
Text -- John 10:33-42 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson -> Joh 10:33; Joh 10:33; Joh 10:33; Joh 10:34; Joh 10:34; Joh 10:34; Joh 10:34; Joh 10:35; Joh 10:35; Joh 10:35; Joh 10:36; Joh 10:36; Joh 10:36; Joh 10:36; Joh 10:37; Joh 10:37; Joh 10:38; Joh 10:38; Joh 10:38; Joh 10:38; Joh 10:38; Joh 10:39; Joh 10:39; Joh 10:40; Joh 10:40; Joh 10:40; Joh 10:41; Joh 10:42
Robertson: Joh 10:33 - -- For a good work we stone thee not ( peri kalou ergou ou lithazomen ).
"Concerning a good deed we are not stoning thee."Flat denial that the healing o...
For a good work we stone thee not (
"Concerning a good deed we are not stoning thee."Flat denial that the healing of the blind man on the Sabbath had led them to this attempt (Joh 8:59) in spite of the facts.

Robertson: Joh 10:33 - -- But for blasphemy ( alla peri blasphēmias ).
See Act 26:7 where peri with the genitive is also used with egkaloumai for the charge against Paul...

Robertson: Joh 10:33 - -- And because that thou, being a man, makest thyself God ( kai hoti su anthrōpos ōn poieis seauton theon ).
In Joh 5:18 they stated the charge more...
And because that thou, being a man, makest thyself God (
In Joh 5:18 they stated the charge more accurately: "He called God his own Father, making himself equal with God."That is, he made himself the Son of God. This he did beyond a doubt. But was it blasphemy? Only if he was not the Son of God. The penalty for blasphemy was death by stoning (Lev 24:16; 1Ki 21:10, 1Ki 21:13).

Robertson: Joh 10:34 - -- Is it not written? ( ouk estin gegrammenon ).
Periphrastic perfect passive indicative of graphō (as in Joh 2:17) in place of the usual gegraptai ...
Is it not written? (
Periphrastic perfect passive indicative of

Robertson: Joh 10:34 - -- In your law ( en tōi nomōi humōn ).
From Psa 82:6. The term nomos (law) applying here to the entire O.T. as in Joh 12:34; Joh 15:25; Rom 3:19...

Robertson: Joh 10:34 - -- I said ( hoti egō eipa ).
Recitative hoti before a direct quotation like our quotation marks. Eipa is a late second aorist form of indicative w...
I said (
Recitative

Robertson: Joh 10:34 - -- Ye are gods ( theoi este ).
Another direct quotation after eipa but without hoti . The judges of Israel abused their office and God is represented ...
Ye are gods (
Another direct quotation after

Robertson: Joh 10:35 - -- If he called them gods ( ei ekeinous eipen theous ).
Condition of first class, assumed as true. The conclusion (Joh 10:36) is humeis legete ; ( Do y...
If he called them gods (
Condition of first class, assumed as true. The conclusion (Joh 10:36) is

Robertson: Joh 10:35 - -- To whom the word of God came ( pros hous ho logos tou theou egeneto ).
The relative points to ekeinous , before. These judges had no other claim to t...
To whom the word of God came (
The relative points to

Robertson: Joh 10:35 - -- And the scripture cannot be broken ( kai ou dunatai luthēnai hē graphē ).
A parenthesis that drives home the pertinency of the appeal, one that...
And the scripture cannot be broken (
A parenthesis that drives home the pertinency of the appeal, one that the Pharisees had to accept.

Robertson: Joh 10:36 - -- Of him whom the Father sanctified and sent into the world ( hon ho patēr hēgiasen kai apesteilen eis ton kosmon ).
Another relative clause with t...
Of him whom the Father sanctified and sent into the world (
Another relative clause with the antecedent (

Robertson: Joh 10:36 - -- Thou blasphemest ( hoti blasphēmeis ).
Recitative hoti again before direct quotation.
Thou blasphemest (
Recitative

Robertson: Joh 10:36 - -- Because I said ( hoti eipon ).
Causal use of hoti and regular form eipon (cf. eipa in Joh 10:34).
Because I said (
Causal use of

Robertson: Joh 10:36 - -- I am the Son of God ( huios tou theou eimi ).
Direct quotation again after eipon . This Jesus had implied long before as in Joh 2:16 (my Father) and ...
I am the Son of God (
Direct quotation again after

Robertson: Joh 10:37 - -- If I do not ( ei ou poiō ).
Condition of first class, assumed as true, with negative ou , not ei mē = unless.
If I do not (
Condition of first class, assumed as true, with negative

Robertson: Joh 10:37 - -- Believe me not ( mē pisteuete moi ).
Prohibition with mē and the present active imperative. Either "cease believing me"or "do not have the habi...
Believe me not (
Prohibition with

Robertson: Joh 10:38 - -- But if I do ( ei de poiō ).
Condition again of the first class, assumed as true, but with the opposite results.
But if I do (
Condition again of the first class, assumed as true, but with the opposite results.

Robertson: Joh 10:38 - -- Though ye believe not me ( kan emoi mē pisteuēte ).
Condition now of third class, undetermined (but with prospect), "Even if you keep on (present...
Though ye believe not me (
Condition now of third class, undetermined (but with prospect), "Even if you keep on (present active subjunctive of

Robertson: Joh 10:38 - -- Believe the works ( tois ergois pisteuete ).
These stand irrefutable. The claims, character, words, and works of Jesus challenge the world today as t...
Believe the works (
These stand irrefutable. The claims, character, words, and works of Jesus challenge the world today as then.

Robertson: Joh 10:38 - -- That ye may know and understand ( hina gnōte kai ginōskēte ).
Purpose clause with hina and the same verb ginōskō repeated in different ...
That ye may know and understand (
Purpose clause with

Robertson: Joh 10:38 - -- That the Father is in me, and I in the Father ( hoti en emoi ho patēr kagō en tōi patri ).
Thus he repeats (Joh 10:30) sharply his real claim t...
That the Father is in me, and I in the Father (
Thus he repeats (Joh 10:30) sharply his real claim to oneness with the Father as his Son, to actual deity. It was a hopeless wish.

Robertson: Joh 10:39 - -- They sought again to seize him ( ezētoun auton palin piazai ).
Imperfect active, "They kept on seeking to seize"(ingressive aorist active infinitiv...
They sought again to seize him (
Imperfect active, "They kept on seeking to seize"(ingressive aorist active infinitive of

Robertson: Joh 10:39 - -- Out of their hand ( ek tēs cheiros autōn ).
Overawed, but still angry, the stones fell to the ground, and Jesus walked out.
Out of their hand (
Overawed, but still angry, the stones fell to the ground, and Jesus walked out.

Robertson: Joh 10:40 - -- Again ( palin ).
Referring to Joh 1:28 (Bethany beyond Jordan). Palin does not mean that the other visit was a recent one.
Again (
Referring to Joh 1:28 (Bethany beyond Jordan).

Robertson: Joh 10:40 - -- At the first ( to prōton ).
Adverbial accusative (extent of time). Same idiom in Joh 12:16; Joh 19:39. Here the identical language of Joh 1:28 is u...

Robertson: Joh 10:40 - -- And there he abode ( kai emenen ekei ).
Imperfect (continued) active of menō , though some MSS. have the constative aorist active emeinen . Probabl...
And there he abode (
Imperfect (continued) active of

Robertson: Joh 10:41 - -- Many came to him ( polloi ēlthon pros auton ).
Jesus was busy here and in a more congenial atmosphere than Jerusalem. John wrought no signs the cro...
Many came to him (
Jesus was busy here and in a more congenial atmosphere than Jerusalem. John wrought no signs the crowds recall, though Jesus did many here (Mat 19:2). The crowds still bear the impress of John’ s witness to Christ as "true"(

Robertson: Joh 10:42 - -- Many believed on him there ( polloi episteusan eis auton ekei ).
See Joh 1:12; Joh 2:11 for same idiom. Striking witness to the picture of the Messia...
Many believed on him there (
See Joh 1:12; Joh 2:11 for same idiom. Striking witness to the picture of the Messiah drawn by John. When Jesus came they recognized the original. See Joh 1:29-34. What about our sermons about Jesus if he were to walk down the aisle in visible form according to A.J. Gordon’ s dream?
Saying
Omit.

Vincent: Joh 10:34 - -- Is it not written ( οὐκ ἐστιν γεγραμμένον )
More strictly, does it not stand written .
Is it not written (
More strictly, does it not stand written .

Vincent: Joh 10:34 - -- Law ( νόμῳ )
The word is sometimes used in the New Testament of other scriptures. See Joh 12:34; Joh 15:25; Rom 3:19; 1Co 14:21.

Vincent: Joh 10:35 - -- The Scripture ( ἡ γραφή )
The passage of scripture. See on Joh 2:22; see on Joh 5:47.

Vincent: Joh 10:35 - -- Broken ( λυθῆναι )
Literally, loosened . Wyc., undone . The word is characteristic of John. He uses it of the destruction of the templ...
Broken (
Literally, loosened . Wyc., undone . The word is characteristic of John. He uses it of the destruction of the temple (Joh 2:19); the breaking of the Sabbath (Joh 5:18); the violation of the law (Joh 7:23); the destruction of Satan's works (1Jo 3:8), besides elsewhere in the physical sense.

Vincent: Joh 10:36 - -- Sanctified ( ἡγίασεν )
Better, as Rev., in margin, consecrated . The fundamental idea of the word is separation and consecration ...
Sanctified (
Better, as Rev., in margin, consecrated . The fundamental idea of the word is separation and consecration to the service of Deity. See note on Act 26:10, on the kindred adjective

Vincent: Joh 10:36 - -- The Son of God
There is no article. Its absence directs us to the character rather than to the person of Jesus. The judges, to whom the quota...
The Son of God
There is no article. Its absence directs us to the character rather than to the person of Jesus. The judges, to whom the quotation in Joh 10:35 refers, were called gods , as being representatives of God. See Exo 21:6; Exo 22:8, where the word rendered judges is

Vincent: Joh 10:37 - -- Believe me ( πιστεύετέ μοι )
Notice believe , with the simple dative; believe me , not on me. It is a question of faith in Hi...
Believe me (
Notice believe , with the simple dative; believe me , not on me. It is a question of faith in His testimony , not in His person . See on Joh 1:12.

In Him
The best texts read

Vincent: Joh 10:39 - -- Again
Pointing back to Joh 7:30, Joh 7:32, Joh 7:44, where the word πιάσαι , to seize , is found.

Vincent: Joh 10:39 - -- Escaped out of ( ἐξῆλθεν ἐκ )
Rev., literally, went forth out of . The phrase occurs only here.
Escaped out of (
Rev., literally, went forth out of . The phrase occurs only here.

Vincent: Joh 10:40 - -- Beyond Jordan ( πέραν τοῦ Ιορδάνου )
Into the region called Peroea, from πέραν , beyond . It was on the east side o...
Beyond Jordan (
Into the region called Peroea, from

That is, nothing which is written therein can be censured or rejected.

Wesley: Joh 10:36 - -- This sanctification (whereby he is essentially the Holy One of God) is mentioned as prior to his mission, and together with it implies, Christ was God...
This sanctification (whereby he is essentially the Holy One of God) is mentioned as prior to his mission, and together with it implies, Christ was God in the highest sense, infinitely superior to that wherein those judges were so called.

Wesley: Joh 10:38 - -- In some a more exact knowledge precedes, in others it follows faith. I am in the Father and the Father in me.
In some a more exact knowledge precedes, in others it follows faith. I am in the Father and the Father in me.

These two sentences illustrate each other.

Wesley: Joh 10:40 - -- To the desert place where John baptized, and gave so honourable a testimony of him.
To the desert place where John baptized, and gave so honourable a testimony of him.

An honour reserved for him, whose forerunner he was.
Whose legal punishment was stoning (Lev 24:11-16).

JFB: Joh 10:33 - -- Twice before they understood Him to advance the same claim, and both times they prepared themselves to avenge what they took to be the insulted honor ...

Being the official representatives and commissioned agents of God.

JFB: Joh 10:35-36 - -- The whole force of this reasoning, which has been but in part seized by the commentators, lies in what is said of the two parties compared. The compar...
The whole force of this reasoning, which has been but in part seized by the commentators, lies in what is said of the two parties compared. The comparison of Himself with mere men, divinely commissioned, is intended to show (as NEANDER well expresses it) that the idea of a communication of the Divine Majesty to human nature was by no means foreign to the revelations of the Old Testament; but there is also a contrast between Himself and all merely human representatives of God--the one "sanctified by the Father and sent into the world"; the other, "to whom the word of God (merely) came," which is expressly designed to prevent His being massed up with them as only one of many human officials of God. It is never said of Christ that "the word of the Lord came to Him"; whereas this is the well-known formula by which the divine commission, even to the highest of mere men, is expressed, as John the Baptist (Luk 3:2). The reason is that given by the Baptist himself (see on Joh 3:31). The contrast is between those "to whom the word of God came"--men of the earth, earthy, who were merely privileged to get a divine message to utter (if prophets), or a divine office to discharge (if judges)--and "Him whom (not being of the earth at all) the Father sanctified (or set apart), and sent into the world," an expression never used of any merely human messenger of God, and used only of Himself.

JFB: Joh 10:35-36 - -- It is worthy of special notice that our Lord had not said, in so many words, that He was the Son of God, on this occasion. But He had said what beyond...
It is worthy of special notice that our Lord had not said, in so many words, that He was the Son of God, on this occasion. But He had said what beyond doubt amounted to it--namely, that He gave His sheep eternal life, and none could pluck them out of His hand; that He had got them from His Father, in whose hands, though given to Him, they still remained, and out of whose hand none could pluck them; and that they were the indefeasible property of both, inasmuch as "He and His Father were one." Our Lord considers all this as just saying of Himself, "I am the Son of God"--one nature with Him, yet mysteriously of Him. The parenthesis (Joh 10:35), "and the Scripture cannot be broken," referring to the terms used of magistrates in the eighty-second Psalm, has an important bearing on the authority of the living oracles. "The Scripture, as the expressed will of the unchangeable God, is itself unchangeable and indissoluble" [OLSHAUSEN]. (Compare Mat 5:17).

JFB: Joh 10:37-39 - -- There was in Christ's words, independently of any miracles, a self-evidencing truth, majesty and grace, which those who had any spiritual susceptibili...
There was in Christ's words, independently of any miracles, a self-evidencing truth, majesty and grace, which those who had any spiritual susceptibility were unable to resist (Joh 7:46; Joh 8:30). But, for those who wanted this, "the works" were a mighty help. When these failed, the case was desperate indeed.

JFB: Joh 10:37-39 - -- Thus reiterating His claim to essential oneness with the Father, which He had only seemed to soften down, that He might calm their rage and get their ...
Thus reiterating His claim to essential oneness with the Father, which He had only seemed to soften down, that He might calm their rage and get their ear again for a moment.

JFB: Joh 10:39 - -- True to their original understanding of His words, for they saw perfectly well that He meant to "make Himself God" throughout all this dialogue.
True to their original understanding of His words, for they saw perfectly well that He meant to "make Himself God" throughout all this dialogue.

On whom the ministry of the Baptist had left permanent impressions.

JFB: Joh 10:41 - -- What they now heard and saw in Jesus only confirming in their minds the divinity of His forerunner's mission, though unaccompanied by any of His Maste...
What they now heard and saw in Jesus only confirming in their minds the divinity of His forerunner's mission, though unaccompanied by any of His Master's miracles. And thus, "many believed on Him there."
Clarke: Joh 10:33 - -- But for blasphemy - I have elsewhere shown that the original word, βλασφημειν, when applied to men, signifies to speak injuriously of the...
But for blasphemy - I have elsewhere shown that the original word,

Clarke: Joh 10:33 - -- Thou, being a man - That is, only a man - makest thyself God. When Christ said before, Joh 10:30, I and the Father are one, had the Jews understood ...
Thou, being a man - That is, only a man - makest thyself God. When Christ said before, Joh 10:30, I and the Father are one, had the Jews understood him (as many called Christians profess to do) as only saying he had a unity of sentiments with the Father, they would not have attempted to treat him for this as a blasphemer; because in this sense Abraham, Isaac, Moses, David, and all the prophets, were one with God. But what irritated them so much was that they understood him as speaking of a unity of nature. Therefore they say here, thou makest thyself God; which word they understood, not in a figurative, metaphorical, or improper sense, but in the most literal meaning of the term.

Clarke: Joh 10:34 - -- Is it not written in your law - The words which our Lord quotes are taken from Psa 82:6, which shows that, under the word law, our Lord comprised th...

Clarke: Joh 10:34 - -- Ye are gods? - That is, judges, who are called אלהים elohim . That judges are here meant appears from Psa 82:2, etc., and also from what foll...
Ye are gods? - That is, judges, who are called

Clarke: Joh 10:35 - -- Unto whom the word of God came - Bishop Pearce thinks that "the word λογος, here, is put for λογος κρισεως, the word or matter of...
Unto whom the word of God came - Bishop Pearce thinks that "the word

Clarke: Joh 10:35 - -- And the scripture cannot be broken - Λυθηναι, dissolved, rendered of none effect, i.e. it cannot be gainsayed or set aside; every man must b...
And the scripture cannot be broken -

Clarke: Joh 10:37 - -- If I do not the works, etc. - I desire you to believe only on the evidence of my works: if I do not do such works as God only can perform, then beli...
If I do not the works, etc. - I desire you to believe only on the evidence of my works: if I do not do such works as God only can perform, then believe me not.

Clarke: Joh 10:38 - -- Believe the works - Though ye do not now credit what I have said to you, yet consider my works, and then ye will see that these works prove that I a...
Believe the works - Though ye do not now credit what I have said to you, yet consider my works, and then ye will see that these works prove that I am in the Father and the Father in me; and, consequently, that I and the Father are one. This seems to be the force of our Lord’ s argument; and every man must see and feel that it is conclusive. There was no possibility of weakening the force of this reasoning but by asserting that these miracles were not wrought by the power of God; and then they must have proved that not only a man, but a bad man, such as they said Jesus was, could work these miracles. As this was impossible, then the argument of Christ had a complete triumph.

Clarke: Joh 10:39 - -- They sought again to take him - They could not reply to his arguments but by stones. The evidence of the truth could not be resisted; and they endea...
They sought again to take him - They could not reply to his arguments but by stones. The evidence of the truth could not be resisted; and they endeavored to destroy the person who spoke it. Truth may confound the obstinately wicked, but it does not convert them; and it is a just judgment of God, to leave those to perish in their gainsayings who obstinately continue to gainsay and disbelieve

Clarke: Joh 10:39 - -- But he escaped - In such a way as we know not, for the evangelist has not specified the manner of it.
But he escaped - In such a way as we know not, for the evangelist has not specified the manner of it.

Clarke: Joh 10:40 - -- Beyond Jordan - Rather, to the side of Jordan, not beyond it. See the note on Joh 6:22, and Mat 19:1

Clarke: Joh 10:40 - -- Where John at first baptized - That is, at Bethabara: see Joh 1:28. Afterwards, John baptized at Aenon: Joh 3:23.

Clarke: Joh 10:42 - -- Many believed on him there - The people believed on him
1. because of the testimony of John the Baptist whom they knew to be a goo...
Many believed on him there - The people believed on him
1. because of the testimony of John the Baptist whom they knew to be a good and a wise man, and a prophet of the Lord; and they knew he could neither deceive nor be deceived in this mater; and
2. they believed because of the miracles which they saw Jesus work. These fully proved that all that John had said of him was true. The scribes and Pharisees with all their science could not draw a conclusion so just. Truth and common sense are often on the side of the common people, whom the insolently wise, the unsanctifiedly learned, and the tyrannically powerful sometimes disingenuously brand with the epithets of mob and swinish multitude
1. This and the preceding chapter contain two remarkable discomfitures of the Jewish doctors. In the former they were confounded by the testimony of a plain uneducated man, simply appealing to the various circumstances of a matter of fact, at which they cavilled, and which they endeavored to decry. In this chapter the wise are taken in their own craftiness: the Pharisees are confounded by that wisdom which is from above, speaking of and manifesting the deep things of God. Sometimes God himself stops the mouths of gainsayers; at other times he makes the simplest of his followers too mighty for the most learned among the doctors. Ancient and modern martyrologies of the people of God abound with proofs of both these facts. And the persecutions of the Protestants by the Papists in the reign of Queen Mary afford a very large proportion of proofs. In these the mighty power of God, and the prevalence of truth, were gloriously apparent. Both the word of God and the Protestant cause were nobly illustrated by those transactions. May that abomination that maketh desolate never more sit in the holy place
2. It must be remarked, by every serious reader, that our Lord did frequently speak of himself to the Jews, as being not only sent of God as their Messiah, but as being one with him. And it is as evident that in this sense the priests and Pharisees understood him; and it was because they would not credit this that they accused him of blasphemy. Now, if our Lord was not the person they understood him to state himself to be, he had the fairest opportunity, from their strong remonstrances, to correct their misapprehension of his words, if they really had mistaken his meaning - but this he never attempts. He rather strengthens his assertions in his consequent discourses with them; which, had not his positions been true, he could not have done, even as an honest man. He not only asserted himself to be equal with God, but wished them to believe it to be true; and he amply confirmed this heavenly doctrine by the miracles he wrought.
Calvin: Joh 10:33 - -- 33.We stone thee not for a good work Though wicked men carry on open war with God, yet they never wish to sin without some plausible pretense. The co...
33.We stone thee not for a good work Though wicked men carry on open war with God, yet they never wish to sin without some plausible pretense. The consequence is, that when they rage against the Son of God, they are not content with this cruelty, but bring an unprovoked accusation against him, and constitute themselves advocates and defenders of the glory of God. A good conscience must therefore be to us a wall of brass, by which we boldly repel the reproaches and calumnies with which we are assailed. For whatever plausibility may adorn their malice, and whatever reproach they may bring on us for a time, if we fight for the cause of God, he will not refuse to uphold his truth. But as the wicked never want pretences for oppressing the servants of God, and as they have also hardened impudence, so that, even when vanquished, they do not cease to slander, we have need of patience and meekness, to support us to the end.
But for blasphemy The word blasphemy, which among profane authors denotes generally every kind of reproach, Scripture refers to God, when his majesty is offended and insulted.
Because thou, being a man, makest thyself God There are two kinds of blasphemy, either when God is deprived of the honor which belongs to him, or when anything unsuitable to his nature, or contrary to his nature, is ascribed to him. They argue therefore that Christ is a blasphemer and a sacrilegious person, because, being a mortal man, he lays claim to Divine honor. And this would be a just definition of blasphemy, if Christ were nothing more than a man. They only err in this, that they do not design to contemplate his Divinity, which was conspicuous in his miracles.

Calvin: Joh 10:34 - -- 34.Is it not written in your Law? He clears himself of the crime charged against him, not by denying that he is the Son of God, but by maintaining th...
34.Is it not written in your Law? He clears himself of the crime charged against him, not by denying that he is the Son of God, but by maintaining that he had justly said so. Yet he adapts his reply to the persons, instead of giving a full explanation of the fact; for he reckoned it enough for the present to expose their malice. In what sense he called himself the Son of God he does not explain fully, but states indirectly. The argument which he employs is not drawn from equals, but from the less to the greater.
I said, You are gods Scripture gives the name of gods to those on whom God has conferred an honorable office. He whom God has separated, to be distinguished above all others, is far more worthy of this honorable title. Hence it follows, that they are malicious and false expounders of Scripture, who admit the first, but take offense at the second. The passage which Christ quotes is in Psa 82:6,
I have said, You are gods,
and all of you are children of the Most High;
where God expostulates with the kings and judges of the earth, who tyrannically abuse their authority and power for their own sinful passions, for oppressing the poor, and for every evil action. He reproaches them that, unmindful of Him from whom they received so great dignity, they profane the name of God. Christ applies this to the case in hand, that they receive the name of gods, because they are God’s ministers for governing the world. For the same reason Scripture calls the angels gods, because by them the glory of God beams forth on the world. We must attend to the mode of expression:

Calvin: Joh 10:35 - -- 35.To whom the word of God was addressed For Christ means that they were authorized by an undoubted command of God. Hence we infer that empires did n...
35.To whom the word of God was addressed For Christ means that they were authorized by an undoubted command of God. Hence we infer that empires did not spring up at random, nor by the mistakes of men, but that they were appointed by the will of God, because he wishes that political order should exist among men, and that we should be governed by usages and laws. For this reason Paul says, that all who
resist the power are rebels against God, because there is no power but what is ordained by God,
(Rom 13:1.)
It will, perhaps, be objected, that other callings also are from God, and are approved by him, and yet that we do not, on that account, call farmers, or cowherds, or cobblers, gods I reply, this is not a general declaration, that all who have been called by God to any particular way of living are called gods; but Christ speaks of kings, whom God has raised to a more elevated station, that they may rule and govern. In short, let us know that magistrates are called gods, because God has given them authority. Under the term Law, Christ includes the whole doctrine by which God governed his ancient Church; for since the prophets were only expounders of the Law, the Psalms are justly regarded as an appendage to the Law. That the Scripture cannot be broken means, that the doctrine of Scripture is inviolable.

Calvin: Joh 10:36 - -- 36.Whom the Father hath sanctified There is a sanctification that is common to all believers. But here Christ claims for himself something far more...
36.Whom the Father hath sanctified There is a sanctification that is common to all believers. But here Christ claims for himself something far more excellent, namely, that he alone was separated from all others, that the power of the Spirit and the majesty of God might be displayed in him; as he formerly said, that him hath God the Father sealed, (Joh 6:27.) But this refers strictly to the person of Christ, so far as he is manifested in the flesh. Accordingly, these two things are joined, that he has been sanctified and sent into the world. But we must also understand for what reason and on what condition he was sent It was to bring salvation from God, and to prove and exhibit himself, in every possible way, to be the Son of God.
Do you say that I blaspheme? The Arians anciently tortured this passage to prove that Christ is not God by nature, but that he possesses a kind of borrowed Divinity. But this error is easily refuted, for Christ does not now argue what he is in himself, but what we ought to acknowledge him to be, from his miracles in human flesh. For we can never comprehend his eternal Divinity, unless we embrace him as a Redeemer, so far as the Father hath exhibited him to us. Besides, we ought to remember what I have formerly suggested, that Christ does not, in this passage, explain fully and distinctly what he is, as he would have done among his disciples; but that he rather dwells on refuting the slander of his enemies.

Calvin: Joh 10:37 - -- 37.If I do not the works Lest the Jews might reply that it was in vain for him to boast of sanctification, and of all that depended on it, he again d...
37.If I do not the works Lest the Jews might reply that it was in vain for him to boast of sanctification, and of all that depended on it, he again draws their attention to his miracles, in which there was a sufficiently evident proof of his Divinity. This is in the shape of a concession, as if he had said, “I do not wish you to be bound to give me credit on any other condition than that you see the fact plainly before your eyes. 303 You may safely reject me, if God has not openly given testimony to me.”
The works of my Father He gives them this name, because those works were truly Divine, and because so great power shone in them, that they could not be ascribed to a man.

Calvin: Joh 10:38 - -- 38.But if I do He shows that they are held plainly convicted of unbelieving and sacrilegious contempt, because they render no reverence or honor 304 ...
38.But if I do He shows that they are held plainly convicted of unbelieving and sacrilegious contempt, because they render no reverence or honor 304 to what are undoubtedly the works of God. This is a second concession, when he says, “Though I allow you to doubt of my doctrine, you cannot deny, at least, that the miracles which I have performed are from God. You therefore openly reject God, and not a man.”
That you may know and believe Though he places knowledge before faith, as if faith were inferior to it, he does so, because he has to do with unbelieving and obstinate men, who never yield to God, until they are vanquished and constrained by experience; for rebels wish to know before they believe And yet our gracious God indulges us so far, that he prepares us for faith by a knowledge of his works. But the knowledge of God and of his secret wisdom comes after faith, because the obedience of faith opens to us the door of the kingdom of heaven.
That the Father is in me, and I in him He repeats the same thing which he had said before in other words, I and my Father are one All tends to this point, that in his ministry there is nothing contrary to his Father. “ The Father, he says, is in me; that is, Divine power is manifested in me.”
And I am in my Father; that is, “I do nothing but by the command of God, so that there is a mutual connection between me and my Father.” For this discourse does not relate to the unity of essence, but to the manifestation of Divine power in the person of Christ, from which it was evident that he was sent by God.

Calvin: Joh 10:39 - -- 39.Therefore they sought again to seize him This was undoubtedly that they might drive him out of the temple, and immediately stone him; for their ra...
39.Therefore they sought again to seize him This was undoubtedly that they might drive him out of the temple, and immediately stone him; for their rage was not at all abated by the words of Christ. As to what the Evangelist says, that he escaped out of their hands, this could not be accomplished in any other way than by a wonderful exertion of Divine power. This reminds us that we are not exposed to the lawless passions of wicked men, which God restrains by his bridle, whenever he thinks fit.

Calvin: Joh 10:40 - -- 40.He went away beyond Jordan Christ passed beyond Jordan, that he might not have to fight continually without any advantage. He has therefore taug...
40.He went away beyond Jordan Christ passed beyond Jordan, that he might not have to fight continually without any advantage. He has therefore taught us, by his example, that we ought to avail ourselves of opportunities, when they occur. As to the place of his retreat, the reader may consult the observations which I have made at Chapter 1, verse 28. 305

Calvin: Joh 10:41 - -- 41.And many came to him This large assembly shows that Christ did not seek solitude, in order to cease from the discharge of his duty, but to erect a...
41.And many came to him This large assembly shows that Christ did not seek solitude, in order to cease from the discharge of his duty, but to erect a sanctuary of God in the wilderness, when Jerusalem, which was his own abode and dwelling-place, 306 had obstinately driven him out. And indeed this was a dreadful vengeance of God, that, while the temple chosen by God was a den of robbers, (Jer 7:11; Mat 21:13,) the Church of God was collected in a despised place.
John indeed did no miracle They infer that Christ is more excellent than John, because he has distinguished himself by so many miracles, while John did not perform a single miracle Not that we ought always to judge from miracles, but that miracles, when united with doctrine, have no small weight, as has already been repeatedly mentioned. Their argument is defective; for they compare Christ with John, but they express only one part of the comparison. Besides, they take for granted, that John was an eminent prophet of God, and that he was endued with extraordinary grace of the Holy Spirit. They justly argue, therefore, that Christ ought to be preferred to John, because it was only by the fixed Providence of God that it was brought about that John, though in other respects a very great prophet, yet was not honored by performing any miracle. Hence they conclude, that this was done on Christ’s account, that he might be more highly esteemed.
But all that John said It appears that this was not spoken by themselves, but was added by the Evangelist, in order to show that there were two reasons which induced them to believe in Christ. On the one hand, 307 they saw that the testimony which John had given to him was true; and, on the other hand, 308 the miracles of Christ procured for him greater authority.
Defender: Joh 10:34 - -- This is quoted from Psa 82:6. The generic term "law" was often understood by the Jews to include the entire Old Testament Canon of Scripture (see note...

Defender: Joh 10:35 - -- Jesus is basing His entire defense against the charge of blasphemy on one word, "gods," in a relatively obscure psalm, commenting that the "scripture"...
Jesus is basing His entire defense against the charge of blasphemy on one word, "gods," in a relatively obscure psalm, commenting that the "scripture" - that is the word actually written down - cannot be broken. This constitutes a very important testimony by Christ to the plenary verbal inspiration and authority of the Bible. The reasoning of Christ is very subtle yet powerful, relying entirely on the use of this precise word in its context."

Defender: Joh 10:36 - -- In Psa 82:1, the word "gods" is the Hebrew elohim, the usual word for "God." There, however, it is applied to the human judges to whom the Word of God...
In Psa 82:1, the word "gods" is the Hebrew

Defender: Joh 10:41 - -- John the Baptist, though "filled with the Holy Ghost" (Luk 1:15) and the greatest man ever born before Christ (Mat 11:11), never performed a miracle. ...
John the Baptist, though "filled with the Holy Ghost" (Luk 1:15) and the greatest man ever born before Christ (Mat 11:11), never performed a miracle. Thus, signs and wonders are never a necessary - or even desirable - accompaniment to the ministry of a true man of God especially today, when we have the complete Bible."
TSK: Joh 10:33 - -- but : Lev 24:14; 1Ki 21:10
makest : Joh 10:30, Joh 5:18; Psa 82:6; Rom 13:1; Phi 2:6

TSK: Joh 10:34 - -- in : Joh 12:34, Joh 15:25; Rom 3:10-19
I said : Psa 82:1, Psa 82:6, Psa 82:7
gods : Exo 4:16, Exo 7:1, Exo 22:28; Psa 138:1

TSK: Joh 10:35 - -- unto : Gen 15:1; Deu 18:15, Deu 18:18-20; 1Sa 14:36, 1Sa 14:37, 1Sa 15:1, 1Sa 23:9-11, 1Sa 28:6, 1Sa 30:8; 2Sa 7:5; 1Ch 22:8; 2Ch 11:2, 2Ch 11:3, 2Ch ...
unto : Gen 15:1; Deu 18:15, Deu 18:18-20; 1Sa 14:36, 1Sa 14:37, 1Sa 15:1, 1Sa 23:9-11, 1Sa 28:6, 1Sa 30:8; 2Sa 7:5; 1Ch 22:8; 2Ch 11:2, 2Ch 11:3, 2Ch 19:2; Rom 13:1
the scripture : Joh 12:38, Joh 12:39, Joh 19:28, Joh 19:36, Joh 19:37; Mat 5:18, Mat 24:35, Mat 26:53-56, Mat 27:35; Luk 16:17; Luk 24:26, Luk 24:27, Luk 24:44-46; Act 1:16

TSK: Joh 10:36 - -- whom : Joh 3:34, Joh 6:27; Psa 2:2, Psa 2:6-12; Isa 11:2-5, Isa 42:1, Isa 42:3, Isa 49:1-3, Isa 49:6-8, Isa 55:4; Isa 61:1-3; Jer 1:5
sent : Joh 3:17,...
whom : Joh 3:34, Joh 6:27; Psa 2:2, Psa 2:6-12; Isa 11:2-5, Isa 42:1, Isa 42:3, Isa 49:1-3, Isa 49:6-8, Isa 55:4; Isa 61:1-3; Jer 1:5
sent : Joh 3:17, Joh 5:30,Joh 5:36, Joh 5:37, Joh 6:38, Joh 6:57, Joh 8:42, Joh 17:4, Joh 17:5, Joh 17:8, Joh 17:18, Joh 17:21; Rom 8:3; Gal 4:4; 1Jo 4:9-14
I am : Joh 10:30-33, Joh 5:17, Joh 5:18, Joh 9:35-37, Joh 19:7, Joh 20:28, Joh 20:31; Mat 26:63-66, Mat 27:43, Mat 27:54; Luk 1:35; Rom 1:4, Rom 9:5

TSK: Joh 10:37 - -- Joh 10:25, Joh 10:32, Joh 5:31, Joh 12:37-40, Joh 14:10, Joh 15:24; Mat 11:20-24

TSK: Joh 10:38 - -- believe the : Joh 3:2, Joh 5:36; Act 2:22, Act 4:8-12
that ye : Joh 10:30, Joh 14:9-11, Joh 14:20, Joh 17:11, Joh 17:21-23
believe the : Joh 3:2, Joh 5:36; Act 2:22, Act 4:8-12
that ye : Joh 10:30, Joh 14:9-11, Joh 14:20, Joh 17:11, Joh 17:21-23



TSK: Joh 10:41 - -- many : Joh 3:26; Mat 4:23-25; Mar 1:37; Luk 5:1, Luk 12:1
John did : Mat 14:2; Luk 7:26-28
but : Joh 1:29, Joh 1:33, Joh 1:34, Joh 3:29-36; Mat 3:11, ...
many : Joh 3:26; Mat 4:23-25; Mar 1:37; Luk 5:1, Luk 12:1
John did : Mat 14:2; Luk 7:26-28
but : Joh 1:29, Joh 1:33, Joh 1:34, Joh 3:29-36; Mat 3:11, Mat 3:12; Luk 7:29, Luk 7:30

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Joh 10:33 - -- For blasphemy - See the notes at Mat 9:3. Makest thyself God - See the notes at Joh 5:18. This shows how they understood what he had said...

Barnes: Joh 10:34-38 - -- Jesus answered them - The answer of Jesus consists of two parts. The first Joh 10:34-36 shows that they ought not to object to his use of the w...
Jesus answered them - The answer of Jesus consists of two parts. The first Joh 10:34-36 shows that they ought not to object to his use of the word God, even if he were no more than a man. The second Joh 10:37-38 repeats substantially what he had before said, left the same impression, and in proof of it he appealed to his works.
In your law - Psa 82:6. The word "law"here, is used to include the Old Testament.
I said - The Psalmist said, or God said by the Psalmist.
Ye are gods - This was said of magistrates on account of the dignity and honor of their office, and it shows that the Hebrew word translated "god,"
Unto whom the word of God came - That is, who were his servants, or who received their dignity and honor only because the law of God was intrusted to them. "The Word of God"here means the command of God; his commission to them to do justice.
The scripture cannot be broken - See Mat 5:19. The authority of the Scripture is final; it cannot be set aside. The meaning is, "If, therefore, the Scripture uses the word "god"
Whom the Father hath sanctified - The word "sanctify"with us means to make holy; but this is not its meaning here, for the Son of God was always holy. The original word means to set apart from a common to a sacred use; to devote to a sacred purpose, and to designate or consecrate to a holy office. This is the meaning here. God has consecrated or appointed his Son to be his Messenger or Messiah to mankind. See Exo 28:41; Exo 29:1, Exo 29:44; Lev 8:30.
And sent into the world - As the Messiah, an office far more exalted than that of magistrates.
I am the Son of God - This the Jews evidently understood as the same as saying that he was equal with God. This expression he had often applied to himself. The meaning of this place may be thus expressed: "You charge me with blasphemy. The foundation of that charge is the use of the name God, or the Son of God, applied to myself; yet that same term is applied in the Scriptures to magistrates. The use of it there shows that it is right to apply it to those who sustain important offices (see the notes of Joh 10:34-35). And especially you, Jews, ought not to attempt to found a charge of blasphemy on the application of a word to the Messiah which in your own Scriptures is applied to all magistrates. And we may remark here:
1. That Jesus did not deny that he meant to apply the term to himself.
2. He did not deny that it was properly applied to him.
3. He did not deny that it implied that he was God. He affirmed only that they were inconsistent, and were not authorized to bring a charge of blasphemy for the application of the name to himself.
The works of my Father - The very works that my Father does. See Joh 5:17; "My Father worketh hitherto, and I work."See the note on that place. The works of his Father are those which God only can do. As Jesus did them, it shows that the name "Son of God,"implying equality with God, was properly applied to him. This shows conclusively that he meant to be understood as claiming to be equal with God. So the Jews naturally understood him Joh 10:39, and they were left with this impression on their minds.
Believe the works - Though you do not credit me, yet consider my works, for they prove that I came from God. No one could do them unless he was sent of God.
Father is in me ... - Most intimately connected. See Joh 5:36. This expression denotes most intimate union - such as can exist in no other case. See Mat 11:27; Notes, Joh 17:21.

Barnes: Joh 10:39 - -- Sought again to take him - They evidently understood him as still claiming equality with God, and under this impression Jesus left them. Nor ca...
Sought again to take him - They evidently understood him as still claiming equality with God, and under this impression Jesus left them. Nor can it be doubted that he intended to leave them with this impression; and if so, then he is divine.
He escaped - See Joh 8:59.

Barnes: Joh 10:41 - -- No miracle - He did not confirm his mission by working miracles, but he showed that he was a prophet by foretelling the character and success o...
No miracle - He did not confirm his mission by working miracles, but he showed that he was a prophet by foretelling the character and success of Jesus. Either miracle or prophecy is conclusive proof of a divine mission, for no man can foretell a future event, or work a miracle, except by the special aid of God. It may be remarked that the people of that place were properly prepared by the ministry of John for the preaching of Jesus. The persecution of the Jews was the occasion of his going there, and thus the wrath of man was made to praise him. It has commonly happened that the opposition of the wicked has resulted in the increased success of the cause which they have persecuted. God takes the wise in their own craftiness, and brings glory to himself and salvation to sinners out of the pride, and passions, and rage of wicked men.
Poole: Joh 10:33 - -- The Jews answered him These are not the things we are incensed against thee for; we grant that thou hast done many good works amongst us; these we gr...
The Jews answered him These are not the things we are incensed against thee for; we grant that thou hast done many good works amongst us; these we gratefully acknowledge. But this is that which we are not able to bear, that whereas thou art but a mere man, by thy discourses thou makest thyself equal with God, and so art guilty of
blasphemy which is committed as well by arrogating to ourselves what is proper to God, as by imputing to God the natural or moral imperfections of the creature; and the blasphemer deserveth to be stoned, according to the law of God. By this it is manifest, that the Jews understood our Saviour, affirming that he and his Father were one, as asserting himself one in essence with his Father, not in will only.

Poole: Joh 10:34 - -- This was written, Psa 82:6 . The whole Scripture of the Old Testament, being wrote by holy men, inspired of God, and directive of men’ s conver...
This was written, Psa 82:6 . The whole Scripture of the Old Testament, being wrote by holy men, inspired of God, and directive of men’ s conversation before men, and towards God, is sometimes called the law, Psa 19:7 . It was spoken concerning magistrates, and the governors of God’ s people, who, being God’ s deputies and vicegerents, intrusted to execute the judgments and vengeance of God, are dignified with the name of gods.

Poole: Joh 10:35 - -- If God dignified those men (and many of them were also vile and sinful men) with the title of gods, because they had a commission to govern people a...
If God dignified those men (and many of them were also vile and sinful men) with the title of gods, because they had a commission to govern people according to the law of God; and none must contradict what God hath said in his word; there can be no falsehood in the revelation of any part of the Divine will.

Poole: Joh 10:36 - -- Suppose I were no more than a mere man, yet being sanctified, that is, set apart of God for the special work of man’ s redemption, and sent ...
Suppose I were no more than a mere man, yet being sanctified, that is, set apart of God for the special work of man’ s redemption, and sent of God into the world with commission both to reveal and to do his will, yet dare you say that I blaspheme,
because I said, I am the Son of God? In the place viz. Psa 82:6where God said of magistrates, Ye are gods, he also added, all of you are children of the Most High; you have therefore no reason to rage at me, though I did say I was the Son of God; being one whom the Father hath in his eternal counsels set apart for this great and special work, and actually by his providence sent into the world for the finishing and despatching of it. But we must take heed that we do not understand our Saviour here, as if he in another sense assumed to him the title of the Son of God; it was enough for him at present to assert, that the title well enough belonged to him, if he indeed had been no more than the Son of man, as they said.

Poole: Joh 10:37 - -- Our Saviour doth often appeal to his works to testify concerning his Divine mission and power; these works he here calleth the
works of his Father...
Our Saviour doth often appeal to his works to testify concerning his Divine mission and power; these works he here calleth the
works of his Father by which he doth not only mean works that are pleasing and acceptable to God, as acts of obedience to the will of God performed by men may be called, and are, Joh 6:28,29 ; nor (as I conceive) only those works which he did by commission and authority from his Father, which, Joh 17:4 , he calleth the work which his Father had given him to do; but those works which none but God could do; such were the multiplication of the loaves, Joh 6:1-14 , the curing of him who was born blind, Joh 9:1-41 , &c. If (saith our Saviour) I do not do those works which no mere man ever did, give me no credit; but if I do those works which can be done by no human art or power, you have reason to believe me.

Poole: Joh 10:38 - -- If I do such works as can be done by no less than a Divine power, being beyond the power and ability of all creatures; then, though you will not giv...
If I do such works as can be done by no less than a Divine power, being beyond the power and ability of all creatures; then, though you will not give credit to any bare affirmations of myself, because I say I am the Son of God, yet believe the things for the testimony that my works give unto it. Proper effects give testimony to the proper cause; he who doth those things which none but God can do, must needs be God, or empowered by God to do them. This is the way for you to know, be persuaded, and believe, that the Father is in me by his mighty, Divine, working power: Joh 14:10 , The Father that dwelleth in me, he doeth the works; and I work in and together with him. This phrase, The Father is in me, and I in him, teacheth us three things concerning Christ:
1. His oneness in nature and essence with the Father.
2. His personal distinction from his Father: here are two mentioned, the Father, and me: none can properly be said to be in himself.
3. The most perfect and intimate indwelling of one of the Persons in the Holy Trinity in the other.

Poole: Joh 10:39 - -- Therefore they sought again to take him because he said, that the Father was in him, and he in the Father; by which they well enough understood, that...
Therefore they sought again to take him because he said, that the Father was in him, and he in the Father; by which they well enough understood, that he asserted a union with the Father. They did not again go about to stone him, as they did before; he had sufficiently stopped their mouths as to their imputation of blasphemy; but they seek to apprehend him, with a design (no doubt) to carry him before the sanhedrim, their great court, which had cognizance of those things. But as he had once and again before, so he now again escapeth out of their hands; whether by darkening the air before their eyes, or (as some would have it) making his body invisible, by his Divine power, or what other way, the Scripture tells us not, and it is great rashness to determine.

Poole: Joh 10:40 - -- Christ’ s time was not yet come when he should be betrayed and crucified; it was yet three months and more to it; he saw the Jews at Jerusalem ...
Christ’ s time was not yet come when he should be betrayed and crucified; it was yet three months and more to it; he saw the Jews at Jerusalem were in such a rage and fury, that there was no staying in that place: he goes beyond Jordan to Bethabara, where he found John at first baptizing, Joh 1:28 , before he baptized in Aenon near Salim, Joh 3:23 . See Poole on "Joh 1:28" . Possibly he chose that place as being a place where John had been preparing a way for him, by turning men’ s hearts in some measure for receiving the gospel, and pointing out Christ to his disciples, as the Lamb of God who taketh away the sins of the world.
And there he abode: how long he abode there we cannot tell; probably till he took his last journey from Galilee to Jerusalem; of which the other evangelists speak, Mat 20:17 Mar 10:32 Luk 18:31 . What he did in Galilee during these three months John reports not, only saith... see Joh 10:41

Poole: Joh 10:41 - -- God so ordered it in the wisdom of his providence, that though Elijah and Elisha under the law wrought miracles, by which they confirmed their Divin...
God so ordered it in the wisdom of his providence, that though Elijah and Elisha under the law wrought miracles, by which they confirmed their Divine mission; yet John, coming immediately before Christ, as his messenger and forerunner, wrought none; that so the glory of Christ in working miracles when he came might be more clear and evident. This made the people, that came to Christ while he was in Galilee, say thus amongst themselves, We paid a great veneration to John the Baptist, yet he never did those things which Christ hath done: and whatsoever John told us of this person hath proved true; he hath done, and doth, greater things than ever John did, and is in the judgment of sense to be preferred before him, should we not now believe in him? John told us he was the Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world; and told us much more concerning him, which our eyes see is true.

Poole: Joh 10:42 - -- Some believed on him as such whom John Baptist had spoken him to be; others possibly believed on him in the sense mentioned Joh 2:23 ; not to the sa...
Some believed on him as such whom John Baptist had spoken him to be; others possibly believed on him in the sense mentioned Joh 2:23 ; not to the saving of their souls, but as one sent of God, a great Prophet, no ordinary man. The rage of men shall not hinder the progress of the gospel.
Lightfoot: Joh 10:35 - -- If he called them gods, unto whom the word of God came, and the scripture cannot be broken;  [If he called them gods, etc.] the Jews in...
If he called them gods, unto whom the word of God came, and the scripture cannot be broken;  
[If he called them gods, etc.] the Jews interpret those words of the Psalmist, "I have said, Ye are gods," to a most ridiculous sense.  
"Unless our fathers had sinned, we had never come into the world; as it is written, I have said, 'Ye are gods, and the children of the Most High: but ye have corrupted your doings; therefore ye shall die like men.' " And a little after; "Israel had not received the law, only that the angel of death might not rule over them; as it is said, 'I have said, Ye are gods: but ye have corrupted your doings; therefore ye shall die like men.' "  
The sense is, If those who stood before mount Sinai had not sinned in the matter of the golden calf, they had not begot children, nor had been subject to death, but had been like the angels. So the Gloss: "If our fathers had not sinned by the golden calf, we had never come into the world; for they would have been like the angels, and had never begot ten children."  
The Psalmist indeed speaks of the magistracy, to whom the word of God hath arrived, ordaining and deputing them to the government by an express dispensation and diploma, as the whole web and contexture of the psalm doth abundantly shew. But if we apply the words as if they were spoken by our Saviour according to the common interpretation received amongst them, they fitly argue thus: "If he said they were angels or gods, to whom the law and word of God came on mount Sinai, as you conceive; is it any blasphemy in me then, whom God in a peculiar manner hath sanctified and sent into the world that I might declare his word and will, if I say that I am the Son of God?"

Lightfoot: Joh 10:40 - -- And went away again beyond Jordan into the place where John at first baptized; and there he abode.  [Where John at first baptized.] That ...
And went away again beyond Jordan into the place where John at first baptized; and there he abode.  
[Where John at first baptized.] That is, Bethabara: for the evangelist speaks according to his own history: which to the judicious reader needs no proof.
Haydock: Joh 10:34 - -- This is addressed to princes established to govern the people of God. They are the image of God on earth by the authority they exercise, and which th...
This is addressed to princes established to govern the people of God. They are the image of God on earth by the authority they exercise, and which they have received from Him. ---
Is it not written in you law, (under which were also comprehended the Psalms) I have said: you are Gods? &c. Christ here stops the mouths of the Jews, by an argument which they could not answer, that sometimes they were called Gods, who acted by God's authority. I have said: you are Gods. (Psalm lxxxi. 6.) But then he immediately declares, that it is not in this sense only that he is God. 1st, Because he has been sanctified by the Father, which St. Augustine and others understand of that infinite sanctification, which he has necessarily by always proceeding from the Father. Others expound it of a greater sanctity and fulness of grace above all other saints, given to him, even as he was man. But 2ndly, he adds at the same time, and confirms what he had often told them, that he was the Son of God, sent into the world: that his works shew that he was in the Father, and the Father in him. by this they saw that he was far from recalling or contradicting what he had said before. And therefore (ver. 30.) they sought to apprehend him, and put him to death for blasphemy. (Witham) ---
Eloim, which name of God was so called from judging, and may be interpreted judges. (Menochius)

Haydock: Joh 10:39 - -- And he escaped out of their hands; perhaps making himself invisible, or hindering them by his divine power. (Witham)
And he escaped out of their hands; perhaps making himself invisible, or hindering them by his divine power. (Witham)
Gill: Joh 10:33 - -- The Jews answered him, saying,.... As follows;
for a good work we stone thee not: they could not deny, that he had done many good works; this was t...
The Jews answered him, saying,.... As follows;
for a good work we stone thee not: they could not deny, that he had done many good works; this was too barefaced to be contradicted; yet they cared not to own them; and though they industriously concealed their resentment at them, yet they were very much gravelled and made uneasy by them, but chose to give another reason for their stoning him:
but for blasphemy; which required death by stoning, according to Lev 24:16, and according to the Jews' oral law q:
and because that thou, being a man, makest thyself God; which they concluded very rightly, from his saying, Joh 10:30, that God was his Father, and that he and his Father were one; that is, in nature and essence, and therefore he must be God; but then this was no blasphemy, but a real truth, as is hereafter made to appear; nor is there any contradiction between his being man, and being God; he is truly and really man, but then he is not a mere man, as the Jews suggested; but is truly God, as well as man, and is both God and man in one person, the divine and human nature being united in him, of which they were ignorant: two mistakes they seem to be guilty of in this account; one that Christ was a mere man, the other that he made himself God, or assumed deity to himself, which did not belong to him, and therefore must be guilty of blasphemy; neither of which were true: the phrase is used by the Jews, of others who have taken upon them the name and title of God; as of Hiram king of Tyre, of whom they say,

Gill: Joh 10:34 - -- Jesus answered them, is it not written in your law,.... In the law which was given unto them, of which they boasted, and pretended to understand, and ...
Jesus answered them, is it not written in your law,.... In the law which was given unto them, of which they boasted, and pretended to understand, and interpret, even in Psa 82:6; for the law includes not only the Pentateuch, but all the books of the Old Testament: it is an observation of one of the Jewish doctors t, that
"with the wise men of blessed memory, it is found in many places that the word law comprehends the Prophets and the Hagiographa.''
Among which last stands the book of Psalms; and this may be confirmed by a passage out of the Talmud u; it is asked,
"from whence does the resurrection of the dead appear,
It is answered,
"as it is said in Psa 84:4, "Blessed are they that dwell in thy house, they will still praise thee, Selah; they do praise thee", it is not said, but "they will praise thee"; from hence is a proof of the resurrection of the dead, "out of the law".''
The same question is again put, and then Isa 52:8 is cited, and the like observation made upon it. Moreover, this is a way of speaking used by the Jews, when they introduce another citing a passage of Scripture thus w,
I said, ye are gods? which is spoken to civil magistrates, so called, because of their authority and power; and because they do, in some sort, represent the divine majesty, in the government of nations and kingdoms. Many of the Jewish writers, by "gods", understand "the angels". The Targum paraphrases the words thus:
"I said ye are accounted as angels, as the angels on high, all of you;''
and to this sense some of their commentators interpret it. Jarchi's gloss is, ye are gods; that is, angels; for when I gave the law to you, it was on this account, that the angel of death might not any more rule over you: the note of Aben Ezra is, "and the children of the Most High": as angels; and the sense is, your soul is as the soul of angels: hence the x Jew charges Christ with seeking refuge in words, that will not profit, or be any help to him, when he cites these words, showing that magistrates are called gods, when the sense is only, that they are like to the angels in respect of their souls: but let it be observed, that it is not said, "ye are as gods", as in Gen 3:5, but "ye are gods"; not like unto them only, but are in some sense gods; and besides, to say that they are like to angels, with respect to their souls, which come from above, is to say no more of the judges of the earth, than what may be said of every man: to which may be added, that this objector himself owns, that judges are called

Gill: Joh 10:35 - -- If he called them gods, unto whom the word of God came,.... The Syriac version reads, "because the word of God came to them"; either the divine "Logos...
If he called them gods, unto whom the word of God came,.... The Syriac version reads, "because the word of God came to them"; either the divine "Logos", the essential word, the Son of God, who appeared to Moses, and made him a God to Pharaoh, and who appointed rulers and magistrates among the Jews; and who is the King of kings, and Lord of lords, from whom all receive their power and dominion: this sense is favoured by the Ethiopic version, which renders it, "if he called them gods to whom God appeared, the word of God was with them": or else the commission from God, authorizing them to act in the capacity of rulers and governors, is here meant; or rather the word of God, which, in the passage of Scripture cited, calls them so, as it certainly does:
and the Scripture cannot be broken; or be made null and void; whatever that says is true, there is no contradicting it, or objecting to it: it is a Jewish way of speaking, much used in the Talmud y; when one doctor has produced an argument, or instance, in any point of debate, another says,

Gill: Joh 10:36 - -- Say ye of him whom the Father hath sanctified,.... Not by making his human nature pure and holy, and free from all sin, and by bestowing the holy Spir...
Say ye of him whom the Father hath sanctified,.... Not by making his human nature pure and holy, and free from all sin, and by bestowing the holy Spirit on him without measure, though both true; but these were upon, or after his mission into the world; whereas sanctification here, designs something previous to that, and respects the eternal separation of him to his office, as Mediator, in the counsel, purposes, and decrees of God, and in the covenant of his grace, being pre-ordained thereunto, before the foundation of the world; which supposes his eternal existence as a divine person, and tacitly proves his true and proper deity:
and sent into the world; in human nature, to obtain eternal redemption and salvation his people: to save them from sin, Satan, the world, law, hell and death, which none but God could do:
thou blasphemest, because I said, I am the Son of God; for what he had said in Joh 10:30 is equivalent to it; and in it he was rightly understood by the Jews, and what he here and afterwards says confirms it: the argument is what the Jews call

Gill: Joh 10:37 - -- If I do not the works of my Father,.... Not only what the Father had given him to finish, and which he wrought by him as man, but such as were as grea...
If I do not the works of my Father,.... Not only what the Father had given him to finish, and which he wrought by him as man, but such as were as great as the Father had done, and were equal to them; and which could not be done by any, but by the Father, or by one that is equal with him:
believe me not: Christ appeals to his miracles as proofs of his deity, sonship, and Messiahship, and desires no other credit than what they demand; see Mat 11:3.

Gill: Joh 10:38 - -- But if I do,.... Works, which none but God can do:
though ye believe not me; what Christ said in his doctrine and ministry, though they paid no reg...
But if I do,.... Works, which none but God can do:
though ye believe not me; what Christ said in his doctrine and ministry, though they paid no regard to that, and did not receive his testimony, on the credit of him the testifier, as they ought to have done:
believe the works; not only that they are true and real, and not imaginary and delusory; but for the sake of them believe the above assertion, that Christ is the Son of God, he and his Father being one; or take such notice of these works and miracles, consider the nature, evidence, and importance of them, and the divine power that attends them,
that ye may know and believe, that the Father is in me, and I in him; or "in the Father", as one of Beza's exemplars; the Vulgate Latin, Persic, and Ethiopic versions read, or "in my Father", as read the Syriac and Arabic versions; that they are one in nature, distinct in person, equal in power, and have a mutual inhabitation and communion in the divine essence; all which is manifest, by doing the same works, and which are out of the reach and power of any mere creature.

Gill: Joh 10:39 - -- Therefore they sought again to take him,.... Not to take away his life by stoning him, as before, in the manner the furious zealots did, and was the p...
Therefore they sought again to take him,.... Not to take away his life by stoning him, as before, in the manner the furious zealots did, and was the part they were about to act just now; but to lay hold upon him and bring him before the sanhedrim, as they had done in Joh 5:18, he being so far from clearing himself from the charge of blasphemy, they had brought against him, that in their opinion he had greatly strengthened it; and they thought they had now sufficient proof and evidence to convict him as a blasphemer, in their high court of judicature; and therefore attempted to lay hands on him, and bring him thither:
but he escaped out of their hands; either by withdrawing from them in some private way; or by open force, exerting his power, and obliging them on every side to fall back, and give way to him; or by rendering himself invisible to them; and this he did, not through fear of death, but because his time was not yet come, and he had other work to do, before he suffered and died.

Gill: Joh 10:40 - -- And went away again beyond Jordan,.... Where he had been before; and whither he went; not merely for the security of his person, much less to indulge ...
And went away again beyond Jordan,.... Where he had been before; and whither he went; not merely for the security of his person, much less to indulge himself in ease, but to preach the Gospel, work miracles, and bring many souls to believe on him, as did: and he went
into the place where John at first baptized; that is, Bethabara, where he baptized before he was at Aenon, near Salim, Joh 1:28, and was the place where Christ himself was baptized, and where John bore such a testimony of him:
and there he abode; how long is not certain, perhaps till he went to Bethany, on account of raising Lazarus from the dead.

Gill: Joh 10:41 - -- And many resorted to him,.... From all the parts adjacent, having heard of his being there, and of the fame of him; and many of them doubtless persona...
And many resorted to him,.... From all the parts adjacent, having heard of his being there, and of the fame of him; and many of them doubtless personally knew him; these came to him, some very likely to be healed by him, others to see his person and miracles, and others to hear him preach:
and said, John did no miracle; though it was now three years ago, yet the name, ministry, and baptism of John, were fresh in the memory of men in those parts; and what they say one to another, was not to lessen the character of John, but to exalt Jesus Christ, and to give a reason why they should receive and embrace him; for if John, who did no miracle, who only taught and baptized, and directed men to the Messiah, was justly reckoned a very great person, and his doctrine was received, and his baptism was submitted to, then much more should this illustrious person be attended to; who, besides his divine doctrine, did such great and amazing miracles; to which they add, though John did no miracle to confirm his mission, ministry, and baptism,
but all things that John spake of this man, were true; as that he was greater than he, was the Lamb of God, yea, the Son of God, the Saviour of the world, and true Messiah, who should baptize men with the Holy Ghost and with fire.

Gill: Joh 10:42 - -- And many believed on him there., Through the doctrine he preached, the miracles he wrought, and through comparing these things with what John had said...
And many believed on him there., Through the doctrine he preached, the miracles he wrought, and through comparing these things with what John had said of him: this shows the reason of Christ's leaving Jerusalem, and coming into these parts; there were others that were to believe in his name: the word "there", is left out in the Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and Persic versions.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Joh 10:33; Joh 10:33; Joh 10:33; Joh 10:33; Joh 10:33; Joh 10:33; Joh 10:34; Joh 10:34; Joh 10:35; Joh 10:36; Joh 10:37; Joh 10:37; Joh 10:38; Joh 10:38; Joh 10:38; Joh 10:39; Joh 10:39; Joh 10:39; Joh 10:39; Joh 10:40; Joh 10:40; Joh 10:40; Joh 10:40; Joh 10:40; Joh 10:41; Joh 10:41; Joh 10:41; Joh 10:41; Joh 10:42

NET Notes: Joh 10:34 A quotation from Ps 82:6. Technically the Psalms are not part of the OT “law” (which usually referred to the five books of Moses), but occ...

NET Notes: Joh 10:35 The parenthetical note And the scripture cannot be broken belongs to Jesus’ words rather than the author’s. Not only does Jesus appeal to ...




NET Notes: Joh 10:39 It is not clear whether the authorities simply sought to “arrest” him, or were renewing their attempt to stone him (cf. John 10:31) by sei...



Geneva Bible: Joh 10:35 If he called them gods, unto whom the word of God came, and the scripture cannot be ( l ) broken;
( l ) Void and of no effect.

Geneva Bible: Joh 10:39 ( 11 ) Therefore they sought again to take him: but he escaped out of their hand,
( 11 ) Christ flees danger, not because of mistrust, nor for fear o...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Joh 10:1-42
TSK Synopsis: Joh 10:1-42 - --1 Christ is the door, and the good shepherd.19 Divers opinions of him.23 He proves by his works that he is Christ the Son of God;31 escapes the Jews;3...
Combined Bible -> Joh 10:32-42
Combined Bible: Joh 10:32-42 - --of the Gospel of John
CHAPTER 36
Christ, One with the Father
John 10:22-42
It is by no mean...
MHCC -> Joh 10:31-38; Joh 10:39-42
MHCC: Joh 10:31-38 - --Christ's works of power and mercy proclaim him to be over all, God blessed for evermore, that all may know and believe He is in the Father, and the Fa...

MHCC: Joh 10:39-42 - --No weapon formed against our Lord Jesus shall prosper. He escaped, not because he was afraid to suffer, but because his hour was not come. And He who ...
Matthew Henry -> Joh 10:22-38; Joh 10:39-42
Matthew Henry: Joh 10:22-38 - -- We have here another rencounter between Christ and the Jews in the temple, in which it is hard to say which is more strange, the gracious words that...

Matthew Henry: Joh 10:39-42 - -- We have here the issue of the conference with the Jews. One would have thought it would have convinced and melted them, but their hearts were harden...
Barclay -> Joh 10:31-39; Joh 10:40-41
Barclay: Joh 10:31-39 - --To the Jews Jesus' statement that he and the Father were one was blasphemy. It was the invasion by a man of the place which belonged to God alone. ...

Barclay: Joh 10:40-41 - --For Jesus the time was running out; but he knew his hour. He would not recklessly court danger and throw his life away; nor would he in cowardice a...
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...

Constable: Joh 7:10--11:1 - --H. Jesus' third visit to Jerusalem 7:10-10:42
This section of the text describes Jesus' teaching in Jeru...

Constable: Joh 10:22-42 - --8. The confrontation at the feast of Dedication 10:22-42
The present section of the fourth Gospe...

Constable: Joh 10:31-39 - --Jesus' claim to be God's Son 10:31-39
10:31-33 Clearly the Jews understood Jesus to be claiming more than simple agreement with God in thought and pur...

Constable: Joh 10:40-42 - --Jesus' withdrawal from Jerusalem 10:40-42
10:40 John presented Jesus' departure from Jerusalem as the result of official rejection of Him. The event h...
College -> Joh 10:1-42
College: Joh 10:1-42 - --JOHN 10
6. The Feast of Dedication and the Shepherd Analogy (10:1-42)
There is no clear break between Jesus' words in 9:41 and 10:1, but this seems ...
McGarvey -> Joh 10:22-42
McGarvey: Joh 10:22-42 - --
LXXXVIII.
FEAST OF THE DEDICATION. THE JEWS ATTEMPT
TO STONE JESUS AND HE RETIRES TO PERÆA.
(Jerusalem and beyond Jordan.)
dJOHN X. 22-42.
&n...
Lapide -> Joh 10:32-41
Lapide: Joh 10:32-41 - --Ver. 32. — Jesus answered, &c. He replied not to the words, for none had been spoken, but to the crafty intention of the Jews. He answered, i.e.,...
