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Text -- John 6:58-71 (NET)

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Context
6:58 This is the bread that came down from heaven; it is not like the bread your ancestors ate, but then later died. The one who eats this bread will live forever.”
Many Followers Depart
6:59 Jesus said these things while he was teaching in the synagogue in Capernaum. 6:60 Then many of his disciples, when they heard these things, said, “This is a difficult saying! Who can understand it?” 6:61 When Jesus was aware that his disciples were complaining about this, he said to them, “Does this cause you to be offended? 6:62 Then what if you see the Son of Man ascending where he was before? 6:63 The Spirit is the one who gives life; human nature is of no help! The words that I have spoken to you are spirit and are life. 6:64 But there are some of you who do not believe.” (For Jesus had already known from the beginning who those were who did not believe, and who it was who would betray him.) 6:65 So Jesus added, “Because of this I told you that no one can come to me unless the Father has allowed him to come.”
Peter’s Confession
6:66 After this many of his disciples quit following him and did not accompany him any longer. 6:67 So Jesus said to the twelve, “You don’t want to go away too, do you?” 6:68 Simon Peter answered him, “Lord, to whom would we go? You have the words of eternal life. 6:69 We have come to believe and to know that you are the Holy One of God!” 6:70 Jesus replied, “Didn’t I choose you, the twelve, and yet one of you is the devil?” 6:71 (Now he said this about Judas son of Simon Iscariot, for Judas, one of the twelve, was going to betray him.)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Capernaum a town located on the northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee.
 · Iscariot the surname of Judas, the man who betrayed Christ
 · Judas a son of Mary and Joseph; half-brother of Jesus)
 · Peter a man who was a leader among the twelve apostles and wrote the two epistles of Peter
 · Simon a son of Jonas and brother of Andrew; an apostle of Jesus Christ,a man who was one of the apostles of Christ and also called 'the Zealot',a brother of Jesus,a man who was a well-know victim of leprosy who had been healed by Jesus (NIV note),a man from Cyrene who was forced to carry the cross of Jesus,a Pharisee man in whose house Jesus' feet were washed with tears and anointed,the father of Judas Iscariot,a man who was a sorcerer in Samaria and who wanted to buy the gifts of the Spirit,a man who was a tanner at Joppa and with whom Peter was staying when Cornelius sent for him


Dictionary Themes and Topics: WORD | Unbelief | TEACH; TEACHER; TEACHING | NICODEMUS | MANNA | LORD'S SUPPER; (EUCHARIST) | Judas | Jesus, The Christ | JUDAS ISCARIOT | JOHN, GOSPEL OF | JOHANNINE THEOLOGY, 2 | JESUS CHRIST, 4C2 | JESUS CHRIST, 3 | Flesh | Eternal life | Eating | DISCIPLE | CHOOSE; CHOSEN | ASCENSION | APOSTASY; APOSTATE | more
Table of Contents

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

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , PBC , 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 6:58 - -- This is the bread ( houtos estin ho artos ). Summary and final explanation of the true manna (from Joh 6:32 on) as being Jesus Christ himself.

This is the bread ( houtos estin ho artos ).

Summary and final explanation of the true manna (from Joh 6:32 on) as being Jesus Christ himself.

Robertson: Joh 6:59 - -- In the synagogue ( en sunagōgēi ). Definite like our in church, though article absent. Only use of the word in John except Joh 18:20. "Among the ...

In the synagogue ( en sunagōgēi ).

Definite like our in church, though article absent. Only use of the word in John except Joh 18:20. "Among the ruins at Tell Hum , the probable site of Capernaum, have been found among the remains of a synagogue a block of stone perhaps the lintel, carved with a pot of manna, and with a pattern of vine leaves and clusters of grapes"(Vincent).

Robertson: Joh 6:60 - -- A hard saying ( sklēros ). "This saying is a hard one."Old adjective, rough, harsh, dried hard (from skellō , to dry), probably the last saying o...

A hard saying ( sklēros ).

"This saying is a hard one."Old adjective, rough, harsh, dried hard (from skellō , to dry), probably the last saying of Jesus that he was the bread of life come down from heaven and they were to eat him. It is to be hoped that none of the twelve joined the many disciples in this complaint.

Robertson: Joh 6:60 - -- Hear it ( autou akouein ). Or "hear him,"hear with acceptation. For akouō with the genitive see Joh 10:3, Joh 10:16, Joh 10:27.

Hear it ( autou akouein ).

Or "hear him,"hear with acceptation. For akouō with the genitive see Joh 10:3, Joh 10:16, Joh 10:27.

Robertson: Joh 6:61 - -- Knowing in himself ( eidōs en heautōi ). Second perfect active participle of oida . See Joh 2:25 for this supernatural insight into men’ s m...

Knowing in himself ( eidōs en heautōi ).

Second perfect active participle of oida . See Joh 2:25 for this supernatural insight into men’ s minds.

Robertson: Joh 6:61 - -- Murmured ( gogguzousin ). Present active indicative retained in indirect discourse. See Joh 6:41 for gogguzō .

Murmured ( gogguzousin ).

Present active indicative retained in indirect discourse. See Joh 6:41 for gogguzō .

Robertson: Joh 6:61 - -- At this ( peri toutou ). "Concerning this word."

At this ( peri toutou ).

"Concerning this word."

Robertson: Joh 6:61 - -- Cause to stumble ( skandalizei ). Common Synoptic verb from skandalon for which see Mat 5:29. In John again only in Joh 16:1.

Cause to stumble ( skandalizei ).

Common Synoptic verb from skandalon for which see Mat 5:29. In John again only in Joh 16:1.

Robertson: Joh 6:62 - -- What then if ye should behold ( ean oun theōrēte ). No "what"in the Greek. Condition of third class with ean and present active subjunctive, "i...

What then if ye should behold ( ean oun theōrēte ).

No "what"in the Greek. Condition of third class with ean and present active subjunctive, "if ye then behold."

Robertson: Joh 6:62 - -- Ascending ( anabainonta ). Present active participle picturing the process.

Ascending ( anabainonta ).

Present active participle picturing the process.

Robertson: Joh 6:62 - -- Where he was before ( hopou ēn to proteron ). Neuter articular adjective as adverb (accusative of general reference, at the former time as in Joh 9...

Where he was before ( hopou ēn to proteron ).

Neuter articular adjective as adverb (accusative of general reference, at the former time as in Joh 9:8; Gal 3:13). Clear statement of Christ’ s pre-existence in his own words as in Joh 3:13; Joh 17:5 (cf. 1:1-18).

Robertson: Joh 6:63 - -- That quickeneth ( to zōopoioun ). Articular present active participle of zōopoieō for which see Joh 5:21. For the contrast between pneuma (...

That quickeneth ( to zōopoioun ).

Articular present active participle of zōopoieō for which see Joh 5:21. For the contrast between pneuma (spirit) and sarx (flesh) see note on Joh 3:6.

Robertson: Joh 6:63 - -- The words ( ta rēmata ). Those in this discourse (I have just spoken, lelalēka ), for they are the words of God (Joh 3:34; Joh 8:47; Joh 17:8). ...

The words ( ta rēmata ).

Those in this discourse (I have just spoken, lelalēka ), for they are the words of God (Joh 3:34; Joh 8:47; Joh 17:8). No wonder they "are spirit and are life"(pneuma estin kai zōē estin ). The breath of God and the life of God is in these words of Jesus. Never man spoke like Jesus (Joh 7:46). There is life in his words today.

Robertson: Joh 6:64 - -- That believe not ( hoi ou pisteuousin ). Failure to believe kills the life in the words of Jesus.

That believe not ( hoi ou pisteuousin ).

Failure to believe kills the life in the words of Jesus.

Robertson: Joh 6:64 - -- Knew from the beginning ( ēidei ex archēs ). In the N.T. we have ex archēs only here and Joh 16:4, but ap' archēs in apparently the same ...

Knew from the beginning ( ēidei ex archēs ).

In the N.T. we have ex archēs only here and Joh 16:4, but ap' archēs in apparently the same sense as here in Joh 15:27; 1Jo 2:7, 1Jo 2:24; 1Jo 3:11 and see Luk 1:2; 1Jo 1:1. From the first Jesus distinguished between real trust in him and mere lip service (Joh 2:24; Joh 8:31), two senses of pisteuō .

Robertson: Joh 6:64 - -- Were ( eisin ). Present active indicative retained in indirect discourse.

Were ( eisin ).

Present active indicative retained in indirect discourse.

Robertson: Joh 6:64 - -- And who it was that should betray him ( kai tis estin ho paradōsōn ). Same use of estin and note article and future active participle of paradi...

And who it was that should betray him ( kai tis estin ho paradōsōn ).

Same use of estin and note article and future active participle of paradidōmi , to hand over, to betray. John does not say here that Jesus knew that Judas would betray him when he chose him as one of the twelve, least of all that he chose him for that purpose. What he does say is that Jesus was not taken by surprise and soon saw signs of treason in Judas. The same verb is used of John’ s arrest in Mat 4:12. Once Judas is termed traitor (prodotēs ) in Luk 6:16. Judas had gifts and was given his opportunity. He did not have to betray Jesus.

Robertson: Joh 6:65 - -- Except it be given him of the Father ( ean mē ēi dedomenon autōi ek tou patros ). Condition of third class with ean mē and periphrastic per...

Except it be given him of the Father ( ean mē ēi dedomenon autōi ek tou patros ).

Condition of third class with ean mē and periphrastic perfect passive subjunctive of didōmi . Precisely the same point as in Joh 6:44 where we have helkusēi instead of ēi dedomenon . The impulse to faith comes from God. Jesus does not expect all to believe and seems to imply that Judas did not truly believe.

Robertson: Joh 6:66 - -- Upon this ( ek toutou ). Same idiom in Joh 19:12. "Out of this saying or circumstance."Jesus drew the line of cleavage between the true and the false...

Upon this ( ek toutou ).

Same idiom in Joh 19:12. "Out of this saying or circumstance."Jesus drew the line of cleavage between the true and the false believers.

Robertson: Joh 6:66 - -- Went back ( apēlthon eis ta opisō ). Aorist (ingressive) active indicative of aperchomai with eis ta opisō , "to the rear"(the behind things)...

Went back ( apēlthon eis ta opisō ).

Aorist (ingressive) active indicative of aperchomai with eis ta opisō , "to the rear"(the behind things) as in Joh 18:6.

Robertson: Joh 6:66 - -- Walked no more with him ( ouketi met' autou periepatoun ). Imperfect active of peripateō . The crisis had come. These half-hearted seekers after th...

Walked no more with him ( ouketi met' autou periepatoun ).

Imperfect active of peripateō . The crisis had come. These half-hearted seekers after the loaves and fishes and political power turned abruptly from Jesus, walked out of the synagogue with a deal of bluster and were walking with Jesus no more. Jesus had completely disillusioned these hungry camp-followers who did not care for spiritual manna that consisted in intimate appropriation of the life of Jesus as God’ s Son.

Robertson: Joh 6:67 - -- Would ye also go away? ( Mē kai humeis thelete hupagein ). Jesus puts it with the negative answer (mē ) expected. See Joh 21:5 where Jesus also ...

Would ye also go away? ( Mē kai humeis thelete hupagein ).

Jesus puts it with the negative answer (mē ) expected. See Joh 21:5 where Jesus also uses mē in a question. Judas must have shown some sympathy with the disappointed and disappearing crowds. But he kept still. There was possibly restlessness on the part of the other apostles.

Robertson: Joh 6:68 - -- Lord, to whom shall we go? ( Kurie ,pros tina apeleusometha ). Peter is the spokesman as usual and his words mean that, if such a thought as deserti...

Lord, to whom shall we go? ( Kurie ,pros tina apeleusometha ).

Peter is the spokesman as usual and his words mean that, if such a thought as desertion crossed their minds when the crowd left, they dismissed it instantly. They had made their choice. They accepted these very words of Jesus that had caused the defection as "the words of eternal life."

Robertson: Joh 6:69 - -- We have believed ( hēmeis pepisteukamen ). Perfect active indicative of pisteuō , "We have come to believe and still believe"(Joh 6:29).

We have believed ( hēmeis pepisteukamen ).

Perfect active indicative of pisteuō , "We have come to believe and still believe"(Joh 6:29).

Robertson: Joh 6:69 - -- And know ( kai egnōkamen ). Same tense of ginōskō , "We have come to know and still know."

And know ( kai egnōkamen ).

Same tense of ginōskō , "We have come to know and still know."

Robertson: Joh 6:69 - -- Thou art the Holy One of God ( su ei ho hagios tou theou ). Bernard follows those who believe that this is John’ s report of the same confession...

Thou art the Holy One of God ( su ei ho hagios tou theou ).

Bernard follows those who believe that this is John’ s report of the same confession given by the Synoptics (Mar 8:27.; Mat 16:13-20; Luk 9:18.), an utterly unjustifiable conclusion. The details are wholly different. Here in the synagogue in Capernaum, there on Mt. Hermon near Caesarea Philippi. What earthly difficulty is there in supposing that Peter could make a noble confession twice? That is to my mind a wooden conception of the apostles in their growing apprehension of Christ.

Robertson: Joh 6:70 - -- And one of you is a devil ( kai ex humōn heis diabolos estin ). Jesus does not say that Judas was a devil when he chose him, but that he is one now...

And one of you is a devil ( kai ex humōn heis diabolos estin ).

Jesus does not say that Judas was a devil when he chose him, but that he is one now. In Joh 13:2, Joh 13:27 John speaks of the devil entering Judas. How soon the plan to betray Jesus first entered the heart of Judas we do not know (Joh 12:4). One wonders if the words of Jesus here did not cut Judas to the quick.

Robertson: Joh 6:71 - -- Of Simon Iscariot ( Simōnos Iskariōtou ). So his father was named Iscariot also, a man of Kerioth (possibly in Judah, Jos 15:25, possibly in Moab...

Of Simon Iscariot ( Simōnos Iskariōtou ).

So his father was named Iscariot also, a man of Kerioth (possibly in Judah, Jos 15:25, possibly in Moab, Jer 48:24), not in Galilee. Judas was the only one of the twelve not a Galilean. The rest of the verse is like Joh 12:4.

Robertson: Joh 6:71 - -- One of the twelve ( heis ek tōn dōdeka ). The eternal horror of the thing.

One of the twelve ( heis ek tōn dōdeka ).

The eternal horror of the thing.

Vincent: Joh 6:59 - -- In the synagogue ( ἐν συναγωγῇ ) But the definite article is wanting; so that we must either understand in a synagogue , or in ...

In the synagogue ( ἐν συναγωγῇ )

But the definite article is wanting; so that we must either understand in a synagogue , or in an assembly . See on Jam 2:2. Among the ruins at Tell Hum , the probable site of Capernaum, have been found among the remains of a synagogue a block of stone, perhaps the lintel, carved with the pot of manna, and with a pattern of vine leaves and clusters of grapes. See a full account of these ruins in Thomson's " Land and Book, Central Palestine and Phoenicia," pp. 417-419.

Vincent: Joh 6:60 - -- Hard ( σκληρός ) See on Mat 25:24; see on Jud 1:14. According to the Greek order, hard is this saying .

Hard ( σκληρός )

See on Mat 25:24; see on Jud 1:14. According to the Greek order, hard is this saying .

Vincent: Joh 6:60 - -- Hear it ( αὐτοῦ ἀκούειν ) Αὐτοῦ may be rendered Him , but this is not probable. Hear means a docile hearing, wit...

Hear it ( αὐτοῦ ἀκούειν )

Αὐτοῦ may be rendered Him , but this is not probable. Hear means a docile hearing, with a view to receiving what is heard. Compare Joh 10:3, Joh 10:16, Joh 10:27; Joh 12:47; Joh 18:37.

Vincent: Joh 6:61 - -- Offend ( οκανδαλίζει ) Rev., cause to stumble . See on Mat 5:29. Wyc., slandereth you .

Offend ( οκανδαλίζει )

Rev., cause to stumble . See on Mat 5:29. Wyc., slandereth you .

Vincent: Joh 6:62 - -- What and if ye shall see ( ἐὰν οὐν θεωρῆτε ) The question is marked by an aposiopesis , i.e., a breaking off of the sentenc...

What and if ye shall see ( ἐὰν οὐν θεωρῆτε )

The question is marked by an aposiopesis , i.e., a breaking off of the sentence and leaving the hearer to complete it for himself. Literally, if then ye should behold , etc. - the completion would be, would not this still more cause you to stumble?

Vincent: Joh 6:62 - -- Ascend ( ἀναβαίνοντα ) Rev., properly, renders the participle, ascending .

Ascend ( ἀναβαίνοντα )

Rev., properly, renders the participle, ascending .

Vincent: Joh 6:62 - -- I speak ( λαλῶ ) But the correct reading is λελάληκα , the perfect tense, I have spoken , or I have just spoken, referring...

I speak ( λαλῶ )

But the correct reading is λελάληκα , the perfect tense, I have spoken , or I have just spoken, referring to the preceding discourse.

Vincent: Joh 6:64 - -- Should betray ( παραδώσων ) See on Mat 4:12; see on Mar 4:29. Judas is once in the New Testament designated by the noun προδότ...

Should betray ( παραδώσων )

See on Mat 4:12; see on Mar 4:29. Judas is once in the New Testament designated by the noun προδότης , traitor , Luk 6:16.

Vincent: Joh 6:66 - -- From that time ( ἐκ τούτου ) Render, as Rev., upon this . As a result proceeding out of (ἐκ ) this. Compare Joh 19:12.

From that time ( ἐκ τούτου )

Render, as Rev., upon this . As a result proceeding out of (ἐκ ) this. Compare Joh 19:12.

Vincent: Joh 6:66 - -- Went back ( ἀπῆλθον εἰς τὰ ὀπίσω ) The Greek expresses more than the English. They went away (ἀπό ) from Ch...

Went back ( ἀπῆλθον εἰς τὰ ὀπίσω )

The Greek expresses more than the English. They went away (ἀπό ) from Christ, Literally, to the things behind , to what they had left in order to follow the Lord.

Vincent: Joh 6:66 - -- Walked ( περιεπάτουν ) Literally, walked about , with Jesus in His wanderings here and there.

Walked ( περιεπάτουν )

Literally, walked about , with Jesus in His wanderings here and there.

Vincent: Joh 6:67 - -- The twelve John assumes that the number is known. It is implied in the twelve baskets of fragments. As in so many other instances in this Gospel,...

The twelve

John assumes that the number is known. It is implied in the twelve baskets of fragments. As in so many other instances in this Gospel, facts of the synoptic narrative are taken for granted as familiar.

Vincent: Joh 6:67 - -- Will ye also go away? ( μὴ καὶ ὑμεῖς θέλετε ὑπάγειν ) The interrogative particle μὴ shows that a negati...

Will ye also go away? ( μὴ καὶ ὑμεῖς θέλετε ὑπάγειν )

The interrogative particle μὴ shows that a negative answer is expected. Surely ye will not . Will ye go is not the future tense of the verb to go , but is expressed by two words, do ye will (θέλετε ), to go away (ὑπάγειν ). Rev., would ye . On the verb to go away , see on they went (Joh 6:21).

Vincent: Joh 6:68 - -- Simon Peter Assailants of the authenticity of John's Gospel have asserted that it reveals an effort on the part of the writer to claim for the di...

Simon Peter

Assailants of the authenticity of John's Gospel have asserted that it reveals an effort on the part of the writer to claim for the disciple whom Jesus loved a pre-eminence above Peter. The assertion is effectually contradicted by the narrative itself. See Joh 1:42; Joh 6:68; Joh 13:6; Joh 18:10, Joh 18:16; Joh 20:2, Joh 20:7; Joh 21:3, Joh 21:7, Joh 21:11, and notes on those passages. Peter's replying for the twelve, in this passage, is a case in point.

Vincent: Joh 6:68 - -- The words of eternal life ( ῥήματα ζωῆς αἰωνίου ) There is no article. Thou hast words . Words of life are words whic...

The words of eternal life ( ῥήματα ζωῆς αἰωνίου )

There is no article. Thou hast words . Words of life are words which carry life with them. Compare the phrases bread of life , light of life , water of life , tree of life .

Vincent: Joh 6:69 - -- Are sure ( ἐγνώκαμεν ) Literally, have come to know . The order of the words believe and know is reversed in Joh 17:8; 1J...

Are sure ( ἐγνώκαμεν )

Literally, have come to know . The order of the words believe and know is reversed in Joh 17:8; 1Jo 4:16. In the case of the first disciples, faith , produced by the overpowering impression of Jesus' works and person, preceded intellectual conviction.

Vincent: Joh 6:69 - -- That Christ, the Son of the living God The best texts substitute ὁ ἅγιος τοῦ Θεοῦ , the holy one of God . The oth...

That Christ, the Son of the living God

The best texts substitute ὁ ἅγιος τοῦ Θεοῦ , the holy one of God . The other reading has resulted from the attempt to bring Peter's confession here into accord with that in Mat 16:16. The two confessions differ in that " here the confession points to the inward character in which the Apostles found the assurance of life; there the confession was of the public office and theocratic person of the Lord" (Westcott).

Vincent: Joh 6:70 - -- A devil ( διάβολος ) See on Mat 4:1. The word is an adjective, meaning slanderous , but is almost invariably used in the New Testament...

A devil ( διάβολος )

See on Mat 4:1. The word is an adjective, meaning slanderous , but is almost invariably used in the New Testament as a noun, and with the definite article. The article is wanting only in 1Pe 5:8; Act 13:10; Rev 12:9; and perhaps Rev 20:2. It is of the very essence of the devilish nature to oppose Christ. Compare Mat 16:23.

Vincent: Joh 6:71 - -- Judas Iscariot the son of Simon ( Ἱούδαν Σίμωνος Ἱσκαριώτην ). The correct reading is Ἱσκαριώτου ,...

Judas Iscariot the son of Simon ( Ἱούδαν Σίμωνος Ἱσκαριώτην ).

The correct reading is Ἱσκαριώτου , Iscariot , agreeing in the genitive case with Σίμωνος , of Simon . Render, as Rev., Judas , the son of Simon Iscariot . Iscariot denotes the name of Simon's town: a man of Kerioth . See on Mat 10:5.

Wesley: Joh 6:58 - -- That is, I am the bread - Which is not like the manna your fathers ate, who died notwithstanding.

That is, I am the bread - Which is not like the manna your fathers ate, who died notwithstanding.

Wesley: Joh 6:60 - -- Hard to the children of the world, but sweet to the children of God. Scarce ever did our Lord speak more sublimely, even to the apostles in private.

Hard to the children of the world, but sweet to the children of God. Scarce ever did our Lord speak more sublimely, even to the apostles in private.

Wesley: Joh 6:60 - -- Endure it?

Endure it?

Wesley: Joh 6:62 - -- How much more incredible will it then appear to you, that he should give you his flesh to eat?

How much more incredible will it then appear to you, that he should give you his flesh to eat?

Wesley: Joh 6:63 - -- The spiritual meaning of these words, by which God giveth life.

The spiritual meaning of these words, by which God giveth life.

Wesley: Joh 6:63 - -- The bare, carnal, literal meaning, profiteth nothing. The words which I have spoken, they are spirit - Are to be taken in a spiritual sense and, when ...

The bare, carnal, literal meaning, profiteth nothing. The words which I have spoken, they are spirit - Are to be taken in a spiritual sense and, when they are so understood, they are life - That is, a means of spiritual life to the hearers.

Wesley: Joh 6:64 - -- And so receive no life by them, because you take them in a gross literal sense.

And so receive no life by them, because you take them in a gross literal sense.

Wesley: Joh 6:64 - -- Of his ministry: who would betray him - Therefore it is plain, God does foresee future contingencies: "But his foreknowledge causes not the fault, Whi...

Of his ministry: who would betray him - Therefore it is plain, God does foresee future contingencies: "But his foreknowledge causes not the fault, Which had no less proved certain unforeknown."

Wesley: Joh 6:65 - -- And it is given to those only who will receive it on God's own terms.

And it is given to those only who will receive it on God's own terms.

Wesley: Joh 6:66 - -- So our Lord now began to purge his floor: the proud and careless were driven away, and those remained who were meet for the Master's use.

So our Lord now began to purge his floor: the proud and careless were driven away, and those remained who were meet for the Master's use.

Wesley: Joh 6:68 - -- Thou, and thou alone, speakest the words which show the way to life everlasting.

Thou, and thou alone, speakest the words which show the way to life everlasting.

Wesley: Joh 6:69 - -- Who have been with thee from the beginning, whatever others do, have known - Are absolutely assured, that thou art the Christ.

Who have been with thee from the beginning, whatever others do, have known - Are absolutely assured, that thou art the Christ.

Wesley: Joh 6:70 - -- And yet even ye have not all acted suitable to this knowledge.

And yet even ye have not all acted suitable to this knowledge.

Wesley: Joh 6:70 - -- But they might fall even from that election.

But they might fall even from that election.

Wesley: Joh 6:70 - -- On this gracious warning, Judas ought to have repented; is a devil - Is now influenced by one.

On this gracious warning, Judas ought to have repented; is a devil - Is now influenced by one.

JFB: Joh 6:53-58 - -- The harshest word He had yet uttered in their ears. They asked how it was possible to eat His flesh. He answers, with great solemnity, "It is indispen...

The harshest word He had yet uttered in their ears. They asked how it was possible to eat His flesh. He answers, with great solemnity, "It is indispensable." Yet even here a thoughtful hearer might find something to temper the harshness. He says they must not only "eat His flesh" but "drink His blood," which could not but suggest the idea of His death--implied in the separation of one's flesh from his blood. And as He had already hinted that it was to be something very different from a natural death, saying, "My flesh I will give for the life of the world" (Joh 6:51), it must have been pretty plain to candid hearers that He meant something above the gross idea which the bare terms expressed. And farther, when He added that they "had no life in them unless they thus ate and drank," it was impossible they should think He meant that the temporal life they were then living was dependent on their eating and drinking, in this gross sense, His flesh and blood. Yet the whole statement was certainly confounding, and beyond doubt was meant to be so. Our Lord had told them that in spite of all they had "seen" in Him, they "did not believe" (Joh 6:36). For their conviction therefore he does not here lay Himself out; but having the ear not only of them but of the more candid and thoughtful in the crowded synagogue, and the miracle of the loaves having led up to the most exalted of all views of His Person and Office, He takes advantage of their very difficulties and objections to announce, for all time, those most profound truths which are here expressed, regardless of the disgust of the unteachable, and the prejudices even of the most sincere, which His language would seem only designed to deepen. The truth really conveyed here is no other than that expressed in Joh 6:51, though in more emphatic terms--that He Himself, in the virtue of His sacrificial death, is the spiritual and eternal life of men; and that unless men voluntarily appropriate to themselves this death, in its sacrificial virtue, so as to become the very life and nourishment of their inner man, they have no spiritual and eternal life at all. Not as if His death were the only thing of value, but it is what gives all else in Christ's Incarnate Person, Life, and Office, their whole value to us sinners.

JFB: Joh 6:58 - -- A sort of summing up of the whole discourse, on which let this one further remark suffice--that as our Lord, instead of softening down His figurative ...

A sort of summing up of the whole discourse, on which let this one further remark suffice--that as our Lord, instead of softening down His figurative sublimities, or even putting them in naked phraseology, leaves the great truths of His Person and Office, and our participation of Him and it, enshrined for all time in those glorious forms of speech, so when we attempt to strip the truth of these figures, figures though they be, it goes away from us, like water when the vessel is broken, and our wisdom lies in raising our own spirit, and attuning our own ear, to our Lord's chosen modes of expression. (It should be added that although this discourse has nothing to do with the Sacrament of the Supper, the Sacrament has everything to do with it, as the visible embodiment of these figures, and, to the believing partaker, a real, yea, and the most lively and affecting participation of His flesh and blood, and nourishment thereby of the spiritual and eternal life, here below).

JFB: Joh 6:59 - -- Which seems to imply that what follows took place after the congregation had broken up.

Which seems to imply that what follows took place after the congregation had broken up.

JFB: Joh 6:60-65 - -- His pretty constant followers, though an outer circle of them.

His pretty constant followers, though an outer circle of them.

JFB: Joh 6:60-65 - -- Not merely harsh, but insufferable, as the word often means in the Old Testament.

Not merely harsh, but insufferable, as the word often means in the Old Testament.

JFB: Joh 6:60-65 - -- Submit to listen to it.

Submit to listen to it.

JFB: Joh 6:61-62 - -- That is, "If ye are stumbled at what I have said, how will ye bear what I now say?" Not that His ascension itself would stumble them more than His dea...

That is, "If ye are stumbled at what I have said, how will ye bear what I now say?" Not that His ascension itself would stumble them more than His death, but that after recoiling from the mention of the one, they would not be in a state of mind to take in the other.

JFB: Joh 6:63 - -- Much of His discourse was about "flesh"; but flesh as such, mere flesh, could profit nothing, much less impart that life which the Holy Spirit alone c...

Much of His discourse was about "flesh"; but flesh as such, mere flesh, could profit nothing, much less impart that life which the Holy Spirit alone communicates to the soul.

JFB: Joh 6:63 - -- The whole burden of the discourse is "spirit," not mere flesh, and "life" in its highest, not its lowest sense, and the words I have employed are to b...

The whole burden of the discourse is "spirit," not mere flesh, and "life" in its highest, not its lowest sense, and the words I have employed are to be interpreted solely in that sense.

JFB: Joh 6:64 - -- That is, "But it matters little to some of you in what sense I speak, for ye believe not." This was said, adds the Evangelist, not merely of the outer...

That is, "But it matters little to some of you in what sense I speak, for ye believe not." This was said, adds the Evangelist, not merely of the outer but of the inner circle of His disciples; for He knew the traitor, though it was not yet time to expose him.

JFB: Joh 6:65 - -- That is, "That was why I spoke to you of the necessity of divine teaching which some of you are strangers to."

That is, "That was why I spoke to you of the necessity of divine teaching which some of you are strangers to."

JFB: Joh 6:65 - -- Plainly showing that by the Father's "drawing" (Joh 6:44) was meant an internal and efficacious operation, for in recalling the statement here He says...

Plainly showing that by the Father's "drawing" (Joh 6:44) was meant an internal and efficacious operation, for in recalling the statement here He says, it must be "given to a man to come" to Christ.

JFB: Joh 6:66-71 - -- Or, in consequence of this. Those last words of our Lord seemed to have given them the finishing stroke--they could not stand it any longer.

Or, in consequence of this. Those last words of our Lord seemed to have given them the finishing stroke--they could not stand it any longer.

JFB: Joh 6:66-71 - -- Many a journey, it may be, they had taken with Him, but now they gave Him up finally!

Many a journey, it may be, they had taken with Him, but now they gave Him up finally!

JFB: Joh 6:67 - -- The first time they are thus mentioned in this Gospel.

The first time they are thus mentioned in this Gospel.

JFB: Joh 6:67 - -- Affecting appeal! Evidently Christ felt the desertion of Him even by those miserable men who could not abide His statements; and seeing a disturbance ...

Affecting appeal! Evidently Christ felt the desertion of Him even by those miserable men who could not abide His statements; and seeing a disturbance even of the wheat by the violence of the wind which blew away the chaff (not yet visibly showing itself, but open to His eyes of fire), He would nip it in the bud by this home question.

JFB: Joh 6:68 - -- Whose forwardness in this case was noble, and to the wounded spirit of His Lord doubtless very grateful.

Whose forwardness in this case was noble, and to the wounded spirit of His Lord doubtless very grateful.

JFB: Joh 6:68 - -- That is, "We cannot deny that we have been staggered as well as they, and seeing so many go away who, as we thought, might have been retained by teach...

That is, "We cannot deny that we have been staggered as well as they, and seeing so many go away who, as we thought, might have been retained by teaching a little less hard to take in, our own endurance has been severely tried, nor have we been able to stop short of the question, Shall we follow the rest, and give it up? But when it came to this, our light returned, and our hearts were reassured. For as soon as we thought of going away, there arose upon us that awful question, 'TO WHOM shall we go?' To the lifeless formalism and wretched traditions of the elders? to the gods many and lords many of the heathen around us? or to blank unbelief? Nay, Lord, we are shut up. They have none of that 'ETERNAL LIFE' to offer us whereof Thou hast been discoursing, in words rich and ravishing as well as in words staggering to human wisdom. That life we cannot want; that life we have learnt to crave as a necessity of the deeper nature which Thou hast awakened: 'the words of that eternal life' (the authority to reveal it and the power to confer it). Thou hast: Therefore will we stay with Thee--we must."

JFB: Joh 6:69 - -- (See on Mat 16:16). Peter seems to have added this not merely--probably not so much--as an assurance to his Lord of his heart's belief in Him, as for ...

(See on Mat 16:16). Peter seems to have added this not merely--probably not so much--as an assurance to his Lord of his heart's belief in Him, as for the purpose of fortifying himself and his faithful brethren against that recoil from his Lord's harsh statements which he was probably struggling against with difficulty at that moment. Note.--There are seasons when one's faith is tried to the utmost, particularly by speculative difficulties; the spiritual eye then swims, and all truth seems ready to depart from us. At such seasons, a clear perception that to abandon the faith of Christ is to face black desolation, ruin and death; and on recoiling from this, to be able to fall back, not merely on first principles and immovable foundations, but on personal experience of a Living Lord in whom all truth is wrapt up and made flesh for our very benefit--this is a relief unspeakable. Under that blessed Wing taking shelter, until we are again fit to grapple with the questions that have staggered us, we at length either find our way through them, or attain to a calm satisfaction in the discovery that they lie beyond the limits of present apprehension.

JFB: Joh 6:70 - -- "Well said, Simon-Barjonas, but that 'we' embraces not so wide a circle as in the simplicity of thine heart thou thinkest; for though I have chosen yo...

"Well said, Simon-Barjonas, but that 'we' embraces not so wide a circle as in the simplicity of thine heart thou thinkest; for though I have chosen you but twelve, one even of these is a 'devil'" (the temple, the tool of that wicked one).

Clarke: Joh 6:59 - -- In the synagogue - in Capernaum - From Joh 6:26, to this verse, the evangelist gives us the discourse which our Lord preached in the synagogue, in w...

In the synagogue - in Capernaum - From Joh 6:26, to this verse, the evangelist gives us the discourse which our Lord preached in the synagogue, in which he was repeatedly interrupted by the Jews; but this gave him the fuller opportunity to proclaim the whole truth relative to his passion and death, to edify the disciples, and confute these gainsayers.

Clarke: Joh 6:60 - -- Many therefore of his disciples - So it appears that he had many more than the twelve, who constantly accompanied him

Many therefore of his disciples - So it appears that he had many more than the twelve, who constantly accompanied him

Clarke: Joh 6:60 - -- This is a hard saying; who can hear it? - Who can digest such doctrine as this? It is intolerable: it is impracticable. There is a similar saving in...

This is a hard saying; who can hear it? - Who can digest such doctrine as this? It is intolerable: it is impracticable. There is a similar saving in Euripides, to the σκληρος λογος of the evangelist. Ποτερα θελεις σοι μαλθακα ψευδη λεγω, η σκληρ αληθη, φραζε ; Tell me whether thou wouldst that I should speak unto thee, a Soft Lie, or the Harsh Truth? The wicked word of a lying world is in general better received than the holy word of the God of truth!

Clarke: Joh 6:61 - -- Jesus knew in himself - By giving them this proof that he knew their hearts he also proved that he was God; that he could not be deceived himself, a...

Jesus knew in himself - By giving them this proof that he knew their hearts he also proved that he was God; that he could not be deceived himself, and that it was impossible for him to deceive any; consequently, that the doctrine he taught them must be the truth of God.

Clarke: Joh 6:62 - -- If ye shall see the Son of man ascend - Ye need not be stumbled at what I say concerning eating my flesh and drinking my blood, for ye shall soon ha...

If ye shall see the Son of man ascend - Ye need not be stumbled at what I say concerning eating my flesh and drinking my blood, for ye shall soon have the fullest proof that this is figuratively spoken, for I shall ascend with the same body with which I shall arise from the dead; therefore my flesh and blood, far from being eaten by men, shall not even be found among them.

Clarke: Joh 6:63 - -- It is the spirit that quickeneth - It is the spiritual sense only of my words that is to be attended to, and through which life is to be attained, 2...

It is the spirit that quickeneth - It is the spiritual sense only of my words that is to be attended to, and through which life is to be attained, 2Co 3:6. Such only as eat and drink what I have mentioned, in a spiritual sense, are to expect eternal life

Clarke: Joh 6:63 - -- The flesh profiteth nothing - If ye could even eat my flesh and drink my blood, this would not avail for your salvation. These words contain a cauti...

The flesh profiteth nothing - If ye could even eat my flesh and drink my blood, this would not avail for your salvation. These words contain a caution that the hearers should not understand his words in the strict literal sense, as if his body were really Bread, and as if his flesh and blood were really to be eaten and drank

Clarke: Joh 6:63 - -- The words that I speak - Or, I have spoken. Instead of λαλω, I speak, I read λελαληκα, I have spoken, on the authority of BCDKLT, thir...

The words that I speak - Or, I have spoken. Instead of λαλω, I speak, I read λελαληκα, I have spoken, on the authority of BCDKLT, thirteen others; the Syriac, all the Arabic, all the Persic, Coptic, Ethiopic, Gothic, Slavonic, Vulgate, all the Itala; Origen, Eusebius, Athanasius, Basil, Cyril, Chrysostom, Tertullian, Ambrosias, Augustin, Gaudentius, and Vigilius Taps. This is an important reading, and plainly shows that our Lord’ s words here do not refer to any new point of doctrine which he was then inculcating, but to what he had spoken concerning his being the living bread, and concerning the eating of his flesh, and drinking of his blood, in the preceding verses

Clarke: Joh 6:63 - -- Are spirit, and they are life - As my words are to be spiritually understood, so the life they promise is of a spiritual nature: see Bishop Pearce.

Are spirit, and they are life - As my words are to be spiritually understood, so the life they promise is of a spiritual nature: see Bishop Pearce.

Clarke: Joh 6:64 - -- But there are some of you that believe not - This is addressed to Judas, and to those disciples who left him: Joh 6:66

But there are some of you that believe not - This is addressed to Judas, and to those disciples who left him: Joh 6:66

Clarke: Joh 6:64 - -- And who should betray him - Or, who would deliver him up. Because he knew all things; he knew from the first, from Judas’ s call to the apostle...

And who should betray him - Or, who would deliver him up. Because he knew all things; he knew from the first, from Judas’ s call to the apostleship, and from eternity, (if the reader pleases), who it was who would (not should) deliver him up into the hands of the Jews. Should, in the apprehension of most, implies necessity and compulsion; would implies that he was under the influence of his own free will, without necessity or constraint. The former takes away his guilt: for what a man is irresistibly compelled to do, by the supreme authority of God, he cannot avoid; and therefore to him no blame can attach: but Judas having acted through his own free will, abusing his power, and the grace he had received, he was guilty of the murder of an innocent man, and deserved the perdition to which he went.

Clarke: Joh 6:65 - -- Therefore said I unto you - Joh 6:44. See the note there

Therefore said I unto you - Joh 6:44. See the note there

Clarke: Joh 6:65 - -- Except it were given unto him - None can come at first, unless he be drawn by the Father; and none can continue, unless he continue under those sacr...

Except it were given unto him - None can come at first, unless he be drawn by the Father; and none can continue, unless he continue under those sacred influences which God gives only to those who do not receive his first graces in vain. St. Augustin himself grants that it was the sole fault of these disciples that they did not believe, and were saved. Quare non Poterant credere, si a me quaeratur, cito respondeo, quia Nolebant . If I be asked why these could not believe, I immediately answer, because they Would Not. Aug. Tract. 53, in Joan.

Clarke: Joh 6:66 - -- Many of his disciples went back - They no longer associated with him, nor professed to acknowledge him as the Messiah. None of these were of the twe...

Many of his disciples went back - They no longer associated with him, nor professed to acknowledge him as the Messiah. None of these were of the twelve. Christ had many others who generally attended his ministry, and acknowledged him for the Messiah.

Clarke: Joh 6:67 - -- Will ye also go alway? - Or, Do Ye also desire, etc. These words are very emphatical. Will You abandon me? - you, whom I have distinguished with inn...

Will ye also go alway? - Or, Do Ye also desire, etc. These words are very emphatical. Will You abandon me? - you, whom I have distinguished with innumerable marks of my affection - you, whom I have chosen out of the world to be my companions, - you, to whom I have revealed the secrets of the eternal world - you, who have been witnesses of all my miracles - you, whom I intend to seat with me on my throne in glory; will You go away? Reader, in what state art thou? Hast thou gone back from Christ, or art thou going back? Wilt thou go? Thou, whom he has redeemed by his blood - thou, whom he has upheld by his power, and fed by his providence - thou, into whose wounded soul he has poured the balm of pardoning mercy - thou, whom he has adopted into the heavenly family - thou, whom he has comforted in so many tribulations and adversities - thou, whose multiplied offenses he has freely and fully pardoned; wilt thou go away?

Clarke: Joh 6:68 - -- Simon Peter answered - With his usual zeal and readiness, speaking in behalf of the whole, To whom shall we go? Where shall we find a more gracious ...

Simon Peter answered - With his usual zeal and readiness, speaking in behalf of the whole, To whom shall we go? Where shall we find a more gracious master - a more powerful Redeemer - a more suitable Savior? Thou alone hast the words of eternal life. None can teach the doctrine of salvation but thyself; and none can confer the gift of eternal life but thou alone. Reader, let me ask, whither art thou going? Has the world - the devil - the flesh - the words of eternal life? Art thou turning thy back upon God and Christ? For thy zealous services, what has Satan to give thee? Death! hell! and eternal misery! O stop! Cleave to Jesus; he will give thee that happiness which, in vain, thou seekest in the pleasures of sin.

Clarke: Joh 6:69 - -- We believe - On the authority of thy word; and are sure - have known, εγνωκαμεν, by the evidence of thy miracles, that thou art the Christ...

We believe - On the authority of thy word; and are sure - have known, εγνωκαμεν, by the evidence of thy miracles, that thou art the Christ, the promised Messiah. And we belyfath and witen that thu eart Crist Godes Son . Anglo-Saxon. How near is the mother to the daughter tongue

Instead of Christ the Son of the living God, some excellent MSS., BCDL, and others, read ὁ αγιος του Θεου, the holy one of God; and this reading Griesbach has received into the text, leaving out του ζωντος, the living. Χριστος, and ἁγιος convey nearly the same meaning; but the Ethiopic, as usual, retains both. Του ζωντες is omitted by BCDL, H, the Coptic, Sahidic, Armenian, later Persic, Vulgate, all the Itala but one, and by the Anglo-Saxon; which last Griesbach has not noticed.

Clarke: Joh 6:70 - -- Have not I chosen you twelve - Have I not, in an especial manner, called you to believe in my name, and chosen you to be my disciples and the propag...

Have not I chosen you twelve - Have I not, in an especial manner, called you to believe in my name, and chosen you to be my disciples and the propagators of my doctrine! Nevertheless, one of you is a devil, or accuser, enlisted on the side of Satan, who was a murderer from the beginning.

Clarke: Joh 6:71 - -- He spake of Judas - for he it was that should betray him - Οὑτος γαρ ημελλεν αυτον παραδιδοναι, He who was about t...

He spake of Judas - for he it was that should betray him - Οὑτος γαρ ημελλεν αυτον παραδιδοναι, He who was about to deliver him up. By referring to this matter so often, did not our blessed Lord intend to warn Judas? Was not the evil fully exposed to his view? And who dare say that it was impossible for him to avoid what he had so often been warned against? When the temptation did take place, and his heart, in purpose, had brought forth the sin, might he not have relented, fallen at his injured master’ s feet, acknowledge his black offense, and implored forgiveness? And surely his most merciful Lord would have freely pardoned him

1.    On the subject of the disciples sailing off without Christ, and the storm that overtook them, it may be necessary to make a few observations, chiefly for the encouragement of the laborers in God’ s vineyard. It was the duty of the disciples to depart at the commandment of the Lord, though the storm was great, and the wind contrary. It was their duty to tug at the oar, expecting the appearing of their Lord and master. So it is the duty of the ministers of Christ to embark, and sail even into the sea of persecution and dangerous trial, in order to save souls. There may be darkness for a time - they must row. The waves may rise high - they must row on. The wind may be contrary - still they must tug at the oar. Jesus will appear, lay the storm, and calm the sea, and they shall have souls for their hire. The vessel will get to land, and speedily too. There are particular times in which the Lord pours out his Spirit, and multitudes are quickly convinced and converted. "Alas!"says one, "I see no fruit of my labor; no return of my prayers and tears."Take courage, man; tug on; thou shalt not labor in vain, nor spend thy strength for nought. What he does thou knowest not now, but thou shalt know hereafter. Great grace, and great peace await thee; take courage, and tug on

2.    When a man forsakes the living God, and gives way to avarice, which appears to have been the case with Judas, he is fit for any thing in which Satan may choose to employ him. Beware of the love of money! The cursed lust of gold induced a disciple of Christ to betray his God: and has it not been the ruin of millions since? Few people love money merely for its own sake: they love it because it can provide them with the necessaries, conveniences, and comforts of life; those who have not God for their portion incessantly long after these things, and therefore are covetous. While a man watches unto prayer, and abides in the love of Christ Jesus the Lord, so long he is safe, for he is contented with the lot which God has given him in life. Reader, art thou like Judas (in his best state) put in trust for the poor, or for the Church of Christ. Do not covet; and take heed that thou grudge not; nor permit thy heart to be hardened by repeated sights and tales of wo. Thou art but a steward; act faithfully, and act affectionately. Because the ointment that prefigured the death of our Lord was not applied just as Judas would have it, he took offense; betrayed and sold his master; saw and wished to remedy his transgression; despaired and hanged himself. Behold the fruit of covetousness! To what excesses and miseries the love of money may lead, God alone can comprehend. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him.

Calvin: Joh 6:58 - -- 58.This is the bread which came down from heaven He returns to the comparison between the manna and his flesh, with which he had begun; for it wa...

58.This is the bread which came down from heaven He returns to the comparison between the manna and his flesh, with which he had begun; for it was necessary that he should close the sermon in this manner: “There is no reason why you should prefer Moses to me, because he fed your fathers in the wilderness; since I supply you with far more excellent food, for I bring heavenly life with me.” For — as was formerly said — the bread is said to have come down from heaven, because it has nothing earthly or corruptible in its nature, but breathes the immortality of the kingdom of God. They who were only bent on feeding the belly, did not find such virtue in the manna; for while the manna had a twofold use, the Jews, with whom Christ is now disputing, beheld in it nothing else than bodily food. But the life of the soul is not fading, but makes continual progress until the whole man is renewed.

Calvin: Joh 6:59 - -- 59.He spoke these things in the synagogue John points out the place, that we may know that there were many present, and likewise, that a sermon was d...

59.He spoke these things in the synagogue John points out the place, that we may know that there were many present, and likewise, that a sermon was delivered as on a weighty and important subject. But it immediately follows that out of so great a multitude there were scarcely to be found a very few who profited by it; and — what is worse — it proved to be the occasion of desertion to many who professed to be disciples of Christ. If the Evangelist had said that only some of them were offended, that ought to have been accounted monstrous; but when they rise up in crowds and conspire together against him, what name shall we give to such an action? Let this narrative then be deeply impressed on our minds, that we may never murmur against Christ when he speaks; and if in the present day we perceive any thing of this kind in others, let not their pride disturb our faith.

Calvin: Joh 6:60 - -- 60.This is a harsh saying On the contrary, it was in their hearts, and not in the saying, that the harshness lay. But out of the word of God the ...

60.This is a harsh saying On the contrary, it was in their hearts, and not in the saying, that the harshness lay. But out of the word of God the reprobate are thus accustomed to form stones to dash themselves upon, and when, by their hardened obstinacy, they rush against Christ, they complain that his saying is harsh, which ought rather to have softened them. For whoever shall submit with true humility 168 to the doctrine of Christ will find nothing in it harsh or disagreeable; but to unbelievers, who oppose themselves with obstinacy, it will be a hammer which breaketh the rocks in pieces, as the Prophet calls it, (Jer 23:29.) But since the same hardness is natural to us all, if we judge of the doctrine of Christ according to our feelings, his words will be just so many strange and incredible 169 statements. All that remains for us, therefore, is, that every one commit himself to the guidance of the Spirit, that he may inscribe on our hearts what otherwise would never have even entered into our ears.

Who can hear it? Here we see the awful wickedness of unbelief; for they who impiously and basely reject the doctrine of salvation, not satisfied with excusing themselves, have the hardihood to put the Son of God in their room as if he were guilty, and to declare that he is unworthy of being heard Thus, in the present day, Papists not only reject the Gospel in a daring manner, but likewise break out into horrid blasphemies, that it may not be thought that they have no good reason for opposing God. And, indeed, since they desire darkness, we need not wonder if Satan deceives them by strange monsters, where there is nothing but the open highway. 170 But that which they, through their rage and fury, cannot endure will not only be tolerable to modest and teachable persons, but will support and comfort them. Yet the reprobate, by their obstinate slanders, will do nothing more than bring down on themselves more dreadful condemnation.

Calvin: Joh 6:61 - -- 61.But Jesus knowing Christ knew indeed, that the offense which the reprobate had taken up could not be removed; for, to tell the truth, 171 the doct...

61.But Jesus knowing Christ knew indeed, that the offense which the reprobate had taken up could not be removed; for, to tell the truth, 171 the doctrine does not so much wound them as it exposes the putrid ulcer which they inwardly nourished in their hearts. But he wished by all methods to try if there were not one of those who were offended that was not yet beyond the reach of cure, and to stop the mouths of the rest. By putting the question, he means that they have no reason to be offended, 172 or, at least, that the ground of offense does not lie in the doctrine itself. Thus we ought to repress the wickedness of those who, urged on by nothing but the rage of mastiff dogs, slander the word of God; and thus too we ought to chastise the folly of those who inconsiderately attack the truth.

Knowing in himself He says that Jesus knew in himself, because they had not yet declared openly what gave them uneasiness, but secretly murmured and groaned within themselves, and, therefore, he anticipates their open complaints. If it be objected, that the nature of those complaints was not difficult to understand, because in express terms they rejected the doctrine of Christ, I acknowledge that the words which John has formerly related are plain enough; but still I say that, like persons who are disgusted at any thing, they whispered those words to each other in low murmurs. For if they had spoken to Christ, there would have been better ground of hope, because the way would have been opened up for teaching them; but now, when they indulge in secret murmurings, they shut up against themselves the way to gain instruction. So then, when we do not immediately perceive the Lord’s meaning, there is nothing better than to go straight to him, that he may solve all our difficulties.

Doth this offend you? Christ appears here to increase the offense instead of removing it; but if any person examine very closely the ground of offense, there was in the following statement what ought to have pacified their minds.

Calvin: Joh 6:62 - -- 62.What if you shall see the Son of man ascend to where he was before? The mean and despicable condition of Christ which they saw before their eyes, ...

62.What if you shall see the Son of man ascend to where he was before? The mean and despicable condition of Christ which they saw before their eyes, while, clothed with flesh, he was not at all different from other men, prevented them from submitting to his Divine power; but now — by withdrawing, as it were, the veil — he calls them to behold his heavenly glory, as if he had said, “Because I converse among men without honor, I am despised by you, and you recognize in me nothing that is Divine; but ere long God will adorn me with splendid power, and, withdrawing me from the contemptible state of mortal life, will raise me above the heavens.” For, in the resurrection of Christ, so great was the power displayed by the Holy Spirit, that it plainly showed Christ to be the Son of God, as Paul also shows, (Rom 1:4.) And when it is said,

Thou art my Son, today have I begotten thee,
(Psa 2:7,)

the resurrection is brought forward as a proof from which that glory of Christ ought to be acknowledged, and his ascension to heaven was the completion of that glory. When he says that he was formerly in heaven, this does not apply strictly to his human nature, and yet he speaks of the Son of man; but since the two natures in Christ constitute one person, it is not an unusual way of speaking to transfer to one nature what is peculiar to the other.

Calvin: Joh 6:63 - -- 63.It is the Spirit that quickeneth By these words Christ shows the reason why the Jews did not profit by his doctrine to be, that, being spiritual a...

63.It is the Spirit that quickeneth By these words Christ shows the reason why the Jews did not profit by his doctrine to be, that, being spiritual and quickening, it does not find ears well prepared. But as this passage has been variously expounded, it will be of importance first to ascertain the natural meaning of the words; from which it will be easy to perceive Christ’s intention. When he affirms that the flesh profiteth nothing, Chrysostom improperly, in my opinion, refers it to the Jews, who were carnal I readily acknowledge that in heavenly mysteries the whole power of the human mind is utterly unavailing; but the words of Christ do not bear that meaning, if they be not violently tortured. Equally forced would be that opinion, as applied to the apposite clause; namely, it is the illumination of the Spirit that quickeneth. Nor do I approve of the views of those who say, that the flesh of Christ profiteth, so far as he was crucified, but that, when it is eaten, it is of no advantage to us; for, on the contrary, we must eat it, that, having been crucified, it may profit

Augustine thinks that we ought to supply the word only, or by itself, as if it had been said, “ The flesh alone, and by itself, profiteth not, ” 173 because it must be accompanied by the Spirit This meaning accords well with the scope of the discourse, for Christ refers simply to the manner of eating. He does not, therefore, exclude every kind of usefulness, as if none could be obtained from his flesh; but he declares that, if it be separated from the Spirit, it will then be useless. For whence has the flesh power to quicken, but because it is spiritual? Accordingly, whoever confines his whole attention to the earthly nature of the flesh, will find in it nothing but what is dead; but they who shall raise their eyes to the power of the Spirit, which is diffused over the flesh, will learn from the actual effect and from the experience of faith, that it is not without reason that it is called quickening

We now understand in what manner the flesh is truly food, and yet it profiteth not It is food, because by it life is procured for us, because in it God is reconciled to us, because in it we have all the parts of salvation accomplished. It profiteth not, if it be estimated by its origin and nature; for the seed of Abraham, which is in itself subject to death, does not bestow life, but receives from the Spirit its power to feed us; and, therefore, on our part also, that we may be truly nourished by it, we must bring the spiritual mouth of faith.

As to the sentence breaking off in so abrupt a manner, it is probable that this was done because Christ saw that it was necessary to act in this manner towards unbelievers. By this clause, therefore, he suddenly closed the sermon, because they did not deserve that he should speak to them any longer. Yet he did not overlook those who are godly and teachable; for they have here, in a few words, what may abundantly satisfy them.

The words which I speak to you This is an allusion to the preceding statement, for he now employs the word Spirit in a different sense. But as he had spoken of the secret power of the Spirit, he elegantly applies this to his doctrine, because it is spiritual; for the word Spirit must be explained to mean spiritual Now the word is called spiritual, because it calls us upwards to seek Christ in his heavenly glory, through the guidance of the Spirit, by faith, and not by our carnal perception; for we know that of all that was said, nothing can be comprehended but by faith. And it is also worthy of observation, that he connects life with the Spirit He calls his word life, from its effect, as if he had called it quickening; but shows that it will not be quickening to any but those who receive it spiritually, for others will rather draw death from it. To the godly, this commendation bestowed on the Gospel is most delightful, because they are certain that it is appointed for their eternal salvation; but at the same time, they are reminded to labor to prove that they are genuine disciples.

Calvin: Joh 6:64 - -- 64.But there are some of you who do not believe He again imputes blame to them, because, being destitute of the Spirit, they wickedly corrupt and d...

64.But there are some of you who do not believe He again imputes blame to them, because, being destitute of the Spirit, they wickedly corrupt and debase his doctrine, and thus turn it to their ruin. For otherwise they might have objected: “You boast, indeed, that what you speak is quickening, but we experience nothing of that nature.” He therefore says, that by themselves it is prevented; for unbelief, as it is always proud, will never understand any thing in the words of Christ which it despises and disdains. Wherefore, if we wish to profit at all under this Teacher, let us bring minds well disposed to listen to him; for if the entrance to his doctrine be not opened up by humility and reverence, our understandings are harder than stones, and will not receive any part of sound doctrine. And therefore, when in the present day we see so few people in the world profiting by the Gospel, we ought to remember that this arises from the depravity of men. For how many will you find who deny themselves, and truly submit to Christ? As to his saying only that there were some who did not believe, though almost all of them were liable to this charge, his reason for doing so appears to have been that, if there were any who were not yet beyond the possibility of cure, they might not cast down their minds in despair.

For Jesus knew from the beginning The Evangelist added this, that none might think that Christ formed an opinion at random about his hearers. Many professed to belong to his flock, but a sudden apostacy exposed their hypocrisy. But the Evangelist says that their treachery, even while it was unknown to others, was well known to Christ. And this is stated, not so much on his account, as that we may learn not to form a judgment except on subjects which we have thoroughly investigated; for as to their being known to Christ from the beginning, this was peculiar to his Divinity. It is otherwise with us; for since we do not know the hearts, we ought to delay forming a judgment, until impiety be manifested by outward signs, and thus the tree be known by its fruits, (Mat 7:16.)

Calvin: Joh 6:65 - -- 65.Therefore have I told you He again states that faith is an uncommon and remarkable gift of the Spirit of God, that we may not be astonished that t...

65.Therefore have I told you He again states that faith is an uncommon and remarkable gift of the Spirit of God, that we may not be astonished that the Gospel is not received in every place and by all. For, being ill qualified to turn to our advantage the course of events, we think more meanly of the Gospel, because the whole world does not assent to it. The thought arises in our mind, How is it possible that the greater part of men shall deliberately reject their salvation? Christ therefore assigns a reason why there are so few believers, namely, because no man, whatever may be his acuteness, 174 can arrive at faith by his own sagacity; for all are blind, until they are illuminated by the Spirit of God, and therefore they only partake of so great a blessing whom the Father deigns to make partakers of it. If this grace were bestowed on all without exception, it would have been unseasonable and inappropriate to have mentioned it in this passage; for we must understand that it was Christ’s design to show that not many believe the Gospel, because faith proceeds only from the secret revelation of the Spirit.

Unless it be given him by my Father He now uses the word give instead of the word which he formerly used, draw; by which he means that there is no other reason why God draws, than because out of free grace he loves us; for what we obtain by the gift and grace of God, no man procures for himself by his own industry.

Calvin: Joh 6:66 - -- 66.From that time many of his disciples went back The Evangelist now relates what trouble was the consequence of that sermon. It is a dreadful and mo...

66.From that time many of his disciples went back The Evangelist now relates what trouble was the consequence of that sermon. It is a dreadful and monstrous thing, that so kind and gracious an invitation of Christ could have alienated the minds of many, and especially of those who had formerly professed to belong to him, and were even his ordinary disciples. But this example is held out to us for a mirror, as it were, in which we may perceive how great is the wickedness and ingratitude of men, who turn a plain road into an occasion of stumbling to them, that they may not come to Christ. Many would say that it would have been better that a sermon of this kind should never have been preached, which occasioned the apostacy of many. But we ought to entertain a widely different view; for it was then necessary, and now is daily necessary, that what had been foretold concerning Christ should be perceived in his doctrine, namely, that

he is the stone of stumbling, (Isa 8:14.)

We ought, indeed, to regulate our doctrine in such a manner that none may be offended through our fault; as far as possible, we ought to retain all; and, in short, we ought to take care that we do not, by talking inconsiderately or at random, 175 disturb ignorant or weak minds. But it will never be possible for us to exercise such caution that the doctrine of Christ shall not be the occasion of offense to many; because the reprobate, who are devoted to destruction, suck venom from the most wholesome food, and gall from honey. The Son of God undoubtedly knew well what was useful, and yet we see that he cannot avoid 176 offending many of his disciples. Whatever then may be the dislike entertained by many persons for pure doctrine, still we are not at liberty to suppress it. Only let the teachers of the Church remember the advice given by Paul, that the word of God ought to be properly divided, (2Ti 2:15;) and next let them advance boldly amidst all offenses. And if it happen that many apostatize, let us not be disgusted at the word of God, because it is not relished by the reprobate; for they who are so much shaken by the revolt of some that, when those persons fall away, they are immediately discouraged, are too delicate and tender.

And walked no more with him When the Evangelist adds these words, he means that it was not a complete apostacy, but only that they withdrew from familiar intercourse with Christ; and yet he condemns them as apostates. Hence we ought to learn that we cannot go back a foot breadth, without being immediately in danger of falling into treacherous denial of our Master.

Calvin: Joh 6:67 - -- 67.Jesus therefore said to the twelve As the faith of the apostles might be greatly shaken, when they saw that they were so small a remnant of a grea...

67.Jesus therefore said to the twelve As the faith of the apostles might be greatly shaken, when they saw that they were so small a remnant of a great multitude, Christ directs his discourse to them, and shows that there is no reason why they should allow themselves to be hurried away by the lightness and unsteadiness of others. When he asks them if they also wish to go away, he does so in order to confirm their faith; for, by exhibiting to them himself, that they may remain with him, he likewise exhorts them not to become the companions of apostates. And, indeed, if faith be founded on Christ, it will not depend on men, and will never waver, though it should see heaven and earth mingling. We ought also to observe this circumstance, that Christ, when deprived of nearly all his disciples, retains the twelve only, in like manner as Isaiah was formerly commanded to

bind the testimony and seal the law among the disciples,
(Isa 8:16.)

By such examples, every one of the believers is taught to follow God, even though he should have no companion.

Calvin: Joh 6:68 - -- 68.Simon Peter therefore answered him. Peter replies here in the name of all, as he does on other occasions; because all of them were of the same min...

68.Simon Peter therefore answered him. Peter replies here in the name of all, as he does on other occasions; because all of them were of the same mind, except that in Judas there was no sincerity. This reply contains two clauses; for Peter first states the reason why he cheerfully adheres to Christ, along with his brethren; namely, because they feel that his doctrine is wholesome and quickening; and, secondly, he acknowledges that to whomsoever they might go, if they left Christ, there remained for them nothing but death.

Thou hast the words of eternal life When he says the words of life, by the phrase of life, he means quickening, using the genitive case instead of the adjective, which is a very common mode of expression among the Hebrews. It is a remarkable commendation bestowed on the Gospel, that it administers to us eternal life, as Paul testifies, that

it is the power of God for salvation to every one who believeth,
(Rom 1:16.)

True, the Law also contains life, but because it denounces against all transgressors 177 the condemnation of eternal death, it can do nothing but kill. Widely different is the manner in which life is offered to us in the Gospel, that is, when God reconciles us to himself through free grace, by not imputing our sins, (2Co 5:19.) It is no ordinary assertion that Peter makes concerning Christ, when he says that he has the words of eternal life; but he ascribes this to Christ as belonging to him alone. Hence follows the second statement which I glanced at a little ago, that as soon as they have gone away from Christ, there remains for them everywhere nothing but death. Certain destruction, therefore, awaits all who, not satisfied with that Teacher, fly to the inventions of men.

Calvin: Joh 6:69 - -- 69.And we have believed and known The verbs are in the past tense, but they may be changed into the present tense, we believe and know, but it makes...

69.And we have believed and known The verbs are in the past tense, but they may be changed into the present tense, we believe and know, but it makes little difference in the meaning. In these words Peter gives a brief summary of faith. But the confession appears to have nothing to do with the matter in hand, for the question had been raised about eating the flesh of Christ. I reply, although the twelve did not at once comprehend all that Christ had taught, yet it is enough that, according to the capacity of their faith, they acknowledge him to be the Author of salvation, and submit themselves to him in all things. The word believe is put first, because the obedience of faith is the commencement of right understanding, or rather, because faith itself is truly the eye of the understanding. But immediately afterwards knowledge is added, which distinguishes faith from erroneous and false opinions; for Mahometans and Jews and Papists believe, but they neither know nor understand any thing. Knowledge is connected with faith, because we are certain and fully convinced of the truth of God, not in the same manner as human sciences are learned, but when the Spirit seals it on our hearts.

Calvin: Joh 6:70 - -- 70.Jesus answered them Since Christ replies to all, we infer from it that all spake by the mouth of Peter. Besides, Christ now prepares and fortifies...

70.Jesus answered them Since Christ replies to all, we infer from it that all spake by the mouth of Peter. Besides, Christ now prepares and fortifies the eleven apostles against a new offense which was already at hand. It was a powerful instrument of Satan for shaking their faith, when they were reduced to so small a number, but the fall of Judas might take away all their courage; for since Christ had chosen that sacred number, who would ever have thought that any portion of the whole number could be torn away? That admonition of Christ may be interpreted thus: “You twelve alone remain out of a large company. If your faith has not been shaken by the unbelief of many, prepare for a new contest; for this company, though small, will be still diminished by one man.”

Have not I chosen you twelve? When Christ says that he has chosen or elected twelve, he does not refer to the eternal purpose of God; for it is impossible that any one of those who have been predestinated to life shall fall away; but, having been chosen to the apostolic office, they ought to have surpassed others in piety and holiness. He used the word chosen, therefore, to denote those who were eminent and distinguished from the ordinary rank.

And one of you is a devil He unquestionably intended, by this name, to hold up Judas to the utmost detestation; for they are mistaken who extenuate the atrocity implied in the name and indeed we cannot sufficiently execrate those who dishonor so sacred an office. Teachers who faithfully discharge their office are called angels

They should seek the law at his mouth, for he is the angel of the Lord of Hosts,
(Mal 2:7.)

Justly, therefore, is he accounted a devil, who, after having been admitted to so honorable a rank, is corrupted through his treachery and wickedness. Another reason is, that God allows more power and liberty to Satan over wicked and ungodly ministers, than over other ordinary men; and therefore, if they who were chosen to be pastors are driven by diabolical rage, so as to resemble wild and monstrous beasts, so far are we from being entitled, on that account, to despise the honorable rank to which they belong, that we ought rather to honor it the more, when the profanation of it is followed by so fearful a punishment.

Calvin: Joh 6:71 - -- 71.He spoke of Judas Although Judas had a bad conscience, still we do not read that he was at all moved. Hypocrites are so stupid that they do not fe...

71.He spoke of Judas Although Judas had a bad conscience, still we do not read that he was at all moved. Hypocrites are so stupid that they do not feel their sores, and in the presence of men they have such hardened effrontery, that they do not scruple to prefer themselves to the very best of men.

Defender: Joh 6:66 - -- It is possible, therefore, to be a "disciple" of Christ yet not a true believer, for these disciples would not have gone back otherwise (Joh 6:39; 1Jo...

It is possible, therefore, to be a "disciple" of Christ yet not a true believer, for these disciples would not have gone back otherwise (Joh 6:39; 1Jo 2:19). It may be only coincidence, since the verse divisions were not in the original autographs, but it is at least worth noting (in light of the significance of the number 666 - see Rev 13:18) that this verse, Joh 6:66, which marks those disciples who were false disciples, is the only "Joh 6:66" verse in any of the 27 books of the New Testament (Joh 6:70)."

Defender: Joh 6:70 - -- Judas was not a true disciple, but he did not "go away" (Joh 6:67) at this time. He continued with the twelve until he could find opportunity to betra...

Judas was not a true disciple, but he did not "go away" (Joh 6:67) at this time. He continued with the twelve until he could find opportunity to betray Jesus. Even at this time, however, he was a "devil." The Greek word here is diabolos, and usually refers to the Devil. It seems most probable that Satan was already controlling Judas, though he didn't "enter into" him and fully possess him until later (Luk 22:3)."

TSK: Joh 6:58 - -- Joh 6:32, Joh 6:34, Joh 6:41, Joh 6:47-51

TSK: Joh 6:59 - -- in the : Joh 6:24, Joh 18:20; Psa 40:9, Psa 40:10; Pro 1:20-23, Pro 8:1-3; Luk 4:31

TSK: Joh 6:60 - -- of his : Joh 6:66, Joh 8:31 This : Joh 6:41, Joh 6:42, Joh 8:43; Mat 11:6; Heb 5:11; 2Pe 3:16

TSK: Joh 6:61 - -- Joh 6:64, Joh 2:24, Joh 2:25, Joh 21:17; Heb 4:13; Rev 2:23

TSK: Joh 6:62 - -- Joh 3:13, Joh 16:28, Joh 17:4, Joh 17:5, Joh 17:11; Mar 16:19; Luk 24:51; Act 1:9; Eph 4:8-10; 1Pe 3:22

TSK: Joh 6:63 - -- the spirit : Gen 2:7; Rom 8:2; 1Co 15:45; 2Co 3:6; Gal 5:25; 1Pe 3:18 the flesh : Rom 2:25, Rom 3:1, Rom 3:2; 1Co 11:27-29; Gal 5:6, Gal 6:15; 1Ti 4:8...

TSK: Joh 6:64 - -- there : Joh 6:36, Joh 6:61, Joh 5:42, Joh 8:23, Joh 8:38-47, Joh 8:55, Joh 10:26, Joh 13:10,Joh 13:18-21 For : Joh 6:70,Joh 6:71, Joh 2:24, Joh 2:25, ...

TSK: Joh 6:65 - -- that no : Joh 6:37, Joh 6:44, Joh 6:45, Joh 10:16, Joh 10:26, Joh 10:27, Joh 12:37-41; Eph 2:8, Eph 2:9; Phi 1:29; 1Ti 1:14; 2Ti 2:25; Tit 3:3-7; Heb ...

TSK: Joh 6:66 - -- of his : Joh 6:60, Joh 8:31; Zep 1:6; Mat 12:40-45, Mat 13:20,Mat 13:21, Mat 19:22, Mat 21:8-11, Mat 27:20-25; Luk 9:62; 2Ti 1:15, 2Ti 4:10; Heb 10:38...

TSK: Joh 6:67 - -- Will : Jos 24:15-22; Rth 1:11-18; 2Sa 15:19, 2Sa 15:20; Luk 14:25-33

TSK: Joh 6:68 - -- to whom : Psa 73:25 thou hast : Joh 6:40,Joh 6:63, Joh 5:24, Joh 5:39, Joh 5:40; Act 4:12, Act 5:20, Act 7:38; 1Jo 5:11-13

TSK: Joh 6:69 - -- we believe : Joh 1:29, Joh 1:41, Joh 1:45-49, Joh 11:27, Joh 20:28, Joh 20:31; Mat 16:16; Mar 1:1, Mar 8:29; Luk 9:20; Act 8:37; Rom 1:3; 1Jo 5:1, 1Jo...

TSK: Joh 6:70 - -- Have : Joh 6:64, Joh 13:18, Joh 17:12; Mat 10:1-4; Luk 6:13-16; Act 1:17 and one : Joh 8:44, Joh 13:2, Joh 13:21, Joh 13:27; Act 13:10; 1Jo 3:8; Rev 3...

TSK: Joh 6:71 - -- for : Psa 109:6-8; Act 1:16-20, Act 2:23; Jud 1:4 being : Joh 18:2-6; Psa 41:9, Psa 55:13, Psa 55:14; Mat 26:14-16, Mat 27:3-5

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Joh 6:58 - -- This is that bread ... - This is the true bread that came down. The word "that"should not be in the translation. Shall live for ever - No...

This is that bread ... - This is the true bread that came down. The word "that"should not be in the translation.

Shall live for ever - Not on the earth, but in the enjoyments of a better world.

Barnes: Joh 6:60 - -- Many of his disciples - The word "disciple"means "learner."It was applied to the followers of Christ because they were taught by him. It does n...

Many of his disciples - The word "disciple"means "learner."It was applied to the followers of Christ because they were taught by him. It does not imply, of necessity, that those to whom it was given were real Christians, but simply that they were under his teaching, and were professed learners in his school. See Mat 17:16; Mar 2:18; Joh 9:28; Mat 10:24. It is doubtless used in this sense here. It is, however, often applied to those who are real Christians.

This is an hard saying - The word "hard"here means "offensive, disagreeable"- that which they could not bear. Some have understood it to mean "difficult to be understood,"but this meaning does not suit the connection. The doctrine which he delivered was opposed to their prejudices; it seemed to be absurd, and they therefore rejected it.

Saying - Rather doctrine or speech - Greek, λόγος logos . It does not refer to any particular part of the discourse, but includes the whole.

Who can hear it? - That is, who can hear it patiently - who can stay and listen to such doctrine or believe it. The effect of this is stated in Joh 6:66. The doctrines which Jesus taught that were so offensive appear to have been:

1.\caps1     t\caps0 hat he was superior to Moses.

2.\caps1     t\caps0 hat God would save all that he had chosen and those only.

3.\caps1     t\caps0 hat he said he was the bread that came from heaven.

4.\caps1     t\caps0 hat it was necessary to partake of that; that it was necessary that an atonement should be made, and that they should be saved by that.

These doctrines have always been among the most offensive that men have been called on to believe, and many, rather than trust in them, have chosen to draw back to perdition.

Barnes: Joh 6:62 - -- What and if ... - Jesus does not say that those who were then present would see him ascend, but he implies that he would ascend. They had taken...

What and if ... - Jesus does not say that those who were then present would see him ascend, but he implies that he would ascend. They had taken offence because he said he came down from heaven. Instead of explaining that away, he proceeds to state another doctrine quite as offensive to them - that he would reascend to heaven. The apostles only were present at his ascension, Act 1:9. As Jesus was to ascend to heaven, it was clear that he could not have intended literally that they should eat his flesh.

Barnes: Joh 6:63 - -- It is the Spirit that quickeneth - These words have been understood in different ways. The word "Spirit,"here, evidently does not refer to the ...

It is the Spirit that quickeneth - These words have been understood in different ways. The word "Spirit,"here, evidently does not refer to the Holy Spirit, for he adds, "The words that I speak unto you, they are spirit."He refers here, probably, to the doctrine which he had been teaching in opposition to their notions and desires. "My doctrine is spiritual; it is fitted to quicken and nourish the soul. It is from heaven. Your doctrine or your views are earthly, and may be called flesh, or fleshly, as pertaining only to the support of the body. You place a great value on the doctrine that Moses fed the body; yet that did not permanently profit, for your fathers are dead. You seek also food from me, but your views and desires are gross and earthly."

Quickeneth - Gives life. See the notes at Joh 5:21.

The flesh - Your carnal views and desires, and the literal understanding of my doctrine. By this Jesus shows them that he did not intend that his words should be taken literally.

Profiteth nothing - Would not avail to the real needs of man. The bread that Moses gave, the food which you seek, would not be of real value to man’ s highest wants.

They are spirit - They are spiritual. They are not to be understood literally, as if you were really to eat my flesh, but they are to be understood as denoting the need of that provision for the soul which God has made by my coming into the world.

Are life - Are fitted to produce or give life to the soul dead in sins.

Barnes: Joh 6:64 - -- Jesus knew from the beginning ... - As this implied a knowledge of the heart, and of the secret principles and motives of men, it shows that he...

Jesus knew from the beginning ... - As this implied a knowledge of the heart, and of the secret principles and motives of men, it shows that he must have been omniscient.

Barnes: Joh 6:66 - -- Many of his disciples - Many who had followed him professedly as his disciples and as desirous of learning of him. See the notes at Joh 6:60. ...

Many of his disciples - Many who had followed him professedly as his disciples and as desirous of learning of him. See the notes at Joh 6:60.

Went back - Turned away from him and left him. From this we may learn,

1.    Not to wonder at the apostasy of many who profess to be followers of Christ. Many are induced to become his professed followers by the prospect of some temporal benefit, or under some public excitement, as these were; and when that temporal benefit is not obtained, or that excitement is over, they fall away.

2.    Many may be expected to be offended by the doctrines of the gospel. Having no spirituality of mind, and really understanding nothing of the gospel, they may be expected to take offence and turn back. The best way to understand the doctrines of the Bible is to be a sincere Christian, and aim to do the will of God, Joh 7:17.

3.    We should examine ourselves. We should honestly inquire whether we have been led to make a profession of religion by the hope of any temporal advantage, by any selfish principle, or by mere excited animal feeling. If we have it will profit us nothing, and we shall either fall away of ourselves, or be cast away in the great day of judgment.

Barnes: Joh 6:67 - -- The twelve - The twelve apostles. Will ye also go away? - Many apostatized, and it was natural now for Jesus to submit the question to th...

The twelve - The twelve apostles.

Will ye also go away? - Many apostatized, and it was natural now for Jesus to submit the question to the twelve. "Will you, whom I have chosen, on whom I have bestowed the apostleship, and who have seen the evidence of my Messiahship, will you now also leave me?"This was the time to try them; and it is always a time to try real Christians when many professed disciples become cold and turn back; and then we may suppose Jesus addressing us, and saying, Will ye also go away! Observe here, it was submitted to their choice. God compels none to remain with him against their will, and the question in such trying times is submitted to every man whether he will or will not go away.

Barnes: Joh 6:68 - -- Simon Peter answered him - With characteristic ardor and promptness. Peter was probably one of the oldest of the apostles, and it was his chara...

Simon Peter answered him - With characteristic ardor and promptness. Peter was probably one of the oldest of the apostles, and it was his character to be first and most ardent in his professions.

To whom shall we go - This implied their firm conviction that Jesus was the Messiah, and that he alone was able to save them. It is one of Peter’ s noble confessions - the instinctive promptings of a pious heart and of ardent love. There was no one else who could teach them. The Pharisees, the Sadducees, and the scribes were corrupt, and unable to guide them aright; and, though the doctrines of Jesus were mysterious, yet they were the only doctrines that could instruct and save them.

Thou hast ... - The meaning of this is, thou teachest the doctrines which lead to eternal life. And from this we may learn:

1.\caps1     t\caps0 hat we are to expect that some of the doctrines of the Bible will be mysterious.

2.\caps1     t\caps0 hat, though they are difficult to be understood, yet we should not therefore reject them.

3.\caps1     t\caps0 hat nothing would be gained by rejecting them. The atheist, the infidel - nay, the philosopher, believes, or professes to believe, propositions quite as mysterious as any in the Bible.

4.\caps1     t\caps0 hat poor, lost, sinful man has nowhere else to go but to Jesus. He is the way, the truth, and the life, and if the sinner betakes himself to any other way he will wander and die.

5.    We should, therefore, on no account forsake the teachings of the Son of God. The words that he speaks are spirit and are life.

Barnes: Joh 6:69 - -- We are sure ... - See a similar confession of Peter in Mat 16:16, and the notes at that place. Peter says we are sure, in the name of the whole...

We are sure ... - See a similar confession of Peter in Mat 16:16, and the notes at that place. Peter says we are sure, in the name of the whole of the apostles. Jesus immediately cautions him, as he did on other occasions, not to be too confident, for one of them actually had no such feelings, but was a traitor.

Barnes: Joh 6:70 - -- Have not I chosen you twelve? - There is much emphasis in these words. Have not I - I, the Saviour, the Messiah, chosen you in mercy and in lo...

Have not I chosen you twelve? - There is much emphasis in these words. Have not I - I, the Saviour, the Messiah, chosen you in mercy and in love, and therefore it will be a greater sin to betray me? Chosen. Chosen to the apostolic office; conferred on you marks of special favor, and treason is therefore the greater sin. You twelve. So small a number. Out of such a multitude as follow for the loaves and fishes, it is to be expected there should be apostates; but when the number is so small, chosen in such a manner, then it becomes every one, however confident he may be, to be on his guard and examine his heart.

Is a devil - Has the spirit, the envy, the malice, and the treasonable designs of a devil. The word "devil"here is used in the sense of an enemy, or one hostile to him.

Barnes: Joh 6:71 - -- He spake of Judas ... - There is no evidence that Jesus designated Judas so that the disciples then understood that it was he. It does not appe...

He spake of Judas ... - There is no evidence that Jesus designated Judas so that the disciples then understood that it was he. It does not appear that the apostles even suspected Judas, as they continued to treat him afterward with the same confidence, for he carried the bag, or the purse containing their little property Joh 12:6; Joh 13:29; and at the table, when Jesus said that one of them would betray him, the rest did not suspect Judas until Jesus pointed him out particularly, Joh 13:26. Jesus spoke of one, to put them on their guard, to check their confidence, and to lead them to self-examination. So in every church, or company of professing Christians, we may know that it is probable that there may be some one or more deceived; but we may not know who it may be, and should therefore inquire prayerfully and honestly, "Lord, is it I?"

Should betray - Would betray. If it be asked why Jesus called a man to be an apostle who he knew had no love for him, who would betray him, and who had from the beginning the spirit of a "devil,"we may reply:

1. It was that Judas might be an important witness for the innocence of Jesus, and for the fact that he was not an impostor. Judas was with him more than three years. He was treated with the same confidence as the others, and in some respects even with superior confidence, as he had "the bag"Joh 12:6, or was the treasurer. He saw the Saviour in public and in private, heard his public discourses and his private conversation, and he would have been just the witness which the high priests and Pharisees would have desired, if he had known any reason why he should be condemned. Yet he alleged nothing against him. Though he betrayed him, yet he afterward said that he was innocent, and, under the convictions of conscience, committed suicide. If Judas had known anything against the Saviour he would have alleged it. If he had known that he was an impostor, and had alleged it, he would have saved his own life and been rewarded. If Jesus was an impostor, he ought to have made it known, and to have bean rewarded for it.

2. It may have been, also, with a foresight of the necessity of having such a man among his disciples, in order that his own death might be brought about in the manner in which it was predicted. There were several prophecies which would have been unfulfilled had there been no such man among the apostles.

3. It showed the knowledge which the Saviour had of the human heart, that he could thus discern character before it was developed, and was able so distinctly to predict that he would betray him.

4. We may add, what benevolence did the Saviour evince - what patience and forbearance - that he had with him for more than three years a man who he knew hated him at heart, and who would yet betray him to be put to death on a cross, and that during all that time he treated him with the utmost kindness!

Poole: Joh 6:58 - -- There is no more said in this verse than Joh 6:49-51 : See Poole on "Joh 6:49" , and following verses to Joh 6:51 . From this whole discourse it is...

There is no more said in this verse than Joh 6:49-51 : See Poole on "Joh 6:49" , and following verses to Joh 6:51 . From this whole discourse it is as evident as the light, that the justification of the soul depends upon believing; and the spiritual life of the soul floweth not from love or obedience to the works of the law, but from faith in Jesus Christ: though it be true, that true faith cannot be without works, and no man without obedience in sincerity (though not in perfection) to the will of God, shall ever obtain eternal life and salvation; but this obedience is not faith, nor doth it enter into the justification of the soul, but is the certain and necessary product of that faith which justifieth, which cannot be justified as true and saving without obedience. In all this discourse here is no mention of love, or obedience, as that to which the promises of life everlasting and a joyful resurrection are so often made; but only of eating Christ; eating his flesh and drinking his blood; eating him as the bread which came down from heaven, &c.; which are phrases no way expressive of obedience to the works of the law, but of believing, Joh 6:47-49 . The other texts of Scripture make it plain enough, that there can be no believing without obeying, nor any eternal life and salvation obtained without both.

Poole: Joh 6:59 - -- Though the state of the Jewish church at this time was corrupt enough, both as to matters of doctrine, worship, and discipline; yet it being constit...

Though the state of the Jewish church at this time was corrupt enough, both as to matters of doctrine, worship, and discipline; yet it being constituted by his Father, he did not decline their assemblies either in the temple at Jerusalem, or in the places of the public worship, which were called synagogues, and were both in their cities and villages; for he had a liberty to teach in them, as appeareth both from this and many other texts; which he accordingly used, and usually spent the sabbath, or a great part of it, in those places and assemblies: yet by his presence he no way owned or declared his approbation of their corruptions, but frequently and freely reproved them; only because of those superstitious impertinencies (there being at this time no idolatry practised amongst them) he would not disown what was of God his Father among them. The same practice we shall observe amongst the apostles, till the Jews declared themselves hardened, drove them out from their synagogues, and spake evil of the way of the gospel before the multitude, Act 19:9 . Then indeed, and not before, Paul separated the disciples, disputing daily in the school of one Tyrannus. This also is further to be observed in the practice of our Saviour, that although he went to the temple and the synagogues, and there joined with the Jewish worship instituted by his Father, and reproved (as he had occasion) the corruptions they had introduced and superadded; yet he did not forbear himself teaching the gospel in other places besides the temple and the synagogues. The evangelist also notes, that the synagogue where he taught these things was in Capernaum, a city of Galilee, which in this was exalted to heaven, that it had not only the gospel preached in it, but by Christ himself; but for the contempt of the gospel is since brought down to hell, as much debased as it was before exalted, being long since reduced to a poor inconsiderable place, and at this day under the tyranny of the Mahometan prince.

Poole: Joh 6:60 - -- His disciples his followers, not those that were his disciples indeed, but in name; for many followed him that did not believe in him; and many (in a...

His disciples his followers, not those that were his disciples indeed, but in name; for many followed him that did not believe in him; and many (in a sense) believed, to whom he did not commit himself, Joh 2:23,24 . Now, many of these disciples, having heard these sayings, and being no way able to comprehend so great mysteries, nor having their eyes opened by the Spirit of illumination, said within themselves, These are sayings hard, or impossible, to be understood; who is able to hear or to understand them? or who is able to bear them?

Poole: Joh 6:61 - -- Christ, though clothed with our flesh, yet being also the eternal Son of God, knew by virtue of his Divine nature, personally united to the human na...

Christ, though clothed with our flesh, yet being also the eternal Son of God, knew by virtue of his Divine nature, personally united to the human nature, what was in the heart of man; hence is this phrase,

knew in himself which is opposed to a knowledge from the hearing of his own ears, as man heareth, whether more immediately from the sound of their words, (for we read of nothing they spake audibly), or from the relation of others, as what they had heard: he knew in himself their thoughts by his Divine prerogative and property of searching the hearts, and trying the reins, and discerning the thoughts of men afar off. Knowing their thoughts, he saith, Doth this give you occasion of stumbling?

Poole: Joh 6:62 - -- Our Saviour by these words may seem rather to increase than to abate their offence. That which stumbled them was, his calling himself the bread of l...

Our Saviour by these words may seem rather to increase than to abate their offence. That which stumbled them was, his calling himself the bread of life; his affirming that he came down from heaven; that he gave life to the world; that the way to obtain this life was eating his flesh and drinking his blood. How doth what he now tells them any way tend to satisfy them? He now speaks of ascending up to heaven, and asserts that he was there before.

Answer. The former assertions were no way to be justified but upon this foundation, that though he appeared now in the form and shape of a man, and was indeed the Son of man, yet he was also God, the eternal Son of God: he therefore here plainly asserts, that he was in heaven before he appeared as the Son of man upon the earth; and descending from thence, did assume the form of a servant; and for a further proof of this, he refers them to what they were to see or hear (to know) within some few months after this discourse, (for this was after his third passover, which was to be the last year of his life), viz. that he should ascend up to heaven; which it is very probable that some of them did see with their bodily eyes; for he was in Galilee when he ascended, and Capernaum was a city of that province; and when he ascended, the men of Galilee stood gazing up to heaven after him, as appears from Act 1:11 , and had a revelation, that they should see him so come again, and descend from heaven, as they had seen him go up.

Poole: Joh 6:63 - -- As it is not the bread or flesh that a man eateth for the sustenance of his animal or natural life, that doth the main work, but the soul of a man w...

As it is not the bread or flesh that a man eateth for the sustenance of his animal or natural life, that doth the main work, but the soul of a man within him, which putteth forth its virtues and powers in causing the digestion, concoction, and alteration of it, without which it nourisheth not the body; so the flesh of Christ eaten carnally can be of no profit for the nourishment of the soul: nor can the flesh of Christ considered alone, or by any virtue in it, profit; it only profiteth by virtue of the Divine nature, which being personally united to the human nature, addeth all the virtue and merit to the sufferings and actions of the human nature; so as the human nature of Christ hath all its quickening virtue from the Divine nature. It is not therefore the carnal eating of my flesh that I intended, that is a very gross conception of yours; nor can any such thing as that do you good: but the words that I speak to you, they are spiritual, and such by the belief of which you may obtain a spiritual and eternal life; for by believing those words, and obeying them, you shall come to believe in me, which is that eating my flesh and drinking my blood which I intended, not any corporeal or carnal eating.

Poole: Joh 6:64 - -- I may say what I will to you; the Spirit quickeneth, but it doth not quicken all; it only quickeneth whomsoever it pleaseth. You understand not thes...

I may say what I will to you; the Spirit quickeneth, but it doth not quicken all; it only quickeneth whomsoever it pleaseth. You understand not these things, but have most gross conceptions of sublime spiritual things; the reason is, because you believe not: though some of them, questionless, did truly believe, yet the most did not; for we read, Joh 6:66 , that many of them went back, and walked no more with him. And though faith be an inward, secret act of the soul, yet Christ knew, and from the beginning, who were believers, and who were not; nay, he had a particular knowledge of that disciple who was to betray him.

Poole: Joh 6:65 - -- He said this in Joh 6:44 , See Poole on "Joh 6:44" .

He said this in Joh 6:44 , See Poole on "Joh 6:44" .

Poole: Joh 6:66 - -- His disciples at large, so called because they followed him, partly to hear what he would say, partly to see his miracles, followed him no more. Man...

His disciples at large, so called because they followed him, partly to hear what he would say, partly to see his miracles, followed him no more. Many professors and seeming disciples of Christ may draw back and fall from their profession, though none that truly receive Christ shall fall away, but be by the power of God preserved through faith unto salvation.

Poole: Joh 6:67 - -- It is probable that some stayed besides the twelve, for it is said only that many of his disciples turned back. Nor was our Saviour (who knew the he...

It is probable that some stayed besides the twelve, for it is said only that many of his disciples turned back. Nor was our Saviour (who knew the hearts of all) ignorant what they would do; but he had a mind both to try them by this question, and also to convince them that there was a false brother amongst them, whose wickedness (though it lay hid from them) would in a short time discover itself.

Poole: Joh 6:68 - -- Peter, who is observed in the whole history of the gospel to have discovered the hottest and quickest spirit, and to have been first in answering qu...

Peter, who is observed in the whole history of the gospel to have discovered the hottest and quickest spirit, and to have been first in answering questions propounded to the twelve, as Mat 16:16 , &c., replies,

Lord, to whom shall we go? &c., thereby teaching us under temptations to apostasy, first, to consider what we shall get by it, as the following words teach us, that an abiding with Christ in a steady adherence to the truths of his gospel, is the best choice that we can make.

Poole: Joh 6:69 - -- We believe (saith Peter) and are sure, both from what we have heard from time, and from the miracles which we have seen wrought by thee, that tho...

We believe (saith Peter) and are sure, both from what we have heard from time, and from the miracles which we have seen wrought by thee,

that thou art that Christ, the Son of the living God The very words by which St. Matthew Mat 16:16expresses that noble confession of his, which our Saviour calleth the rock, upon which he would build his church. But notwithstanding this acknowledgment, which speaks the seeds of this faith now sown in the heart of Peter, and the hearts of the rest; yet whoso considereth the passages of the other evangelists after this, will see reason to believe, that their persuasion as to this was but faint, till Christ by his resurrection declared himself the Son of God with power.

Poole: Joh 6:70 - -- Chosen not to eternal life, but to the great office of an apostle. I chose but twelve amongst you, Mat 10:1-4 , and of those twelve one is diabolov ,...

Chosen not to eternal life, but to the great office of an apostle. I chose but twelve amongst you, Mat 10:1-4 , and of those twelve one is diabolov , an accuser, or informer; a name by which the devil (who is the grand accuser of the brethren) is ordinarily expressed in holy writ.

Poole: Joh 6:71 - -- This he spake of Judas Iscariot ( so called, as most think, from the name of the city where he lived), and to distinguish him from the other Judas, ...

This he spake of Judas Iscariot ( so called, as most think, from the name of the city where he lived), and to distinguish him from the other Judas, the brother of James, who wrote the Epistle that goeth by his name, and is a part of holy writ: for he

being one of the twelve chosen and sent out with the rest to preach the gospel, and empowered by miraculous operations to confirm the truth of it; yet it was he that was to betray Christ, as we largely read in all the evangelists’ relation of the passion: to teach us, that no office to which God calleth us, no gifts (except those of special grace) with which God blesseth any man, can secure him of an eternal happy state; nothing can do that but a true saving faith in Jesus Christ, with the obedience of a holy life becoming the gospel of Christ.

PBC: Joh 6:63 - -- See PB: Joh 16:13 It is scripturally obvious that all the Divine operations in the management of salvation proceed from the Father, are through the S...

See PB: Joh 16:13

It is scripturally obvious that all the Divine operations in the management of salvation proceed from the Father, are through the Son, and are executed by the Spirit. Quickening is the Holy Spirit’s initial work in the elect. It is by the sovereign and supernatural act by which He brings His elect out of the depravity of spiritual death by resurrecting them to righteousness in Christ Jesus. In this " Spiritual Creation," the Holy Spirit sovereignly imparts a principle of grace and habit of holiness, which is a communication of the life of God to the soul. 2Co 5:17 The elect become God’s " workmanship" through the quickening " Omnipotency" of the Holy Spirit. Eph 2:10 In this work, the Spirit of God does not act capriciously, or without reason or motive, but acts as a " Sovereign." This means that He is above any obligation to, and is uninfluenced by the creature in all that He does. The Spirit extends mercy to whom He will, for Paul says in Ro 9:16, " So then it is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that sheweth mercy." As the Quickening Spirit and Agent from Heaven, He is absolutely free to work sovereign grace in whom He pleases. None of the fallen offspring of Adam have the slightest claim upon Him, nor can any influence Him in any manner. It is an act of amazing and sovereign grace for the Spirit to give a new heart to the object of His love. This act of " quickening" is by the instantaneous and invincible operation of the Almighty Spirit.

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PBC: Joh 6:66 - -- See WebbSr: WALKING WITH JESUS

See WebbSr: WALKING WITH JESUS

Haydock: Joh 6:58 - -- As the living Father hath sent me, his only, his true Son, to become man; and I live by the Father, proceeding always from him; so he that eateth ...

As the living Father hath sent me, his only, his true Son, to become man; and I live by the Father, proceeding always from him; so he that eateth me, first by faith only, by believing in me; and secondly, he that eateth my body and blood, truly made meat and drink, though after a spiritual manner, (not in that visible, bloody manner as the Capharnaites fancied to themselves) shall live by me, and live for ever, happy in the kingdom of my glory. (Witham)

Haydock: Joh 6:61 - -- If Christ had wished to say nothing else than that his disciples should be filled with his doctrine, that being his flesh and blood, it would not have...

If Christ had wished to say nothing else than that his disciples should be filled with his doctrine, that being his flesh and blood, it would not have been a hard saying; neither would it have shocked the Jews. He had already said as much in the former part of his discourse: but he goes on in still stronger terms, notwithstanding their complaints; and, as they were ignorant how he would fulfil his promise, they left him, (Calmet) and followed the example of the other unbelieving Jews, as all future sectarists have, saying: how can this be done?

Haydock: Joh 6:62 - -- If you cannot believe that I can give you my flesh to eat, now that I am living amongst you, how will you believe, that, after my ascension, I can giv...

If you cannot believe that I can give you my flesh to eat, now that I am living amongst you, how will you believe, that, after my ascension, I can give you to eat my glorified and immortal flesh, seated on the right hand of the majesty of God? (Bible de Vence)

Haydock: Joh 6:63 - -- If then you shall see, &c. Christ, by mentioning his ascension, by this instance of his power and divinity, would confirm the truth of what he had b...

If then you shall see, &c. Christ, by mentioning his ascension, by this instance of his power and divinity, would confirm the truth of what he had before asserted; at the same time, correct their gross apprehension of eating his flesh and drinking his blood, in a vulgar and carnal manner, by letting them know he should take his whole body living with him to heaven; and consequently not suffer it to be, as they supposed, divided, mangled, and consumed upon earth. (Challoner) ---

The sense of these words, according to the common exposition, is this: you murmur at my words, as hard and harsh, and you refuse now to believe them: when I shall ascend into heaven, from whence I came into the world, and when my ascension, and the doctrine that I have taught you, shall be confirmed by a multitude of miracles, then shall you and many others believe. (Witham)

Haydock: Joh 6:64 - -- The flesh profiteth nothing. Dead flesh, separated from the spirit, in the gross manner they supposed they were to eat his flesh, would profit nothi...

The flesh profiteth nothing. Dead flesh, separated from the spirit, in the gross manner they supposed they were to eat his flesh, would profit nothing. Neither doth man's flesh, that is to say, man's natural and carnal apprehension, (which refuses to be subject to the spirit, and words of Christ) profit any thing. But it would be the height of blasphemy, to say the living flesh of Christ (which we receive in the blessed sacrament, with his spirit, that is, with his soul and divinity) profiteth nothing. For if Christ's flesh had profited us nothing, he would never have taken flesh for us, nor died in the flesh for us. ---

Are spirit and life. By proposing to you a heavenly sacrament, in which you shall receive, in a wonderful manner, spirit, grace and life. These words sufficiently correct the gross and carnal imagination of these Capharnaites, that he meant to them his body and blood to eat in a visible and bloody manner, as flesh, says St. Augustine, is sold in the market, and in the shambles; [3] but they do not imply a figurative or metaphorical presence only. The manner of Christ's presence is spiritual and under the outward appearances of bread and wine; but yet he is there truly and really present, by a change of the substance of bread and wine into the substance of his body and blood, which truly and really become our spiritual food, and are truly and really received in the holy sacrament. ---

The flesh [4] of itself profiteth nothing, not even the flesh of our Saviour Christ, were it not united to the divine person of Christ. But we must take care how we understand these words spoken by our Saviour: for it is certain, says St. Augustine, that the word made flesh, is the cause of all our happiness. (Witham) ---

When I promise you life if you eat my flesh, I do not wish you to understand this of that gross and carnal manner, of cutting my members in pieces: such ideas are far from my mind: the flesh profiteth nothing. In the Scriptures, the word flesh is often put for the carnal manner of understanding any thing. If you with to enter into the spirit of my words, raise your hearts to a more elevated and spiritual way of understanding them. (Calmet) ---

The reader may consult Des Mahis, p. 165, a convert from Protestantism, and who has proved the Catholic doctrine on the Eucharist in the most satisfactory manner, from the written word. Where he shows that Jesus Christ, speaking of his own body, never says the flesh, but my flesh: the former mode of expression is used to signify, as we have observed above, a carnal manner of understanding any thing.

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

St. Augustine, 27. p. 503, carnem quippe intellexerunt, quomodo in cadavere dilaniatur, aut in macello venditur.

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

St. Augustine, 27. p. 503, caro non prodest quicquam, sed caro sola ... nam si caro nihil prodesset, verbum caro non fieret.

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Haydock: Joh 6:68 - -- Jesus said to the twelve: Will you also go away? He shews them, says St. John Chrysostom, that he stood not in need of them, and so leaves them to t...

Jesus said to the twelve: Will you also go away? He shews them, says St. John Chrysostom, that he stood not in need of them, and so leaves them to their free choice. (Witham) ---

Jesus Christ remarking in the previous verse that the apostate disciples had left him, to walk no more with him, turning to the twelve, asks them, Will you also go away? The twelve had heard all that passed; they had seen the Jews strive amongst themselves, and the disciples murmur and leave their Master; they understood what he said in the same literal sense; it could, indeed, bear no other meaning; but when Jesus put the above question to them, leaving them to their free choice, whether to follow him, or to withdraw themselves, Simon Peter answered him: "Lord, to whom shall we go? Thou hast the words of eternal life;" and therefore art able to make good thy words, however hard and difficult they may appear to others. ---

We may here admire not only the excellency of their faith, but the plain, yet noble motive of their faith: they believe, because he is Christ, the Son of God, (or, as it is in the Greek, the Son of the living God ) who is absolutely incapable of deceiving his creatures, and whose power is perfectly equal to perform the promises he here makes them.

Haydock: Joh 6:69 - -- Simon Peter, the chief or head of them, said in the name of the rest: Lord, to whom shall we go? It is only from thee that we hope for salvation. ...

Simon Peter, the chief or head of them, said in the name of the rest: Lord, to whom shall we go? It is only from thee that we hope for salvation. Thou hast the words of eternal life: we have believed, and known, and remain in this belief, that thou art the Christ, the Son of God. (Witham)

Concluding reflections on this chapter.

If we take into consideration all the circumstances of this chapter, it will be difficult to conceive how any person can bring their mind to think that there is no connexion between this chapter and the institution of the blessed sacrament. It must proceed, as Dr. Clever, the Protestant Bishop of Bangor, affirms, "from the fear of giving advantage to the doctrine of transubstantiation." He moreover adds: "whilst the institution is considered as a memorial only, nothing can well be further from being plain." See his Sermon on the Lord's Supper. The holy Fathers have unanimously understood these repeated promises of Christ with a reference to the institution. St. Cyprian, of the third age [century] quoting the promises of Christ, the bread which I will give, is my flesh, for the life of the world, deduces this conclusion: "Hence it is manifest, that they have this life, who touch his body, and receive the Eucharist." Qui corpus ejus attingunt. (De Orat. Dom. p. 147.) St. Hilary, of the fourth age [century] quoting Christ's words, says: "there is no place left to doubt of the truth of Christ's flesh and blood, de veritate carnis et sanguinis non relictus est ambigendi locus; for now, by the profession of the Lord himself, and according to our belief, it is truly flesh and truly blood." (De Trin. lib. viii. p. 954-6.) St. Basil, of the fourth century also, citing ver. 53 and 54 of this chapter, says: "about the things that God has spoken there should be no hesitation, nor doubt, but a firm persuasion that all is true and possible, though nature be against it: Greek: Kan e phusis machetai. Herein lies the struggle of faith." (Reg. viii. Moral. t. 2, p. 240.) Again the same saint says: "it is very profitable every day, to partake of the body and blood of Christ, Greek: phagein to soma kai piein to aima tou kuriou emon, for he that eateth my flesh. &c. (John vi. 55.) ---

"We communicate four times in the week; on Sunday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, and on the other days, if there be a commemoration of any saint." (Ep. xcii. t. 3, p. 186.) ---

St. Ambrose, of the same age, says: "the manna in the desert was given in figure. You have known things more excellent. For light is preferable to the shadow; truth to the figure; the body of Christ to the manna of heaven. But you may say: I see somewhat else: how do you assert that I shall receive the body of Christ?" He gives this answer: "How much more powerful is the virtue of the divine blessing, than that of nature; because by the former, nature itself is changed? ... If the blessing of men (he here instances Moses changing a rod into a serpent, and many other miraculous changes) was powerful enough to change nature, what must we not say of the divine consecration, when the very words of the Lord operate? For that sacrament which we receive, is accomplished by the word of Christ. If the word of Elias could call down fire from heaven, shall not the word of Christ be able to change the outward elements? ... The word of Christ could draw out of nothing what was not, shall it not be able to change the things that are into that which they were not? ... Was the order of nature followed when Jesus was born of a Virgin? Certainly not. Then why is that order to be looked for here? It was the true flesh of Christ, which was crucified, which was buried; and this is truly the sacrament of his flesh ... Our Lord himself proclaims, This is my body." ---

If Jesus Christ, during his public ministry, performed so many visible and palpable miracles as we read of in the gospels, was it not to induce us to believe without doubting the truths that escape our senses, and surpass our reason? If we believe the water was changed into wine at the marriage feast of Cana; if we believe that the bread in the hands of Christ and his apostles was not diminished, by being broken and divided among five thousand, why cannot we believe the miracle of the Eucharist on the authority of Christ's word, "the bread that I will give you, is my flesh? This is my body," &c. Not one of all the ancient Fathers has ever denied the real presence; not one of them all has ever said, that the body of Jesus Christ is received in figure only.

Gill: Joh 6:58 - -- This is that bread which came down from heaven,.... That true bread, the bread of God, the bread of life, living bread; meaning himself, as in Joh 6:3...

This is that bread which came down from heaven,.... That true bread, the bread of God, the bread of life, living bread; meaning himself, as in Joh 6:32;

not as your fathers did eat manna, and are dead: this is bread of a quite different nature from that; that was only typical bread, this true; that was the bread of angels, but this is the bread of God; that came but from the air, this from the third heaven; that men ate of, and died; but whoever eats of this, lives for ever; see Joh 6:49; as follows:

he that eateth of this bread shall live for ever; See Gill on Joh 6:51.

Gill: Joh 6:59 - -- These things said he in the synagogue,.... Openly and publicly, in the place of divine worship, where the Jews resorted for that purpose: as he tau...

These things said he in the synagogue,.... Openly and publicly, in the place of divine worship, where the Jews resorted for that purpose:

as he taught in Capernaum; his own city, and where there was a synagogue, into which he often went and taught his doctrines, and wrought miracles; see Mat 3:13.

Gill: Joh 6:60 - -- Many therefore of his disciples,.... Not of the twelve, nor of the seventy, but of the multitude of the disciples, who followed him from place to plac...

Many therefore of his disciples,.... Not of the twelve, nor of the seventy, but of the multitude of the disciples, who followed him from place to place, attended on his ministry, and might be baptized in his name; see Joh 4:1;

when they had heard this; that his flesh and blood were truly and really meat and drink, and that none had life in them, or should have eternal life, but such as eat and drink the same:

said, this is an hard saying; or it is to be objected to; so קשיא, "an hard thing", the word here used in the Syriac version, and קשה הוא עלי, "it is to me a hard thing", are phrases used to express an objection in the Talmudic writings, where they are often met with: or it is difficult to be understood and received; so הדבר הקשה, "an hard saying", or "an hard cause", is a cause difficult to be tried and determined, Exo 18:26, and is used of that which seems incredible and absurd, and is surprising and unaccountable: so it is said z, that

"it happened to a certain woman, that she came before R. Abika: she said to him, I have seen a spot; he said to her, perhaps there is a wound in thee; she answered him, yes, and it is healed; he replied, perhaps it may be opened, and the blood brought out; she answered him, yes; and he pronounced her clean. R. Abika saw his disciples look upon one another; and he said unto them, מה הדבר קשה, "is this an hard saying with you?"''

is it a difficult thing with you? does it seem absurd to you? or are you surprised at it? anything difficult, or which seems irreconcilable, is so called: so the slaying the passover between the two evenings is called by Aben Ezra, in Exo 12:6, מלה קשה, "an hard saying". In like sense the phrase is used here; and the allusion may be to food that is hard of digestion, since Christ had been speaking of himself under the metaphors of bread and meat. As some of the doctrines of Christ are comparable to milk, which is easy of digestion; others are like to strong meat, which belongs to those of full age, and cannot be digested by children, by babes in Christ, and much less be received, ate, and digested, with ease and pleasure, by carnal minds; who therefore say, as these Capernaites did,

who can hear it? this saying, or doctrine, concerning eating the flesh, and drinking the blood of Christ; or "him" Christ, who delivered this doctrine: such preaching, and such a preacher, are intolerable; there is no hearing, nor bearing them: hence we afterwards read, that these withdrew from the ministry of Christ, Joh 6:66.

Gill: Joh 6:61 - -- When Jesus knew in himself,.... And of himself, without any intelligence from others, or hearing what was said, being the omniscient God: that his ...

When Jesus knew in himself,.... And of himself, without any intelligence from others, or hearing what was said, being the omniscient God:

that his disciples murmured at it; at the doctrine he had delivered, looking upon it as absurd, incredible, and contrary to sense and reason:

he said unto them, does this offend you? or trouble you? cannot you get over this? cannot you understand it? or account for it? if not, how will you be able to digest some other things, or reconcile them to your minds, which are less known, and more unexpected, and will appear at first sight more surprising?

Gill: Joh 6:62 - -- What and if ye shall see the son of man,.... Meaning himself then in a state of humiliation, and was taken for a mere man, though the true Messiah, a...

What and if ye shall see the son of man,.... Meaning himself then in a state of humiliation, and was taken for a mere man, though the true Messiah, and Son of God:

ascend up where he was before? for Christ was, he existed before his incarnation, and he was in heaven before; not in his human nature, but as the word and Son of God: and he intimates, that when he had done his work, and the will of his Father, for which he came down from heaven, by the assumption of the human nature, he should ascend up thither again; and which would be seen, as it was, by his apostles; and which would prove that he came down from heaven, as he had asserted; see Eph 4:9; and that his flesh and blood were not to be eaten in a corporeal sense; in which sense they understood him: and he hereby suggests, that if it was difficult to receive, and hard to be understood, and was surprising and incredible, that he should come down from heaven, as bread, to be eat and fed upon; it would be much more so to them to be told, that he who was in so mean and lowly a form, should ascend up into heaven.

Gill: Joh 6:63 - -- It is the Spirit that quickeneth,.... It is the spirit of man that quickens him; or which being breathed into him, he becomes a living soul; for the b...

It is the Spirit that quickeneth,.... It is the spirit of man that quickens him; or which being breathed into him, he becomes a living soul; for the body, without the spirit, is dead; it is a lifeless lump: and it is the Spirit of God that quickens dead sinners, by entering into them as the spirit of life, and causing them to live: and it is spiritual eating, or eating the flesh, and drinking the blood of Christ in a spiritual sense, which quickens, refreshes, and comforts the minds of believers; it is that by, and on which they live, and by which their spiritual strength is renewed: unless, by spirit, is meant the divine nature of Christ, by which he was quickened and raised from the dead, and ascended up into heaven, and was declared to be the Son of God with power:

the flesh profiteth nothing; the human nature of Christ, though profitable, as in union with the Son of God, to be given for the life of his people, and to be an offering, and a sacrifice for their sins, yet not as alone, or as abstracted from the divine nature; nor would his flesh and blood, corporeally eaten, could, or should it be done, be of any avail to eternal life; nor is any other flesh, literally understood, profitable of itself for life; for man lives not by bread, or meat, or flesh alone, but by the word and blessing of God upon it, and along with it; nor flesh, in a figurative sense, as creature acts and performances, self-righteousness, obedience to the ceremonial law, carnal descent, and birth privileges:

the words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life; the doctrines which Christ had then been delivering concerning himself, his flesh and blood, being spiritually understood, are the means of quickening souls. The Gospel, and the truths of it, which are the wholesome words of our Lord Jesus Christ, are the means of conveying the Spirit of God, as a spirit of illumination and sanctification, into the hearts of men, and of quickening sinners dead in trespasses and sins: the Gospel is the Spirit that giveth life, and is the savour of life unto life, when it comes not in word only, or in the bare ministry of it, but with the energy of the Holy Ghost, and the power of divine grace.

Gill: Joh 6:64 - -- But there are some of you that believe not,.... Notwithstanding the ministry they sat under, and the words they heard; for though they professed to be...

But there are some of you that believe not,.... Notwithstanding the ministry they sat under, and the words they heard; for though they professed to believe in Jesus, as the Messiah, yet they did not truly believe in him; their faith was not a living faith, or of a spiritual kind, but a mere historical and temporary one, and was feigned and hypocritical:

for Jesus knew from the beginning; of his ministry, and of their profession of him, being God omniscient, and the searcher of hearts:

who they were that believed not; i.e. in him, as the Arabic version reads: notwithstanding their following him, and professing to believe in him, and the great outward respect and esteem they showed to him, he could see through all those masks they put on, and knew they had no true faith of him in them; and the same knowledge he has of every professor of his name: he knows whether their faith is of the right kind or not; whether they have obtained the like precious faith with God's elect; or whether their profession is only a verbal one. In some copies it is read, "who they were that believed"; who were true believers, as well as who were hypocrites.

And who should betray him: he not only knew how it was with the multitude of the disciples that professed love to him, and faith in him; but he also particularly knew the case of the twelve apostles, and that one of them should betray him, and who he was. This was determined in the decrees of God, and was foretold in the prophecies of the Old Testament, and was predicted by Christ; and the person was pointed at by him before it was done.

Gill: Joh 6:65 - -- And he said, therefore said I unto you,.... Referring to Joh 6:44, where the substance of what is here said, is there delivered; though the Ethiopic v...

And he said, therefore said I unto you,.... Referring to Joh 6:44, where the substance of what is here said, is there delivered; though the Ethiopic version reads, therefore I say unto you, what follows:

that no man can come to me, except it be given him of my Father; which is the same, as to be drawn by the Father; for faith in Christ is the gift of God, and coming to him, is owing to efficacious grace, and is not the produce of man's power and freewill; See Gill on Joh 6:44.

Gill: Joh 6:66 - -- From that time many of his disciples went back,.... Not any of the twelve apostles, for they are distinguished from these in the next verse; nor any ...

From that time many of his disciples went back,.... Not any of the twelve apostles, for they are distinguished from these in the next verse; nor any of the seventy disciples, for their names were written in heaven, and could not apostatize totally and finally, as these did; but some of the multitude of the disciples, who followed Christ, heard him, and professed to believe in him, and were baptized in his name, but were not true disciples, only nominal ones: they had never heard and learned of the Father, otherwise they would have known what it was to come to Christ, as the Father's gift, and under the drawings of his grace; and would not have been offended at the words of our Lord, just now spoken by him, concerning that sort of coming to him: but from the time he spoke those words; "because of this word", as the Syriac, Arabic, and Persic versions render it; they withdrew themselves from his ministry, they dropped their profession of faith in him, and relinquished him as a Saviour and Redeemer: for finding that he would not be made king, nor set up for a temporal redeemer; and talking of himself as the bread of life, and of coming to him, in a sense they did not understand; they turned their backs on him; and as the words may be literally read, "returned to the things that were behind"; to the world, and to their old companions, to Satan and their own hearts lusts; like the dog to its vomit, and the swine to its wallowing in the mire: their true picture is drawn, in the parable of the unclean spirit going out of the man, and returning, Mat 12:43. And they returned to their quondam teachers, the Scribes and Pharisees, and to the law of works, and to seek for righteousness by it; setting up their own righteousness, and not submitting to the righteousness of Christ; and thus to look back and draw back, is a sad case indeed:

and walked no more with him; never returned to him more, or went with him from place to place as before: never more attended on his ministry, or had any intimacy and fellowship with him: and so it commonly is with apostates from the profession of Christ; they seldom or ever return, or are recovered; it is difficult, if not impossible, which is sometimes the case, to renew them again to repentance.

Gill: Joh 6:67 - -- Then said Jesus unto the twelve,.... "To his own twelve", as the Persic version reads; that is, to his twelve apostles, whom he had chosen to that off...

Then said Jesus unto the twelve,.... "To his own twelve", as the Persic version reads; that is, to his twelve apostles, whom he had chosen to that office: Christ takes no notice of those that went away from him, he showed no concern about them; he knew what they were, that the truth of grace was not in them, and that they did not belong to him, and therefore was not uneasy about their departure; but turns himself to his apostles, whom he dearly loved, and in a very tender manner thus said to them,

will ye also go away? this he said, not as ignorant of what they were, or of what they would do in this case; he knew full well their faith in him, their love to him, and esteem of him, and close attachment to him, at least in eleven of then; nor did he say this, as having any fears or jealousies concerning them, by observing any thing in their countenances or gestures, which looked like a departure from him; but it was said out of a tender regard and strong affection for them: and it is as if he should have said, as for these men that have walked with me for some time, and have now turned their backs upon me, it gives me no concern; but should you, my dear friends and companions, go also, it would give me, as man, real pain and great uneasiness: or he might say this to show, that as they were not pressed into his service, but willingly followed him, and became his disciples, being made a willing people by him, in the day of his power on them; so they willingly continued with him, and abode by him; as also to strengthen their faith in him, and cause them the more to cleave to him, with full purpose of heart, when others left him; as well as to draw out from them expressions of their regard for him, and faith in him, which end was answered.

Gill: Joh 6:68 - -- Then Simon Peter answered him,.... Who was strong in the faith of Christ, and full of zeal for him, and love to him; and who was the mouth of the apos...

Then Simon Peter answered him,.... Who was strong in the faith of Christ, and full of zeal for him, and love to him; and who was the mouth of the apostles, and always forward to speak out of the abundance and sincerity of his heart, in their name; believing, that they all of them, for he had now no suspicion of Judas, no more than of the rest, had the same faith in Christ, love to him, and esteem of him, as he himself had; wherefore out of a good opinion of them, and love to Christ, he thus addressed him:

Lord; or "my Lord"; as the Syriac version renders it; which was either a title of respect, and the same with "Sir" with us; or else, as acknowledging the dominion and authority of Christ, as Lord of all, and especially of the saints, and as claiming his interest in him; and which carries in it a reason, why he should abide by him:

to whom shall we go? as a teacher, whose ministry we can attend upon, to greater profit and advantage? not to the Scribes and Pharisees, whose leaven, or doctrine, Christ had bid them beware of; who taught for doctrines the commandments of men, and were blind leaders of the blind; nor to John the Baptist, who had declared he was not the Messiah; but had pointed him out to them in his person, as the son of God; and in his office as the Lamb of God, that takes away the sins of men; and perhaps, he might not be now living; and if he was, he would have encouraged them not to follow him, but abide with their master; so that there was no other, that was "better", as Nonnus expresses it, that they could go unto; and therefore it would be folly and madness in them to leave him: and as it was with Peter and the rest of the disciples, so it is with all sensible sinners, and true believers, who see there is no other to go to for life and salvation, but Christ; not to the law of Moses, which accuses, curses, and condemns, and by which there is neither life nor righteousness; nor to any creature, or creature performance, for there is a curse on him that trusts in man, and makes flesh his arm; nor to their own righteousness, which is impure and imperfect, and cannot justify before God, nor answer for them in a time to come; nor to their tears of repentance, which will not satisfy the law, atone for sins, or wash them away; nor to carnal descent, birth privileges, a religious education, sobriety, and civility, to trust to which, is to have confidence in the flesh, which will be of no avail; nor to ceremonial services, or moral duties, or even evangelical ordinances, neither of which can take away sin. There is no other Saviour, but Christ, to look to; no other Mediator between God and man, to make use of; no other physician of value, for diseased and sin sick souls to apply unto; no other fountain but his blood, for polluted souls to wash in, and be cleansed; no other city of refuge, or strong hold, for souls sensible of danger, to flee unto and be safe; no other to come to as the bread of life, where hungry souls may be fed; no other place of rest, for those that are weary and heavy laden; nor is there any other, where there is plenty of all grace, and security from every enemy, as in him: and therefore, to whom can they have recourse, but unto him? and that for the following reason,

thou hast the words of eternal life: meaning, either the promises of eternal life, which were made before the world began, and were put into Christ's hands, for his people, and are yea and amen in him; or the doctrines of eternal life; for so the Gospel, and the truths of it, are called, Act 5:20; and that because the Gospel brings life and immortality to light, gives an account of eternal life; of the nature of it, that it is a glorious life, a life free from all the sorrows of the present one; a life of pleasure, and of perfect knowledge and holiness, and which will last for ever: and because it points out the way to it, that it is not by the works of the law, but by the grace of God; that it is his free gift, through Christ; and that Christ is the way, the truth, and the life, or the true way to eternal life: and because it is a means of quickening dead sinners, and of reviving true believers, and of nourishing them up unto everlasting life: or this phrase may design the power and authority which Christ has, to dispose of, and dispense eternal life; for he has the firing itself in his hands, and a power to give it to as many as the father has given him; and to them he does give it: and each of these senses carry in them a reason why souls should go to Christ, and to him only, for life and salvation.

Gill: Joh 6:69 - -- And we believe and are sure,.... Or know of a certainty: they believed upon the first call of them by Christ, and their following of him, that he was ...

And we believe and are sure,.... Or know of a certainty: they believed upon the first call of them by Christ, and their following of him, that he was the true Messiah; and they came to an assurance of it, by the miracles he wrought, and by the doctrines which he taught; their faith, how weak soever it might be at first, rose up to a full assurance of faith, and of understanding; there was a reality and a certainty in it, as there is in all true faith, with respect to the object, though not always with respect to interest in it; which was the case here, as appears by what follows:

that thou art that Christ; or Messiah, that was promised by God of old, spoken of by the prophets, and expected by the Jews; that anointed prophet Moses had spoken of, that should arise out of Israel, like unto him that anointed priest, who, according to the oath of God, was to be priest for ever, after the order of Melchizedek; and that anointed King, whom God has set over his holy hill of Zion:

the son of the living God; this they knew, and were sure of, both by John's testimony, and by the father's voice from heaven; which three of them heard, at Christ's transfiguration on the mount: God the father is called "the living God"; though the Vulgate Latin version leaves out the word "living"; not to distinguish him from his son; for he also is the living God; and is so called, Heb 3:12, but to distinguish him from the idols of the Gentiles, who have no life nor breath in them: and Christ is called the son of the living God, as he is a divine person, as he is truly God; and to show that he has the same life his father has; being a partaker of the same nature, and divine perfections: and this is another reason why sensible souls will go to Christ, and no other; because he is the Messiah, the Saviour, and Redeemer, and an able one; and because he is God, and there is none else.

Gill: Joh 6:70 - -- Jesus answered them,.... The disciples, taking Peter's answer to his question, as delivered in the name of them all, and as expressing their mind and ...

Jesus answered them,.... The disciples, taking Peter's answer to his question, as delivered in the name of them all, and as expressing their mind and sense:

have not I chosen you twelve; not to grace and glory, to holiness and happiness; though this was true of eleven of them, but to be apostles:

and one of you is a devil? or like to one, is a deceiver, a liar, and a murderer, as the devil is from the beginning; all which Judas was, and appeared to be, in the betraying of his master. The Syriac, Persic, and Ethiopic versions read, "is Satan"; which name, if given to Peter, as it once was on a certain occasion, Mat 16:23, might very well be given to Judas; who, notwithstanding his profession of faith in Christ, was in the hands and kingdom of Satan, and under his influence and power: and this our Lord said, partly that they might not too much presume upon their faith and love, and steady attachment, and be over confident of their standing; and partly, to prepare them for the apostasy of one from among them.

Gill: Joh 6:71 - -- He spake of Judas Iscariot, the son of Simon,.... These are the words of the evangelist, pointing out the person Christ intended, lest any other shou...

He spake of Judas Iscariot, the son of Simon,.... These are the words of the evangelist, pointing out the person Christ intended, lest any other should be suspected:

for he it was that should betray him: as it was determined and foretold, and which Christ knew full well, and therefore said the above words:

being one of the twelve; apostles, whom Christ had chosen, and which was an aggravation of his crime.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Joh 6:58 Or “who chews.” On the alternation between ἐσθίω (esqiw, “eat,” v. 53) and τρώγ...

NET Notes: Joh 6:59 For location see Map1 D2; Map2 C3; Map3 B2.

NET Notes: Joh 6:60 Or “obey it”; Grk “hear it.” The Greek word ἀκούω (akouw) could imply hearing with obedience here, i...

NET Notes: Joh 6:61 Does this cause you to be offended? It became apparent to some of Jesus’ followers at this point that there would be a cost involved in followin...

NET Notes: Joh 6:62 Or “he was formerly?”

NET Notes: Joh 6:63 Or “are spirit-giving and life-producing.”

NET Notes: Joh 6:64 This is a parenthetical comment by the author.

NET Notes: Joh 6:65 Grk “unless it has been permitted to him by the Father.”

NET Notes: Joh 6:66 Grk “were not walking with him.”

NET Notes: Joh 6:67 Questions prefaced with μή (mh) in Greek anticipate a negative answer. This can sometimes be indicated by using a “tag” at the ...

NET Notes: Joh 6:69 You have the words of eternal life…you are the Holy One of God! In contrast to the response of some of his disciples, here is the response of th...

NET Notes: Joh 6:70 Although most translations render this last phrase as “one of you is a devil,” such a translation presupposes that there is more than one ...

NET Notes: Joh 6:71 This parenthetical statement by the author helps the reader understand Jesus’ statement one of you is the devil in the previous verse. This is t...

Geneva Bible: Joh 6:60 ( 13 ) Many therefore of his disciples, when they had heard [this], said, This is an hard saying; who can hear it? ( 13 ) The reason of man cannot co...

Geneva Bible: Joh 6:63 ( 14 ) It is the ( x ) spirit that quickeneth; the flesh profiteth nothing: the words that I speak unto you, [they] are spirit, and [they] are life. ...

Geneva Bible: Joh 6:66 ( 15 ) From that [time] many of his disciples went back, and walked no more with him. ( 15 ) Such is the malice of men, that they bring about their o...

Geneva Bible: Joh 6:70 ( 16 ) Jesus answered them, Have not I chosen you twelve, and one of you is a devil? ( 16 ) The number of the professors of Christ is very small, and...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Joh 6:1-71 - --1 Christ feeds five thousand men with five loaves and two fishes.15 Thereupon the people would have made him king;16 but withdrawing himself, he walks...

Combined Bible: Joh 6:41-59 - --of the Gospel of John    CHAPTER 23    Christ in the Capernaum Synagogue    John 6:41-59    The followi...

Combined Bible: Joh 6:60-71 - --of the Gospel of John    CHAPTER 24    Christ and His Disciples    John 6:60-71    The following is sub...

MHCC: Joh 6:52-59 - --The flesh and blood of the Son of man, denote the Redeemer in the nature of man; Christ and him crucified, and the redemption wrought out by him, with...

MHCC: Joh 6:60-65 - --The human nature of Christ had not before been in heaven, but being God and man, that wondrous Person was truly said to have come down from heaven. Th...

MHCC: Joh 6:66-71 - --When we admit into our minds hard thoughts of the words and works of Jesus, we enter into temptation, which, if the Lord in mercy prevent not, will en...

Matthew Henry: Joh 6:28-59 - -- Whether this conference was with the Capernaites, in whose synagogue Christ now was, or with those who came from the other side of the sea, is not c...

Matthew Henry: Joh 6:60-71 - -- We have here an account of the effects of Christ's discourse. Some were offended and others edified by it; some driven from him and others brought...

Barclay: Joh 6:51-59 - --To most of us this is a very difficult passage. It speaks in language and moves in a world of ideas which are quite strange to us and which may seem ...

Barclay: Joh 6:51-59 - --Let us see now if we can find out something of what Jesus meant and of what John understood from words like this. There are two ways in which we may ...

Barclay: Joh 6:59-65 - --It is little wonder that the disciples found the discourse of Jesus hard. The Greek word is skleros (4642), which means not hard to understand; but...

Barclay: Joh 6:66-71 - --Here is a passage instinct with tragedy, for in it is the beginning of the end. There was a time when men came to Jesus in large numbers. When he w...

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 6:1--7:10 - --G. Jesus' later Galilean ministry 6:1-7:9 This section of the text records the high point of Jesus' popu...

Constable: Joh 6:22-59 - --3. The bread of life discourse 6:22-59 Jesus proceeded to clarify His identity by teaching the c...

Constable: Joh 6:52-59 - --The meaning of believing 6:52-59 Jesus introduced a new metaphor for believing on Him, namely eating His flesh. The following pericope is highly metap...

Constable: Joh 6:60--7:10 - --4. The responses to the bread of life discourse 6:60-7:9 Considerable discussion followed Jesus ...

Constable: Joh 6:60-65 - --The response of many disciples 6:60-65 6:60 Not only "the Jews" (v. 52) but many of Jesus' followers found His teaching about the Bread of Life offens...

Constable: Joh 6:66-71 - --The response of the Twelve 6:66-71 6:66 Jesus lost many of His followers because of the Bread of Life discourse (cf. v. 60). His explanation to them f...

College: Joh 6:1-71 - --JOHN 6 2. The Passover and Jesus' Explanation of the Exodus (6:1-71) The Background (6:1-4) 1 Some time after this, Jesus crossed to the far shore ...

McGarvey: Joh 6:22-71 - -- LXIV. DISCOURSE ON SPIRITUAL FOOD AND TRUE DISCIPLESHIP. PETER'S CONFESSION. (At the synagogue in Capernaum.) dJOHN VI. 22-71.    d22...

Lapide: Joh 6:1-71 - --CHAPTER 6 Ver. 1.— After this, &c. Tiberias is here named, because the desert in which Christ fed the five thousand was near to Tiberias. After ...

Lapide: Joh 6:49-58 - --Ver. 49, 50 . — Your fathers, &c, in the desert, "signifying," says S. Chrysostom, "that the manna did not long continue, nor come to the land o...

Lapide: Joh 6:59-71 - --Ver. 59.— This is the bread, &c. He intimates the same thing which I have said at the end of the foregoing verse. For Christ came down from heaven ...

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Commentary -- Other

Evidence: Joh 6:65 " The impulse to pursue God originates with God." A. W. Tozer

Evidence: Joh 6:68 The uniqueness of Jesus . " This Jesus of Nazareth, without money and arms, conquered more millions than Alexander, Caesar, Mohammed, and Napoleon; wi...

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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 6 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Joh 6:1, Christ feeds five thousand men with five loaves and two fishes; Joh 6:15, Thereupon the people would have made him king; Joh 6:1...

Poole: John 6 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 6

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 6 (Chapter Introduction) (Joh 6:1-14) Five thousand miraculously fed. (Joh 6:15-21) Jesus walks on the sea. (Joh 6:22-27) He directs to spiritual food. (v. 28-65) His disco...

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 6 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter we have, I. The miracle of the loaves (Joh 6:1-14). II. Christ's walking upon the water (Joh 6:15-21). III. The people's flockin...

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 6 (Chapter Introduction) The Loaves And Fishes (Joh_6:1-13) The Meaning Of A Miracle (Joh_6:1-13 Continued) The Response Of The Mob (Joh_6:14-15) A Very Present Help In T...

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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