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Text -- John 9:20-41 (NET)

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Context
9:20 So his parents replied, “We know that this is our son and that he was born blind. 9:21 But we do not know how he is now able to see, nor do we know who caused him to see. Ask him, he is a mature adult. He will speak for himself.” 9:22 (His parents said these things because they were afraid of the Jewish religious leaders. For the Jewish leaders had already agreed that anyone who confessed Jesus to be the Christ would be put out of the synagogue. 9:23 For this reason his parents said, “He is a mature adult, ask him.”) 9:24 Then they summoned the man who used to be blind a second time and said to him, “Promise before God to tell the truth. We know that this man is a sinner.” 9:25 He replied, “I do not know whether he is a sinner. I do know one thing– that although I was blind, now I can see.” 9:26 Then they said to him, “What did he do to you? How did he cause you to see?” 9:27 He answered, “I told you already and you didn’t listen. Why do you want to hear it again? You people don’t want to become his disciples too, do you?” 9:28 They heaped insults on him, saying, “You are his disciple! We are disciples of Moses! 9:29 We know that God has spoken to Moses! We do not know where this man comes from!” 9:30 The man replied, “This is a remarkable thing, that you don’t know where he comes from, and yet he caused me to see! 9:31 We know that God doesn’t listen to sinners, but if anyone is devout and does his will, God listens to him. 9:32 Never before has anyone heard of someone causing a man born blind to see. 9:33 If this man were not from God, he could do nothing.” 9:34 They replied, replied, “You were born completely in sinfulness, and yet you presume to teach us?” So they threw him out.
The Man’s Response to Jesus
9:35 Jesus heard that they had thrown him out, so he found the man and said to him, “Do you believe in the Son of Man?” 9:36 The man replied, “And who is he, sir, that I may believe in him?” 9:37 Jesus told him, “You have seen him; he is the one speaking with you.” 9:38 He said, “Lord, I believe,” and he worshiped him. 9:39 Jesus said, “For judgment I have come into this world, so that those who do not see may gain their sight, and the ones who see may become blind.” 9:40 Some of the Pharisees who were with him heard this and asked him, “We are not blind too, are we?” 9:41 Jesus replied, “If you were blind, you would not be guilty of sin, but now because you claim that you can see, your guilt remains.”
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Jews the people descended from Israel
 · Moses a son of Amram; the Levite who led Israel out of Egypt and gave them The Law of Moses,a Levite who led Israel out of Egypt and gave them the law
 · Pharisee a religious group or sect of the Jews


Dictionary Themes and Topics: WORD | STATURE | SINNER | MIRACLE | Jesus, The Christ | JESUS CHRIST, 4C2 | HOW | HEREIN | GLORY | FELLOW | EXCOMMUNICATION | DISCIPLE | CHRISTIANITY | CHRIST, THE EXALTATION OF | BEG; BEGGAR; BEGGING | Age | ALTOGETHER | AGREE | AGE; OLD AGE | ADORATION | more
Table of Contents

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

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

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

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

Other
Critics Ask , Evidence

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Joh 9:20 - -- We know that this is our son, and that he was born blind ( Oidamen hoti houtos estin ho huios hēmōn kai hoti tuphlos egennēthē ). These two q...

We know that this is our son, and that he was born blind ( Oidamen hoti houtos estin ho huios hēmōn kai hoti tuphlos egennēthē ).

These two questions the parents answer clearly and thus cut the ground from under the disbelief of these Pharisees as to the fact of the cure (Joh 9:18). So these Pharisees made a failure here.

Robertson: Joh 9:21 - -- But how he now seeth we know not ( pōs de nun blepei ouk oidamen ). Concerning the third question they profess ignorance both as to the "how"(pōs...

But how he now seeth we know not ( pōs de nun blepei ouk oidamen ).

Concerning the third question they profess ignorance both as to the "how"(pōs ) and the "who"(tis ).

Robertson: Joh 9:21 - -- Opened ( ēnoixen ). First aorist active indicative with single augment of anoigō , same form as ēneōixen (triple augment) in Joh 9:17. They...

Opened ( ēnoixen ).

First aorist active indicative with single augment of anoigō , same form as ēneōixen (triple augment) in Joh 9:17. They were not witnesses of the cure and had the story only from the son as the Pharisees had.

Robertson: Joh 9:21 - -- He is of age ( hēlikian echei ). "He has maturity of age."He is an adult. A regular classical phrase in Plato, etc. The parents were wholly right a...

He is of age ( hēlikian echei ).

"He has maturity of age."He is an adult. A regular classical phrase in Plato, etc. The parents were wholly right and within their rights.

Robertson: Joh 9:22 - -- Because they feared the Jews ( hoti ephobounto tous Ioudaious ). Imperfect middle, a continuing fear and not without reason. See note on the whispers...

Because they feared the Jews ( hoti ephobounto tous Ioudaious ).

Imperfect middle, a continuing fear and not without reason. See note on the whispers about Jesus because of fear of the Jews (Joh 7:13).

Robertson: Joh 9:22 - -- Had agreed already ( ēdē sunetetheinto ). Past perfect middle of suntithēmi , to put together, to form a compact (Joh 7:32, Joh 7:47-49).

Had agreed already ( ēdē sunetetheinto ).

Past perfect middle of suntithēmi , to put together, to form a compact (Joh 7:32, Joh 7:47-49).

Robertson: Joh 9:22 - -- If any man should confess him to be Christ ( ean tis auton homologēsēi Christon ). Condition of third class with ean and first aorist active su...

If any man should confess him to be Christ ( ean tis auton homologēsēi Christon ).

Condition of third class with ean and first aorist active subjunctive of homologeō and predicate accusative Christon . Jesus had made confession of himself before men the test of discipleship and denial the disproof (Mat 10:32; Luk 12:8). We know that many of the rulers nominally believed on Jesus (Joh 12:42) and yet "did not confess him because of the Pharisees"(alla dia tous Pharisaious ouch hōmologoun ), for the very reason given here, "that they might not be put out of the synagogue"(hina mē aposunagōgoi genōntai ). Small wonder then that here the parents cowered a bit.

Robertson: Joh 9:22 - -- That he should be put out of the synagogue ( hina aposunagōgos genētai ). Sub-final use of hina with second aorist middle subjunctive of ginoma...

That he should be put out of the synagogue ( hina aposunagōgos genētai ).

Sub-final use of hina with second aorist middle subjunctive of ginomai . Aposunagōgos (apo and sunagōgē ) is found in N.T. only here and Joh 12:42; Joh 16:2. A purely Jewish word naturally. There were three kinds of excommunication (for thirty days, for thirty more, indefinitely).

Robertson: Joh 9:23 - -- Therefore ( dia touto ). "For this reason."Reason enough for due caution.

Therefore ( dia touto ).

"For this reason."Reason enough for due caution.

Robertson: Joh 9:24 - -- A second time ( ek deuterou ). He had given the Pharisees the facts the first time (Joh 9:15). It was really the third time (see palin in Joh 9:17)...

A second time ( ek deuterou ).

He had given the Pharisees the facts the first time (Joh 9:15). It was really the third time (see palin in Joh 9:17). Now it was like a joke unless the Pharisees meant to imply that his previous story was untrue.

Robertson: Joh 9:24 - -- Give glory to God ( dos doxan tōi theōi ). Second aorist active imperative of didōmi (cf. sches ,hes ). This phrase does not mean gratitude...

Give glory to God ( dos doxan tōi theōi ).

Second aorist active imperative of didōmi (cf. sches ,hes ). This phrase does not mean gratitude to God as in Luk 17:18. It is rather an adjuration to speak the truth (Jos 7:19; 1Sa 6:5) as if he had not done it before. Augustine says: " Quid est Da gloriam Deo? Nega quod accepisti. "Is a sinner (hamartōlos estin ). They can no longer deny the fact of the cure since the testimony of the parents (Joh 9:19) and now wish the man to admit that he was lying in saying that Jesus healed him. He must accept their ecclesiastical authority as proving that Jesus had nothing to do with the cure since Jesus is a sinner. They wish to decide the fact by logic and authority like all persecutors through the ages. Recall the Pharisaic distinction between dikaios (righteous) and hamartōlos (sinner).

Robertson: Joh 9:25 - -- One thing I know ( hen oida ). This man is keen and quick and refuses to fall into the trap set for him. He passes by their quibbling about Jesus bei...

One thing I know ( hen oida ).

This man is keen and quick and refuses to fall into the trap set for him. He passes by their quibbling about Jesus being a "sinner"(hamartōlos ) and clings to the one fact of his own experience.

Robertson: Joh 9:25 - -- Whereas I was blind, now I see ( tuphlos ōn arti blepō ). Literally, "Being blind I now see."The present active participle ōn of eimi by im...

Whereas I was blind, now I see ( tuphlos ōn arti blepō ).

Literally, "Being blind I now see."The present active participle ōn of eimi by implication in contrast with arti (just now, at this moment) points to previous and so past time. It must be borne in mind that the man did not at this stage know who Jesus was and so had not yet taken him as Saviour (Joh 9:36-38).

Robertson: Joh 9:26 - -- What did he do to thee? ( Ti epoiēsen soi ). Another cross-examination, now admitting that Jesus opened his eyes and wishing again (Joh 9:15, Joh 9...

What did he do to thee? ( Ti epoiēsen soi ).

Another cross-examination, now admitting that Jesus opened his eyes and wishing again (Joh 9:15, Joh 9:17) to know "how."

Robertson: Joh 9:27 - -- I told you even now ( eipon humin ēdē ). In Joh 9:15, Joh 9:17, Joh 9:25.

I told you even now ( eipon humin ēdē ).

In Joh 9:15, Joh 9:17, Joh 9:25.

Robertson: Joh 9:27 - -- Would ye also become his disciples? ( Mē kai humeis thelete autou mathētai genesthai ). Negative answer formally expected, but the keenest irony ...

Would ye also become his disciples? ( Mē kai humeis thelete autou mathētai genesthai ).

Negative answer formally expected, but the keenest irony in this gibe. Clearly the healed man knew from the use of "also"(kai ) that Jesus had some "disciples"(mathētai , predicate nominative with the infinitive genesthai ) and that the Pharisees knew that fact. "Do ye also (like the Galilean mob) wish, etc."See Joh 7:45-52. It cut to the bone.

Robertson: Joh 9:28 - -- They reviled him ( eloidorēsan auton ). First aorist active indicative of loidoreō , old verb from loidoros (reviler, 1Co 5:11), in N.T. only h...

They reviled him ( eloidorēsan auton ).

First aorist active indicative of loidoreō , old verb from loidoros (reviler, 1Co 5:11), in N.T. only here, Act 23:4; 1Co 4:12; 1Pe 2:23.

Robertson: Joh 9:28 - -- Thou art his disciple ( su mathētēs ei ekeinou ). Probably a fling in ekeinou (of that fellow). He had called him a prophet (Joh 9:17) and beca...

Thou art his disciple ( su mathētēs ei ekeinou ).

Probably a fling in ekeinou (of that fellow). He had called him a prophet (Joh 9:17) and became a joyful follower later (Joh 9:36-38).

Robertson: Joh 9:28 - -- But we are disciples of Moses ( hēmeis de tou Mōuseōs esmen mathētai ). This they said with proud scorn of the healed beggar. All orthodox ra...

But we are disciples of Moses ( hēmeis de tou Mōuseōs esmen mathētai ).

This they said with proud scorn of the healed beggar. All orthodox rabbis so claimed.

Robertson: Joh 9:29 - -- We know that God hath spoken unto Moses ( hēmeis oidamen hoti Mōusei lelalēken ho theos ). Perfect active indicative of laleō , so still on r...

We know that God hath spoken unto Moses ( hēmeis oidamen hoti Mōusei lelalēken ho theos ).

Perfect active indicative of laleō , so still on record. See Exo 33:11. For laleō used of God speaking see Heb 1:1. They are proud to be disciples of Moses.

Robertson: Joh 9:29 - -- But as for this man, we do not know whence he is ( touton de ouk oidamen pothen estin ). "This fellow"they mean by "touton "in emphatic position, we...

But as for this man, we do not know whence he is ( touton de ouk oidamen pothen estin ).

"This fellow"they mean by "touton "in emphatic position, we do not even know whence he is. Some of the people did (Joh 7:27), but in the higher sense none of the Jews knew (Joh 8:14). These Pharisees neither knew nor cared.

Robertson: Joh 9:30 - -- Why, herein is the marvel ( en toutōi gar to thaumaston estin ). This use of gar (ge +ara , accordingly indeed) to bring out an affirmation fro...

Why, herein is the marvel ( en toutōi gar to thaumaston estin ).

This use of gar (ge +ara , accordingly indeed) to bring out an affirmation from the previous words is common enough. "Why in this very point is the wonder"(thaumaston , old verbal adjective from thaumazō as in Mat 21:42). The man is angry now and quick in his insight and reply. You confess your ignorance of whence he is, ye who know everything, "and yet (adversative use of kai again) he opened my eyes"(kai ēnoixen mou tous ophthalmous ). That stubborn fact stands.

Robertson: Joh 9:31 - -- God does not hear sinners ( ho theos hamartōlōn ouk akouei ). Note genitive case with akouei . This was the argument of the Pharisees in Joh 9:16...

God does not hear sinners ( ho theos hamartōlōn ouk akouei ).

Note genitive case with akouei . This was the argument of the Pharisees in Joh 9:16. It is frequent in the O.T. (Job 27:9; Psa 66:18; Isa 1:15; Isa 59:2, etc.). The conclusion is inevitable from this premise. Jesus is not hamartōlos .

Robertson: Joh 9:31 - -- If any man be a worshipper of God ( ean tis theosebēs ēi ). Condition of third class with ean and present active subjunctive ēi . Theosebēs...

If any man be a worshipper of God ( ean tis theosebēs ēi ).

Condition of third class with ean and present active subjunctive ēi . Theosebēs (theos , God, sebomai , to worship) is an old compound adjective, here alone in the N.T.

Robertson: Joh 9:31 - -- And do his will ( kai to thelēma autou poiei ). Same condition with present active subjunctive of poieō , "keep on doing his will."

And do his will ( kai to thelēma autou poiei ).

Same condition with present active subjunctive of poieō , "keep on doing his will."

Robertson: Joh 9:32 - -- Since the world began ( ek tou aiōnos ). Literally, "from the age,""from of old."Elsewhere in the N.T. we have apo tou aiōnos or ap 'aiōnos ...

Since the world began ( ek tou aiōnos ).

Literally, "from the age,""from of old."Elsewhere in the N.T. we have apo tou aiōnos or ap 'aiōnos (Luk 1:70; Act 3:21; Act 15:18) as is common in the lxx.

Robertson: Joh 9:32 - -- Of a man born blind ( tuphlou gegennēmenou ). Perfect passive participle of gennaō . This is the chief point and the man will not let it be overl...

Of a man born blind ( tuphlou gegennēmenou ).

Perfect passive participle of gennaō . This is the chief point and the man will not let it be overlooked, almost rubs it in, in fact. It was congenital blindness.

Robertson: Joh 9:33 - -- If this man were not from God ( ei mē ēn houtos para theou ). Negative condition of second class with imperfect indicative. Assuming that Jesus i...

If this man were not from God ( ei mē ēn houtos para theou ).

Negative condition of second class with imperfect indicative. Assuming that Jesus is not "from God"(para theou ) as some argued in Joh 9:16, "he could do nothing"(ouk ēdunato poiein ouden ). Conclusion of the second-class condition with imperfect indicative (double augment in ēdunato ) without an as is usual in conditions of possibility, propriety, obligation (Robertson, Grammar , pp. 920, 1014). The man has scored with terrific power in his use of Scripture and logic.

Robertson: Joh 9:34 - -- Thou wast altogether born in sin ( en hamartiais su egennēthēs holos ). First aorist passive indicative of gennaō . "In sins thou wast begotten...

Thou wast altogether born in sin ( en hamartiais su egennēthēs holos ).

First aorist passive indicative of gennaō . "In sins thou wast begotten (or born) all of thee."Holos is predicate nominative and teaches total depravity in this case beyond controversy, the Pharisees being judges.

Robertson: Joh 9:34 - -- And dost thou teach us? ( kai su didaskeis hēmas ). The audacity of it all. Note emphasis on su (thou). It was insufferable. He had not only taug...

And dost thou teach us? ( kai su didaskeis hēmas ).

The audacity of it all. Note emphasis on su (thou). It was insufferable. He had not only taught the rabbis, but had utterly routed them in argument.

Robertson: Joh 9:34 - -- And they cast him out ( kai exebalon auton exō ). Effective second aorist active indicative of ekballō intensified by the addition of exō . P...

And they cast him out ( kai exebalon auton exō ).

Effective second aorist active indicative of ekballō intensified by the addition of exō . Probably not yet expulsion from the synagogue (Joh 9:22) which required a formal meeting of the Sanhedrin, but certainly forcible driving of the gifted upstart from their presence. See note on Joh 6:37 for another use of ekballō exō besides Joh 9:35.

Robertson: Joh 9:35 - -- Finding him ( heurōn auton ). Second aorist active participle of heuriskō , after search because of what he had heard (ēkousen ).

Finding him ( heurōn auton ).

Second aorist active participle of heuriskō , after search because of what he had heard (ēkousen ).

Robertson: Joh 9:35 - -- Dost thou believe on the Son of God? ( Su pisteueis eis ton huion tou theou ). So A L Theta and most versions, but Aleph B D W Syr-sin read tou anthr...

Dost thou believe on the Son of God? ( Su pisteueis eis ton huion tou theou ).

So A L Theta and most versions, but Aleph B D W Syr-sin read tou anthrōpou (the Son of Man), almost certainly correct. In either case it is a distinct Messianic claim quite beyond the range of this man’ s limited knowledge, keen as he is.

Robertson: Joh 9:36 - -- And who is he, Lord, that I may believe on him? ( Kai tis estin ,kurie ). The initial kai (and) is common (Mar 10:26; Luk 10:29; Luk 18:26). Proba...

And who is he, Lord, that I may believe on him? ( Kai tis estin ,kurie ).

The initial kai (and) is common (Mar 10:26; Luk 10:29; Luk 18:26). Probably by kurie he means only "Sir."It usually comes at the beginning of the sentence, not at the end as here and Joh 9:38.

Robertson: Joh 9:36 - -- That I may believe on him ( hina pisteusō eis auton ). Ellipsis to be supplied before this final clause. He catches up the words of Jesus in the pr...

That I may believe on him ( hina pisteusō eis auton ).

Ellipsis to be supplied before this final clause. He catches up the words of Jesus in the preceding verse, though he does not yet know who the Son of Man (or Son of God) is, but he trusts Jesus.

Robertson: Joh 9:37 - -- Thou hast both seen him ( kai heōrakas auton ). Perfect active indicative (double reduplication) of horaō . Since his eyes were opened.

Thou hast both seen him ( kai heōrakas auton ).

Perfect active indicative (double reduplication) of horaō . Since his eyes were opened.

Robertson: Joh 9:37 - -- And he it is that speaketh with thee ( kai ho lalōn meta sou ekeinos estin ). "And the one speaking with thee is that man."See Joh 19:35 for ekeino...

And he it is that speaketh with thee ( kai ho lalōn meta sou ekeinos estin ).

"And the one speaking with thee is that man."See Joh 19:35 for ekeinos used of the speaker. In Joh 4:26 Jesus reveals himself in like manner to the Samaritan woman as Messiah while here as the Son of Man (or the Son of God).

Robertson: Joh 9:38 - -- Lord, I believe ( Pisteuō ,kurie ). Kurie here = Lord (reverence, no longer respect as in Joh 9:36). A short creed, but to the point.

Lord, I believe ( Pisteuō ,kurie ).

Kurie here = Lord (reverence, no longer respect as in Joh 9:36). A short creed, but to the point.

Robertson: Joh 9:38 - -- And he worshipped him ( kai prosekunēsen autōi ). Ingressive first aorist active indicative of proskuneō , old verb to fall down in reverence, ...

And he worshipped him ( kai prosekunēsen autōi ).

Ingressive first aorist active indicative of proskuneō , old verb to fall down in reverence, to worship. Sometimes of men (Mat 18:26). In John (see Joh 4:20) this verb "is always used to express divine worship"(Bernard). It is tragic to hear men today deny that Jesus should be worshipped. He accepted worship from this new convert as he later did from Thomas who called him "God"(Joh 20:28). Peter (Act 10:25.) refused worship from Cornelius as Paul and Barnabas did at Lystra (Act 14:18), but Jesus made no protest here.

Robertson: Joh 9:39 - -- For judgment ( eis krima ). The Father had sent the Son for this purpose (Joh 3:17). This world (kosmos ) is not the home of Jesus. The krima (jud...

For judgment ( eis krima ).

The Father had sent the Son for this purpose (Joh 3:17). This world (kosmos ) is not the home of Jesus. The krima (judgment), a word nowhere else in John, is the result of the krisis (sifting) from krinō , to separate. The Father has turned over this process of sifting (krisis ) to the Son (Joh 5:22). He is engaged in that very work by this miracle.

Robertson: Joh 9:39 - -- They which see not ( hoi mē blepontes ). The spiritually blind as well as the physically blind (Luk 4:18; Isa 42:18). Purpose clause with hina an...

They which see not ( hoi mē blepontes ).

The spiritually blind as well as the physically blind (Luk 4:18; Isa 42:18). Purpose clause with hina and present active subjunctive blepōsin (may keep on seeing). This man now sees physically and spiritually.

Robertson: Joh 9:39 - -- And that they which see may become blind ( kai hoi blepontes tuphloi genōntai ). Another part of God’ s purpose, seen in Mat 11:25; Luk 10:21,...

And that they which see may become blind ( kai hoi blepontes tuphloi genōntai ).

Another part of God’ s purpose, seen in Mat 11:25; Luk 10:21, is the curse on those who blaspheme and reject the Son. Note ingressive aorist middle subjunctive of ginomai and predicate nominative. Hoi blepontes are those who profess to see like these Pharisees, but are really blind. Blind guides they were (Mat 23:16). Complacent satisfaction with their dim light.

Robertson: Joh 9:40 - -- Are we also blind? ( Mē kai hēmeis tuphloi esmen ). Negative answer expected (mē ) and yet these Pharisees who overheard the words of Jesus to...

Are we also blind? ( Mē kai hēmeis tuphloi esmen ).

Negative answer expected (mē ) and yet these Pharisees who overheard the words of Jesus to the new convert vaguely suspected that Jesus was referring to them by the last clause. Up in Galilee Jesus had called the Pharisees blind guides who stumble into the pit (Mat 15:14).

Robertson: Joh 9:41 - -- If ye were blind ( ei tuphloi ēte ). Condition of second class with imperfect indicative in the protasis. The old word tuphlos is from tuphō , ...

If ye were blind ( ei tuphloi ēte ).

Condition of second class with imperfect indicative in the protasis. The old word tuphlos is from tuphō , to raise a smoke, to blind by smoke (literally and metaphorically). Here, of course, it is moral blindness. If the Pharisees were born morally blind, they would, like idiots, be without responsibility.

Robertson: Joh 9:41 - -- Ye would not have sin ( ouk an eichete hamartian ). Regular form for conclusion of second-class condition, an with imperfect.

Ye would not have sin ( ouk an eichete hamartian ).

Regular form for conclusion of second-class condition, an with imperfect.

Robertson: Joh 9:41 - -- But now ye say ( nun de legete ). In contrast to the previous condition. See like contrast in Joh 15:22, Joh 15:24. They arrogantly asserted superior...

But now ye say ( nun de legete ).

In contrast to the previous condition. See like contrast in Joh 15:22, Joh 15:24. They arrogantly asserted superior knowledge.

Robertson: Joh 9:41 - -- We see ( blepomen ). The ignorant mob do not (Joh 7:49). It is sin against light and is hopeless (Mar 3:29; Mat 12:31.). "Ye are witnesses against yo...

We see ( blepomen ).

The ignorant mob do not (Joh 7:49). It is sin against light and is hopeless (Mar 3:29; Mat 12:31.). "Ye are witnesses against yourselves"(martureite heautois , Mat 23:31).

Vincent: Joh 9:22 - -- Had agreed - that ( συνετέθειντο - ἵνα ) The sense is, had formed an agreement in order to bring about ...

Had agreed - that ( συνετέθειντο - ἵνα )

The sense is, had formed an agreement in order to bring about this end , viz., that the confessor of Christ should be excommunicated.

Vincent: Joh 9:22 - -- Confess ( ὁμολογήσῃ ) See on Mat 7:23; see on Mat 10:32.

Confess ( ὁμολογήσῃ )

See on Mat 7:23; see on Mat 10:32.

Vincent: Joh 9:22 - -- He should be put out of the synagogue ( ἀποσυνάγωγος ) The literal rendering cannot be neatly given, as there is no English adjec...

He should be put out of the synagogue ( ἀποσυνάγωγος )

The literal rendering cannot be neatly given, as there is no English adjective corresponding to ἀποσυνάγωγος , which means excluded from the synagogue: as nearly as possible - that He should become banished from the synagogue . The adjective occurs only in John's Gospel - here, Joh 12:42; Joh 16:2. Three kinds of excommunication were recognized, of which only the third was the real cutting off, the other two being disciplinary. The first, and lightest, was called rebuke , and lasted from seven to thirty days. The second was called thrusting out , and lasted for thirty days at least, followed by a " second admonition," which lasted for thirty days more. This could only be pronounced in an assembly of ten. It was accompanied by curses, and sometimes proclaimed with the blast of the horn. The excommunicated person would not be admitted into any assembly of ten men, nor to public prayer. People would keep at the distance of four cubits from him, as if he were a leper. Stones were to be cast on his coffin when dead, and mourning for him was forbidden. If all else failed, the third, or real excommunication was pronounced, the duration of which was indefinite. The man was to be as one dead. No intercourse was to be held with him; one must not show him the road, and though he might buy the necessaries of life, it was forbidden to eat and drink with him. These severer forms appear to have been of later introduction, so that the penalty which the blind man's parents feared was probably separation from all religious fellowship, and from ordinary intercourse of life for perhaps thirty days.

Vincent: Joh 9:24 - -- Give God the praise ( δὸς δόξαν τῷ Θεῷ ) Rev., give glory to God . Compare Jos 7:19; 1Sa 6:5. This phrase address...

Give God the praise ( δὸς δόξαν τῷ Θεῷ )

Rev., give glory to God . Compare Jos 7:19; 1Sa 6:5. This phrase addressed to an offender implies that by some previous act or word he has done dishonor to God, and appeals to him to repair the dishonor by speaking the truth. In this case it is also an appeal to the restored man to ascribe his cure directly to God, and not to Jesus. Palgrave, " Central and Eastern Arabia," says that the Arabic phrase commonly addressed to one who has said something extremely out of place, is Istaghfir Allah , Ask pardon of God .

Vincent: Joh 9:24 - -- We know The we is emphatic. We , the wise men and guardians of religion.

We know

The we is emphatic. We , the wise men and guardians of religion.

Vincent: Joh 9:28 - -- Reviled ( ἐλοιδόρησαν ) The verb means to reproach or scold in a loud and abusive manner. Calvin, on 1Co 4:12, " being reviled w...

Reviled ( ἐλοιδόρησαν )

The verb means to reproach or scold in a loud and abusive manner. Calvin, on 1Co 4:12, " being reviled we bless," remarks: " Λοιδορία is a harsher railing, which not only rebukes a man, but also sharply bites him, and stamps him with open contumely. Hence λοιδορεῖν is to wound a man as with an accursed sting."

Vincent: Joh 9:28 - -- His disciple ( μαθητὴς ἐκείνου ) Literally, that man's disciple . The pronoun has a contemptuous force which is not give...

His disciple ( μαθητὴς ἐκείνου )

Literally, that man's disciple . The pronoun has a contemptuous force which is not given by his .

Vincent: Joh 9:29 - -- Spake ( λελάληκεν ) Perfect tense, hath spoken , and the authority of Moses' words therefore continues to the present. So Rev., Λ...

Spake ( λελάληκεν )

Perfect tense, hath spoken , and the authority of Moses' words therefore continues to the present. So Rev., Λαλέω is to talk , familiarly. See Exo 33:11.

Vincent: Joh 9:29 - -- Whence he is Compare Joh 7:27; Joh 8:14.

Whence he is

Compare Joh 7:27; Joh 8:14.

Vincent: Joh 9:30 - -- A marvelous thing ( θαυμαστόν ) The correct reading adds the article, the marvel. So Rev.

A marvelous thing ( θαυμαστόν )

The correct reading adds the article, the marvel. So Rev.

Vincent: Joh 9:30 - -- Ye know not Ye is emphatic: ye who might be expected to know about a man who has wrought such a miracle.

Ye know not

Ye is emphatic: ye who might be expected to know about a man who has wrought such a miracle.

Vincent: Joh 9:30 - -- And yet ( καὶ ) See on Joh 8:20; see on Joh 1:10.

And yet ( καὶ )

See on Joh 8:20; see on Joh 1:10.

Vincent: Joh 9:31 - -- We know Here the pronoun is not expressed, and the we is not emphatic, like the pronouns in Joh 9:24, Joh 9:29, but expresses the common inform...

We know

Here the pronoun is not expressed, and the we is not emphatic, like the pronouns in Joh 9:24, Joh 9:29, but expresses the common information of all concerning a familiar fact.

Vincent: Joh 9:31 - -- A worshipper of God ( θεοσεβὴς ) Only here in the New Testament. The kindred word, θεοσέβεια , godliness , occurs only at 1...

A worshipper of God ( θεοσεβὴς )

Only here in the New Testament. The kindred word, θεοσέβεια , godliness , occurs only at 1Ti 2:10. Compounded with Θεός , God , and σέβομαι , to worship , the same verb which appears in εὐσεβής , devout (Act 10:2, Act 10:7; Act 22:12), and εὐσέβεια , godliness (Act 3:12; 1Ti 2:2, etc.). See on 2Pe 1:3. These two latter words, while they may mean reverence toward God, may also mean the due fulfillment of human relations; while θεοσεβὴς , worshipper of God , is limited to piety towards God.

Vincent: Joh 9:32 - -- Since the world began ( ἐκ τοῦ αἰῶνος ) The exact phrase only here in the New Testament. Ἁπ ' is found in Act 3:21; Act 15...

Since the world began ( ἐκ τοῦ αἰῶνος )

The exact phrase only here in the New Testament. Ἁπ ' is found in Act 3:21; Act 15:18; ἀπὸ τῶν αἰώνων in Col 1:26.

Vincent: Joh 9:34 - -- Altogether ( ὅλος ) Literally, all of thee .

Altogether ( ὅλος )

Literally, all of thee .

Vincent: Joh 9:34 - -- In sins Standing first in the Greek order, and emphatic, as is also σὺ thou , in both instances. " In sins wast thou born, all of thee; an...

In sins

Standing first in the Greek order, and emphatic, as is also σὺ thou , in both instances. " In sins wast thou born, all of thee; and dost thou teach us?"

Vincent: Joh 9:34 - -- Teach Emphatic. Dost thou , thus born in sins, assume the office of teacher?

Teach

Emphatic. Dost thou , thus born in sins, assume the office of teacher?

Vincent: Joh 9:34 - -- Cast him out From the place where they were conversing. Not excommunicated , which this miscellaneous gathering could not do.

Cast him out

From the place where they were conversing. Not excommunicated , which this miscellaneous gathering could not do.

Vincent: Joh 9:35 - -- Said unto him Omit unto him .

Said unto him

Omit unto him .

Vincent: Joh 9:35 - -- Dost thou believe ( σὺ πιστεύεις )? The form of the question indicates the confident expectation of an affirmative answer. It is a...

Dost thou believe ( σὺ πιστεύεις )?

The form of the question indicates the confident expectation of an affirmative answer. It is almost an affirmation, you surely believe; you (σὺ , emphatic) who have born such bold testimony to me that they have cast you out. Note the phrase, πιστεύεις εἰς , believe on , and see on Joh 1:12.

Vincent: Joh 9:35 - -- Son of God Both Tischendorf and Westcott and Hort read Son of man .

Son of God

Both Tischendorf and Westcott and Hort read Son of man .

Vincent: Joh 9:36 - -- Who is He? The best texts insert καὶ , and; and who is he? which imparts an air of eagerness to the question.

Who is He?

The best texts insert καὶ , and; and who is he? which imparts an air of eagerness to the question.

Vincent: Joh 9:38 - -- Worshipped ( προσεκύνησεν ) See on Act 10:25.

Worshipped ( προσεκύνησεν )

See on Act 10:25.

Vincent: Joh 9:39 - -- Judgment ( κρίμα ) Not the act of judgment, but its result . His very presence in the world constitutes a separation , which is the pr...

Judgment ( κρίμα )

Not the act of judgment, but its result . His very presence in the world constitutes a separation , which is the primitive idea of judgment, between those who believe on Him and those who reject Him. See on Joh 3:17.

Vincent: Joh 9:40 - -- Are we blind also ( μὴ καὶ ἡμεῖς τυφλοί ἐσμεν )? The also belongs with we . The interrogative particle has th...

Are we blind also ( μὴ καὶ ἡμεῖς τυφλοί ἐσμεν )?

The also belongs with we . The interrogative particle has the force of we are surely not , and the we is emphatic. Are we also blind? So Rev.

Vincent: Joh 9:41 - -- Ye should have no sin ( οὐκ ἀν εἴχετε ἁμαρτίαν ) Or, ye would have had . The phrase ἁμαρτίαν ε...

Ye should have no sin ( οὐκ ἀν εἴχετε ἁμαρτίαν )

Or, ye would have had . The phrase ἁμαρτίαν ἔχειν , to have sin , occurs only in John, in the Gospel and First Epistle.

Wesley: Joh 9:22 - -- That is be excommunicated.

That is be excommunicated.

Wesley: Joh 9:27 - -- As well as I, at length convinced and willing to be his disciples?

As well as I, at length convinced and willing to be his disciples?

Wesley: Joh 9:29 - -- By what power and authority he does these things.

By what power and authority he does these things.

Wesley: Joh 9:30 - -- Utterly illiterate as he was. And with what strength and clearness of reason! So had God opened the eyes of his understanding, as well as his bodily e...

Utterly illiterate as he was. And with what strength and clearness of reason! So had God opened the eyes of his understanding, as well as his bodily eyes. Why, herein is a marvellous thing, that ye - The teachers and guides of the people, should not know, that a man who has wrought a miracle, the like of which was never heard of before, must be from heaven, sent by God.

Wesley: Joh 9:31 - -- Even we of the populace, know that God heareth not sinners - Not impenitent sinners, so as to answer their prayers in this manner. The honest courage ...

Even we of the populace, know that God heareth not sinners - Not impenitent sinners, so as to answer their prayers in this manner. The honest courage of this man in adhering to the truth, though he knew the consequence, Joh 9:22, gives him claim to the title of a confessor.

Wesley: Joh 9:33 - -- Of this kind; nothing miraculous.

Of this kind; nothing miraculous.

Wesley: Joh 9:34 - -- And therefore, they supposed, born blind.

And therefore, they supposed, born blind.

Wesley: Joh 9:34 - -- Of the synagogue; excommunicated him.

Of the synagogue; excommunicated him.

Wesley: Joh 9:35 - -- For he had sought him.

For he had sought him.

Wesley: Joh 9:36 - -- This implies some degree of faith already. He was ready to receive whatever Jesus said.

This implies some degree of faith already. He was ready to receive whatever Jesus said.

Wesley: Joh 9:37 - -- What an excellent spirit was this man of! Of so deep and strong an understanding; (as he had just shown to the confusion of the Pharisees,) and yet of...

What an excellent spirit was this man of! Of so deep and strong an understanding; (as he had just shown to the confusion of the Pharisees,) and yet of so teachable a temper!

Wesley: Joh 9:39 - -- That is, the consequence of my coming will be, that by the just judgment of God, while the blind in body and soul receive their sight, they who boast ...

That is, the consequence of my coming will be, that by the just judgment of God, while the blind in body and soul receive their sight, they who boast they see, will be given up to still greater blindness than before.

Wesley: Joh 9:41 - -- Invincibly ignorant; if ye had not had so many means of knowing: ye would have had no sin - Comparatively to what ye have now.

Invincibly ignorant; if ye had not had so many means of knowing: ye would have had no sin - Comparatively to what ye have now.

Wesley: Joh 9:41 - -- Ye yourselves acknowledge, Ye see, therefore your sin remaineth - Without excuse, without remedy.

Ye yourselves acknowledge, Ye see, therefore your sin remaineth - Without excuse, without remedy.

JFB: Joh 9:18-23 - -- Foiled by the testimony of the young man himself, they hope to throw doubt on the fact by close questioning his parents, who, perceiving the snare lai...

Foiled by the testimony of the young man himself, they hope to throw doubt on the fact by close questioning his parents, who, perceiving the snare laid for them, ingeniously escape it by testifying simply to the identity of their son, and his birth-blindness, leaving it to himself, as a competent witness, to speak as to the cure. They prevaricated, however, in saying they "knew not who had opened his eyes," for "they feared the Jews," who had come to an understanding (probably after what is recorded, Joh 7:50, &c.; but by this time well known), that whoever owned Him as the Christ would be put out of the synagogue--that is, not simply excluded, but excommunicated.|| 26465||1||11||0||@Give God the praise; we know that this man is a sinner==--not wishing him to own, even to the praise of God, that a miracle had been wrought upon him, but to show more regard to the honor of God than ascribe any such act to one who was a sinner.

JFB: Joh 9:25 - -- Not that the man meant to insinuate any doubt in his own mind on the point of His being "a sinner," but as his opinion on such a point would be of no ...

Not that the man meant to insinuate any doubt in his own mind on the point of His being "a sinner," but as his opinion on such a point would be of no consequence to others, he would speak only to what he knew as fact in his own case.

JFB: Joh 9:26 - -- Hoping by repeated questions to ensnare him, but the youth is more than a match for them.

Hoping by repeated questions to ensnare him, but the youth is more than a match for them.

JFB: Joh 9:27 - -- In a vein of keen irony he treats their questions as those of anxious inquirers, almost ready for discipleship! Stung by this, they retort upon him as...

In a vein of keen irony he treats their questions as those of anxious inquirers, almost ready for discipleship! Stung by this, they retort upon him as the disciple (and here they plainly were not wrong); for themselves, they fall back upon Moses; about him there could be no doubt; but who knew about this upstart?

JFB: Joh 9:30 - -- He had no need to say another word; but waxing bolder in defense of his Benefactor, and his views brightening by the very courage which it demanded, h...

He had no need to say another word; but waxing bolder in defense of his Benefactor, and his views brightening by the very courage which it demanded, he puts it to them how they could pretend inability to tell whether one who opened the eyes of a man born blind was "of God" or "a sinner"--from above or from beneath--and proceeds to argue the case with remarkable power. So irresistible was his argument that their rage burst forth in a speech of intense Pharisaism, "Thou wast altogether born in sins, and dost thou teach us?"--thou, a base-born, uneducated, impudent youth, teach us, the trained, constituted, recognized guides of the people in the things of God! Out upon thee!

JFB: Joh 9:31 - -- Judicially, no doubt, as well in fact. The allusion to his being "born in sins" seems a tacit admission of his being blind from birth--the very thing ...

Judicially, no doubt, as well in fact. The allusion to his being "born in sins" seems a tacit admission of his being blind from birth--the very thing they had been so unwilling to own. But rage and enmity to truth are seldom consistent in their outbreaks. The friends of this excommunicated youth, crowding around him with their sympathy, would probably express surprise that One who could work such a cure should be unable to protect his patient from the persecution it had raised against him, or should possess the power without using it. Nor would it be strange if such thoughts should arise in the youth's own mind. But if they did, it is certain, from what follows, that they made no lodgment there, conscious as he was that "whereas he was blind, now he saw," and satisfied that if his Benefactor "were not of God, He could do nothing" (Joh 9:33). There was a word for him too, which, if whispered in his ear from the oracles of God, would seem expressly designed to describe his case, and prepare him for the coming interview with his gracious Friend. "Hear the word of the Lord, ye that tremble at His word. Your brethren that hated you, that cast you out for My name's sake, said, Let the Lord be glorified; BUT HE SHALL APPEAR TO YOUR JOY, and they shall be ashamed" (Isa 66:5). But how was He engaged to whom such noble testimony had been given, and for whom such persecution had been borne? Uttering, perhaps, in secret, "with strong crying and tears," the words of the prophetic psalm, "Let not them that wait on Thee, O Lord God of hosts, be ashamed for my sake; let none that seek Thee be confounded for my sake, O God of Israel; because for Thy sake I have borne reproach . . . and the reproaches of them that reproached Thee are fallen upon me" (Psa 69:6-7, Psa 69:9).

JFB: Joh 9:35-38 - -- That is, by intelligence brought Him.

That is, by intelligence brought Him.

JFB: Joh 9:35-38 - -- By accident? Not very likely. Sympathy in that breast could not long keep aloof from its object.

By accident? Not very likely. Sympathy in that breast could not long keep aloof from its object.

JFB: Joh 9:35-38 - -- A question stretching purposely beyond his present attainments, in order the more quickly to lead him--in his present teachable frame--into the highes...

A question stretching purposely beyond his present attainments, in order the more quickly to lead him--in his present teachable frame--into the highest truth.

JFB: Joh 9:36 - -- "His reply is affirmative, and believing by anticipation, promising faith as soon as Jesus shall say who He is" [STIER].

"His reply is affirmative, and believing by anticipation, promising faith as soon as Jesus shall say who He is" [STIER].

JFB: Joh 9:37 - -- The new sense of sight having at that moment its highest exercise, in gazing upon "the Light of the world."

The new sense of sight having at that moment its highest exercise, in gazing upon "the Light of the world."

JFB: Joh 9:38 - -- A faith and a worship, beyond doubt, meant to express far more than he would think proper to any human "prophet" (Joh 9:17) --the unstudied, resistles...

A faith and a worship, beyond doubt, meant to express far more than he would think proper to any human "prophet" (Joh 9:17) --the unstudied, resistless expression, probably of SUPREME faith and adoration, though without the full understanding of what that implied.

JFB: Joh 9:39-41 - -- Perhaps at the same time, but after a crowd, including some of the skeptical and scornful rulers, had, on seeing Jesus talking with the healed youth, ...

Perhaps at the same time, but after a crowd, including some of the skeptical and scornful rulers, had, on seeing Jesus talking with the healed youth, hastened to the spot.

JFB: Joh 9:39-41 - -- Rising to that sight of which the natural vision communicated to the youth was but the symbol. (See on Joh 9:5, and compare Luk 4:18).

Rising to that sight of which the natural vision communicated to the youth was but the symbol. (See on Joh 9:5, and compare Luk 4:18).

JFB: Joh 9:39-41 - -- Judicially incapable of apprehending and receiving the truth, to which they have wilfully shut their eyes.

Judicially incapable of apprehending and receiving the truth, to which they have wilfully shut their eyes.

JFB: Joh 9:40 - -- We, the constituted, recognized guides of the people in spiritual things? pride and rage prompting the question.

We, the constituted, recognized guides of the people in spiritual things? pride and rage prompting the question.

JFB: Joh 9:41 - -- Wanted light to discern My claims, and only waited to receive it.

Wanted light to discern My claims, and only waited to receive it.

JFB: Joh 9:41 - -- None of the guilt of shutting out the light.

None of the guilt of shutting out the light.

JFB: Joh 9:41 - -- Your claim to possess light, while rejecting Me, is that which seals you up in the guilt of unbelief.

Your claim to possess light, while rejecting Me, is that which seals you up in the guilt of unbelief.

Clarke: Joh 9:21 - -- He is of age - Ἡλικιαν εχει, literally, he has stature, i.e. he is a full-grown man; and in this sense the phrase is used by the best ...

He is of age - Ἡλικιαν εχει, literally, he has stature, i.e. he is a full-grown man; and in this sense the phrase is used by the best Greek writers. See Kypke and Raphelius. Mature age was fixed among the Jews at thirty years.

Clarke: Joh 9:22 - -- Put out of the synagogue - That is, excommunicated - separated from all religious connection with those who worshipped God. This was the lesser kind...

Put out of the synagogue - That is, excommunicated - separated from all religious connection with those who worshipped God. This was the lesser kind of excommunication among the Jews and was termed nidui . The cherem , or anathema , was not used against the followers of Christ till after the resurrection.

Clarke: Joh 9:24 - -- Give God the praise - Having called the man a second time, they proceeded to deal with him in the most solemn manner; and therefore they put him to ...

Give God the praise - Having called the man a second time, they proceeded to deal with him in the most solemn manner; and therefore they put him to his oath; for the words above were the form of an oath, proposed by the chief magistrate to those who were to give evidence to any particular fact, or to attest any thing, as produced by or belonging to the Lord. See Jos 7:19; 1Sa 6:5, and Luk 17:18. But, while they solemnly put him to his oath, they endeavored to put their own words in his mouth, viz. he is a sinner - a pretender to the prophetic character, and a transgressor of the law of God: - assert this, or you will not please us.

Clarke: Joh 9:25 - -- Whereas I was blind, now I see - He pays no attention to their cavils, nor to their perversion of justice; but, in the simplicity of his heart, spea...

Whereas I was blind, now I see - He pays no attention to their cavils, nor to their perversion of justice; but, in the simplicity of his heart, speaks to the fact, of the reality of which he was ready to give them the most substantial evidence.

Clarke: Joh 9:27 - -- I have told you already - So he did, Joh 9:15. And did ye not hear? Ye certainly did. Why then do you wish to hear it again? Is it because ye wish t...

I have told you already - So he did, Joh 9:15. And did ye not hear? Ye certainly did. Why then do you wish to hear it again? Is it because ye wish to become his disciples? The poor man continued steady in his testimony; and, by putting this question to them, he knew he should soon put an end to the debate.

Clarke: Joh 9:28 - -- Then they reviled him - Ελοιδορησαν . Eustathius derives λοιδορια from λογος, a word, and δορυ, a spear: - they spo...

Then they reviled him - Ελοιδορησαν . Eustathius derives λοιδορια from λογος, a word, and δορυ, a spear: - they spoke cutting, piercing words. Solomon talks of some who spoke like the piercings of a sword, Pro 12:18. And the psalmist speaks of words that are like drawn swords, Psa 55:21, words which show that the person who speaks them has his heart full of murderous intentions; and that, if he had the same power with a sword as he has with his tongue, he would destroy him whom he thus reproaches

Clarke: Joh 9:28 - -- We are Moses’ disciples - By this they meant that they were genuine Pharisees; for they did not allow the Sadducees to be disciples of Moses.

We are Moses’ disciples - By this they meant that they were genuine Pharisees; for they did not allow the Sadducees to be disciples of Moses.

Clarke: Joh 9:29 - -- We know not from whence he is - As if they had said: We have the fullest assurance that the commission of Moses was Divine; but we have no proof tha...

We know not from whence he is - As if they had said: We have the fullest assurance that the commission of Moses was Divine; but we have no proof that this man has such a commission: and should we leave Moses, and attach ourselves to this stranger? No.

Clarke: Joh 9:30 - -- Why herein is a marvellous thing - As if he had said, This is wonderful indeed! Is it possible that such persons as you are, whose business it is to...

Why herein is a marvellous thing - As if he had said, This is wonderful indeed! Is it possible that such persons as you are, whose business it is to distinguish good from evil, and who pretend to know a true from a false prophet, cannot decide in a case so plain? Has not the man opened my eyes? Is not the miracle known to all the town; and could any one do it who was not endued with the power of God?

Clarke: Joh 9:31 - -- God heareth not sinners - I believe the word ἁμαρτωλων signifies heathens, or persons not proselyted to the Jewish religion; and theref...

God heareth not sinners - I believe the word ἁμαρτωλων signifies heathens, or persons not proselyted to the Jewish religion; and therefore it is put in opposition to θεοσεβης, a worshipper of the true God. See the note on Luk 7:37. But in what sense may it be said, following our common version, that God heareth not sinners? When they regard iniquity in their heart - when they wish to be saved, and yet abide in their sins - when they will not separate themselves from the workers and works of iniquity. In all these cases, God heareth not sinners.

Clarke: Joh 9:32 - -- Since the world began - Εκ του αιωνος, From the age - probably meaning from the commencement of time. Neither Moses nor the prophets hav...

Since the world began - Εκ του αιωνος, From the age - probably meaning from the commencement of time. Neither Moses nor the prophets have ever opened the eyes of a man who was born blind: if this person then were not the best of beings, would God grant him a privilege which he has hitherto denied to his choicest favorites

Clarke: Joh 9:32 - -- Opened the eyes of one that was born blind - It will readily appear that our Lord performed no surgical operation in this cure: the man was born bli...

Opened the eyes of one that was born blind - It will readily appear that our Lord performed no surgical operation in this cure: the man was born blind, and he was restored to sight by the power of God; the simple means used could have had no effect in the cure; the miracle is therefore complete. That there are cases, in which a person who was born blind may be restored to sight by surgical means, we know: but no such means were used by Christ: and it is worthy of remark that, from the foundation of the world, no person born blind has been restored to sight, even by surgical operation, till about the year of our Lord, 1728; when the celebrated Dr. Cheselden, by couching the eyes of a young man, 14 years of age, who had been born blind, restored him to perfect soundness. This was the effect of well directed surgery: that performed by Christ was a miracle.

Clarke: Joh 9:33 - -- If this man were not of God, etc. - A very just conclusion: God is the fountain of all good: all good must proceed from him, and no good can be done...

If this man were not of God, etc. - A very just conclusion: God is the fountain of all good: all good must proceed from him, and no good can be done but through him; if this person were not commissioned by the good God, he could not perform such beneficent miracles as these.

Clarke: Joh 9:34 - -- Thou wast altogether born in sins - Thou hast not only been a vile wretch in some other pre-existent state, but thy parents also have been grossly i...

Thou wast altogether born in sins - Thou hast not only been a vile wretch in some other pre-existent state, but thy parents also have been grossly iniquitous; therefore thou and they are punished by this blindness: Thou wast altogether born in sins - thou art no other than a sinful lump of deformity, and utterly unfit to have any connection with those who worship God

Clarke: Joh 9:34 - -- And they cast him out - They immediately excommunicated him, as the margin properly reads - drove him from their assembly with disdain, and forbade ...

And they cast him out - They immediately excommunicated him, as the margin properly reads - drove him from their assembly with disdain, and forbade his farther appearing in the worship of God. Thus a simple man, guided by the Spirit of truth, and continuing steady in his testimony, utterly confounded the most eminent Jewish doctors. When they had no longer either reason or argument to oppose to him, as a proof of their discomfiture and a monument of their reproach and shame, they had recourse to the secular arm, and thus silenced by political power a person whom they had neither reason nor religion to withstand. They hare had since many followers in their crimes. A false religion, supported by the state, has, by fire and sword silenced those whose truth in the end annihilated the system of their opponents.

Clarke: Joh 9:35 - -- Dost thou believe on the Son of God? - This was the same with, Dost thou believe on the Messiah? for these two characters were inseparable; see Joh ...

Dost thou believe on the Son of God? - This was the same with, Dost thou believe on the Messiah? for these two characters were inseparable; see Joh 1:34, Joh 1:49; Joh 10:36; Mat 16:16; Mar 1:1.

Clarke: Joh 9:36 - -- Who is he, Lord? - It is very likely that the blind man did not know that it was Jesus the Christ who now spoke to him; for it is evident he had nev...

Who is he, Lord? - It is very likely that the blind man did not know that it was Jesus the Christ who now spoke to him; for it is evident he had never seen him before this time; and he might now see him without knowing that he was the person by whom he was cured, till our Lord made that discovery of himself, mentioned in the following verse.

Clarke: Joh 9:38 - -- And he said, Lord, I believe - That is, I believe thou art the Messiah; and, to give the fullest proof of the sincerity of his faith, he fell down b...

And he said, Lord, I believe - That is, I believe thou art the Messiah; and, to give the fullest proof of the sincerity of his faith, he fell down before and adored him. Never having seen Jesus before, but simply knowing that a person of that name had opened his eyes, he had only considered him as a holy man and a prophet; but now that he sees and hears him he is convinced of his divinity, and glorifies him as his Savior. We may hear much of Jesus, but can never know his glories and excellencies till he has discovered himself to our hearts by his own Spirit; then we believe on him, trust him with our souls, and trust in him for our salvation. The word κυριε has two meanings: it signifies Lord, or Sovereign Ruler, and Sir, a title of civil respect. In the latter sense it seems evidently used in the 36th verse, because the poor man did not then know that Jesus was the Messiah; in the former sense it is used in this verse - now the healed man knew the quality of his benefactor.

Clarke: Joh 9:39 - -- For judgment I am come - I am come to manifest and execute the just judgment of God 1.    By giving sight to the blind, and light to ...

For judgment I am come - I am come to manifest and execute the just judgment of God

1.    By giving sight to the blind, and light to the Gentiles who sit in darkness

2.    By removing the true light from those who, pretending to make a proper use of it, only abuse the mercy of God

In a word, salvation shall be taken away from the Jews, because they reject it; and the kingdom of God shall be given to the Gentiles.

Clarke: Joh 9:40 - -- Are we blind also? - These Pharisees understood Christ as speaking of blindness in a spiritual sense, and wished to know if he considered them in th...

Are we blind also? - These Pharisees understood Christ as speaking of blindness in a spiritual sense, and wished to know if he considered them in that state.

Clarke: Joh 9:41 - -- If ye were blind - If ye had not had sufficient opportunities to have acquainted yourselves with my Divine nature, by the unparalleled miracles whic...

If ye were blind - If ye had not had sufficient opportunities to have acquainted yourselves with my Divine nature, by the unparalleled miracles which I have wrought before you? and the holy doctrine which I have preached, then your rejecting me could not be imputed to you as sin; but because ye say, we see - we are perfectly capable of judging between a true and false prophet, and can from the Scriptures point out the Messiah by his works - on this account you are guilty, and your sin is of no common nature, it remaineth, i.e. it shall not be expiated: as ye have rejected the Lord from being your deliverer, so the Lord has rejected you from being his people. When the Scripture speaks of sin remaining, it is always put in opposition to pardon; for pardon is termed the taking away of sin, Joh 1:29; Psa 32:5. And this is the proper import of the phrase, αφεσις των ἁμαρτιων, which occurs so frequently in the sacred writings

1.    The history of the man who was born blind and cured by our Lord is, in every point of view, instructive. His simplicity, his courage, his constancy, and his gratitude are all so many subjects worthy of attention and emulation. He certainly confessed the truth at the most imminent risk of his life; and therefore, as Stephen was the first martyr for Christianity, this man was the first confessor. The power and influence of Truth, in supporting its friends and confounding its adversaries, are well exemplified in him; and not less so, that providence of God by which he was preserved from the malice of these bad men. The whole story is related with inimitable simplicity, and cannot be read by the most cold-hearted without extorting the exclamation, How forcible are right words

2.    It has already been remarked that, since the world began, there is no evidence that any man born blind was ever restored to sight by surgical means, till the days of Mr. Cheselden, who was a celebrated surgeon at St. Thomas’ s Hospital, London. For though, even before the Christian era, there is reason to believe that both the Greek and Roman physicians performed operations to remove blindness occasioned by the cataract, yet we know of none of these ever attempted on the eyes of those who had been born blind, much less of any such persons being restored to sight. The cure before us must have been wholly miraculous - no appropriate means were used to effect it. What was done had rather a tendency to prevent and destroy sight than to help or restore it. The blindness in question was probably occasioned by a morbid structure of the organs of sight; and our Lord, by his sovereign power, instantaneously restored them to perfect soundness, without the intervention of any healing process. In this case there could be neither deception nor collusion.

Calvin: Joh 9:20 - -- 20.We hnow that this is our son, and that he was born blind Hence it follows that he does not see naturally, but that his eyes have been miraculously...

20.We hnow that this is our son, and that he was born blind Hence it follows that he does not see naturally, but that his eyes have been miraculously opened; but this latter point — that his sight had been miraculously restored — they pass by, because it would give offense. By their silence they show their ingratitude; for, having received so distinguished a gift of God, they ought to have burned with desire to celebrate his name. But, struck with terror, they bury the grace of God, as far as lies in their power, with this exception, that they substitute in their room, as a witness, their son, who will explain the whole matter as it happened, and who will be heard with less prejudice, and will be more readily believed. But though they prudently avoid danger, and continue this middle path, of testifying indirectly about Christ by the mouth of their son, yet this does not prevent the Holy Spirit from condemning their cowardice by the mouth of the Evangelist, because they fail to discharge their own duty. How much less excuse then will they have, who, by treacherous denial, utterly bury Christ, with his doctrine, with his miracles, with his power and grace!

Calvin: Joh 9:22 - -- 22.The Jews had determined This passage shows that the custom of excommunication is ancient, and has been observed in all ages; for excommunication w...

22.The Jews had determined This passage shows that the custom of excommunication is ancient, and has been observed in all ages; for excommunication was not then for the first time invented, but it was a custom which had been anciently used against apostates and despisers of the Law, and was turned against the disciples of Christ. We learn, therefore, that the practice of excommunication arose out of the most ancient discipline of the Church. We learn also that it is a crime which has not been of recent origin, and has not been peculiar to a single age, that wicked and unbelieving 264 men should corrupt the holy ordinances of God by their deeds of sacrilege. God determined, from the beginning of the world, 265 that there should be some form of correction, by which rebels should be restrained. The priests and scribes not only abused this power in a tyrannical manner to oppress innocent men; but at length they basely attacked God himself and his doctrine. The truth of Christ being so powerful that they were not able to put it down by law, or by a regular course of proceedings, they launched the thunders of excommunications to crush it.

The same thing has also been done with the Christian people; for it is impossible to express the barbarous tyranny which the pretended bishops have exercised in enslaving the people, so that no man dared to whisper; and now we see with what cruelty they throw this dart of excommunication against all who worship God. But we ought to believe that excommunication, when it is violently applied to a different purpose by the passions of men, may safely be treated with contempt. For when God committed to his Church the power of excommunicating, he did not arm tyrants or executioners to strangle souls, but laid down a rule for governing his people; and that on the condition that he should hold the supreme government, and that he should have men for his ministers. Let the pretended bishops then thunder as they think fit, by their empty noises they will not terrify any but those who wander about in doubt and uncertainty, not having yet been instructed, by the voice of the Chief Shepherd, what is the true fold.

In short, nothing can be more certain than that those who, we see, are not subject to Christ are deprived of the lawful power of excommunicating. Nor ought we to dread being excluded by them from their assembly, since Christ, who is our life and salvation, is banished from it. So far are we from having any reason to dread being thrown out, that, on the contrary, if we desire to be united to Christ, we must, of our own accord, withdraw from the synagogues of Satan. Yet though the ordinance of excommunication was so basely corrupted in the ancient Church, still Christ did not intend that it should be abolished by his coming, but restored it to its purity, that it might be in full vigor amongst us. Thus, though at the present day there prevails in Popery a base profanation of this holy discipline, yet, instead of abolishing it, we ought rather to give the utmost diligence to restore it to its former completeness. There never will be so good order the world, that even the holiest Laws of God shall not degenerate into corruption, through the fault of men. Assuredly, it would give too much power to Satan, if he could reduce to nothing every thing that he corrupts. We would then have no Baptism, no Lord’s Supper, and, in short, no religion; for there is no part of it which he has left uncontaminated by its pollutions.

Calvin: Joh 9:24 - -- 24.A second time, therefore, they called the man who had been blind There can be no doubt that they were constrained by shame to call the blind man, ...

24.A second time, therefore, they called the man who had been blind There can be no doubt that they were constrained by shame to call the blind man, whom they had previously found to be too firm and steady. In this way, the more fiercely they struggle against God, the more numerous are the cords which they put about their neck, 269 and the more strongly do they bind themselves. Besides, they put the questions in such a manner as to endeavor to make the man say what they wish. It is a plausible preface, indeed, when they exhort him to give glory to God; but immediately afterwards they strictly forbid him to answer according to the conviction of his mind; and therefore, under the pretense of the name of God, they demand from him servile obedience.

Give glory to God Though this adjuration may be referred to what is connected with the present cause, that the blind man should not obscure the glory of God by ascribing to man the benefit which he had received, yet I rather agree with those who think that it was a solemn form, which was wont to be employed when an oath was administered to any person. For in those very words does Joshua adjure Achan, when he wishes to draw from him a true confession of having taken away the accursed thing, (Jos 7:19.) By these words they reminded him that no slight insult is offered to God, when any person, in His name, commits falsehood. And, indeed, whenever we are called to swear, we ought to remember this preface, so that truth may not be less highly valued by us than the glory of God. If this were done, the sacredness of an oath would be viewed in a very different light. Now, since the greater part of men — not considering that they deny God, when they invoke His name for upholding a falsehood — rashly and daringly rush forward to swear, the consequence is, that every place is full of perjuries. Meanwhile, we see how hypocrites, though they pretend to have the greatest reverence for God, are guilty not only of hypocrisy, but of insolent mockery; for they at the same time express a wish that the blind man should wickedly swear according to their direction, with open contempt of God. Thus God drags to light their wicked designs, whatever attempts they may make to give them a plausible appearance, or to conceal them by hypocritical pretences.

Calvin: Joh 9:25 - -- 25.Whether he be a sinner, I know not The blind man appears not to have been at all prevented by fear from giving a sincere testimony. For there is n...

25.Whether he be a sinner, I know not The blind man appears not to have been at all prevented by fear from giving a sincere testimony. For there is no reason to believe that he had any doubts about Christ, as his words seem to imply; but I rather think that he spoke ironically, in order to wound them more deeply. He had already confessed that Christ was a Prophet, (verse 17.) Perceiving that he gains nothing by doing so, he suspends his judgment about the person, and brings forward the fact itself, so that, while he makes this admission in their favor, he is not free from ridiculing them.

Calvin: Joh 9:26 - -- 26.Again, therefore, they said to him When we see wicked men so delighted in performing their own base actions, we ought to be ashamed of our slothfu...

26.Again, therefore, they said to him When we see wicked men so delighted in performing their own base actions, we ought to be ashamed of our slothfulness, in acting with such coolness about the affairs of Christ. Though they search on all sides to obtain grounds of slander, the Lord defeats their attempts, in a remarkable manner, by the unshaken firmness of the blind man; for not only does he persist in his opinion, but he freely and severely reproaches them, that after having abundantly ascertained and known the truth, they endeavor to bury it by their continual inquiries. He charges them also with wicked hatred of Christ, when he says,

Do you also wish to become his disciples? For he means that, though they were a hundred times convinced, they are so strongly prejudiced by wicked and hostile dispositions, that they will never yield. It is an astonishing display of freedom, when a man of mean and low condition, and especially liable to be reproached on account of his poverty, fearlessly provokes the rage of all the priests against himself. If that which was nothing more than a small preparation for faith gave him so much boldness, when he came to the struggle, what excuse can be pleaded by great preachers of the Gospel, who, though they are beyond the reach of darts, are silent as soon as danger is threatened? This question is likewise ironical; for he means that they are prompted by malice, and not by a sincere desire of the truth, to press him so earnestly to reply as to this fact. 270

Calvin: Joh 9:28 - -- 28.Then they upbraided him It is probable that all the reproaches which were prompted by the violence of their rage and indignation were eagerly cast...

28.Then they upbraided him It is probable that all the reproaches which were prompted by the violence of their rage and indignation were eagerly cast upon him; but there was this one reproach among men, that they called him an apostate from the Law. For, in their opinion, he could not be a disciple of Christ without revolting from the Law of Moses; and they expressly represent these two things as inconsistent with each other. It is a very plausible pretence, that they are afraid of revolting from the doctrine of Moses. For this is the true rule of piety, that we ought to listen to the prophets, by whom we certainly know that God has spoken; that our faith may not be carried about by any doctrines of men. From this principle they deduce their certainty as to the Law of Moses; but they lie when they say that they are the disciples of Moses, for they have turned aside from the end of the Law. Thus hypocrites are wont to tear God in pieces, 271 when they wish to shelter themselves under his name. If Christ be the soul of the Law, as Paul tells us, (Rom 10:4,) what will the Law be when separated from him, but a dead body? We are taught by this example, that no man truly hears God, unless he be an attentive hearer of his word, so as to understand what God means and says.

Calvin: Joh 9:29 - -- 29.As for this man, we know not whence he is When they say so, they refer not to his country or the place of his birth, but to the prophetical office...

29.As for this man, we know not whence he is When they say so, they refer not to his country or the place of his birth, but to the prophetical office. For they allege that they have no knowledge of his calling, so as to receive him as having proceeded from God.

Calvin: Joh 9:30 - -- 30.Certainly this is wonderful He indirectly reproves them for remaining unmoved by a miracle so illustrious, and for pretending that they did not kn...

30.Certainly this is wonderful He indirectly reproves them for remaining unmoved by a miracle so illustrious, and for pretending that they did not know Christ’s calling; as if he had said, that it was highly improper that such a testimony of Divine power should be held in no estimation, and that the calling of Christ, so proved and attested, should obtain no credit among them. And, in order to show more clearly their stupidity or malice, he magnifies the excellence of the miracle from this consideration, that, as far as the memory of men reaches, none was ever heard to say that such a thing was done by a man. Hence it follows that they are malicious and ungrateful, because they voluntarily shut their eyes on a manifest work of God. He infers from this, that Christ was sent by God, because he is endued with so great power of the Spirit of God, to procure credit for himself and for his doctrine.

Calvin: Joh 9:31 - -- 31.Now we know that God heareth not sinners Those who think that the man spoke this, in accordance with the opinion of the people, are mistaken; for ...

31.Now we know that God heareth not sinners Those who think that the man spoke this, in accordance with the opinion of the people, are mistaken; for the word sinner, in this passage, as in another which lately occurred, means an ungodly and immoral person. It is the uniform doctrine of Scripture, that God does not listen to any but those who call upon him with truth and sincerity. For while faith alone opens the door to us to go to God, it is certain that all wicked men are excluded from approaching to him; and he even declares that he detests their prayers, (Pro 28:9,) as he abhors their sacrifices, (Pro 15:8.) It is by a special privilege that he invites his children to himself; and it is the Spirit of adoption alone that crieth out in our hearts, Abba, Father, (Rom 8:15; Gal 4:6.) In short, no man is properly disposed to pray to God, unless his heart be purified by faith. But wicked men profane the sacred name of God by their prayers, and therefore they deserve rather to be punished for this sacrilege, than to obtain any thing for salvation. Accordingly, the blind man does not reason inconclusively, that Christ has come from God, because God lends a favorable ear to his prayers.

Calvin: Joh 9:34 - -- 34.Thou wast altogether born in sins They alluded, I doubt not, to his blindness; as proud men are wont to teaze those who have any distress or calam...

34.Thou wast altogether born in sins They alluded, I doubt not, to his blindness; as proud men are wont to teaze those who have any distress or calamity; and, therefore, they continually insult him, as if he had come out of his mother’s womb, bearing the mark of his sins For all the scribes were convinced in their hearts, that souls, after having finished one life, entered into new bodies, and there suffered the punishment of their former crimes. Hence they conclude that he who was born blind was, at that very time, covered and polluted by his sins.

This undeserved censure ought to instruct us to be exceedingly cautious, not always to estimate the sins of any person by the chastisements of God; for, as we have already seen, God has various ends to accomplish, by inflicting calamities on men. But not only do those hypocrites insult the wretched man; they likewise reject disdainfully his warnings, though they are holy and good; as indeed it very frequently happens that one cannot endure to be taught by him whom he despises. Now, since we ought always to hear God, by whomsoever he may talk to us, let us learn not to despise any man, that God may find us always mild and submissive, even though he employ a person altogether mean and despicable to instruct us. For there is not a more dangerous plague than when pride stops our ears, so that we do not deign to hear those who warn us for our profit; and it frequently happens that God purposely selects vile and worthless persons to instruct and warn us, in order to subdue our pride.

And they cast him out Though it is possible that those haughty Rabbis 273 cast him, with violence, out of the temple, yet I think that the Evangelist has a different meaning, that they excommunicated him; and thus the casting of him out would have the semblance of law. This agrees better also with what follows; for if they had only cast him out in a disdainful and furious manner, it would not have been of so great importance as to make it probable that the report of it would reach Christ.

Calvin: Joh 9:35 - -- 35.Jesus heard that they had cast him out From this circumstance I conjecture that they proceeded to it in a solemn manner, as an affair of great imp...

35.Jesus heard that they had cast him out From this circumstance I conjecture that they proceeded to it in a solemn manner, as an affair of great importance, By this example, we are taught how trivial and how little to be dreaded are the excommunications of the enemies of Christ. If we are cast out from that assembly in which Christ reigns, it is a dreadful judgment which is executed against us, that we are delivered to Satan, (1Co 5:5,) because we are banished from the kingdom of the Son of God. But so far are we from having any reason to dread that tyrannical judgment by which wicked men insult the servants of Christ, that, even though no man should drive us out, we ought of our own accord to flee from that place in which Christ does not preside by his word and Spirit.

And having found him If he had been allowed to remain in the synagogue, he would have been in danger of becoming gradually alienated from Christ, and plunged in the same destruction with wicked men. Christ now meets him, when he is no longer in the temple, but wandering hither and hither; receives and embraces him, when he is cast out by the priests; raises him up from the ground, and offers to him life, when he has received the sentence of death. We have known the same thing by experience in our own time; for when Dr Martin Luther, 274 and other persons of the same class, were beginning to reprove the grosser abuses of the Pope, they scarcely had the slightest relish for pure Christianity; but after that the Pope had thundered against them, and cast them out of the Roman synagogue by terrific bulls, Christ stretched out his hand, and made himself fully known to them. So there is nothing better for us than to be at a very great distance from the enemies of the Gospel, that Christ may approach nearer to us.

Dost thou believe on the Son of God? He speaks to a Jew, who had been from his infancy instructed in the doctrine of the Law, and had learned that God had promised the Messiah. This question, therefore, has the same meaning as if Christ had exhorted him to follow the Messiah and to devote himself to him; though he employs a more honorable name than they were wont at that time to employ, for the Messiah was reckoned to be only the son of David, (Mat 22:42.)

Calvin: Joh 9:36 - -- 36.Who is he, Lord, that I may believe in him? From this reply of the blind man it is evident that, though he had not yet attained any clear or certa...

36.Who is he, Lord, that I may believe in him? From this reply of the blind man it is evident that, though he had not yet attained any clear or certain knowledge of Christ, still he was obedient and ready to receive instruction; for these words mean, “As soon as he is pointed out to me, I am ready to embrace him.” But it ought to be observed that the blind man desires to be instructed by Christ as a Prophet; for he was already convinced that Christ had been sent by God, and therefore he does not at random place reliance on his doctrine.

Calvin: Joh 9:37 - -- 37.Thou hast both seen him By these words of Christ the blind man could not be carried higher than to a very small and cold portion of faith. For Chr...

37.Thou hast both seen him By these words of Christ the blind man could not be carried higher than to a very small and cold portion of faith. For Christ does not mention his power, or the reason why he was sent by the Father, or what he has brought to men. But what principally belongs to faith is, to know that, by the sacrifice of his death, atonement has been made for our sins, and we are reconciled to God; that his resurrection was a triumph over vanquished death; that we are renewed by his Spirit, in order that, being dead to the flesh and to sin, we may live to righteousness; that he is the only Mediator; that the Spirit is the earnest of our adoption; in short, that in him is found every thing that belongs to eternal life. But the Evangelist either does not relate the whole of the conversation which Christ held with him, or he only means that the blind man professed his attachment to Christ, so that henceforth he began to be one of his disciples. For my own part, I have no doubt that Jesus intended to be acknowledged by him as the Christ, that from this beginning of faith he might afterwards lead him forward to a more intimate knowledge of himself.

Calvin: Joh 9:38 - -- 38.And he worshipped him It may be asked, Did the blind man honor or worship Christ as God? 275 The word which the Evangelist employs (προσέκ...

38.And he worshipped him It may be asked, Did the blind man honor or worship Christ as God? 275 The word which the Evangelist employs (προσέκυνησει) means nothing more than to express respect and homage by bending the knee, or by other signs. For my own part, certainly, I think that it denotes something rare and uncommon; namely, that the blind man gave far more honor to Christ than to an ordinary man, or even to a prophet. And yet I do not think that at that time he had made such progress as to know that Christ was God manifested in the flesh. What then is meant by worship ? The blind man, convinced that Jesus was the Son of God, nearly lost the command of himself, and, in rapturous admiration, bowed down before him.

Calvin: Joh 9:39 - -- 39.For judgment am I come into this world The word judgment cannot be understood, in this passage, to denote simply the punishment which is inflict...

39.For judgment am I come into this world The word judgment cannot be understood, in this passage, to denote simply the punishment which is inflicted on unbelievers, 276 and on those who despise God; for it is made to include the grace of illumination. Christ, therefore, calls it judgment, because he restores to proper order what was disordered and confused; but he means that this is done by a wonderful purpose of God, and contrary to the ordinary opinion of men. And, indeed, human reason considers nothing to be more unreasonable than to say, that they who see are made blind by the light of the world. This then is one of the secret judgments of God, by which he casts down the pride of men. It ought to be observed, that the blindness which is here mentioned, does not proceed so much from Christ as from the fault of men. For by its own nature, it does not strictly blind any man, but as there is nothing which the reprobate desire more earnestly than to extinguish its light, the eyes of their mind, which are diseased through malice and depravity, must be dazzled by the light which is exhibited to them. In short, since Christ is, by his own nature, the light of the world, (Joh 8:12,) it is an accidental result, that some are made blind by his coming.

But again it may be asked, Since all are universally accused of blindness, who are they that see ? I reply, this is spoken ironically by way of concession, because unbelievers, though they are blind, think that their sight is uncommonly acute and powerful; and elated by this confidence, they do not deign to listen to God. Besides, out of Christ the wisdom of the flesh has a very fair appearance, because the world does not understand what it is to be truly wise. So then, they see, says our Lord Jesus Christ, 277 who, deceiving themselves and others under a foolish confidence in their wisdom, are guided by their own opinion, and reckon their vain imaginations to be great wisdom. 278 Such persons, as soon as Christ appears in the brightness of his Gospel, are made blind; not only because their folly, which was formerly concealed amidst the darkness of unbelief, is now discovered, but because, being plunged in deeper darkness by the righteous vengeance of God, they lose that small remnant of I know not what light which they formerly possessed.

It is true that we are all born blind, but still, amidst the darkness of corrupted and depraved nature, some sparks continue to shine, so that men differ from brute beasts. Now, if any man, elated by proud confidence in his own opinion, refuses to submit to God, he will seem — apart from Christ — to be wise, but the brightness of Christ will strike him with dismay; for never does the vanity of the human mind begin to be discovered, until heavenly wisdom is brought into view. But Christ intended, as I have already suggested, to express something more by these words. For hypocrites do not so obstinately resist God before Christ shines; but as soon as the light is brought near them, then do they, in open war, and — as it were, with unfurled banner, 279 — rise up against God. It is in consequence of this depravity and ingratitude, therefore, that they become doubly blind, and that God, in righteous vengeance, entirely puts out their eyes, which were formerly destitute of the true light.

We now perceive the amount of what is stated in this passage, that Christ came into the world to give sight to the blind, and to drive to madness those who think that they are wise. In the first part of it, he mentions illumination, that they who see not may see; because this is strictly the cause of his coming, for he did not come to judge the world, but rather to save that which was lost, (Mat 18:11.) In like manner Paul, when he declares that he has vengeance prepared against all rebels, at the same time adds, that this punishment will take place

after that believers shall have fulfilled their obedience,
(2Co 10:6.)

And this vengeance ought not to be limited to the person of Christ, as if he did not perform the same thing daily by the ministers of his Gospel.

We ought to be the more careful that none of us, through a foolish and extravagant opinion of his wisdom, draw down upon himself this dreadful punishment. But experience shows us the truth of this statement which Christ uttered; for we see many persons struck with giddiness and rage, for no other reason but because they cannot endure the rising of the Sun of righteousness. Adam lived, and was endued with the true light of understanding, while he lost that divine blessing by desiring to see more than was allowed him. Now if, while we are plunged in blindness and thus humbled by the Lord, we still flatter ourselves in our darkness, and oppose our mad views to heavenly wisdom, we need not wonder if the vengeance of God fall heavily upon us, so that we are rendered doubly blind This very punishment was formerly inflicted on the wicked and unbelievers 280 under the Law; for Isaiah is sent to blind the ancient people, that

seeing they may not see: blind the heart of this people, and shut their ears,
(Isa 6:9.)

But in proportion as the brightness of the divine light is more fully displayed in Christ than in the Prophets, so much the more remarkably must this example of blindness have been manifested and perceived; as even now the noon-day light of the Gospel drives hypocrites to extreme rage.

Calvin: Joh 9:40 - -- 40.Some of the Pharisees heard They instantly perceived that they were smitten by this saying of Christ, and yet they appear not to have belonged to ...

40.Some of the Pharisees heard They instantly perceived that they were smitten by this saying of Christ, and yet they appear not to have belonged to the worst class; for the open enemies had so strong an abhorrence of Christ that they did not at all associate with him. But those men submitted to listen to Christ, yet without any advantage, for no man is qualified to be a disciple of Christ, until he has been divested of self, and they were very far from being so.

Are we also blind? This question arose from indignation, because they thought that they were insulted by being classed with blind men; and, at the same time, it shows a haughty contempt of the grace of Christ accompanied by mockery, as if they had said, “Thou canst not rise to reputation without involving us in disgrace; and is it to be endured that thou shouldst obtain honor for thyself by upbraiding us? As to the promise thou makest of giving new light to the blind, go hence and leave us with thy benefit; for we do not choose to receive sight from thee on the condition of admitting that we have been hitherto blind. ” Hence we perceive that hypocrisy has always been full of pride and of venom. The pride is manifested by their being satisfied with themselves, and refusing to have any thing taken from them; and the venom, by their being enraged at Christ and arguing with him, because he has pointed out their wound, as if he had inflicted on them a grievous wound. Hence arises contempt of Christ and of the grace which he offers to them.

The word also is emphatic; for it means that, though all the rest be blind, still it is improper that they should be reckoned as belonging to the ordinary rank. It is too common a fault among those who are distinguished above others, that they are intoxicated with pride, and almost forget that they are men.

Calvin: Joh 9:41 - -- 41.If you were blind These words may be explained in two ways; either, that ignorance would, in some degree, alleviate their guilt, if they were not ...

41.If you were blind These words may be explained in two ways; either, that ignorance would, in some degree, alleviate their guilt, if they were not fully convinced, and did not deliberately fight against the truth; or, that there was reason to hope that their disease of ignorance might be cured, if they would only acknowledge it. The former view is supported by the words of Christ,

If I had not come and spoken to them, they would have no sin,
(Joh 15:22.)

But as it is added in this passage, but now you say you see, in order that the points of contrast may correspond to each other, it appears to be more consistent to explain them to mean, that he is blind who, aware of his own blindness, seeks a remedy to cure his disease. 281 In this way the meaning will be, “If you would acknowledge your disease, it would not be altogether incurable; but now because you think that you are in perfect health, you continue in a desperate state.” When he says that they who are blind have no sin, this does not excuse ignorance, as if it were harmless, and were placed beyond the reach of condemnation. He only means that the disease may easily be cured, when it is truly felt; because, when a blind man is desirous to obtain deliverance, God is ready to assist him; but they who, insensible to their diseases, despise the grace of God, are incurable.

Defender: Joh 9:30 - -- This is marvelous sarcasm. These men professed to be teachers of the laws and works of God, yet knew nothing about the uniquely powerful teacher sent ...

This is marvelous sarcasm. These men professed to be teachers of the laws and works of God, yet knew nothing about the uniquely powerful teacher sent from God."

Defender: Joh 9:38 - -- Faith requires both a willing heart and knowledge concerning the object of faith. As soon as the blind man knew who Jesus claimed to be, he believed."

Faith requires both a willing heart and knowledge concerning the object of faith. As soon as the blind man knew who Jesus claimed to be, he believed."

TSK: Joh 9:22 - -- because : Joh 7:13, Joh 12:42, Joh 12:43, Joh 19:38, Joh 20:19; Psa 27:1, Psa 27:2; Pro 29:25; Isa 51:7, Isa 51:12, Isa 57:11; Luk 12:4-9, Luk 22:56-6...

TSK: Joh 9:23 - -- He is : Joh 9:21

He is : Joh 9:21

TSK: Joh 9:24 - -- Give : Joh 5:23, Joh 8:49, Joh 16:2; Jos 7:19; 1Sa 6:5-9; Psa 50:14, Psa 50:15; Isa 66:5; Rom 10:2-4 we know : Joh 9:16, Joh 8:46, Joh 14:30, Joh 18:3...

TSK: Joh 9:25 - -- one : Joh 9:30, Joh 5:11; 1Jo 5:10

TSK: Joh 9:27 - -- I have : Joh 9:10-15; Luk 22:67

TSK: Joh 9:28 - -- they : Joh 9:34, Joh 7:47-52; Isa 51:7; Mat 5:11, Mat 27:39; 1Co 4:12, 1Co 6:10; 1Pe 2:23 but : Joh 5:45-47, Joh 7:19; Act 6:11-14; Rom 2:17

TSK: Joh 9:29 - -- know : Joh 1:17; Num 12:2-7, Num 16:28; Deu 34:10; Psa 103:7, Psa 105:26, Psa 106:16; Mal 4:4; Act 7:35, Act 26:22; Heb 3:2-5 as for : Joh 9:16, Joh 9...

TSK: Joh 9:30 - -- herein : Joh 3:10, Joh 12:37; Isa 29:14; Mar 6:6 and yet : Psa 119:18; Isa 29:18, Isa 35:5; Mat 11:5; Luk 7:22; 2Co 4:6

TSK: Joh 9:31 - -- we know : Job 27:8, Job 27:9, Job 35:12, Job 42:8; Psa 18:41, Psa 34:15, Psa 66:18-20; Pro 1:28, Pro 1:29, Pro 15:29; Pro 21:13, Pro 28:9; Isa 1:15, I...

TSK: Joh 9:32 - -- Since : It is worthy of remark, that, from the foundation of the world, no person born blind had been restored to sight, even by surgical operation, t...

Since : It is worthy of remark, that, from the foundation of the world, no person born blind had been restored to sight, even by surgical operation, till about the year 1728; when the celebrated Dr. Cheselden, by couching the eyes of a young man fourteen years of age, restored them to perfect vision. This was the effect of well-directed surgery; that performed by Christ was wholly a miracle, effected by the power of God. The simple means employed could have had no effect in this case, and were merely employed as symbols.

the world : Job 20:4; Isa 64:4; Luk 1:70; Rev 16:18

TSK: Joh 9:33 - -- were : Joh 9:16, Joh 3:2; Act 5:38, Act 5:39

TSK: Joh 9:34 - -- wast : Joh 9:2, Joh 8:41; Job 14:4, Job 15:14-16, Job 25:4; Psa 51:5; Gal 2:15; Eph 2:3 and dost : Joh 9:40, Joh 7:48, Joh 7:49; Gen 19:9; Exo 2:14; 2...

TSK: Joh 9:35 - -- and when : Joh 5:14; Psa 27:10; Rom 10:20 Dost : Joh 1:49, Joh 1:50, Joh 3:15-18, Joh 3:36, Joh 6:69, Joh 11:27, Joh 20:28, Joh 20:31; Act 8:37, Act 9...

TSK: Joh 9:36 - -- Who : Joh 1:38; Pro 30:3, Pro 30:4; Son 5:9; Mat 11:3

TSK: Joh 9:37 - -- Thou : Joh 4:26, Joh 7:17, Joh 14:21-23; Psa 25:8, Psa 25:9, Psa 25:14; Mat 11:25, Mat 13:11, Mat 13:12; Act 10:31-33

TSK: Joh 9:38 - -- Lord : Joh 20:28; Psa 2:12, Psa 45:11; Mat 14:33, Mat 28:9, Mat 28:17; Luk 24:52; Rev 5:9-14

TSK: Joh 9:39 - -- For : Joh 3:17, Joh 5:22-27, Joh 8:15; Jer 1:9, Jer 1:10; Luk 2:34, Luk 13:30; 2Co 2:16 that they : Joh 9:25, Joh 9:36-38, Joh 8:12, Joh 12:46; Mat 11...

TSK: Joh 9:40 - -- Are : Joh 9:34, Joh 7:47-52; Mat 15:12-14, Mat 23:16-28; Luke 11:39-54; Rom 2:19-22; Rev 3:17

TSK: Joh 9:41 - -- If : Joh 15:22-24; Pro 26:12; Isa 5:21; Jer 2:35; Luk 12:47, Luk 18:14; Heb 10:26; 1Jo 1:8-10

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Joh 9:20-22 - -- His parents answered ... - To the first two questions they answered without hesitation. They knew that he was their son, and that he was born b...

His parents answered ... - To the first two questions they answered without hesitation. They knew that he was their son, and that he was born blind. The third question they could not positively answer, as they had not witnessed the means of the cure, and were afraid to express their belief. It appears that they had themselves no doubt, but they were not eye-witnesses, and could not be therefore legal evidence.

He is of age - He is of sufficient age to give testimony. Among the Jews this age was fixed at thirteen years.

If any man did confess that he was Christ - Did acknowledge that he was the Messiah. They had prejudged the case, and were determined to put down all free inquiry, and not to be convinced by any means.

Put out of the synagogue - This took place in the temple, or near the temple. It does not refer, therefore, to any immediate and violent putting forth from the place where they were. It refers to excommunication from the synagogue. Among the Jews there were two grades of excommunication; the one for lighter offences, of which they mentioned 24 causes; the other for greater offences. The first excluded a man for 30 days from the privilege of entering a synagogue, and from coming nearer to his wife or friends than 4 cubits. The other was a solemn exclusion forever from the worship of the synagogue, attended with awful maledictions and curses, and an exclusion from all contact with the people. This was called the curse, and so thoroughly excluded the person from all communion whatever with his countrymen, that they were not allowed to sell to him anything, even the necessaries of life (Buxtorf). It is probable that this latter punishment was what they intended to inflict if anyone should confess that Jesus was the Messiah: and it was the fear of this terrible punishment that deterred his parents from expressing their opinion.

Barnes: Joh 9:24 - -- Give God the praise - This expression seems to be a form of administering an oath. It is used in Jos 7:19, when Achan was put on his oath and e...

Give God the praise - This expression seems to be a form of administering an oath. It is used in Jos 7:19, when Achan was put on his oath and entreated to confess his guilt. Joshua said, "My son, give, I pray thee, glory to the Lord God of Israel (in the Greek of the Septuagint, the very expression used in John, ‘ Give God the praise’ ), and make confession unto him."It is equivalent to an adjuration in the presence of God to acknowledge the truth; as the truth would be giving God praise, confessing the case before him, and trusting to his mercy. Compare 1Sa 6:5 The meaning here is not "give God praise for healing you,"for they were not willing to admit that he had been cured Joh 9:18, but confess that there is imposture in the case; that you have declared to us a falsehood, that you have endeavored to impose on us; and by thus confessing your sin, give praise and honor to God, who condemns all imposture and falsehood, and whom you will thus acknowledge to be right in your condemnation. To induce him to do this, they added that they knew, or were satisfied that Jesus was a sinner. As they considered that point settled, they urged him to confess that he had attempted to impose on them.

We know - We have settled that. He has broken the Sabbath, and that leaves no doubt.

A sinner - A violator of the law respecting the Sabbath, and an impostor. See Joh 9:16.

Barnes: Joh 9:25 - -- Whether he be a sinner or no, I know not - The man had just said that he believed Jesus to be a prophet, Joh 9:17. By his saying that he did no...

Whether he be a sinner or no, I know not - The man had just said that he believed Jesus to be a prophet, Joh 9:17. By his saying that he did not know whether he was a sinner may be meant that though he might be a prophet, yet that he might not be perfect; or that it did not become him, being an obscure and unlearned man, to attempt to determine that question. What follows shows that he did not believe that he was a sinner, and these words were probably spoken in irony to deride the Pharisees. They were perverse and full of cavils, and were determined not to believe. The man reminded them that the question was not whether Jesus was a sinner; that, though that might be, yet it did not settle the other question about opening his eyes, which was the chief point of the inquiry.

One thing I know ... - About this he could have no doubt. He disregarded, therefore, their cavils. We may learn, also, here:

1.    That this declaration may be made by every converted sinner. He may not be able to meet the cavils of others. He may not be able to tell how he was converted. It is enough if he can say, "I was a sinner, but now love God; I was in darkness, but have now been brought to the light of truth."

2.    We should not be ashamed of the fact that we are made to see by the Son of God. No cavil or derision of men should deter us from such an avowal.

3.    Sinners are perpetually shifting the real point of inquiry. They do not inquire into the facts. They assume that a thing cannot be true, and then argue as if that was a conceded point. The proper way in religion is first to inquire into the facts, and then account for them as we can.

Barnes: Joh 9:26 - -- How opened he thine eyes? - The reason why they asked this so often was doubtless to attempt to draw him into a contradiction; either to intimi...

How opened he thine eyes? - The reason why they asked this so often was doubtless to attempt to draw him into a contradiction; either to intimidate him, or throw him off his guard, so that he might be detected in denying what he had before affirmed. But God gave to this poor man grace and strength to make a bold confession of the truth, and sufficient common sense completely to confound his proud and subtle examiners.

Barnes: Joh 9:28 - -- Thou art his disciple - This they cast at him as a reproach. His defense of Jesus they regarded as proof that he was his follower, and this the...

Thou art his disciple - This they cast at him as a reproach. His defense of Jesus they regarded as proof that he was his follower, and this they now attempted to show was inconsistent with being a friend of Moses and his law. Moses had given the law respecting the Sabbath; Jesus had healed a man contrary, in their view, to the law of Moses. They therefore held Jesus to be a violater and contemner of the law of Moses, and of course that his followers were also.

We are Moses’ disciples - We acknowledge the authority of the law of Moses, which they alleged Jesus has broken by healing on that day.

Barnes: Joh 9:29 - -- We know ... - We know that God commanded Moses to deliver the law. In that they were correct; but they assumed their interpretation of the law ...

We know ... - We know that God commanded Moses to deliver the law. In that they were correct; but they assumed their interpretation of the law to be infallible, and, hence, condemned Jesus.

As for this fellow - The word "fellow"is not in the original. It is simply "this."The word "fellow"implies contempt, which it cannot be proved they intended to express.

Whence he is - We know not his origin, his family, or his home. The contrast with the preceding member of the sentence shows that they intended to express their belief that he was not from God. They knew not whether he was mad, whether he was instigated by the devil, or whether he spoke of himself. See Joh 7:27; Joh 8:48-52.

Barnes: Joh 9:30 - -- A marvelous thing - This is wonderful and amazing. Know not from whence he is - That you cannot perceive that he who has performed such a...

A marvelous thing - This is wonderful and amazing.

Know not from whence he is - That you cannot perceive that he who has performed such a miracle must be from God.

Barnes: Joh 9:31 - -- Now we know - That is, it is an admitted or conceded point. No one calls it into question. God heareth not - When a miracle was performed...

Now we know - That is, it is an admitted or conceded point. No one calls it into question.

God heareth not - When a miracle was performed it was customary to invoke the aid of God. Jesus often did this himself, and it was by his power only that prophets and apostles could perform miracles. The word "heareth"in this place is to be understood as referring to such cases. God will not hear - that is, answer.

Sinners - Impostors. False prophets and pretenders to divine revelation. See Joh 9:24. The meaning of this verse is, therefore, "It is well understood that God will not give miraculous aid to impostors and false prophets."We may remark here:

1.    That the passage has no reference to the prayers which sinners make for salvation.

2.    If it had it would not be of course true. It was the mere opinion of this man, in accordance with the common sentiment of the Jews, and there is no evidence that he was inspired.

3.    The only prayers which God will not hear are those which are offered in mockery, or when the man loves his sins and is unwilling to give them up. Such prayers God will not hear, Psa 66:18; "If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me;"Isa 1:14-15; Job 27:9; Jer 11:11; Eze 8:18; Mic 3:4; Zec 7:13,

A worshipper - A sincere worshipper; one who fears, loves, and adores him.

Doeth his will - Obeys his commandments. This is infallibly true. The Scripture abounds with promises to such that God will hear their prayer. See Psa 34:15; Mat 7:7-8.

Barnes: Joh 9:32 - -- Since the world began - Neither Moses nor any of the prophets had ever done this. No instance of this kind is recorded in the Old Testament. As...

Since the world began - Neither Moses nor any of the prophets had ever done this. No instance of this kind is recorded in the Old Testament. As this was a miracle which had never been performed, the man argued justly that he who had done it must be from God. As Jesus did it not by surgical operations, but by clay, it showed that he had power of working miracles by any means. It may be also remarked that the restoration of sight to the blind by surgical operations was never performed until the year 1728. Dr. Cheselden, an English surgeon, was the first who attempted it successfully, who was enabled to remove a cataract from the eye of a young man, and to restore sight. This fact shows the difficulty of the operation when the most skillful natural means are employed, and the greatness of the miracle performed by the Saviour.

Barnes: Joh 9:33 - -- Could do nothing - Could do no such work as this. This reasoning was conclusive. The fact that Jesus could perform miracles like this was full ...

Could do nothing - Could do no such work as this. This reasoning was conclusive. The fact that Jesus could perform miracles like this was full proof that he was commissioned by God - proof that never has been and never can be refuted. One such miracle proves that he was from God. But Jesus gave many similar proofs, and thus put his divine mission beyond the possibility of doubt.

Barnes: Joh 9:34 - -- Wast born in sins - That is, thou wast born in a state of blindness a state which proved that either thou or thy parents had sinned, and that t...

Wast born in sins - That is, thou wast born in a state of blindness a state which proved that either thou or thy parents had sinned, and that this was the punishment for it. See Joh 9:2. Thou wast cursed by God with blindness for crime, and yet thou dost set up for a religious teacher! When people have no arguments, they attempt to supply their place by revilings. When they are pressed by argument, they reproach their adversaries with crime, and especially with being blind, perverse, heretical, disposed to speculation, and regardless of the authority of God. And especially do they consider it great presumption that one of an inferior age or rank should presume to advance an argument in opposition to prevailing opinions.

They cast him out - Out of the synagogue. They excommunicated him. See the notes at Joh 9:22.

Barnes: Joh 9:35 - -- Dost thou believe on the Son of God? - Hitherto he had understood little of the true character of Jesus. He believed that he had power to heal ...

Dost thou believe on the Son of God? - Hitherto he had understood little of the true character of Jesus. He believed that he had power to heal him, and he inferred that he must be a prophet, Joh 9:17. He believed according to the light he had, and he now showed that he was prepared to believe all that Jesus said. This is the nature of true faith. It believes all that God has made known, and it is premiered to receive all that he will teach. The phrase Son of God here is equivalent to the Messiah. See the notes at Mat 8:29.

Barnes: Joh 9:36 - -- Who is he? - It is probable that the man did not know that he who now addressed him was the same who had healed him. He had not yet seen him Jo...

Who is he? - It is probable that the man did not know that he who now addressed him was the same who had healed him. He had not yet seen him Joh 9:7, but he was prepared to acknowledge him when he did see him. He inquired, therefore, who the person was, or wished that he might be pointed out to him, that he might see him. This passage shows that he was disposed to believe, and had a strong desire to see and hear the Son of God.

Lord - This word here, as in many other instances in the New Testament, means "Sir."It is clear that the man did not know that it was the Lord Jesus that addressed him, and he therefore replied to him in the common language of respect, and asked him to point out to him the Son of God. The word translated "Lord"here is rendered "Sir"in Joh 4:11; Joh 20:15; Joh 12:21; Act 16:30; Mat 27:63. It should have been also here, and in many other places.

Barnes: Joh 9:38 - -- I believe - This was the overflowing expression of gratitude and faith. And he worshipped him - He did homage to him as the Messiah and a...

I believe - This was the overflowing expression of gratitude and faith.

And he worshipped him - He did homage to him as the Messiah and as his gracious benefactor. See the notes at Mat 2:2. This shows:

1.    That it is right and natural to express thanks and praise for mercies.

2.    All blessings should lead us to pour out our gratitude to Jesus, for it is from him that we receive them.

3.    Especially is this true when the mind has been enlightened, when our spiritual eyes have been opened, and we are permitted to see the glories of the heavenly world.

4.    It is right to pay homage or worship to Jesus. He forbade it not. He received it on earth, and for all mercies of providence and redemption we should pay to him the tribute of humble and grateful hearts. The Syriac renders the phrase, "he worshipped him,"thus:"and, casting himself down, he adored him."The Persian, "and he bowed down and adored Christ."The Arabic, "and he adored him."The Latin Vulgate, "and, falling down, he adored him."

Barnes: Joh 9:39 - -- For judgment - The word "judgment,"here, has been by some understood in the sense of condemnation - "The effect of my coming is to condemn the ...

For judgment - The word "judgment,"here, has been by some understood in the sense of condemnation - "The effect of my coming is to condemn the world. But this meaning does not agree with those places where Jesus says that he came not to condemn the world, Joh 3:17; Joh 12:47; Joh 5:45. To judge is to express an opinion in a judicial manner, and also to express any sentiment about any person or thing, Joh 7:24; Joh 5:30; Luk 8:43. The meaning here may be thus expressed: "I came to declare the condition of men; to show them their duty and danger. My coming will have this effect, that some will be reformed and saved, and some more deeply condemned."

That they ... - The Saviour does not affirm that this was the design of his coming, but that such would be the effect or result. He came to declare the truth, and the effect would be, etc. Similar instances of expression frequently occur. Compare Mat 11:25; Mat 10:34; "I came not to send peace, but a sword"- that is, such will be the effect of my coming.

That they which see not - Jesus took this illustration, as he commonly did, from the case before him; but it is evident that he meant it to be taken in a spiritual sense. He refers to those who are blind and ignorant by sin; whose minds have been darkened, but who are desirous of seeing.

Might see - Might discern the path of truth, of duty, and of salvation, Joh 10:9.

They which see - They who suppose they see; who are proud, self-confident, and despisers of the truth. Such were evidently the Pharisees.

Might be made blind - Such would be the effect of his preaching. It would exasperate them, and their pride and opposition to him would confirm them more and more in their erroneous views. This is always the effect of truth. Where it does not soften it hardens the heart; where it does not convert, it sinks into deeper blindness and condemnation.

Barnes: Joh 9:41 - -- If ye were blind - If you were really blind had had no opportunities of learning the truth. If you were truly ignorant, and were willing to con...

If ye were blind - If you were really blind had had no opportunities of learning the truth. If you were truly ignorant, and were willing to confess it, and to come to me for instruction.

No sin - You would not be guilty. Sin is measured by the capacities or ability of people, and by their opportunities of knowing the truth. If people had no ability to do the will of God, they could incur no blame. If they have all proper ability, and no disposition, God holds them to be guilty. This passage teaches conclusively:

1.\caps1     t\caps0 hat people are not condemned for what they cannot do.

2.\caps1     t\caps0 hat the reason why they are condemned is that they are not disposed to receive the truth.

3.\caps1     t\caps0 hat pride and self-confidence are the sources of condemnation.

4.\caps1     t\caps0 hat if people are condemned, they, and not God, will be to blame.

We see - We have knowledge of the law of God. This they had pretended when they professed to understand the law respecting the Sabbath better than Jesus, and had condemned him for healing on that day.

Your sin remaineth - You are guilty, and your sin is unpardoned. People’ s sins will always be unpardoned while they are proud, and self-sufficient, and confident of their own wisdom. If they will come with humble hearts and confess their ignorance, God will forgive, enlighten, and guide them in the path to heaven.

Poole: Joh 9:20-21 - -- Ver. 20,21. But besides this, the parents of this man proved more honest and stouter than, it may be, the Pharisees did expect. They affirm, that the...

Ver. 20,21. But besides this, the parents of this man proved more honest and stouter than, it may be, the Pharisees did expect. They affirm, that they knew that he was their son, and that he was born blind. But for the third question, How he now saw? They avoid an answer to that, being possibly no eyewitnesses of Christ when he wrought the miracle. For this they refer them to their son, who was no babe, but a man grown, one of age, able to speak for himself; of whom they might inquire, and he was best able, as to this thing, to give them satisfaction.

Poole: Joh 9:22 - -- The reason why his parents answered so very warily, and avoided saying any thing to the Pharisees third question, which probably they could not go o...

The reason why his parents answered so very warily, and avoided saying any thing to the Pharisees third question, which probably they could not go of their particular personal knowledge, was, that they were afraid of the rulers of the Jews. Solomon saith,

The fear of man bringeth a snare Pro 29:25 ; it is often a temptation to men to deny the truth, or, at least, not to own and confess it when God calls to them for a public owning and confession of it: but nothing of that nature appeareth in this case; for it doth not appear that his parents were present when Christ wrought this great miracle; which if they were not, they were not obliged to tell the Pharisees what themselves had only received by rumour and hearsay: so that their answer seems but a prudential answer, to avoid an eminent danger. For they were not ignorant of a decree made by the Jewish sanhedrim. That if any did publicly say, or declare, that Jesus was Christ, he should be excommunicated; for that is meant by being

put out of the synagogue

Poole: Joh 9:23-24 - -- Ver. 23,24. They were not able to obtain their design from the parents of this poor man; now they again call him, and advise him to give glory to God...

Ver. 23,24. They were not able to obtain their design from the parents of this poor man; now they again call him, and advise him to give glory to God. Thus far they spake well, if they had been hearty and serious in what they said; for the man indeed had great reason to give God the glory, by whose power alone, exerted by his Son Christ Jesus, he had received his sight: but moral actions are made good or bad by their ends; and if we consider the end of these wretched men in this action of theirs, wherein they persuaded the poor man to his duty, the words will appear to have been spoken from hearts minding nothing less than the glory of God, and out of a design to vilify and depreciate his Son; whereas God hath set up his rest in his Son, and cannot be glorified but with, in, and through him; whom in the next words they maliciously defame, not only speaking of him contemptuously, calling him

this man but affirm him amartwlov , not

a sinner only, but a notorious, scandalous sinner as that word imports.

Poole: Joh 9:25 - -- This poor man being of no higher quality than a beggar, can be presumed to have had no great education; yet his answer is as good as could be expect...

This poor man being of no higher quality than a beggar, can be presumed to have had no great education; yet his answer is as good as could be expected from one of the greatest breeding, both for security to himself, and his stout asserting what was truth. As to their charge upon our Saviour of his being a great sinner, he avoids it, telling them, as to that he knew nothing, nor was it his concern to inquire; but this he knew, that he had wrought a great work on him, for whereas he had been blind from his mother’ s womb, he now had his sight by his means: so as all their frowns could not tempt him to deny the miracle wrought upon him, nor yet to speak the least in abatement of it.

Poole: Joh 9:26 - -- They cannot frown him into a denial of the miracle wrought; he stood stoutly to affirm, that he was born blind, and that he was cured by Christ: now...

They cannot frown him into a denial of the miracle wrought; he stood stoutly to affirm, that he was born blind, and that he was cured by Christ: now they put him to tell the story over again, either hoping they should entrap him, contradicting himself in his story; or, at least, find something, upon his repeating the story, for them to take advantage from, to persuade the people that it was but a cheat, and indeed there was no such miracle wrought upon him.

Poole: Joh 9:27 - -- It is wonderful to see how the boldness and confidence of the poor man increased; God giving him that wisdom and courage which they were not able to...

It is wonderful to see how the boldness and confidence of the poor man increased; God giving him that wisdom and courage which they were not able to resist. He refuseth to repeat the story to them, telling them he had once already told it them, but they would not give credit to him; and to what purpose was it for him to say it over again, unless they were inclined to be his disciples? Some think the form of speech implies a hearty wishing and desiring that they would be so: but others think he speaks ironically, as if he had said, I know my repeating again the story will not induce you to be his disciples, you are resolved against that, and therefore why do you put me upon a needless trouble? And this seemeth to have been his sense by what followeth in the Pharisees reply, full of indignation.

Poole: Joh 9:28 - -- If this were all their reviling, for them to tell this poor man that he was Christ’ s disciple, it was a very tolerable imputation, and what th...

If this were all their reviling, for them to tell this poor man that he was Christ’ s disciple, it was a very tolerable imputation, and what the blind man had reason to glory in: their guilt in reviling is to be judged not so much from what they spake, for there was nothing of greater honour, as from what heart and spirit they spake it. A disciple signifies, one that followeth another, and learns of him. To be a disciple of Christ indeed, was the greatest thing that any could glory in; yet the imputation of it to this blind man is here called a reviling: whence we may observe, that the guilt of reviling is to be judged not so much from the words which a man speaketh, as from the frame of his spirit, and design of that in the speaking of them. If a man speaketh that of another which is good and true, yet if he doth it out of a design to expose him, to do him mischief, and make him odious unto others, God doth account this reviling, because it proceedeth from the hatred of our brother in our heart, and a design to do him harm. Again, though indeed it was no reproach to be called Christ’ s disciple, yet they affixed this term upon this poor man out of a design to reproach him, and to expose him to the hatred of others. We are in the government of our tongues not only obliged to take heed what we say, but with what heart, and out of what design we speak it. A malicious design turns terms of the greatest honour into terms of reviling. Besides, they here oppose Christ and Moses: whereas, Moses was but the type, Christ the antitype; Moses prophesied of Christ, Christ was that Prophet which God had promised to raise up like unto him; Moses but the school master, who led them unto Christ.

Poole: Joh 9:29 - -- Concerning Moses indeed they speak honourably, and say, they knew God spake to him; yet did they know it no otherwise than by tradition, and the rev...

Concerning Moses indeed they speak honourably, and say, they knew God spake to him; yet did they know it no otherwise than by tradition, and the revelation of the will of God in the law and the prophets. For Christ, they call him touton ,

this fellow and say, they know not whence he was; that is, they know of no Divine authority that he had. They were blinded through malice and prejudice. Indeed they did know whence he was as to his human nature, for they often made that the cause of their stumbling at him; that he was of Galilee, that his father was a carpenter, and his mother called Mary: but they knew of no Divine mission or authority that he had: this they might have known also, for he did those things which no man ever did, nor could be effected by any thing less than a Divine power; but their eyes were blinded, and their hearts were judicially hardened; they studied to shut out the light by which they should have seen, and would not know whence he was.

Poole: Joh 9:30 - -- The opening of the eyes of the blind without the application of means rationally probable for the producing such an effect, nay, by the application ...

The opening of the eyes of the blind without the application of means rationally probable for the producing such an effect, nay, by the application of means which to all human reason seemed of a quite contrary tendency; and this cure wrought upon one who was not blind by some accidental cause, but by some defect in nature, who had been so from his mother’ s womb, was so manifest an effect of the Divine power, as this poor man was astonished at it, that they should not understand that it was done by such a power, either immediately or mediately; especially considering the prophecy concerning the Messias, Isa 35:5,6 , to which Christ refers John and his disciples for an evidence of it, Mat 11:5 .

Poole: Joh 9:31 - -- This poor man proveth that Christ was from heaven, because he had opened his eyes; not as yet apprehending that Christ did it by putting out an imme...

This poor man proveth that Christ was from heaven, because he had opened his eyes; not as yet apprehending that Christ did it by putting out an immediate Divine power for his healing; but as a great prophet, obtaining such a power from God for the confirmation of the things which he delivered.

Now (saith he) we know that God heareth not sinners But the question is, what truth there is in this axiom, or proposition. Doth not God hear sinners? Then he can hear none; for who liveth, and sinneth not against God? How did he hear Ahab, and others who were notorious sinners?

Answer.

1. By sinners here must be understood notorious and presumptuous sinners, that live and go on in courses of sin with hardened hearts: the word here used signifieth bold, presumptuous sinners; not such as sin merely through ignorance, weakness, or human infirmity.

2. God is under no covenant obligation to hear sinners; they can challenge no such favour upon the account of any promise: but God, out of the aboundings of his goodness, may hear them, as he heard Ahab and others; he may hear them as his creatures crying in their misery, though he hears them not as children, or upon the account of any covenant.

3. As to the sense of this maxim in this place, it seemeth to be particular and special; and the words seem to be restrained to that particular degree of favour here spoken of; God useth not to honour notorious and flagitious sinners, by giving them a power to work miracles, by which they should confirm any thing which they say.

This poor man bringeth this as an argument, why Christ should not be such a notorious sinner as they spake him, because it was not God’ s way to honour such persons with his presence and assistance to the doing of those things which none could do but by a Divine power committed to him. Two things this man assumes, or taketh for granted:

1. That no man can work miracles, without a power obtained of by prayer, as we saw it was in the case of Elisha, 2Ki 4:33 .

2. That what Christ did, he did as a man.

The first is true, the second was false. He was not yet convinced of Christ’ s Divine nature, nor looked upon him higher than as a prophet, one sent of God to reveal the will of God, and to work great works in the world by prayer; as to which he affirms, that if he were such a sinner as they clamoured, God would not hear him. So as the question, How far God may hear sinners, in giving them any thing they ask of him, seemeth not at all proper to this place; though it be enough clear from other scriptures, such as Psa 66:18 Isa 1:5 , that none that live in a course of sin can expect that God should hear or give answer to their prayers; and though God may give to such sinners such things as they ask him for, which are of a mere external concern, yet it is not with respect to any promise which he hath made to them, but out of the aboundings of his own goodness. But if a man feareth God, and worketh righteousness, him the Lord heareth, accepteth, and answereth. The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him, Psa 25:14 Pro 3:32 .

Poole: Joh 9:32 - -- He proveth Christ to be sent from God, (though it appears by Joh 9:33 that he looked as yet upon him in no higher notion than a man), from the natu...

He proveth Christ to be sent from God, (though it appears by Joh 9:33 that he looked as yet upon him in no higher notion than a man), from the nature of the miracle that was wrought; which was not the recovery of a blind man’ s sight only, but giving sight to one who was born blind. Now, saith this poor man, this is such a work as was never done by Moses, or by any of the prophets who have been since the creation of the world. Some who have been blind from some accidental cause, and something which hath befallen them, films and cataracts, &c., have been cured; and possibly God by his almighty power may have given sight to one born blind; but we never heard of any such thing done by Moses, whom we magnify; nor by the prophets, for whom we have the greatest veneration.

Poole: Joh 9:33 - -- If therefore this man (for still he apprehended him no more) had not some special authority from God, and there were not some special presence of Go...

If therefore this man (for still he apprehended him no more) had not some special authority from God, and there were not some special presence of God with him, he could do nothing that is of this nature. It is a work beyond the power of man, and beyond that power first we read God did ever trust any man with.

Poole: Joh 9:34 - -- The Pharisees seeing that they could by no arts bring this poor blind man to their lure, either to deny, or speak any thing in abatement of the mira...

The Pharisees seeing that they could by no arts bring this poor blind man to their lure, either to deny, or speak any thing in abatement of the miracle which Christ had wrought upon him; nor yet to agree with them, that Christ was a great sinner; fall at last to a downright railing; they tell him, he was

altogether born in sins So were all of them. David had taught them, that there was none righteous, no not one; and confessed concerning himself, Psa 51:5 , that he was conceived in iniquity, and that in sin his mother had brought him forth. They had learned from Job, that none can bring a clean thing out of that which is unclean; nothing can be clean that is born of a woman, Job 14:4 . Their meaning therefore in this phrase must be something more; and possibly the adjective olov , which signifieth whole, (we translate it as if it were olwv , altogether ) doth import thus much. They do not only tell this man that he was born in sin, but that he was whole or altogether born in sin, that is, under the guilt of sin: nor do they mean only the common corruption and contagion of human nature, derived from the loss of God’ s image in man upon the fall of Adam, but some notorious sin. If any say, How could they think that he was guilty of any such thing before he was born?

Answer. It was the opinion of Pythagoras, one of the heathen philosophers, that when men and women died their souls went into other bodies that were then born, and in those bodies often suffered punishment for those enormous acts which they had been guilty of in former bodies. It is apparent that the Jews were some of them tainted with this notion, from Herod’ s saying, Mat 14:2 Mar 6:14 , when, after the beheading of John the Baptist, he heard what great works Christ did, that John the Baptist was risen from the dead, and therefore mighty works did show forth themselves in him; by which the best interpreters think, that Herod meant no more than that John the Baptist’ s soul was gone into another body, according to their notion borrowed from the heathens; for it had been easy for Herod by search to have found whether John the Baptist’ s body was risen from the dead.

So it is thought that the Pharisees here saying,

Thou wast altogether born in sins meant that his soul was a sordid, filthy soul, which in another body had committed vile and abominable things; and for those sins God set a mark upon him, even in his birth, and he was horn blind. Or perhaps this phrase signified no more than a term of reviling; of which no great account can be given, as passionate men in the madness of their passions oft throw out words of reproach, of which neither themselves nor others can give any just and reasonable account.

And dost thou teach us? Thou that art such a marked villain from thy mother’ s womb, or that art such an ignorant idiot, dost thou think thyself fit to instruct us about true and false prophets, who are of God, and who are not? Surely we are to be thy teachers, and not thou ours.

And they cast him out: some think that casting out here signifieth no more than a turning him out of the place where they were; as the word signifieth, Act 7:58 13:50 . Others think its here to be understood of a judicial excommunication, or casting him out of communion with the Jewish church; which latter seemeth more probable, because of the notice or it brought to our Saviour, and the notice which he took of this poor man, upon this occasion. If it had been only a turning him out of the place where they were met, it is not probable that it would have made such a noise.

Poole: Joh 9:35 - -- Jesus heard that they had cast him out as was said in the former verse, probably by excommunication. When he had found him ( whether casually, or up...

Jesus heard that they had cast him out as was said in the former verse, probably by excommunication.

When he had found him ( whether casually, or upon an industrious search for him, the Scripture doth not say), he said unto him,

Dost thou believe on the Son of God? Art thou one who art ready truly and seriously to embrace the Messiah and Saviour of the world, who must not be only the Son of man, but also the Son of God? Art thou willing to accept, receive, and close with him, and to give up thyself to his obedience?

Poole: Joh 9:36 - -- It is as much as if he had said, Lord! How should I believe on him, of whom I have not heard? (So the disciples answered Paul, asking them whether t...

It is as much as if he had said, Lord! How should I believe on him, of whom I have not heard? (So the disciples answered Paul, asking them whether they had received the Holy Ghost, We have not so much as heard whether there be any Holy Ghost , Act 19:2 ). But, saith he, Lord, I am ready to believe on him, may I but know who he is. Our Lord had prepared this poor man’ s heart for the receiving of him; there wanted now nothing but the due revelation of the Messiah unto him. This our Saviour giveth him.

Poole: Joh 9:37 - -- This is as much as, I am he. Thou hast not only seen him with the eyes of thy body, but thou hast had experience of his Divine virtue and power, in ...

This is as much as, I am he. Thou hast not only seen him with the eyes of thy body, but thou hast had experience of his Divine virtue and power, in giving thee sight who wert born blind: thus seeing also signifieth, Joh 14:9 . It is very observable here, that miracles do not work faith, but confirm it. The blind man had experienced here a miracle wrought upon himself, but yet he is an unbeliever, until the Lord cometh to give him the revelation of his word: faith cometh by hearing: but together with this word we must also conceive a mighty power to have flowed from Christ, inwardly enlightening him, and enabling him to discern the truth of what he told him, and making him yet further willing to receive him, and close with him.

Poole: Joh 9:38 - -- Now is the work of faith with power wrought in his soul: he saith, Lord, I do acknowledge and receive thee as the Son of God; I am fully persuaded t...

Now is the work of faith with power wrought in his soul: he saith, Lord, I do acknowledge and receive thee as the Son of God; I am fully persuaded that thou art more than what thou art in thy external form and appearance, more than a mere man, and I give up myself to thee, to be ruled and guided by thee. And as a testimony of this, he performed some act of external adoration to him. The word signifies prostration; he kneeled down to him, or he fell upon his face before him: we are not able to determine what particular act or posture of adoration he used; but there is nothing plainer, than that it is to be understood of such a Divine adoration and homage as is due unto God alone, for it was such as testified his faith in him as the Son of God, whom he had professed that he believed him to be, in the words immediately preceding: although therefore the word in the Greek be a word used sometimes to signify that civil respect which men show to their superiors, yet it cannot be so interpreted in this place, considering what went before.

Poole: Joh 9:39 - -- There is a great variety in interpreters notions about the judgment here mentioned. Some think that by it is meant the Divine counsel and decree: I...

There is a great variety in interpreters notions about the judgment here mentioned. Some think that by it is meant the Divine counsel and decree: I am come into the world, to execute the just will, and counsel, and pleasure of my Father: and the event of it is this, that some who saw not, see; and some who see, in a sense are made blind. Others understand it of condemnation; I am come to execute the judgment of condemnation: but thus it is hardly reconcilable to Joh 3:17 , where it is said, that God sent not his Son to condemn the world. The best notion of it is theirs who interpret it of the spiritual government of the world, committed to Christ, and managed by him with perfect rectitude and equity. One eminent part of this was his publishing the gospel, the law of faith. The event of which is, that many spiritually blind, and utterly unable to see the way that leads to eternal life, might (as this person that was born blind is now clear sighted) be enlightened with the saving knowledge of the truth; and many that think they see, should by their obstinate infidelity be more blind than they were from their birth. Not that I cast any such ill influence upon them; but this happeneth through their own sore eyes. I am the light of the world; and as it is of the nature of light to make other things visible to men; and it hath its effect, and doth so, where men’ s eyes are not ill affected with humours and the like; so the light of my gospel, by which I shine in the world, makes the way of salvation by me, ordained by my Father, Act 3:18 , evident and clear to many souls who are in darkness and the shadow of death: but it so happeneth, through the prejudices that others are prepossessed with against me, and the doctrine of my gospel by which I shine in the world, so full of ignorance, malice, and hatred against me and the doctrine which I bring; that through their own perverseness, and the righteous judgment of God, at last giving men over to their own delusions, they are made more blind. In this sense this scripture agreeth with what was prophesied by Isa 8:14 , And he shall be for a sanctuary; but for a stone of stumbling and for a rock of offence to both the houses of Israel, for a gin and for a snare to the inhabitants of Jerusalem; and the words of Simeon in Luk 2:34 , Behold, this child is set for the fall and rising again of many in Israel; as also with that of Paul, Rom 9:33 .

Poole: Joh 9:40 - -- The Pharisees attended our Saviour almost in all places where he went, to catch something from him whereof they might accuse him: they could not but...

The Pharisees attended our Saviour almost in all places where he went, to catch something from him whereof they might accuse him: they could not but understand, that the import of our Saviour’ s last words was, that this poor blind man, now not only receiving bodily sight, (though born blind), but a spiritual illumination, by which he discerned that Christ was the Son of God, the true Messiah and Saviour of the world, was an instance of those mentioned, who, not seeing before, upon Christ’ s coming saw; and that themselves and their masters were an instance of those whom he intended by such as saw, and by his coming were made blind; for our Saviour had often called them blind, and so represented them to the people to whom he preached, Mat 15:14 Luk 6:39 . They therefore grew very angry, being very proud, and not patient to be thought or called blind, looking upon themselves as the greatest lights of the Jewish church.

Poole: Joh 9:41 - -- If ye were blind if your ignorance were simple, and not affected, and you were sensible that your blindness were not incurable, and your sin might be...

If ye were blind if your ignorance were simple, and not affected, and you were sensible that your blindness were not incurable, and your sin might be pardoned. This appeareth to be the sense from the opposition of it, now ye say, We see in the latter part of the verse. They were indeed blind, as to any true and saving sight of Christ, and of the true way of salvation by believing in him; seeing (as they apprehended) a way of salvation without Christ, by the works of the law, and wilfully shutting their eyes against the glorious light of the gospel shining on them.

Ye should have no sin; you should not have so much sin, so much guilt upon your souls, as you now have: though your ignorance had been sin, yet it had not been so great a sin as a wilful shutting your eyes against the light.

But now ye say, We see; now that you have an opinion that you see, and boast in your knowledge of the law, as if you were the only men that saw; and upon this presumption reject the doctrine of salvation; therefore your sin remaineth, by it you not only conclude yourselves under the guilt of sin, but your sin remaineth upon you, not pardoned to you: which teacheth us, that without a true and saving sight of sin, and such a one as carrieth the soul out of itself to Christ for pardon and remedy, there is no hope of pardon and forgiveness from all the mercy that is in God.

Lightfoot: Joh 9:22 - -- These words spake his parents, because they feared the Jews: for the Jews had agreed already, that if any man did confess that he was Christ, he...

These words spake his parents, because they feared the Jews: for the Jews had agreed already, that if any man did confess that he was Christ, he should be put out of the synagogue.   

[He should be put out of the synagogue.] So Joh 16:2; Granting that this is spoken of excommunication, the question may be, Whether it is to be understood of the ordinary excommunication, that is, from this or that synagogue; or the extraordinary, that is, a cutting off from the whole congregation of Israel.   

"Whoever is excommunicated by the president of the Sanhedrim is cut off from the whole congregation of Israel": and if so, then much more if it be by the vote of the whole Sanhedrim. And it seems by that speech, they cast him out; Joh 9:34, that word out; was added for such a signification.   

But suppose we, it might be understood of the ordinary excommunication; among all the four-and-twenty reasons of excommunication, which should it be for which this was decreed, viz. that "if any man did confess that Jesus was the Christ, he should be put out of the synagogue?" The elders of the Sanhedrim, perhaps, would answer, what upon other occasions is frequently said and done by them, "It is decreed for the necessity of the time."

Lightfoot: Joh 9:28 - -- Then they reviled him, and said, Thou art his disciple; but we are Moses' disciples.   [We are Moses' disciples.] The man, as it shou...

Then they reviled him, and said, Thou art his disciple; but we are Moses' disciples.   

[We are Moses' disciples.] The man, as it should seem, had in gentle and persuasive terms asked them, "Will ye also be his disciples?" as if he heartily wished they would. But they as ruggedly, "Be you so: we are Moses' disciples."   

"They delivered two disciples of the wise men into the hands of the chief priest" [that they might instruct him about the rites and usages of the day of expiation]; they were of the disciples of Moses. And who are these disciples of Moses? it follows, the very phrase excludes the Sadducees.   

The reader may observe, by the way, these disciples of Moses; with what reverence they treat him.   

"Moses was angry about three things, and the tradition was accordingly hid from him: I. About the sabbath, Exo 16:20; while he was angry he forgot to recite to them the traditions about the sabbath. II. About the vessels of metal, Num 31:14; while he was angry, he forgot to recite to them the traditions about the vessels of metal. III. About the mourner, Lev 10:16; while he was wrath, the tradition was hid from him, which forbade the mourner to eat of the holy things."   

Did Moses think it unlawful for the mourner to have eaten of the holy things, when he spake to Eleazar and Ithamar, while they were in the very act of bewailing the death of their two brethren, "Wherefore have ye not eaten the sin offering in the holy place?" Yes, but in his passion he forgot both the tradition and himself too. Excellent disciples indeed! that can thus chastise your great master at pleasure, as a man very hasty, apt to be angry, and of a slender memory! Let him henceforward learn from you to temperate his passions and quicken his memory. You have a memory indeed that have recovered the tradition which he himself had forgot.

Lightfoot: Joh 9:34 - -- They answered and said unto him, Thou wast altogether born in sins, and dost thou teach us? And they cast him out.   [And they cast him o...

They answered and said unto him, Thou wast altogether born in sins, and dost thou teach us? And they cast him out.   

[And they cast him out.] I shall note something of this kind of phrase at Joh 16:2. Thus doth this man commence the first confessor in the Christian church, as John the Baptist had been the first martyr in it. He suffered excommunication, and that from the whole congregation of Israel, for the name of Christ. It seems something strange that they did not excommunicate Jesus himself: but they were contriving more bloody things against him.

Haydock: Joh 9:22 - -- The Jews had already agreed, or combined together, that if any one owned him for the Messias, he should be turned out of their synagogues, as a perso...

The Jews had already agreed, or combined together, that if any one owned him for the Messias, he should be turned out of their synagogues, as a person excommunicated. (Witham)

Haydock: Joh 9:24 - -- Give glory to God, before whom thou art speaking, and tell us the truth. It could not be this man who cured thee; for we know he is a sinner, who sed...

Give glory to God, before whom thou art speaking, and tell us the truth. It could not be this man who cured thee; for we know he is a sinner, who seduceth the people. (Bible de Vence) ---

So say our separated brethren, when they derogate from miracles done by saints, pharisaically pretending the glory of God, as if it were not God's glory when his servants act by his power and virtue. Witness Peter's shadow, (Acts v.) and Paul's handkerchiefs that cured diseases, and expelled wicked spirits. (Acts xix. 11, 12.)

Haydock: Joh 9:27 - -- I have told you already, and you have heard. In almost all Greek manuscripts we now read, and you have not heard. Beza, with good reason, here pr...

I have told you already, and you have heard. In almost all Greek manuscripts we now read, and you have not heard. Beza, with good reason, here prefers the Latin Vulgate, as more correct than the Greek. (Witham)

Haydock: Joh 9:28 - -- They reviled him with scornful[1] and disdainful language. (Witham) =============================== [BIBLIOGRAPHY] Maledixerunt, Greek: elo...

They reviled him with scornful[1] and disdainful language. (Witham)

===============================

[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Maledixerunt, Greek: eloidoresan, reviled, rather than cursed.

====================

Haydock: Joh 9:31 - -- God doth not hear sinners. That is, in so particular a manner, as to work miracles in favour of them and their doctrine. (Witham)

God doth not hear sinners. That is, in so particular a manner, as to work miracles in favour of them and their doctrine. (Witham)

Haydock: Joh 9:32 - -- From the beginning of the world it hath not been heard. Though we read of many miracles done by Moses and the prophets, this, saith he, is the first...

From the beginning of the world it hath not been heard. Though we read of many miracles done by Moses and the prophets, this, saith he, is the first example of any man receiving his sight who had been born blind. (Witham)

Haydock: Joh 9:39 - -- For judgment I am come into this world. Christ said (chap. iii. 17.) that God did not send his Son to judge the world: the same he repeats; (John ...

For judgment I am come into this world. Christ said (chap. iii. 17.) that God did not send his Son to judge the world: the same he repeats; (John xii. 47.) nor is this contradictory to those words: the meaning here is not that he is come to exercise the office of a judge, but he tells them what will be the consequences of his coming, and their refusing to believe in him, that they shall be justly punished with the greatest severity for their wilful blindness. (Witham) ---

Jesus Christ came into the world that the pagans, who were yet in darkness, might receive light, and that the Jews, who enjoyed the light, might fall into darkness. The Jews were thus condemned, on account of their presumption and hardness of heart, and grace was granted to the Gentiles to enter into the true Church. These are the designs of the Almighty upon mankind, some of whom remain in infidelity, whilst others receive the light of faith; but all is done by the secret and impenetrable decrees of the justice and wisdom of God. The Holy Ghost, by these words, tells us only what was to be the event, not what was the cause of these things. We must seek for the cause of them in the malice of the heart of man, and in the depth of the judgments of God. (Calmet) ---

I am come, &c. Not that Christ came for that end, that any one should be made blind; but that the Jews, by the abuse of his coming, and by their not receiving him, brought upon themselves this judgment of blindness. (Challoner)

Haydock: Joh 9:40-41 - -- The Pharisees them replied: and are we also blind? Jesus said to them: if you were blind, by ignorance in not having heard of me, and my doctrine, y...

The Pharisees them replied: and are we also blind? Jesus said to them: if you were blind, by ignorance in not having heard of me, and my doctrine, you might be excused for not believing; but now saying, we see: and having been yourselves in the occasions and opportunities of seeing, your sin remaineth, and you in your sins. (Witham) ---

If you were blind, &c. If you were invincibly ignorant, and had neither read the Scriptures, nor seen my miracles, you would not be guilty of the sin of infidelity: but now, as you boast of your knowledge of the Scriptures, you are inexcusable. (Challoner) ---

If you had humility enough to acknowledge your blindness and ignorance, and seriously to seek for a remedy, you would soon be delivered from sin, and freed from the evil of blindness. But filled as you are with presumption, you remain still in blindness, which, as it is voluntary, is at the same time criminal and inexcusable. This is your evil; this you sin. (Calmet) ---

We here see that it is judged by truth itself far better not to read the Scriptures at all, than to read them with bad dispositions; not to see the miracles of Jesus Christ, than to refuse our assent to their author. At the present day all read the Scriptures, but do we see any marked improvement in the moral world? The text, without any comment, is given to Churchmen and to Dissenters: the latter gladly accept the offering, because, as the Rev. Frederick Noland observes, (in his objections of a Churchman to uniting with the Bible society, p. 34) "the authorized version is in many places accommodated to their peculiar opinions, through the conciliatory spirit of the Church, which revised the text for the purpose of doing their objections away." And in his note on this part, he adds: "The last revisal of the translation of the Bible was undertaken, as is notorious, for the purpose of removing certain objections made to the old version by the non-conformists. That the execution has been answerable to the intent, is evident from the fact of the Dissenters having withdrawn their exceptions, and adopted the version. Comp. Nichols. Defens. Eccles. Anglic. p. 33. Pierre. Vindic. Fratr. Dissent. p. 60-67." Thus (Acts xiv. 23.) " Greek: cheirotonesantes de autois presbuterous kat ekklesian. When they had ordained them elders by election, in every church. (Bp's Bible.) When they had ordained them elders in every church. (Authors. vers.) These words, as applied to St. Paul and St. Barnabas, who had merely received first orders, (Acts xiii. 2.) form in the former version an argument against presbyters' right to ordain, and in the latter one in favour of that practice." As a further accommodation, he says the word elders was substituted for presbyters, &c. "Independency in the very nature of it is schism; for every congregation is a different church. " (Sherl. Def. of Stillingfl.)

Gill: Joh 9:20 - -- His parents answered them, and said,.... What follows, which contains distinct answers to the several questions: and to the first they reply very free...

His parents answered them, and said,.... What follows, which contains distinct answers to the several questions: and to the first they reply very freely, and with great confidence,

we know that this is our son; for though his receiving his sight made a considerable alteration in him, yet his features were the same; and there might be some marks in his body, which they were acquainted with, by which they knew assuredly he was their son: and if even the neighbours, though they disagreed about him, yet some of them knew him to be the same person that had been blind and begged, then much more his parents; and even those who said it was not he, yet they owned he was like him: and with respect to the second question they answer,

and that he was born blind: this they were ready to attest, and did attest.

Gill: Joh 9:21 - -- But by what means he now seeth we know not,.... As to the third question they could say nothing to it, they were not present when the cure was wrought...

But by what means he now seeth we know not,.... As to the third question they could say nothing to it, they were not present when the cure was wrought, and knew nothing of the matter, but what they had heard from their son, or from others, or both:

or who hath opened his eyes we know not; they had heard it was Jesus, and their son had doubtless told them it was he; but since they could say nothing of their own personal knowledge, they choose not to say anything of him:

he is of age; at man's estate, as, with the Jews, one was, who was at the age of thirteen years, if he could produce the signs of puberty: and such an one was allowed a witness in any case, but not under this age; nor if he was arrived to it, if the above signs could not be produced q. This man very likely was much older, as may be thought from the whole of his conduct, his pertinent answers, and just reasoning: wherefore his parents direct the sanhedrim to him for an answer to their third question,

ask him, he shall speak for himself; or "of himself", as the Vulgate Latin and Ethiopic versions render it: their sense is, he is capable of giving an account of himself in this matter, and he will do it, and let him do it; put the question to him, and a proper answer will be returned; and so they left the affair to be issued in this way.

Gill: Joh 9:22 - -- These words spake his parents,.... these were the answers they returned to the three questions put to them: and the reason why they answered in the ma...

These words spake his parents,.... these were the answers they returned to the three questions put to them: and the reason why they answered in the manner they did to the third, was,

because they feared the Jews; the Jewish sanhedrim, otherwise they were Jews themselves:

for the Jews had agreed already; the sanhedrim had made a decree, either at this time, upon this account, or some time before,

that if any man did confess that he was Christ; that Jesus of Nazareth was the Messiah,

he should be put out of the synagogue; which was not that sort of excommunication which they called נדוי, "Niddui", a separation from civil society for the space of four cubits, and which held but thirty days, if the person repented; if he did not, it was continued to sixty days; and after that, in case of non-repentance, to ninety days; and if no amendment, then they proceeded to another excommunication called חרם, "Cherem", or שמתא, "Shammatha", whereby such were anathematized, and cut off from the whole body of the Jewish church and people, called sometimes the synagogue and congregation of Israel r; and this struck great terror in the minds of the people; and this was what intimidated the parents of the blind man, being what is intended here. Though these are sometimes put one for another, and signify the same thing; and he that was under the former of those censures, is said to be מן ציבור מובדל, "separated from the congregation" s, a phrase by which the word here used may be very well rendered: but in some things there was a difference between them; the one was without cursing, the other with; he that was under "Niddui", might teach others the traditions, and they might teach him; he might hire workmen, and be hired himself: but he that was under "Cherem" might neither teach others, nor they teach him; but he might teach himself, that he might not forget his learning; and he might neither hire, nor be hired; and they did not trade with him, nor did they employ him in any business, unless in very little, just to keep him alive t; yea, the goods which he was possessed of, were confiscated, and which they conclude should be done from u Ezr 10:8, which may be compared with this passage; so that this greatly and chiefly affected them in the affairs of civil life, and which made it so terrible: for I do not find that they were obliged to abstain from the temple, or temple worship, or from the synagogue, and the worship of it, and which is the mistake of some learned men: it is certain, they might go into places of worship, though with some difference from others; for it is said w, that

"all that go into the temple, go in, in the right hand way, and go round, and come out in the left, except such an one to whom anything has befallen him, and he goes about to the left; (and when asked) why dost thou go to the left? (he answers) because I am a mourner; (to whom it is replied) he that dwells in this house comfort thee: (or) שאני מנודה, "because I am excommunicated"; (to whom they say) he that dwells in this house put it into thy heart (that thou mayest hearken to the words of thy friends, as it is afterwards explained) and they may receive thee.''

And it is elsewhere said x, that

"Solomon, when he built the temple, made two gates, the one for bridegrooms, and the other for mourners and excommunicated persons; and the Israelites, when they went in on sabbath days, or feast days, sat between these two gates; and when anyone came in by the gate of the bridegrooms, they knew he was a bridegroom, and said unto him, he that dwells in this house make thee cheerful with sons and daughters: and when anyone came in at the gate of mourners, and his upper lip covered, they knew that he was a mourner, and said unto him, he that dwells in this house comfort thee: and when anyone came in at the gate of mourners, and his upper lip was not covered, they knew שהיה מנודה, "that he was excommunicated"; and said unto him, he that dwells in this house comfort thee, and put it into thy heart to hearken to thy friends.''

And it is afterwards also said in the same place, that when the temple was destroyed, it was decreed that such persons should come into synagogues and schools; but then they were not reckoned as members of the Jewish church, but as persons cut off from the people of Israel, and scarce allowed to be of their commonwealth. And it may be further observed, that excommunication with the Jews was not only on religious accounts, but on civil accounts; on account of money, or when a man would not pay his debts, according to the decree of the sanhedrim y. The twenty four reasons of excommunication, given by Maimonides z, chiefly respect contempt of the sanhedrim, and of the wise men, and breach of the traditions of the elders; sometimes they excommunicated for immorality, particularly the Essenes, as Josephus relates, who says a, that such who are taken in grievous sins, they cast them out of their order; and he that is so dealt with commonly dies a miserable death; for being bound by oaths and customs, he cannot eat the food of others, and so starves. The same is reported b by R. Abraham Zachuth: and sometimes excommunication was for Epicurism, or heresy, and such they reckoned the belief of Jesus of Nazareth, as the Messiah, on account of which this decree was made, and which continued with them; for not only this blind man was cast out of the synagogue by virtue of it, but our Lord tells his disciples, that they should be so treated by the Jews after his death; and we find it remained in force and practice many hundreds of years afterwards. Athanasius c relates of a Jew, that lived in Berytus, a city in Syria, between Tyre and Sidon, that an image of Christ being found in his house by another Jew, though unknown to him; and this being discovered to the chief priests and elders of the Jews, they cast him out of the synagogue. Sometimes this sentence was pronounced by word of mouth, and sometimes it was delivered in writing: the form of one is given us by Buxtorf d, out of an ancient Hebrew manuscript; and a dreadful shocking one it is; and is as follows:

"according to the mind of the Lord of lords, let such an one, the son of such an one, be in "Cherem", or anathematized, in both houses of judgment, of those above, and those below; and with the anathema of the saints on high, with the anathema of the "Seraphim" and "Ophanim", and with the anathema of the whole congregation, great and small; let great and real stripes be upon him, and many and violent diseases; and let his house be an habitation of dragons; and let his star be dark in the clouds; and let him be for indignation, wrath, and anger; and let his carcass be for beasts and serpents; and let those that rise up against him, and his enemies, rejoice over him; and let his silver and his gold be given to others; and let all his children be exposed at the gate of his enemies, and at his day may others be amazed; and let him be cursed from the mouth of Addiriron and Actariel, (names of angels, as are those that follow,) and from the mouth of Sandalphon and Hadraniel, and from the mouth of Ansisiel and Pathchiel, and from the mouth of Seraphiel and Zaganzael, and from the mouth of Michael and Gabriel, and from the mouth of Raphael and Meshartiel; and let him be anathematized from the mouth of Tzabtzabib, and from tile mouth of Habhabib, he is Jehovah the Great, and from the mouth of the seventy names of the great king, and from the side of Tzortak the great chancellor; and let him be swallowed up as Korah and his company, with terror, and with trembling; let his soul go out; let the reproof of the Lord kill him; and let him be strangled as Ahithophel in his counsel; and let his leprosy be as the leprosy of Gehazi; and let there be no raising him up from his fall; and in the sepulchres of Israel let not his grave be; and let his wife be given to another; and let others bow upon her at his death: in this anathema, let such an one, the son of such an one be, and let this be his inheritance; but upon me, and upon all Israel, may God extend his peace and his blessing. Amen.''

And if he would, he might add these verses in Deu 29:19, "and it come to pass when he heareth the words of this curse, that he bless himself in his heart, saying, I shall have peace, though I walk in the imagination of mine heart, to add drunkenness to thirst: the Lord will not spare him, but then the anger of the Lord, and his jealousy shall smoke against that man, and all the curses that are written in this book shall lie upon him, and the Lord shall blot out his name from under heaven. And the Lord shall separate, him unto evil, out of all the tribes of Israel, according, to all the curses of the covenant, that are written in this book of the law". There were many rites and ceremonies, which in process of time were used, when such a sentence was pronounced, as blowing of horns and trumpets, and lighting of candles, and putting them out: hence, trumpets are reckoned d a among the instruments of judges. It is said e of R. Judah, that being affronted by a certain person, he resented the injury, and brought out the trumpets and excommunicated him: and they tell us f, that Barak anathematized Meroz, whom they take to be some great person, with four hundred trumpets: and they also say g, that four hundred trumpets were brought out, and they excommunicated Jesus of Nazareth; though these words are left out in some editions of the Talmud. Now this was done in order to inject terror both into those that were guilty, and also into the whole congregation of the people, that they might hear and fear; for the "Cherem", or that sort of excommunication which goes by that name, was done publicly before the whole synagogue, all the heads and elders of the church being gathered together; and then candles were lighted, and as soon as the form of the curse was finished, they were put out, as a sign that the excommunicated person was unworthy of the heavenly light h. Very likely the Papists took their horrible custom from hence of cursing with bell, book, and candle.

Gill: Joh 9:23 - -- Therefore said his parents, he is of age,.... See Gill on Joh 9:21.

Therefore said his parents, he is of age,.... See Gill on Joh 9:21.

Gill: Joh 9:24 - -- Then again called they the man that was blind,.... That had been blind. After they had examined his parents, and could get nothing from them for their...

Then again called they the man that was blind,.... That had been blind. After they had examined his parents, and could get nothing from them for their purpose, they try a second time what they could do with the son:

and said unto him, give God the praise; a phrase used when confession of sin was required; see Jos 7:19; and this may be the meaning of it here; confess this fraud and imposture before the omniscient God, the searcher of hearts, and in so doing glorify that perfection of his. One and the same word, ידה, signifies both to confess the truth of anything, as a sinful action, Pro 28:13, and to give thanks and praise to God for any mercy and blessing, Psa 45:17. Some take this to be the form of an oath, and that the Pharisees adjured the than by the living God, that he would tell the truth, and discover the cheat and collusion used in this affair of receiving his sight; and thought hereby to have deterred him from speaking of this benefit he had received from Christ, especially in such a manner as to reflect any honour upon the author of it. Or the sense may be, if this really is matter of fact, that thou wast born blind, and hast received thy sight by the means of this man, give all the glory of it to God, to whom alone it is due, and not to him. God sometimes works by wicked instruments, when the glory of what is done ought not to be ascribed to them, but to him.

We know that this man is a sinner; this they concluded from his breaking the sabbath, as they supposed; though they also aspersed his character, and accused him of other things, yet falsely; see Mat 11:19; nor could they prove one single instance of sin in him, though they express themselves here with so much assurance.

Gill: Joh 9:25 - -- He answered and said,.... That is, the man who had been blind, who takes no notice of the confession they pressed him to, which is what he could not d...

He answered and said,.... That is, the man who had been blind, who takes no notice of the confession they pressed him to, which is what he could not do; there being no collusion in this case, he only replies to the reproachful character they had given of his benefactor.

Whether he be a sinner or not, I know not: or "if he is a sinner I know not", as the Vulgate Latin version renders it, suggesting that he did not know he was a sinner; he could not charge him with being one; nor could he join with them in saying he was a sinner; nor did he think and believe he was: however, he was sure he had done a good thing to him, and in that he was no sinner; and what proof they had of his being one he could not tell: and be that as it will, adds he,

one thing I know, that whereas I was blind, now I see; as if he should say, whatever charges you bring against the person that has done me this favour, which I am not able to answer to, you cannot reason me out of this; this I am sure of, that once I had no eyes to see with, and now I have, and that by the means of this man you reproach. And so it is with persons enlightened in a spiritual sense, whatever things they may be ignorant of, though they may not know the exact time of their conversion, nor have so much Gospel light and knowledge as others, or be so capable of expressing themselves, or giving such a distinct and orderly account of the work of God upon them as some can, nor dispute with an adversary for the truths of the Gospel, or have that faith of assurance, and discoveries of God's love, and the application of such great and precious promises as others have; yet this they know, that they were once blind, as to the knowledge of spiritual things, as to a saving knowledge of God in Christ, as to a true sight and sense of themselves, their sins and lost estate, as to the way of righteousness and salvation by Christ, or the work of the Spirit of God upon their souls, or as to any true and spiritual discerning of the Scriptures, and the doctrines of grace in them: but now they are comfortably assured, they see the exceeding sinfulness of sin, the plague of their own hearts, the insufficiency of their righteousness to justify them before God, and the beauty, fulness, suitableness, and ability of Christ as a Saviour; and that their salvation is, and must be of free grace; and that they see the truths of the Gospel in another light than they did before, and have some glimpse of eternal glory and happiness, in the hope of which they rejoice.

Gill: Joh 9:26 - -- Then said they to him again,.... Finding they could not bring him to deny the fact, or cause him to entertain an ill opinion of him that did it, they ...

Then said they to him again,.... Finding they could not bring him to deny the fact, or cause him to entertain an ill opinion of him that did it, they examine him again about the manner of it:

what did he to thee? how opened he thine eyes? These questions they had put before, Joh 9:15, and propose them again, in hope he would vary in the account, which they would not fail of improving against him; or that it would appear that he had not been really blind, at least from his birth; or that Christ made use of some unlawful means, as magic art, which they were always ready to charge him with, and to impute his miracles to a diabolical familiarity and influence; and they would have been glad to have had something to support such a calumny.

Gill: Joh 9:27 - -- He answered them, I have told you already,..... As he had, Joh 9:15, and ye did not hear; the Vulgate Latin version reads, and ye have heard; and s...

He answered them, I have told you already,..... As he had, Joh 9:15,

and ye did not hear; the Vulgate Latin version reads, and ye have heard; and so some copies of Stephens's; that is, an account had been given of the manner how his eyes were opened, and they had heard the account with their bodily ears, though not with the ears of their minds; and therefore, according to most copies and versions, it is read, "ye did not hear"; did not regard it, or give credit to it; and so the Persic version renders it, "and ye have not believed"; they would not believe the man had been blind, until they sent for his parents; much less would they believe the account of his cure:

wherefore would ye hear it again? once is sufficient, especially since the former account has been disregarded and discredited: their view could not be their own information but to baffle and confound the man, if they could. The Syriac, Arabic, and Ethiopic versions leave out the word "again", and only read, "wherefore would ye hear?" what end can you have in it? of what avail would it be? or what purpose can be answered by it?

will ye also be his disciples? as many whom you call ignorant and accursed people are, and as I myself desire to be. This he might say either in an ironical and sarcastic way; or else seriously, suggesting, that if they were willing to examine into this fact, with upright views and sincere intentions, that should it appear to be a true miracle, they would become the disciples and followers of Jesus, then he would, with all his heart, relate the account to them over and over again, or as often as they pleased.

Gill: Joh 9:28 - -- Then they reviled him,.... Called him an impertinent, saucy, impudent fellow, for talking in this pert manner to them, the great sanhedrim of the nati...

Then they reviled him,.... Called him an impertinent, saucy, impudent fellow, for talking in this pert manner to them, the great sanhedrim of the nation; or, as the Vulgate Latin version reads, they cursed him; they thundered out their anathemas against him, and pronounced him an execrable and an accursed fellow:

and said, thou art his disciple; for they looked upon it a reproach and scandal to be called a disciple of Jesus of Nazareth; though there is nothing more honourable than to be a follower of him the Lamb whithersoever he goes: wherefore these Jews threw off what they thought a term of reproach from themselves to the blind man; and perhaps they might say this to ensnare him, hoping that he would own himself to be a disciple of Jesus, and profess him to be the Christ, that they might, according to their own act, excommunicate him. The Vulgate Latin, Persic, and Ethiopic versions read, "be thou his disciple"; if thou wilt, we despise the character; far be it from us that we should be followers of him:

but we are Moses's disciples. Thus they preferred Moses to Christ, and chose to be the disciples of Moses the servant, rather than of Christ the Son; though indeed they were not the genuine disciples of Moses; for if they had, they would have been the disciples of Christ, and believers in him, since Moses wrote and testified of him: they might indeed be so far the disciples of Moses, or of his law, since they sought for righteousness and justification by obedience to his law. This was a phrase in use among the Jews: so the Targumist i on Num 3:2 says,

"these are the names of they sons of Aaron the priests, תלמידיא דמשה, "the disciples of Moses", the master of the Israelites;''

particularly the Pharisees, as here, claimed this title to themselves: for it is said k,

"all the seven days (before the day of atonement) they delivered to him (the high priest) two of the disciples of the wise men, to instruct him in the service (of that day), who were, מתלמידיו של משה, "of the disciples of Moses", in opposition to the Sadducees:''

from whence it appears, that these disciples of Moses were of the sect of the Pharisees, who assumed this character as peculiar to themselves; sometimes they call themselves the disciples of Abraham, though the description they give of such, by no means belongs to them; See Gill on Joh 8:39. They say l,

"whoever has three things in him, is מתלמידיו של אברהם, "of the disciples of Abraham" our father, and who has three other things is of the disciples of Balaam the wicked: he that has a good eye, (beneficence, or temperance, or contentment,) a lowly spirit, and an humble soul, he is of "the disciples of Abraham" our father; but he that has evil eye, and a proud spirit, and a large soul (lustful or covetous), is of the disciples of Balaam.''

This last character best agrees with those very persons, who would be thought to be the disciples of Abraham and of Moses.

Gill: Joh 9:29 - -- We know that God spoke to Moses,.... Out of the bush, and told him who he was, and sent him to deliver the children of Israel out of Egyptian bondage,...

We know that God spoke to Moses,.... Out of the bush, and told him who he was, and sent him to deliver the children of Israel out of Egyptian bondage, and spoke the ten words, or law unto him, and by him delivered them to the children of Israel, and to whom he spake face to face, as a man does to his friend, and mouth to mouth, and not in dark sayings; they mean, they knew that Moses had his mission, commission, and credentials from God:

but as for this fellow; so they contemptuously called the Lord Jesus Christ,

we know not from whence he is; contradicting what others of them had said, Joh 7:27. They imagined they knew the country from whence he came, which they supposed to be Galilee, and the place where he was born, which they concluded was Nazareth; though in both they were in the wrong; and they knew his parents, Joseph and Mary, and his brethren and sisters; but as to his divine filiation, they knew nothing of it; nor would they own his mission, commission, and credentials to be from heaven; and pretended they had no reason to conclude they were.

Gill: Joh 9:30 - -- The man answered and said unto them,.... Very appropriately and pertinently, why herein is a marvellous thing; strange and unaccountable, that y...

The man answered and said unto them,.... Very appropriately and pertinently,

why herein is a marvellous thing; strange and unaccountable,

that ye know not from whence he is; that you learned doctors, men of sagacity and penetration, should not be able to discern that this man is of God, is a prophet sent by him, and that there should be any doubt from whence he comes, or from whom he has his commission:

and yet he hath opened mine eyes; which was so clearly and plainly the work of the Messiah, and to be done by him when he came, Isa 35:4.

Gill: Joh 9:31 - -- Now we know that God heareth not sinners,.... All mankind are sinners, even God's elect; yea, such who are truly gracious and righteous persons; for t...

Now we know that God heareth not sinners,.... All mankind are sinners, even God's elect; yea, such who are truly gracious and righteous persons; for there is no man without sin; and God hears such who cry unto him day and night; such Christ came to save; for such he died; and these he calls to repentance; and every penitent sinner God hears: but by "sinners" are meant notorious sinners, such in whom sin reigns, who live in sin, and particularly impostors. The man takes up the word the Jews had made use of, and applied to Christ, Joh 9:24, and suggests, that had Jesus been a sinner, that is, an impostor, God would not have heard him, or have assisted him in doing a miracle, to support an imposture, or cover and encourage a fraud; but that he was heard and assisted, was a plain case: whereas not only they, the learned doctors of the nation, but such an illiterate man as himself knew, that notoriously wicked men, cheats, and deceivers, were not heard of God; and this was known from the Scripture, and all experience; see Psa 66:18. The Persic and Ethiopic versions read, "I know, that God", &c.

but if any man be a worshipper of God; fears the Lord, and worships him in spirit and in truth, both with internal and external worship:

and doth his will; for it is not everyone that Lord, or draws nigh to God with his mouth, and honours him with his lips, that is a true and sincere worshipper of him; but he that does his will in faith, from a principle of love, and with a view to his glory: and

him he heareth; for he is nigh to all that call upon him in truth; and such an one the man intimates Jesus must be, since it was out of all dispute that God had heard him, and had bore a testimony to him.

Gill: Joh 9:32 - -- Since the world began,.... εκ του αιωνος, "from eternity", or never: the phrase answers to מעולם, frequently used by the Jews m, for n...

Since the world began,.... εκ του αιωνος, "from eternity", or never: the phrase answers to מעולם, frequently used by the Jews m, for never; and so the Arabic version renders it, "it was never heard", &c. since time was:

was it not heard, that any man opened the eyes of one that was born blind; as not any physician by any natural means, or art, so not any prophet in a miraculous way, no not Moses himself; among all the miracles he wrought, which the Jews say n were seventy six, and which were two more than were wrought by all the prophets put together, this is not to be found in the list of them, nor in the catalogue of miracles done by others. Elisha indeed prayed to God to restore sight to an army smitten with blindness; but then they were persons who saw before, and were not blind from their birth. Wherefore it must follow, that Jesus, the author of this miracle, must be greater than any of the prophets, even than Moses himself, and has a greater confirmation of his mission from God, than either he or they had: and as this was a miracle in nature, it is no less a miracle in grace, that one born in the blindness and darkness of sin, ignorance, and infidelity, should have the eyes of his understanding opened, to behold divine and spiritual things.

Gill: Joh 9:33 - -- If this man were not of God,.... If he had not his mission, commission, and credentials from God; if he had not been sent by him, and had not authorit...

If this man were not of God,.... If he had not his mission, commission, and credentials from God; if he had not been sent by him, and had not authority from him, and was not assisted by him, as man, or God was not with him,

he could do nothing; or "not do these things", as the Syriac version reads; that is, such miraculous works; or, as the Persic version, "he could not do this miracle": open the eyes of a man born blind. His doing this is a full proof that he is of God, and comes from him.

Gill: Joh 9:34 - -- They answered and said unto him,.... Being nettled, and stung at what he said, and not able to confute his reasoning; and it is amazing that a man tha...

They answered and said unto him,.... Being nettled, and stung at what he said, and not able to confute his reasoning; and it is amazing that a man that could never read the Scriptures, who had had no education, was not only blind, but a beggar from his youth, should be able to reason in so strong and nervous a manner, and should have that boldness and presence of mind, and freedom of speech before the whole sanhedrim. Certainly it was God that gave him a mouth and wisdom which these learned doctors could not resist, and therefore they reply in the following manner,

thou wast altogether born in sins; meaning not in original sin, as all mankind are, for this might have been retorted on themselves; but having imbibed the Pythagorean notion of a transmigration of souls into other bodies, and of sinning in a pre-existent state, or a notion of infants sinning actually in the womb, and so punished with blindness, lameness, or some deformity or another for it, they reproach this man, calling him vile miscreant, saying, thou vile, sinful creature, who came into the world covered with sin, with the visible marks of having sinned, either in another body, or in the womb before birth, and therefore wast born blind:

and dost thou teach us, holy, wise, and learned men! which breathes out the true pharisaical spirit they were possessed of, and which appeared in their ancestors before them; see Isa 65:5.

And they cast him out; not merely out of the place where the sanhedrim sat, or out of the temple; this would have been no great matter, nor have made any great noise in the city, or have been taken notice of by Christ, or moved his compassion towards him; nor merely out of any particular synagogue, or was the excommunication called "Niddui", which was a separation for thirty days, and for the space of four cubits only; but was what they call "Cherem", which was a cutting him off from the whole congregation of Israel; See Gill on Joh 9:22; an anathematizing him, and a devoting him to ruin and destruction: and now in part was fulfilled, Isa 66:5, for this was done in pretence of zeal, for the honour and glory of God; and Christ appeared to the joy and comfort of this man, and to the shame and confusion of those that cast him out, as the following verses show.

Gill: Joh 9:35 - -- Jesus heard that they had cast him out,.... this being perhaps the first instance, of putting in execution the act they had made, Joh 9:22, and was a ...

Jesus heard that they had cast him out,.... this being perhaps the first instance, of putting in execution the act they had made, Joh 9:22, and was a stretching of that act; which only threatened with an ejection, in case any should confess Jesus to be the Messiah; which this man had not done as yet, only had said he was a prophet, and that he was of God; it made a very great noise in the city, and the report of it was soon spread over it; and it became the talk of everyone, and so Jesus, as man, came to hear of it; though he, as God, knew it the very instant it was done, and needed not any to make report of it to him:

and when he had found him: not by chance, meeting him at an unawares, but seeking him; and knowing where he was, went to the very place, and found him in this piteous condition, abandoned by all mankind: this is an emblem of Christ's seeking after his chosen ones, both in redemption, and in the effectual calling, who are like sheep going astray, and never come to, and lay hold on Christ, till he comes first, seeks after, and apprehends them: he sends his ministers and his Gospel after them, where they are, and his Spirit into their hearts; yea, he comes himself, and enters there, and dwells in them by faith: he knows where they are, as he did Matthew the publican, Zacchaeus, and the woman of Samaria; and even though they are at the ends of the earth; and he goes and looks them up, and finds them; and he finds them in a deplorable condition, in a desert, in a waste howling wilderness, hopeless and helpless, poor and miserable, and blind and naked; in a pit wherein is no water; in the mire and clay of sin; in the paw of Satan, and under the power of darkness.

He said unto him, dost thou believe on the Son of God? the Persic version adds, "who hath healed thee": this supposes that there was a Son of God, or a divine person known by the Jews under this character, and that the expected Messiah would appear as such; and that, as such, he is the object of faith, and therefore, as such, must be God, since a creature, though ever so much dignified, or with whatsoever office invested, is not the object of faith, trust, and confidence, with respect to everlasting life and happiness: and it may be observed, that whenever Christ finds any of his people, he brings them to believe in him as the Son of God for righteousness and life: he himself is the author of faith in them, as well as the object of it; and no doubt power went along with these words, creating faith in this man: this was a most proper and pertinent question put to him in his present case, and suggests, that if he believed in the Son of God, it was no matter in what situation he was among men: since he would then appear to be a Son of God himself by adopting grace, and so an heir of God, and a joint heir with Christ; would receive the remission of his sins, openly justified in the court of conscience, as well of God, and be everlastingly saved: and this question is put by Christ, not as though he was ignorant, whether he believed in him or not; for he knew from the beginning, who would, and who would not believe in him: he that knew whether Peter loved him or not, knew whether this man believed in him or not; but this he said to draw forth the principle of faith, which was wrought in him, into act and exercise, and to direct it to its proper object. And this effect it had, as appears by what follows.

Gill: Joh 9:36 - -- He answered and said,.... That is, "he that was healed", as the Syriac version reads: who is the Lord that I might believe in him? which shows, tha...

He answered and said,.... That is, "he that was healed", as the Syriac version reads:

who is the Lord that I might believe in him? which shows, that though he knew there was a Messiah expected, and he believed in him as to come, yet he knew not that he was already come, nor the particular person in human nature, who was the Messiah, and the Son of God; even though he had been cured of his blindness by him, and had vindicated him, and pleaded for him before the sanhedrim, and had also suffered for him; which makes it appear, that Christ does many and great things for his people before they know him: nor does their interest in him, in his favour, and in the blessings of his grace, depend upon their knowledge of him, and faith in him; as likewise, that a man may plead for Christ, and suffer much for him, and yet be ignorant of him: however, there were in this man desires of knowing Christ; he was not like those in Job 21:14; and there was a readiness in him to believe on him, as soon as he was pointed out to him; not that there is any natural disposition in men to believe, or any readiness in themselves to it, or that it is of themselves; nothing of this nature was in this man; but he having, by the power and grace of Christ, the principle of faith implanted in his heart, what he wanted was to be directed to the proper object of it, as he is in Joh 9:37.

Gill: Joh 9:37 - -- And Jesus said unto him,.... Giving him the tokens by which he might know him: thou hast both seen him; not that he had seen him before now, with his ...

And Jesus said unto him,.... Giving him the tokens by which he might know him: thou hast both seen him; not that he had seen him before now, with his bodily eyes; for he was blind when Christ anointed him, and sent him to Siloam to wash; nor when he came back, since Jesus was gone, and he knew not where he was; but he had seen him, that is, he had perceived and felt the power of him in restoring him to sight; and now he had seen him bodily, and did at this present time: but as this was not sufficient to distinguish him from other persons in company, he adds,

and it is he that talketh with thee; in like manner he made himself known to the woman of Samaria, Joh 4:26.

Gill: Joh 9:38 - -- And he said, Lord, I believe,.... He immediately found faith in his soul, and that in exercise, moving towards, and acting upon Christ, as the Son of ...

And he said, Lord, I believe,.... He immediately found faith in his soul, and that in exercise, moving towards, and acting upon Christ, as the Son of God, and true Messiah, for everlasting life and salvation; and as soon as he did perceive it, he made an open and hearty profession of it:

and he worshipped him: as God, with religious worship and adoration, not only trusting in him, but ascribing honour, glory, and blessing to him, which are due to God only, and not a creature.

Gill: Joh 9:39 - -- And Jesus said, for judgment I am come into this world,.... The Syriac version reads, "for the judgment of this world I am come"; and with which agree...

And Jesus said, for judgment I am come into this world,.... The Syriac version reads, "for the judgment of this world I am come"; and with which agrees the Ethiopic version, "for the judgment of the world I am come into the world"; and the Arabic and Persic versions still more expressly, "to judge this world", or "the world, am I come"; which seems contrary to what Christ elsewhere says, Joh 3:17. Nor is the sense of the words that Christ came by the judgment of God, or the order of divine providence, or to administer justice in the government of the world, in a providential way, or to distinguish his own people from others, though all these are true; but either to fulfil the purpose and decree of God in revealing truth to some, and hiding it from others; or in a way of judgment to inflict judicial blindness on some, whilst in a way of mercy he illuminated others. So Nonnus interprets it of κριμα θισσον, a twofold "judgment", which is different the one from the other.

That they which see not, might see; meaning, not so much corporeally as spiritually, since in the opposite clause corporeal blindness can have no place; for though Christ restored bodily sight to many, he never took it away from any person. The sense is, that Christ came as a light into the world, that those who are in the darkness of sin, ignorance, and unbelief, and who are sensible of the same, and desire spiritual illuminations, as this man did, might see what they are by nature, what need they stand in of him, and what fulness of grace, life, righteousness, and salvation, there is in him for them.

And that they which see might be made blind; that such who are wise and knowing in their own conceit, who fancy themselves to have great light and knowledge, to have the key of knowledge, and to have the true understanding of divine things, and to be guides of the blind, such as the Scribes and Pharisees, might be given up to judicial blindness and hardness of heart, so as to shut their eyes, and harden their hearts against the Gospel, and the truths of it, and which was in judgment to them: such different effects Christ and his Gospel have, as to illuminate and soften some, and blind and harden others; just as some creatures, as bats and owls, are blinded by the sun, whilst others see clearly by the light of it; and as that also has these different effects to soften the wax, and harden the clay; see Isa 6:9.

Gill: Joh 9:40 - -- And some of the Pharisees which were with him,.... Who had followed him, and were watching him, and observing what he said and did, in order to take a...

And some of the Pharisees which were with him,.... Who had followed him, and were watching him, and observing what he said and did, in order to take all advantages, and every opportunity against him, they could,

heard these words, and said unto him, are we blind also? they perceived he pointed at them, and therefore with indignation ask this question, taking it as a great affront unto them, to put such wise, learned, and knowing men as they in company with the ignorant and unlearned common people; see Isa 42:19.

Gill: Joh 9:41 - -- Jesus said unto them, if ye were blind,.... And sensible of it, and knew yourselves to be blind, and were desirous of light and knowledge, ye would...

Jesus said unto them, if ye were blind,.... And sensible of it, and knew yourselves to be blind, and were desirous of light and knowledge,

ye would have no sin: or your sin would not be so aggravated; it would not be imputed to you; it would be pardoned and taken away from you: for the sense cannot be, that their blindness would not have been criminal, or they should have no sin in them, or any done by them; only, that had this been barely their case, there would have been some hope of them, that their sin might be forgiven, and put away, and be no more; see 1Ti 1:13;

but now ye say we see; they thought themselves to be wise and knowing, and stood in no need of any illumination from him, but were obstinate and hardened in their infidelity, and wilfully opposed and shut their eyes against all the light and evidence of truth:

therefore your sin remaineth; untaken away, yea, immoveable, or unpardonable; the guilt of it abode upon them; nor was there any hope of its being removed from them; owning that they saw, and yet believed not: sinning wilfully against light and knowledge in rejecting Jesus, as the Messiah, they sinned the sin against the Holy Ghost, which is never forgiven. And so the Ethiopic version renders it, "your error shall not be forgiven you"; see Mat 12:32.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Joh 9:20 Grk “So his parents answered and said.”

NET Notes: Joh 9:21 Or “he is of age.”

NET Notes: Joh 9:22 This reference to excommunication from the Jewish synagogue for those who had made some sort of confession about Jesus being the Messiah is dismissed ...

NET Notes: Joh 9:23 This is a parenthetical note by the author explaining the parents’ response.

NET Notes: Joh 9:24 The phrase “this man” is a reference to Jesus.

NET Notes: Joh 9:25 Grk “Then that one answered.”

NET Notes: Joh 9:26 Grk “open your eyes” (an idiom referring to restoration of sight).

NET Notes: Joh 9:27 The word “people” is supplied in the translation to clarify the plural Greek pronoun and verb.

NET Notes: Joh 9:28 Grk “You are that one’s disciple.”

NET Notes: Joh 9:29 Grk “where this one.”

NET Notes: Joh 9:30 Grk “and he opened my eyes” (an idiom referring to restoration of sight).

NET Notes: Joh 9:31 Grk “this one.”

NET Notes: Joh 9:32 Grk “someone opening the eyes of a man born blind” (“opening the eyes” is an idiom referring to restoration of sight).

NET Notes: Joh 9:33 Grk “this one.”

NET Notes: Joh 9:34 Grk “and are you teaching us?”

NET Notes: Joh 9:35 Although most witnesses (A L Θ Ψ 070 0250 Ë1,13 33 Ï lat) have θεοῦ (qeou, “of God”) instead of &...

NET Notes: Joh 9:36 Or “And who is he, sir? Tell me so that…” Some translations supply elliptical words like “Tell me” (NIV, NRSV) following...

NET Notes: Joh 9:37 The καί – καί (kai – kai) construction would normally be translated “both – and”: “Y...

NET Notes: Joh 9:38 Assuming the authenticity of John 9:38-39a (see the tc note following the bracket in v. 39), the man’s response after Jesus’ statement of ...

NET Notes: Joh 9:39 Or “that those who do not see may see.”

NET Notes: Joh 9:40 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 9:41 Because you claim that you can see, your guilt remains. The blind man received sight physically, and this led him to see spiritually as well. But the ...

Geneva Bible: Joh 9:24 Then again called they the man that was blind, and said unto him, ( d ) Give God the praise: we know that this man is a ( e ) sinner. ( d ) A solemn ...

Geneva Bible: Joh 9:28 ( 6 ) Then they reviled him, and said, Thou art his disciple; but we are Moses' disciples. ( 6 ) Eventually, proud wickedness must necessarily break ...

Geneva Bible: Joh 9:34 They answered and said unto him, ( f ) Thou wast altogether born in sins, and dost thou teach us? And they cast him out. ( f ) You are wicked even fr...

Geneva Bible: Joh 9:35 ( 7 ) Jesus heard that they had cast him out; and when he had found him, he said unto him, Dost thou believe on the Son of God? ( 7 ) Most happy is t...

Geneva Bible: Joh 9:39 ( 8 ) And Jesus said, For ( g ) judgment I am come into this world, that they ( h ) which see not might see; and that they which see might be made bli...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Joh 9:1-41 - --1 The man that was born blind restored to sight.8 He is brought to the Pharisees.13 They are offended at it, and excommunicate him;35 but he is receiv...

Combined Bible: Joh 9:8-23 - --of the Gospel of John    CHAPTER 32    Christ and the Blind Beggar (Continued)    John 9:8-23    We beg...

Combined Bible: Joh 9:24-41 - --of the Gospel of John    CHAPTER 33    Christ and the Blind Beggar (Concluded)    John 9:24-41    The f...

MHCC: Joh 9:18-23 - --The Pharisees vainly hoped to disprove this notable miracle. They expected a Messiah, but could not bear to think that this Jesus should be he, becaus...

MHCC: Joh 9:24-34 - --As Christ's mercies are most valued by those who have felt the want of them, that have been blind, and now see; so the most powerful and lasting affec...

MHCC: Joh 9:35-38 - --Christ owns those who own him and his truth and ways. There is particular notice taken of such a suffer in the cause of Christ, and for the testimony ...

MHCC: Joh 9:39-41 - --Christ came into the world to give sight to those who were spiritually blind. Also, that those who see might be made blind; that those who have a high...

Matthew Henry: Joh 9:13-34 - -- One would have expected that such a miracle as Christ wrought upon the blind man would have settled his reputation, and silenced and shamed all oppo...

Matthew Henry: Joh 9:35-38 - -- In these verses we may observe, I. The tender care which our Lord Jesus took of this poor man (Joh 9:35): When Jesus heard that they had cast him o...

Matthew Henry: Joh 9:39-41 - -- Christ, having spoken comfort to the poor man that was persecuted, here speaks conviction to his persecutors, a specimen of the distributions of tro...

Barclay: Joh 9:17-34 - --There is no more vivid character drawing in all literature than this. With deft and revealing touches John causes the people involved to live before ...

Barclay: Joh 9:35-41 - --This section begins with two great spiritual truths. (i) Jesus looked for the man. As Chrysostom put it: "The Jews cast him out of the Temple; the ...

Constable: Joh 1:19--13:1 - --II. Jesus' public ministry 1:19--12:50 The first part of the body of John's Gospel records Jesus' public ministr...

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

Constable: Joh 9:1-41 - --6. The sixth sign: healing a man born blind ch. 9 This chapter continues the theme of Jesus as t...

Constable: Joh 9:13-23 - --The Pharisees' first interrogation 9:13-23 "John evidently wants us to see that the activity of Jesus as the Light of the world inevitably results in ...

Constable: Joh 9:24-34 - --The Pharisees' second interrogation 9:24-34 The Pharisees, who considered themselves enlightened, now tried to badger the formerly blind man into deny...

Constable: Joh 9:35-41 - --Spiritual sight and blindness 9:35-41 "John is interested in the way the coming of Jesus divides people."347 9:35 The healed man had responded positiv...

College: Joh 9:1-41 - --JOHN 9 5. Healing of the Man Born Blind (9:1-41) As is usual for John, a series of discourses is followed by a miracle account or " sign" (shmei'on,...

McGarvey: Joh 9:1-41 - -- LXXXI. CONTENTION OVER THE MAN BORN BLIND. (Jerusalem.) dJOHN IX. 1-41.    [Some look upon the events in this and the next section as...

Lapide: Joh 9:1-41 - --CHAPTER 9 Ver. 1.— And as Jesus passed by, &c. Passing through the midst of His enemies and the crowd of the people. This signifies (though some d...

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Commentary -- Other

Critics Ask: Joh 9:31 JOHN 9:31 —Does God hear the prayers of sinners? PROBLEM: John said here, “Now we know that God does not hear sinners.” Yet Jesus said God ...

Evidence: Joh 9:25 This is the testimony of the newly saved. There are many questions for which they have no answers. But one thing they do know: " Whereas I was blind, ...

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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 9 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Joh 9:1, The man that was born blind restored to sight; Joh 9:8, He is brought to the Pharisees; Joh 9:13, They are offended at it, and e...

Poole: John 9 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 9

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 9 (Chapter Introduction) (Joh 9:1-7) Christ give sight to one born blind. (Joh 9:8-12) The account given by the blind man. (Joh 9:13-17) The Pharisees question the man that ...

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 9 (Chapter Introduction) After Christ's departure out of the temple, in the close of the foregoing chapter, and before this happened which is recorded in this chapter, he h...

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 9 (Chapter Introduction) Light For The Blind Eyes (Joh_9:1-5) Light For The Blind Eyes (Joh_9:1-5 Continued) The Method Of A Miracle (Joh_9:6-12) Prejudice And Conviction...

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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