again" (1Pe 1:23) to become children of God (Joh 1:13), as the One who reveals the Father (Joh 1:18), as the only begotten Son of God (Joh 1:14, Joh 1:18), as the sin-bearing, sin-removing Lamb of God (Joh 1:29), and as the One who would baptize with the Holy Spirit (Joh 1:33). This is surely a fully developed Christology, not an Old Testament prophecy, as many expositors have claimed. John was indeed a prophet but not of the Old Testament. John the Baptist was the first Christian prophet, the first Christian gospel preacher, the first to administer Christian baptism, the first Christian witness, the first Christian filled with the Spirit, the first Christian missionary, the first Christian pastor and, finally, the first Christian martyr. It is remarkable that so few Christians recognize his unique greatness, as Christ did (Mat 11:9-11)."
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Defender: Joh 1:35 - -- It is probable, in light of Peter's statement in Act 1:21, Act 1:22 (along with Mat 3:13; Luk 1:17; and Act 10:37), that not only these two disciples,...
It is probable, in light of Peter's statement in Act 1:21, Act 1:22 (along with Mat 3:13; Luk 1:17; and Act 10:37), that not only these two disciples, but all of those who soon comprised the twelve disciples of Christ, had first been won, baptized, and trained as John's disciples before he directed them to Christ."
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Defender: Joh 1:36 - -- The clear implication of this command was: "Therefore, now you must follow Him!" "He must increase, but I must decrease" (Joh 3:30)."
The clear implication of this command was: "Therefore, now you must follow Him!" "He must increase, but I must decrease" (Joh 3:30)."
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Defender: Joh 1:39 - -- The place where Jesus dwelt was probably not His family home, which was far to the north in Nazareth, whereas John was baptizing east of Jerusalem. It...
The place where Jesus dwelt was probably not His family home, which was far to the north in Nazareth, whereas John was baptizing east of Jerusalem. It is likely that He had no real dwelling place, for He said not long after this time that "the Son of man hath not where to lay his head" (Mat 8:20)."
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Defender: Joh 1:40 - -- The second was undoubtedly John, who wrote the gospel, but who never identifies himself by name."
The second was undoubtedly John, who wrote the gospel, but who never identifies himself by name."
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Defender: Joh 1:41 - -- The need to explain the meaning of Messias shows that John's Gospel was written for Gentiles (Joh 1:38; Joh 5:2). John wrote his Gospel long after th...
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Defender: Joh 1:43 - -- At this time, Jesus was apparently still in Judaea where John had been baptizing (Joh 1:28), preparing to travel north, nearer to His family home in G...
At this time, Jesus was apparently still in Judaea where John had been baptizing (Joh 1:28), preparing to travel north, nearer to His family home in Galilee. A wedding had been scheduled in Cana, to which He had been called (Joh 2:1, Joh 2:2). Yet he called John, Andrew, Peter, Philip, Nathanael, and presumably James (John's brother) as His disciples during these two days. All of these men lived far north in Galilee, yet Jesus first encountered them in or near Bethabara, east of Jerusalem, far from their homes. The implication seems to be that all were disciples of John the Baptist, and were with him as he preached and baptized near Jerusalem in those days."
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Defender: Joh 1:46 - -- The town of Nazareth is not mentioned in the Old Testament or in any of the extra-Biblical literature of the period, so it is not known why Nathanael ...
The town of Nazareth is not mentioned in the Old Testament or in any of the extra-Biblical literature of the period, so it is not known why Nathanael made such a remark. As a fellow Galilean, Nathanael undoubtedly had some knowledge about its citizens. The Nazarenes ill-tempered reaction to Jesus when he returned to preach in their synagogue, even attempting to kill Him, gives some insight (Luk 4:16-30)."
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Defender: Joh 1:51 - -- Nathanael had been convinced by the Lord's miraculous knowledge concerning himself (Joh 1:47-49), and Jesus was very pleased to find a disciple "in wh...
Nathanael had been convinced by the Lord's miraculous knowledge concerning himself (Joh 1:47-49), and Jesus was very pleased to find a disciple "in whom is no guile" (Joh 1:47). The resulting prophetic promise given to Nathanael obviously referred back to the remarkable vision of Jacob's ladder (Gen 28:12), when he saw angels going up and down on a ladder reaching from earth to heaven. The reason for Christ's surprising statement may well have been that Nathanael was reading that account in Genesis when Philip approached him. Jacob's ladder thus is revealed to be a symbol of Christ, who is Himself the ladder from earth to heaven. He Himself had ascended and descended from heaven (Joh 3:13), and the time is coming "when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels, In flaming fire taking vengeance on them that ... obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ" (2Th 1:7, 2Th 1:8)."
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TSK: Joh 1:23 - -- I am : Joh 3:28; Mat 3:3; Mar 1:3; Luk 1:16, Luk 1:17, Luk 1:76-79, Luk 3:4-6
as said : Isa 40:3-5
I am : Joh 3:28; Mat 3:3; Mar 1:3; Luk 1:16, Luk 1:17, Luk 1:76-79, Luk 3:4-6
as said : Isa 40:3-5
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TSK: Joh 1:24 - -- were of : Joh 3:1, Joh 3:2, Joh 7:47-49; Mat 23:13-15, Mat 23:26; Luk 7:30, Luk 11:39-44, Luk 11:53, Luk 16:14; Act 23:8; Act 26:5; Phi 3:5, Phi 3:6
...
were of : Joh 3:1, Joh 3:2, Joh 7:47-49; Mat 23:13-15, Mat 23:26; Luk 7:30, Luk 11:39-44, Luk 11:53, Luk 16:14; Act 23:8; Act 26:5; Phi 3:5, Phi 3:6
Why : Mat 21:23; Act 4:5-7, Act 5:28
that Christ : Joh 1:20-22; Dan 9:24-26
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TSK: Joh 1:26 - -- I : Mat 3:11; Mar 1:8; Luk 3:16; Act 1:5, Act 11:16
whom : Joh 1:10,Joh 1:11, Joh 8:19, Joh 16:3, Joh 17:3, Joh 17:25; Mal 3:1, Mal 3:2; 1Jo 3:1
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TSK: Joh 1:29 - -- Behold : Joh 1:36; Gen 22:7, Gen 22:8; Exo 12:3-13; Num 28:3-10; Isa 53:7; Act 8:32; 1Pe 1:19; Rev 5:6, Rev 5:8, Rev 5:12, Rev 5:13, Rev 6:1, Rev 6:16...
Behold : Joh 1:36; Gen 22:7, Gen 22:8; Exo 12:3-13; Num 28:3-10; Isa 53:7; Act 8:32; 1Pe 1:19; Rev 5:6, Rev 5:8, Rev 5:12, Rev 5:13, Rev 6:1, Rev 6:16; Rev 7:9, Rev 7:10,Rev 7:14, Rev 7:17, Rev 12:11, Rev 13:8, Rev 14:1, Rev 14:4, Rev 14:10, Rev 15:3, Rev 17:14, Rev 19:7, Rev 19:9; Rev 21:9, Rev 21:14, Rev 21:22, Rev 21:23, Rev 21:27, Rev 22:1-3
which : Isa 53:11; Hos 14:2; Mat 20:28; Act 13:39; 1Co 15:3; 2Co 5:21; Gal 1:4; Gal 3:13; 1Ti 2:6; Tit 2:14; Heb 1:3, Heb 2:17, Heb 9:28; 1Pe 2:24, 1Pe 3:18; 1Jo 2:2, 1Jo 3:5, 1Jo 4:10; Rev 1:5
taketh : or, beareth, Exo 28:38; Lev 10:17, Lev 16:21, Lev 16:22; Num 18:1, Num 18:23
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TSK: Joh 1:31 - -- I knew : Joh 1:33; Luk 1:80, Luk 2:39-42
but : Joh 1:7; Isa 40:3-5; Mal 3:1, Mal 4:2-5; Luk 1:17, Luk 1:76-79
therefore : Mat 3:6; Mar 1:3-5; Luk 3:3,...
I knew : Joh 1:33; Luk 1:80, Luk 2:39-42
but : Joh 1:7; Isa 40:3-5; Mal 3:1, Mal 4:2-5; Luk 1:17, Luk 1:76-79
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TSK: Joh 1:33 - -- I knew : Joh 1:31; Mat 3:13-15
the same : Joh 3:5, Joh 3:34; Mat 3:11, Mat 3:14; Mar 1:7, Mar 1:8; Luk 3:16; Act 1:5, Act 2:4, Act 10:44-47; Act 11:15...
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TSK: Joh 1:34 - -- this : Joh 1:18, Joh 1:49, Joh 3:16-18, Joh 3:35, Joh 3:36, Joh 5:23-27, Joh 6:69, Joh 10:30,Joh 10:36, Joh 11:27, Joh 19:7, Joh 20:28, Joh 20:31; Psa...
this : Joh 1:18, Joh 1:49, Joh 3:16-18, Joh 3:35, Joh 3:36, Joh 5:23-27, Joh 6:69, Joh 10:30,Joh 10:36, Joh 11:27, Joh 19:7, Joh 20:28, Joh 20:31; Psa 2:7, Psa 89:26, Psa 89:27; Mat 3:17, Mat 4:3, Mat 4:6, Mat 8:29, Mat 11:27, Mat 16:16, Mat 17:5, Mat 26:63; Mat 27:40,Mat 27:43, Mat 27:54; Mar 1:1, Mar 1:11; Luk 1:35, Luk 3:22; Rom 1:4; 2Co 1:19; Heb 1:1, Heb 1:2, Heb 1:5, Heb 1:6, Heb 7:3; 1Jo 2:23, 1Jo 3:8, 1Jo 4:9, 1Jo 4:14, 1Jo 4:15, 1Jo 5:9-13, 1Jo 5:20; 2Jo 1:9; Rev 2:18
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TSK: Joh 1:37 - -- and they : Joh 1:43, Joh 4:39-42; Pro 15:23; Zec 8:21; Rom 10:17; Eph 4:29; Rev 22:17
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TSK: Joh 1:38 - -- turned : Luk 14:25, Luk 15:20, Luk 19:5, Luk 22:61
What : Joh 18:4, Joh 18:7, Joh 20:15, Joh 20:16; Luk 7:24-27, Luk 18:40,Luk 18:41; Act 10:21, Act 1...
turned : Luk 14:25, Luk 15:20, Luk 19:5, Luk 22:61
What : Joh 18:4, Joh 18:7, Joh 20:15, Joh 20:16; Luk 7:24-27, Luk 18:40,Luk 18:41; Act 10:21, Act 10:29
where : Joh 12:21; Rth 1:16; 1Ki 10:8; Psa 27:4; Pro 3:18, Pro 8:34Rabbi : Joh 1:49, Joh 3:2, Joh 3:26, Joh 6:25; Mat 23:7, Mat 23:8
Mat 13:20; Son 1:7, Son 1:8; Luk 8:38, Luk 10:39
dwellest : or, abidest
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TSK: Joh 1:39 - -- Come : Joh 1:46, Joh 6:37, Joh 14:22, Joh 14:23; Pro 8:17; Mat 11:28-30
abode : Joh 4:40; Act 28:30,Act 28:31; Rev 3:20
about : ""That was two hours b...
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TSK: Joh 1:41 - -- first : Joh 1:36, Joh 1:37, Joh 1:45, Joh 4:28, Joh 4:29; 2Ki 7:9; Isa 2:3-5; Luk 2:17, Luk 2:38; Act 13:32, Act 13:33; 1Jo 1:3
the Messias : Joh 4:25...
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TSK: Joh 1:42 - -- Thou art : Joh 1:47, Joh 1:48, Joh 2:24, Joh 2:25, Joh 6:70,Joh 6:71, Joh 13:18
the son : Joh 21:15-17, Jonas, Mat 16:17, Barjona
called : 1Co 1:12, 1...
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TSK: Joh 1:44 - -- Philip : Joh 12:21, Joh 14:8, Joh 14:9; Mat 10:3; Mar 3:18; Luk 6:14; Act 1:13
Bethsaida : Mat 11:21; Mar 6:45, Mar 8:22; Luk 9:10, Luk 10:13
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TSK: Joh 1:45 - -- Luk 24:27, Luk 24:44
Nathanael : Joh 21:2
of whom : Joh 5:45, Joh 5:46; Gen 3:15, Gen 22:18, Gen 49:10; Deu 18:18-22
and the : Isa 4:2, Isa 7:14, Isa ...
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TSK: Joh 1:46 - -- Can : Joh 7:41, Joh 7:42, Joh 7:52; Luk 4:28, Luk 4:29
Come : Joh 4:29; Luk 12:57; 1Th 5:21
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TSK: Joh 1:47 - -- Behold : Joh 8:31, Joh 8:39; Rom 2:28, Rom 2:29, Rom 9:6; Phi 3:3
in : Psa 32:2, Psa 73:1; 1Pe 2:1, 1Pe 2:22; Rev 14:5
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TSK: Joh 1:48 - -- when : Joh 2:25; Gen 32:24-30; Psa 139:1, Psa 139:2; Isa 65:24; Mat 6:6; 1Co 4:5, 1Co 14:25; Rev 2:18, Rev 2:19
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TSK: Joh 1:49 - -- Rabbi : Joh 1:38
thou : Joh 1:18, Joh 1:34, Joh 20:28, Joh 20:29; Mat 14:33
the King : Joh 12:13-15, Joh 18:37, Joh 19:19-22; Psa 2:6, Psa 110:1; Isa ...
Rabbi : Joh 1:38
thou : Joh 1:18, Joh 1:34, Joh 20:28, Joh 20:29; Mat 14:33
the King : Joh 12:13-15, Joh 18:37, Joh 19:19-22; Psa 2:6, Psa 110:1; Isa 9:7; Jer 23:5, Jer 23:6; Eze 37:21-25; Dan 9:25; Hos 3:5; Mic 5:2; Zep 3:15; Zec 6:12, Zec 6:13, Zec 9:9; Mat 2:2, Mat 21:5, Mat 27:11, Mat 27:42; Luk 19:38
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TSK: Joh 1:50 - -- Because : Joh 20:29; Luk 1:45, Luk 7:9
thou shalt : Joh 11:40; Mat 13:12, Mat 25:29
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TSK: Joh 1:51 - -- Verily : Joh 3:3, Joh 3:5, Joh 5:19, Joh 5:24, Joh 5:25, Joh 6:26, Joh 6:32, Joh 6:47, Joh 6:53, Joh 8:34, Joh 8:51, Joh 8:58, Joh 10:1, Joh 10:7, Joh...
Verily : Joh 3:3, Joh 3:5, Joh 5:19, Joh 5:24, Joh 5:25, Joh 6:26, Joh 6:32, Joh 6:47, Joh 6:53, Joh 8:34, Joh 8:51, Joh 8:58, Joh 10:1, Joh 10:7, Joh 12:24, Joh 13:16; Joh 13:20,Joh 13:21, Joh 13:38, Joh 14:12, Joh 16:20,Joh 16:23, Joh 21:18
Hereafter : Eze 1:1; Mat 3:16; Mar 1:10; Luk 3:21; Act 7:56, Act 10:11; Rev 4:1, Rev 19:11
and the : Gen 28:12; Dan 7:9, Dan 7:10; Mat 4:11; Luk 2:9, Luk 2:13, Luk 22:43, Luk 24:4; Act 1:10,Act 1:11; 2Th 1:7-9; 1Ti 3:16; Heb 1:14; Jud 1:14
the Son : Joh 3:13, Joh 3:14, Joh 5:27, Joh 12:23, Joh 12:24; Dan 7:13, Dan 7:14; Zec 13:7; Mat 9:6, Mat 16:13-16; Mat 16:27, Mat 16:28, Mat 25:31, Mat 26:24; Mar 14:62; Luk 22:69
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
I am the voice ... - See the notes at Mat 3:3.
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Barnes: Joh 1:24 - -- Were of the Pharisees - For an account of this sect, see the notes at Mat 3:7. Why they are particularly mentioned is not certainly known. Many...
Were of the Pharisees - For an account of this sect, see the notes at Mat 3:7. Why they are particularly mentioned is not certainly known. Many of the "Sadducees"came to his baptism Mat 3:7, but it seems that they did not join in sending to him to know what was the design of John. This circumstance is one of those incidental and delicate allusions which would occur to no impostor in forging a book, and which show that the writers of the New Testament were honest men and knew what they affirmed. Because:
1. The Pharisees composed a great part of the Sanhedrin, Act 23:6. It is probable that a deputation from the Sanhedrin would be of that party.
2. The Pharisees were very tenacious of rites and customs, of traditions and ceremonies. They observed many. They believed that they were lawful, Mar 7:3-4. Of course, they believed that those rites might be increased, but they did not suppose that it could be done except by the authority of a prophet or of the Messiah. When, therefore, John came "baptizing"- adding a rite to be observed by his followers - baptizing not only Gentiles, but also Jews - the question was whether he had authority to institute a new rite; whether it was to be received among the ceremonies of religion. In this question the Sadducees felt no interest, for they rejected all such rites at once; but the Pharisees thought it was worth inquiry, and it was a question on which they felt themselves specially called on to act as the guardians of the ceremonies of religion.
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Barnes: Joh 1:25 - -- Why baptizest thou then ... - Baptism on receiving a proselyte from "paganism"was common before the time of John, but it was not customary to b...
Why baptizest thou then ... - Baptism on receiving a proselyte from "paganism"was common before the time of John, but it was not customary to baptize a "Jew."John had changed the custom. He baptized "all,"and they were desirous of knowing by what authority he made such a change in the religious customs of the nation. They presumed, from the fact that he introduced that change, that he claimed to be a prophet or the Christ. They supposed that no one would attempt it without "pretending,"at least, authority from heaven. As he disclaimed the character of Christ and of the prophet Elijah, they asked whence he derived his authority. As he had just before applied to himself a prediction that they all considered as belonging to the fore runner of Christ, they "might"have understood "why"he did it; but they were blind, and manifested, as all sinners do, a remarkable slowness in understanding the plainest truths in religion.
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Barnes: Joh 1:26 - -- I baptize - He did not deny it; nor did he condescend to state his authority. That he had given. He "admitted"that he had introduced an importa...
I baptize - He did not deny it; nor did he condescend to state his authority. That he had given. He "admitted"that he had introduced an important "change"in the rites of religion, and he goes on to tell them that this was not all. Greater and more important changes would soon take place without their authority. The Messiah was about to come, and the "power"was about to depart from "their"hands.
There standeth one - There is one.
Among you - In the midst of you. He is undistinguished among the multitude. The Messiah had already come, and was about to be manifested to the people. It was not until the next day Joh 1:29 that Jesus was manifested or proclaimed as the Messiah; but it is not improbable that he was then among the people that were assembled near the Jordan, and mingled with them, though he was undistinguished. He had gone there, probably, with the multitudes that had been drawn thither by the fame of John, and had gone without attracting attention, though his real object was go receive baptism in this public manner, and to be exhibited and proclaimed as the Messiah.
Whom ye know not - Jesus was not yet declared publicly to be the Christ. Though it is probable that he was then among the multitude, yet he was not known as the Messiah. We may hence learn:
1. That there is often great excellency in the world that is obscure, undistinguished, and unknown. Jesus was near to all that people, but they were not conscious of his presence, for he was retired and obscure. Though the greatest personage ever in the world, yet he was not externally distinguished from others.
2. Jesus may be near to men of the world, and yet they know him not. He is everywhere by his Spirit, yet few know it, and few are desirous of knowing it.
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Barnes: Joh 1:27 - -- Whose shoe’ s latchet - See the notes at Mat 3:11. The "latchet"of sandals was the string or thong by which they were fastened to the feet...
Whose shoe’ s latchet - See the notes at Mat 3:11. The "latchet"of sandals was the string or thong by which they were fastened to the feet. To unloose them was the office of a servant, and John means, therefore, that he was unworthy to perform the lowest office for the Messiah. This was remarkable humility. John was well known; he was highly honored; thousands came to hear him. Jesus was at that time unknown; but John says that he was unworthy to perform the humblest office for Jesus. So we all should be willing to lay all that we have at the feet of Christ, and feel that we are unworthy to be his lowest servants.
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Barnes: Joh 1:28 - -- In Bethabara - Almost all the ancient manuscripts and versions, instead of "Bethabara"here, have "Bethany,"and this is doubtless the true readi...
In Bethabara - Almost all the ancient manuscripts and versions, instead of "Bethabara"here, have "Bethany,"and this is doubtless the true reading. There was a Bethany about 2 miles east of Jerusalem, but there is said also to have been another in the tribe of Reuben, on the east side of the river Jordan, and in this place, probably, John was baptizing. It is about 12 miles above Jericho. The word "Bethabara"means "house or place of a ford."The reading "Bethabara,"instead of "Bethany,"seems to have arisen from the conjecture of Origen, who found in his day no such place as "Bethany,"but saw a town called "Bethabara,"where John was said to have baptized, and therefore took the liberty of changing the former reading - Robinson, Lexicon.
Beyond Jordan - On the east side of the Jordan River.
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Barnes: Joh 1:29 - -- The next day - The day after the Jews made inquiry whether he was the Christ. Behold the Lamb of God - A "lamb,"among the Jews, was kille...
The next day - The day after the Jews made inquiry whether he was the Christ.
Behold the Lamb of God - A "lamb,"among the Jews, was killed and eaten at the Passover to commemorate their deliverance from Egypt, Exo 12:3-11. A lamb was offered in the tabernacle, and afterward in the temple, every morning and evening, as a part of the daily worship, Exo 29:38-39. The Messiah was predicted as a lamb led to the slaughter, to show his patience in his sufferings, and readiness to die for man, Isa 53:7. A lamb, among the Jews, was also an emblem of patience, meekness, gentleness. On "all"these accounts, rather than on any one of them alone, Jesus was called "the Lamb."He was innocent 1Pe 2:23-25; he was a sacrifice for sin the substance represented by the daily offering of the lamb, and slain at the usual time of the evening sacrifice Luk 23:44-46; and he was what was represented by the Passover, turning away the anger of God, and saving sinners by his blood from vengeance and eternal death, 1Co 5:7.
Of God - Appointed by God, approved by God, and most dear to him; the sacrifice which he chose, and which he approves to save people from death.
Which taketh away - This denotes his "bearing"the sins of the world, or the sufferings which made an atonement for sin. Compare Isa 53:4; 1Jo 3:5; 1Pe 2:24. He takes away sin by "bearing"in his own body the sufferings which God appointed to show his sense of the evil of sin, thus magnifying the law, and rendering it consistent for him to pardon. See the notes at Rom 3:24-25.
Of the world - Of all mankind, Jew and Gentile. His work was not to be confined to the Jew, but was also to benefit the Gentile; it was not confined to any one part of the world, but was designed to open the way of pardon to all men. He was the propitiation for the sins of the whole world, 1Jo 2:2. See the notes at 2Co 5:15.
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Barnes: Joh 1:31 - -- I knew him not - John was not personally acquainted with Jesus. Though they were remotely related to each other, yet it seems that they had had...
I knew him not - John was not personally acquainted with Jesus. Though they were remotely related to each other, yet it seems that they had had heretofore no personal acquaintance. John had lived chiefly in the hill country of Judea. Jesus had been employed with Joseph at Nazareth. Until Jesus came to be baptized Mat 3:13-14, it seems that John had no acquaintance with him. He understood that he was to announce that the Messiah was about to appear. He was sent to proclaim his coming, but he did not personally know Jesus, or that he was to be the Messiah. This proves that there could have been no collusion or agreement between them to impose on the people.
Should be made manifest - That the Messiah should be "exhibited,"or made known. He came to prepare the way for the Messiah, and it now appeared that the Messiah was Jesus of Nazareth.
To Israel - To the Jews.
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Barnes: Joh 1:32 - -- Bare record - Gave testimony. I saw the Spirit ... - See the notes at Mat 3:16-17.
Bare record - Gave testimony.
I saw the Spirit ... - See the notes at Mat 3:16-17.
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Barnes: Joh 1:33-34 - -- The same said ... - This was the sign by which he was to know the Messiah. He was to see the Spirit descending like a dove and abiding on him. ...
The same said ... - This was the sign by which he was to know the Messiah. He was to see the Spirit descending like a dove and abiding on him. It does not follow, however, that he had no intimation before this that Jesus was the Christ, but it means that by this he should know it infallibly. From Mat 3:13-14, it seems that John supposed, before the baptism of Jesus, that he claimed to be the Messiah, and, that he believed it; but the infallible, certain testimony in the case was the descent of the Holy Spirit on him at his baptism.
That this is the Son of God - This was distinctly declared by a voice from heaven at his baptism, Mat 3:17. This John heard, and he testified that he had heard it.
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Barnes: Joh 1:35 - -- The next day - The day after his remarkable testimony that Jesus was the Son of God. This testimony of John is reported because it was the main...
The next day - The day after his remarkable testimony that Jesus was the Son of God. This testimony of John is reported because it was the main design of this evangelist to show that Jesus was the Messiah. See the introduction. To do this, he adduces the decided and repeated testimony of John the Baptist. This was impartial evidence in the case, and hence he so particularly dwells upon it. John stood - Or was standing. This was probably apart from the multitude.
Two of his disciples - One of these was Andrew Joh 1:40, and it is not improbable that the other was the writer of this gospel.
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Barnes: Joh 1:36 - -- Looking upon Jesus ... - Fixing his eyes intently upon him. Singling him out and regarding him with special attention. Contemplating him as the...
Looking upon Jesus ... - Fixing his eyes intently upon him. Singling him out and regarding him with special attention. Contemplating him as the long-expected Messiah and Deliverer of the world. In this way all ministers should fix the eye upon the Son of God, and direct all others to him.
As he walked - While Jesus was walking.
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Barnes: Joh 1:37 - -- They followed Jesus - They had been the disciples of John. his office was to point out the Messiah. When that was done, they left at once their...
They followed Jesus - They had been the disciples of John. his office was to point out the Messiah. When that was done, they left at once their master and teacher, John. and followed the long-expected Messiah. This shows that John was sincere; that he was not desirous of forming a party or of building up a sect; that he was willing that all those whom he had attracted to himself by his ministry should become followers of Christ. The object of ministers should not be to build up their own interests or to extend their own fame. It is to point men to the Saviour. Ministers, however popular or successful, should be willing that their disciples should look to Christ rather than to them; nay, should forget them and look away from them, to tread in the footsteps of the Son of God; and the conduct of these disciples shows us that we should forsake all and follow Jesus when he is pointed out to us as the Messiah. We should not delay nor debate the matter, but leave at once all our old teachers, guides and companions, and follow the Lamb of God. And we should do that, too, though "to the world"the Lord Jesus may appear, as he did to the multitude of the Jews, as poor, unknown, and despised. Reader, have you left all and followed him? Have you forsaken the guides of false philosophy and deceit, of sin and infidelity, and committed yourself to the Lord Jesus Christ.
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Barnes: Joh 1:38 - -- What seek ye? - This was not asked to obtain "information."Compare Joh 1:48. It was not a harsh reproof, forbidding them to follow him. Compare...
What seek ye? - This was not asked to obtain "information."Compare Joh 1:48. It was not a harsh reproof, forbidding them to follow him. Compare Mat 11:28-30. It was a kind inquiry respecting their desires; an invitation to lay open their minds, to state their wishes, and to express all their feelings respecting the Messiah and their own salvation. We may learn:
1. That Jesus regards the first inclinations of the soul to follow him. He "turned"toward these disciples, and he will incline his ear to all who begin to approach him for salvation.
2. Jesus is ready to hear their requests and to answer them.
3. Ministers of the gospel, and all other Christians, should be accessible, kind, and tender toward all who are inquiring the way to life. In conformity with their Master, they should be willing to aid all those who look to them for guidance and help in the great work of their salvation.
Rabbi - This was a Jewish title conferred somewhat as literary degrees now are, and meaning literally "a great one,"and was applied to a teacher or master in the Jewish schools. It corresponded with the title "Doctor."Our Saviour solemnly forbade his disciples to wear that title. See the notes at Mat 23:8. The fact that John "interpreted"this word shows that he wrote his gospel not for the Jews only, but for those who did not understand the Hebrew language. It is supposed to have been written at Ephesus.
Where dwellest thou? - This question they probably asked him in order to signify their wish to be with him and to be instructed by him. They desired more fully to listen to him than they could now by the wayside. They were unwilling to interrupt him in his traveling. Religion teaches people true politeness, or a disposition to consult the convenience of others, and not improperly to molest them, or to break in upon them when engaged. It also teaches us to "desire to be with Christ;"to seek every opportunity of communion with him, and chiefly to desire "to be with him where he is"when we leave this world. Compare Phi 1:23.
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Barnes: Joh 1:39 - -- Come and see - This was a kind and gracious answer. He did not put them off to some future period. Then, as now, he was willing that they shoul...
Come and see - This was a kind and gracious answer. He did not put them off to some future period. Then, as now, he was willing that they should come at once and enjoy the full opportunity which they desired of his conversation. Jesus is ever ready to admit those who seek him to his presence and favor.
Abode with him - Remained with him. This was probably the dwelling of some friend of Jesus. His usual home was at Nazareth.
The tenth hour - The Jews divided their day into twelve equal parts, beginning at sunrise. If John used their mode of computation, this was about four o’ clock p. m. The Romans divided time as we do, beginning at midnight. If John used their mode, it was about ten o’ clock in the forenoon. It is not certain which he used.
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Barnes: Joh 1:41 - -- He first findeth - He found him and "told him about Jesus"before he brought him to Jesus. We have found the Messias - They had learned fr...
He first findeth - He found him and "told him about Jesus"before he brought him to Jesus.
We have found the Messias - They had learned from the testimony of John, and now had been more fully convinced from conversation with Jesus, that he was the Messiah. The word "Messiah,"or "Messias,"is Hebrew, and means the same as the Greek word "Christ,""anointed."See the notes at Mat 1:1. From the conduct of Andrew we may learn that it is the nature of religion to desire that others may possess it. It does not lead us to monopolize it or to hide it under a bushel, but it seeks that others also may be brought to the Saviour. It does not "wait"for them to come, but it goes "for"them; it seeks them out, and tells them that a Saviour is found. Young converts should "seek"their friends and neighbors, and tell them of a Saviour; and not only their relatives, but all others as far as possible, that all may come to Jesus and be saved.
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Barnes: Joh 1:42 - -- Cephas - This is a Syriac word, meaning the same as the Greek word Peter, a stone. See the notes at Mat 16:17. The stone, or rock, is a symbol ...
Cephas - This is a Syriac word, meaning the same as the Greek word Peter, a stone. See the notes at Mat 16:17. The stone, or rock, is a symbol of firmness and steadiness of character - a trait in Peter’ s character after the ascension of Jesus that was very remarkable. before the death of Jesus he was rash, headlong, variable; and it is one proof of the omniscience of Jesus that he saw that Peter "would"possess a character that would be expressed appropriately by the word "stone"or "rock."The word "Jonas"is a Hebrew word, whose original signification is a "dove."It may be that Jesus had respect to that when he gave Simon the name Peter. "You now bear a name emblematic of timidity and inconstancy. You shall be called by a name denoting firmness and constancy."
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Barnes: Joh 1:43 - -- Would go forth - Was about to go. Into Galilee - He was now in Judea, where he went to be baptized by John. He was now about to return to...
Would go forth - Was about to go.
Into Galilee - He was now in Judea, where he went to be baptized by John. He was now about to return to his native country.
Findeth Philip - This does not refer to his calling these disciples to be "apostles,"for that took place at the Sea of Tiberias Mat 4:18, but it refers to their being. convinced that he was the Christ. This is the object of this evangelist, to show how and when they were convinced of this. Matthew states the time and occasion in which they were called to be "apostles;"John, the time in which they first became acquainted with Jesus, and were convinced that he was the Messiah. There is, therefore, no contradiction in the evangelists.
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Barnes: Joh 1:44 - -- Of Bethsaida - See the notes at Mat 11:21. The city of - The place where Andrew and Peter dwelt.
Of Bethsaida - See the notes at Mat 11:21.
The city of - The place where Andrew and Peter dwelt.
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Barnes: Joh 1:45 - -- Moses, in the law - Moses, in that part of the Old Testament which he wrote, called by the Jews "the law."See Deu 18:15, Deu 18:18; Gen 49:10; ...
Moses, in the law - Moses, in that part of the Old Testament which he wrote, called by the Jews "the law."See Deu 18:15, Deu 18:18; Gen 49:10; Gen 3:15.
And the prophets - Isa 53:1-12; Isa 9:6-7; Dan 9:24-27; Jer 23:5-6; etc.
Jesus of Nazareth ... - They spoke according to common apprehension. They spoke of him as the son of Joseph because he was commonly supposed to be. They spoke of him as dwelling at Nazareth, though they might not have been ignorant that he was born at Bethlehem.
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Barnes: Joh 1:46 - -- Can any good thing ... - The character of Nazareth was proverbially bad. To be a Galilean or a Nazarene was an expression of decided contempt, ...
Can any good thing ... - The character of Nazareth was proverbially bad. To be a Galilean or a Nazarene was an expression of decided contempt, Joh 7:52. See the notes at Mat 2:23. Nathanael asked, therefore, whether it was possible that the Messiah should come from a place proverbially wicked. This was a mode of judging in the case not uncommon. It is not by examining evidence, but by prejudice. Many persons suffer their minds to be filled with prejudice against religion, and then pronounce at once without examination. They refuse to examine the subject, for they have set it down that it cannot be true. It matters not where a teacher comes from, or what is the place of his birth, provided he be authorized of God and qualified for his work.
Come and see - This was the best way to answer Nathanael. He did not sit down to reason with him, or speculate about the possibility that a good thing could come from Nazareth; but he asked him to go and examine for himself, to see the Lord Jesus, to hear him converse, to lay aside his prejudice, and to judge from a fair and candid personal inquiry. So we should beseech sinners to lay aside their prejudices against religion, and "to be Christians,"and thus make trial for themselves. If men can be persuaded to come to Jesus, all their petty and foolish objections against religion will vanish. They will be satisfied from their own experience that it is true, and in this way only will they ever be satisfied.
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Barnes: Joh 1:47 - -- An Israelite indeed - One who is really an Israelite - not by birth only, but one worthy of the name. One who possesses the spirit, the piety, ...
An Israelite indeed - One who is really an Israelite - not by birth only, but one worthy of the name. One who possesses the spirit, the piety, and the integrity which become a man who is really a Jew, who fears God and obeys his law. Compare Rom 9:6; Rom 2:28-29.
No guile - No deceit, no fraud, no hypocrisy. He is really what he professes to be - a Jew, a descendant of the patriarch Jacob, fearing and serving God. He makes no profession which he does not live up to. He does not say that Nathanael was without guilt or sin, but that he had no disguise, no trick, no deceit - he was sincere and upright. This was a most honorable testimony. How happy would it be if he, who knows the hearts of all as he did that of Nathanael, could bear the same testimony of all who profess the religion of the gospel!
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Barnes: Joh 1:48 - -- Whence knowest thou me? - Nathanael was not yet acquainted with the divinity of Christ, and supposed that he had been a stranger to him. Hearin...
Whence knowest thou me? - Nathanael was not yet acquainted with the divinity of Christ, and supposed that he had been a stranger to him. Hearing him express a favorable opinion of him, he naturally inquired by what means he had any knowledge of him. His conscience testified to the truth of what Jesus said that he had no guile, and he was anxious to know whence he had learned his character.
Before that Philip called thee - See Joh 1:45.
When thou wast under the fig-tree - It is evident that it was from something that had occurred under the fig-tree that Jesus judged of his character. What that was is not recorded. It is not improbable that Nathanael was accustomed to retire to the shade of a certain tree, perhaps in his garden or in a grove, for the purpose of meditation and prayer. The Jews were much in the habit of selecting such places for private devotion, and in such scenes of stillness and retirement there is something especially favorable for meditation and prayer. Our Saviour also worshipped in such places. Compare Joh 18:2; Luk 6:12. In that place of retirement it is not improbable that Nathanael was engaged in private devotion.
I saw thee - It is clear, from the narrative, that Jesus did not mean to say that he was bodily present with Nathanael and saw him; but he knew his thoughts, his desires, his secret feelings and wishes. In this sense Nathanael understood him. We may learn:
1.\caps1 t\caps0 hat Jesus sees what is done in secret, and is therefore divine.
2.\caps1 t\caps0 hat he sees us when we little think of it.
3.\caps1 t\caps0 hat he sees us especially in our private devotions, hears our prayers, and marks our meditations. And,
4.\caps1 t\caps0 hat he judges of our character chiefly by our private devotions. Those are secret; the world sees them not; and in our closets we show what we are. How does it become us, therefore, that our secret prayers and meditations should be without "guile"and hypocrisy, and such as Jesus will approve!
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Barnes: Joh 1:49 - -- Rabbi - Master. Applied appropriately to Jesus, and to no one else, Mat 23:10. The Son of God - By this title he doubtless meant that he ...
Rabbi - Master. Applied appropriately to Jesus, and to no one else, Mat 23:10.
The Son of God - By this title he doubtless meant that he was the Messiah. His conscience told him that he had judged right of his character, and that therefore he must know the heart and the desires of the mind. If so, he could not be a mere man, but must be the long-expected Messiah.
The King of Israel - This was one of the titles by which the Messiah was expected, and this was the title which was affixed to his cross, Joh 19:18. This case of Nathanael John adduces as another evidence that Jesus was the Christ. The great object he had in view in writing this gospel was to collect the evidence that he was the Messiah, Joh 20:31. A case, therefore, where Jesus searched the heart, and where his knowledge of the heart convinced a pious Jew that he was the Christ, is very properly adduced as important testimony.
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Barnes: Joh 1:50 - -- Greater things - Fuller proof of his Messiahship, particularly what is mentioned in the following verse.
Greater things - Fuller proof of his Messiahship, particularly what is mentioned in the following verse.
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Barnes: Joh 1:51 - -- Verily, verily - In the Greek, "Amen, amen."The word "amen"means "truly, certainly, so be it"- from the Hebrew verb to confirm, to establish, t...
Verily, verily - In the Greek, "Amen, amen."The word "amen"means "truly, certainly, so be it"- from the Hebrew verb to confirm, to establish, to be true. It is often used in this gospel. When repeated it expresses the speaker’ s sense of the importance of what he is saying, and the "certainty"that it is as he affirms.
Ye shall see - Not, perhaps, with the bodily eyes, but you shall have "evidence"that it is so. The thing shall take place, and you shall be a witness of it.
Heaven open - This is a figurative expression, denoting "the conferring of favors."Psa 78:23-24; "he opened the doors of heaven, and had rained down manna."It also denotes that God was about to work a miracle in attestation of a particular thing. See Mat 3:16. In the language, here, there is an evident allusion to the ladder that Jacob saw in a dream, and to the angels ascending and descending on it, Gen 28:12. It is not probable that Jesus referred to any particular instance in which Nathanael should literally see the heavens opened. The baptism of Jesus had taken place, and no other instance occurred in his life in which it is said that the "heavens were"opened.
Angels of God - Those pure and holy beings that dwell in heaven, and that are employed as ministering spirits to our world, Heb 1:14. Good men are represented in the Scriptures as being under their protection, Psa 91:11-12; Gen 28:12. They are the agents by which God often expressed his will to men, Heb 2:2; Gal 3:19. They are represented as strengthening the Lord Jesus, and ministering unto him. Thus they aided him in the wilderness Mar 1:13, and in the garden Luk 22:43, and they were present when he rose from the dead, Mat 28:2-4; Joh 20:12-13. By their ascending and descending upon him it is probable that he meant that Nathanael would have evidence that they came to his aid, and that he would have "the"kind of protection and assistance from God which would show "more fully that he was the Messiah."Thus his life, his many deliverances from dangers, his wisdom to confute his skilled and cunning adversaries, the scenes of his death, and the attendance of angels at his resurrection, may all be represented by the angels descending upon him, and all would show to Nathanael and the other disciples most clearly that he was the Son of God.
The Son of man - A term by which lie often describes himself. It shows his humility, his love for man, his willingness to be esteemed "as a man,"Phi 2:6-7.
From this interview with Nathanael we may learn:
1.\caps1 t\caps0 hat Jesus searches the heart.
2.\caps1 t\caps0 hat he was truly the Messiah.
3.\caps1 t\caps0 hat he was under the protection of God.
4.\caps1 t\caps0 hat if we have faith in Jesus, it will be continually strengthened the evidence will grow brighter and brighter.
5.\caps1 t\caps0 hat if we believe his word, we shall yet see full proof that his word is true.
6. Since Jesus was under the protection of God, so all his friends will be. God will defend and save us also if we put our trust in Him.
7. Jesus applied terms expressive of humility to himself. He was not solicitous even to be called by titles which he might claim.
So we should not be ambitious of titles and honors. Ministers of the gospel most resemble him when they seek for the fewest titles, and do not aim at distinctions from each other or their brethren. See the notes at Mat 23:8.
Poole -> Joh 1:22; Joh 1:23; Joh 1:24; Joh 1:25; Joh 1:26; Joh 1:27; Joh 1:28; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:30; Joh 1:31; Joh 1:32; Joh 1:33; Joh 1:34; Joh 1:35-36; Joh 1:37; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:40; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:44; Joh 1:45; Joh 1:46; Joh 1:47; Joh 1:48; Joh 1:49; Joh 1:50; Joh 1:51
Poole: Joh 1:22 - -- Hitherto John had given them only a negative answer, and told them who he was not; he was neither Christ, nor the Elias, nor that prophet they expec...
Hitherto John had given them only a negative answer, and told them who he was not; he was neither Christ, nor the Elias, nor that prophet they expected; neither any of the old prophets risen from the dead; nor any prophet at all in a strict sense (as were the prophets of the Old Testament): they press him to a direct, plain, positive answer, that they might give an answer to those that sent them, who did not send them to inquire what he was not, but what he was. And there were various talks and discourses of the people about him, which they were not willing to take up and run away with; but they desired to have it from himself.
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Poole: Joh 1:23 - -- We had the same, See Poole on "Mat 3:3" , See Poole on "Mar 1:3" . Chemnitius thinks, that John chose rather to preach and fulfil his ministry in ...
We had the same, See Poole on "Mat 3:3" , See Poole on "Mar 1:3" . Chemnitius thinks, that John chose rather to preach and fulfil his ministry in the wilderness, than in the temple; to make an illustrious difference between himself, who was but the Lord’ s messenger, and whose office was but to prepare the Lord’ s way, and his Lord himself, of whom it was prophesied, Mal 3:1 , The Lord, whom ye seek, shall suddenly come to his holy temple; upon which account Haggai prophesied. Hag 2:9 , that the glory of that latter house (built by Ezra, and Zerubbabel, and Nehemiah) should be greater than of the former.
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Poole: Joh 1:24 - -- Who these Pharisees were hath been before explained in our notes on Mat 3:7 . They were of the strictest sect of the Jewish religion, Act 26:5 . The...
Who these Pharisees were hath been before explained in our notes on Mat 3:7 . They were of the strictest sect of the Jewish religion, Act 26:5 . The greatest part of their councils was made up of those of this sect, as may be learned from Act 23:1-10 . They were the men most zealous for and tenacious of the Jewish rites; and would allow nothing to be added to the Jewish worship to what they had received concerning it, either from the law of God, or the traditions of the elders.
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Poole: Joh 1:25 - -- The Pharisees themselves would allow the Messiah, or Elias, or a prophet, to make any additions to or alterations in the worship of God, but none el...
The Pharisees themselves would allow the Messiah, or Elias, or a prophet, to make any additions to or alterations in the worship of God, but none else: hence it is they ask, by what authority he baptized, if he were none of these? From whence we may learn, that although they might have some umbrage of that baptismal washing which was under the gospel, to commence into a sacrament, or federal sign, in the washing of their proselytes, or of Jewish children when they were circumcised; yet John’ s action was looked upon as new, who baptized adult Jews: now the care of the sanhedrim was to keep the worship of God incorrupt, and the Pharisees amongst them had a particular zeal in the case, especially so far as the traditions of the elders were concerned.
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Poole: Joh 1:26 - -- This was no strict answer to their question, which was not, how, but why he baptized? But proper replies are often called answers in Scripture, thou...
This was no strict answer to their question, which was not, how, but why he baptized? But proper replies are often called answers in Scripture, though not apposite to the question.
I baptize with water I baptize you with mere water:
but there standeth one among you, whom ye know not but there hath stood one amongst you,
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Poole: Joh 1:27 - -- John the Baptist had before told them, He that cometh after me is preferred before me, See Poole on "Joh 1:15" . He now repeateth those words; and...
John the Baptist had before told them, He that cometh after me is preferred before me, See Poole on "Joh 1:15" . He now repeateth those words; and it is observable, that the three other evangelists all put this passage before the history of Christ’ s coming to him to be baptized. So as it is probable that these messengers came to John as he was baptizing; and either immediately before or after Christ’ s baptism, Christ being yet in the crowd, he repeateth to his hearers what he had a little before said of him, that he was to be preferred before him.
Whose shoe’ s latchet I am not worthy to unloose; he here enlargeth upon it with a proverbial speech, which the other evangelists have, with a very little variation: Matthew saith, Whose shoe’ s I am not worthy to bear; that is, to perform unto him the very meanest service or office. We have such forms of speech in use at this day amongst us; when we would express the great preeminence of some one above another, we say of that other, He is not worthy to tie his shoes; or, to carry his shoes after him. There is a vast difference between Christ and the most excellent of his ministers; which as to baptism lieth here; the ministerial baptism is but with water; Christ baptizeth with the Holy Ghost and with fire, Mat 3:11 , or, with the Holy Ghost, as Mar 1:8 .
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Poole: Joh 1:28 - -- The evangelist had before told us what was done, these words tell us where. Some ancient writers will have the place to have been Bethany; but they ...
The evangelist had before told us what was done, these words tell us where. Some ancient writers will have the place to have been Bethany; but they seem not to have so well considered Joh 11:18 , where Bethany is said to have been but fifteen furlongs from Jerusalem, and consequently on this side Jordan; whereas the evangelist saith, that this place was
beyond Jordan in the tribe of Reuben, in the country of Peraea, where John at this time was baptizing, and probably had been so for some time.
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Poole: Joh 1:29 - -- The next day the most think, the day following that day when the messengers from Jerusalem had been examining the Baptist. Heinsius thinks it was the...
The next day the most think, the day following that day when the messengers from Jerusalem had been examining the Baptist. Heinsius thinks it was the same day, and saith, the Hellenists usually so interpret
John seeth Jesus coming to him out of the wilderness, as some think, where he had been tempted by the devil; but then it must follow, that he was not amongst the crowd, Joh 1:2 , standing in the midst of them, when the messengers were there; and it should appear by Joh 1:32,33 , that this which is here recorded happened after Christ’ s baptism by John (of which this evangelist saith nothing): it seemeth rather to be understood of another coming of Christ to John after he had been baptized, when John, seeing him, pointed as it were with his finger to him, (for the term
Behold seemeth to be here used demonstratively), showing them the person whom he would have them cast their eye upon; whom he calls,
the Lamb of God not only to denote his excellency, as we read of the night of the Lord, Exo 12:42 , and the bread of God, Lev 21:21 ; which indeed Christ was, being without blemish, 1Pe 1:19 ; but with reference to the lambs used in the Jewish sacrifices, not only at the passover, Exo 12:5 , but in the daily sacrifice, Exo 29:38 Lev 1:10 , or the burnt offering; and in the peace offering, Lev 3:7 , and in the sin offering, Lev 4:32 . He calls Christ the Lamb of God, probably, because divers of the priests were there to hear, and (as appears, Joh 1:39 ) it was nigh the time of their daily sacrifice; that so he might remind them that Christ was the truth and Antitype to all their sacrifices.
Which taketh away the sin of the world
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Poole: Joh 1:30 - -- And (saith he) this is he of whom I said, (as Joh 1:15 ), He cometh after me in order of time and ministry, but is more excellent than I am.
See P...
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Poole: Joh 1:31 - -- This verse is best expounded by Joh 1:33 , where the same words are repeated, I knew him not; and it is added, but he that sent me to baptize wi...
This verse is best expounded by Joh 1:33 , where the same words are repeated, I knew him not; and it is added, but he that sent me to baptize with water, the same said unto me, Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending, &c. Lest any should think that Christ and John had compacted together to give one another credit, or that there was some near relation between John and Christ, John saith, I knew him not; for Christ had spent his time at home, Luk 2:51 , John had lived in desert places; the providence of God so ordering it, that John should not know Christ so much as by face, until that time came when Christ was to be made manifest to Israel. But that God might make his Son manifest unto Israel, when God by an extraordinary mission sent John to baptize with water, he gave him this token, That he upon whom he should see the Spirit descending and remaining on him, as Joh 1:33 , that was the Messiah, the Lamb of God, that should take away the sin of the world; he who should baptize with the Holy Ghost.
And therefore (saith John) am I come baptizing with water I did not run without sending, nor introduce a new rite or sacrament without commission; but being thus sent of God, and that I might give Christ an opportunity of coming to me, that I might see the Spirit descending and remaining upon him. From whence we learn, that none but Christ can institute a sacrament. John baptized not, till he was sent to baptize with water.
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Poole: Joh 1:32 - -- Saith John, According to the revelation which I had, when I received my extraordinary commission to baptize, so it fell out to me, I did see, when h...
Saith John, According to the revelation which I had, when I received my extraordinary commission to baptize, so it fell out to me, I did see, when he was baptized, the heaven opening, and a representation of the Spirit of God (for no man can see God and live) descending. The form of the representation was like that of a dove. And it was not a mere transient sight, but it did for some time abide upon that person, in that sensible representation; by that token I knew that he was the Son of God.
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Poole: Joh 1:33 - -- And I knew him not I was a stranger to him; I knew him in a sense, when I leaped in my mother’ s womb, upon his mother’ s coming to see my ...
And I knew him not I was a stranger to him; I knew him in a sense, when I leaped in my mother’ s womb, upon his mother’ s coming to see my mother, Luk 1:41 ; but that (as impressions made upon infants use to do) wore off. I had some impression upon me at that time when he came towards me to be baptized, which made me say to him, as Mat 3:14
I have need to be baptized of thee, and comest thou to me? But yet I was not certain, though I knew he was in the crowd of people, that he was the person designed, and whose work it should be to baptize with the Holy Ghost, until the same God that had given me that sign fulfilled it to me.
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Poole: Joh 1:34 - -- But when I saw that, I could not but believe, and also bear an open testimony to the world, that this man was not mere man, but the eternal Son of t...
But when I saw that, I could not but believe, and also bear an open testimony to the world, that this man was not mere man, but the eternal Son of that God, who sent me to baptize with water; reserving still to himself the Divine power of blessing that holy sacrament, and conferring the Holy Ghost in regenerating habits, working like fire, in purging away the dross of souls, and like water, washing away the filth of sin, Mat 3:11 Joh 3:5 .
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Poole: Joh 1:35-36 - -- Ver. 35,36. The next day after that the messengers who came from Jerusalem had been with John,
John stood, and two of his disciples whether he was...
Ver. 35,36. The next day after that the messengers who came from Jerusalem had been with John,
John stood, and two of his disciples whether he was preaching or no it is not said; but John standing with them, saw Christ walking, whence, or whither, is not said; but as a good man is always taking opportunity to commend Christ to others, so John upon this occasion took advantage further to make Christ known to those two men, (who they were, we shall hear in the following verses), and repeats the words he had said before,
Behold the Lamb of God! ( See Poole on "Joh 1:27" ). Thus good and faithful ministers will continually be inviting their disciples to Christ, taking them off from further consideration of themselves, and, as ministers, to show them the way to Christ.
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Poole: Joh 1:37 - -- God blessed the verbal testimony that John had given so far, that they stood in no need of any miracle to confirm it, but upon their hearing John
s...
God blessed the verbal testimony that John had given so far, that they stood in no need of any miracle to confirm it, but upon their hearing John
speak, they followed Jesus: as yet, not as his apostles; for their call to that office was afterward (as we shall hear); nor yet, so as no more to depart from him: but there was created in them a further desire of knowledge of him and acquaintance with him.
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Poole: Joh 1:38 - -- Christ, as he walked, turning him, and seeing two men following him, inquires of their end, what they sought; to teach us, in all our religious moti...
Christ, as he walked, turning him, and seeing two men following him, inquires of their end, what they sought; to teach us, in all our religious motions and actions, to do the like; for the end will contribute much to specify the action, and to make it good or bad. They gave him that honourable title which was then in fashion, by and under which they were wont to speak to those upon whom they relied for instruction, whose doctrine they desired to know, and with whom they desired to converse, and to learn of him. They asked him where he abode, or where he lodged.
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Poole: Joh 1:39 - -- Our Lord discerning the end of their following him to be sincere and good, invites them to
come and see where his lodging was; for he elsewhere te...
Our Lord discerning the end of their following him to be sincere and good, invites them to
come and see where his lodging was; for he elsewhere telleth us, that he had not a house wherein to hide his head.
They came and saw his lodgings where, or of what nature they were, we are not told, but we never read that he during his whole pilgrimage amongst us had any stately or splendid lodgings.
The text saith that these two disciples
abode with him that day whether only the two or three remaining hours of the same day, (for it was now about four of the clock afternoon, which answers the tenth hour according to the Jewish account), or another whole day, being the sabbath day, (as some think), we are not told, nor can conclude; certain it is, they abode with him the remaining part of that day, from four of the clock till night.
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Poole: Joh 1:40 - -- Concerning the call of this Andrew to the apostleship, See Poole on "Mat 4:18" . See Poole on "Mat 4:19" . See Poole on "Mar 1:16" . See Poole o...
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Poole: Joh 1:41 - -- It should seem that both the disciples (after their converse with Christ at the place where he lodged) went together to look for Peter, Andrew’...
It should seem that both the disciples (after their converse with Christ at the place where he lodged) went together to look for Peter, Andrew’ s brother. Andrew first found him, and tells him (with great joy) that he and that other disciple had found the Messiah, prophesied of by Daniel, and in the expectation of whom the disciples and the Jews lived. The term Messiah in Hebrew is the same with Christ in Greek, and both signify the same with Anointed in English. The article in this place is emphatic, not merely prepositive, as in other places, but signifying, that Anointed; for other kings, and priests, and prophets were also anointed, and God’ s people are called anointed; but he was anointed with the oil of gladness above his fellows, having the Spirit not given him by measure.
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Poole: Joh 1:42 - -- Andrew having found his brother Simon, conducts him to Jesus. Andrew, and Simon, and Philip were citizens of Bethsaida, Joh 1:44 , which was a city ...
Andrew having found his brother Simon, conducts him to Jesus. Andrew, and Simon, and Philip were citizens of Bethsaida, Joh 1:44 , which was a city of Galilee; how near to the place where John baptized, or Christ lodged, we cannot say. Probably Simon was one of John’ s disciples, and came to attend his ministry; so as the disciples only sought him in the crowd, and came with him to Christ. When Christ beheld him, he said,
Thou art Simon he knew him, and called him by name, and told him his father’ s name,
Jonas and giveth him a new name,
Cephas which by interpretation doth not signify a head, (as the popish disputant at Berne urged, to prove him the head of the church, as if it had been a Greek word, and came from
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Poole: Joh 1:43 - -- All this while Christ seemeth to have been in Judea, which was the most famous province. The day after Peter had thus been with him, he had a mind t...
All this while Christ seemeth to have been in Judea, which was the most famous province. The day after Peter had thus been with him, he had a mind to go into Galilee; out of that he designed to choose his disciples; and that being the country where he had been educated, he designed in a more special manner to honour it with the first fruit of his public ministry. There findeth Philip (the name signifieth, a lover of horses). He calleth him to be his disciple.
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Poole: Joh 1:44 - -- This Philip was a citizen of Bethsaida (the word signifies in the Hebrew, The house of fruits, or of huntsmen). Andrew and Peter (mentioned before) ...
This Philip was a citizen of Bethsaida (the word signifies in the Hebrew, The house of fruits, or of huntsmen). Andrew and Peter (mentioned before) both of them lived there. It was one of those cities where Christ did most of his mighty works, Mat 11:20 .
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Poole: Joh 1:45 - -- Philip having himself discovered Christ, is not willing to eat his morsels alone, but desires to communicate his discovery to others; he finds (whet...
Philip having himself discovered Christ, is not willing to eat his morsels alone, but desires to communicate his discovery to others; he finds (whether casually, or upon search, is not said) one Nathanael, he was of Cana in Galilee, Joh 21:2 . (The name is a Hebrew name, signifying, The gift of God; some think it the same with Nethaneel, 1Ch 15:24 .) Having found him, he tells him with great joy, that they had found him of whom Moses had wrote in the law, the Shiloh, mentioned Gen 49:10 , the Prophet, mentioned Deu 18:15 , the Branch of the Lord, mentioned Isa 4:2 , the Messiah, mentioned by Daniel, Dan 9:25,26 , and all the other prophets, him whom they usually called Jesus of Nazareth, ( there he was conceived, there he was bred, Luk 2:4,51 , though he was born in Bethlehem of Judah, Luk 2:4 ), and who was commonly thought to be the son of Joseph. If Philip did only cum vulgo loqui, speak as was commonly said, though himself knew and believed other things, he is not to be blamed; but the most think Philip discovered here his own weakness, both in thinking Christ the son of Joseph, and to have been born at Nazareth. It is certain that the apostles themselves at first, yea, and till Christ’ s resurrection from the dead, had a very imperfect notion of Christ as the true Messiah. Grace may consist with great weakness as to knowledge.
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Poole: Joh 1:46 - -- The words of Philip begat a prejudice in Nathanael, as to what he said. It was prophesied, Mic 5:2 , that the Messiah should come out of Bethlehem. ...
The words of Philip begat a prejudice in Nathanael, as to what he said. It was prophesied, Mic 5:2 , that the Messiah should come out of Bethlehem. So, Joh 7:41,42 , some of the people said, Shall Christ come out of Galilee? Hath not the Scripture said, That Christ cometh of the seed of David, and out of the town of Bethlehem, where David was? Nazareth was not only a poor little place, (for so Bethlehem also was), but a place which the Scripture never mentioned as the place from whence the Messiah should arise; a place that God had not honoured with the production of a prophet. By
any good thing seems to be meant, the Messiah, or any prophet, or (more generally) any thing which is noble and excellent, and of any remark. So prone are we to think that the kingdom of God comes with observation, that we know not how to fancy how great things should be done by little means, and great persons should arise out of little, contemptible places. Whereas God chooseth the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and the weak things to confound the mighty; and base things of the world, to confound the wise, 1Co 1:25-28 .
Philip saith unto him, Come and see Philip, not knowing how to answer Nathanael’ s objection, and to remove his prejudice, wishes him himself to go, and make up a judgment. Wise men ought to do this, and not to take up prejudices from reports and common vogue.
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Poole: Joh 1:47 - -- They are not all Israel, which are of Israel, Rom 9:6 . For he is not a Jew, which is one outwardly; neither is that circumcision, which is outwar...
They are not all Israel, which are of Israel, Rom 9:6 . For he is not a Jew, which is one outwardly; neither is that circumcision, which is outward in the flesh: but he is a Jew, which is one inwardly; and circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit, Rom 2:28,29 . Christ seeing Nathanael (though he was prejudiced by Philip’ s mistake, or the common mistake of his nation) coming to see him, and seeing not only his body and bodily motion, but his heart also, and the motions of that, saith of him, Behold one who is not only born an Israelite, but is a true Israelite, like his father Jacob, a plain man, Gen 25:27 ;
in whom is no guile in whom there is no deceit, no doubleness of heart. Such ought Christians to be, no crafty, deceitful, double minded men, but men of great sincerity and plainness of heart, laying aside all malice, and all guile, 1Pe 2:1 , like little children, Mat 18:3 .
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Poole: Joh 1:48 - -- Nathanael wonders how Christ should know him, having not been of his familiar acquaintance. Christ tells him he saw him under the fig tree, before e...
Nathanael wonders how Christ should know him, having not been of his familiar acquaintance. Christ tells him he saw him under the fig tree, before ever Philip called him. That was a very hot country, wherein people sought shadowy places; hence we read of sitting under their own vines and fig trees, Mic 4:4 Zec 3:10 ; and it is likely that those being two luxuriant plants, that had large leaves, and ran out in long boughs, in hot weather they might under the covert of these plants not only sit as in an arbour to converse one with another, but also perform religious duties. Whether Christ saw him there eating and drinking, or conversing with friends, or reading, or praying, the Scripture saith not, and it is but vainly guessed; it is enough that by his telling this to him, he let him know that he saw him, though he was not in his view, and so was omnipresent and omniscient. Christ seeth us, where we are, and what we do, when we see not him; and he seeth our hearts, whether they be single or double, plain, or false and deceitful; which as in many cases it affords us much comfort, so it admonishes us to be at all times in the fear of the Lord.
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Poole: Joh 1:49 - -- The term Rabbi, which Nathanael here giveth to Christ, is of the same significance with Rabban, and Rabboni, Joh 20:16 , Rabban, Rabhi, Rabbi, a...
The term Rabbi, which Nathanael here giveth to Christ, is of the same significance with Rabban, and Rabboni, Joh 20:16 , Rabban, Rabhi, Rabbi, all which signify Master, and my Master; a name which in that age they usually gave their teachers, as a title of honour, Mat 23:7,8 , titles that began about the time of our Saviour; for Buxtorf tells us, purer antiquity gave no such titles to their teachers or prophets, thinking it not possible to give those persons (extraordinarily sent of God) titles answerable to their dignity. They say, Hillel, about our Saviour’ s time, was the first who was so called; Rabban was counted the highest, Rabbi the next, Rabbi the least. Rabban, they say, lasted about two hundred years, given to seven after Hillel. Nathanael calls him also
the Son of God as Peter and the other disciples did, Mat 14:33 , and Peter, Mat 16:16 . But it appeareth, by many following passages, that they had but a faint persuasion of this, till he was declared so with power, by his resurrection from the dead, Rom 1:4 . He acknowledgeth Christ also the King of Israel, that is, the true Messiah. This was the title of the Messiah, Mat 21:5 27:11 .
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Poole: Joh 1:50 - -- Christ encourages the beginnings of faith in the souls of his people, and magnifies Nathanael’ s faith from the revelation which he had, which ...
Christ encourages the beginnings of faith in the souls of his people, and magnifies Nathanael’ s faith from the revelation which he had, which was but imperfect; for Christ had said no more, than that he had seen him under the fig tree before Philip called him. He tells him that he should
see greater things than these To him that hath, shall be given. What those greater things are, which our Lord here meaneth, he telleth him, in part at least, Joh 1:51 .
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Poole: Joh 1:51 - -- These things he ushers in with a Verily, verily, and declareth them spoken not to Nathanael alone, but unto you; viz. all you that are my disc...
These things he ushers in with a Verily, verily, and declareth them spoken not to Nathanael alone, but unto you; viz. all you that are my disciples indeed, who are (like Nathanael) true Israelites, in whom there is no guile. For the terms, Amen, Amen, (by us translated, Verily, verily ), some of the ancients accounted them an oath; but the most learned modern writers have seen no reason to agree with them. Surely (see a large discourse about these particles in our learned Fuller, his Miscellan. 1.1. cap. 2, to which nothing need be added) if Amen is never used in the Old Testament but as a term of prayer or wishing, in the New Testament it is used to assert or affirm a thing, or as a particle of wishing and prayer. The word in the Hebrew properly signifies, truth, Isa 65:16 ; whence Christ (the truth) is called the Amen, Rev 3:14 . As the prophets were wont to begin their discourses with The word of the Lord, and Thus saith the Lord, to assert the truth of what they were about to say; so Christ, to show that himself was God, and spake from himself, begins with Amen; and Amen, Amen, sometimes: it is observed that John constantly doubles the particle, and saith Amen, Amen, that is, Verily, verily; either (as interpreters say) for further confirmation of the thing, or to get the greater attention, or to assert as well the truth of the speaker as of the thing spoken. Now the thing spoken followeth as a thing promised, not to Nathanael only, but to all believers, that they should
see the heavens opened, and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man Some think that hereby is meant the spiritual, metaphorical opening of heaven to believers by Christ. But it seems more properly to signify such an opening of the heavens as we read of, Mat 3:16 . Some understand it of the appearances of angels to Christ at his passion, and resurrection, and ascension; but it seems rather to refer to the day of judgment, when ten thousands of angels shall wait upon Christ, as the Judge of the quick and the dead, and minister unto him; which ministration, they say, is expressed by the terms of ascending and descending, with reference (doubtless) to Jacob’ s vision, Gen 28:12 : Jacob saw it sleeping, Nathanael and other believers shall see it with open eyes. Others interpret it more generally, viz. You shall see as many miracles as if you saw the heavens opened, and the angels ascending and descending. Others think it refers to some further appearances of the angels to Christ in their ministration to him than the Scripture records. Christ doth not say, You shall see angels ascending and descending upon me, but upon the Son of man; by which our learned Lightfoot saith, he did not only declare himself to be truly man, but the Second Adam, in whom what was lost in the first was to be restored. It is observed, that only Ezekiel in the Old Testament, and Christ in the New Testament, are thus called; and that Christ was never thus called but by himself. Ezekiel was doubtless so called to distinguish him from those spiritual beings with which he often conversed: Christ, to distinguish his human nature from his Divine nature, both which (in him) made up one person. Christ’ s calling himself so was but a further indication of his making himself of no reputation, while he was in the form of a servant. Others think, that the Son of man in the gospel, used by Christ, signifies no more than I, and me; (it being usual in the Hebrew dialect for persons to speak of themselves in the third person); so, upon the Son of man, is, upon me, who am truly man. Chemnitius thinks, that as the term Messiah (by which the people commonly called Christ) was taken out of Daniel; so this term, by Christ applied to the same person, is taken out thence too, Dan 7:13 , where it is said, one like the Son of man came with the clouds of heaven, and came to the Ancient of days, & c.; and that Christ did ordinarily so call himself, to correspond with the prophecy of Daniel, to assert himself truly man, and to declare himself his Father’ s servant, according to the prophecy, Isa 42:1 .
Lightfoot: Joh 1:25 - -- And they asked him, and said unto him, Why baptizest thou then, if thou be not that Christ, nor Elias, neither that prophet?  [Why the...
And they asked him, and said unto him, Why baptizest thou then, if thou be not that Christ, nor Elias, neither that prophet?  
[Why then baptizest thou?] the Jews likewise expected that the world should be renewed at the coming of the Messiah. "In those years wherein God will renew his world." Aruch, quoting these words, adds, "In those thousand years." So also the Gloss upon the place.  
Amongst other things, they expected the purifying of the unclean. R. Solomon upon Eze 36:26; "I will expiate you, and remove your uncleanness, by the sprinkling of the water of purification." Kimchi upon Zec 9:6; "The Rabbins of blessed memory have a tradition that Elias will purify the bastards and restore them to the congregation." You have the like in Kiddushin, Elias comes to distinguish the unclean and purify them; etc.  
When therefore they saw the Baptist bring in such an unusual rite, by which he admitted the Israelites into a new rule of religion, they ask him by what authority he doth these things if he himself were not either the Messiah or Elias, or one of the prophets raised from the dead.  
It is very well known that they expected the coming of Elias, and that, from the words of Mal 4:5; not rightly understood. Which mistake the Greek version seems to patronise; I will send you Elias the Tishbite; which word the Tishbite; they add of themselves in favour of their own tradition; which indeed is too frequent a usage in that version to look so far asquint towards the Jewish traditions as to do injury to the sacred text.
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Lightfoot: Joh 1:29 - -- The next day John seeth Jesus coming unto him, and saith, Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world.  [The Lamb of ...
The next day John seeth Jesus coming unto him, and saith, Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world.  
[The Lamb of God.] St. John alludes plainly to the lamb of the daily sacrifice. Which in shadow took away the sins of Israel.  
I. It was commanded in the law that he that offered the sacrifice should lay his hand upon the head of the sacrifice, Lev 1:4; Lev 3:2; Lev 4:4; etc.  
II. The reason of which usage was, that he might, as it were, transfer his sins and guilt upon the head of the offering, which is more especially evident in the scapegoat, Lev 16:22.  
Hence Christ is said "himself to have borne our sins in his own body on the tree," 1Pe 2:24; as the offering upon the altar was wont to do. He was made by God a "sin for us," 2Co 5:21; that is, a sacrifice for sin.  
III. The same rite was used about the lamb of the daily sacrifice that was offered for all Israel; "The stationary men [as they were called], or the substitutes of the people, laying their hands upon the head of the lamb."  
To this therefore the words of the Baptist refer: "The lamb of God, that is, the daily sacrifice, taketh away the sins of the world, as the sacrifice did for all Israel. But behold here the true Lamb of God, that taketh away the sins of the world."
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Lightfoot: Joh 1:38 - -- Then Jesus turned, and saw them following, and saith unto them, What seek ye? They said unto him, Rabbi, (which is to say, being interpreted, ...
Then Jesus turned, and saw them following, and saith unto them, What seek ye? They said unto him, Rabbi, (which is to say, being interpreted, Master), where dwellest thou?  
[Where dwellest thou?] the proper and most immediate sense of this is, Where dwellest; or, Where lodgest thou? But I could willingly render it as if it had been said, 'Where dost thou keep thy sabbath?' and from thence conjecture that day was the evening of the sabbath. For whereas it is said, "and they abode with him that day," it would be a little hard to understand it of the day that was now almost gone; and therefore we may suppose it meant of the following day, for it is added it was now the tenth hour. It was about the middle of our November when these things fell out in Bethabara, as will easily appear to any one that will be accurate in calculating the times, and that little that was left of that day was then the tenth hour. It was then about sunset, and, as it were, the entrance of a new day: so that it might more properly have been said, "They abode with him that night;" rather than that day; only the evangelist seems to point out that they remained with him the next day; which that it was the sabbath I will not so much contend, as (not without some reason) suppose.  
"Caesar, for two reasons, would not fight that day; partly because he had no soldiers in the ships, and partly because it was after the tenth hour of the day."
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Lightfoot: Joh 1:41 - -- He first findeth his own brother Simon, and saith unto him, We have found the Messias, which is, being interpreted, the Christ.  [He ...
He first findeth his own brother Simon, and saith unto him, We have found the Messias, which is, being interpreted, the Christ.  
[He findeth his brother.] So " Rab Nachman Bar Isaac found him with Rab Houna ": and many such-like expressions, in the Talmudic authors, as also We have found!
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Lightfoot: Joh 1:42 - -- And he brought him to Jesus. And when Jesus beheld him, he said, Thou art Simon the son of Jona: thou shalt be called Cephas, which is by interp...
And he brought him to Jesus. And when Jesus beheld him, he said, Thou art Simon the son of Jona: thou shalt be called Cephas, which is by interpretation, A stone.  
[The son of Jona.] I do not see any reason why the word Joannes; or Joannas; should be here put for Jona; or why any should contend (as many do) that it should be the same with Joannas.  
I. In the third chapter of St. Luke Luke_3, the name of Jochanan is sounded three ways in the Greek pronunciation of it, Janna; Luk 3:24; Joanna; Luk 3:27; and Jonan; Luk 3:30; but never Jona.  
II. Jona was a name amongst the Jews very commonly used, and we meet with it frequently in the Talmudic authors written Jonah; why, therefore, should not Peter's father be allowed the name of Jonah as well as that of John?  
III. Especially when this son of Jonah imitated the great prophet of that name in this, that both preached to the Gentiles, and both began their journey from Joppa.  
[Which is by interpretation, A stone.] So Act 9:26; " Tabitha; which, being interpreted, is Dorcas ": Beza, Caprea, a goat. But what! do the holy penmen of the Scriptures make lexicons, or play the schoolmasters, that they should only teach that the Syriac word Cepha signifies in the Greek language a stone; and Tabitha, Dorcas; that is, a goat? No; they rather teach what Greek proper names answer to those Syriac proper names: for the Syriac proper name is here rendered into the Greek proper name, and not an appellative into an appellative, nor a proper name into an appellative.  
But let the Vulgar have what it desires, and be it so, "Thou shalt be called a rock"; yet you will scarce grant that our blessed Saviour should call Simon a rock in the direct and most ordinary sense; "There is no rock save our God," 2Sa 22:32; where the Greek interpreters, instead of a rock; have the Creator. Which word St. Peter himself makes use of, 1Pe 4:19; showing who is that rock indeed.  
There is a rock; or 'stone of stumbling,' indeed, as well as a 'foundation-stone'; and this stone of stumbling hath St. Peter been made, to the fall of many thousands; not by any fault of his, but theirs, who, through ignorance or frowardness, or both, will esteem him as a rock upon which the church is built.  
If, therefore, they will so pertinaciously adhere to that version, Et tu vocaberis Petra, let it be rendered into English thus, Thou wilt be called a rock; and let us apprehend our blessed Lord speaking prophetically, and foretelling that grand error that should spring up in the church, viz., that Peter is a rock; than which the Christian world hath not known any thing more sad and destructive.
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Lightfoot: Joh 1:46 - -- And Nathanael said unto him, Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth? Philip saith unto him, Come and see.  [Come and see.] Nothi...
And Nathanael said unto him, Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth? Philip saith unto him, Come and see.  
[Come and see.] Nothing more common in the Talmudic authors than Come and behold, come and see.
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Lightfoot: Joh 1:47 - -- Jesus saw Nathanael coming to him, and saith of him, Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile!  [An Israelite indeed.] Compare i...
Jesus saw Nathanael coming to him, and saith of him, Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile!  
[An Israelite indeed.] Compare it with Isa 63:8. "I saw thee (saith Christ) when thou wert under the fig tree." What doing there? Doubtless not sleeping, or idling away his time, much less doing any ill thing. This would not have deserved so remarkable an encomium as Christ gave him. We may therefore suppose him, in that recess under the fig tree, as having sequestered himself from the view of men, either for prayer, meditation, reading, or some such religious performance; and so indeed from the view of men, that he must needs acknowledge Jesus for the Messiah for that very reason, that, when no mortal eye could see, he saw and knew that he was there. Our Saviour, therefore, calls him an "Israelite indeed, in whom there was no guile," because he sought out that retirement to pray, so different from the usual craft and hypocrisy of that nation, that were wont to pray publicly, and in the streets, that they might be seen of men.  
And here Christ gathered to himself five disciples, viz., Andrew, Peter, Philip, Nathanael (who seems to be the same with Bartholomew), and another, whose name is not mentioned, Joh 1:35; Joh 1:40; whom, by comparing Joh 21:2; we may conjecture to have been Thomas.
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Lightfoot: Joh 1:51 - -- And he saith unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Hereafter ye shall see heaven open, and the angels of God ascending and descending upon t...
And he saith unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Hereafter ye shall see heaven open, and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man.  
[Verily, verily.] If Christ doubled his affirmation, as we here find it, why is it not so doubled in the other evangelists? If he did not double it, why is it so here?  
I. Perhaps the asseveration he useth in this place may not be to the same things and upon the same occasion to which he useth the single Amen in other evangelists.  
II. Perhaps, also, St. John, being to write for the use of the Hellenists, might write the word in the same Hebrew letters wherein Christ used it, and in the same letters also wherein the Greeks used it, retaining still the same Hebrew idiom.  
III. But, however, it may be observed, that, whereas by all others the word Amen was generally used in the latter end of a speech or sentence, our Lord only useth it in the beginning, as being himself the Amen, Rev 3:14; and Isa 65:16; the God of truth.  
So that that single Amen which he used in the other evangelists contained in it the germination, Amen, Amen. I, the Amen; the true and faithful witness, Amen; i.e. " of a truth do say unto you," etc. Nor did it become any mortal man to speak Amen in the beginning of a sentence in the same manner as our Saviour did. Indeed, the very Masters of Traditions, who seemed to be the oracles of that nation, were wont to say, I speak in truth; but not " Amen; I say unto you."  
IV. Amen contains in it Yea and Amen; 2Co 1:20; Rev 1:7; i.e. truth and stability; Isa 25:1. Interlin. faithfulness and truth. The other evangelists express the word which our Saviour useth: St. John doubles it, to intimate the full sense of it.  
I have been at some question with myself, whether I should insert in this place the blasphemous things which the Talmudic authors belch out against the holy Jesus, in allusion (shall I say?) or derision of this word Amen; to which name he entitled himself, and by which asseveration he confirmed his doctrines. But that thou mightest, reader, both know, and with equal indignation abhor, the snarlings and virulency of these men, take it in their own words, although I cannot without infinite reluctancy allege what they with all audaciousness have uttered.  
They have a tradition, that Imma Shalom, the wife of R. Eliezer, and her brother Rabban Gamaliel, went to a certain philosopher (the Gloss hath it 'a certain heretic') of very great note for his integrity in giving judgment in matters, and taking no bribes. The woman brings him a golden candlestick, and prayeth him that the inheritance might be divided in part to her. Rabban Gamaliel objects, "It is written amongst us, that the daughter shall not inherit instead of the son. But the philosopher answered, 'Since the time that you were removed from your land, the law of Moses was made void: and Aven was given ' [he means the Gospel, but marks it with a scurrilous title]; and in that it is written, The son and the daughter shall inherit together. The next day Rabban Gamaliel brought him, a Libyan ass. Then saith he unto them, 'I have found at the end of Aven [i.e. the Gospel] that it is written there, I, Aven; came not to diminish, but to add to the law of Moses'": where he abuseth both the name of our Saviour and his words too, Mat 5:17.  
And now, after our just detestation of this execrable blasphemy, let us think what kind of judge this must be, to whose judgment Rabban Gamaliel, the president of the Sanhedrim, and his sister, wife to the great Eliezer, should betake themselves. A Christian, as it should seem by the whole contexture of the story; but, alas! what kind of Christian, that should make so light of Christ and his gospel! However, were he a Christian of what kind soever, yet if there be any truth in this passage, it is not unworthy our taking notice of it, both as to the history of those times, and also as to that question, Whether there were any Christian judges at that time?  
[Ye shall see heaven open, and the angels of God, etc.] there are those that in this place observe an allusion to Jacob's ladder. The meaning of this passage seems to be no other than this: "Because I said, 'I saw thee under the fig tree, believest thou?' Did this seem to thee a matter of such wonder? 'Thou shalt see greater things than these.' For you shall in me observe such plenty, both of revelation and miracle, that it shall seem to you as if the heavens were opened and the angels were ascending and descending, to bring with them all manner of revelation, authority, and power from God, to be imparted to the Son of man." Where this also is included, viz., that angels must in a more peculiar manner administer unto him, as in the vision of Jacob the whole host of angels had been showed and promised to him in the first setting out of his pilgrimage.  
Of this ladder the Rabbins dream very pleasantly: "The ladder is the ascent of the altar and the altar itself. The angels are princes or monarchs. The king of Babylon ascended seventy steps; the king of the Medes fifty-and-two; the king of Greece one hundred and eighty; the king of Edom, it is uncertain how many," etc. They reckon the breadth of the ladder to have been about eight thousand parasangae, i.e. about two-and-thirty thousand miles; and that the bulk of each angel was about eight thousand English miles in compass. Admirable mathematicians these indeed!
Haydock: Joh 1:23 - -- The voice of one crying in the wilderness. See Matthew iii. 3.; Mark i. 3.; Luke iii. 4.; and Isaias xl. 3. by all which John was his immediate prec...
The voice of one crying in the wilderness. See Matthew iii. 3.; Mark i. 3.; Luke iii. 4.; and Isaias xl. 3. by all which John was his immediate precursor. (Witham)
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Haydock: Joh 1:26 - -- Hath stood. St. John the Baptist, by these words, which he spoke to the priests and Levites, sent to him by the Pharisees, did not mean to tell them...
Hath stood. St. John the Baptist, by these words, which he spoke to the priests and Levites, sent to him by the Pharisees, did not mean to tell them, that Jesus was either at the present time standing amongst them, or that he had ever been in the presence of the self same people; but they may be understood two different ways, either with regard to his divinity; an din that sense, Jesus was always by his divine presence amongst them; or in regard to his humanity; either that he lived in the same country, and among their countrymen, or, that he stood actually amongst them, because Jesus was accustomed yearly to go up to Jerusalem on the festival of the Pasch. (Denis the Carthusian)
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Haydock: Joh 1:29 - -- Behold the Lamb of God. John the Baptist let the Jews know who Jesus was, by divers testimonies. 1st, By telling them he was the Lamb of God who tak...
Behold the Lamb of God. John the Baptist let the Jews know who Jesus was, by divers testimonies. 1st, By telling them he was the Lamb of God who taketh away the sin, or sins of the world, who was come to be their Redeemer, and to free mankind from the slavery of sin; 2ndly, that he was greater than he, and before him, though born after him; 3rdly, that God had revealed to him that Jesus was to baptize in the Holy Ghost; 4thly, that he saw the Spirit descending upon him from heaven, and remaining upon him; 5thly, that he was the Son of God, ver. 34. (Witham) ---
Who taketh away. It was only a being like Christ, in whose person the divine and human natures were united, that could effectually take away the sins of the world. As man, hew was enabled to suffer; and as God, his sufferings obtained a value equal to the infinite atonement required. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Joh 1:39 - -- Staid with him that day. Yet they did not continually remain with him, as his disciples, till he called them, as they were fishing. See the annotat...
Staid with him that day. Yet they did not continually remain with him, as his disciples, till he called them, as they were fishing. See the annotations, Matthew iv. 18. (Witham)
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Haydock: Joh 1:42 - -- Thou art Simon, the son of Jona, or of John. Jesus, who knew all things, knew his name, and at the first meeting told him he should hereafter be cal...
Thou art Simon, the son of Jona, or of John. Jesus, who knew all things, knew his name, and at the first meeting told him he should hereafter be called Cephas, or Petrus, a rock, designing to make him the chief or head of his whole Church. See Matthew xvi. 18. (Witham) ---
Cephas is a Syriac word, its import is the same as rock or stone. And St. Paul commonly calleth him by this name: whereas others, both Greeks and Latins, call him by the Greek appellation, Peter; which signifies exactly the same thing. Hence St. Cyril saith, that our Saviour, by foretelling that his name should be now no more Simon, but Peter, did by the word itself aptly signify, that on him, as on a rock most firm, he would build his Church. (Lib. ii. chap. 12. in Joan.)
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Haydock: Joh 1:46 - -- Can any thing of good come from Nazareth? Nathanael did not think it consistent with the predictions of the prophets, that the Messias, who was to b...
Can any thing of good come from Nazareth? Nathanael did not think it consistent with the predictions of the prophets, that the Messias, who was to be the Son of David, and to be born at Bethlehem, should be of the town of Nazareth; which he did not imagine could be the place of Jesus's birth. But when he came to Jesus, and found that he knew the truth of things done in private, and in his absence, he professed his belief in Jesus in these words: Rabbi, thou art the Son of God, thou art the king of Israel. We may here take notice, with Dr. Pearson, on the second article of the Creed, that the Jews, before the coming of Christ, were convinced that he was to be the Son of God; (though they have denied it since that time) for they interpreted, as foretold of their Messias, these words: (Psalm ii. 7.) The Lord said to me, thou art my Son, this day have I begotten thee: and this is what Nathanael here confessed. The same is confirmed by the famous confession of St. Peter, (Matthew xvi. 16.) Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God; by the words of Martha, (John xi. 27.) I have believed that thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God, who art come into the world: In fine, by the question which the Jewish priest put to our Saviour, (Matthew xxvi. 63.) I adjure thee by the living God, that thou tell us whether thou be the Christ the Son of God. See also John vi. 17. and John xx. 31. (Witham)
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Haydock: Joh 1:50 - -- Greater things than these. Greater miracles and proofs that I am the Messias, and the true Son of God. (Witham)
Greater things than these. Greater miracles and proofs that I am the Messias, and the true Son of God. (Witham)
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Haydock: Joh 1:51 - -- You shall see the heaven open, &c. It is not certain when this was to be fulfilled: St. John Chrysostom thinks at Christ's ascension; others refer i...
You shall see the heaven open, &c. It is not certain when this was to be fulfilled: St. John Chrysostom thinks at Christ's ascension; others refer it to the day of judgment. (Witham)
Gill -> Joh 1:22; Joh 1:23; Joh 1:24; Joh 1:25; Joh 1:26; Joh 1:27; Joh 1:28; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:30; Joh 1:31; Joh 1:32; Joh 1:33; Joh 1:34; Joh 1:35; Joh 1:36; Joh 1:37; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:40; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:44; Joh 1:45; Joh 1:46; Joh 1:47; Joh 1:48; Joh 1:49; Joh 1:50; Joh 1:51
Gill: Joh 1:22 - -- Then said they unto him, who art thou?.... Since, as yet, he had only answered in negatives, who he was not, that he was not the Christ, nor Elias, no...
Then said they unto him, who art thou?.... Since, as yet, he had only answered in negatives, who he was not, that he was not the Christ, nor Elias, nor that prophet; they desire he would give them a positive account who he was:
that we may give answer to them that sent us; that their labour might not be in vain; that they might not come so far for nothing, without knowing who he was; and that they might be capable of giving an account of him to the sanhedrim:
what sayest thou of thyself? they insisted on it, that he would openly, and honestly declare who he was, and what was his office and business; that from his own mouth, and not from the opinion and conjectures of others, they might represent him in a true light to those who had deputed them on this errand.
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Gill: Joh 1:23 - -- And he said, I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness,.... These words are cited by the other evangelists, and applied to John the Baptist; but ...
And he said, I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness,.... These words are cited by the other evangelists, and applied to John the Baptist; but then they are only to be considered as their citation, and as an application of them to him by them: but here they are used by John himself, who both expresses them, and interprets them of himself; and in which he was undoubtedly under the infallible direction of the blessed Spirit; and which confirms the sense of the evangelists, who apply the words to him. The Jews give a different interpretation of the words; though one of their celebrated commentators u owns, that the comforts spoken of in the preceding verses are what will be in the days of the King Messiah: one of them w interprets, "the voice", of the Holy Ghost; and so far it may be true, as John was filled with the Holy Ghost, and he spake by him in his ministry: and another x, of the resurrection of the dead, or the voice that will be heard then, which will be the voice of the archangel: though another of y them better explains it by,
"the voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, prepare the way before the people of the Lord, make in the plain, paths before the congregation of our God:
but not the people of the Lord, but the Lord himself, and not the congregation of God, but God himself is intended; whose ways were to be prepared, and made plain, even the King Messiah; which was to be done, and was done by his forerunner John the Baptist, who, with great modesty, expresses himself in the language of this Scripture, as being a prophecy of him: he was a "voice", but not a mere voice; nor was his ministry a mere voice of words, as the law was, but it was the sweet voice of the Gospel, proclaiming the coming of the Messiah; encouraging men to believe in him; calling them to evangelical repentance, and publishing remission of sins in the name of Christ, and pointing him out as the Lamb of God, which takes away the sin of the world: this voice was "crying"; it was not a still small voice, it was a very loud one; John lifted up his voice like a trumpet; he delivered himself with great zeal and fervency; and it was "in the wilderness" where this voice was heard, in the wilderness of Judea, as in Mat 3:1 where Jesus came preaching; the Ethiopic version renders the words, "I am the voice of one that goes about in the wilderness"; that is, in the several towns and villages which were in the wilderness, to whom John went and preached the Gospel: the Persic version reads, "I am the voice and cry which cometh out of the wilderness"; referring to the place where he was before he entered on his public ministry, and from whence he came; for he was in the deserts till the day of his showing unto Israel, Luk 1:80. The words this voice cried were,
make straight the way of the Lord; he called upon persons to reform their ways, and walk in the way of the Lord, to repent of their sins, believe in Christ, and submit to the ordinance of baptism: the Ethiopic version reads, "the way of God"; and such was the person he came to prepare the way for, even the Son of God, and who is truly and properly God,
as said the prophet Esaias, in Isa 40:3.
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Gill: Joh 1:24 - -- And they which were sent were of the Pharisees. Who were the straitest sect of religion among the Jews; were very zealous of the traditions of the eld...
And they which were sent were of the Pharisees. Who were the straitest sect of religion among the Jews; were very zealous of the traditions of the elders, and professed an expectation of the Messiah; and were famous in the nation for their knowledge and learning, as well as for their devotion and sanctity: and many of them were in the sanhedrim, as appears from Joh 3:1; see Gill on Mat 3:7.
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Gill: Joh 1:25 - -- And they asked him, and said unto him,.... They put a question, by saying to him,
why baptizest thou then, if thou be not that Christ, nor Elias, n...
And they asked him, and said unto him,.... They put a question, by saying to him,
why baptizest thou then, if thou be not that Christ, nor Elias, neither that prophet? since he denied that he was the Messiah, or Elias that was to come before the Messiah, according to the expectation of the Jews, or that prophet, or a prophet, they demand by what authority he introduced a new rite and ordinance among them, which they had never been used to; for though there were divers washings or baptisms among them, enjoined by the law of Moses in certain cases, and others which obtained by tradition, as the immersion of themselves after they had been at market, and of cups, pots, brazen vessels, and tables, yet nothing of this kind that John administered: and as for the baptism of proselytes, it seems to be of a later date than this, and had no manner of likeness to it. The ordinance John administered was such, as they apprehended that no one ought to practise, unless he was the Messiah, or his forerunner, or some eminent prophet; they insist upon it therefore, that since he denied he was either of these, that he would show his credentials, and what commission he had from God to baptize; or they suggest he was liable to be called to an account by their sanhedrim, and be condemned as a false prophet, or an innovator in religious affairs. From hence it appears, that the Jews expected that baptism would be administered in the times of the Messiah, and his forerunner; but from whence they had this notion, it is not easy to say, whether from Zec 13:1 as Grotius, or from Eze 36:25 as Lightfoot; nor do they speak contemptibly of it, but rather consider it as a very solemn affair, to be performed only by great personages: and this may teach modern ones to think and speak more respectfully of this ordinance than they do, who have given themselves great liberties, and have treated it with much contempt and virulence; calling it by the names of uncleanness, abomination, filthy water, and a devoting of persons to Satan z: likewise, it is clear from hence, that they expected that this ordinance would be first administered by some person of very great note, either some very famous prophet, as Elias, whom they looked for before the coming of the Messiah, or else the Messiah himself, and not by a common teacher, or any ordinary person; wherefore this rite, as performed by John, could have no likeness with any thing that was in common use among them: besides, it was expressly done in the name of the Messiah, Act 19:5 therefore they conclude he, or his forerunner, must be come; and that John must be one, or other of them, otherwise, why did he administer it? and it is also evident from hence, that no such practice had obtained before among them, or they would not have been alarmed at it, as they were; nor would they have troubled themselves to have sent after John, and inquire of him who he was, that should practise in this manner,
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Gill: Joh 1:26 - -- John answered them, saying, I baptize with water,.... Or in water, so the Vulgate Latin, and all the Oriental versions render it. The sense of the ans...
John answered them, saying, I baptize with water,.... Or in water, so the Vulgate Latin, and all the Oriental versions render it. The sense of the answer is, that he indeed baptized persons in water, which was all that he could do, or pretended to do; and he owned, that this was a new rite, and that he was the administrator of a new ordinance; but he suggests, as may be supplied from Mat 3:11 that there was one at hand, and even now among them, that should baptize, and so it is read in one of Stephens's copies here, in the Holy Ghost, and in fire; and it was by his authority, by a commission he had received from him, that he baptized in water; and that his speedy manifestation and appearance as the Messiah, which would be confirmed by his power of baptizing in the Holy Ghost, and by his ministry and miracles, would be a sufficient vindication of his conduct, and support him in his administration of water baptism:
but there standeth one among you; or "hath stood", as the Vulgate Latin version renders it; referring, not to his being among them at twelve years of age, but a few days ago when he came to John to be baptized, and was baptized by him; for from Joh 1:29 it is plain he was not now, or "today", as Nounus expresses it, standing in the midst of them. The Ethiopic version renders it, there is one about to stand among you, as he did the next day: though the meaning of the phrase may only be, that he was then in being, and dwelt somewhere among them, and not that he was personally present at that time:
whom ye know not; neither from whence he is, nor who he is, or what is his work and office; neither the dignity of his person, nor the end of his coming into the world, nor the nature of his business in it.
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Gill: Joh 1:27 - -- He it is who coming after me,.... Both into the world, and into the ministry of the word; for John was before Christ, in both these respects, though g...
He it is who coming after me,.... Both into the world, and into the ministry of the word; for John was before Christ, in both these respects, though greatly behind him in others, and therefore he adds,
is preferred before me: being not only of a more excellent nature, the Son of God, and of an higher extract, the Lord from heaven; but in an higher office, and having greater gifts, and the Spirit of God without measure on him; and also being more followed by the people; for John decreased, but he increased: or rather the words may be rendered, who was before me; being the eternal Son of God, whose goings forth were of old, from everlasting; who was set up from everlasting, from the beginning, or ever the earth was; the firstborn, or first bringer forth of every creature; and therefore must be before all things, which are created by him; see Gill on Joh 1:15.
Whose shoes latchet I am not worthy to unloose; which was one of the meanest services done by a servant to his master; see Gill on Mat 3:11.
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Gill: Joh 1:28 - -- These things were done in Bethabara,.... That is, this testimony was bore by John; and this discourse passed between him and the Pharisees, at the pla...
These things were done in Bethabara,.... That is, this testimony was bore by John; and this discourse passed between him and the Pharisees, at the place here mentioned; which was a passage over Jordan, where much people walked to go on the other side,
beyond Jordan; and
where also John was baptizing; which brought a great concourse of people together: so that this witness was bore in a very public manner, and before a large number; and it is to this that Christ refers, in Joh 1:33 for this was so well known, that there was no hiding or denying it: the place where this conversation passed, is in the Vulgate Latin, and all the eastern versions; and in the Alexandrian copy, and many other copies, and so in Nonnus, called Bethany; but as De Dieu observes, Bethany was not beyond Jordan, nor in the wilderness of Judea, but near to Jerusalem, about two miles distant from it; nor was it situated by waters convenient for baptizing, unless they went to the brook Kidron, which indeed was not far from it; but it is clear from the history, that John was not so near Jerusalem; nor did that brook which might be forded over, continues the same learned author, seem fit and proper enough, `"mergendis baptizandorum corporibus", for plunging the bodies of those that were to be baptized'; wherefore he rightly concludes, that either this reading is an error, or there was another Bethany near Jordan: Bethabara signifies "the house of passage", and is thought to be the place where the Israelites passed over Jordan, to go into the land of Canaan, Jos 3:16. And which, as it must be a very convenient place for the administration of baptism by immersion, used by John, so it was very significant of the use of this ordinance; which is, as it were, the passage, or entrance, into the Gospel church state; for persons ought first to be baptized, and then be admitted into a Gospel church, according to the example of the primitive Christians, Act 2:41 but whether there was a place of this name, where the Israelites went over Jordan, is not certain; and if there was, it does not seem so likely to be the place here designed, since that was right over against Jericho; whereas this seems to be rather further off, and over against Galilee: there were several passages of Jordan, Jdg 12:5. There was a bridge over it, between the lake of Samochon and Gennesaret, now called Jacob's bridge, where Jacob is supposed to have wrestled with the angel, and to have met with his brother Esau; and there was another over it at Chainmath, near Tiberias, and in other places: and it might be at one of these passages, by which they went over into Galilee, that John pitched upon to continue preaching and baptizing at; partly because of the number of people that went over, to whom he had the opportunity of preaching; and partly, for the sake of baptizing those who became proper subjects of that ordinance through his ministry. Some have thought, that this place is the same with Bethbarah, in Jdg 7:24, which was either in the tribe of Ephraim or of Manasseh, and not far from the parts where this place must be, but was on this side Jordan; and so Beza says the words should be rendered; and those who came to John at Jordan, are not said to pass over that river: others are of opinion, that Bethabara is the same with Betharabah, Jos 15:6, since this is called Bethabara by the Septuagint, in Jos 18:22. However, be it what place soever, and wheresoever, it was no doubt very proper for John's purpose; and therefore he chose it, and for a while continued at it: and here, says Jerom a.
"to this day many of the brethren, that is, of the number of believers, desiring there to be born again, are baptized in the vital stream;
such veneration had they for the place where John first baptized: Origen says b, that in his time it was said, that Bethabara was showed by the banks of Jordan, where they report John baptized,
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Gill: Joh 1:29 - -- The next day John seeth Jesus coming unto him,.... Not to be baptized, for he had been baptized before by him. This seems to have been after Christ ha...
The next day John seeth Jesus coming unto him,.... Not to be baptized, for he had been baptized before by him. This seems to have been after Christ had been forty days in the wilderness, from whence he now returned, and came to attend on John's ministry; both to do honour to him, and that he might be made manifest by him; and this was the day after John had bore such a testimony concerning him, to the priests and Levites; and which Christ the omniscient God, knew full well, and therefore came at this season, when the minds of the people were prepared by John's testimony, to expect and receive him: one part of the work of Elias, which the Jews assign unto him, and the precise time of his doing it, exactly agree with this account of John the Baptist; they say c, that his work is
“to bring to them (the Israelites) the good news of the coming of the Redeemer; and this shall be,
For John, the day before Christ Lord, came to him, had signified to the priests and Levites, that the Messiah was already come; and now on the day following, seeing him, pointed as with his finger to him,
and saith, behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world: he calls him a "lamb", either with respect to any lamb in common, for his harmlessness and innocence; for his meekness and humility; for his patience; and for his usefulness, both for food and clothing, in a spiritual sense; as well as for his being to be a sacrifice for the sins of his people: or else with respect to the lambs that were offered in sacrifice, under the legal dispensation; and that either to the passover lamb, or rather to the lambs of the daily sacrifice, that were offered morning and evening; since the account of them best agrees with what is said of this Lamb of God, who was slain in type, in the morning of the world, or from the foundation of the world; and actually in the evening of the world, or in the end of it; and who has a continued virtue to take away the sins of his people, from the beginning, to the end of the world; and their sins, both of the day and night, or which are committed every day: for as they are daily committed, there is need of the daily application of the blood and sacrifice of Christ, to remove them; or of continual looking unto him by faith, whose blood has a continual virtue, to cleanse from all sin: the Jewish doctors say d, that "the morning daily sacrifice made atonement for the iniquities done in the night; and the evening sacrifice made atonement for the iniquities that were by day:
and in various things they were typical of Christ, as that they were lambs of the first year, which may denote the weakness of the human nature of Christ, which had all the sinless infirmities of it; they, were also without spot, signifying the purity of Christ's human nature, who was holy and harmless, a lamb without spot and blemish; these were offered as a sacrifice, and for the children of Israel only, as Christ has given himself an offering and a sacrifice to God, both in soul and body, for the sins of the mystical Israel of God, the Israel whom God has chosen for himself, whether Jews or Gentiles; for Christ is the propitiation for the sins of both: and these were offered daily, morning and evening; and though Christ was but once offered, otherwise he must have often suffered; yet as he has by one offering put away sin for ever, so there is a perpetual virtue in his sacrifice to take it away, and there is a constant application of it for that purpose; to which may be added, that these lambs were offered with fine flour, oil and wine, for a sweet savour to the Lord; denoting the acceptableness of the sacrifice of Christ to his Father, to whom it is for a sweet smelling savour, Eph 5:2. And Christ is styled the Lamb "of God", in allusion to the same, whom the Cabalistic Jews e call the secret of the mystery, and
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Gill: Joh 1:30 - -- This is he, of whom it is said,.... Either the day before, as in Joh 1:27, or some time before that, Joh 1:15, when he first began to baptize, even be...
This is he, of whom it is said,.... Either the day before, as in Joh 1:27, or some time before that, Joh 1:15, when he first began to baptize, even before Christ came to be baptized by him, and before he personally knew him; see Mat 3:11.
After me cometh a man; not a mere man, but the man God's fellow: and this is said, not because he was now a grown man, or to show the truth of his human nature; but seems to be a common Hebraism, and is all one as if it had been said, "after me cometh one", or a certain person: for the sense of this phrase, and what follows; see Gill on Joh 1:15.
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Gill: Joh 1:31 - -- And I knew him not,.... Ομμασιν, "by sight", as Nonnus paraphrases it; personally he had never seen him, nor had had any conversation and famil...
And I knew him not,....
but that he should be made manifest to Israel; who had been for many years hid in Galilee, an obscure part of the world: and though he had been known to Joseph and Mary, and to Zacharias and Elisabeth, and to Simeon and Anna; yet he was not made manifest to the people of Israel in common; nor did they know that the Messiah was come: but that he might be known:
therefore am I come baptizing with water; or in water, as before: for by administering this new ordinance, the people were naturally put upon inquiry after the Messiah, whether come, and where he was, since such a new rite was introduced; and besides, John, when he baptized any, he exhorted them to believe on him, which should come after him, that is, on Christ Jesus; and moreover, by Christ's coming to his baptism, he came to have a personal knowledge of him himself, and so was capable of pointing him out, and making him manifest to others, as he did.
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Gill: Joh 1:32 - -- And John bare record,.... The same day that he said the above things, and at the same time:
saying, I saw the Spirit; that is, of God, as is said i...
And John bare record,.... The same day that he said the above things, and at the same time:
saying, I saw the Spirit; that is, of God, as is said in Mat 3:16 and which Nonnus here expresses; and the Ethiopic version reads, "the Holy Ghost",
descending from heaven like a dove; at the time of his baptism; see Gill on Mat 3:16.
And it abode upon him; for some time; so long as that John had a full sight of it, and so was capable of giving a perfect account of it, and bearing a certain and distinct testimony to it.
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Gill: Joh 1:33 - -- And I knew him not,.... That is, before he came to be baptized by him; when it was secretly suggested to him who he was, and the following signal was ...
And I knew him not,.... That is, before he came to be baptized by him; when it was secretly suggested to him who he was, and the following signal was given him, to confirm him in it:
but he that sent me to baptize with water; or "in water"; that is, God; for John's mission was from God, as in Joh 1:6, and his baptism from heaven; he had a divine warrant and commission for what he did:
the same said unto me; either by an articulate voice, or by a divine impulse on his mind, or by the revelation of the Spirit:
upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending and remaining on him, the same is he which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost; that is, the Messiah; See Gill on Mat 3:11, Mat 3:16.
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Gill: Joh 1:34 - -- And I saw,.... The Spirit descending from heaven as a dove, and lighting upon Jesus, and remaining some time on him; this he saw with his bodily eyes:...
And I saw,.... The Spirit descending from heaven as a dove, and lighting upon Jesus, and remaining some time on him; this he saw with his bodily eyes:
and bore record; at the same time, before all the people that were with him, when he baptized Jesus:
that this is the Son of God; the natural, essential, and eternal Son of God; who being sent in the fulness of time, had assumed an human nature, in which he became subject to all ordinances, and had the Spirit without measure bestowed on him; and which was an evidence who he was, and of what he came about.
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Gill: Joh 1:35 - -- Again, the next day after,.... The third day from the priests and Levites having been with John, to know who he was. The Syriac, Arabic, and Persic ve...
Again, the next day after,.... The third day from the priests and Levites having been with John, to know who he was. The Syriac, Arabic, and Persic versions, leave out the word "again":
stood, and two of his disciples; one of these was Andrew, Simon Peter's brother, as appears from Joh 1:40 and very likely the other was the Evangelist John, the writer of this Gospel, who always chooses to conceal himself. John the Baptist stood, and these disciples by him, in some certain place near Jordan, where he was preaching and baptizing.
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Gill: Joh 1:36 - -- And looking upon Jesus as he walked,.... Either by them; or as he was going from them to his lodgings; it being toward the close of the day, when John...
And looking upon Jesus as he walked,.... Either by them; or as he was going from them to his lodgings; it being toward the close of the day, when John had finished his work for that day, and the people were departing home: John fixed his eyes intently on Christ, with great pleasure and delight, and pointing at him,
he saith, behold the Lamb of God; as in Joh 1:29, where it is added, "which taketh away the sin of the world"; and which the Ethiopic version subjoins here.
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Gill: Joh 1:37 - -- And the two disciples heard him speak,.... The above words, and took notice of them; faith in Christ came by hearing them; they reached their hearts, ...
And the two disciples heard him speak,.... The above words, and took notice of them; faith in Christ came by hearing them; they reached their hearts, and they found their affections, and the desires of their souls, to be after Christ:
and they followed Jesus; left their master, and went after him, in order to get some acquaintance with him, and receive some instructions from him.
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Gill: Joh 1:38 - -- Then Jesus turned, and saw them following,.... That is, "him", as the Vulgate Latin, and all the Oriental versions add: he saw by their walk, and by t...
Then Jesus turned, and saw them following,.... That is, "him", as the Vulgate Latin, and all the Oriental versions add: he saw by their walk, and by their countenances, that they were following him; and which he knew before he turned himself: he knew what John had said, and what an effect it had upon these disciples, and what was working in their hearts, and how desirous they were of coming up to him, and conversing with him; and therefore he turned himself, that they might have an opportunity of speaking to him; or rather, in order to speak to them first, as he did:
and saith unto them, what seek ye? This he said, not as ignorant of whom, and what they were seeking, and desirous; but to encourage them to speak to him, which, through fear and bashfulness, they might be backward to do; and therefore, he who will not break the bruised reed, nor quench the smoking flax, but cherishes and encourages the first motions of grace, begins first with them, and treats them in a free and familiar manner; thereby to animate and engage them to use freedom with him, and which end was answered:
they said unto him, Rabbi; a title which now began to be in much use with the Jews, and which they gave to their celebrated doctors; and these disciples of John, observing how magnificently their master spoke of Jesus, in great reverence to him, addressed him under this character; See Gill on Mat 23:7,
which is to say, being interpreted, master. These are the words of the evangelist, interpreting the word "Rabbi", and not of the disciples, and are left out in the Syriac and Persic versions, who, for "Rabbi", read "our master", or our "Rabbi"; being said by both the disciples, or by one in the name of both, putting the following question:
where dwellest thou? signifying, that that was not a proper place, in the public way, to enter into a conversation with him, and acquaint him with what they were desirous of; but should be glad to know where he lodged, that they might wait upon him there, either then, or on the morrow, or at any convenient time.
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Gill: Joh 1:39 - -- He saith unto them, come and see,.... He gave them an invitation, to go along with him directly, and see with their own eyes, where he dwelt, and ther...
He saith unto them, come and see,.... He gave them an invitation, to go along with him directly, and see with their own eyes, where he dwelt, and there and then converse with him, and at any other time; to which they had a hearty welcome:
they came and saw where he dwelt; they accepted of the invitation, and went along with him immediately, and saw, and took notice of the place where he had lodgings, that they might know it, and find it another time; which Dr. Lightfoot conjectures was at Capernaum, which is very probable; since that was his own city, where he paid tribute, where he frequently resorted, and was on the banks of Jordan, near the lake of Gennesaret; and these disciples were Galilaeans:
and abode with him that day; the remaining part of the day, which they spent in delightful conversation with him; by which they knew that he was the Messiah; at least they were better instructed in this matter, and more confirmed in it. The Arabic version renders it, "they remained with him that his own day"; and Dr. Lightfoot thinks the next day is meant, and that it was the sabbath day, which they kept with him in private devotion and conference:
for it was about the tenth hour; which, according to the Roman way of reckoning, must be ten o'clock in the morning; so that there was a considerable part of the day before them; but according to the Jewish way of reckoning, who reckon twelve hours to a day, it must be four o'clock in the afternoon, when there were but two hours to night: and this being; about the time when the lamb of the daily sacrifice of the evening was offered up, very seasonably did John point unto them, at this time, Christ the Lamb of God, the antitype of that sacrifice; for the daily evening sacrifice was slain at eight and a half, and was offered at nine and a half f, or between the ninth and tenth hours of the day. The Ethiopic version renders it, "they remained with him that day unto the tenth hour",
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Gill: Joh 1:40 - -- One of the two which heard John speak,.... The above things, concerning Jesus being the Lamb of God:
and followed him; that is, Jesus, as the Syri...
One of the two which heard John speak,.... The above things, concerning Jesus being the Lamb of God:
and followed him; that is, Jesus, as the Syriac and Arabic versions read; and the Persic version, Christ: and the Ethiopic version, "the Lord Jesus"; for not John, but Jesus they followed:
was Andrew, Simon Peter's brother: see Mat 4:18 the other, as before observed, might be the writer of this Gospel.
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Gill: Joh 1:41 - -- He first findeth his own brother Simon,.... Either before the other disciple, or before he found any other person: after he and the other disciple dep...
He first findeth his own brother Simon,.... Either before the other disciple, or before he found any other person: after he and the other disciple departed from Christ, being affected with the grace bestowed upon him, and his heart warm with the conversation he had had with him, and transported with joy at finding the Messiah, goes in all haste in search of his relations, friends, and acquaintance, to communicate what he had seen and heard, in order to bring them to the knowledge of the same; for such is the nature of grace, it is very communicative, and those that have it, are very desirous that all others should be partakers of it: and the first person he lighted on was Simon, who was afterwards called Peter, who was his own brother; not a brother-in-law, but his own brother, by father and mother's side, and so dear unto him by the ties of nature and blood:
and saith unto him; with all eagerness imaginable, and in a rapture of joy:
we have found the Messias; I, and a fellow disciple have had the Messiah, so often foretold by the prophets, and so long expected by our fathers, pointed out to us; and we have followed him, and have had conversation with him, and are well assured he is that illustrious person:
which is, being interpreted, the Christ; which, as in Joh 1:38, are the words of the evangelist, and not Andrew, and are therefore left out in the Syriac version; the word Messiah needing no interpretation in that language, and which was the language in which Andrew spoke. This name, Messiah, was well known among the Jews, for that who was promised, and they expected as a Saviour and Redeemer; though it is not very often mentioned in the books of the Old Testament, chiefly in the following places, Psa 2:2; but is very much used in the Chaldee paraphrases: Elias Levita g says, he found it in more than fifty verses; and Buxtorf h has added others to them, and the word appears in "seventy one" places, which he takes notice of, and are worthy of regard; for they show the sense of the ancient synagogue, concerning the passages of the Old Testament, respecting the Messiah: this Hebrew word is interpreted by the Greek word, "Christ"; and both signify "anointed", and well agree with the person to whom they belong, to which there is an allusion in Son 1:3, "thy name is as ointment poured forth": he is so called, because he was anointed from everlasting, to be prophet, priest, and king; see Psa 2:6 Pro 8:22, and he was anointed as man, with the oil of gladness, with the graces of the Spirit, without measure, Psa 45:7. And it is from him the saints receive the anointing, or grace in measure; and are from him called Christians, and are really anointed ones; see 1Jo 2:27, hence it is a name precious to the saints, and savoury to them. These words were delivered by Andrew, in a very exulting strain, expressing great joy; as indeed what can be greater joy to a sensible soul, than to find Christ? which in a spiritual sense, is to have a clear sight of him by faith, to go unto him, and lay hold on him, as the only Saviour and Redeemer: who is to be found in the Scriptures of truth, which testify of him; in the promises of grace, which are full of him and in the Gospel, of which he is the sum and substance; and in the ordinances of it, where he shows himself; for he is not to be found by the light of nature, or by carnal reason, nor by the law of Moses, but by means of the Gospel, and the Spirit of God attending that, as a spirit of wisdom and revelation, in the knowledge of him: and happy are those souls that find Christ under his direction; for they find life, spiritual and eternal, in him; a justifying righteousness; free and full pardon of their sins; spiritual food for their souls; and peace, comfort, joy, and rest, and eternal glory: wherefore this must needs be matter of joy unto them, since such a finding is a rich one, a pearl of great price, riches durable and unsearchable; and which a man that has found, would not part with for all the world; but parts with all he has for it; and is what can never be lost again; and, particularly to two sorts of persons, finding Christ must give a peculiar pleasure, and an inexpressible joy; to such as are under a sense of sin and damnation, and to such who have been under desertion. The phrase of "finding" a person, twice used in this text, and hereafter in some following verses, is frequent in Talmudic and Rabbinic writings; as
“he went,
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Gill: Joh 1:42 - -- And he brought him to Jesus,.... That is, Andrew brought his brother Simon to Jesus; he persuaded him to go along with him, and showed him where he wa...
And he brought him to Jesus,.... That is, Andrew brought his brother Simon to Jesus; he persuaded him to go along with him, and showed him where he was; which discovered great zeal for Christ, being desirous of, gaining souls unto him; and great affection to his brother, being heartily concerned that he might know Christ, as well as he; nor did he choose that he should take up with the bare account that he gave of him, but would have him go to him himself, that he might be personally acquainted with him, and instructed by him: and this also shows the readiness and willingness of Simon, to see and hear Christ himself, and not sit down contented with the bare relation his brother gave: no doubt he found his heart stirred up within him, and the desires of his soul going after Christ; and therefore he at once rose up and went with Andrew to him; and thus one person may be the means of bringing another to Christ: and it may be observed, that Peter was not the first of the apostles that was called by Christ, or first knew him; Andrew was before him, and the means of bringing him into an acquaintance with him; had it been the reverse, the Papists would have improved it in favour of Peter, as the prince of the apostles: this clause is omitted in the Persic version,
And when Jesus beheld him; as he was coming, or come to him: he had beheld him before in the glass of his Father's purposes and decrees; he had viewed him in his blood, and said unto him, live; and he now looked upon him with a look of love, of complacency, and delight:
he said, thou art Simon, the son of Jona; thy name is Simon, and thy father's name is Jona: he knew both their names, though he might have never seen their faces, nor heard of them: this he said to give Simon a testimony of his omniscience; and which, no doubt, must strike him at once. Simon, or Simeon, was a common name among the Jews, being the name of one of the twelve patriarchs; see Gill on Mat 10:2; and so likewise was Jona, being the name of a prophet of theirs; See Gill on Mat 16:17; and inasmuch as the prophet Jonah was of Gathhepher in Zebulun, which was in Galilee; see Gill on Joh 7:52; this might be a common name among the Galilaeans; so that there seems no reason why it should be thought to be the same with John, as the Ethiopic version reads it, and by way of interrogation, "art thou not Simon the son of John?"
Thou shall be called Cephas, which is, by interpretation, a stone; or Peter as it should rather be rendered; and as it is in the Vulgate Latin, and Ethiopic versions; and as "Cepha", or "Cephas", in the Syriac and Chaldee languages signifies a stone, or rock k, so does "Peter" in Greek: hence, the Syriac version here gives no interpretation of the word. Christ not only calls Simon by his present name, at first sight of him, but tells him what his future name should be; and which imports, not only that he should be a lively stone in the spiritual building, the church, but should have a considerable hand in that work, and abide firm and steadfast to Christ, and his interest, notwithstanding his fall; and continue constant and immoveable until death, as he did. The Jews also, in their writings, call him Simeon Kepha l,
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Gill: Joh 1:43 - -- The day following,.... Not the day after John had pointed out Christ, as the Lamb of God, to two of his disciples; but the day after Simon had been wi...
The day following,.... Not the day after John had pointed out Christ, as the Lamb of God, to two of his disciples; but the day after Simon had been with him, being brought by Andrew:
Jesus would go forth into Galilee; from whence he came to Jordan, to John, to be baptized by him; and which being done, and his temptations in the wilderness over, it was his will, resolution, and determination, to return to Galilee, the place of his education and conversation, till this time; and therefore chose to begin his ministry, and miracles, there, both to give honour to it, and to fulfil a prophecy in Isa 9:1; and besides this, he had doubtless another end in going thither: which was to call some other disciples that dwelt there:
and findeth Philip; as he was going to Galilee, or rather when in it; not by hap or chance; but knowing where he was, as the shepherd and bishop of souls, looked him up and found him out, and called him by his grace, and to be a disciple of his; See Gill on Mat 10:3,
and saith unto him, follow me; leave thy friends, thy calling, and business, and become a disciple of mine: and such power went along with these words, that he at once left all, and followed Christ; as the other disciples, Peter, and Andrew, James, and John, and Matthew did, as is recorded of them, though not of this; but the following history makes it appear he did.
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Gill: Joh 1:44 - -- Now Philip was of Bethsaida,.... A town on the lake of Gennesaret, afterwards made a city by Philip the tetrarch, and called Julias, after the name of...
Now Philip was of Bethsaida,.... A town on the lake of Gennesaret, afterwards made a city by Philip the tetrarch, and called Julias, after the name of Caesar's daughter m: it was a fishing town, and had its name from thence; and the disciples that were of it, were of this business:
the city of Andrew and Peter; or "Simon", as read the Syriac and Persic versions: three apostles were called out of this place, as mean, and wicked, as it was; see Mat 11:21; which was no small honour to it: it is a saying of the Jews n, that
"a man's place (his native place) does not honour him, but a man honours his place.''
This was the case here.
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Gill: Joh 1:45 - -- Philip findeth Nathanael,.... Who was of Cana of Galilee, Joh 21:2 and where, it is very likely, Philip found him; since we quickly read of Jesus, and...
Philip findeth Nathanael,.... Who was of Cana of Galilee, Joh 21:2 and where, it is very likely, Philip found him; since we quickly read of Jesus, and his disciples being there. This man is thought, by some, to be the same with Bartholomew; and so he is called Bartholomew, in a Syriac dictionary o; and the rather, since he and Philip are always mentioned together in the account of the apostles, Mat 10:3. And certain it is, from the above mentioned place, that Nathanael was among the apostles after our Lord's resurrection; and it is highly probable was one of them? his name might be Nathanael bar Tholmai, the son of Tholmai, Ptolomy, or Tholomew. It is the same name with Nethaneel, and which is read Nathanael, as here, in:
"And of the sons of Phaisur; Elionas, Massias Israel, and Nathanael, and Ocidelus and Talsas.'' (1 Esdras 9:22)
and by the Septuagint on 1Ch 2:14 Neh 12:36; and signifies one given of God; and is the same with Theodore in Greek, and Adeodatus in Latin; a doctor of this name, R. Nathaniel, is mentioned in the Jewish writings p:
and saith unto him, we have found him of whom Moses, in the law, and the prophets, did write. He does not say, that he, and Andrew, and Simon, had found the Messiah; though he designs him by this circumlocution; Nathanael being, as is generally thought, a person well versed in the law, and the prophets, and so would at once know who Philip meant: for Moses, in the law, or Pentateuch, in the five books written by him, frequently speaks of the Messiah as the seed of the woman, that should break the serpent's head; as the seed of Abraham, in whom all nations should be blessed; and as the Shiloh to whom the gathering of the people should be; and as the great prophet, like to himself, God would raise up among the children of Israel, to whom they were to hearken: and as for the prophets, they wrote of his birth of a virgin; of the place of his birth, Bethlehem; of his sufferings, and the glory, that should follow; of his resurrection from the dead, his ascension to heaven, and session at the right hand of God; and of many things relating to his person, and office, and work. And Philip having given this general account of him, proceeds to name him particularly; and affirms him to be
Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph; that his name was Jesus, which signifies a saviour; and answers to the promises, and prophecies, and character of him in the Old Testament; that he was of Nazareth, a place not above three hours walk from Cana, as Adrichomius says, where Philip and Nathanael were: Nazareth was the place where Christ had lived almost all his days hitherto, and therefore is said to be of it; though Bethlehem was the place of his birth, which Philip might not as yet know; as Capernaum afterwards was his city, or the more usual place of his residence: and that he was the son of Joseph; this Philip says, according to the common opinion of people, for he was supposed to be the son of Joseph; he having married his mother Mary.
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Gill: Joh 1:46 - -- And Nathanael said unto him,.... Taking notice of, and laying hold on what Philip said, that he was of Nazareth, which at once stumbled, and prejudice...
And Nathanael said unto him,.... Taking notice of, and laying hold on what Philip said, that he was of Nazareth, which at once stumbled, and prejudiced him against Jesus being the Messiah; knowing very well that Bethlehem was to be the place of his birth:
can there any good thing come out of Nazareth? The whole country of Galilee was had in contempt with the Jews; but Nazareth was so mean a place, that it seems it was even despised by its neighbours, by the Galilaeans themselves; for Nathanael was a Galilean, that said these words. It was so miserable a place that he could hardly think that any sort of good thing, even any worldly good thing, could come from thence; and it was so wicked, as appears from their murderous designs upon our Lord, that he thought no good man could arise from hence; and still less, any prophet, any person of great note; and still least of all, that that good thing, or person, the Messiah, should spring from it: so that his objection, and prejudice, proceeded not only upon the oracle in Mic 5:2, which points out Bethlehem as the birthplace of the Messiah; but upon the wickedness, and meanness, and obscurity of Nazareth,
Philip saith unto him, come and see; who though he might not be master of this point, and knew not how to solve this difficulty, and remove this prejudice from Nathanael's mind, yet persuades him to go with him to Jesus; who, he doubted not, would give him full satisfaction in this, and all other points; and then it would most clearly appear to him, as it had done to him, that he was the true Messiah. The phrase,
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Gill: Joh 1:47 - -- Jesus saw Nathanael coming to him,.... For notwithstanding his prejudices, he was a man of so much uprightness and honesty, that he thought Philip's r...
Jesus saw Nathanael coming to him,.... For notwithstanding his prejudices, he was a man of so much uprightness and honesty, that he thought Philip's request was very reasonable; and that it was but right, and fair, that he should see, and hear, and judge, for himself, whether the person Philip spoke of was the Messiah, or not; and therefore he came along with him; and as he was coming, Jesus saw him, who knew all that had passed between him and Philip:
and saith of him; to those that were standing by him, and in the hearing of Nathanael,
behold an Israelite indeed! a son of Israel, as the Syriac and Persic versions read; a true son of Jacob's; an honest, plain hearted man, like him; one that was an Israelite at heart; inwardly so; not one after the flesh only, but after the Spirit; see Rom 2:28; and which was a rare thing at that time; and therefore a note of admiration is prefixed to it; for all were not Israel, that were of Israel; and indeed but a very few then: and so,
in whom there is no guile; not that he was without sin; nor is this said of him; nor was he in such sense without guile, as Christ himself was; but guile was not a governing sin in him: the course of his life, and conversation, was with great integrity, and uprightness, and without any prevailing hypocrisy and deceit, either to God, or men. This Christ said to show how much such a character is approved by him; and that he knew the secrets of men's hearts, and the inward frames of their minds,
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Gill: Joh 1:48 - -- Nathanael saith unto him, whence knowest thou me?.... This he said as one surprised, that he, who was a stranger to him, should hit upon his general c...
Nathanael saith unto him, whence knowest thou me?.... This he said as one surprised, that he, who was a stranger to him, should hit upon his general character, and describe the internal state and frame of his soul: this was more surprising to him, than if he had called him by his name Nathanael, as he did Simon; or had said what was the place, of his abode; Cana of Galilee; since this ordinarily was only to be observed, and learned, from a long and familiar acquaintance and conversation: by Nathanael's reply, it looks as if he had no doubt, or fears, about the character Christ gave him; but rather, that he believed it, as every good man must be conscious to himself of his own integrity; only it was amazing to him, how he should know it:
Jesus answered and said unto him; in order to satisfy him, how he could know this inward temper of his mind, and to give him some undeniable proofs of his omniscience, which he himself must acknowledge, being such as none but an all seeing eye could discover:
before that Philip called thee, when thou wast under the fig tree, I saw thee; in which words Christ gives two instances of his omniscience; the one is, that he knew Philip had called him; he was privy to all that passed between them, though they were alone, and the conversation was had in the most private manner. Christ knew what an account Philip had given of him, and what objection Nathanael had made; and what an invitation Philip had given him to go along with him to Christ, and judge for himself; which is here meant by calling him, and with which he complied: and the other is, that he saw him under the fig tree before that: he was sitting under it, as men in those countries used to do; see Mic 4:4, where he might be reading the Scriptures, and meditating upon them; and if, as some observe, he was reading, and thinking upon Jacob's dream, concerning the ladder which reached from earth to heaven, and on which he saw the angels of God ascending and descending, the words of Christ in Joh 1:51 must strike him with fresh surprise, and give him another convincing proof of his omniscience: or he might be praying here in secret, and so acted a different part from the generality, of religious men of that nation, who chose to pray in synagogues, and corners of the streets, that they might be seen; and likewise proved him to be what Christ had said of him, a true and rare Israelite, without guile and hypocrisy, which were so visible and prevailing among others. It was usual with the doctors to read, and study in the law, under fig trees, and sometimes, though rarely, to pray there. It is said t,
"R. Jacob, and his companions, were "sitting", studying in the law,
And the rule they give about praying, on, or under one, is thus u:
"he that prays on the top of an olive tree, or on the top of a "fig tree", or on any other trees, must come down, and "pray below".
It is said of Nathanael, in the Syriac dictionary x; that his mother laid him under a fig tree, when the infants were slain, i.e. at Bethlehem; which, if it could be depended upon, must be to Nathanael a surprising and undeniable proof of the deity of Christ, and of his being the true Messiah; since, at that time, he was an infant of days himself, and was the person Herod was seeking to destroy, as the Messiah, and king of the Jews,
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Gill: Joh 1:49 - -- Nathanael answered and saith unto him,.... Being fully convinced of his omniscience by these instances:
Rabbi; that is, master, as it is interprete...
Nathanael answered and saith unto him,.... Being fully convinced of his omniscience by these instances:
Rabbi; that is, master, as it is interpreted in Joh 1:38, and is not here, because it is there:
thou art the Son of God; not by creation, for this would be to say no more of him, than may be said of every man; nor by adoption, for in that sense Nathanael himself was a Son of God, and many others; nor on account of his wonderful incarnation, which, it is very likely, at this time Nathanael knew nothing of; nor by reason of his resurrection from the dead, which, as yet, was not, and still less might be known by this person; nor because of his office, as Mediator, for this is expressed in the next clause; but by nature, as being of the same essence, and possessed of the same perfections God is; and of which he was convinced by the instances he gave of his omniscience; for it was from hence, and no other consideration, that he concludes him to be the Son of God: wherefore this phrase must be understood of him, not as Mediator, but as a divine person; as the natural, essential, and eternal Son of God; and who is truly and properly God: he adds,
thou art the King of Israel; having in view, no doubt, the passage in Psa 2:6, where the characters of Son of God, and King of Zion, meet in the same person: not King of Israel, in a literal sense; though he was the son of David, and a descendant of his in a right line, and was of the royal line, and had a legal right to the throne of Israel; and Nathanael might have a view to this, being tinctured with the common national prejudice, that the Messiah would be a temporal prince: but his kingdom is not of this world; nor with observation; but is spiritual; and he is a King over Israel in a spiritual sense, even of saints, whether Jews or Gentiles: whom he conquers by his power, and rules in their hearts by his Spirit, and grace; and protects, and defends them from all their enemies.
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Gill: Joh 1:50 - -- Jesus answered and said unto him,.... Not as reproving him for his faith, as if he was too credulous, and too easily gave into the belief of Christ, a...
Jesus answered and said unto him,.... Not as reproving him for his faith, as if he was too credulous, and too easily gave into the belief of Christ, as the Son of God, and true Messiah, upon these single expressions of his; but as approving of it, and surprised at it:
because I said unto thee, I saw thee under the fig tree, believest thou? some read the words, not by way of interrogation, but as an assertion; "thou believest", or "hast believed", as the Vulgate Latin, Arabic, and Persic versions:
thou shall see greater things than these; meaning that he should have larger discoveries of his person, nature, and perfections, and should see things done by him, much more surprising than any thing he had seen yet; referring to the miracles of raising the dead, casting out devils, and healing all manner of diseases.
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Gill: Joh 1:51 - -- And he saith unto him, verily, verily, I say unto you,.... Not only to Nathanael, but to the rest of the disciples that were then with him; and to sho...
And he saith unto him, verily, verily, I say unto you,.... Not only to Nathanael, but to the rest of the disciples that were then with him; and to show himself to be the "Amen", and faithful witness, as well as more strongly to asseverate what he was about to say, he doubles the expression:
hereafter you shall see heaven open; either in a literal sense, as it had been at his baptism; or, in a mystical sense, that there should be a clearer manifestation of heavenly truths made by his ministry; and that the way into the holiest of all should be made more manifest; and a more familiar intercourse he opened between God and his people; and also between angels and saints:
and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the son of man; or to the son of man, as the Syriac, Arabic, and Ethiopic versions render it; meaning himself in human nature; the second Adam, and seed of the woman; and is expressive both of the truth, and infirmity of that nature. Reference may here be had to the ladder Jacob dreamed of, in Gen 28:12, which was a representation of Christ, in his person, as God-man; who, as God, was in heaven, whilst he, as man, was on earth; and in his office, as Mediator between God and man, making peace between them both; and in the ministration of angels to him in person, and to his body the church. And it is observable, that some of the Jewish writers y understand the ascent, and descent of the angels, in Gen 28:12, to be, not upon the ladder, but upon Jacob; which makes the phrase there still more agreeable to this; and so they render
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Joh 1:22; Joh 1:23; Joh 1:23; Joh 1:23; Joh 1:24; Joh 1:24; Joh 1:25; Joh 1:25; Joh 1:25; Joh 1:26; Joh 1:26; Joh 1:27; Joh 1:27; Joh 1:27; Joh 1:28; Joh 1:28; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:29; Joh 1:30; Joh 1:31; Joh 1:31; Joh 1:32; Joh 1:32; Joh 1:32; Joh 1:32; Joh 1:32; Joh 1:34; Joh 1:35; Joh 1:35; Joh 1:36; Joh 1:37; Joh 1:37; Joh 1:37; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:38; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:39; Joh 1:40; Joh 1:40; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:41; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:42; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:43; Joh 1:44; Joh 1:44; Joh 1:45; Joh 1:45; Joh 1:46; Joh 1:46; Joh 1:46; Joh 1:46; Joh 1:46; Joh 1:47; Joh 1:47; Joh 1:47; Joh 1:48; Joh 1:48; Joh 1:49; Joh 1:49; Joh 1:50; Joh 1:50; Joh 1:51; Joh 1:51; Joh 1:51
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NET Notes: Joh 1:27 The term refers to the leather strap or thong used to bind a sandal. This is often viewed as a collective singular and translated as a plural, “...
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NET Notes: Joh 1:29 Gen 22:8 is an important passage in the background of the title Lamb of God as applied to Jesus. In Jewish thought this was held to be a supremely imp...
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NET Notes: Joh 1:31 John the Baptist, who has been so reluctant to elaborate his own role, now more than willingly gives his testimony about Jesus. For the author, the em...
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NET Notes: Joh 1:32 John says the Spirit remained on Jesus. The Greek verb μένω (menw) is a favorite Johannine word, used 40 times in the Gospel and 2...
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NET Notes: Joh 1:34 ‡ What did John the Baptist declare about Jesus on this occasion? Did he say, “This is the Son of God” (οὗτό ...
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NET Notes: Joh 1:36 This section (1:35-51) is joined to the preceding by the literary expedient of repeating the Baptist’s testimony about Jesus being the Lamb of G...
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NET Notes: Joh 1:37 The expression followed Jesus pictures discipleship, which means that to learn from Jesus is to follow him as the guiding priority of one’s life...
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NET Notes: Joh 1:39 About four o’clock in the afternoon. What system of time reckoning is the author using? B. F. Westcott thought John, unlike the synoptic gospels...
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NET Notes: Joh 1:40 Grk “him”; the referent (Jesus) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
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NET Notes: Joh 1:42 This is a parenthetical note by the author. The change of name from Simon to Cephas is indicative of the future role he will play. Only John among the...
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NET Notes: Joh 1:44 Probably ἀπό (apo) indicates “originally from” in the sense of birthplace rather than current residence; Mark 1:21, 29 see...
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NET Notes: Joh 1:48 Many have speculated about what Nathanael was doing under the fig tree. Meditating on the Messiah who was to come? A good possibility, since the fig t...
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NET Notes: Joh 1:49 Nathanael’s confession – You are the Son of God; you are the King of Israel – is best understood as a confession of Jesus’ mes...
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NET Notes: Joh 1:50 What are the greater things Jesus had in mind? In the narrative this forms an excellent foreshadowing of the miraculous signs which began at Cana of G...
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NET Notes: Joh 1:51 The title Son of Man appears 13 times in John’s Gospel. It is associated especially with the themes of crucifixion (3:14; 8:28), revelation (6:2...
Geneva Bible: Joh 1:24 ( 12 ) And they which were sent were of the Pharisees.
( 12 ) Christ is the author of baptism, and not John: and therefore the authority of this does...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:25 And they asked him, and said unto him, ( l ) Why baptizest thou then, if thou be not that Christ, nor Elias, neither that prophet?
( l ) By this we m...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:26 John answered them, saying, I baptize with water: but there standeth one ( m ) among you, whom ye know not;
( m ) Whom all the world sees, and sees e...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:29 ( 13 ) The next day John seeth Jesus coming unto him, and saith, Behold ( n ) the Lamb of God, which ( o ) taketh away the ( p ) sin of the world.
( ...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:31 And ( q ) I knew him not: but that he should be made manifest to Israel, therefore am I come baptizing with water.
( q ) I never knew him by face bef...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:32 ( 14 ) And John bare record, saying, I saw the Spirit descending from heaven like a dove, and it abode upon him.
( 14 ) Christ is proved to be the So...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:34 And I saw, and bare record that this is ( r ) the Son of God.
( r ) This word "the" points out to us some excellent thing, and makes a distinction be...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:35 ( 15 ) Again the next day after John stood, and two of his disciples;
( 15 ) John gathers disciples not to himself, but to Christ.
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:36 ( 16 ) And looking upon Jesus as he walked, he saith, Behold the Lamb of God!
( 16 ) Christ is set before us to follow, not as a vain shadow, but as ...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:37 ( 17 ) And the two disciples heard him speak, and they followed Jesus.
( 17 ) In this first gathering of the disciples we have shown to us that the b...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:38 Then Jesus turned, and saw them following, and saith unto them, What seek ye? They said unto him, Rabbi, (which is to say, being interpreted, Master,)...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:39 He saith unto them, Come and see. They came and saw where he dwelt, and abode with him that day: for it was about the ( t ) tenth hour.
( t ) It was ...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:41 He first findeth his own brother Simon, and saith unto him, We have found the Messias, which is, being interpreted, the ( u ) Christ.
( u ) That is, ...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:45 ( 18 ) Philip findeth Nathanael, and saith unto him, We have found him, of whom Moses in the law, and the prophets, did write, Jesus of Nazareth, the ...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:46 ( 19 ) And Nathanael said unto him, Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth? Philip saith unto him, Come and see.
( 19 ) We must especially tak...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:47 ( 20 ) Jesus saw Nathanael coming to him, and saith of him, Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile!
( 20 ) Simple uprightness discerns the t...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:48 ( 21 ) Nathanael saith unto him, Whence knowest thou me? Jesus answered and said unto him, Before that Philip called thee, when thou wast under the fi...
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Geneva Bible: Joh 1:51 And he saith unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Hereafter ye shall see heaven open, and the angels of God ( x ) ascending and descending upon t...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Joh 1:1-51
TSK Synopsis: Joh 1:1-51 - --1 The divinity, humanity, office, and incarnation of Jesus Christ.15 The testimony of John.39 The calling of Andrew, Peter, etc.
Combined Bible -> Joh 1:19-34; Joh 1:35-51
Combined Bible: Joh 1:19-34 - --of the Gospel of John
CHAPTER 4
Christ’ s Forerunner
John 1:19-34
Following our usual ...
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Combined Bible: Joh 1:35-51 - --of the Gospel of John
CHAPTER 5
CHRIST AND HIS FIRST DISCIPLES
John 1:35-51
We first submit...
Maclaren: Joh 1:29 - --The World's Sin-Bearer
The next day John seeth Jesus coming unto him, and saith, Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world.'--Jo...
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Maclaren: Joh 1:37-39 - --The First Disciples: I John And Andrew
And the two disciples heard Him speak, and they followed Jesus. 38. Then Jesus turned, and saw them following,...
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Maclaren: Joh 1:40-42 - --The First Disciples: II. Simon Peter
One of the two which heard John speak, and followed him, was Andrew, Simon Peter's brother. 41. He first findeth...
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Maclaren: Joh 1:43 - --The First Disciples: III. Philip
The day following Jesus would go forth into Galilee, and findeth Philip, and saith unto him, Follow Me.'--John 1:43....
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Maclaren: Joh 1:45-49 - --The First Disciples: IV. Nathanael
Philip findeth Nathanael, and saith unto him, We have found Him, of whom Moses in the law, and the prophets, did w...
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Maclaren: Joh 1:50-51 - --The First Disciples: V. Believing And Seeing
Jesus answered and said unto him. Because I said unto thee, I saw thee under the fig tree, believest tho...
MHCC: Joh 1:19-28 - --John disowns himself to be the Christ, who was now expected and waited for. He came in the spirit and power of Elias, but he was not the person of Eli...
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MHCC: Joh 1:29-36 - --John saw Jesus coming to him, and pointed him out as the Lamb of God. The paschal lamb, in the shedding and sprinkling of its blood, the roasting and ...
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MHCC: Joh 1:37-42 - --The strongest and most prevailing argument with an awakened soul to follow Christ, is, that it is he only who takes away sin. Whatever communion there...
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MHCC: Joh 1:43-51 - --See the nature of true Christianity, it is following Jesus; devoting ourselves to him, and treading in his steps. Observe the objection Nathanael made...
Matthew Henry: Joh 1:19-28 - -- We have here the testimony of John, which he delivered to the messengers who were sent from Jerusalem to examine him. Observe here, I. Who they were...
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Matthew Henry: Joh 1:29-36 - -- We have in these verses an account of John's testimony concerning Jesus Christ, which he witnessed to his own disciples that followed him. As soon a...
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Matthew Henry: Joh 1:37-42 - -- We have here the turning over of two disciples from John to Jesus, and one of them fetching in a third, and these are the first-fruits of Christ's d...
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Matthew Henry: Joh 1:43-51 - -- We have here the call of Philip and Nathanael. I. Philip was called immediately by Christ himself, not as Andrew, who was directed to Christ by John...
Barclay -> Joh 1:19-28; Joh 1:19-28; Joh 1:29-31; Joh 1:32-34; Joh 1:35-39; Joh 1:40-42; Joh 1:43-51
Barclay: Joh 1:19-28 - --With this passage John begins the narrative part of his gospel. In the prologue he has shown what he intends to do; he is writing his gospel to demo...
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Barclay: Joh 1:19-28 - --The emissaries of the orthodox could think of three things that John might claim to be.
(i) They asked him if he was the Messiah. The Jews were waiti...
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Barclay: Joh 1:29-31 - --Here we come to the second day of this momentous week in the life of Jesus. By this time his baptism and his temptations were past and he was about t...
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Barclay: Joh 1:32-34 - --Something had happened at the baptism of Jesus which had convinced John beyond all doubt that Jesus was the Son of God. As the fathers of the church ...
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Barclay: Joh 1:35-39 - --Never was a passage of scripture fuller of little revealing touches than this.
Once again we see John the Baptist pointing beyond himself. He must ha...
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Barclay: Joh 1:40-42 - --The Revised Standard Version has it that Andrew "first found his brother Simon." In the Greek manuscripts there are two readings. Some manuscripts ...
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Barclay: Joh 1:43-51 - --At this point in the story Jesus left the south and went north to Galilee. There, perhaps in Cana, he found and called Philip. Philip, like Andre...
Constable: Joh 1:19--13:1 - --II. Jesus' public ministry 1:19--12:50
The first part of the body of John's Gospel records Jesus' public ministr...
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Constable: Joh 1:19-51 - --A. The prelude to Jesus' public ministry 1:19-51
The rest of the first chapter continues the introductor...
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Constable: Joh 1:19-28 - --1. John the Baptist's veiled testimony to Jesus 1:19-28
The writer recorded John the Baptist's witness to Jesus' identity as preparation for his narra...
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Constable: Joh 1:29-34 - --2. John the Baptist's open identification of Jesus 1:29-34
John the Baptist continued his witness to Jesus' identity by identifying Him publicly as th...
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Constable: Joh 1:35-42 - --3. The response to John the Baptist's witness 1:35-42
The writer now turned his attention from John the Baptist's witness to Jesus to record the react...
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Constable: Joh 1:43-51 - --4. The witness of Philip and Andrew 1:43-51
The disciples of John were not the only men who began following Jesus. Andrew continued to bring other fri...
College -> Joh 1:1-51
College: Joh 1:1-51 - --JOHN 1
I. JESUS MANIFESTS HIMSELF (HIS GLORY)
TO THE WORLD (1:1-12:50)
A. THE PROLOGUE (1:1-18)
For an inscription or title manuscripts a and B re...
McGarvey -> Joh 1:19-34; Joh 1:35-51
McGarvey: Joh 1:19-34 - --
XX.
JOHN'S FIRST TESTIMONY TO JESUS.
(Bethany beyond Jordan, February, A. D. 27.)
dJOHN I. 19-34.
d19 And this is the witness of J...
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McGarvey: Joh 1:35-51 - --
XXI.
JESUS MAKES HIS FIRST DISCIPLES.
(Bethany beyond Jordan, Spring A. D. 27.)
dJOHN I. 35-51.
d35 Again on the morrow [John's di...
Lapide -> Joh 1:1-51; Joh 1:14-51
Lapide: Joh 1:1-51 - --
THE
HOLY GOSPEL OF JESUS CHRIST,
ACCORDING TO JOHN.
T
HIS is the title in the Greek and Latin codices. In the Syriac it is as follows, Th...
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Lapide: Joh 1:14-51 - --Was made : not that the Word was changed into flesh, or flesh into the Word, for, as S. Chrysostom says, "far from that immortal nature is transmutati...
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expand allCommentary -- Other
Contradiction: Joh 1:32 42. John the Baptist did (Matthew 3:13-14) or did not (John 1:32-33) recognize Jesus before his baptism?
(Category: misunderstood the author's inte...
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Contradiction: Joh 1:33 42. John the Baptist did (Matthew 3:13-14) or did not (John 1:32-33) recognize Jesus before his baptism?
(Category: misunderstood the author's inte...
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Contradiction: Joh 1:35 99. Did Jesus go immediately to the desert after his baptism (Mark 1:12-13), or did he first go to Galilee, see disciples, and attend a wedding (Joh...
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Contradiction: Joh 1:41 37. Simon Peter finds out that Jesus was the Christ by a revelation from heaven (Matthew 16:17), or by His brother Andrew (John 1:41)?
(Category: t...
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Contradiction: Joh 1:42 38. Jesus first met Simon Peter and Andrew by the Sea of Galilee (Matthew 4:18-22), or on the banks of the river Jordan (John 1:42-43)?
(Category: ...
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Contradiction: Joh 1:43 38. Jesus first met Simon Peter and Andrew by the Sea of Galilee (Matthew 4:18-22), or on the banks of the river Jordan (John 1:42-43)?
(Category: ...
Critics Ask: Joh 1:33 JOHN 1:33 —Did John the Baptist know Jesus before His baptism or not? PROBLEM: Before His baptism John said categorically, “I did not know Hi...
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Critics Ask: Joh 1:37 JOHN 1:37-49 —Were the apostles called at this time or later? PROBLEM: John records that Jesus called Andrew, Peter, Philip, Nathanael, and ano...
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Critics Ask: Joh 1:38 JOHN 1:37-49 —Were the apostles called at this time or later? PROBLEM: John records that Jesus called Andrew, Peter, Philip, Nathanael, and ano...
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Critics Ask: Joh 1:39 JOHN 1:37-49 —Were the apostles called at this time or later? PROBLEM: John records that Jesus called Andrew, Peter, Philip, Nathanael, and ano...
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Critics Ask: Joh 1:40 JOHN 1:37-49 —Were the apostles called at this time or later? PROBLEM: John records that Jesus called Andrew, Peter, Philip, Nathanael, and ano...
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Critics Ask: Joh 1:41 JOHN 1:37-49 —Were the apostles called at this time or later? PROBLEM: John records that Jesus called Andrew, Peter, Philip, Nathanael, and ano...
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Critics Ask: Joh 1:42 JOHN 1:37-49 —Were the apostles called at this time or later? PROBLEM: John records that Jesus called Andrew, Peter, Philip, Nathanael, and ano...
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Critics Ask: Joh 1:43 JOHN 1:37-49 —Were the apostles called at this time or later? PROBLEM: John records that Jesus called Andrew, Peter, Philip, Nathanael, and ano...
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Critics Ask: Joh 1:44 JOHN 1:37-49 —Were the apostles called at this time or later? PROBLEM: John records that Jesus called Andrew, Peter, Philip, Nathanael, and ano...
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Critics Ask: Joh 1:45 JOHN 1:37-49 —Were the apostles called at this time or later? PROBLEM: John records that Jesus called Andrew, Peter, Philip, Nathanael, and ano...
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Critics Ask: Joh 1:46 JOHN 1:37-49 —Were the apostles called at this time or later? PROBLEM: John records that Jesus called Andrew, Peter, Philip, Nathanael, and ano...
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Critics Ask: Joh 1:47 JOHN 1:37-49 —Were the apostles called at this time or later? PROBLEM: John records that Jesus called Andrew, Peter, Philip, Nathanael, and ano...
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Critics Ask: Joh 1:48 JOHN 1:37-49 —Were the apostles called at this time or later? PROBLEM: John records that Jesus called Andrew, Peter, Philip, Nathanael, and ano...
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Critics Ask: Joh 1:49 JOHN 1:37-49 —Were the apostles called at this time or later? PROBLEM: John records that Jesus called Andrew, Peter, Philip, Nathanael, and ano...
Evidence: Joh 1:32 Messianic prophecy fulfilled : " And the spirit of the LORD shall rest upon him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and mig...
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Evidence: Joh 1:40 " I believe that lack of efficient personal work is one of the failures of the Church today. The people of the Church are like squirrels in a cage. Lo...
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Evidence: Joh 1:41 After we have found the Messiah, we are to tell others about Him. The only " failure" when it comes to reaching out to the lost is not to be doing it...
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Evidence: Joh 1:46 Come and see. Jesus called Philip to follow Him, then Philip immediately found Nathanael and told him about the Savior. Nathanael’s question is a ty...
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