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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
JOHN
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 16
@Joh
16:1-33. DISCOURSE AT THE SUPPER TABLE CONCLUDED.
1-5. These things have I spoken unto you, that ye should
not be offended--both the warnings and the encouragements
just given.
2. They shall put you out of the synagogue--(@Joh
9:22 12:42).
the time cometh, that
whosoever killeth you will think that he doeth God service--The
words mean religious service--"that he is
offering a service to God." (So Saul of Tarsus, @Ga
1:13,14 Php 3:6).
4. these things I said not . . . at--from.
the beginning--He had
said it pretty early (@Lu
6:22), but not quite as in @Joh
16:2.
because I was with you.
5. But now I go my way to him that sent me--While He
was with them, the world's hatred was directed chiefly
against Himself; but His departure would bring it down upon
them as His representatives.
and none of you asketh me,
Whither goest thou?--They had done so in a sort
(@Joh
13:36 14:5); but He wished more intelligent and eager
inquiry on the subject.
6, 7. But because I have said these things . . .
sorrow hath filled your heart--Sorrow had too much
paralyzed them, and He would rouse their energies.
7. It is expedient for you that I go away--
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My Saviour, can it
ever be
That I should gain by losing thee?
KEBLE. |
Yes.
for if I go not away, the
Comforter will not come unto you, but if I depart, I will
send him unto you--(See on Joh 7:39; Joh 14:15).
8. And when he is come, he will, &c.--This is one
of the passages most pregnant with thought in the profound
discourses of Christ; with a few great strokes depicting all
and every part of the ministry of the Holy Ghost in the
world--His operation with reference to individuals as well
as the mass, on believers and unbelievers alike [OLSHAUSEN].
he will reprove--This
is too weak a word to express what is meant. Reproof
is indeed implied in the term employed, and doubtless the
word begins with it. But convict or convince
is the thing intended; and as the one expresses the work of
the Spirit on the unbelieving portion of mankind, and
the other on the believing, it is better not to
restrict it to either.
9. Of sin, because they believe not on me--As all sin
has its root in unbelief, so the most aggravated form of
unbelief is the rejection of Christ. The Spirit, however, in
fastening this truth upon the conscience, does not extinguish,
but, on the contrary, does consummate and intensify, the
sense of all other sins.
10. Of righteousness, because I go to my Father, and ye
see me no more--Beyond doubt, it is Christ's personal
righteousness which the Spirit was to bring home to the
sinner's heart. The evidence of this was to lie in the great
historical fact, that He had "gone to His Father
and was no more visible to men":--for if His claim to
be the Son of God, the Saviour of the world, had been a lie,
how should the Father, who is "a jealous God,"
have raised such a blasphemer from the dead and exalted him
to His right hand? But if He was the "Faithful and True
Witness," the Father's "Righteous Servant,"
"His Elect, in whom His soul delighted," then was
His departure to the Father, and consequent disappearance
from the view of men, but the fitting consummation, the
august reward, of all that He did here below, the seal of
His mission, the glorification of the testimony which He
bore on earth, by the reception of its Bearer to the
Father's bosom. This triumphant vindication of Christ's rectitude
is to us divine evidence, bright as heaven, that He is
indeed the Saviour of the world, God's Righteous Servant to
justify many, because He bare their iniquities (@Isa
53:11). Thus the Spirit, in this clause, is seen
convincing men that there is in Christ perfect relief under
the sense of sin of which He had before convinced
them; and so far from mourning over His absence from us, as
an irreparable loss, we learn to glory in it, as the
evidence of His perfect acceptance on our behalf, exclaiming
with one who understood this point, "Who shall lay
anything to the charge of God's elect? It is God that
justifieth: Who is he that condemneth? It is Christ that
died; yea, rather, that is risen again, who is even at
the right hand of God," &c. (@Ro
8:33,34).
11. Of judgment, because the prince of this world is
judged--By supposing that the final judgment is
here meant, the point of this clause is, even by good
interpreters, quite missed. The statement, "The prince
of this world is judged," means, beyond all
reasonable doubt, the same as that in @Joh
12:31, "Now shall the prince of this world be cast
out"; and both mean that his dominion over men, or
his power to enslave and so to ruin them, is destroyed. The
death of Christ "judged" or judicially overthrew
him, and he was thereupon "cast out" or expelled
from his usurped dominion (@Heb
2:14 1Jo 3:8 Col 2:15). Thus, then, the Spirit shall
bring home to men's conscience: (1) the sense of sin,
consummated in the rejection of Him who came to "take
away the sin of the world"; (2) the sense of perfect
relief in the righteousness of the Father's Servant,
now fetched from the earth that spurned Him to that bosom
where from everlasting He had dwelt; and (3) the sense of
emancipation from the fetters of Satan, whose judgment
brings to men liberty to be holy, and transformation out of
servants of the devil into sons and daughters of the Lord
Almighty. To one class of men, however, all this will carry conviction
only; they "will not come to Christ"--revealed
though He be to them as the life-giving One--that they may
have life. Such, abiding voluntarily under the dominion of
the prince of this world, are judged in his judgment,
the visible consummation of which will be at the great day.
To another class, however, this blessed teaching will have
another issue--translating them out of the kingdom of
darkness into the kingdom of God's dear Son.
12-15. when he, the Spirit of truth, is come . . .
he shall not speak of himself--that is, from
Himself, but, like Christ Himself, "what He
hears," what is given Him to communicate.
he will show you things to
come--referring specially to those revelations which, in
the Epistles partially, but most fully in the Apocalypse,
open up a vista into the Future of the Kingdom of God, whose
horizon is the everlasting hills.
14. He shall glorify me; for he shall receive of mine and
show it unto you--Thus the whole design of the Spirit's
office is to glorify Christ--not in His own Person, for this
was done by the Father when He exalted Him to His own right
hand--but in the view and estimation of men. For this
purpose He was to "receive of Christ"--all
the truth relating to Christ--"and show it unto
them," or make them to discern it in its own light.
The subjective nature of the Spirit's teaching--the
discovery to the souls of men of what is Christ outwardly--is
here very clearly expressed; and, at the same time, the
vanity of looking for revelations of the Spirit which shall
do anything beyond throwing light in the soul upon what
Christ Himself is, and taught, and did upon earth.
15. All things that the Father hath are mine--a
plainer expression than this of absolute community
with the Father in all things cannot be conceived, though
the "all things" here have reference to the things
of the Kingdom of Grace, which the Spirit was to receive
that He might show it to us. We have here a wonderful
glimpse into the inner relations of the Godhead.
16-22. A little while, and ye shall not see me; and again
a little while, and ye shall see me, because I go to the
Father--The joy of the world at their not seeing Him
seems to show that His removal from them by death was
what He meant; and in that case, their joy at again seeing
Him points to their transport at His reappearance amongst
them on His Resurrection, when they could no longer
doubt His identity. At the same time the sorrow of the
widowed Church in the absence of her Lord in the heavens,
and her transport at His personal return, are certainly here
expressed.
23-28. In that day--of the dispensation of the Spirit
(as in @Joh
14:20).
ye shall ask--inquire
of
me nothing--by reason
of the fulness of the Spirit's teaching (@Joh
14:26 16:13; and compare @1Jo
2:27).
24. Hitherto have ye asked nothing in my name--for
"prayer in the name of Christ, and prayer to
Christ, presuppose His glorification" [OLSHAUSEN].
ask--when I am gone,
"in My name."
25. in proverbs--in obscure language, opposed to
"showing plainly"--that is, by the Spirit's
teaching.
26. I say not . . . I will pray the Father for
you--as if He were not of Himself disposed to aid
you: Christ does pray the Father for His people, but not for
the purpose of inclining an unwilling ear.
27. For the Father himself loveth you, because ye have
loved me--This love of theirs is that which is called
forth by God's eternal love in the gift of His Son mirrored
in the hearts of those who believe, and resting on His dear
Son.
28. I came forth from the Father, &c.--that is,
"And ye are right, for I have indeed so come forth,and
shall soon return whence I came." This echo of the
truth, alluded to in @Joh
16:27, seems like thinking aloud, as if it were
grateful to His own spirit on such a subject and at such an
hour.
29, 30. His disciples said, . . . now speakest
thou plainly, and speakest no proverb--hardly more so
than before; the time for perfect plainness was yet to come;
but having caught a glimpse of His meaning (it was nothing
more), they eagerly express their satisfaction, as if glad
to make anything of His words. How touchingly does this show
both the simplicity of their hearts and the infantile
character of their faith!
31-33. Jesus answered . . . Do ye now believe?--that
is, "It is well ye do, for it is soon to be tested, and
in a way ye little expect."
the hour cometh, yea, is
now come, that ye shall be scattered, every man to his own,
and shall leave me alone; and yet I am not alone--A deep
and awful sense of wrong experienced is certainly
expressed here, but how lovingly! That He was not to be
utterly deserted, that there was One who would not forsake
Him, was to Him matter of ineffable support and consolation;
but that He should be without all human countenance
and cheer, who as Man was exquisitely sensitive to the law
of sympathy, would fill themselves with as much shame,
when they afterwards recurred to it, as the Redeemer's heart
in His hour of need with pungent sorrow. "I
looked for some to take pity, but there was none; and for
comforters, but I found none" (@Ps
69:20).
because the Father is with
me--how near, and with what sustaining power, who can
express?
33. These things I have spoken unto you--not the
immediately preceding words, but this whole discourse, of
which these were the very last words, and which He thus
winds up.
that in me ye might have
peace--in the sublime sense before explained. (See on
Joh 14:27).
In the world ye shall have
tribulation--specially arising from its deadly
opposition to those who "are not of the world, but
chosen out of the world." So that the "peace"
promised was far from an unruffled one.
I have overcome the world--not
only before you, but for you, that ye may be
able to do the same (@1Jo
5:4,5).
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