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Numbers 31:49

Context
31:49 and said to him, 1  “Your servants have taken a count 2  of the men who were in the battle, who were under our authority, 3  and not one is missing.

John 6:39-40

Context
6:39 Now this is the will of the one who sent me – that I should not lose one person of every one he has given me, but raise them all up 4  at the last day. 6:40 For this is the will of my Father – for everyone who looks on the Son and believes in him to have eternal life, and I will raise him up 5  at the last day.” 6 

John 10:27-30

Context
10:27 My sheep listen to my voice, and I know them, and they follow me. 10:28 I give 7  them eternal life, and they will never perish; 8  no one will snatch 9  them from my hand. 10:29 My Father, who has given them to me, is greater than all, 10  and no one can snatch 11  them from my Father’s hand. 10:30 The Father and I 12  are one.” 13 

John 17:12

Context
17:12 When I was with them I kept them safe 14  and watched over them 15  in your name 16  that you have given me. Not one 17  of them was lost except the one destined for destruction, 18  so that the scripture could be fulfilled. 19 

John 18:9

Context
18:9 He said this 20  to fulfill the word he had spoken, 21  “I have not lost a single one of those whom you gave me.” 22 

John 18:1

Context
Betrayal and Arrest

18:1 When he had said these things, 23  Jesus went out with his disciples across the Kidron Valley. 24  There was an orchard 25  there, and he and his disciples went into it.

John 1:5

Context
1:5 And the light shines on 26  in the darkness, 27  but 28  the darkness has not mastered it. 29 

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[31:49]  1 tn Heb “to Moses”; the proper name has been replaced by the pronoun (“him”) in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[31:49]  2 tn Heb “lifted up the head.”

[31:49]  3 tn Heb “in our hand.”

[6:39]  4 tn Or “resurrect them all,” or “make them all live again”; Grk “raise it up.” The word “all” is supplied to bring out the collective nature of the neuter singular pronoun αὐτό (auto) in Greek. The plural pronoun “them” is used rather than neuter singular “it” because this is clearer in English, which does not use neuter collective singulars in the same way Greek does.

[6:40]  5 tn Or “resurrect him,” or “make him live again.”

[6:40]  6 sn Notice that here the result (having eternal life and being raised up at the last day) is produced by looking on the Son and believing in him. Compare John 6:54 where the same result is produced by eating Jesus’ flesh and drinking his blood. This suggests that the phrase in 6:54 (eats my flesh and drinks my blood) is to be understood in terms of the phrase here (looks on the Son and believes in him).

[10:28]  7 tn Grk “And I give.”

[10:28]  8 tn Or “will never die” or “will never be lost.”

[10:28]  9 tn Or “no one will seize.”

[10:29]  10 tn Or “is superior to all.”

[10:29]  11 tn Or “no one can seize.”

[10:30]  12 tn Grk “I and the Father.” The order has been reversed to reflect English style.

[10:30]  13 tn The phrase ἕν ἐσμεν ({en esmen) is a significant assertion with trinitarian implications. ἕν is neuter, not masculine, so the assertion is not that Jesus and the Father are one person, but one “thing.” Identity of the two persons is not what is asserted, but essential unity (unity of essence).

[17:12]  14 tn Or “I protected them”; Grk “I kept them.”

[17:12]  15 tn Grk “and guarded them.”

[17:12]  16 tn Or “by your name.”

[17:12]  17 tn Grk And not one.” The conjunction καί (kai, “and”) has not been translated here in keeping with the tendency of contemporary English style to use shorter sentences.

[17:12]  18 tn Grk “the son of destruction” (a Semitic idiom for one appointed for destruction; here it is a reference to Judas).

[17:12]  19 sn A possible allusion to Ps 41:9 or Prov 24:22 LXX. The exact passage is not specified here, but in John 13:18, Ps 41:9 is explicitly quoted by Jesus with reference to the traitor, suggesting that this is the passage to which Jesus refers here. The previous mention of Ps 41:9 in John 13:18 probably explains why the author felt no need for an explanatory parenthetical note here. It is also possible that the passage referred to here is Prov 24:22 LXX, where in the Greek text the phrase “son of destruction” appears.

[18:9]  20 tn The words “He said this” are not in the Greek text, but are implied. There is an ellipsis in the Greek text that must be supplied for the modern English reader at this point.

[18:9]  21 sn This expression is similar to John 6:39 and John 17:12.

[18:9]  22 tn Grk “Of the ones whom you gave me, I did not lose one of them.” The order of the clauses has been rearranged to reflect contemporary English style.

[18:1]  23 sn When he had said these things appears to be a natural transition at the end of the Farewell Discourse (the farewell speech of Jesus to his disciples in John 13:31-17:26, including the final prayer in 17:1-26). The author states that Jesus went out with his disciples, a probable reference to their leaving the upper room where the meal and discourse described in chaps. 13-17 took place (although some have seen this only as a reference to their leaving the city, with the understanding that some of the Farewell Discourse, including the concluding prayer, was given en route, cf. 14:31). They crossed the Kidron Valley and came to a garden, or olive orchard, identified in Matt 26:36 and Mark 14:32 as Gethsemane. The name is not given in Luke’s or John’s Gospel, but the garden must have been located somewhere on the lower slopes of the Mount of Olives.

[18:1]  24 tn Grk “the wadi of the Kidron,” or “the ravine of the Kidron” (a wadi is a stream that flows only during the rainy season and is dry during the dry season).

[18:1]  25 tn Or “a garden.”

[1:5]  26 tn To this point the author has used past tenses (imperfects, aorists); now he switches to a present. The light continually shines (thus the translation, “shines on”). Even as the author writes, it is shining. The present here most likely has gnomic force (though it is possible to take it as a historical present); it expresses the timeless truth that the light of the world (cf. 8:12, 9:5, 12:46) never ceases to shine.

[1:5]  27 sn The author now introduces what will become a major theme of John’s Gospel: the opposition of light and darkness. The antithesis is a natural one, widespread in antiquity. Gen 1 gives considerable emphasis to it in the account of the creation, and so do the writings of Qumran. It is the major theme of one of the most important extra-biblical documents found at Qumran, the so-called War Scroll, properly titled The War of the Sons of Light with the Sons of Darkness. Connections between John and Qumran are still an area of scholarly debate and a consensus has not yet emerged. See T. A. Hoffman, “1 John and the Qumran Scrolls,” BTB 8 (1978): 117-25.

[1:5]  28 tn Grk “and,” but the context clearly indicates a contrast, so this has been translated as an adversative use of καί (kai).

[1:5]  29 tn Or “comprehended it,” or “overcome it.” The verb κατέλαβεν (katelaben) is not easy to translate. “To seize” or “to grasp” is possible, but this also permits “to grasp with the mind” in the sense of “to comprehend” (esp. in the middle voice). This is probably another Johannine double meaning – one does not usually think of darkness as trying to “understand” light. For it to mean this, “darkness” must be understood as meaning “certain people,” or perhaps “humanity” at large, darkened in understanding. But in John’s usage, darkness is not normally used of people or a group of people. Rather it usually signifies the evil environment or ‘sphere’ in which people find themselves: “They loved darkness rather than light” (John 3:19). Those who follow Jesus do not walk in darkness (8:12). They are to walk while they have light, lest the darkness “overtake/overcome” them (12:35, same verb as here). For John, with his set of symbols and imagery, darkness is not something which seeks to “understand (comprehend)” the light, but represents the forces of evil which seek to “overcome (conquer)” it. The English verb “to master” may be used in both sorts of contexts, as “he mastered his lesson” and “he mastered his opponent.”



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