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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
JOHN
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 17
@Joh
17:1-26. THE INTERCESSORY PRAYER.
(See on Joh 14:1). Had this prayer not been recorded,
what reverential reader would not have exclaimed, Oh, to
have been within hearing of such a prayer as that must have
been, which wound up the whole of His past ministry and
formed the point of transition to the dark scenes which
immediately followed! But here it is, and with such
signature of the Lips that uttered it that we seem rather to
hear it from Himself than read it from the pen of His
faithful reporter.
1-3. These words spake Jesus, and lifted up his eyes--"John
very seldom depicts the gestures or looks of our Lord, as
here. But this was an occasion of which the impression was
indelible, and the upward look could not be passed
over" [ALFORD].
Father, the hour is come--(See
on Joh 13:31,32).
glorify thy Son--Put
honor upon Thy Son, by countenancing, sustaining, and
carrying Him through that "hour."
2. given--gavest
him power over all flesh--(See
on Mt 11:27; Mt 28:18-20).
give eternal life to as
many as, &c.--literally, "to all that which
thou hast given him." (See on Joh 6:37-40).
3. this is--that.
life eternal, that they
might--may.
know, &c.--This
life eternal, then, is not mere conscious and unending
existence,.but a life of acquaintance with God in Christ (@Job
22:21).
thee, the only true God--the
sole personal living God; in glorious contrast equally with
heathen polytheism, philosophic naturalism,
and mystic pantheism.
and Jesus Christ whom thou
hast sent--This is the only place where our Lord gives
Himself this compound name, afterwards so current in
apostolic preaching and writing. Here the terms are used in
their strict signification--"JESUS," because He
"saves His people from their sins";
"CHRIST," as anointed with the measureless
fulness of the Holy Ghost for the exercise of His saving
offices (see on Mt 1:16); "WHOM THOU HAST SENT,"
in the plenitude of Divine Authority and Power, to save.
"The very juxtaposition here of Jesus Christ
with the Father is a proof, by implication, of our
Lord's Godhead. The knowledge of God and a creature
could not be eternal life, and such an association of the
one with the other would be inconceivable" [ALFORD].
4, 5. I have glorified thee on the earth--rather,
"I glorified" (for the thing is conceived as now past).
I have finished--I
finished.
the work which thou gavest
me to do--It is very important to preserve in the
translation the past tense, used in the original,
otherwise it might be thought that the work already "finished"
was only what He had done before uttering that prayer;
whereas it will be observed that our Lord speaks throughout
as already beyond this present scene (@Joh
17:12, &c.), and so must be supposed to include in
His "finished work" the "decease which He was
to accomplish at Jerusalem."
5. And now--in return.
glorify thou me--The
"I Thee" and "Thou Me" are
so placed in the original, each beside its fellow, as to
show that A PERFECT RECIPROCITY OF SERVICES of the Son to
the Father first, and then of the Father to the Son in
return, is what our Lord means here to express.
with the glory which I had
with thee before the world was--when "in the
beginning the Word was with God" (@Joh
1:1), "the only-begotten Son in the bosom of the
Father" (@Joh
1:18). With this pre-existent glory, which He veiled on
earth, He asks to be reinvested, the design of the veiling
being accomplished--not, however, simply as before, but now
in our nature.
6-8. From praying for Himself He now comes to pray
for His disciples.
I have manifested--I
manifested.
thy name--His whole
character towards mankind.
to the men thou gavest me
out of the world--(See on Joh 6:37-40).
8. they . . . have known surely that I came out
from thee--(See on Joh 16:29; Joh 16:31).
9-14. I pray for them--not as individuals merely, but
as representatives of all such in every succeeding age (see
on Joh 17:20).
not for the world--for
they had been given Him "out of the world"
(@Joh
17:6), and had been already transformed into the very opposite
of it. The things sought for them, indeed, are applicable
only to such.
10. all mine are thine, and thine are mine--literally,
"All My things are Thine and Thy things are Mine."
(On this use of the neuter gender, see on Joh
6:37-40). Absolute COMMUNITY OF PROPERTY between the Father
and the Son is here expressed as nakedly as words can do it.
(See on Joh 17:5).
11. I am no more in the world--(See on Joh 17:4).
but these are in the world--that
is, Though My struggles are at an end, theirs are not;
though I have gotten beyond the scene of strife, I cannot
sever Myself in spirit from them, left behind and only just
entering on their great conflict.
Holy Father--an
expression He nowhere else uses. "Father"
is His wonted appellation, but "Holy" is
here prefixed, because His appeal was to that perfection of
the Father's nature, to "keep" or preserve them
from being tainted by the unholy atmosphere of "the
world" they were still in.
keep through thine own
name--rather, "in thy name"; in the exercise
of that gracious and holy character for which He was known.
that they may be one--(See
on Joh 17:21).
12. I kept--guarded.
them in thy name--acting
as Thy Representative on earth.
none of them is lost, but
the son of perdition--It is not implied here that the
son of perdition was one of those whom the Father had given
to the Son, but rather the contrary (@Joh
13:18) [WEBSTER and WILKINSON]. It is just as in @Lu
4:26,27, where we are not to suppose that the woman of Sarepta
(in Sidon) was one of the widows of Israel, nor
Naaman the Syrian one of the lepers in Israel,
though the language--the same as here--might seem to
express it.
son of perdition--doomed
to it (@2Th
2:3 Mr 14:21).
13. I speak in the world, that they might have my joy
fulfilled in themselves--that is, Such a strain befits
rather the upper sanctuary than the scene of conflict; but I
speak so "in the world," that My joy, the
joy I experience in knowing that such intercessions are to
be made for them by their absent Lord, may be tasted by
those who now hear them, and by all who shall hereafter read
the record of them,
15-19. I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of
the world--for that, though it would secure their own
safety, would leave the world unblessed by their testimony.
but . . . keep
them from the evil--all evil in and of the world.
16. They are not of the world, even as I am not of the
world--(See @Joh
15:18,19). This is reiterated here, to pave the way for
the prayer which follows.
17. Sanctify them--As the former prayer, "Keep
them," was "negative," asking protection
for them from the poisonous element which surrounded and
pressed upon their renewed nature, so this prayer, "Sanctify
them," is positive, asking the advancement and
completion of their begun sanctification.
through--in.
thy truth--God's
revealed truth, as the medium or element of sanctification;
a statement this of immense importance.
thy word is truth--(Compare
@Joh
15:3 Col 1:5 Eph 1:13).
18. As thou hast sent--sentest.
me into the world, even so
have I also sent them--sent I also them.
into the world--As
their mission was to carry into effect the purposes of their
Master's mission, so our Lord speaks of the authority
in both cases as co-ordinate.
19. And for their sakes I sanctify--consecrate.
myself that they also
might--may.
be sanctified--consecrated.
The only difference between the application of the same term
to Christ and the disciples is, as applied to Christ, that
it means only to "consecrate"; whereas, in
application to the disciples, it means to consecrate with
the additional idea of previous sanctification, since
nothing but what is holy can be presented as an offering.
The whole self-sacrificing work of the disciples appears
here as a mere result of the offering of Christ [OLSHAUSEN].
through--in.
the truth--Though the
article is wanting in the original here, we are not to
translate, as in the Margin, "truly
sanctified"; for the reference seems plainly to be
"the truth" mentioned in @Joh
17:17. (See on Joh 17:17).
20-23. Neither pray I for these alone--This very
important explanation, uttered in condescension to the
hearers and readers of this prayer in all time, is meant not
merely of what follows, but of the whole prayer.
them also which shall
believe--The majority of the best manuscripts read
"which believe," all future time being viewed as present,
while the present is viewed as past and gone.
21. that they all may be one, as thou, Father, art in me,
and I in thee, that they may be one in us--The
indwelling Spirit of the Father and the Son is the one
perfect bond of union, knitting up into a living unity,
first all believers amongst themselves; next, this unity
into one still higher, with the Father and the Son.
(Observe, that Christ never mixes Himself up with His
disciples as He associates Himself with the Father, but
says I in THEM and THEY in US).
that the world may believe
that thou hast sent me--sentest me. So the grand
impression upon the world at large, that the mission of
Christ is divine, is to be made by the unity of His
disciples. Of course, then, it must be something that
shall be visible or perceptible to the world. What is
it, then? Not certainly a merely formal, mechanical unity of
ecclesiastical machinery. For as that may, and to a large
extent does, exist in both the Western and Eastern churches,
with little of the Spirit of Christ, yea much, much with
which the Spirit of Christ cannot dwell so instead of
convincing the world beyond its own pale of the
divinity of the Gospel, it generates infidelity to a large
extent within its own bosom. But the Spirit of Christ,
illuminating, transforming, and reigning in the hearts of
the genuine disciples of Christ, drawing them to each other
as members of one family, and prompting them to loving
co-operation for the good of the world--this is what, when
sufficiently glowing and extended, shall force conviction
upon the world that Christianity is divine. Doubtless, the
more that differences among Christians disappear--the more
they can agree even in minor matters--the impression upon
the world may be expected to be greater. But it is not dependent
upon this; for living and loving oneness in Christ is
sometimes more touchingly seen even amidst and in spite of
minor differences, than where no such differences exist to
try the strength of their deeper unity. Yet till this living
brotherhood in Christ shall show itself strong enough to
destroy the sectarianism, selfishness, carnality, and apathy
that eat out the heart of Christianity in all the visible
sections of it, in vain shall we expect the world to be
overawed by it. It is when "the Spirit shall be poured
upon us from on high," as a Spirit of truth and love,
and upon all parts of the Christian territory alike, melting
down differences and heart burnings, kindling astonishment
and shame at past unfruitfulness, drawing forth longings of
catholic affection, and yearnings over a world lying in
wickedness, embodying themselves in palpable forms and
active measures--it is then that we may expect the effect
here announced to be produced, and then it will be
irresistible. Should not Christians ponder these things?
Should not the same mind be in them which was also in Christ
Jesus about this matter? Should not His prayer be theirs?
22. And the glory which thou gavest--hast given.
me I have given them, that
they may be one, even as we are one--The last clause
shows the meaning of the first. It is not the future
glory of the heavenly state, but the secret of that present
unity just before spoken of; the glory, therefore, of
the indwelling Spirit of Christ; the glory of an
accepted state, of a holy character, of every grace.
23. I in them, and thou in me, that they may be made
perfect in one--(See on Joh 17:21).
24-26. Father, I will--The majesty of this style of
speaking is quite transparent. No petty criticism will be
allowed to fritter it away in any but superficial or
perverted readers.
be with me where I am--(See
on Joh 14:3).
that they may behold my
glory which thou hast given me--(See on Joh 17:5).
Christ regards it as glory enough for us to be admitted to
see and gaze for ever upon His glory! This is
"the beatific vision"; but it shall be no mere
vision, for "we shall be like Him, because we shall see
Him as He is" (@1Jo
3:2).
25. O righteous Father, the world hath not known thee--knew
thee not.
but I have known thee--knew
thee.
and these have known--knew.
that thou hast sent--sentest
me--As before He said
"Holy Father," when desiring the display of
that perfection on His disciples (@Joh
17:11), so here He styles Him "Righteous
Father," because He is appealing to His righteousness
or justice, to make a distinction between those two
diametrically opposite classes--"the world,"
on the one hand, which would not "know the Father,
though brought so nigh to it in the Son of His love, and, on
the other, Himself, who recognized and owned Him, and
even His disciples, who owned His mission from the
Father.
26. And I have declared--I made known or
communicated.
thy name--in His past
ministry.
and will declare it--in
yet larger measure, by the gift of the Holy Ghost at
Pentecost and through all succeeding ages.
that the love wherewith
thou hast loved--lovedst.
me may be in them, and I
in them--This eternal love of the Father, resting first
on Christ, is by His Spirit imparted to and takes up its
permanent abode in all that believe in Him; and "He
abiding in them and they in Him" (@Joh
15:5), they are "one Spirit."
"With this lofty thought the Redeemer closes His prayer
for His disciples, and in them for His Church through all
ages. He has compressed into the last moments given Him for
conversation with His own the most sublime and glorious
sentiments ever uttered by mortal lips. But hardly has the
sound of the last word died away, when He passes with the
disciples over the brook Kedron to Gethsemane--and the
bitter conflict draws on. The seed of the new world must be
sown in Death, that thence Life may spring up" [OLSHAUSEN].
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