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John 7:7

Context
7:7 The world cannot hate you, but it hates me, because I am testifying about it that its deeds are evil.

John 15:19

Context
15:19 If you belonged to the world, 1  the world would love you as its own. 2  However, because you do not belong to the world, 3  but I chose you out of the world, for this reason 4  the world hates you. 5 

John 15:23

Context
15:23 The one who hates me hates my Father too.

John 17:14

Context
17:14 I have given them your word, 6  and the world has hated them, because they do not belong to the world, 7  just as I do not belong to the world. 8 

John 17:1

Context
Jesus Prays for the Father to Glorify Him

17:1 When Jesus had finished saying these things, he looked upward 9  to heaven 10  and said, “Father, the time 11  has come. Glorify your Son, so that your 12  Son may glorify you –

John 2:15-16

Context
2:15 So he made a whip of cords 13  and drove them all out of the temple courts, 14  with the sheep and the oxen. He scattered the coins of the money changers 15  and overturned their tables. 2:16 To those who sold the doves he said, “Take these things away from here! Do not make 16  my Father’s house a marketplace!” 17 
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[15:19]  1 tn Grk “if you were of the world.”

[15:19]  2 tn The words “you as” are not in the original but are supplied for clarity.

[15:19]  3 tn Grk “because you are not of the world.”

[15:19]  4 tn Or “world, therefore.”

[15:19]  5 sn I chose you out of the world…the world hates you. Two themes are brought together here. In 8:23 Jesus had distinguished himself from the world in addressing his Jewish opponents: “You are from below, I am from above; you are of this world, I am not of this world.” In 15:16 Jesus told the disciples “You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you.” Now Jesus has united these two ideas as he informs the disciples that he has chosen them out of the world. While the disciples will still be “in” the world after Jesus has departed, they will not belong to it, and Jesus prays later in John 17:15-16 to the Father, “I do not ask you to take them out of the world, but to keep them from the evil one. They are not of the world, even as I am not of the world.” The same theme also occurs in 1 John 4:5-6: “They are from the world; therefore they speak as from the world, and the world listens to them. We are from God; he who knows God listens to us; he who is not from God does not listen to us.” Thus the basic reason why the world hates the disciples (as it hated Jesus before them) is because they are not of the world. They are born from above, and are not of the world. For this reason the world hates them.

[17:14]  6 tn Or “your message.”

[17:14]  7 tn Grk “because they are not of the world.”

[17:14]  8 tn Grk “just as I am not of the world.”

[17:1]  9 tn Grk “he raised his eyes” (an idiom).

[17:1]  10 tn Or “to the sky.” The Greek word οὐρανός (ouranos) may be translated “sky” or “heaven” depending on the context.

[17:1]  11 tn Grk “the hour.”

[17:1]  12 tc The better witnesses (א B C* W 0109 0301) have “the Son” (ὁ υἱός, Jo Juios) here, while the majority (C3 L Ψ Ë13 33 Ï) read “your Son also” (καὶ ὁ υἱὸς σου, kai Jo Juio" sou), or “your Son” (ὁ υἱὸς σου; A D Θ 0250 1 579 pc lat sy); the second corrector of C has καὶ ὁ υἱός (“the Son also”). The longer readings appear to be predictable scribal expansions and as such should be considered secondary.

[2:15]  13 tc Several witnesses, two of which are quite ancient (Ì66,75 L N Ë1 33 565 892 1241 al lat), have ὡς (Jws, “like”) before φραγέλλιον (fragellion, “whip”). A decision based on external evidence would be difficult to make because the shorter reading also has excellent witnesses, as well as the majority, on its side (א A B Θ Ψ Ë13 Ï co). Internal evidence, though, leans toward the shorter reading. Scribes tended to add to the text, and the addition of ὡς here clearly softens the assertion of the evangelist: Instead of making a whip of cords, Jesus made “[something] like a whip of cords.”

[2:15]  14 tn Grk “the temple.”

[2:15]  15 sn Because of the imperial Roman portraits they carried, Roman denarii and Attic drachmas were not permitted to be used in paying the half-shekel temple-tax (the Jews considered the portraits idolatrous). The money changers exchanged these coins for legal Tyrian coinage at a small profit.

[2:16]  16 tn Or (perhaps) “Stop making.”

[2:16]  17 tn Or “a house of merchants” (an allusion to Zech 14:21).



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