John 16:32
Context16:32 Look, a time 1 is coming – and has come – when you will be scattered, each one to his own home, 2 and I will be left alone. 3 Yet 4 I am not alone, because my Father 5 is with me.
John 7:28
Context7:28 Then Jesus, while teaching in the temple courts, 6 cried out, 7 “You both know me and know where I come from! 8 And I have not come on my own initiative, 9 but the one who sent me 10 is true. You do not know him, 11
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[16:32] 2 tn Grk “each one to his own”; the word “home” is not in the Greek text but is implied. The phrase “each one to his own” may be completed in a number of different ways: “each one to his own property”; “each one to his own family”; or “each one to his own home.” The last option seems to fit most easily into the context and so is used in the translation.
[16:32] 3 sn The proof of Jesus’ negative evaluation of the disciples’ faith is now given: Jesus foretells their abandonment of him at his arrest, trials, and crucifixion (I will be left alone). This parallels the synoptic accounts in Matt 26:31 and Mark 14:27 when Jesus, after the last supper and on the way to Gethsemane, foretold the desertion of the disciples as a fulfillment of Zech 13:7: “Strike the shepherd, and the sheep will be scattered.” Yet although the disciples would abandon Jesus, he reaffirmed that he was not alone, because the Father was still with him.
[16:32] 4 tn Grk “And” (but with some contrastive force).
[16:32] 5 tn Grk “the Father.”
[7:28] 7 tn Grk “Then Jesus cried out in the temple, teaching and saying.”
[7:28] 8 sn You both know me and know where I come from! Jesus’ response while teaching in the temple is difficult – it appears to concede too much understanding to his opponents. It is best to take the words as irony: “So you know me and know where I am from, do you?” On the physical, literal level, they did know where he was from: Nazareth of Galilee (at least they thought they knew). But on another deeper (spiritual) level, they did not: He came from heaven, from the Father. Jesus insisted that he has not come on his own initiative (cf. 5:37), but at the bidding of the Father who sent him.
[7:28] 9 tn Grk “And I have not come from myself.”
[7:28] 10 tn The phrase “the one who sent me” refers to God.
[7:28] 11 tn Grk “the one who sent me is true, whom you do not know.”