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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
JOHN
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 1
@Joh
1:1-14. THE WORD MADE FLESH.
1. In the beginning--of all time and created
existence, for this Word gave it being (@Joh
1:3,10); therefore, "before the world was" (@Joh
17:5,24); or, from all eternity.
was the Word--He who
is to God what man's word is to himself, the manifestation
or expression of himself to those without him. (See on
Joh 1:18). On the origin of this most lofty and now
for ever consecrated title of Christ, this is not the place
to speak. It occurs only in the writings of this seraphic
apostle.
was with God--having a
conscious personal existence distinct from God (as
one is from the person he is "with"), but inseparable
from Him and associated with Him (@Joh
1:18 Joh 17:5 1Jo 1:2), where "THE FATHER" is
used in the same sense as "GOD" here.
was God--in substance
and essence GOD; or was possessed of essential or proper
divinity. Thus, each of these brief but pregnant statements
is the complement of the other, correcting any
misapprehensions which the others might occasion. Was the
Word eternal? It was not the eternity of
"the Father," but of a conscious personal
existence distinct from Him and associated with Him.
Was the Word thus "with God?" It was not the
distinctness and the fellowship of another being, as
if there were more Gods than one, but of One who was Himself
God--in such sense that the absolute unity of the
God head, the great principle of all religion, is only
transferred from the region of shadowy abstraction to the
region of essential life and love. But why all this
definition? Not to give us any abstract information
about certain mysterious distinctions in the Godhead, but
solely to let the reader know who it was that in the
fulness of time "was made flesh." After
each verse, then, the reader must say, "It was He who
is thus, and thus, and thus described, who was made
flesh."
2. The same, &c.--See what property of the Word
the stress is laid upon--His eternal distinctness, in
unity, from God--the Father (@Joh
1:2).
3. All things, &c.--all things absolutely
(as is evident from @Joh
1:10 1Co 8:6 Col 1:16,17; but put beyond question by
what follows).
without Him was not any
thing--not one thing.
made--brought into
being.
that was made--This is
a denial of the eternity and non-creation of
matter, which was held by the whole thinking world outside
of Judaism and Christianity: or rather, its proper creation
was never so much as dreamt of save by the children of revealed
religion.
4. In Him was life--essentially and originally,
as the previous verses show to be the meaning. Thus He is the
Living Word, or, as He is called in @1Jo
1:1,2, "the Word of Life."
the life . . .
the light of men--All that in men which is true light--knowledge,
integrity, intelligent, willing subjection to God, love to
Him and to their fellow creatures, wisdom, purity, holy joy,
rational happiness--all this "light of men" has
its fountain in the essential original "life" of
"the Word" (@1Jo
1:5-7 Ps 36:9).
5. shineth in darkness, &c.--in this dark, fallen
world, or in mankind "sitting in darkness and the
shadow of death," with no ability to find the way
either of truth or of holiness. In this thick darkness,
and consequent intellectual and moral obliquity, "the
light of the Word" shineth--by all the rays whether
of natural or revealed teaching which men (apart from
the Incarnation of the Word) are favored with.
the darkness comprehended
it not--did not take it in, a brief summary of
the effect of all the strivings of this unincarnate
Word throughout this wide world from the beginning, and a
hint of the necessity of His putting on flesh, if any
recovery of men was to be effected (@1Co
1:21).
6-9. The Evangelist here approaches his grand
thesis, so paving his way for the full statement of it in @Joh
1:14, that we may be able to bear the bright light of
it, and take in its length and breadth and depth and height.
7. through him--John.
8. not that Light--(See on Joh 5:35). What a
testimony to John to have to explain that "he was not
that Light!" Yet was he but a foil to set it off, his
night-taper dwindling before the Dayspring from on high (@Joh
3:30).
9. lighteth every man, &c.--rather, "which,
coming into the world, enlighteneth every man"; or, is
"the Light of the world" (@Joh
9:5). "Coming into the world" is a superfluous
and quite unusual description of "every man"; but
it is of all descriptions of Christ amongst the most
familiar, especially in the writings of this Evangelist (@Joh
12:46 16:28 18:37 1Jo 4:9 1Ti 1:15, &c.).
10-13. He was in the world, &c.--The language
here is nearly as wonderful as the thought. Observe its
compact simplicity, its sonorousness--"the world"
resounding in each of its three members--and the enigmatic
form in which it is couched, startling the reader and
setting his ingenuity a-working to solve the stupendous
enigma of Christ ignored in His own world. "The
world," in the first two clauses, plainly means the created
world, into which He came, says @Joh
1:9; "in it He was," says this verse.
By His Incarnation, He became an inhabitant of it,
and bound up with it. Yet it "was made by Him" (@Joh
1:3-5). Here, then, it is merely alluded to, in contrast
partly with His being in it, but still more with the
reception He met with from it. "The world that knew Him
not" (@1Jo
3:1) is of course the intelligent world of mankind. (See
on Joh 1:11,12). Taking the first two clauses as one
statement, we try to apprehend it by thinking of the infant
Christ conceived in the womb and born in the arms of His own
creature, and of the Man Christ Jesus breathing His own air,
treading His own ground, supported by substances to which He
Himself gave being, and the Creator of the very men whom He
came to save. But the most vivid commentary on this entire
verse will be got by tracing (in His matchless history) Him
of whom it speaks walking amidst all the elements of nature,
the diseases of men and death itself, the secrets of the
human heart, and "the rulers of the darkness of this
world" in all their number, subtlety, and malignity,
not only with absolute ease, as their conscious Lord, but,
as we might say, with full consciousness on their part of
the presence of their Maker, whose will to one and all of
them was law. And this is He of whom it is added, "the
world knew Him not!"
11. his own--"His own" (property or
possession), for the word is in the neuter gender. It
means His own land, city, temple, Messianic rights and
possessions.
and his own--"His
own (people)"; for now the word is masculine. It
means the Jews, as the "peculiar people." Both they
and their land, with all that this included, were
"HIS OWN," not so much as part of "the world
which was made by Him," but as "THE HEIR" of
the inheritance (@Lu
20:14; see also on @Mt
22:1).
received him not--nationally,
as God's chosen witnesses.
12. But as many--individuals, of the
"disobedient and gainsaying people."
gave he power--The
word signifies both authority and ability, and
both are certainly meant here.
to become--Mark these
words: Jesus is the Son of God; He is never said to have
become such.
the sons--or more
simply, "sons of God," in name and in nature.
believe on his name--a
phrase never used in Scripture of any mere creature, to
express the credit given to human testimony, even of
prophets or apostles, inasmuch it carries with it the idea
of trust proper only towards GOD. In this sense of supreme
faith, as due to Him who "gives those that believe
in Himself power to become sons of God," it is
manifestly used here.
13. Which were born--a sonship therefore not of mere
title and privilege, but of nature, the soul being
made conscious of the vital capacities, perceptions, and
emotions of a child of God, before unknown.
not of blood,
&c.--not of superior human descent, not of human
generation at all, not of man in any manner of way. By this
elaborate threefold denial of the human source of
this sonship, immense force is given to what follows,
but of God--Right
royal gift, and He who confers must be absolutely divine.
For who would not worship Him who can bring him into the
family, and evoke within him the very life, of the sons of
God?
14. And the Word, &c.--To raise the reader to
the altitude of this climax were the thirteen foregoing
verses written.
was made flesh--BECAME
MAN, in man's present frail, mortal condition, denoted by
the word "flesh" (@Isa
40:6 1Pe 1:24). It is directed probably against the Docetæ,
who held that Christ was not really but only apparently
man; against whom this gentle spirit is vehement in his
Epistles (@1Jo
4:3 2Jo 1:7:10,11), [LUCKE, &c.]. Nor could He be
too much so, for with the verity of the Incarnation all
substantial Christianity vanishes. But now, married to our
nature, henceforth He is as personally conscious of all
that is strictly human as of all that is properly divine;
and our nature is in His Person redeemed and quickened,
ennobled and transfigured.
and dwelt--tabernacled
or pitched his tent; a word peculiar to John, who uses it
four times, all in the sense of a permanent stay (@Re
7:15 12:12 13:6 21:3). For ever wedded to our "flesh,"
He has entered this tabernacle to "go no more
out." The allusion is to that tabernacle where dwelt
the Shekinah (see on Mt 23:38,39), or manifested
"GLORY OF THE LORD," and with reference to God's permanent
dwelling among His people (@Le
26:11 Ps 68:18 132:13,14 Eze 37:27). This is put almost
beyond doubt by what immediately follows, "And we
beheld his glory" [LUCKE, MEYER, DE WETTE which last
critic, rising higher than usual, says that thus were
perfected all former partial manifestations of God in an
essentially Personal and historically Human
manifestation].
full of grace and truth--So
it should read: "He dwelt among us full of grace and
truth"; or, in Old Testament phrase, "Mercy and
truth," denoting the whole fruit of God's purposes of
love towards sinners of mankind, which until now existed
only in promise, and the fulfilment at length
of that promise in Christ; in one great word, "the
SURE MERCIES of David" (@Isa
55:3 Ac 13:34; compare @2Sa
23:5). In His Person all that Grace and Truth which had
been floating so long in shadowy forms, and darting into the
souls of the poor and needy its broken beams, took
everlasting possession of human flesh and filled it full. By
this Incarnation of Grace and Truth, the teaching of
thousands of years was at once transcended and beggared, and
the family of God sprang into Manhood.
and we beheld his glory--not
by the eye of sense, which saw in Him only "the
carpenter." His glory was "spiritually
discerned" (@1Co
2:7-15 2Co 3:18 4:4,6 5:16)--the glory of surpassing
grace, love, tenderness, wisdom, purity, spirituality;
majesty and meekness, richness and poverty, power and
weakness, meeting together in unique contrast; ever
attracting and at times ravishing the "babes" that
followed and forsook all for Him.
the glory as of the only
begotten of the Father--(See on Lu 1:35); not like,
but "such as (belongs to)," such as became
or was befitting the only begotten of the Father [CHRYSOSTOM
in LUCKE, CALVIN, &c.], according to a well-known use of
the word "as."
@Joh
1:15. A SAYING OF THE BAPTIST CONFIRMATORY OF THIS.
15. after me--in official manifestation.
before me--in rank
and dignity.
for he was before me--in
existence; "His goings forth being from of old,
from everlasting" (@Mic
5:2). (Anything lower than this His words cannot mean);
that is, "My Successor is my Superior, for He was my
Predecessor." This enigmatic play upon the different
senses of the words "before" and "after"
was doubtless employed by the Baptist to arrest attention,
and rivet the thought; and the Evangelist introduces it just
to clinch his own statements.
@Joh
1:16-18. SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED.
16. of his fulness--of "grace and truth,"
resuming the thread of @Joh
1:14.
grace for grace--that
is, grace upon grace (so all the best interpreters), in
successive communications and larger measures, as each was
able to take it in. Observe, the word "truth" is
here dropped. "Grace" being the chosen New
Testament word for the whole fulness of the new covenant,
all that dwells in Christ for men.
17. For, &c.--The Law elicits the consciousness
of sin and the need of redemption; it only typifies the
reality. The Gospel, on the contrary, actually communicates
reality and power from above (compare @Ro
6:14). Hence Paul terms the Old Testament
"shadow," while he calls the New Testament
"substance" (@Col
2:17) [OLSHAUSEN].
18. No man--"No one," in the widest sense.
hath seen God--by
immediate gaze, or direct intuition.
in the bosom of the Father--A
remarkable expression, used only here, presupposing the
Son's conscious existence distinct from the Father, and
expressing His immediate and most endeared access to, and
absolute acquaintance with, Him.
he--emphatic; As if he
should say, "He and He only hath declared Him,"
because He only can.
@Joh
1:19-36. THE BAPTIST'S TESTIMONY TO CHRIST.
19. record--testimony.
the Jews--that is, the
heads of the nation, the members of the Sanhedrim. In
this peculiar sense our Evangelist seems always to use the
term.
20. confessed, &c.--that is, While many were
ready to hail him as the Christ, he neither gave the
slightest ground for such views, nor the least entertainment
to them.
21. Elias--in His own proper person.
that prophet--announced
in @De
18:15, &c., about whom they seem not to have been
agreed whether he were the same with the Messiah or no.
25. Why baptizest thou, if not, &c.--Thinking he
disclaimed any special connection with Messiah's kingdom,
they demand his right to gather disciples by baptism.
26. there standeth--This must have been spoken after
the baptism of Christ, and possibly just after His
temptation (see on Joh 1:29).
28. Bethabara--Rather, "Bethany" (according
to nearly all the best and most ancient manuscripts); not
the Bethany of Lazarus, but another of the same name, and
distinguished from it as lying "beyond Jordan," on
the east.
29. seeth Jesus--fresh, probably, from the scene of
the temptation.
coming unto him--as to
congenial company (@Ac
4:23), and to receive from him His first greeting.
and saith--catching a
sublime inspiration at the sight of Him approaching.
the Lamb of God--the
one God-ordained, God-gifted sacrificial offering.
that taketh away--taketh
up and taketh away. The word signifies both, as
does the corresponding Hebrew word. Applied to sin,
it means to be chargeable with the guilt of it (@Ex
28:38 Le 5:1 Eze 18:20), and to bear it away (as
often). In the Levitical victims both ideas met, as they do
in Christ, the people's guilt being viewed as transferred
to them, avenged in their death, and so borne away
by them (@Le
4:15 16:15,21,22; and compare @Isa
53:6-12 2Co 5:21).
the sin--The singular
number being used to mark the collective burden and all-embracing
efficacy.
of the world--not of
Israel only, for whom the typical victims were exclusively
offered. Wherever there shall live a sinner throughout the
wide world, sinking under that burden too heavy for him to
bear, he shall find in this "Lamb of God," a
shoulder equal to the weight. The right note was struck at
the first--balm, doubtless, to Christ's own spirit; nor was
ever after, or ever will be, a more glorious utterance.
31-34. knew him not--Living mostly apart, the one at
Nazareth, the other in the Judean desert--to prevent all
appearance of collusion, John only knew that at a definite
time after his own call, his Master would show Himself. As
He drew near for baptism one day, the last of all the crowd,
the spirit of the Baptist heaving under a divine
presentiment that the moment had at length arrived, and an
air of unwonted serenity and dignity, not without traits,
probably, of the family features, appearing in this
Stranger, the Spirit said to him as to Samuel of his
youthful type, "Arise, anoint Him, for this is
He!" (@1Sa
16:12). But the sign which he was told to expect
was the visible descent of the Spirit upon Him as He emerged
out of the baptismal water. Then, catching up the
voice from heaven, "he saw and bare record that this is
the Son of God."
35. John stood--"was standing," at his
accustomed place.
36. looking--having fixed his eyes, with significant
gaze, on Jesus.
as he walked--but not
now to him. To have done this once (see on Joh 1:29)
was humility enough [BENGEL].
Behold, &c.--The
repetition of that wonderful proclamation, in identical
terms and without another word, could only have been meant
as a gentle hint to go after Him--as they did.
@Joh
1:37-51. FIRST GATHERING OF DISCIPLES--JOHN ANDREW,
SIMON, PHILIP, NATHANAEL.
38. What seek ye--gentle, winning question,
remarkable as the Redeemer's first public utterance.
(See on Mt 12:18-20.)
where dwellest thou--that
is, "That is a question we cannot answer in a moment;
but had we Thy company for a calm hour in private, gladly
should we open our burden."
39. Come and see--His second utterance, more
winning still.
tenth hour--not ten
A.M. (as some), according to Roman, but four P.M.,
according to Jewish reckoning, which John follows.
The hour is mentioned to show why they stayed out the day
with him--because little of it remained.
40. One . . . was Andrew--The other was
doubtless our Evangelist himself. His great sensitiveness is
touchingly shown in his representation of this first contact
with the Lord; the circumstances are present to him in the
minutest details; he still remembers the Very hour. But
"he reports no particulars of those discourses of the
Lord by which he was bound to Him for the whole of His life;
he allows everything personal to retire" [OLSHAUSEN].
Peter's brother--and
the elder of the two.
41. have found the Messias--The previous preparation
of their simple hearts under the Baptist's ministry, made
quick work of this blessed conviction, while others
hesitated till doubt settled into obduracy. So it is
still.
42. brought him to Jesus--Happy brothers that thus do
to each other!
beheld him--fixed his
eyes on him, with significant gaze (as @Joh
1:36).
Cephas . . .
stone--(See on Mt 16:18).
43. would go . . . into Galilee--for from
His baptism He had sojourned in Judea (showing that
the calling at the Sea of Galilee [@Mt
4:18] was a subsequent one, see on Lu 5:1).
Follow me--the first
express call given, the former three having come to Him
spontaneously.
44. the city of Andrew and Peter--of their birth
probably, for they seem to have lived at Capernaum (@Mr
1:29).
45. Nathanael--(See on Mt 10:3).
Moses--(See @Joh
5:46).
son of Joseph--the
current way of speaking. (See @Lu
3:23).
46. any good out of Nazareth--remembering Bethlehem,
perhaps, as Messiah's predicted birthplace, and Nazareth
having no express prophetic place at all, besides
being in no repute. The question sprang from mere dread of
mistake in a matter so vital.
Come and see--Noble
remedy against preconceived opinions [BENGEL]. Philip,
though he could not perhaps solve his difficulty, could show
him how to get rid of it. (See on Joh 6:68).
47. an Israelite indeed . . . no guile--not
only no hypocrite, but with a guileless simplicity not
always found even in God's own people, ready to follow
wherever truth might lead him, saying, Samuel-like,
"Speak, Lord, for Thy servant heareth" (@1Sa
3:10).
48. Whence knowest thou me--conscious that his very
heart had been read, and at this critical moment more than
ever before.
Before Philip called thee--showing
He knew all that passed between Philip and him at a
distance.
when . . . under
the fig tree, &c.--where retirement for meditation
and prayer was not uncommon [LIGHTFOOT]. Thither,
probably--hearing that his master's Master had at length
appeared, and heaving with mingled eagerness to behold Him
and dread of deception--he had retired to pour out his
guileless heart for light and guidance, ending with such a
prayer as this, "Show me a token for good!" (See
on Lu 2:8). Now he has it, "Thou guileless one, that
fig tree scene, with all its heaving anxieties, deep
pleadings and tremulous hopes--I saw it all." The first
words of Jesus had astonished, but this quite overpowered
and won him.
49. Son of God . . . King of Israel--the
one denoting His person, the other His office. How much
loftier this than anything Philip had said to him! But just
as the earth's vital powers, the longer they are
frost-bound, take the greater spring when at length set
free, so souls, like Nathanael and Thomas (see on Joh
20:28), the outgoings of whose faith are hindered for a
time, take the start of their more easy-going brethren when
loosed and let go.
50, 51. Because I said, &c.--"So quickly
convinced, and on this evidence only?"--an expression
of admiration.
51. Hereafter, &c.--The key to this great saying
is Jacob's vision (@Ge
28:12-22), to which the allusion plainly is. To show the
patriarch that though alone and friendless on earth his
interests were busying all heaven, he was made to see
"heaven opened and the angels of God ascending and
descending upon a" mystic "ladder reaching
from heaven to earth." "By and by," says
Jesus here, "ye shall see this communication between
heaven and earth thrown wide open, and the Son of man the
real Ladder of this intercourse."
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