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Text -- John 1:3 (NET)

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1:3 All things were created by him, and apart from him not one thing was created that has been created.
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Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Joh 1:3 - -- All things ( panta ). The philosophical phrase was ta panta (the all things) as we have it in 1Co 8:6; Rom 11:36; Col 1:16. In Joh 1:10 John uses h...

All things ( panta ).

The philosophical phrase was ta panta (the all things) as we have it in 1Co 8:6; Rom 11:36; Col 1:16. In Joh 1:10 John uses ho kosmos (the orderly universe) for the whole.

Robertson: Joh 1:3 - -- Were made ( egeneto). Second aorist middle indicative of ginomai , the constative aorist covering the creative activity looked at as one event in cont...

Were made ( egeneto).

Second aorist middle indicative of ginomai , the constative aorist covering the creative activity looked at as one event in contrast with the continuous existence of ēn in Joh 1:1 and Joh 1:2. All things "came into being."Creation is thus presented as a becoming (ginomai ) in contrast with being (eimi ).

Robertson: Joh 1:3 - -- By him ( di' autou ). By means of him as the intermediate agent in the work of creation. The Logos is John’ s explanation of the creation of the...

By him ( di' autou ).

By means of him as the intermediate agent in the work of creation. The Logos is John’ s explanation of the creation of the universe. The author of Hebrews (Heb 1:2) names God’ s Son as the one "through whom he made the ages."Paul pointedly asserts that "the all things were created in him"(Christ) and "the all things stand created through him and unto him"(Col 1:16). Hence it is not a peculiar doctrine that John here enunciates. In 1Co 8:6, Paul distinguishes between the Father as the primary source (ex hou ) of the all things and the Son as the intermediate agent as here (di' hou ).

Robertson: Joh 1:3 - -- Without him ( chōris autou ). Old adverbial preposition with the ablative as in Phi 2:14, "apart from."John adds the negative statement for complet...

Without him ( chōris autou ).

Old adverbial preposition with the ablative as in Phi 2:14, "apart from."John adds the negative statement for completion, another note of his style as in Joh 1:20; 1Jo 1:5. Thus John excludes two heresies (Bernard) that matter is eternal and that angels or aeons had a share in creation.

Robertson: Joh 1:3 - -- Not anything ( oude hen ). "Not even one thing."Bernard thinks the entire Prologue is a hymn and divides it into strophes. That is by no means certai...

Not anything ( oude hen ).

"Not even one thing."Bernard thinks the entire Prologue is a hymn and divides it into strophes. That is by no means certain. It is doubtful also whether the relative clause "that hath been made"(ho gegonen ) is a part of this sentence or begins a new one as Westcott and Hort print it. The verb is second perfect active indicative of ginomai . Westcott observes that the ancient scholars before Chrysostom all began a new sentence with ho gegonen . The early uncials had no punctuation.

Vincent: Joh 1:3 - -- All things ( πάντα ) Regarded severally . The reference is to the infinite detail of creation, rather than to creation as a whole, whic...

All things ( πάντα )

Regarded severally . The reference is to the infinite detail of creation, rather than to creation as a whole, which is expressed by τὰ πάντα , the all (Col 1:16). For this reason John avoids the word κόσμος , the world , which denotes the world as a great system. Hence Bengel, quoted by Meyer, is wrong in referring to κόσμῳ ( the world ) of Joh 1:10 as a parallel.

Vincent: Joh 1:3 - -- Were made ( ἐγένετο ) Literally, came into being , or became . Expressing the passage from nothingness into being, and the unfol...

Were made ( ἐγένετο )

Literally, came into being , or became . Expressing the passage from nothingness into being, and the unfolding of a divine order. Compare Joh 1:14, Joh 1:17. Three words are used in the New Testament to express the act of creation: κτίζειν , to create (Rev 4:11; Rev 10:6; Col 1:16); ποιεῖν , to make (Rev 14:7; Mar 10:6), both of which refer to the Creator; and γίγνεσθαι , to become , which refers to that which is created. In Mar 10:6, both words occur. " From the beginning of the creation (κτίσεως ) God made " (ἐποίησεν ). So in Eph 2:10 : " We are His workmanship (ποίημα ), created (κτισθέντες ) in Christ Jesus." Here the distinction is between the absolute being expressed by ἦν (see on Joh 1:1), and the coming into being of creation (ἐγένετο ). The same contrast occurs in Joh 1:6, Joh 1:9. " A man sent from God came into being " (ἐγένετο ); " the true Light was " (ἦν ).

" The main conception of creation which is present in the writings of St. John is expressed by the first notice which he makes of it: All things came into being through the Word . This statement sets aside the notions of eternal matter and of inherent evil in matter. 'There was when' the world 'was not' (Joh 17:5, Joh 17:24); and, by implication, all things as made were good. The agency of the Word, 'who was God,' again excludes both the idea of a Creator essentially inferior to God, and the idea of an abstract Monotheism in which there is no living relation between the creature and the Creator; for as all things come into being 'through' the Word, so they are supported 'in' Him (Joh 1:3; compare Col 1:16 sq.; Heb 1:3). And yet more, the use of the term ἐγένετο , came into being , as distinguished from ἐκτίσθη , were created , suggests the thought that creation is to be regarded (according to our apprehension) as a manifestation of a divine law of love. Thus creation ( all things came into being through Him ) answers to the Incarnation ( the Word became flesh ). All the unfolding and infolding of finite being to the last issue lies in the fulfillment of His will who is love" (Westcott, on 1Jo 2:17).

Vincent: Joh 1:3 - -- By Him ( δἰ αὐτοῦ ) Literally, through him. The preposition διά is generally used to denote the working of God through some ...

By Him ( δἰ αὐτοῦ )

Literally, through him. The preposition διά is generally used to denote the working of God through some secondary agency, as διὰ τοῦ προφήτου , through the prophet (Mat 1:22, on which see note). It is the preposition by which the relation of Christ to creation is usually expressed (see 1Co 8:6; Col 1:16; Heb 1:2), though it is occasionally used of the Father (Heb 2:10; Rom 11:36, and Gal 1:1, where it is used of both). Hence, as Godet remarks, it " does not lower the Word to the rank of a simple instrument," but merely implies a different relation to creation on the part of the Father and the Son.

Vincent: Joh 1:3 - -- Without ( χωρὶς ) Literally, apart from . Compare Joh 15:5.

Without ( χωρὶς )

Literally, apart from . Compare Joh 15:5.

Vincent: Joh 1:3 - -- Was not anything made that was made ( ἐγένετο οὐδὲ ἕν ὁ γέγονεν ). Many authorities place the period after ...

Was not anything made that was made ( ἐγένετο οὐδὲ ἕν ὁ γέγονεν ).

Many authorities place the period after ἕν , and join ὁ γένονεν with what follows, rendering, " without Him was not anything made. That which hath been made was life in Him."

Vincent: Joh 1:3 - -- Made ( ἐγένετο ) As before, came into being .

Made ( ἐγένετο )

As before, came into being .

Vincent: Joh 1:3 - -- Not anything ( οὐδὲ ἓν ) Literally, not even one thing . Compare on πάντα ( all things ) at the beginning of this ...

Not anything ( οὐδὲ ἓν )

Literally, not even one thing . Compare on πάντα ( all things ) at the beginning of this verse.

Vincent: Joh 1:3 - -- That was made ( ὁ γέγονεν ) Rev., more correctly, that hath been made , observing the force of the perfect tense as distinguis...

That was made ( ὁ γέγονεν )

Rev., more correctly, that hath been made , observing the force of the perfect tense as distinguished from the aorist (ἐγένετο ) The latter tense points back to the work of creation considered as a definite act or series of acts in the beginning of time. The perfect tense indicates the continuance of things created; so that the full idea is, that which hath been made and exists . The combination of a positive and negative clause (compare Joh 1:20) is characteristic of John's style, as also of James'. See note on " wanting nothing," Jam 1:4.

Wesley: Joh 1:3 - -- All things beside God were made, and all things which were made, were made by the Word. In Joh 1:1-2 is described the state of things before the creat...

All things beside God were made, and all things which were made, were made by the Word. In Joh 1:1-2 is described the state of things before the creation: Joh 1:3, In the creation: Joh 1:4, In the time of man's innocency: Joh 1:5, In the time of man's corruption.

JFB: Joh 1:3 - -- All things absolutely (as is evident from Joh 1:10; 1Co 8:6; Col 1:16-17; but put beyond question by what follows).

All things absolutely (as is evident from Joh 1:10; 1Co 8:6; Col 1:16-17; but put beyond question by what follows).

JFB: Joh 1:3 - -- Not one thing.

Not one thing.

JFB: Joh 1:3 - -- Brought into being.

Brought into being.

JFB: Joh 1:3 - -- This is a denial of the eternity and non-creation of matter, which was held by the whole thinking world outside of Judaism and Christianity: or rather...

This is a denial of the eternity and non-creation of matter, which was held by the whole thinking world outside of Judaism and Christianity: or rather, its proper creation was never so much as dreamt of save by the children of revealed religion.

Clarke: Joh 1:3 - -- All things were made by him - That is, by this Logos. In Gen 1:1, God is said to have created all things: in this verse, Christ is said to have crea...

All things were made by him - That is, by this Logos. In Gen 1:1, God is said to have created all things: in this verse, Christ is said to have created all things: the same unerring Spirit spoke in Moses and in the evangelists: therefore Christ and the Father are One. To say that Christ made all things by a delegated power from God is absurd; because the thing is impossible. Creation means causing that to exist that had no previous being: this is evidently a work which can be effected only by omnipotence. Now, God cannot delegate his omnipotence to another: were this possible, he to whom this omnipotence was delegated would, in consequence, become God; and he from whom it was delegated would cease to be such: for it is impossible that there should be two omnipotent beings

On these important passages I find that many eminently learned men differ from me: it seems they cannot be of my opinion, and I feel I cannot be of theirs. May He, who is the Light and the Truth, guide them and me into all truth!

Calvin: Joh 1:3 - -- 3.All things were made by him. Having affirmed that the Speech is God, and having asserted his eternal essence, he now proves his Divinity from his w...

3.All things were made by him. Having affirmed that the Speech is God, and having asserted his eternal essence, he now proves his Divinity from his works. And this is the practical knowledge, to which we ought to be chiefly accustomed; for the mere name of God attributed to Christ will affect us little, if our faith do not feel it to be such by experience. In reference to the Son of God, he makes an assertion which strictly and properly applies to his person. Sometimes, indeed, Paul simply declares that all things are by God, (Rom 11:36) but whenever the Son is compared with the Father, he is usually distinguished by this mark. Accordingly, the ordinary mode of expression is here employed, that the Father made all things by the Son, and that all things are by God through the Son. Now the design of the Evangelist is, as I have already said, to show that no sooner was the world created than the Speech of God came forth into external operation; for having formerly been incomprehensible in his essence, he then became publicly known by the effect of his power. There are some, indeed, even among philosophers, who make God to be the Master-builder of the world in such a manner as to ascribe to him intelligence in framing this work. So far they are in the right, for they agree with Scripture; but as they immediately fly off into frivolous speculations, there is no reason why we should eagerly desire to have their testimonies; but, on the contrary, we ought to be satisfied with this inspired declaration, well knowing that it conveys far more than our mind is able to comprehend.

And without him was not any thing made that was made. Though there is a variety of readings in this passage, yet for my own part, I have no hesitation in taking it continuously thus: not any thing was made that was made; and in this almost all the Greek manuscripts, or at least those of them which are most approved, are found to agree; besides, the sense requires it. Those who separate the words, which was made, from the preceding clause, so as to connect them with the following one, bring out a forced sense: what was made was in him life; that is, lived, or was sustained in life. 13 But they will never show that this mode of expression is, in any instance, applied to creatures. Augustine, who is excessively addicted to the philosophy of Plato, is carried along, according to custom, to the doctrine of ideas; that before God made the world, he had the form of the whole building conceived in his mind; and so the life of those things which did not yet exist was in Christ, because the creation of the world was appointed in him. But how widely different this is From the intention of the Evangelist we shall immediately see.

I now return to the former clause. This is not a faulty redundancy, (περιττολογία) as it appears to be; for as Satan endeavors, by every possible method, to take any thing from Christ, the Evangelist intended to declare expressly, that of those things which have been made there is no exception whatever.

Defender: Joh 1:3 - -- This is an emphatic statement declaring that Jesus Christ, before His incarnation, had made everything in the universe. He is the God of Gen 1:1; the ...

This is an emphatic statement declaring that Jesus Christ, before His incarnation, had made everything in the universe. He is the God of Gen 1:1; the God of all creation. Furthermore, note that "all things were made." They are not now being made, as the concept of evolution requires. The Creator rested from all His work of creating after the six days of the creation week (Gen 2:1-3). Also, note the past tense in such passages as Col 1:16 and Heb 1:2, Heb 1:3."

TSK: Joh 1:3 - -- am 1, bc 4004, Joh 1:10, Joh 5:17-19; Gen 1:1, Gen 1:26; Psa 33:6, Psa 102:25; Isa 45:12, Isa 45:18; Eph 3:9; Col 1:16, Col 1:17; Heb 1:2, Heb 1:3, He...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Joh 1:3 - -- All things - The universe. The expression cannot be limited to any part of the universe. It appropriately expresses everything which exists - a...

All things - The universe. The expression cannot be limited to any part of the universe. It appropriately expresses everything which exists - all the vast masses of material worlds, and all the animals and things, great or small, that compose those worlds. See Rev 4:11; Heb 1:2; Col 1:16.

Were made - The original word is from the verb "to be,"and signifies "were"by him; but it expresses the idea of creation here. It does not alter the sense whether it is said "‘ were’ by him,"or "were ‘ created’ by him."The word is often used in the sense of "creating,"or forming from nothing. See Jam 3:9; and Gen 2:4; Isa 48:7; in the Septuagint.

By him - In this place it is affirmed that "creation"was effected by "the Word,"or the Son of God. In Gen 1:1, it is said that the Being who created the heavens and the earth was God. In Psa 102:25-28, this work is ascribed to Yahweh. The "Word,"or the Son of God, is therefore appropriately called "God."The work of "creation"is uniformly ascribed in the Scriptures to the Second Person of the Trinity. See Col 1:16; Heb 1:2, Heb 1:10. By this is meant, evidently, that he was the agent, or the efficient cause, by which the universe was made. There is no higher proof of omnipotence than the work of creation; and, hence, God often appeals to that work to prove that he is the true God, in opposition to idols. See Isa 40:18-28; Jer 10:3-16; Psa 24:2; Psa 39:11; Pro 3:19. It is absurd to say that God can invest a creature with omnipotence. If He can make a creature omnipotent, He can make him omniscient, and can in the same way make him omnipresent, and infinitely wise and good; that is, He can invest a creature with all His own attributes, or make another being like Himself, or, which is the same thing, there could be two Gods, or as many Gods as He should choose to make. But this is absurd! The Being, therefore, that "created"all things must be divine; and, since this work is ascribed to Jesus Christ, and as it is uniformly in the Scriptures declared to be the work of God, Jesus Christ is therefore equal with the Father.

Without him - Without his agency; his notice; the exertion of his power. Compare Mat 10:29. This is a strong way of speaking, designed to confirm, beyond the possibility of doubt, what he had just said. He says, therefore, in general, that all things were made by Christ. In this part of the verse he shuts out all doubt, and affirms that there was "no exception;"that there was not a single thing, however minute or unimportant, which was not made by him. In this way, he confirms what he said in the first verse. Christ was not merely called God, but he did the works of God, and therefore the name is used in its proper sense as implying supreme divinity. To this same test Jesus himself appealed as proving that he was divine. Joh 10:37, "if I do not the works of my Father, believe me not."Joh 5:17, "my Father worketh hitherto, and I work."

Poole: Joh 1:3 - -- All things were made by him: the Divine nature and eternal existence of the Lord Christ, is evident from his efficiency in the creation of the world:...

All things were made by him: the Divine nature and eternal existence of the Lord Christ, is evident from his efficiency in the creation of the world: what the evangelist here calleth all things, the apostle to the Hebrews, Heb 1:2 , calleth the worlds; and St. Paul, Col 1:16 , calleth, all things that are in heaven and earth, visible and invisible; Moses calls, the heaven and the earth, Gen 1:1 . These were all made by the Word; not as an instrumental cause, but as a principal efficient cause; for though it be true, that the preposition dia is sometimes used to signify an instrumental cause; yet it is as true, that it is often used to signify the principal efficient cause; as Joh 6:57 Act 3:16 Rom 5:5 11:36 Eph 4:6 , and in many other texts: it here only denotes the order of the working of the holy Trinity.

Without him was not any thing made that was made nothing that was made, neither the heavens nor the earth, neither things visible nor invisible, were made without him. There is nothing more ordinary in holy writ, than after the laying down a universal proposition, (where no synecdoche is used), to add also a universal negative for the confirmation of it: so Rom 3:12 , There is none that doeth good; then is added, no, not one; Lam 2:2 , and in many other texts. The term without him, doth not exclude the efficiency either of the First, or Third Person in the Trinity, in the creation of all things; the Father created the world by the Son, his Word; and the creation of the world is attributed to the Spirit, Gen 1:1 Job 33:4 Psa 33:6 .

Haydock: Joh 1:3 - -- All things were made by him, [2] and without him was made nothing that was made. These words teach us, that all created being, visible or invisi...

All things were made by him, [2] and without him was made nothing that was made. These words teach us, that all created being, visible or invisible on earth, every thing that ever was made, or began to be, were made, produced, and created by this eternal word, or by the Son of God. The same is truly said of the Holy Ghost; all creatures being equally produced, created, and preserved by the three divine Persons as, by their proper, principal, and efficient cause, in the same manner, and by the same action: not by the Son, in any manner inferior to the Father; nor as if the Son produced things only ministerially, and acted only as the minister, and instrument of the Father, as the Arians pretended. In this sublime mystery of one God and three distinct Persons, if we consider the eternal processions, and personal proprieties, the Father is the first Person, but not by any priority of time, or of dignity; all the three divine Persons being eternal, or co-eternal, equal in all perfections, being one in nature, in substance, in power, in majesty: in a word, one and the same God. The Father in no other sense is called the first Person, but because he proceeds from none, or from no other person: and the eternal Son is the second Person begotten, and proceeding from him, the Father, from all eternity, proceeds now, and shall proceed from him for all eternity; as we believe that the third divine Person, the Holy Ghost, always proceeded without any beginning, doth now proceed, and shall proceed for ever, both from the Father and the Son. But when we consider and speak of any creatures, of any thing that was made, or had a beginning, all things were equally created in time, and are equally preserved, no less by the Son, and by the Holy Ghost, than by the Father. For this reason St. John tells us again in this chapter, (ver. 10.) that the world was made by the word. And our Saviour himself (John v. 19.) tells us, that whatsoever the Father doth, these things also in like manner, or in the same manner, the Son doth. Again the apostle, (Hebrews i. ver. 2.) speaking of the Son, says, the world was made by him: and in the same chapter, (ver. 10.) he applies to the Son these words, (Psalm ci. 26.) And thou, O Lord, in the beginning didst found the earth: and the heavens are the works of thy hands, &c. To omit other places, St. Paul again, writing to the Colossians, (Chap. i. ver. 16, 17.) and speaking of God's beloved Son, as may be seen in that chapter, says, that in him all things were created, visible and invisible---all things were created in him, and by him, or, as it is in the Greek, unto him, and for him; to shew that the Son was not only the efficient cause, the Maker and Creator of all things, but also the last end of all. Which is also confirmed by the following words: And he is before all, and all things subsist in him, or consist in him; as in the Rheims and Protestant translations. I have, therefore, in this third verse, translated, all things were made by him, with all English translations and paraphrases, whether made by Catholics or Protestants; and not all things were made through him, lest through should seem to carry with it a different and a diminishing signification; or as if, in the creation of the world, the eternal word, or the Son of God, produced things only ministerially, and, in a manner, inferior to the Father, as the Arians and Eunomians pretended; against whom, on this account, wrote St. Basil, lib. de spiritu Sto. St. John Chrysostom, and St. Cyril, on this very verse; where they expressly undertake to shew that the Greek text in this verse no ways favours these heretics. The Arians, and now the Socinians, who deny the Son to be true God, or that the word God applies as properly to him as to the Father, but would have him called God, that is, a nominal god, in an inferior and improper sense; as when Moses called the goa of Pharao; (Exodus vii. 1.) or as men in authority are called gods; (Psalm lxxxi. 6.) pretend, after Origen, to find another difference in the Greek text; as if, when mention is made of the Father, he is styled the God; but that the Son is only called God, or a God. This objection St. John Chrysostom, St. Cyril, and others, have shewn to be groundless: that pretended significant Greek article being several times omitted, when the word God is applied to God the Father; and being found in other places, when the Son of God is called God. See this objection fully and clearly answered by the author of a short book, published in the year 1729, against Dr. Clark and Mr. Whiston, p. 64, and seq. (Witham) ---

Were made, &c. Mauduit here represents the word: ---"1. As a cause, or principle, acting extraneously from himself upon the void space, in order to give a being to all creatures:" whereas there was no void space before the creation. Ante omnia Deus erat solus, ipse sibe et mundus et locus, et omnia. (Tertullian, lib. cont. Prax. chap. v.) And St. Augustine in Psalm cxxii. says: antequam faceret Deus Sanctos, ubi habitabat? In se habitabat, apud se habitabat. ---

The creation of all things, visible and invisible, was the work of the whole blessed Trinity; but the Scriptures generally attribute it to the word; because wisdom, reason, and intelligence, which are the attributes of the Son, are displayed most in it. (Calmet) ---

What wonderful tergiversations the Arians used to avoid the evidence of this text, we see in St. Augustine, lib. iii. de doct. Christ. chap. 2; even such as modern dissenters do, to avoid the evidence of This is my Body, concerning the blessed Eucharist. (Bristow)

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Omnia per ipsum facta sunt: Greek: panta di autou egeneto: all things were made by him. Let not any one pretend that Greek: di autou, in this verse signifies no more than, that all creatures were made by the Word, or Son of God, ministerially as if he was only the instrument of the eternal Father, the chief and principal cause of all things; of whom the apostle says, Greek: ex ou ta panta, ex ipso omnia. ---

Origen unless perhaps his writings were corrupted by the Arians, seems to have given occasion to this Greek: leptalogia, as St. Basil calls it, to groundless quibbling and squabbling about the sense of the prepositions; when he tells us, (tom. ii, in Joan. p. 55. Ed. Huetii.) the Greek: di ou never has the first place, but always the second place, meaning as to dignity: Greek: oudepote ten proten choran echei to di ou deuteran de aei. It is like many other false and unwarrantable assertions in Origen; as when we find in the same commentary on St. John, that he says only God the Father is called Greek: o Theos. Origen may perhaps be excused as to what he writes about Greek: di ou and Greek: ex ou, as if he spoke only with a regard to the divine processions in God, in which the Father is the first person, from whom proceeds even the eternal Son, the second person. But whatever Origen thought, or meant, whom St. Epiphanius calls the father of Arius, whose works, as then extant, were condemned in the fifth General Council; it appears that the Arians, in particular Aetius, of the Eunomian sect, pretended that Greek: ex ou had always a more eminent signification, and was only applied to the Father; the Father, said he, being the true God, the only principal efficient cause of all things; and Greek: di ou was applied to the word, or Son of God, who was not the same true God, to signify his interior and ministerial production, as he was the instrument of the Father. Aetius, without regard to other places in the Scripture, as we read in St. Basil, (lib. de Sp. S. chap. ii. p. 293. Ed Morelli. an. 1637) produced these words of the apostle: (1 Corinthians viii. 6.) Greek: eis Theos, pater, ex ou ta panta ... kai eis kurios, Iesous Christos; di ou panta: unus Deus, Pater, ex quo omnia, ... et unus Dominus Jesus Christus; per quem omnia. He concluded from hence, that as the prepositions were different, so were the natures and substance of the Father and of the Son. ---

But that no settled and certain rule can be built on these prepositions, and that Greek: di ou, in this third verse of the first chapter of St. John, has no diminishing signification, so that the Son was equally the proper and principal efficient cause of all things that were made and created, we have the authority of the greatest doctors, and the most learned and exact writers of the Greek Church, who knew both the doctrine of the Catholic Church, and the rules and use of the Greek tongue. ---

St. Basil (lib. de Spir. S. chap. iii. et seq.) ridicules this Greek: leptologian, which, he says, had its origin from the vain and profane philosophy of the heathen writers, about the difference of causes. He denies that there is any fixed rule; and brings examples, in which Greek: di ou is applied to the Father, and Greek: ex ou to the Son. ---

St. Gregory of Nazianzus denies this difference, (Orat. xxxvii, p. 604. Ed. Morelli. Parisiis, ann. 1630) and affirms that Greek: ex ou, and Greek: di ou, in this verse, has no diminishing nor inferior signification: Greek: ei de to di ou nomizeis elattoseos einai, &c. ---

St. Cyril of Alexandria, (lib. i. in Joan. p. 48.) makes the very same remark, and with the like examples. His words are: Quod si existiment (Ariani) per quem, Greek: di ou, substantiam ejus (Filii) de æqualitate cum Patre dejicere, ita ut minister sit potius quam creator, ad se redeant insaui, &c. ---

St. Ambrose, a doctor of the Latin Church, (lib. ii. de Sp. S. 10. p. 212. 213. Ed. Par. an. 1586.) confutes, with St. Basil, the groundless and pretended differences of ex quo and per quem. ---

I shall only here produce that one passage in Romans, (Chap. xi. 36.) which St. Basil and St. Ambrose make use of, where we read: ex ipso, et per ipsum, et in ipso sunt omnia, ( Greek: ex autou, kai di autou, kai eis auton ta panta ) et in ipsum omnia. Now either we expound all the three parts of this sentence, as spoken of the Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, (as both St. Basil and St. Ambrose understand them) and then Greek: ex ou is applied to the Son; or we understand them of the Father, and Greek: di ou is applied to the first Person: or, in fine, as St. Augustine observes, (lib. i. de Trin. chap. 6.) we interpret them in such a manner, that the first part be understood of the Father, the second of the Son, the third of the Holy Ghost; and then the words that immediately follow in the singular number, to him be glory for ever, shew that all the three Persons are but one in nature, one God; and to all, and to each of the three Persons, the whole sentence belongs. ---

Had I not already said more than may seem necessary on these words, I might add all the Greek bishops in the council of Florence, when they came to an union with the Latin bishops about the procession of the Holy Ghost. After may passages had been quoted out of the ancient Fathers, some of which had said that the Holy Ghost proceeded from the Father and the Son, Greek: ek tou patros, kai ek tou uiou, many others had asserted that he proceeded Greek: ek tou Patros dia tou uiou; Bessarion, the learned Grecian bishop, in a long oration, (Sess. 25.) shewed that Greek: di uiou was the same as Greek: ek tou uiou. The Fathers, said he, shew, Greek: deiknusin isodunamousan te ek ten dia. See tom. xiii. Conc. Lab. p. 435. All the others allowed this to be true, as the emperor John Paleologus observed. (p. 487.) And the patriarch of Constantinople, when he was about to subscribe, declared the same: Greek: esti to dia tou uiou, tauton to ek tou uiou. Can any one imagine that none of these learned Grecians should know the force and use of these two prepositions, in their own language?

Gill: Joh 1:3 - -- All things were made by him,.... Which is a proof at once of all that is said before; as that he was in the beginning; and that he was with God the Fa...

All things were made by him,.... Which is a proof at once of all that is said before; as that he was in the beginning; and that he was with God the Father in the beginning; and that he was God; otherwise all things could not have been made by him, had either of these been untrue: which is to be understood, not of the new creation; for this would be a restraining "all" things to a "few" persons only; nor is it any where said, that all things are new made, but made; and it is false, that all were converted, that have been converted, by the ministry of Christ, as man: all men are not renewed, regenerated, nor reformed; and the greater part of those that were renewed, were renewed before Christ existed, as man; and therefore could not be renewed by him, as such: though indeed, could this sense be established, it would not answer the end for which it is coined; namely, to destroy the proof of Christ's deity, and of his existence before his incarnation; for in all ages, from the beginning of the world, some have been renewed; and the new creation is a work of God, and of almighty power, equally with the old; for who can create spiritual light, infuse a principle of spiritual life, take away the heart of stone, and give an heart of flesh, or produce faith, but God? Regeneration is denied to be of man, and is always ascribed to God; nor would Christ's being the author of the new creation, be any contradiction to his being the author of the old creation, which is intended here: by "all things", are meant the heaven, and all its created inhabitants, the airy, starry, and third heavens, and the earth, and all therein, the sea, and every thing that is in that; and the word, or Son of God, is the efficient cause of all these, not a bare instrument of the formation of them; for the preposition by does not always denote an instrument, but sometimes an efficient, as in 1Co 1:9 and so here, though not to the exclusion of the Father, and of the Spirit:

and without him was not any thing made that was made: in which may be observed the conjunct operation of the word, or Son, with the Father, and Spirit, in creation; and the extent of his concern in it to every thing that is made; for without him there was not one single thing in the whole compass of the creation made; and the limitation of it to things that are made; and so excludes the uncreated being, Father, Son, and Spirit; and sin also, which is not a principle made by God, and which has no efficient, but a deficient cause. So the Jews ascribe the creation of all things to the word. The Targumists attribute the creation of man, in particular, to the word of God: it is said in Gen 1:27. "God created man in his own image": the Jerusalem Targum of it is,

"and the word of the Lord created man in his likeness.

And Gen 3:22 "and the Lord God said, behold the man is become as one of us", the same Targum paraphrases thus,

"and the word of the Lord God said, behold the man whom I have created, is the only one in the world.

Also in the same writings, the creation of all things in general is ascribed to the word: the passage in Deu 33:27 "the eternal God is thy refuge, and underneath are the everlasting arms", is paraphrased by Onkelos,

"the eternal God is an habitation, by whose word the world was made.

In Isa 48:13 it is said, "mine hand also hath laid the foundation of the earth". The Targum of Jonathan ben Uzziah on it is,

"yea, by my word I have founded the earth:

which agrees with what is said in Heb 11:3, and the same says Philo the Jew, who not only calls him the archetype, and exemplar of the world, but the power that made it: he often ascribes the creation of the heavens, and the earth unto him, and likewise the creation of man after whose image, he says, he was made t. The Ethiopic version adds, at the end of this verse, "and also that which is made is for himself",

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Joh 1:3 Or “made”; Grk “that has come into existence.”

Geneva Bible: Joh 1:3 ( 2 ) All ( f ) things were made by him; and ( g ) without him ( h ) was not any thing made that was made. ( 2 ) The Son of God declares that his eve...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

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 1:1-13 - --of the Gospel of John   CHAPTER 2   Christ, the Eternal Word   Joh 1:1-13   In the last chapter we stated, ...

MHCC: Joh 1:1-5 - --The plainest reason why the Son of God is called the Word, seems to be, that as our words explain our minds to others, so was the Son of God sent in o...

Matthew Henry: Joh 1:1-5 - -- Austin says ( de Civitate Dei, lib. 10, cap. 29) that his friend Simplicius told him he had heard a Platonic philosopher say that these first verse...

Barclay: Joh 1:3 - --It may seem strange to us that John so stresses the way in which the world was created; and it may seem strange that he so definitely connects Jesus ...

Constable: Joh 1:1-18 - --I. Prologue 1:1-18 Each of the four Gospels begins with an introduction to Jesus that places Him in the historic...

Constable: Joh 1:1-5 - --A. The preincarnate Word 1:1-5 John began his Gospel by locating Jesus before the beginning of His ministry, before His virgin birth, and even before ...

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 1:1-18 - -- II. JOHN'S INTRODUCTION. dJOHN I. 1-18.    d1 In the beginning was the Word [a title for Jesus peculiar to the apostle John], and the ...

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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Commentary -- Other

Evidence: Joh 1:3 Rejection of the Bible’s account of creation as given in the Book of Genesis could rightly be called " Genecide," because it eradicated man’s pur...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: John (Book Introduction) THE Fourth Gospel By Way of Introduction Greatest of Books The test of time has given the palm to the Fourth Gospel over all the books of the wor...

JFB: John (Book Introduction) THE author of the Fourth Gospel was the younger of the two sons of Zebedee, a fisherman on the Sea of Galilee, who resided at Bethsaida, where were bo...

JFB: John (Outline) THE WORD MADE FLESH. (Joh 1:1-14) A SAYING OF THE BAPTIST CONFIRMATORY OF THIS. (Joh 1:15) SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED. (Joh 1:16-18) THE BAPTIST'S TESTIM...

TSK: John (Book Introduction) John, who, according to the unanimous testimony of the ancient fathers and ecclesiastical writers, was the author of this Gospel, was the son of Zebed...

TSK: John 1 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Joh 1:1, The divinity, humanity, office, and incarnation of Jesus Christ; Joh 1:15, The testimony of John; Joh 1:39, The calling of Andre...

Poole: John 1 (Chapter Introduction) ARGUMENT The penman of this Gospel is generally taken to have been John the son of Zebedee, Mat 10:2 , not either John the Baptist, or John sur...

MHCC: John (Book Introduction) The apostle and evangelist, John, seems to have been the youngest of the twelve. He was especially favoured with our Lord's regard and confidence, so ...

MHCC: John 1 (Chapter Introduction) (Joh 1:1-5) The Divinity of Christ. (Joh 1:6-14) His Divine and human nature. (Joh 1:15-18) John the Baptist's testimony to Christ. (Joh 1:19-28) J...

Matthew Henry: John (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Gospel According to St. John It is not material to enquire when and where this gospel was written; ...

Matthew Henry: John 1 (Chapter Introduction) The scope and design of this chapter is to confirm our faith in Christ as the eternal Son of God, and the true Messiah and Saviour of the world, th...

Barclay: John (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO SAINT JOHN The Gospel Of The EagleEye For many Christian people the Gospel according to St. John is the mos...

Barclay: John 1 (Chapter Introduction) The Word (Joh_1:1-18) 1:1-18 When the world had its beginning, the Word was already there; and the Word was with God; and the Word was God. This...

Constable: John (Book Introduction) Introduction Writer The writer of this Gospel did not identify himself as such in the ...

Constable: John (Outline) Outline I. Prologue 1:1-18 A. The preincarnate Word 1:1-5 B. The witness...

Constable: John John Bibliography Allen, Ronald B. "Affirming Right-of-Way on Ancient Paths." Bibliotheca Sacra 153:609 (Januar...

Haydock: John (Book Introduction) THE HOLY GOSPEL OF JESUS CHRIST, ACCORDING TO ST. JOHN. INTRODUCTION St. John, the evangelist, a native of Bathsaida, in Galilee, was the son ...

Gill: John (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JOHN The author of this Gospel is John, the son of Zebedee and Salome, the brother of James the greater; he outlived the rest of th...

College: John (Book Introduction) PREFACE INTRODUCTION Even the casual reader of the New Testament will notice that the first three accounts of Jesus' life are generally similar in t...

College: John (Outline) OUTLINE A good outline is more than half the battle in one's understanding and remembering the contents of any book. There is more than one way to bre...

Lapide: John (Book Introduction) NOTICE TO THE READER. Gospel of John Intro ——o—— AS it has been found impossible to compress the Translation of the Commentary upon S. John...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


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