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Text -- John 12:37-50 (NET)

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Context
The Outcome of Jesus’ Public Ministry Foretold
12:37 Although Jesus had performed so many miraculous signs before them, they still refused to believe in him, 12:38 so that the word of Isaiah the prophet would be fulfilled. He said, “Lord, who has believed our message, and to whom has the arm of the Lord been revealed?” 12:39 For this reason they could not believe, because again Isaiah said, 12:40 “He has blinded their eyes and hardened their heart, so that they would not see with their eyes and understand with their heart, and turn to me, and I would heal them.” 12:41 Isaiah said these things because he saw Christ’s glory, and spoke about him. 12:42 Nevertheless, even among the rulers many believed in him, but because of the Pharisees they would not confess Jesus to be the Christ, so that they would not be put out of the synagogue. 12:43 For they loved praise from men more than praise from God.
Jesus’ Final Public Words
12:44 But Jesus shouted out, “The one who believes in me does not believe in me, but in the one who sent me, 12:45 and the one who sees me sees the one who sent me. 12:46 I have come as a light into the world, so that everyone who believes in me should not remain in darkness. 12:47 If anyone hears my words and does not obey them, I do not judge him. For I have not come to judge the world, but to save the world. 12:48 The one who rejects me and does not accept my words has a judge; the word I have spoken will judge him at the last day. 12:49 For I have not spoken from my own authority, but the Father himself who sent me has commanded commanded me what I should say and what I should speak. 12:50 And I know that his commandment is eternal life. Thus the things I say, I say just as the Father has told me.”
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Isaiah a son of Amoz; a prophet active in Judah from about 740 to 701 B.C.,son of Amoz; a major prophet in the time of Hezekiah
 · Pharisee a religious group or sect of the Jews


Dictionary Themes and Topics: WORD | Unbelief | QUOTATIONS IN THE NEW TESTAMENT | KING, CHRIST AS | Jesus, The Christ | JOHN, GOSPEL OF | JOHANNINE THEOLOGY, 2 | JESUS CHRIST, 4E1 | Isaiah, The Book of | INSPIRATION, 8-18 | IMAGE | HEAL | HARDEN | EXCOMMUNICATION | ESCHATOLOGY OF THE NEW TESTAMENT, VI-X | ESCHATOLOGY OF THE NEW TESTAMENT, I-V | CONVERSION | CONDEMN; CONDEMNATION | COMMANDMENT, THE NEW | Arm | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Lightfoot , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , Combined Bible , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College , McGarvey , Lapide

Other
Evidence

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Joh 12:37 - -- Though he had done so many signs before them ( tosauta autou sēmeia pepoiēkotos emprosthen autōn ). Genitive absolute with perfect active parti...

Though he had done so many signs before them ( tosauta autou sēmeia pepoiēkotos emprosthen autōn ).

Genitive absolute with perfect active participle in concessive sense of poieō .

Robertson: Joh 12:37 - -- Yet they believed not on him ( ouk episteuon eis auton ). No "yet"in the Greek. Negative imperfect active of pisteuō , "they kept on not believing ...

Yet they believed not on him ( ouk episteuon eis auton ).

No "yet"in the Greek. Negative imperfect active of pisteuō , "they kept on not believing on him,"stubborn refusal in face of the light (Joh 12:35).

Robertson: Joh 12:38 - -- That might be fulfilled ( hina plērōthēi ). It is usually assumed that hina here with the first aorist passive subjunctive of plēroō ha...

That might be fulfilled ( hina plērōthēi ).

It is usually assumed that hina here with the first aorist passive subjunctive of plēroō has its full telic force. That is probable as God’ s design, but it is by no means certain since hina is used in the N.T. with the idea of result, just as ut in Latin is either purpose or result, as in Joh 6:7; Joh 9:2; 1Th 5:4; Gal 5:17; Rom 11:11 (Robertson, Grammar , p. 998). Paul in Rom 10:16 quotes Isa 53:1 as John does here but without hina . See note on Rom 10:16 for discussion of the quotation. The next verse adds strength to the idea of design.

Robertson: Joh 12:39 - -- For this cause they could not believe ( dia touto ouk edunanto pisteuein ). Touto (this) seems to have a double reference (to what precedes and to ...

For this cause they could not believe ( dia touto ouk edunanto pisteuein ).

Touto (this) seems to have a double reference (to what precedes and to what follows) as in Joh 8:47. The negative imperfect (double augment, edunanto ) of dunamai . John is not absolving these Jews from moral responsibility, but only showing that the words of Isaiah "had to be fulfilled, for they were the expression of Divine foreknowledge"(Bernard).

Robertson: Joh 12:40 - -- He hath blinded ( tetuphlōken ). Perfect active indicative of tuphloō , old causative verb to make blind (from tuphlos , blind), in N.T. only her...

He hath blinded ( tetuphlōken ).

Perfect active indicative of tuphloō , old causative verb to make blind (from tuphlos , blind), in N.T. only here, 2Co 4:4; 1Jo 2:11.

Robertson: Joh 12:40 - -- He hardened ( epōrōsen ). First aorist active indicative of pōroō , a late causative verb (from pōros , hard skin), seen already in Mar 6:5...

He hardened ( epōrōsen ).

First aorist active indicative of pōroō , a late causative verb (from pōros , hard skin), seen already in Mar 6:52, etc. This quotation is from Isa 6:10 and differs from the lxx.

Robertson: Joh 12:40 - -- Lest they should see ( hina mē idōsin ). Negative purpose clause with hina mē instead of mēpote (never used by John) of the lxx. Matthew ...

Lest they should see ( hina mē idōsin ).

Negative purpose clause with hina mē instead of mēpote (never used by John) of the lxx. Matthew (Mat 13:15) has mēpote and quotes Jesus as using the passage as do Mark (Mar 4:12) and Luke (Luk 8:10). Paul quotes it again (Act 28:26) to the Jews in Rome. In each instance the words of Isaiah are interpreted as forecasting the doom of the Jews for rejecting the Messiah. Matthew (Mat 13:15) has sunōsin where John has noēsōsin (perceive), and both change from the subjunctive to the future (kai iasomai ), "And I should heal them."John has here straphōsin (second aorist passive subjunctive of strephō ) while Matthew reads epistrepsōsin (first aorist active of epistrephō ).

Robertson: Joh 12:41 - -- Because he saw his glory ( hoti eiden tēn doxan autou ). Correct reading here hoti (because), not hote (when). Isaiah with spiritual vision saw...

Because he saw his glory ( hoti eiden tēn doxan autou ).

Correct reading here hoti (because), not hote (when). Isaiah with spiritual vision saw the glory of the Messiah and spoke (elalēsen ) of him, John says, whatever modern critics may think or say. So Jesus said that Abraham saw his day (Joh 8:56). Cf. Heb 11:13.

Robertson: Joh 12:42 - -- Nevertheless even ( homōs mentoi kai ). For the old homōs see 1Co 14:7; Gal 3:15 (only other examples in N.T.), here only with mentoi , "but ye...

Nevertheless even ( homōs mentoi kai ).

For the old homōs see 1Co 14:7; Gal 3:15 (only other examples in N.T.), here only with mentoi , "but yet,"and kai , "even."In spite of what has just been said "many (polloi ) even of the rulers"(recall the lonely shyness of Nicodemus in Joh 3:1.). These actually "believed on him"(episteusan eis auton ) in their convictions, a remarkable statement as to the effect that Christ had in Jerusalem as the Sanhedrin plotted his death. Cf. Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea.

Robertson: Joh 12:42 - -- But because of the Pharisees ( alla dia tous Pharisaious ). Like the whispered talk in Joh 7:13 "because of the fear of the Jews."Once the Pharisees ...

But because of the Pharisees ( alla dia tous Pharisaious ).

Like the whispered talk in Joh 7:13 "because of the fear of the Jews."Once the Pharisees sneeringly asked the officers (Joh 7:48): "Hath any one of the rulers believed on him?"And now "many of the rulers have believed on him."

Robertson: Joh 12:42 - -- They did not confess ( ouch hōmologoun ). Negative imperfect in contrast to the punctiliar aorist episteusan . "They kept on not confessing."How li...

They did not confess ( ouch hōmologoun ).

Negative imperfect in contrast to the punctiliar aorist episteusan . "They kept on not confessing."How like the cowardly excuses made today by those under conviction who refuse to step out for Christ.

Robertson: Joh 12:42 - -- Lest they should be put out of the synagogue ( hina mē aposunagōgoi genōntai ). Cf. Joh 9:22 where this very word occurs in a purpose clause li...

Lest they should be put out of the synagogue ( hina mē aposunagōgoi genōntai ).

Cf. Joh 9:22 where this very word occurs in a purpose clause like this. Only once more in the N.T. (Joh 16:2), a Jewish word not in profane authors. This ostracism from the synagogue was dreaded by the Jews and made cowards of these "believing elders."

Robertson: Joh 12:42 - -- More than ( mallon ēper ). They preferred the glory and praise of men more than the glory and praise of God. How apropos these words are to some ...

More than ( mallon ēper ).

They preferred the glory and praise of men more than the glory and praise of God. How apropos these words are to some suave cowards today.

Robertson: Joh 12:44 - -- Cried and said ( ekraxen kai eipen ). First aorist active indicative of krazō , to cry aloud, and second aorist active of defective verb erō , to...

Cried and said ( ekraxen kai eipen ).

First aorist active indicative of krazō , to cry aloud, and second aorist active of defective verb erō , to say. This is probably a summary of what Jesus had already said as in Joh 12:36 John closes the public ministry of Jesus without the Synoptic account of the last day in the temple on our Tuesday (Mark 11:27-12:44; Matt 21:23-23:39; Luke 20:1-21:4).

Robertson: Joh 12:44 - -- Not on me, but on him ( ou eis eme ,alla eis ton ). "Not on me only, but also on,"another example of exaggerated contrast like that in Joh 12:30. Th...

Not on me, but on him ( ou eis eme ,alla eis ton ).

"Not on me only, but also on,"another example of exaggerated contrast like that in Joh 12:30. The idea of Jesus here is a frequent one (believing on Jesus whom the Father has sent) as in Joh 3:17.; Joh 5:23, Joh 5:30, Joh 5:43; Joh 7:16; Joh 8:42; Joh 13:20; Joh 14:1; Mat 10:40; Luk 9:48.

Robertson: Joh 12:46 - -- I am come a light ( Egō phōs elēlutha ). As in Joh 3:19; Joh 9:5; Joh 8:12; Joh 12:35. Final clause (negative) also here (hina mē meinēi , ...

I am come a light ( Egō phōs elēlutha ).

As in Joh 3:19; Joh 9:5; Joh 8:12; Joh 12:35. Final clause (negative) also here (hina mē meinēi , first aorist active subjunctive) as in Joh 12:35. Light dispels darkness.

Robertson: Joh 12:47 - -- If any one ( ean tis ). Third-class condition with ean and first aorist active subjunctive (akousēi ) of akouō and same form (phulaxēi ) ...

If any one ( ean tis ).

Third-class condition with ean and first aorist active subjunctive (akousēi ) of akouō and same form (phulaxēi ) of phulassō with negative mē .

Robertson: Joh 12:47 - -- But to save the world ( all' hina sōsō ton kosmon ). Purpose clause again (cf. hina krinō , just before) with hina and first aorist active of...

But to save the world ( all' hina sōsō ton kosmon ).

Purpose clause again (cf. hina krinō , just before) with hina and first aorist active of sōzō . Exaggerated contrast again, "not so much to judge, but also to save."See Joh 3:17 for same contrast. And yet Jesus does judge the world inevitably (Joh 8:15.; Joh 9:39), but his primary purpose is to save the world (Joh 3:16). See close of the Sermon on the Mount for the same insistence on hearing and keeping (obeying) the words of Jesus (Mat 7:24, Mat 7:26) and also Luk 11:28.

Robertson: Joh 12:48 - -- Rejecteth ( athetōn ). Present active participle of atheteō , late Koiné verb (from athetos , a privative, and tithēmi ), to render null ...

Rejecteth ( athetōn ).

Present active participle of atheteō , late Koiné verb (from athetos , a privative, and tithēmi ), to render null and void, only here in John, but see Mar 6:26; Mar 7:9.

Robertson: Joh 12:48 - -- One that judgeth him ( ton krinonta auton ). Articular present active participle of krinō . See same idea in Joh 8:50; Joh 12:47.

One that judgeth him ( ton krinonta auton ).

Articular present active participle of krinō . See same idea in Joh 8:50; Joh 12:47.

Robertson: Joh 12:48 - -- The same ( ekeinos ). "That"very word of Christ which one rejects will confront him and accuse him to the Father "at the last day"(en tēi eschatē...

The same ( ekeinos ).

"That"very word of Christ which one rejects will confront him and accuse him to the Father "at the last day"(en tēi eschatēi hēmerai , this phrase peculiar to John). There is no escaping it. And yet Jesus himself will bear witness for or against the one whose conduct has already revealed his attitude towards the message of God (Mat 10:32; Luk 12:8.).

Robertson: Joh 12:49 - -- He hath given ( dedōken ). Perfect active indicative. Christ has permanent commission.

He hath given ( dedōken ).

Perfect active indicative. Christ has permanent commission.

Robertson: Joh 12:49 - -- What I should say and what I should speak ( ti eipō kai ti lalēsō ). Indirect question retaining the deliberative subjunctive (second aorist ac...

What I should say and what I should speak ( ti eipō kai ti lalēsō ).

Indirect question retaining the deliberative subjunctive (second aorist active eipō , first aorist active lalēsō ). Meyer and Westcott take eipō to refer to the content and lalēsō more to the varying manner of delivery. Possibly so.

Robertson: Joh 12:50 - -- Life eternal ( zōē aiōnios ). See Joh 3:15; Mat 25:46 for this great phrase. In Joh 6:68 Peter says to Jesus, "Thou hast the words of eternal l...

Life eternal ( zōē aiōnios ).

See Joh 3:15; Mat 25:46 for this great phrase. In Joh 6:68 Peter says to Jesus, "Thou hast the words of eternal life."Jesus had just said (Joh 6:63) that his words were spirit and life. The secret lies in the source, "as the Father hath said to me"(eirēken ).

Vincent: Joh 12:40 - -- He hath blinded, etc. These words of Isaiah are repeated five times in the New Testament as the description of the Jewish people in its latest st...

He hath blinded, etc.

These words of Isaiah are repeated five times in the New Testament as the description of the Jewish people in its latest stage of decay. Mat 13:13; Mar 4:12; Luk 8:10; Joh 12:40; Act 28:26.

Vincent: Joh 12:40 - -- Hardened ( πεπώρωκεν ) See on the kindred noun πώρωσις , hardness , Mar 3:5.

Hardened ( πεπώρωκεν )

See on the kindred noun πώρωσις , hardness , Mar 3:5.

Vincent: Joh 12:40 - -- Understand ( νόησωσιν ) Rev., better, perceive . Mark has συνιῶσιν , understand . See on understanding , Luk 2:47.

Understand ( νόησωσιν )

Rev., better, perceive . Mark has συνιῶσιν , understand . See on understanding , Luk 2:47.

Vincent: Joh 12:40 - -- Be converted ( ἐπιστραφῶσιν ) See on Mat 13:15; see on Luk 22:32. Rev., more accurately, turn , with the idea of turning to or...

Be converted ( ἐπιστραφῶσιν )

See on Mat 13:15; see on Luk 22:32. Rev., more accurately, turn , with the idea of turning to or toward something (ἐπί ).

Vincent: Joh 12:41 - -- When ( ὅτε ) The best texts read ὅτι , because .

When ( ὅτε )

The best texts read ὅτι , because .

Vincent: Joh 12:41 - -- His glory In the vision in the temple, Isa 6:1, Isa 6:3, Isa 6:5.

His glory

In the vision in the temple, Isa 6:1, Isa 6:3, Isa 6:5.

Vincent: Joh 12:41 - -- Of Him Christ.

Of Him

Christ.

Vincent: Joh 12:42 - -- Among the chief rulers ( καὶ ἐκ τῶν ἀρχόντων ) Rev., more neatly and accurately, even of the rulers .

Among the chief rulers ( καὶ ἐκ τῶν ἀρχόντων )

Rev., more neatly and accurately, even of the rulers .

Vincent: Joh 12:42 - -- Believed on Him ( ἐπίστευσαν εἰς αὐτόν ) See on Joh 1:12. It is to be noted that John here uses of this imperfect fai...

Believed on Him ( ἐπίστευσαν εἰς αὐτόν )

See on Joh 1:12. It is to be noted that John here uses of this imperfect faith which refused to complete itself in confession, the formula for complete faith. Compare believed in His name (Joh 2:23), and see note there.

Vincent: Joh 12:42 - -- Confess Him ( ὡμολόγουν ) The Him , or, Rev., it , is not in the text. The verb is used absolutely. They did not make confessio...

Confess Him ( ὡμολόγουν )

The Him , or, Rev., it , is not in the text. The verb is used absolutely. They did not make confession . See on Mat 7:23; see on Mat 10:32; see on Mat 14:7.

Vincent: Joh 12:42 - -- Lest they should be put out of the synagogue ( ἵνα μὴ ἀποσυνάγωγοι γένωνται ) Better, that they should ...

Lest they should be put out of the synagogue ( ἵνα μὴ ἀποσυνάγωγοι γένωνται )

Better, that they should not be , etc. Compare Rev., Joh 12:35. On the phrase, be put out of the synagogue , see on Joh 9:22.

Vincent: Joh 12:43 - -- Praise ( δόξαν ) Much better, Rev., glory , because suggesting a contrast with the vision of divine glory referred to in Joh 12:41. Compa...

Praise ( δόξαν )

Much better, Rev., glory , because suggesting a contrast with the vision of divine glory referred to in Joh 12:41. Compare Joh 5:44.

Vincent: Joh 12:43 - -- Than ( ἤπερ ) The word cannot be rendered by a corresponding word in English The force is, " more than the glory of God, though He i...

Than ( ἤπερ )

The word cannot be rendered by a corresponding word in English The force is, " more than the glory of God, though He is so much more glorious ." The word is found nowhere else in the New Testament. Some authorities read ὕπερ , above .

Vincent: Joh 12:44 - -- Cried ( ἔκραξεν ) This is not meant to relate a reappearance of Jesus in public. The close of His public ministry is noted at Joh 12:3...

Cried ( ἔκραξεν )

This is not meant to relate a reappearance of Jesus in public. The close of His public ministry is noted at Joh 12:36. It is in continuation of the Evangelist's own remarks, and introduces a summary of Jesus' past teaching to the Jews.

Vincent: Joh 12:44 - -- Believeth - on Him that sent Me ( πιστεύει - εἰς τὸν πέμψαντά με ) This is the first and almost the only plac...

Believeth - on Him that sent Me ( πιστεύει - εἰς τὸν πέμψαντά με )

This is the first and almost the only place in the Gospel where the words believe on are used with reference to the Father. This rendering in Joh 5:24 is an error. See Joh 14:1. The phrase is constantly associated with our Lord. At the same time it is to be noted that it contemplates the Father as the source of the special revelation of Christ, and therefore is not absolutely an exception to the habitual usage. The same is true of Joh 14:1.

Vincent: Joh 12:45 - -- Seeth ( θεωρεῖ ) Rev., properly, beholdeth . Compare Joh 14:9. The word is purposely chosen to mark an intent , continuous contemplat...

Seeth ( θεωρεῖ )

Rev., properly, beholdeth . Compare Joh 14:9. The word is purposely chosen to mark an intent , continuous contemplation of Christ, issuing in ever larger knowledge of the Father.

Vincent: Joh 12:45 - -- I am come ( ἐλήλυθα ) The perfect tense, pointing to the abiding result of His manifestation. Compare Joh 5:43; Joh 7:28; Joh 8:42; Jo...

I am come ( ἐλήλυθα )

The perfect tense, pointing to the abiding result of His manifestation. Compare Joh 5:43; Joh 7:28; Joh 8:42; Joh 16:28; Joh 18:37.

Vincent: Joh 12:45 - -- Abide in darkness The phrase occurs only here. Compare 1Jo 2:9, 1Jo 2:11; also Joh 8:12; Joh 12:35.

Abide in darkness

The phrase occurs only here. Compare 1Jo 2:9, 1Jo 2:11; also Joh 8:12; Joh 12:35.

Vincent: Joh 12:47 - -- Believe not ( μὴ πιστεύσῃ ) The best texts read φυλάξῃ , keep (them).

Believe not ( μὴ πιστεύσῃ )

The best texts read φυλάξῃ , keep (them).

Vincent: Joh 12:47 - -- Came ( ἦλθον ) The aorist tense, pointing to the purpose of the coming, as I am come (Joh 12:46) to the result . Compare Joh 8:...

Came ( ἦλθον )

The aorist tense, pointing to the purpose of the coming, as I am come (Joh 12:46) to the result . Compare Joh 8:14; Joh 9:39; Joh 10:10; Joh 12:27, Joh 12:47; Joh 15:22. Both tenses are found in Joh 8:42; Joh 16:28.

Vincent: Joh 12:48 - -- Rejecteth ( ἀθετῶν ) See on Luk 7:30.

Rejecteth ( ἀθετῶν )

See on Luk 7:30.

Vincent: Joh 12:48 - -- The word ( ὁ λόγος ) Comprehending all the sayings (ῥήματα ).

The word ( ὁ λόγος )

Comprehending all the sayings (ῥήματα ).

Vincent: Joh 12:48 - -- The same ( ἐκεῖνος ) That . The pronoun of remote reference Westcott finely remarks: " The resumptive, isolating pronoun places in em...

The same ( ἐκεῖνος )

That . The pronoun of remote reference Westcott finely remarks: " The resumptive, isolating pronoun places in emphatic prominence the teaching which is regarded as past, and separated from those to whom it was addressed. It stands, as it were, in the distance, as a witness and an accuser."

Vincent: Joh 12:48 - -- The last day Peculiar to John. See Joh 6:39.

The last day

Peculiar to John. See Joh 6:39.

Vincent: Joh 12:49 - -- Of myself ( ἐξ ἐμαυτοῦ ) Out of myself . This formula occurs only here. The usual expression is ἀπ ' ἐμαυτοῦ ....

Of myself ( ἐξ ἐμαυτοῦ )

Out of myself . This formula occurs only here. The usual expression is ἀπ ' ἐμαυτοῦ . Ἁπό , from , as distinguished from ἐκ , out of , marks rather the point of departure , while ἐκ , including this idea, emphasizes the point of departure as the living and impelling source of that which issues forth. In Joh 7:17, we read, " whether it be out of God (ἐκ τοῦ Θεοῦ ), or whether I speak from myself (ἀπ ' ἐμαυτοῦ )."

Vincent: Joh 12:49 - -- Gave ( ἔδωκεν ) The best texts read δέδεκεν , the perfect tense, hath given , the result of the gift still abiding. So Rev.

Gave ( ἔδωκεν )

The best texts read δέδεκεν , the perfect tense, hath given , the result of the gift still abiding. So Rev.

Vincent: Joh 12:49 - -- Say - speak ( εἴπω - λαλήσω ) The former relating to the substance , and the latter to the form of Jesus' utterances.

Say - speak ( εἴπω - λαλήσω )

The former relating to the substance , and the latter to the form of Jesus' utterances.

Wesley: Joh 12:37 - -- So that they could not but see them.

So that they could not but see them.

Wesley: Joh 12:38 - -- The power of God manifested by Christ, in his preaching, miracles, and work of redemption. Isa 53:1.

The power of God manifested by Christ, in his preaching, miracles, and work of redemption. Isa 53:1.

Wesley: Joh 12:39 - -- That is, by the just judgment of God, for their obstinacy and wilful resistance of the truth, they were at length so left to the hardness of their hea...

That is, by the just judgment of God, for their obstinacy and wilful resistance of the truth, they were at length so left to the hardness of their hearts, that neither the miracles nor doctrines of our Lord could make any impression upon them.

Wesley: Joh 12:40 - -- Isa 6:10; Mat 13:14; Act 28:26.

Wesley: Joh 12:41 - -- Christ's, Isa 6:1, &c. And it is there expressly said to be the glory of the Lord, Jehovah, the Supreme God.

Christ's, Isa 6:1, &c. And it is there expressly said to be the glory of the Lord, Jehovah, the Supreme God.

Wesley: Joh 12:44 - -- This which follows to the end of the chapter, is with St. John the epilogue of our Lord's public discourses, and a kind of recapitulation of them.

This which follows to the end of the chapter, is with St. John the epilogue of our Lord's public discourses, and a kind of recapitulation of them.

Wesley: Joh 12:44 - -- Not on me alone, but also on him that sent me: because the Father hath sent the Son, and because he and the Father are one.

Not on me alone, but also on him that sent me: because the Father hath sent the Son, and because he and the Father are one.

Wesley: Joh 12:45 - -- By the eye of faith.

By the eye of faith.

Wesley: Joh 12:47 - -- Not now: for I am not come to judge the world. See, Christ came to save even them that finally perish! Even these are a part of that world, which he l...

Not now: for I am not come to judge the world. See, Christ came to save even them that finally perish! Even these are a part of that world, which he lived and died to save.

Wesley: Joh 12:50 - -- Kept, is life everlasting - That is the way to it, and the beginning of it.

Kept, is life everlasting - That is the way to it, and the beginning of it.

JFB: Joh 12:37-41 - -- It is the manner of this Evangelist alone to record his own reflections on the scenes he describes; but here, having arrived at what was virtually the...

It is the manner of this Evangelist alone to record his own reflections on the scenes he describes; but here, having arrived at what was virtually the close of our Lord's public ministry, he casts an affecting glance over the fruitlessness of His whole ministry on the bulk of the now doomed people.

JFB: Joh 12:37-41 - -- The word used suggests their nature as well as number.

The word used suggests their nature as well as number.

JFB: Joh 12:38 - -- This unbelief did not at all set aside the purposes of God, but, on the contrary, fulfilled them.

This unbelief did not at all set aside the purposes of God, but, on the contrary, fulfilled them.

JFB: Joh 12:39-40 - -- That this expresses a positive divine act, by which those who wilfully close their eyes and harden their hearts against the truth are judicially shut ...

That this expresses a positive divine act, by which those who wilfully close their eyes and harden their hearts against the truth are judicially shut up in their unbelief and impenitence, is admitted by all candid critics [as OLSHAUSEN], though many of them think it necessary to contend that this is in no way inconsistent with the liberty of the human will, which of course it is not.

JFB: Joh 12:41 - -- A key of immense importance to the opening of Isaiah's vision (Isa 6:1-13), and all similar Old Testament representations. "THE SON is the King Jehova...

A key of immense importance to the opening of Isaiah's vision (Isa 6:1-13), and all similar Old Testament representations. "THE SON is the King Jehovah who rules in the Old Testament and appears to the elect, as in the New Testament THE SPIRIT, the invisible Minister of the Son, is the Director of the Church and the Revealer in the sanctuary of the heart" [OLSHAUSEN].

JFB: Joh 12:42-43 - -- Rather, "even of the rulers"; such as Nicodemus and Joseph.

Rather, "even of the rulers"; such as Nicodemus and Joseph.

JFB: Joh 12:42-43 - -- That is, the leaders of the sects; for they were of it themselves.

That is, the leaders of the sects; for they were of it themselves.

JFB: Joh 12:42-43 - -- See Joh 9:22, Joh 9:34.

JFB: Joh 12:43 - -- "a severe remark, considering that several at least of these persons afterwards boldly confessed Christ. It indicates the displeasure with which God r...

"a severe remark, considering that several at least of these persons afterwards boldly confessed Christ. It indicates the displeasure with which God regarded their conduct at this time, and with which He continues to regard similar conduct" [WEBSTER and WILKINSON].

JFB: Joh 12:44-50 - -- In a loud tone, and with peculiar solemnity. (Compare Joh 7:37).

In a loud tone, and with peculiar solemnity. (Compare Joh 7:37).

JFB: Joh 12:44-50 - -- This seems to be a supplementary record of some weighty proclamations, for which there had been found no natural place before, and introduced here as ...

This seems to be a supplementary record of some weighty proclamations, for which there had been found no natural place before, and introduced here as a sort of summary and winding up of His whole testimony.

Clarke: Joh 12:37 - -- Yet they believed not on him - Though the miracles were wrought for this very purpose, that they might believe in Christ, and escape the coming wrat...

Yet they believed not on him - Though the miracles were wrought for this very purpose, that they might believe in Christ, and escape the coming wrath, and every evidence given that Jesus was the Messiah, yet they did not believe; but they were blinded by their passions, and obstinately hardened their hearts against the truth.

Clarke: Joh 12:38 - -- That the saying of Esaias - Or, Thus the word of Isaiah was fulfilled. So I think ἱνα (commonly rendered that) should be translated. For it c...

That the saying of Esaias - Or, Thus the word of Isaiah was fulfilled. So I think ἱνα (commonly rendered that) should be translated. For it certainly does not mean the end the Pharisees had in view by not believing; nor the end which the prophet had in view in predicting the incredulity of the Jews; but simply, such a thing was spoken by the prophet, concerning the Jews of his own time, and it had its literal fulfillment in those of our Lord’ s time

Clarke: Joh 12:38 - -- Our report - The testimony of the prophets, concerning the person, office, sufferings, death, and sacrifice of the Messiah. See Isa 53:1, etc

Our report - The testimony of the prophets, concerning the person, office, sufferings, death, and sacrifice of the Messiah. See Isa 53:1, etc

Clarke: Joh 12:38 - -- The arm of the Lord - The power, strength, and miracles of Christ.

The arm of the Lord - The power, strength, and miracles of Christ.

Clarke: Joh 12:39 - -- Therefore they could not believe - Why? Because they did not believe the report of the prophets concerning Christ; therefore they credited not the m...

Therefore they could not believe - Why? Because they did not believe the report of the prophets concerning Christ; therefore they credited not the miracles which he wrought as a proof that he was the person foretold by the prophets, and promised to their fathers. Having thus resisted the report of the prophets, and the evidence of Christ’ s own miracles, God gave them up to the darkness and hardness of their own hearts, so that they continued to reject every overture of Divine mercy; and God refused to heal their national wound, but, on the contrary, commissioned the Romans against them, so that their political existence was totally destroyed

The prophecy of Isaiah was neither the cause nor the motive of their unbelief: it was a simple prediction, which imposed no necessity on them to resist the offers of mercy. They might have believed, notwithstanding the prediction, for such kinds of prophecies always include a tacit condition; they may believe, if they properly use the light and power which God has given them. Such prophecies also are of a general application - they will always suit somebody, for in every age persons will be found who resist the grace and Spirit of God like these disobedient Jews. However, it appears that this prediction belonged especially to these rejecters and crucifiers of Christ; and if the prophecy was infallible in its execution, with respect to them, it was not because of the prediction that they continued in unbelief, but because of their own voluntary obstinacy; and God foreseeing this, foretold it by the prophet. Should I say that, they could not believe, means, they would not believe, I should perhaps offend a generation of his children; and yet I am pretty certain the words should be so understood. However, that I may put myself under cover from all suspicion of perverting the meaning of a text which seems to some to be spoken in favor of that awful doctrine of unconditional reprobation, the very father of it shall interpret the text for me. Thus then saith St. Augustin: Quare autem non Poterant, si a me quaeratur, cito respondeo; Quia Nolebant: Malam quippe eorum Voluntatem praevidit Deus, et per prophetam praenunciavit . "If I be asked why they Could not believe? I immediately answer, Because They Would Not. And God, having foreseen their Bad Will, foretold it by the prophet."Aug. Tract. 53, in Joan.

Clarke: Joh 12:40 - -- And I should heal them - This verse is taken from Isa 6:9, and, perhaps, refers more to the judgments that should fall upon them as a nation, which ...

And I should heal them - This verse is taken from Isa 6:9, and, perhaps, refers more to the judgments that should fall upon them as a nation, which God was determined should not be averted, than it does to their eternal state. To suppose that the text meant that God was unwilling that they should turn unto him, lest he should be obliged to save them, is an insupportable blasphemy.

Clarke: Joh 12:41 - -- When he saw his glory - Isa 6:1, etc. I saw Jehovah, said the prophet, sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up, and his train filled the temple. A...

When he saw his glory - Isa 6:1, etc. I saw Jehovah, said the prophet, sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up, and his train filled the temple. Above it stood the seraphim; and one cried unto another, and said, Holy, holy, holy, is Jehovah, God of hosts; the whole earth shall be full of his glory! It appears evident, from this passage, that the glory which the prophet saw was the glory of Jehovah: John, therefore, saying here that it was the glory of Jesus, shows that he considered Jesus to be Jehovah. See Bishop Pearce. Two MSS. and a few versions have Θεου, and του Θεου αὑτου, the glory of God, or of his God.

Clarke: Joh 12:42 - -- Among the chief rulers - many believed on him - We only know the names of two of them, Nicodemus, and Joseph of Arimathea

Among the chief rulers - many believed on him - We only know the names of two of them, Nicodemus, and Joseph of Arimathea

Clarke: Joh 12:42 - -- But - they did not confess him - Or it: they were as yet weak in the faith, and could not bear the reproach of the cross of Christ. Besides, the pri...

But - they did not confess him - Or it: they were as yet weak in the faith, and could not bear the reproach of the cross of Christ. Besides, the principal rulers had determined to excommunicate every person who acknowledged Christ for the Messiah; see Joh 9:22.

Clarke: Joh 12:43 - -- They loved the praise of men - Δοξαν, the glory or honor that cometh from men How common are these four obstacles of faith! says Quesnel 1.&nb...

They loved the praise of men - Δοξαν, the glory or honor that cometh from men

How common are these four obstacles of faith! says Quesnel

1.    Too great a regard to men

2.    Riches and temporal advantages

3.    The fear of disgrace

4.    The love of the praise of men

Abundance of persons persuade themselves that they love God more than the world, till some trying occasion fully convinces them of their mistake. It is a very great misfortune for a person not to know himself but by his falls; but it is the greatest of all not to rise again after he has fallen. This is generally occasioned by the love of the praise of men, because in their account it is more shameful to rise again than it was to fall at first.

Clarke: Joh 12:44 - -- Jesus cried and said - This is our Lord’ s concluding discourse to this wicked people: probably this and the following verses should be underst...

Jesus cried and said - This is our Lord’ s concluding discourse to this wicked people: probably this and the following verses should be understood as a part of the discourse which was left off at the 36th verse

Jesus cried - he spoke these words aloud, and showed his earnest desire for their salvation

Clarke: Joh 12:44 - -- Believeth not on me, (only), but on him that sent me - Here he asserts again his indivisible unity with the Father: - he who believes on the Son bel...

Believeth not on me, (only), but on him that sent me - Here he asserts again his indivisible unity with the Father: - he who believes on the Son believes on the Father: he who hath seen the Son hath seen the Father: he who honors the Son honors the Father. Though it was for asserting this (his oneness with God) that they were going to crucify him, yet he retracts nothing of what he had spoken, but strongly reasserts it, in the very jaws of death!

Clarke: Joh 12:46 - -- I am come a light into the world - Probably referring to what his forerunner had said, Joh 1:5. Before the coming of this Savior, this sun of righte...

I am come a light into the world - Probably referring to what his forerunner had said, Joh 1:5. Before the coming of this Savior, this sun of righteousness, into the world, all was darkness: at his rising the darkness is dispersed; but it only profits those whose eyes are open to receive the rays of this sun of righteousness. See on Joh 1:5 (note); Joh 3:19 (note); Joh 8:12 (note); Joh 9:5 (note).

Clarke: Joh 12:47 - -- And believe not - Και μη φυλαξῃ, And keep them not, is the reading of ABL, seven others; Syriac, Wheelock’ s Persian, two of the ...

And believe not - Και μη φυλαξῃ, And keep them not, is the reading of ABL, seven others; Syriac, Wheelock’ s Persian, two of the Arabic, Coptic, Sahidic, Ethiopic, Armenian, later Syriac, Vulgate, six of the Itala, and some of the fathers

A man must hear the words of Christ in order to believe them; and he must believe, in order to keep them; and he must keep them in order to his salvation

Clarke: Joh 12:47 - -- I judge him not - I need not do it: the words of Moses and the prophets judge and condemn him. See the notes on Joh 3:17; Joh 5:45.

I judge him not - I need not do it: the words of Moses and the prophets judge and condemn him. See the notes on Joh 3:17; Joh 5:45.

Clarke: Joh 12:48 - -- The word that I have spoken - shall judge him - Ye shall be judged according to my doctrine: the maxims which ye have heard from my mouth shall be t...

The word that I have spoken - shall judge him - Ye shall be judged according to my doctrine: the maxims which ye have heard from my mouth shall be those on which ye shall be tried in the great day; and ye shall be condemned or acquitted according as ye have believed or obeyed them, or according as ye have despised and violated them, See this proved, Mat 25:35 (note), etc.

Clarke: Joh 12:49 - -- For I have not spoken of myself - I have not spoken for my secular interest: I have not aimed at making any gain of you: I have not set up myself as...

For I have not spoken of myself - I have not spoken for my secular interest: I have not aimed at making any gain of you: I have not set up myself as your teachers in general do, to be supported by my disciples, and to be credited on my own testimony. I have taught you, not the things of men, but the deep, everlasting truths of God. As his envoy, I came to you; and his truth only I proclaim

Clarke: Joh 12:49 - -- Gave me a commandment - Or, commission. So I understand the original word, εντολη . Christ, as the Messiah, received his commission from God;...

Gave me a commandment - Or, commission. So I understand the original word, εντολη . Christ, as the Messiah, received his commission from God; what he should command - every thing that related to the formation and establishment of the Christian institution: and what he should speak - all his private conversations with his disciples or others, he, as man, commanded and spoke through the constant inspiration of the Holy Spirit.

Clarke: Joh 12:50 - -- I know that this commandment is life everlasting - These words of our Lord are similar to that saying in St. John’ s first epistle, 1Jo 5:11, 1...

I know that this commandment is life everlasting - These words of our Lord are similar to that saying in St. John’ s first epistle, 1Jo 5:11, 1Jo 5:12. This is the record, that God hath given unto us eternal life, and this life is in his Son. He that hath the Son hath life. God’ s commandment or commission is, Preach salvation to a lost world, and give thyself a ransom for all; and whosoever believeth on thee shall not perish, but have everlasting life. Every word of Christ, properly credited, and carefully applied, leads to peace and happiness here, and to glory hereafter. What an amiable view of the Gospel of the grace of God does this give us? It is a system of eternal life, Divinely calculated to answer every important purpose to dying, miserable man. This sacred truth Jesus witnessed with his last breath. He began his public ministry proclaiming the kingdom of God; and he now finishes it by asserting that the whole commission is eternal life; and, having attested this, he went out of the temple, and retired to Bethany

The public work of our Lord was now done; and the remnant of his time, previously to his crucifixion, he spent in teaching his disciples - instructing them in the nature of his kingdom, his intercession, and the mission of the Holy Spirit; and in that heavenly life which all true believers live with the Father, through faith in the Son, by the operation of the Holy Ghost

Many persons are liberal in their condemnation of the Jews, because they did not believe on the Son of God; and doubtless their unbelief has merited and received the most signal punishment. But those who condemn them do not reflect that they are probably committing the same sort of transgression, in circumstances which heighten the iniquity of their sin. Will it avail any man, that he has believed that Christ has come in the flesh to destroy the works of the devil, who does not come unto him that he may have life, but continues to live under the power and guilt of sin? Paradoxical as it may seem, it is nevertheless possible, for a man to credit the four evangelists, and yet live and die an infidel, as far as his own salvation is concerned. Reader, it is possible to hold the truth in unrighteousness. Pray to God that this may not be thy condemnation. For a farther improvement of the principal subjects of this chapter, see the notes on Joh 12:24 (note), Joh 12:32 (note) and Joh 12:39 (note).

Calvin: Joh 12:37 - -- 37.And though he had done so many signs That no man may be disturbed or perplexed at seeing that Christ was despised by the Jews, the Evangelist remo...

37.And though he had done so many signs That no man may be disturbed or perplexed at seeing that Christ was despised by the Jews, the Evangelist removes this offense, by showing that he was supported by clear and undoubted testimonies, which proved that credit was due to him and to his doctrine; but that the blind did not behold the glory and power of God, which were openly displayed in his miracles. First, therefore, we ought to believe that it was not owing to Christ that the Jews did not place confidence in him, because by many miracles he abundantly testified who he was, and that it was therefore unjust and highly unreasonable that their unbelief should diminish his authority. But as this very circumstance might lead many persons to anxious and perplexing inquiry how the Jews came to be so stupid, that the power of God, though visible, produced no effect upon them, John proceeds further, and shows that faith does not proceed from the ordinary faculties of men, but is an uncommon and extraordinary gift of God, and that this was anciently predicted concerning Christ, that very few would believe the Gospel.

Calvin: Joh 12:38 - -- 38.That the saying of Isaiah the prophet might be fulfilled John does not mean that the prediction laid a necessity on the Jews; for Isaiah (Isa 53:1...

38.That the saying of Isaiah the prophet might be fulfilled John does not mean that the prediction laid a necessity on the Jews; for Isaiah (Isa 53:1; Rom 10:16) uttered nothing but what the Lord revealed to him from the secret treasures of his purpose. Indeed, it must have happened, though the prophet had not spoken of it; but as men would not have known what should take place, if God had not testified by the mouth of the prophet, the Evangelist places before our eyes in the prediction, as in a mirror, what would otherwise have appeared to men obscure and almost incredible.

Lord, who hath believed? This sentence contains two clauses. In the former, Isaiah, having begun to speak of Christ, fore-seeing that all that he proclaims concerning Christ, and all that shall afterwards be made known by the Apostles, will be generally rejected by the Jews, exclaims, as if in astonishment at something strange and monstrous, Lord, who shall believe our report, or, our speech ? 29

To whom hath the arm of the Lord been revealed? In this second clause he assigns the reason why they are few; and that reason is, that men do not attain it by their own strength, and God does not illuminate all without distinction, but bestows the grace of his Holy Spirit on very few, 30 And if among the Jews the obstinate unbelief of many ought not to have been an obstacle to believers, though they were few in number, the same argument ought to persuade us, at the present day, not to be ashamed of the Gospel, though it has few disciples. But we ought first to observe the reason which is added, that what makes men believers is not their own sagacity, but the revelation of God. The word arm, it is well known, denotes power. The prophet declares that the arm of God, which is contained in the doctrine of the Gospel, lies hid until it is revealed, and at the same time testifies that all are not indiscriminately partakers of this revelation. Hence it follows, that many are left in their blindness destitute of inward light, because hearing they do not hear, (Mat 13:13.)

Calvin: Joh 12:39 - -- 39.Therefore they could not believe This is somewhat more harsh; because, if the words be taken in their natural meaning, the way was shut up against...

39.Therefore they could not believe This is somewhat more harsh; because, if the words be taken in their natural meaning, the way was shut up against the Jews, and the power of believing was taken from them, because the prediction of the prophet adjudged them to blindness, before they determined what choice they should make. I reply, there is no absurdity in this, if nothing could happen different from what God had foreseen. But it ought to be observed, that the mere foreknowledge of God is not in itself the cause of events; though, in this passage, we ought to consider not so much the foreknowledge of God as his justice and vengeance. For God declares not what he beholds from heaven that men will do, but what He himself will do; and that is, that he will strike wicked men with giddiness and stupidity, and thus will take vengeance on their obstinate wickedness. In this passage he points out the nearer and inferior cause why God intends that his word, which is in its own nature salutary and quickening, shall be destructive and deadly to the Jews. It is because they deserved it by their obstinate wickedness.

This punishment it was impossible for them to escape, because God had once decreed to give them over to a reprobate mind, and to change the light of his word, so as to make it darkness to them. For this latter prediction differs from the former in this respect, that in the former passage the prophet testifies that none believe but those whom God, of his free grace, enlightens for his own good pleasure, the reason of which does not appear; for since all are equally ruined, God, of his mere good pleasure, distinguishes from others those whom he thinks fit to distinguish. But, in the latter passage, he speaks of the hardness by which God has punished the wickedness of an ungrateful people. They who do not attend to these steps mistake and confound passages of Scripture, which are quite different from each other.

Calvin: Joh 12:40 - -- 40.He hath blinded their eyes, and hardened their heart The passage is taken from Isa 6:9, where the Lord forewarns the prophet, that the labor which...

40.He hath blinded their eyes, and hardened their heart The passage is taken from Isa 6:9, where the Lord forewarns the prophet, that the labor which he spends in instructing will lead to no other result than to make the people worse. First then he says, Go, and tell this people, Hearing, hear and do not hear; as if he had said, “I send thee to speak to the deaf.” He afterwards adds, Harden the heart of this people, &c. By these words he means, that he intends to make his word a punishment to the reprobate, that it may render them more thoroughly blind, and that their blindness may be plunged in deeper darkness. It is indeed a dreadful judgment of God, when He overwhelms men by the light of doctrine, in such a manner as to deprive them of all understanding; and when, even by means of that which is their only light, he brings darkness upon them.

But it ought to be observed, that it is accidental to the word of God, that it blinds men; for nothing can be more inconsistent than that there should be no difference between truth and falsehood, that the bread of life should become a deadly poison, and that medicine should aggravate a disease. But this must be ascribed to the wickedness of men, which turns life into death. It ought also to be observed, that sometimes the Lord, by himself, blinds the minds of men, by depriving them of judgment and understanding; sometimes by Satan and false prophets, when he maddens them by their impostures; sometimes. too by his ministers, when the doctrine of salvation is injurious and deadly to them. But provided that prophets labor faithfully in the work of instruction, and commit to the Lord the result of their labor, though they may not succeed to their wish, they ought not to give way or despond. Let them rather be satisfied with knowing that God approves of their labor, though it be useless to men’ and that even the savor of doctrine, which wicked men render deadly to themselves elves, is good and pleasant to God, as Paul testifies, (2Co 2:15.)

The heart is sometimes in Scripture put for the seat of the affections; but here, as in many other passages, it denotes what is called the intellectual part of the soul. To the same purpose Moses speaks:

God hath not given you a heart to understand,
(Deu 29:4.)

Lest they should see with their eyes Let us remember that the prophet speaks of unbelievers who had already rejected the grace of God. It is certain that all would continue to be such by nature, if The Lord did not form to obedience to him those whom he has elected. At first, therefore, the condition of men is equal and alike, but when reprobate men have, of their own accord, and by their own wickedness, rebelled against God, they subject themselves to this vengeance, by which, being given up to a reprobate mind, they continually rush forward more and more to their own destruction. It is their own fault, therefore, if God does not choose to convert them, because they were the cause of their own despair. We are briefly instructed also, by these words of the prophet, what is the beginning of our conversion to God. It is when he enlightens the hearts, which must have been turned away from him, so long as they were held by the darkness of Satan; but, on the contrary, such is the power of Divine light, that it attracts us to itself, and forms us to the image of God.

And I should heal them He next adds the fruit of conversion, that is, healing. By this word the prophet means the blessing of God and a prosperous condition, and likewise deliverance from all the miseries which spring from the wrath of God. Now, if this happens to the reprobate, contrary to the nature of the word, we ought to attend to the contrast implied in the, opposite use of it; namely, that the purpose for which the word of God is preached is, to enlighten us in the true knowledge of God, to turn us to God, and reconcile us to him, that we may be happy and blessed.

Calvin: Joh 12:41 - -- 41.These things spoke Jesus Lest readers should think that this prediction was inappropriately quoted, John expressly states, that the prophet was no...

41.These things spoke Jesus Lest readers should think that this prediction was inappropriately quoted, John expressly states, that the prophet was not sent as a teacher to a single age, but, on the contrary, that the glory of Christ was exhibited to him, that he might be a witness of those things which should take place under his reign. Now the Evangelist takes for granted, that Isaiah saw the glory of Christ; and hence he infers, that Isaiah accommodates his instruction to the future state of Christ’s kingdom.

Calvin: Joh 12:42 - -- Nevertheless, many even of the rulers believed on Him. The murmuring and fierceness of the Jews, in rejecting Christ, having risen to such a height o...

Nevertheless, many even of the rulers believed on Him. The murmuring and fierceness of the Jews, in rejecting Christ, having risen to such a height of insolence, it might have been thought that all the people, without exception, conspired against him. But the Evangelist says that, amidst the general madness of the nation, there were many who were of a sound mind. A striking instance, truly, of the grace of God; for, when ungodliness has once prevailed, it is a sort of universal plague, which infects with its contagion every part of the body. It is therefore a remarkable gift, and special grace of God, when, amidst a people so corrupt, there are some who remain untainted. And yet we now perceive in the world the same grace of God; for though ungodliness and contempt of God abound everywhere, and though a vast multitude of men make furious attempts to exterminate utterly the doctrine of the Gospel, yet it always finds some places of retreat; and thus faith has — what may be called — its harbors or places of refuge, that it may not be entirely banished from the world.

The word even is emphatic; for in the order of the rulers, there existed so deep and inveterate a hatred of the Gospel, that it could scarcely be believed that a single believer could be found amongst them. So much the greater admiration was due to the power of the Spirit of God, which entered where no opening was made; though it was not a vice, peculiar to a single age, that rulers were rebellious and disobedient to Christ; for honor, and wealth, and high rank, are usually accompanied by pride. The consequence is, that they who, swelled with arrogance, scarcely acknowledge themselves to be men, are not easily subdued by voluntary humility. Whoever, then, holds a high station in the world, will, if he is wise, look with suspicion on his rank, that it may not stand in his way. When the Evangelist says that there were many, this must not be understood as if they were the majority or the half; for, as compared with others who were vastly numerous, they were few, but yet they were many, when viewed in themselves.

On account of the Pharisees. It may be thought that he speaks incorrectly, when he separates faith from confession; for

with the heart we believe to righteousness,
and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation,
(Rom 10:10)

and it is impossible that the faith, which has been kindled in the heart, shall not put forth its flame. I reply, he points out here how weak was the faith of those men who were so lukewarm, or rather cold. In short, John means that they embraced the doctrine of Christ, because they knew that it had come from God, but that they have not a lively faith, or a faith so vigorous as it ought to have been; for Christ does not grant to his followers a spirit of fear, but of firmness, that they may boldly and fearlessly confess what they have learned from him. Yet I do not think that they were altogether silent; but as their confession was not sufficiently open, the Evangelist, in my opinion, simply declares that they did not make profession of their faith; for the proper kind of profession was, openly to declare that they were the disciples of Christ. Let no man, therefore, flatter himself who, in any respect, conceals or dissembles his faith for fear of incurring the hatred of men; for however hateful the name of Christ may be, that cowardice which compels us to turn aside, in the smallest degree, from the confession of him, admits of no excuse.

It must also be observed, that rulers have less rigor and firmness, because ambition almost always reigns in them, which is the most slavish of all dispositions; and, to express it in a single word, earthly honors may be said to be golden fetters, which bind a man, so that he cannot perform his duty with freedom. On this account, persons who are placed in a low and mean condition ought to bear their lot with the greater patience, for they are, at least, delivered from many very bad snares. Yet the great and noble ought to struggle against their high rank, that it may not hinder them from submitting to Christ.

John says that they were afraid of the Pharisees; not that the other scribes and priests freely permitted any man to call himself a disciple of Christ, but because, under the semblance of zeal, cruelty burned in them with greater fierceness. Zeal, in defending religion, is, indeed, an excellent virtue; but if hypocrisy be added to it, no plague can be more dangerous. So much the more earnestly ought we to entreat the Lord to guide us by the unerring rule of his Spirit.

Lest they should be thrown out of the synagogue This was what hindered them, the fear of disgrace; for they would have been thrown out of the synagogue. Hence we see how great is the perversity of men, which not only corrupts and debases the best of God’s ordinances, but turns them into destructive tyranny. Excommunication ought to have been the sinew of holy discipline, that punishment might be ready to be inflicted, if any person despised the Church. But matters had come to such a pitch, that any one who confessed that he belonged to Christ was banished from the society of believers. In like manner, at the present day, the Pope, in order to exercise the same kind of tyranny, falsely pretends to a right of excommunicating, and not only thunders with blind rage against all the godly, but endeavors to cast down Christ from his heavenly throne; and yet he does not hesitate impudently to hold out the right of sacred jurisdiction, with which Christ has adorned his Church.

Calvin: Joh 12:43 - -- 43.For they loved the glory of men The Evangelist expressly states that those men were not guided by any superstition, but only endeavored to avoid d...

43.For they loved the glory of men The Evangelist expressly states that those men were not guided by any superstition, but only endeavored to avoid disgrace among men; for if ambition had greater influence over them than the fear of God, it follows, that it was no vain scruple of conscience that gave them uneasiness. Now, let the reader observe how great ignominy is incurred before God, by the cowardice of those who, from the fear of being hated, dissemble their faith before men. Can any thing be more foolish, or rather, can any thing be more beastly, than to prefer the silly applause of men to the judgment of God? But he declares that all who shrink from the hatred of men, when the pure faith ought to be confessed, are seized with this kind of madness. And justly; for the apostle, in applauding the unshaken steadiness of Moses, says that

he remained firm, as if he had seen him who is invisible,
(Heb 11:27.)

By these words he means that, when any person has fixed his eyes on God, his heart will be invincible, and utterly incapable of being moved.

Whence, therefore, comes the effeminacy 31, which causes us to give way to treacherous hypocrisy, but because, at the sight of the world, all our senses grow dull? For a true sight of God would instantly chase away all the mists of wealth and honors. Away with those who look upon an indirect denial of Christ as some trivial offense, or, as they call it, a venial sin! For, on the contrary, the Holy Spirit declares that it is more base and monstrous than if heaven and earth were mingled.

To love the glory of men means, in this passage, to desire to enjoy reputation among men. The Evangelist, therefore, means, that those men were so much devoted to the world, that they were more desirous to please men than to please God. Besides, when he accuses of this crime those who denied Christ, he, at the same time, shows that the excommunication, which the priests abused, contrary to all that was right and lawful, had no value or efficacy. Let us know, therefore, that all the excommunications which the Pope now mutters against us are mere bugbears to frighten children, 32 since we are fully convinced, in our own consciences, that he aims at nothing else than to lead us away from Christ.

Calvin: Joh 12:44 - -- 44.And Jesus cried The object of Christ, in this statement, is to encourage his followers to a proper and unshaken steadfastness of faith; but it con...

44.And Jesus cried The object of Christ, in this statement, is to encourage his followers to a proper and unshaken steadfastness of faith; but it contains also an implied reproof, by which he intended to correct that perverse fear. The cry is expressive of vehemence; for it is not a simple doctrine, but an exhortation intended to excite them more powerfully. The statement amounts to this, that faith in Christ does not rely on any mortal man, but on God; for it finds in Christ nothing but what is divine, or rather, it beholds God in his face. Hence he infers, that it is foolish and unreasonable for faith to be wavering or doubtful; for it is impossible to offer a greater insult to God, than not to rely on his truth. Who is it then that has duly profited by the Gospel? It is he who, relying or this confidence, that he does not believe men but God, quietly and steadily contends against all the machinations of Satan. If, then, we would render to God the honor due to him, we must learn to remain firm in faith, not only though the world were shaken, but even though Satan should disturb and overturn all that is under heaven.

He that believeth on me believeth not on me, but on him that sent me. Believers are said not to believe on Christ, when they do not fix their whole attention on his human countenance. Comparing himself with the Father, he bids us look at the power of God; for the weakness of the flesh has no firmness in

itself. When we shall, afterwards, find him exhorting the disciples to believe on him, it will be in a different sense; for, in that passage, God is not contrasted with man, but Christ is brought forward with all his gifts and graces 33 which ought to be sufficient for upholding our faith.

Calvin: Joh 12:45 - -- 45.And he who seeth me The word see is here taken for knowledge; for, in order to give true and thorough tranquillity to our consciences, which wo...

45.And he who seeth me The word see is here taken for knowledge; for, in order to give true and thorough tranquillity to our consciences, which would otherwise have been constantly liable to various agitations, he sends us to the Father. The reason why the stability of faith is firm and secure is, that it is stronger than the world, and is above the world. 34 Now, when Christ is truly known, the glory of God shines in him, that we may be fully persuaded that the faith which we have in him does not depend on man, but that it is founded on the eternal God; for it rises from the flesh of Christ to his Divinity. And, if it be so, not only must it be fixed perpetually in our hearts, but it must likewise show itself boldly in the tongue, when it is necessary.

Calvin: Joh 12:46 - -- 46.I am come into the worm as a light In order to render his disciples more bold and persevering, he proceeds still farther in maintaining the certai...

46.I am come into the worm as a light In order to render his disciples more bold and persevering, he proceeds still farther in maintaining the certainty of faith. And, first, he testifies that he came into the world to be a light, by which men might be delivered from darkness and errors; and, at the same time, he points out the means of obtaining so great a benefit, when he says, that whosoever believeth in me may not remain in darkness. Besides, he accuses of ingratitude all who, after having been taught by the Gospel, do not separate themselves from unbelievers; for the higher the excellence of this benefit, of being called from darkness to light, the less excusable are they who, through their indolence or carelessness, quench the light that had been kindled in them.

The words, I am come into the world as a light, are highly emphatic; for though Christ was a light from the beginning, yet there is a good reason why he adorns himself with this title, that he has come to perform the part of a light. That we may perceive distinctly the various steps, he shows, first, that he is a light to others rather than to himself; secondly, that he is a light, not only to angels, but also to men; thirdly, that he was manifested in the flesh, in order that he might shine with full brightness.

The term, whosoever, appears to have been added on purpose, partly, that all believers, without exception, may enjoy this benefit ill common, and partly, to show that the reason why unbelievers perish in darkness is, that, of their own accord, they forsake the light. Now, if the whole wisdom of the world were collected into one mass, not a single ray of the true light would be found in that vast heap; but, contrary, it will be a confused chaos; for it belongs to Christ alone to deliver us from darkness.

Calvin: Joh 12:47 - -- 47.If any man hear my words After having spoken concerning his grace, and exhorted his disciples to steady faith, he now begins to strike the rebelli...

47.If any man hear my words After having spoken concerning his grace, and exhorted his disciples to steady faith, he now begins to strike the rebellious, though even here he mitigates the severity due to the wickedness of those who deliberately — as it were — reject God; for he delays to pronounce judgment on them, because, on the contrary, he has come for the salvation of all. In the first place, we ought to understand that he does not speak here of all unbelievers without distinction, but of those who, knowingly and willingly, reject the doctrine of the Gospel which has been exhibited to them. Why then does Christ not choose to condemn them? It is because he lays aside for a time the office of a judge, and offers salvation to all without reserve, and stretches out his arms to embrace all, that all may be the more encouraged to repent. And yet there is a circumstance of no small moment, by which he points out the aggravation of the crime, if they reject an invitation so kind and gracious, for it is as if he had said, “Lo, I am here to invite all, and, forgetting the character of a judge, I have this as my single object, to persuade all, and to rescue from destruction those who are already twice ruined.” No man, therefore, is condemned on account of having despised the Gospel, except he who, disdaining the lovely message of salvation, has chosen of his own accord to draw down destruction on himself.

The word judge, as is evident from the word save, which is contrasted with it, here signifies to condemn. Now this ought to be understood as referring to the office which properly and naturally belongs to Christ; for that unbelievers are not more severely condemned on account of the Gospel is accidental, and does not arise from its nature, as we have said on former occasions.

Calvin: Joh 12:48 - -- 48.He who rejecteth me That wicked men may not flatter themselves as if their unbounded disobedience to Christ would pass unpunished, he, adds here a...

48.He who rejecteth me That wicked men may not flatter themselves as if their unbounded disobedience to Christ would pass unpunished, he, adds here a dreadful threatening, that though he were to do nothing in this matter, yet his doctrine alone would be sufficient to condemn them, as he says elsewhere, that there would be no need of any other judge than Moses, in whom they boasted, (Joh 5:45.) The meaning, therefore, is: “Burning with ardent desire to promote your salvation, I do indeed abstain from exercising my right to condemn you, and am entirely employed in saving what is lost; but do not think that you have escaped out of the hands of God; for though I should altogether hold my peace, the word alone, which you have despised, is sufficient to judge you.”

And receiveth not my words This latter clause is an explanation of the former; for since hypocrisy is natural to men, nothing is easier for them than to boast in words that they are ready to receive Christ; and we see how common this boasting is even amongst the most wicked men. We must therefore attend to this definition, that Christ is rejected when we do not embrace the pure doctrine of the Gospel.

Loudly do the Papists, indeed, proclaim this word which Christ uttered; but as soon as his pure truth is brought forward, nothing is more hateful to them. Such persons kiss Christ in the same manner as Judas kissed him, (Mat 26:49.) Let us therefore learn to receive him along with his word, and to render to him that homage and obedience which he demands as his sole right.

The word which I speak shall judge you at the last day It is impossible to give a nobler or more magnificent title to the Gospel than to, ascribe to it the power of judging; for, according to these words, the last judgment shall be nothing else than an approbation or ratification 36 of the doctrine of the Gospel. Christ himself will indeed ascend the tribunal, but he declares that he will pronounce the sentence according to the word which is now preached. This threatening ought to strike deep? terror into the ungodly, since they cannot escape the judgment of that doctrine which they now so haughtily disdain.

But when Christ mentions the last judgment, he means that they are now destitute of understanding; for he reminds them that the punishment which they now treat with mockery will then be openly displayed. On the other hand, it yields to the godly an invaluable consolation, that to whatever extent. they may be now condemned by the world, still they do not doubt that they are already acquitted in heaven; for, wherever the faith of the Gospel has its seat, the tribunal of God is erected to save. Relying on this right, we need not trouble ourselves about Papists or their absurd decisions; for our faith rises even above angels.

Calvin: Joh 12:49 - -- 49.For I do not speak from myself That the outward appearance of man may not lessen the majesty of God, Christ frequently sends us to the Father. Thi...

49.For I do not speak from myself That the outward appearance of man may not lessen the majesty of God, Christ frequently sends us to the Father. This is the reason why he so often mentions the Father; and, indeed, since it would be unlawful to transfer to another a single spark of the Divine glory, the word, to which judgment is ascribed, must have proceeded from God. Now Christ here distinguishes himself from the Father, not simply as to his Divine Person, but rather as to his flesh; lest the doctrine should be judged after the manner of men, and, therefore, should have less weight. But if consciences were subject to the laws and doctrine of men, this argument of Christ would not apply, “My word (he says) will judge, because it has not proceeded from man;” according to that saying,

There is one lawgiver, who is able to save and to destroy,
(Jas 4:12.)

We may likewise infer from it, how monstrous, is the sacrilege of the Pope in daring to bind souls by his inventions; for in this way he claims more for himself than the Son of God does, who declares that he does not speak but by the commandment of his Father.

Calvin: Joh 12:50 - -- 50.And I know that his commandment is eternal life He again applauds the fruit of his doctrine, that all may more willingly yield to it; and it is re...

50.And I know that his commandment is eternal life He again applauds the fruit of his doctrine, that all may more willingly yield to it; and it is reasonable that wicked men should feel the vengeance of God, whom they now refuse to have as the Author of life.

Defender: Joh 12:37 - -- Some believed, of course (Joh 12:11), but most did not, especially the Jewish leaders. Not even such mighty miracles of creation as described in John'...

Some believed, of course (Joh 12:11), but most did not, especially the Jewish leaders. Not even such mighty miracles of creation as described in John's Gospel will persuade those who prefer not to believe (Luk 16:31). Even Christ's own bodily resurrection will not convince those who do not want to submit to Him."

Defender: Joh 12:41 - -- This unbelief in Christ was not surprising, for it had been prophesied long before. In Joh 12:38, John cites Isa 53:1, and in Joh 12:40 he cites Isa 6...

This unbelief in Christ was not surprising, for it had been prophesied long before. In Joh 12:38, John cites Isa 53:1, and in Joh 12:40 he cites Isa 6:10. It was in connection with the latter prophecy that Isaiah "saw also the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up" (Isa 6:1) in a glorious theophany."

Defender: Joh 12:42 - -- A mental belief in the facts concerning Christ is not sufficient for salvation. Open confession is an evidence of saving faith (Rom 10:9, Rom 10:10)."

A mental belief in the facts concerning Christ is not sufficient for salvation. Open confession is an evidence of saving faith (Rom 10:9, Rom 10:10)."

Defender: Joh 12:43 - -- This comment is an indictment of many modern professed evangelicals who often are so enamored of acceptance and prestige among their peers that they w...

This comment is an indictment of many modern professed evangelicals who often are so enamored of acceptance and prestige among their peers that they will dilute Biblical standards of doctrine and practice to attain and keep their standing in the world."

Defender: Joh 12:48 - -- The vital and eternal importance of the written Word of God (which is, to all intents and purposes, the Word spoken by Christ) is thus indicated by th...

The vital and eternal importance of the written Word of God (which is, to all intents and purposes, the Word spoken by Christ) is thus indicated by the Lord Jesus. The response of men to the Word will be the basis on which they are judged (Joh 5:24; Rev 20:12)."

TSK: Joh 12:37 - -- Joh 1:11, Joh 11:42, Joh 15:24; Mat 11:20; Luk 16:31

TSK: Joh 12:38 - -- That : Joh 15:25, Joh 17:12, Joh 19:24, Joh 19:36, Joh 19:37; Mat 27:35; Act 13:27-29 Esaias : 2Ch 32:20, Isaiah, Mat 15:7; Act 8:28-30; Rom 10:20 who...

TSK: Joh 12:39 - -- they : Joh 5:44, Joh 6:44, Joh 10:38; Isa 44:18-20; 2Pe 2:14 because : Isa 6:9, Isa 6:10

TSK: Joh 12:40 - -- hath : Joh 9:39; 1Ki 22:20; Isa 29:10; Eze 14:9; Mat 13:13-15, Mat 15:14; Mar 4:12; Luk 8:10; Act 28:26; Rom 11:8-11 hardened : Exo 4:21, Exo 7:3, Exo...

TSK: Joh 12:41 - -- when : Isa 6:1-5, Isa 6:9, Isa 6:10 saw : Joh 1:14, Joh 1:18, Joh 14:9; Exo 33:18-23; 2Co 4:6; Heb 1:3 spake : Joh 5:39; Act 10:43; 1Pe 1:11; Rev 19:1...

TSK: Joh 12:42 - -- among : Joh 3:2, Joh 7:48-51, Joh 11:45, Joh 19:38 they did not : Mat 10:32; Luk 12:8; Rom 10:10; 1Jo 4:2, 1Jo 4:15 lest : Joh 7:13, Joh 9:22, Joh 9:3...

TSK: Joh 12:43 - -- they : Joh 5:41, Joh 5:44; Mat 6:2, Mat 23:5-7; Luk 16:15; Psa 22:29; 1Th 2:6 the praise of God : Joh 12:26, Joh 8:54; 1Sa 2:30; Luk 19:17; Rom 2:7; 1...

TSK: Joh 12:44 - -- cried : Joh 7:28, Joh 11:43; Pro 1:20, Pro 8:1; Isa 55:1-3 He : Joh 13:20; Mat 10:40; Mar 9:37; 1Pe 1:21

TSK: Joh 12:45 - -- Joh 12:41, Joh 14:9, Joh 14:10, Joh 15:24; 2Co 4:6; Col 1:15; Heb 1:3; 1Jo 5:20

TSK: Joh 12:46 - -- am : Joh 12:35, Joh 12:36, Joh 1:4, Joh 1:5, Joh 3:19, Joh 8:12, Joh 9:5, Joh 9:39; Psa 36:9; Isa 40:1; Mal 4:2; Mat 4:16; Luk 1:76-79, Luk 2:32; Act ...

TSK: Joh 12:47 - -- I judge : Joh 12:48, Joh 5:45, Joh 8:15, Joh 8:16, Joh 8:26 for : Joh 3:17; Mat 18:11, Mat 20:28; Luk 9:56, Luk 19:10; 1Ti 1:15, 1Ti 1:16; 2Pe 3:15; 1...

TSK: Joh 12:48 - -- rejecteth : Deu 18:19; 1Sa 8:7, 1Sa 10:19; Isa 53:3; Mat 21:42; Mar 8:31, Mar 12:10; Luk 7:30, Luk 9:22, Luk 9:26, Luk 10:16, Luk 17:25, Luk 20:17; Ac...

TSK: Joh 12:49 - -- Joh 3:11, Joh 3:32, Joh 5:30, Joh 6:38-40, Joh 8:26, Joh 8:42, Joh 14:10, Joh 15:15, Joh 17:8; Deu 18:18; Rev 1:1

TSK: Joh 12:50 - -- his : Joh 6:63, Joh 6:68, Joh 17:3, Joh 20:31; 1Ti 1:16; 1Jo 2:25, 1Jo 3:23, 1Jo 3:24, 1Jo 5:11-13, 1Jo 5:20

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Joh 12:37 - -- So many miracles - This does not refer to any miracles performed on this occasion, but to all his miracles performed in view of the nation, in ...

So many miracles - This does not refer to any miracles performed on this occasion, but to all his miracles performed in view of the nation, in healing the sick, opening the eyes of the blind, raising the dead, etc. John here gives the summary or the result of all his work undeniable proof of his being the Messiah, yet the nation did not believe on him.

Before them - Before the Jewish nation. Not in the presence of the people whom he was then addressing, but before the Jewish people.

They believed not - The Jewish nation did not believe as a nation, but rejected him.

Barnes: Joh 12:38 - -- The saying - The word of Isaiah, or that which Isaiah predicted. This occurs in Isa 53:1. Might be fulfilled - That the same effect shoul...

The saying - The word of Isaiah, or that which Isaiah predicted. This occurs in Isa 53:1.

Might be fulfilled - That the same effect should occur which occurred in the time of Isaiah. This does not mean that the Pharisees rejected Christ in order that the prophecy of Isaiah should be fulfilled, but that by their rejection of him the same thing had occurred which took place in the time of Isaiah. His message was despised by the nation, and he himself put to death. And it was also true - by the same causes, by the same nation that the same gospel message was rejected by the Jews in the time of Christ. The same language of the prophet would express both events, and no doubt it was intended by the Holy Spirit to mark both events. In this way it was completely fulfilled. See the notes at Isa 53:1.

Our report - Literally, by report is meant "what is heard."Our speech, our message. That is, few or none have received the message. The form of the question is an emphatic way of saying that it was rejected.

The arm of the Lord - The arm is a symbol of power, as it is the instrument by which we execute our purposes. It is put for the power of God, Isa 51:9; Isa 52:10. Thus, he is said to have brought out the children of Israel from Egypt with a high arm that is, with great power. It hence means God’ s power in defending his people, in overcoming his enemies, and in saving the soul. In this place it clearly denotes the power displayed by the miracles of Christ.

Revealed - Made known, seen, understood. Though the power of God was displayed, yet the people did not see and understand it.

Barnes: Joh 12:39 - -- They could not believe - See Mar 6:5; "He could there do no mighty works,"etc. The works can and could are often used in the Bible to denote th...

They could not believe - See Mar 6:5; "He could there do no mighty works,"etc. The works can and could are often used in the Bible to denote the existence of such obstacles as to make a result certain, or as affirming that while one thing exists another thing cannot follow. Thus, Joh 5:44; "How can ye believe which receive honor one of another."That is, while this propensity to seek for honor exists, it will effectually prevent your believing. Thus Gen 37:4 it is said of the brethren of Joseph that they "could not speak peaceably unto him."That is, while their hatred continued so strong, the other result would follow. See also Mat 12:34; Rom 8:7; Joh 6:60; Amo 3:3. In this case it means that there was some obstacle or difficulty that made it certain that while it existed they would not believe. What that was is stated in the next verse; and while that blindness of mind and that hardness of heart existed, it was impossible that they should believe, for the two things were incompatible. But this determines nothing about their power of removing that blindness, or of yielding their heart to the gospel. It simply affirms that while one exists the other cannot follow. Chrysostom and Augustine understand this of a moral inability, and not of any natural want. of power. "They could not, because they would not"(Chrysostom in loco). So on Jer 13:23, "Can the Ethiopian change his skin,"etc., he says, "he does not say if is impossible for a wicked man to do well, but, because "they will not, therefore they cannot."Augustine says on this place: "If I be asked why they could not believe, I answer without hesitation, because they would not: because God foresaw their evil will, and he announced it beforehand by the prophet."

Said again - Isa 6:9-10.

Barnes: Joh 12:40 - -- He hath blinded their eyes - The expression in Isaiah is, "Go, make the heart of this people fat, and shut their eyes."That is, go and proclaim...

He hath blinded their eyes - The expression in Isaiah is, "Go, make the heart of this people fat, and shut their eyes."That is, go and proclaim truth to them truth that will result in blinding their eyes. Go and proclaim the law and the will of God, and the effect will be, owing to the hardness of their heart, that their eyes will be blinded and their hearts hardened. As God knew that this would be the result - as it was to be the effect of the message, his commanding Isaiah to go and proclaim it was the same in effect, or in the result, as if he had commanded him to blind their eyes and harden their hearts. It is this effect or result to which the evangelist refers in this place. He states that God did it, that is, he did it in the manner mentioned in Isaiah, for we are limited to that in our interpretation of the passage. In that case it is clear that the mode specified is not a direct agency on the part of God in blinding the mind - which we cannot reconcile with any just notions of the divine character - but "in suffering the truth to produce a regular effect on sinful minds, without putting forth any positive supernatural influence to prevent it."The effect of truth on such minds is to irritate, to enrage, and to harden, unless counteracted by the grace of God. See Rom 7:8-9, Rom 7:11; 2Co 2:15-16. And as God knew this, and, knowing it, still sent the message, and suffered it to produce the regular effect, the Evangelist says "he hath blinded their minds,"thus retaining the substance of the passage in Isaiah without quoting the precise language; but in proclaiming the truth there was nothing wrong on the part of God or of Isaiah, nor is there any indication that God was unwilling that they should believe and be saved.

That they should not see ... - This does not mean that it was the design of God that they should not be converted, but that it was the effect of their rejecting the message. See the notes at Mat 13:14-15.

Barnes: Joh 12:41 - -- When he saw his glory - Isa 6:1-10. Isaiah saw the Lord (in Hebrew, יהוה Yahweh ) sitting on a throne and surrounded with the seraphim....

When he saw his glory - Isa 6:1-10. Isaiah saw the Lord (in Hebrew, יהוה Yahweh ) sitting on a throne and surrounded with the seraphim. This is perhaps the only instance in the Bible in which Yahweh is said to have been seen by man, and for this the Jews affirm that Isaiah was put to death. God had said Exo 33:20, "No man shall see me and live;"and as Isaiah affirmed that he had seen Yahweh, the Jews, for that and other reasons, put him to death by sawing him asunder. See Introduction to Isaiah, Section 2. In the prophecy Isaiah is said expressly to have seen Yahweh Joh 12:1; and in Joh 12:5, "Mine eyes have seen the King Yahweh of hosts."By his glory is meant the manifestation of him - the Shechinah, or visible cloud that was a representation of God, and that rested over the mercy-seat. This was regarded as equivalent to seeing God, and John here expressly applies this to the Lord Jesus Christ; for he is nor affirming that the people did not believe in God, but is assigning the reason why they believed not on Jesus Christ as the Messiah. The whole discourse has respect to the Lord Jesus, and the natural construction of the passage requires us to refer it to him. John affirms that it was the glory of the Messiah that Isaiah saw, and yet Isaiah affirms that it was Yahweh; and from this the inference is irresistible that John regarded Jesus as the Yahweh whom Isaiah saw. The name Yahweh is never, in the Scriptures, applied to a man, or an angel, or to any creature. It is the unique, incommunicable name of God. So great was the reverence of the Jews for that name that they would not even pronounce it. This passage is therefore conclusive proof that Christ is equal with the Father.

Spake of him - Of the Messiah. The connection requires this interpretation.

Barnes: Joh 12:42 - -- The chief rulers - Members of the Sanhedrin - Nicodemus, Joseph, and others like them. Because of the Pharisees - The Pharisees were a ma...

The chief rulers - Members of the Sanhedrin - Nicodemus, Joseph, and others like them.

Because of the Pharisees - The Pharisees were a majority of the council.

Did not confess him - Did not openly avow their belief that he was the Messiah. Two of them, however, did afterward evince their attachment to him. These were Joseph and Nicodemus, Joh 19:38-39. That Joseph was one of them appears from Mar 15:43; Luk 23:50-51.

Put out of the synagogue - Excommunicated. See the notes at Joh 9:22.

Barnes: Joh 12:43 - -- The praise of men - The approval of human beings. It does not appear that they had a living, active faith, but that they were convinced in thei...

The praise of men - The approval of human beings. It does not appear that they had a living, active faith, but that they were convinced in their understanding that he was the Messiah. They had that kind of faith which is so common among people - a speculative acknowledgment that religion is true, but an acknowledgment which leads to no self-denial, which shrinks from the active duties of piety, and fears man more than God. True faith is active. It overcomes the fear of man; it prompts to self-denying duties, Heb. 11. Nevertheless, it was no unimportant proof that Jesus was the Messiah, that any part of the great council of the Jews were even speculatively convinced of it: and it shows that the evidence could not have been slight when it overcame their prejudices and pride, and constrained them to admit that the lowly and poor man of Nazareth was the long expected Messiah of their nation.

Barnes: Joh 12:44 - -- Jesus cried and said - John does not say where or when this was; it is probable, however, that it was a continuation of the discourse recorded ...

Jesus cried and said - John does not say where or when this was; it is probable, however, that it was a continuation of the discourse recorded in Joh 12:30-36. Jesus saw their unbelief, and proceeded to state the consequence of believing on him, and of rejecting him and his message.

Believeth not on me - That is, not on me alone, or his faith does not terminate on me. Compare Mat 10:20; Mar 9:37. It involves, also, belief in him that sent me. Jesus uniformly represents the union between himself and God as so intimate that there could not be faith in him unless there was also faith in God. He did the same works Joh 5:17, Joh 5:20, Joh 5:36; Joh 10:25, Joh 10:37, and taught the very doctrine which God had commissioned him to do, Joh 8:38; Joh 5:30, Joh 5:20-23.

Barnes: Joh 12:45 - -- Seeth me ... - This verse is a strong confirmation of his equality with God. In no other way can it be true that he who saw Jesus saw him that ...

Seeth me ... - This verse is a strong confirmation of his equality with God. In no other way can it be true that he who saw Jesus saw him that sent him, unless he were the same in essence. Of no man could it be affirmed that he who saw him saw God. To say this of Paul or Isaiah would have been blasphemy. And yet Jesus uses this language familiarly and constantly. It shows that he had a consciousness that he was divine, and that it was the natural and proper way of speaking when speaking of himself. Compare Joh 5:17.

Barnes: Joh 12:46 - -- A light into the world - Joh 8:12; Joh 1:9; Joh 3:19. Walk in darkness - In gross and dangerous errors. Darkness is put for error as well...

A light into the world - Joh 8:12; Joh 1:9; Joh 3:19.

Walk in darkness - In gross and dangerous errors. Darkness is put for error as well as for sin, Joh 3:19; 1Jo 1:5. It is also used to denote the state when the comforts of religion are withdrawn from the soul, Isa 8:22; Joe 2:2; Isa 59:9; Joh 8:12.

Barnes: Joh 12:47 - -- I judge him not ... - Joh 8:15. It was not his present purpose to condemn men. He would come to condemn the guilty at a future time. At present...

I judge him not ... - Joh 8:15. It was not his present purpose to condemn men. He would come to condemn the guilty at a future time. At present he came to save them. Hence he did not now even pronounce decisively on the condition of those who rejected him, but still gave them an opportunity to be saved.

Barnes: Joh 12:48 - -- He that rejecteth me - Luk 10:16. The word "reject"means to despise, or to refuse to receive him. Hath one - That is, he needs not my voi...

He that rejecteth me - Luk 10:16. The word "reject"means to despise, or to refuse to receive him.

Hath one - That is, he needs not my voice to condemn him. He will carry his own condemnation with him, even should I be silent. His own conscience will condemn him. The words which I have spoken will be remembered and will condemn him, if there were nothing further. From this we learn:

1.\caps1     t\caps0 hat a guilty conscience needs no accuser.

2.\caps1     t\caps0 hat the words of Christ, and the messages of mercy which the sinner has rejected, will be remembered by him.

3.\caps1     t\caps0 hat this will be the source of his condemnation. This will make him miserable, and there will be no possibility of his being happy.

4.\caps1     t\caps0 hat the conscience of the sinner will concur with the sentence of Christ in the great day, and that he will go to eternity self-condemned. It is this which will make the pains of hell so intolerable to the sinner.

5.    The word that Christ has spoken, the doctrines of his gospel, and the messages of mercy, will be that by which the sinner will be judged in the last day. Every person will be judged by that message, and the sinner will be punished according to the frequency and clearness with which the rejected message has been presented to his mind, Mat 12:41.

Barnes: Joh 12:49 - -- Of myself - Joh 7:16-18.

Of myself - Joh 7:16-18.

Barnes: Joh 12:50 - -- Is life everlasting - Is the cause or source of everlasting life. He that obeys the commandment of God shall obtain everlasting life; and this ...

Is life everlasting - Is the cause or source of everlasting life. He that obeys the commandment of God shall obtain everlasting life; and this is his commandment, that we believe in the name of his only-begotten Son, 1Jo 3:22. We see here the reason of the earnestness and fidelity of the Lord Jesus. It was because he saw that eternal life depended on the faithful preaching of the message of God. He therefore proclaimed it in the face of all opposition, contempt, and persecution. And we see also:

1.    That every minister of religion should have a deep and abiding conviction that he delivers a message that is to be connected with the eternal welfare of his hearers. And,

2.    Under the influence of this belief, he should fearlessly deliver his message in the face of bonds, poverty, contempt, persecution, and death.

It may not be improper to remark here that this is the close of the public preaching of Christ. The rest of his ministry was employed in the private instruction of his apostles, and in preparing them for his approaching death. It is such a close as all his ministers should desire to make a solemn, deliberate, firm exhibition of the truth of God, under a belief that on it was depending the eternal salvation of his hearers, and uttering without fear the solemn message of the Most High to a lost world.

Poole: Joh 12:37 - -- The miracles of Christ did not work faith in any, yet they had a tendency both to prepare souls for an assent to the proposition of the gospel, and ...

The miracles of Christ did not work faith in any, yet they had a tendency both to prepare souls for an assent to the proposition of the gospel, and also for receiving Christ as the true Messiah and Saviour of the world, as they evidenced a Divine power in him by which he wrought those mighty works; but yet they had not this effect upon the generality of the Jews.

Poole: Joh 12:38 - -- So as that which Isaiah prophesied, Isa 53:1 , appeared to be fulfilled in them; for the term ina , which we translate that doth not in Scripture a...

So as that which Isaiah prophesied, Isa 53:1 , appeared to be fulfilled in them; for the term ina , which we translate that doth not in Scripture always denote the final cause, with respect to the counsel and intention of God, but oft times the event. So Joh 5:20 Rom 5:20 2Co 1:17 .

The arm of the Lord may either signify the gospel, which is called the power of God to salvation. Rom 1:16 1Co 1:18 ; or else the Messiah, who is thought to be mentioned under this notion by Isaiah, Isa 51:5 Isa 52:10 59:16 63:12 , because the Father worketh by him, as a man worketh by his arm, Isa 1:3,14 .

Poole: Joh 12:39 - -- Some will have, they could not believe to be the same with, they did not; as, Mar 6:5 , it is said Christ could not do mighty works at Nazareth; or...

Some will have, they could not believe to be the same with, they did not; as, Mar 6:5 , it is said Christ could not do mighty works at Nazareth; or the same with, they would not, as Gen 19:22 ; but this seemeth a hard interpretation of ouk hdunanto . It is most certain, that in all there is a natural impotency and disability to believe; but this text seemeth to speak of a further degree of impossibility than that, occasioned through their wilful obstinacy, and God’ s judicial hardening of them.

Because Esaias said is no more than, for Esaias said; the particle doth not denote the cause influencing them, but the effect of the prophecy: God’ s word (saith the evangelist) must be made good, and Isaiah had prophesied of what now came to pass.

Poole: Joh 12:40 - -- We have this text (than which there is not one more terrible in the whole book of God) no less than six times quoted in the New Testament, and in al...

We have this text (than which there is not one more terrible in the whole book of God) no less than six times quoted in the New Testament, and in all places quoted and given as a reason for the Jews unbelief in the Lord Jesus Christ, Mat 13:14,15 Mr 4:12 Luk 8:10 Act 28:26,27 Ro 11:8 . It is not quoted alike in all places, but for substance the same. The original from whence these quotations are, is Isa 6:9,10 . By comparing the texts we shall find several authors, instruments, or causes of these dreadful effects. In the original, the prophet Isaiah is made the instrumental cause: Go, (saith God), and make the heart of this people fat, & c. Matthew, and Luke in Act 28:27 , mention themselves as the cause. Matthew saith, For this people’ s heart is waxed gross, and their ears are dull of hearing, and their eyes they have closed. And the Acts it is, For the heart of this people is waxed gross, and their ears are dull of hearing, and their eyes have they closed. All the other texts speak of it as God’ s act. The thing is easily thus reconciled: God sent to the Jews his prophets, and gave them the means of salvation; it is true, without the inward efficacy of his Spirit they could not savingly believe, but they did not do what was in their power to have done, nay, they did do what was in their power to have avoided, they slighted and contemned the Lord’ s prophets, and killed them, and stoned such as were sent unto them. Thus they first shut their own eyes, and hardened their own hearts; and as their forefathers had done in their generation, so the Jews in our Saviour Christ’ s time did also in their generation, shutting their eyes against the revelation of the gospel by Christ himself. They thus behaving themselves, God judicially gave them up to their own lusts, permitting their hearts to harden, and suffering them to close their own eyes, so as they could not repent, believe, or return, and be saved; not that God infused any malice into their hearts, but withdrew his grace from them after such provocations on their parts: so that as the prophets in their age laboured with them in vain, and all the event of their ministry was but the generality of that people’ s growing worse and more obdurate; so all the event of Christ’ s ministry and miracles, which he personally wrought amongst them in his age, did accidentally but increase their sin and their judgment, and ripen them for their ruin, through their wilful abuse of those sacred means of life and salvation. The judgment itself was but one, viz. a judicial hardening of them; but it is set out by a great variety of expressions, both by the prophets, and the writers of the New Testament: in Isaiah, by making their hearts fat, their ears heavy, shutting their eyes: in Matthew, making their hearts gross, their ears dull of hearing, shutting their eyes: in this text, by blinding their eyes, and hardening their hearts: in the Acts, by the same phrases as in Matthew: in Rom 11:8 is added, God hath given them the spirit of slumber. All the phrases are expressive of the same dreadful judgment of God; yet it may be expressed in this variety of phrase, to signify the distinct, particular plagues (comprehended in this one plague) which fall upon the several powers and faculties of those souls upon whom this dreadful judgment falls; blindness in the mind, stubbornness in the will, &c., vileness in the affections, reprobacy in the mind, &c.

Poole: Joh 12:41 - -- The evangelist saith, that these things Esaias said, when he saw his glory, and spake of him Isaiah’ s sight of God’ s glory is described...

The evangelist saith, that these things Esaias said, when he saw his glory, and spake of him Isaiah’ s sight of God’ s glory is described, Isa 6:1 , I saw the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up, &c. The evangelist expounds this of Christ, which is an evident proof of the Deity of Christ, that he is Jehovah; for it was Jehovah whom the prophet there saw: and that the revelation of that dreadful wrath of God, did not only concern that particular age in which Isaiah lived, but the successive generation of the Jews, whom the prophet saw by the eye of prophecy would tread in the same steps, and use Christ (the Heir) as their forefathers had used him, and the prophets of that age.

Poole: Joh 12:42 - -- Though the Pharisees made up a great part of the sanhedrim, yet there were divers others also mixed with them, amongst which there were many of a be...

Though the Pharisees made up a great part of the sanhedrim, yet there were divers others also mixed with them, amongst which there were many of a better temper; and it may be arcontwn here may not signify members of that court, but principal men in the magistracy. We must not understand by

believed that they believed with a saving faith; what follows will evidence the contrary; but they had some convictions upon them as to the truth of what he said, and his being the true Messias; but they durst not openly declare what themselves thought, nor publicly own and aver Christ to be what he indeed was, and they were inclinable to think he was, lest the Pharisees, who were Christ’ s most implacable enemies, should have put the decree they had made (of which we read, Joh 9:22 ) in execution upon them.

Poole: Joh 12:43 - -- For they were not willing to part with their great places in the magistracy, which brought them respect, honour, and applause from men; they valued ...

For they were not willing to part with their great places in the magistracy, which brought them respect, honour, and applause from men; they valued this more than God’ s honouring and praising them. How hard it is for great men to enter into the kingdom of God!

Poole: Joh 12:44 - -- The words, at first view, seem to contain a contradiction, and denying the same act as to the same person; as if any man could believe, and yet not ...

The words, at first view, seem to contain a contradiction, and denying the same act as to the same person; as if any man could believe, and yet not believe on Christ; but there is nothing less in them. By the same figurative way of speaking God tells the prophet Samuel, 1Sa 8:7 , the people had not rejected Samuel, (that is, not Samuel alone), but they had rejected him. So Mar 9:37 , Whosoever receiveth me, receiveth not me, ( that is, not me alone), but him that sent me. So 1Th 4:8 . Or else thus, He that believeth on me, doth not believe on a mere man, as I appear at present to the world, but he also believeth on God that sent me. The Jews owned one God the Father, and acknowledged him the object of their faith, Joh 14:1 , Ye believe in God; but they were blinded as to Christ, appearing only in the form of a man. So that our Saviour again by these words asserts his Divine nature, his oneness and equality with his Father; so as he was also the object of their faith, as well as his Father.

Poole: Joh 12:45 - -- No man hath seen God at any time; but he that by the eyes of his mind knows, and understands, and believeth in me, seeth him that sent me: or, he th...

No man hath seen God at any time; but he that by the eyes of his mind knows, and understands, and believeth in me, seeth him that sent me: or, he that seeth me in my works which I do, seeth also him that sent me, by whom I do these mighty works. Thus, afterward, Joh 14:9 , he saith to Philip, He that hath seen me hath seen the Father; he that hath seen me, hath not indeed seen the Divine nature and essence, but hath seen that Person who is one with the Father; the brightness of his glory, and the express image of his person, as the apostle speaks, Heb 1:3 .

Poole: Joh 12:46 - -- I am come a light into the world this is no more than what our Saviour hath often said, Joh 3:19 , and Joh 9:5 ; and it was according to the prophecy...

I am come a light into the world this is no more than what our Saviour hath often said, Joh 3:19 , and Joh 9:5 ; and it was according to the prophecy of him, Isa 42:6 .

That whosoever believeth on me shall not abide in darkness that he who receiveth and embraces me, as his Priest and Prophet, though he may be in darkness naturally, Eph 5:8 , yet should not abide in a state of ignorance, and sin, and guilt, Joh 3:36 8:31 . Men and women, before they believe in Christ are in darkness; but upon believing, they are translated out of their state of darkness into a state of marvellous light; they do not abide in darkness.

Poole: Joh 12:47 - -- I judge him not I alone judge him not, or rather, it is not my present business to pronounce sentence of condemnation against him; I am now doing the...

I judge him not I alone judge him not, or rather, it is not my present business to pronounce sentence of condemnation against him; I am now doing the work of a Redeemer and Saviour, not of a Judge: he is condemned already, Joh 3:18 , and he hath another that accuseth and condemneth him; as the Jews had Moses, Joh 5:45 , so he hath my Father as his Judge, and will have my word as his accuser (as in the next verse): I shall one day condemn him; but that is not my present business, that was not my errand in coming into the world. I came to offer the world the means, and to show them the way to salvation; if they do perish, their blood will be upon their own heads: it is not my business to condemn them.

Poole: Joh 12:48 - -- These words, and receiveth not my words expound the former: not to receive in heart, to believe, and embrace the words of Christ in the gospel, is ...

These words, and receiveth not my words expound the former: not to receive in heart, to believe, and embrace the words of Christ in the gospel, is to reject Christ. So Luk 10:16 , He that heareth you heareth me; and he that despiseth you despiseth me. And he that doth so, hath one that judgeth him, that is, my Father who hath sent me, and will vindicate mine honour. Nay, the word that I have spoken shall rise up in judgment against him at the last day, and prove that he hath judged himself unworthy of everlasting life.

Poole: Joh 12:49 - -- I do not speak what I say to you as mere man, or any thing but what is my Father’ s will, and mine only as one with him, and as sent by him; I ...

I do not speak what I say to you as mere man, or any thing but what is my Father’ s will, and mine only as one with him, and as sent by him; I have said nothing but what my Father hath willed me to reveal to the world as his will.

Poole: Joh 12:50 - -- I am assured that the way to life everlasting is to obey his commandments; and that makes me speak, and deliver all that, and nothing but that, whic...

I am assured that the way to life everlasting is to obey his commandments; and that makes me speak, and deliver all that, and nothing but that, which I have in charge from my Father:

as the Father said unto me, so I speak Therefore look you to it, in rejecting me, you reject my Father, whom you own and acknowledge for your God; and in disobeying me, you disobey my Father, and him whom you own as your Father also.

Lightfoot: Joh 12:39 - -- Therefore they could not believe, because that Esaias said again,   [Therefore they could not believe, etc.] they were not constrained in...

Therefore they could not believe, because that Esaias said again,   

[Therefore they could not believe, etc.] they were not constrained in their infidelity, because Isaiah had said, "Their heart is waxen gross," etc.; but because those things were true which that prophet had foretold concerning them: which prophecy, if I understand them aright, they throw off from themselves, and pervert the sense of it altogether.   

"R. Jochanan saith, Repentance is a great thing; for it rescinds the decree of judgment determined against man: as it is written, 'The heart of this people is made fat, their ears heavy, and their eyes are closed, lest they should see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and understand with their heart: but they shall be converted and healed;' " For to that sense do they render these last words, diametrically contrary to the mind of the prophet.   

They have a conceit that Isaiah was cut in two, either by the saw or the axe, by Manasseh the king, principally for this very vision and prophecy:   

"It is a tradition. Simeon Ben Azzai saith, I found a book at Jerusalem......in which was written how Manasses slew Isaiah. Rabba saith he condemned and put him to death upon this occasion: he saith to him, Thy master Moses saith, 'No man can see God and live': but thou sayest, 'I have seen the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up.' Thy master Moses saith, 'Who is like our God in all things that we call upon him for?' Deu 4:7; but thou sayest, 'Seek ye the Lord while he may be found,' Isa 55:6. Moses thy master saith, 'The number of thy days I will fulfil,' Exo 23:26; but thou sayest, 'I will add unto thy days fifteen years,' Isa 38:5. Isaiah answered and said, 'I know he will not hearken to me in any thing I can say to him: if I should say any thing to the reconciling of the Scriptures, I know he will deal contemptuously in it.' He said therefore, ' I will shut myself up in this cedar.' They brought the cedar, and sawed it asunder. And when the saw touched his mouth, he gave up the ghost. This happened to him because he said, 'I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips.' "   

Manasseh slew Isaiah, and, as it should seem, the Gemarists do not dislike the fact, because he had accused Israel for the uncleanness of their lips. No touching upon Israel by any means!

Lightfoot: Joh 12:41 - -- These things said Esaias, when he saw his glory, and spake of him.   [When he saw his glory.] Isa 6:1; "I saw the Lord sitting upon a th...

These things said Esaias, when he saw his glory, and spake of him.   

[When he saw his glory.] Isa 6:1; "I saw the Lord sitting upon a throne." Where the Targum, I saw the Lord's glory; etc. So Exo 24:10; "They saw the God of Israel." Targum, " They saw the glory of the God of Israel." And Exo 24:11; "And they saw God." Targum, " And they saw the glory of God." So the Targumists elsewhere very often: commended therefore by their followers for so rendering it, Because no man could see God.   

It might be therefore thought that our evangelist speaks with the Targumist and the nation when he saith, that "Isaiah saw his glory"; whereas the prophet himself saith, "He saw the Lord."   

But there is a deeper meaning in it: nor do I doubt but this glory of our Saviour which Isaiah saw was that kind of glory by which he is described when he was to come to avenge himself and punish the Jewish nation. As when he is said, "to come in his kingdom," and "in his glory," and "in the clouds," etc. viz. in his vindictive glory. For observe,   

1. The prophet saw "the posts of the door shaken and removed," as hastening to ruin. 2. "The Temple itself filled with smoke": not with the cloud as formerly, the token of the divine presence, but with smoke, the forerunner and prognostic of that fire that should burn and consume it. 3. He saw the seraphim, angels of fire, because of the predetermined burning. 4. He heard the decree about blinding and hardening the people till the cities be wasted, and the land desolate.

Haydock: Joh 12:39 - -- They could not believe, [3] that is, they would not, says St. Augustine, or it could not be, considering their wilful obstinate blindness. (Witham) --...

They could not believe, [3] that is, they would not, says St. Augustine, or it could not be, considering their wilful obstinate blindness. (Witham) ---

But where then is the sin, if they could not believe? They could not believe, because they would not. For as it is the glory of the will of God, that it cannot be averse to its own glory, so it is the fault of the will of man, that it cannot believe. (St. Augustine, tract. 53. in Joan.) They could not believe. Since the prophet has foretold it, and he cannot but say the truth, it is impossible that they should now believe. Not but they had it in their power to believe; and had they believed, the prophet would never have foretold the contrary. (St. John Chrysostom, hom. lxvii. in Joan.)

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Non poterant credere. St. Augustine (tract. 53.) Quare autem non potuerunt, si a me quæratur, cito respondeo, quia nolebant.

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Haydock: Joh 12:40 - -- He hath blinded their eyes, &c. See Matthew xiii. 14. (Witham) --- God blinded the Jews, not by filling them with malice, but by refusing them his ...

He hath blinded their eyes, &c. See Matthew xiii. 14. (Witham) ---

God blinded the Jews, not by filling them with malice, but by refusing them his graces, of which they had made themselves unworthy, and which they before abused and despised. It was their perverse will, their pride, presumption, and obstinacy, that brought on them this judgment. (St. Augustine)

Haydock: Joh 12:43 - -- For they loved the glory of men. This was one of the chief obstacles of their belief: yet many even of the chief of them believed in him; but du...

For they loved the glory of men. This was one of the chief obstacles of their belief: yet many even of the chief of them believed in him; but durst not own it for fear of being disgraced, and turned out of their synagogues. Do not human considerations, and temporal advantages, hinder men from seeking out, and embracing the truth?

Haydock: Joh 12:45 - -- He that seeth me, seeth him that sent me. In what sense these words are true, see John xiv. ver. 9. where they are repeated again, and with other ex...

He that seeth me, seeth him that sent me. In what sense these words are true, see John xiv. ver. 9. where they are repeated again, and with other expressions to the same sense. (Witham)

Haydock: Joh 12:47 - -- I do not judge him. To judge here, may signify to condemn. St. Augustine expounds it in this manner: I do not judge him at this my first coming. S...

I do not judge him. To judge here, may signify to condemn. St. Augustine expounds it in this manner: I do not judge him at this my first coming. St. John Chrysostom says, it is not I only that judgeth him, but the works also that I do.

Gill: Joh 12:37 - -- But though he had done so many miracles before them,.... Openly, and in the presence of them; meaning those miracles which were done at Jerusalem, as ...

But though he had done so many miracles before them,.... Openly, and in the presence of them; meaning those miracles which were done at Jerusalem, as those which brought Nicodemus to him, and to an acknowledgment of him as a teacher sent from God; and particularly the cure of the lame man at Bethesda's pool, the giving sight to the man that was born blind, by anointing his eyes with clay, and sending him to wash in the Pool of Siloam, and the raising Lazarus from the dead at Bethany, which was within two miles of Jerusalem, in the presence of many of them who were come there to comfort Martha and Mary. Yet

they believed not on him; the miracles done by Christ before their eyes, which they could not deny, nor disprove, and were so many, and so great, were aggravations of their unbelief; and such indeed is the nature of that sin, and so deeply rooted is it, that the most powerful means, and mighty works, will not bring a person to believe in Christ, without the powerful and efficacious grace of God.

Gill: Joh 12:38 - -- That the saying of Esaias the prophet might be fulfilled,.... For though this was not the end of these men in disbelieving Christ, that the words of I...

That the saying of Esaias the prophet might be fulfilled,.... For though this was not the end of these men in disbelieving Christ, that the words of Isaiah might be fulfilled, yet hereby they were eventually fulfilled; and though the predictions of the prophet had no such influence on the wills of these men, as to lay upon them a coactive necessity, or force them to do, or to answer to the things foretold; yet they were to have, and had an infallible event or completion, otherwise the foreknowledge of God, and the authority of the prophetic writings, could not be maintained:

which he spake in Isa 53:1;

Lord, who hath believed our report? which words the prophet delivered by way of complaint to God the Father; not so much with respect to his own time, and the men of it, as to the times of Christ, and his apostles, whom he represents; for the whole chapter is a prophecy of the Messiah, and suggests, that in those times there would be but few that would believe the report made in the ministry of the Gospel, concerning the Messiah, his person, office, and grace; though so true in itself, and so much confirmed by miracles, and mighty deeds; the reason of which, he intimates, would be his outward mean appearance in the world; and which, it is certain, was the true reason, God denying the influence of his powerful and special grace, as follows:

and to whom hath the arm of the Lord been revealed? meaning either the Gospel, which is the power of God unto salvation, and which was bid from the wise and prudent; or the Lord Jesus Christ himself, who is the power of God, by whom he made the heavens and the earth, and upholds them in their being, and by whom he has redeemed and saved his people; and who was not revealed neither to them in the ministry of the word, nor in them the hope of glory: or the Holy Spirit is meant, the finger of God, by whom these surprising miracles were done; and yet he did not exert himself in these persons, in the special operations of his grace; or the powerful and efficacious grace of God itself is designed, which was not put forth, and did not attend the report of the Gospel, and therefore it was not believed.

Gill: Joh 12:39 - -- Therefore they could not believe,.... God had determined to leave them to the blindness and hardness of their hearts, and to deny them his grace, whic...

Therefore they could not believe,.... God had determined to leave them to the blindness and hardness of their hearts, and to deny them his grace, which only could cure them of it, and enable them to believe: he had foretold this in prophecy, and they were manifestly the persons spoken of; and therefore considering the decrees of God, the predictions of the prophet, and the hardness of their hearts, they were left unto, it was morally impossible they should believe,

because that Esaias said again, in Isa 6:9.

Gill: Joh 12:40 - -- He hath blinded their eyes, and hardened their heart,.... It is of no great moment, whether the he, who is said to blind and harden, be God or Christ,...

He hath blinded their eyes, and hardened their heart,.... It is of no great moment, whether the he, who is said to blind and harden, be God or Christ, or whether the words be rendered, "it hath blinded", &c. that is, malice or wickedness; or whether they be read impersonally, "their eyes are blinded", &c. since God or Christ blind and harden not by any positive act, but by leaving and giving men up to the blindness and hardness of their hearts, and denying them the grace which could only cure them, and which they are not obliged to give; and which was the case of these Jews, so as never to be converted, or be turned even by external repentance and reformation, that they might be healed in a national way, and be preserved from national ruin, as it follows,

that they should not see with their eyes,.... See Gill on Mat 13:14, See Gill on Mat 13:15. The Syriac and Persic versions read, "they have blinded their eyes", &c.

Gill: Joh 12:41 - -- These things said Esaias,.... Concerning the blinding and hardening of the Jews: when he saw his glory, and spake of him; when he saw, in a visiona...

These things said Esaias,.... Concerning the blinding and hardening of the Jews:

when he saw his glory, and spake of him; when he saw, in a visionary way, the glory of the Messiah in the temple, and the angels covering their faces with their wings at the sight of him; and when he spake of him as the King, the Lord of hosts, whom he had seen, Isa 6:1, from whence it is clear that he had respect to the Jews in the times of the Messiah. The prophet says in Isa 6:1 that he "saw the Lord": the Targumist renders it, "I saw", את יקרא דיי, "the glory of Jehovah"; and in Isa 6:5 he says, "mine eyes have seen the King", Jehovah, Zebaot, the Lord of hosts; which the Chaldee paraphrase renders, "mine eyes have seen", את יקר, "the glory" of the Shekinah, the King of the world, the Lord of hosts. Agreeably to which our Lord says here, that he saw his glory, the glory of his majesty, the glory of his divine nature, the train of his divine perfections, filling the temple of the human nature; and he spoke of him as the true Jehovah, the Lord of hosts; and which therefore is a very clear and strong proof of the proper divinity of Christ. And it may be observed from hence, that such persons who have a true, spiritual, and saving sight of Christ, of the glory of his person, and the fulness of his grace, cannot but be speaking of him to others, either in private, or in public, as Isaiah here did, and as the church in Son 5:10; and as the apostles of Christ, Joh 1:1; and indeed, should they hold their peace, the stones would cry out; such must, and will speak of his glory in his temple, Psa 29:9.

Gill: Joh 12:42 - -- Nevertheless among the chief rulers also,.... These were the members of the Jewish sanhedrim, as Nicodemus, Joseph of Arimathea, and others: many b...

Nevertheless among the chief rulers also,.... These were the members of the Jewish sanhedrim, as Nicodemus, Joseph of Arimathea, and others:

many believed on him; that he was the Messiah, though they did not believe in him in a spiritual and saving manner, as their Redeemer and Saviour, only in their minds, being convicted by his miracles, gave an assent unto him, as the promised Messiah. The two persons just mentioned may be thought truly to have believed in Christ; but the many here spoken of seem to have had only an historical faith in him, as appears by what follows:

but because of the Pharisees they did not confess him; as they ought to have done, and as they would have done, if their faith had been right; for where with the heart men believe in Christ to righteousness, there, with the mouth, confession is made to salvation; and between a non-confession of Christ, and a denying him, is no medium; and Christ interprets the one to be the same with the other; see Rom 10:9; and this they did not do, because of the Pharisees, who were the inveterate and implacable enemies of Christ, and were the prevailing party in the sanhedrim: wherefore these chief rulers, though many, were afraid of them,

lest they should be put out of the synagogue; for they had made a decree in the sanhedrim, that whoever confessed that Jesus was the Messiah, should be cast out; and they had put it into execution upon the man born blind, whose eyes Christ opened, for speaking in favour of his benefactor; and this had struck terror in the minds, not only of the common people; but of the chief rulers themselves; for it was looked upon as a very dreadful thing to be put out of the synagogue; See Gill on Joh 9:22.

Gill: Joh 12:43 - -- For they loved the praise of men,.... To be in the esteem of men, to have their applause, and receive honour from them: more than the praise of God...

For they loved the praise of men,.... To be in the esteem of men, to have their applause, and receive honour from them:

more than the praise of God; than either to receive honour from him, and be praised by him, or to praise and glorify him. By confessing Christ they knew they should run the risk of losing their places of honour and profit, and of falling under the disgrace and contempt of men; and therefore they chose rather not to confess Christ, than by so doing to glorify God, and please him, and be praised by him, as all the faithful professors of Christ will be at the last day; for then every such an one will have praise of God, and it will be said, well done good and faithful servant, enter into the joy of thy Lord.

Gill: Joh 12:44 - -- Jesus cried and said,.... Upon this occasion, on account of the prevailing hardness and unbelief of the Jewish nation, and the non-confession of him b...

Jesus cried and said,.... Upon this occasion, on account of the prevailing hardness and unbelief of the Jewish nation, and the non-confession of him by those who did believe him to be the Messiah. He cried with a loud voice, that he might be heard, and his audience left inexcusable; it denotes the concern of his mind, the vehemence of his spirit, and that openness and freedom in which he discharged his ministry, by showing the nature, excellency, and usefulness of believing in him, and the dangerous consequences of unbelief:

he that believeth on me, believeth not on me; which is not to be understood simply and absolutely, for this would be a contradiction in terms: they that believe in Christ, do believe in him, and they do right to believe in him; Christ is the object of faith; he is proposed as such in the Gospel; and it is his Father's will, and his own advice, that his people should believe in him: but then those that truly believe in him, do not believe in him as a mere man, but as God, as the Son of God; and not as separate from, or to the exclusion of his Father: nor do they believe in him as a new, or another God, but as the one God with the Father, and the Spirit; for he and his Father are one: nor do they believe in him "only"; and so the Arabic version reads; but in God the Father also: nor does their faith rest in him, but it proceeds through him, as the Mediator unto God; see 1Pe 1:21. Besides, he is here to be considered in his office capacity, as being sent of God; and he that believes on him as the sent of God, does not so much believe on him, as on the sender of him, as follows:

but on him that sent me; just as whatever honour or dishonour are done to an ambassador, sent by an earthly king to a foreign court, are not so much done to the ambassador that is sent, as to the king that sends him; for what is done to him, is all one as if it was personally done to his prince: so he that despises Christ, despises him that sent him; and he that receives Christ, receives him that sent him; and he that believes on Christ, believes on him that sent him; see Luk 10:16.

Gill: Joh 12:45 - -- And he that seeth me, seeth him that sent me. Not with bodily eyes, for there were many that saw Christ, who never saw the Father: they saw Christ as ...

And he that seeth me, seeth him that sent me. Not with bodily eyes, for there were many that saw Christ, who never saw the Father: they saw Christ as a mere man, and were offended at the meanness of his outward appearance; they saw nothing divine in him, nor the glory of the Father through him; but with the eyes of the understanding, whoever saw or perceived the glory of Christ in his miracles, saw the glory of God in them also, for the Father that dwelt in him did the works, Joh 2:11, and whoever truly sees Christ with an eye of faith, sees his glory, as the glory of the only begotten of the Father, as the brightness of his Father's glory, as having the fulness of the Godhead dwelling in him, the same perfections as in the Father; so that he that hath seen the one, hath seen the other also, Joh 14:9.

Gill: Joh 12:46 - -- I am come a light into the world,.... And even as the light of it, being the sun of righteousness, that was to arise, and now was risen, to enlighten ...

I am come a light into the world,.... And even as the light of it, being the sun of righteousness, that was to arise, and now was risen, to enlighten men with the light of the living; see Joh 3:19;

that whosoever believeth on me should not abide in darkness; God's elect themselves, whilst in a state of unregeneracy and unbelief, are in darkness; when Christ shines in upon them, and infuses the light of faith into them, they are no longer in darkness; the darkness is past, at least in a great measure, and the true light shines; in which they see light, see glory and grace of Christ, and the invisible realities of another world: nor do they continue in the darkness of sin, ignorance, and unbelief; but walk in the light of truth, faith, and holiness, until the perfect day comes, when all the shadows of remaining darkness will flee away.

Gill: Joh 12:47 - -- And if any man hear my words and believe not,.... Men may hear the Gospel of Christ, and not understand it; and they may understand it literally and g...

And if any man hear my words and believe not,.... Men may hear the Gospel of Christ, and not understand it; and they may understand it literally and grammatically, though not spiritually and experimentally, and not believe it; not so much as give credit or an assent to the truth of it, but reject and deny it; for though faith comes by hearing to some, it does not come to all: some receive no profit by hearing it, because it is not mixed with faith by them. The Alexandrian copy, and all the Oriental versions, and also Nonnus, read the last clause thus, "and keep them not"; or does not observe them, is negligent of them, and shows no regard, and yields not the obedience of faith to them; the sense is the same.

I judge him not; I do not accuse him to the Father, nor do I condemn him, nor shall I take vengeance on him for so doing; meaning, that he should do none of these things now, though hereafter he will be a swift witness against him, and will convict and condemn him, and pass sentence on him, and execute it:

for I came not to judge the world, but to save the world. Christ, at his first coming, came not under the character of a judge, but a Saviour; wherefore suitable to his character, and the end of his coming, he would not accuse, condemn, or judge any man, even the greatest unbelievers in him, and despisers of him, but would leave them to another day, when righteous judgment shall take place.

Gill: Joh 12:48 - -- He that rejecteth me,.... As the Messiah, with abhorrence and contempt, as many among the Jews did, who would not have him to reign over them, but sou...

He that rejecteth me,.... As the Messiah, with abhorrence and contempt, as many among the Jews did, who would not have him to reign over them, but sought to put him to death:

and receiveth not my words; the doctrines of the Gospel, but disbelieves them, and denies them to be true, looking upon them as the doctrines of a mere man, and an impostor:

hath one that judgeth him; let not such an one think that he shall escape righteous judgment; though Christ does not judge him now, there is one that judges him, yea, even now; and declares, that he that believeth not shall be damned, and that he is condemned already:

the word that I have spoken unto you, the same shall judge him in the last day; according to the different dispensations wicked men are under in this world, will be the rule of their judgment hereafter: such who are only under the law of nature, will be judged according to that, that will accuse them, convict them, and condemn them: such who have been under the law of Moses, or the written law, will be arraigned, proved, and pronounced guilty, and punished by, and according to that law; and such who have been under the Gospel dispensation, and have been favoured with the revelation of the Gospel, but have condemned and denied it, that will judge them at the last day. The judge will act by its present declaration, and according to that proceed, as it stands in Mar 16:16. It will rise up in judgment against such persons, and be an aggravation of their condemnation.

Gill: Joh 12:49 - -- For I have not spoken of myself,.... As man, or as separate from his Father; his doctrine was not human, but divine, and therefore a rejection of it c...

For I have not spoken of myself,.... As man, or as separate from his Father; his doctrine was not human, but divine, and therefore a rejection of it cannot escape notice at the future judgment:

but the Father which sent me, he gave me a commandment what I should say, and what I should speak; Christ, as man, had his mission, and commission, and his instructions from his Father to preach the Gospel unto men; he was anointed for it by the Holy Ghost; he was enjoined the preaching of it by his Father, and the several doctrines he published were delivered him by him; see Joh 8:28.

Gill: Joh 12:50 - -- And I know that his commandment is life everlasting,.... By "his commandment" is not meant the law; that indeed is often styled the commandment; and i...

And I know that his commandment is life everlasting,.... By "his commandment" is not meant the law; that indeed is often styled the commandment; and it is the commandment of God; and many excellent things are said of it; and among the rest it is called "life", Deu 30:15, but not everlasting life: it only promised a continuation of natural life to man, on condition of obedience to it; more than this it did not promise to Adam, in innocence; and what it promised to the obedient Israelites, was only a prolongation of natural life in the land which God gave unto them: but it neither promises, nor gives spiritual life to the fallen sons of Adam; it leaves men as it finds them, dead in trespasses and sins; and cannot communicate either a life of sanctification, or of justification to them; nor does it so much as give them any hopes of life, or show where it is to be had; nor is everlasting life to be obtained by the works of it: justification is not by the works of the law; nor salvation by works of righteousness done by men; and consequently eternal life is never to be attained unto by obedience to the commands of the law: it is so far from being in this sense life everlasting, that it is the ministration of condemnation and death. But the Gospel is here meant, and is called a commandment; not that it has the nature of a law, or consists of precepts, as the law does; but because it is by the commandment of the everlasting God published by Christ, and his apostles. Christ, as appears from the preceding verse, had a commandment from his Father, what he should say and speak; now, not the doctrine he delivered was the commandment itself, but it was a commandment of the Father that he should deliver that doctrine; besides, the word "commandment" sometimes signifies no other than a doctrine, as in Psa 19:8; and the sense is, that the doctrine of the Gospel, which Christ had in commission from the Father to preach, is life everlasting; and is so called, because it is a means of quickening sinners with a spiritual life, which issues in an eternal one; it is the savour of life unto life, and the Spirit which giveth life, and is the ministration of it; and it is a means of implanting the graces of the Spirit of God in the heart, which sprung up unto everlasting life; and of bringing souls to the knowledge of Christ, which is the beginning, pledge, and earnest of eternal life: and besides all this, it gives an account of the nature of eternal life; it directs the way unto it, which is by Christ, and describes the persons who shall enjoy it; showing, that their title to it is the righteousness of Christ, and their meetness for it the regenerating grace of the Spirit; and that all that believe in Christ shall have it:

whatsoever I speak therefore, even as the Father said unto me so I speak; and no otherwise, and therefore ought to be received, and not rejected. This is to be understood not of what Christ spoke in common conversation, but in the ministry of the word, even of the doctrines of the Gospel, which were given him by his Father, and which he knew were agreeable to his mind and will, and to his council and covenant, and to everything done and agreed therein, to which he was privy: these he delivered as he received them, and both as to matter and manner, as it was his Father's will and pleasure he should: he preached the righteousness of God, and hid it not; he declared his faithfulness, and his salvation, and concealed not his lovingkindness and truth, Psa 40:9. Now, though it is a sufficient ground of faith to receive and believe the doctrines of the Gospel, because Christ has spoken them, who is truth itself; yet it is a further confirmation of them, that they are what his Father, the God of truth, said unto him: and his delivering them as he had them from him, is an instance of his faithfulness to him that sent him; and should be imitated by his ministers, who ought to declare the whole counsel of God, and keep back nothing they have received from Christ, and which may be profitable to the souls of men.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Joh 12:37 Or “done.”

NET Notes: Joh 12:38 A quotation from Isa 53:1.

NET Notes: Joh 12:39 The author explicitly states here that Jesus’ Jewish opponents could not believe, and quotes Isa 6:10 to show that God had in fact blinded their...

NET Notes: Joh 12:40 A quotation from Isa 6:10.

NET Notes: Joh 12:41 Because he saw Christ’s glory. The glory which Isaiah saw in Isa 6:3 was the glory of Yahweh (typically rendered as “Lord” in the OT...

NET Notes: Joh 12:42 Compare John 9:22. See the note on synagogue in 6:59.

NET Notes: Joh 12:43 Grk “the glory.”

NET Notes: Joh 12:44 The one who sent me refers to God.

NET Notes: Joh 12:45 Cf. John 1:18 and 14:9.

NET Notes: Joh 12:47 Cf. John 3:17.

NET Notes: Joh 12:48 Or “message.”

NET Notes: Joh 12:49 Grk “has given me commandment.”

NET Notes: Joh 12:50 Grk “The things I speak, just as the Father has spoken to me, thus I speak.”

Geneva Bible: Joh 12:37 ( 9 ) But though he had done so many miracles before them, yet they believed not on him: ( 9 ) Faith is not of nature, but of grace.

Geneva Bible: Joh 12:38 That the saying of Esaias the prophet might be fulfilled, which he spake, Lord, who hath believed our report? and to whom hath the ( h ) arm of the Lo...

Geneva Bible: Joh 12:42 ( 10 ) Nevertheless among the chief rulers also many believed on him; but because of the Pharisees they did not confess [him], lest they should be put...

Geneva Bible: Joh 12:44 ( 11 ) Jesus cried and said, He that believeth on me, believeth ( i ) not on me, but on him that sent me. ( 11 ) The sum of the gospel, and therefore...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Joh 12:1-50 - --1 Jesus excuses Mary anointing his feet.9 The people flock to see Lazarus.10 The chief priests consult to kill him.12 Christ rides into Jerusalem.20 G...

Combined Bible: Joh 12:37-50 - --of the Gospel of John    CHAPTER 44    Christ’ s Ministry Reviewed    John 12:37-50    The followi...

MHCC: Joh 12:37-43 - --Observe the method of conversion implied here. Sinners are brought to see the reality of Divine things, and to have some knowledge of them. To be conv...

MHCC: Joh 12:44-50 - --Our Lord publicly proclaimed, that every one who believed on him, as his true disciple, did not believe on him only, but on the Father who sent him. B...

Matthew Henry: Joh 12:37-41 - -- We have here the honour done to our Lord Jesus by the Old Testament prophets, who foretold and lamented the infidelity of the many that believed not...

Matthew Henry: Joh 12:42-43 - -- Some honour was done to Christ by these rulers: for they believed on him, were convinced that he was sent of God, and received his doctrine as div...

Matthew Henry: Joh 12:44-50 - -- We have here the honour Christ not assumed, but asserted, to himself, in the account he gave of his mission and his errand into the world. Probably ...

Barclay: Joh 12:37-41 - --This is a passage which is bound to trouble many minds. John quotes two passages from Isaiah. The first is from Isa 53:1-2. In it the prophet asks ...

Barclay: Joh 12:42-43 - --Jesus did not speak entirely to deaf ears; there were those even of the Jewish authorities, who in their heart of hearts believed. But they were af...

Barclay: Joh 12:44-50 - --These, according to John, are Jesus' last words of public teaching. Hereafter he will teach his disciples and hereafter he will stand before Pilat...

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 11:1--12:50 - --I. The conclusion of Jesus' public ministry chs. 11-12 The major theme of the Gospel, Jesus' identity as...

Constable: Joh 12:37-50 - --7. The unbelief of Israel 12:37-50 This section of the Gospel contains the writer's explanation ...

Constable: Joh 12:37-43 - --The explanation of Israel's unbelief 12:37-43 12:37-38 The majority of the Jews did not believe on Jesus despite the many miracles that He performed t...

Constable: Joh 12:44-50 - --The final exhortation to believe 12:44-50 John added Jesus' words that follow as a climactic appeal to his readers to believe on Jesus. This exhortati...

College: Joh 12:1-50 - --JOHN 12 8. Preparation for Passover and Death (12:1-50) Mary's Anointing of Jesus (12:1-11) 1 Six days before the Passover, Jesus arrived at Bethan...

McGarvey: Joh 12:20-50 - -- CXII. GREEKS SEEK JESUS. HE FORETELLS THAT HE SHALL DRAW ALL MEN UNTO HIM. (In the Temple. Tuesday, April 4, A. D. 30.) dJOHN XII. 20-50.  &nbs...

Lapide: Joh 12:36-50 - --Ver. 36.— While ye have the light, walk as children of the light. Believe in Me, who am the light of the world; believe that I am the Messiah, the ...

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Commentary -- Other

Evidence: Joh 12:38 One would think that a terminally ill world would gladly embrace the cure of the gospel, but few, so few believe our report.

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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 12 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Joh 12:1, Jesus excuses Mary anointing his feet; Joh 12:9, The people flock to see Lazarus; Joh 12:10, The chief priests consult to kill ...

Poole: John 12 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 12

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 12 (Chapter Introduction) (Joh 12:1-11) Christ anointed by Mary. (Joh 12:12-19) He enters Jerusalem. (Joh 12:20-26) Greeks apply to see Jesus. (Joh 12:27-33) A voice from he...

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 12 (Chapter Introduction) It was a melancholy account which we had in the close of the foregoing chapter of the dishonour done to our Lord Jesus, when the scribes and Pharis...

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 12 (Chapter Introduction) Love's Extravagance (Joh_12:1-8) Love's Extravagance (Joh_12:1-8 Continued) A Plan To Destroy The Evidence (Joh_12:9-11) A King's Welcome (Joh_1...

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...

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