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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
JOHN
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 5
@Joh
5:1-47. THE IMPOTENT MAN HEALED--DISCOURSE OCCASIONED BY
THE PERSECUTION ARISING THEREUPON.
1. a feast of the Jews--What feast? No
question has more divided the Harmonists of the Gospels, and
the duration of our Lord's ministry may be said to hinge on
it. For if, as the majority have thought (until of late
years) it was a Passover, His ministry lasted three
and a half years; if not, probably a year less. Those who
are dissatisfied with the Passover-view all differ among
themselves what other feast it was, and some of the most
acute think there are no grounds for deciding. In our
judgment the evidence is in favor of its being a Passover,
but the reasons cannot be stated here.
2, 3. sheep market--The supplement should be
(as in Margin) "sheep [gate]," mentioned in
@Ne
3:1,32.
Bethesda--that is,
"house (place) of mercy," from the cures wrought
there.
five porches--for
shelter to the patients.
3. impotent--infirm.
4. an angel, &c.--This miracle differed in two
points from all other miracles recorded in Scripture: (1) It
was not one, but a succession of miracles periodically
wrought: (2) As it was only wrought "when the waters
were troubled," so only upon one patient at a time, and
that the patient "who first stepped in after the
troubling of the waters." But this only the more
undeniably fixed its miraculous character. We have heard of
many waters having a medicinal virtue; but what water was
ever known to cure instantaneously a single disease?
And who ever heard of any water curing all, even the most
diverse diseases--"blind, halt, withered"--alike?
Above all, who ever heard of such a thing being done
"only at a certain season," and most singularly of
all, doing it only to the first person who stepped in after
the moving of the waters? Any of these peculiarities--much
more all taken together--must have proclaimed the
supernatural character of the cures wrought. (If the text
here be genuine, there can be no doubt of the miracle, as
there were multitudes living when this Gospel was published
who, from their own knowledge of Jerusalem, could have
exposed the falsehood of the Evangelist, if no such cure had
been known there. The want of @Joh
5:4 and part of @Joh
5:3 in some good manuscripts, and the use of some
unusual words in the passage, are more easily accounted for
than the evidence in their favor if they were not originally
in the text. Indeed @Joh
5:7 is unintelligible without @Joh
5:4. The internal evidence brought against it is
merely the unlikelihood of such a miracle--a
principle which will carry us a great deal farther if we
allow it to weigh against positive evidence).
5-9. thirty and eight years--but not all that time at
the pool. This was probably the most pitiable of all the
cases, and therefore selected.
6. saw him lie, and knew, &c.--As He doubtless
visited the spot just to perform this cure, so He knows
where to find His patient, and the whole previous history of
his case (@Joh
2:25).
Wilt thou be made whole?--Could
anyone doubt that a sick man would like to be made whole, or
that the patients came thither, and this man had returned
again and again, just in hope of a cure? But our Lord asked
the question. (1) To fasten attention upon Himself; (2) By
making him detail his case to deepen in him the feeling of
entire helplessness; (3) By so singular a question to beget
in his desponding heart the hope of a cure. (Compare @Mr
10:51).
7. Sir, I have no man, &c.--Instead of saying
he wished to be cured, he just tells with piteous simplicity
how fruitless had been all his efforts to obtain it, and how
helpless and all but hopeless he was. Yet not
quite. For here he is at the pool, waiting on. It seemed of
no use; nay, only tantalizing,
while I am coming, another
steppeth down before me--the fruit was snatched from his
lips. Yet he will not go away. He may get nothing by
staying, he may drop into his grave ere he get into the
pool; but by going from the appointed, divine way of
healing, he can get nothing. Wait therefore he will, wait he
does, and when Christ comes to heal him, lo! he is waiting
his turn. What an attitude for a sinner at Mercy's
gate! The man's hopes seemed low enough ere Christ came to
him. He might have said, just before "Jesus passed by
that way," "This is no use; I shall never get in;
let me die at home." Then all had been lost. But he held
on, and his perseverance was rewarded with a glorious
cure. Probably some rays of hope darted into his heart as he
told his tale before those Eyes whose glance measured his
whole case. But the word of command consummates his
preparation to receive the cure, and instantaneously works
it.
8. Rise, take up thy bed,
&c.--"Immediately" he did so. "He spake
and it was done." The slinging of his portable
couch over his shoulders was designed to show the perfection
of the cure.
9. the same day was the sabbath--Beyond all doubt
this was intentional, as in so many other healings, in order
that when opposition arose on this account men might be
compelled to listen to His claims and His teaching.
10-16. The Jews--that is, those in authority.
(See on Joh 1:19.)
it is not lawful to carry
thy bed--a glorious testimony to the cure, as instantaneous
and complete, from the lips of the most prejudiced!
(And what a contrast does it, as all our Lord's miracles,
present to the bungling miracles of the Church of Rome!) In ordinary
circumstances, the rulers had the law on their side (@Ne
13:15 Jer 17:21). But when the man referred them to
"Him that had made him whole" (@Joh
5:11) as his authority, the argument was resistless. Yet
they ingeniously parried the thrust, asking him, not who had
"made him whole"--that would have condemned
themselves and defeated their purpose--but who had bidden
him "take up his bed and walk," in other words,
who had dared to order a breach of the sabbath? It is time
we were looking after Him--thus hoping to shake the man's
faith in his Healer.
13. he that was healed wist not, &c.--That some
one, with unparalleled generosity, tenderness and power, had
done it, the man knew well enough: but as he had never heard
of Him before, so he disappeared too quickly for any
inquiries.
conveyed himself away--slipped
out of the crowd that had gathered, to avoid both hasty
popularity and precipitate hatred (@Mt
12:14-19).
14. findeth him in the temple--saying, perhaps,
"I will go into Thy house with burnt offerings, I will
pay my vows which my lips have uttered and my mouth hath
spoken when I was in trouble" (@Ps
66:13,14). Jesus, there Himself for His own ends, "findeth
him there"--not all accidentally, be assured.
sin no more,
&c.--a glimpse this of the reckless life he had probably
led before his thirty-eight years' infirmity had come
upon him, and which not improbably had brought on, in the
just judgment of God, his chronic complaint. Fearful
illustration this of "the severity of God," but
glorious manifestation of our Lord's insight into "what
was in man."
15. The man departed, and told, &c.--little
thinking how unwelcome his grateful and eager testimony
would be. "The darkness received not the light which
was pouring its rays upon it" (@Joh
1:5,11) [OLSHAUSEN].
16. because he had done these things on the sabbath day--What
to these hypocritical religionists was the doing of the most
glorious and beneficent miracles, compared with the atrocity
of doing them on the sabbath day! Having given them this
handle, on purpose to raise the first public controversy
with them, and thus open a fitting opportunity of laying His
claims before them, He rises at once to the whole height of
them, in a statement which for grandeur and terseness
exceeds almost anything that ever afterwards fell from Him,
at least to His enemies.
17, 18. My Father worketh hitherto and I work--The
"I" is emphatic; "The creative and
conservative activity of My Father has known no sabbath-cessation
from the beginning until now, and that is the law of My
working."
18. God was his Father--literally, "His own [or
peculiar] Father," (as in @Ro
8:32). The addition is their own, but a very proper one.
making himself equal with
God--rightly gathering this to be His meaning, not from
the mere words "My Father," but from His claim of
right to act as His Father did in the like high sphere, and
by the same law of ceaseless activity in that sphere. And
as, instead of instantly disclaiming any such meaning--as He
must have done if it was false--He positively sets His seal
to it in the following verses, merely explaining how
consistent such claim was with the prerogatives of His
Father, it is beyond all doubt that we have here an
assumption of peculiar personal Sonship, or
participation in the Father's essential nature.
19, 20. the Son can do nothing of himself--that is, apart
from and in rivalry of the Father, as they
supposed. The meaning is, "The Son can have no separate
interest or action from the Father."
for what things,
&c.--On the contrary, "whatever the Father doeth
that same doeth the Son,"
likewise--"in the
like manner." What claim to absolute equality with the
Father could exceed this: not only to do "the same
things," but to do them as the Father does them?
20. Father loveth . . . and showeth him all,
&c.--As love has no concealments, so it results from the
perfect fellowship and mutual endearment of the Father and
the Son (see on Joh 1:1; Joh 1:18), whose interests are one,
even as their nature, that the Father communicates to the
Son all His counsels, and what has been thus shown to the
Son is by Him executed in His mediatorial character.
"With the Father, doing is willing; it is
only the Son who acts in Time" [ALFORD]. Three
things here are clear: (1) The personal distinctions
in the Godhead. (2) Unity of action among the Persons
results from unity of nature. (3) Their oneness of
interest is no unconscious or involuntary thing, but a thing
of glorious consciousness, will, and love, of
which the Persons themselves are the proper Objects.
show him greater things,
&c.--referring to what He goes on to mention (@Joh
5:21-31), comprised in two great words, LIFE and
JUDGMENT, which STIER beautifully calls God's Regalia.
Yet these, Christ says, the Father and He do in common.
21-23. raiseth the dead and quickeneth them--one
act in two stages. This is His absolute prerogative as God.
so the Son quickeneth them--that
is, raiseth up and quickeneth.
whom he will--not only
doing the same divine act, but doing it as the
result of His own will, even as the Father does it. This
statement is of immense importance in relation to the
miracles of Christ, distinguishing them from similar
miracles of prophets and apostles, who as human
instruments were employed to perform super-natural
actions, while Christ did all as the Father's commissioned
Servant indeed, but in the exercise of His own
absolute right of action.
22. For the Father judgeth no man, &c.--rather,
"For neither doth the Father judge any man,"
implying that the same "thing was meant in the former
verse of the quickening of the dead"--both acts being
done, not by the Father and the Son, as though twice
done, but by the Father through the Son as His
voluntary Agent.
all judgment--judgment
in its most comprehensive sense, or as we should say, all administration.
23. honour the Son as . . . the Father--As
he who believes that Christ in the foregoing verses has
given a true account of His relation to the Father must of
necessity hold Him entitled to the same honor as the
Father, so He here adds that it was the Father's express
intention in making over all judgment to the Son, that men should
thus honor Him.
honoureth not the Father--does
not do it in fact, whatever he may imagine, and will be held
as not doing it by the Father Himself, who will accept no
homage which is not accorded to His own Son.
24. believeth on him that sent me--that is, believeth
in Him as having sent Me. I have spoken of the Son's right
not only to heal the sick but to raise from the dead, and
quicken whom He will: And now I say unto you, That
life-giving operation has already passed upon all who
receive My words as the Sent of the Father on the great
errand of mercy.
hath everlasting life--immediately
on his believing (compare @Joh
3:18 1Jo 5:12,13).
is passed--"hath
passed over"
from death unto life--What
a transition! (Compare @1Jo
3:14).
25-29. The hour cometh--in its whole fulness, at
Pentecost.
and now is--in its
beginnings.
the dead--the spiritually
dead, as is clear from @Joh
5:28. Here He rises from the calmer phrase "hearing
his word" (@Joh
5:24), to the grander expression, "hearing the
voice of the Son of God," to signify that as it
finds men in a dead condition, so it carries with it
a resurrection-power.
shall live--in the
sense of @Joh
5:24.
26. given to the Son, &c.--Does this refer to the
essential life of the Son before all time (@Joh
1:4) (as most of the Fathers, and OLSHAUSEN, STIER,
ALFORD, &c., among the moderns), or to the purpose of
God that this essential life should reside in the Person of
the Incarnate Son, and be manifested thus to the world?
[CALVIN, LUCKE, LUTHARDT, &c.] The question is as
difficult as the subject is high. But as all that Christ
says of His essential relation to the Father is
intended to explain and exalt His mediatorial
functions, so the one seems in our Lord's own mind and
language mainly the starting-point of the other.
27. because he is the Son of man--This seems to
confirm the last remark, that what Christ had properly in
view was the indwelling of the Son's essential life in humanity
as the great theater and medium of divine
display, in both the great departments of His work--life-giving
and judgment. The appointment of a Judge in our own
nature is one of the most beautiful arrangements of
divine wisdom in redemption.
28. Marvel not at this--this committal of all
judgment to the Son of man.
for the hour is coming--He
adds not in this case (as in @Joh
5:25), "and now is," because this was not to
be till the close of the whole dispensation of mercy.
29. resurrection of life--that is, to life
everlasting (@Mt
25:46).
of damnation--It would
have been harsh to say "the resurrection of
death," though that is meant, for sinners rise from
death to death [BENGEL]. The resurrection of both
classes is an exercise of sovereign authority; but in
the one case it is an act of grace, in the other of justice.
(Compare @Da
12:2, from which the language is taken). How awfully
grand are these unfoldings of His dignity and authority from
the mouth of Christ Himself! And they are all in the third
person; in what follows He resumes the first person.
30-32. of mine own self do nothing--that is, apart
from the Father, or in any interest than My own. (See on Joh
5:19).
as I hear--that is,
"My judgments are all anticipated in the bosom
of My Father, to which I have immediate access, and by Me
only responded to and reflected. They cannot
therefore err, as I live for one end only, to carry into
effect the will of Him that sent Me."
31. If I . . . witness of myself--standing
alone, and setting up any separate interest.
32. There is another--that is, the Father, as
is plain from the connection. How brightly the distinction
of the Persons shines out here!
and I know that the
witness, &c.--"This is the Son's testimony to
the Father's truth (see @Joh
7:28 8:26,55). It testifies to the full consciousness on
the part of the Son, even in the days of His humiliation, of
the righteousness of the Father" [ALFORD]. And thus He
cheered His spirit under the cloud of human opposition which
was already gathering over His head.
33-35. Ye sent unto John--(See @Joh
1:19, &c.).
receive not testimony
. . . from man--that is, depend not on human
testimony.
but . . . that
ye might be saved--"I refer to him merely to aid
your salvation."
35. He was a burning and a shining light--literally,
"the burning and shining lamp" (or
torch):--that is, "the great light of his day."
Christ is never called by the humble word here applied to
John--a light-bearer--studiously used to distinguish
him from his Master, but ever the Light in the most
absolute sense. (See on Joh 1:6).
willing for a season--that
is, till they saw that it pointed whither they were not
prepared to go.
to rejoice in his light--There
is a play of irony here, referring to the hollow delight
with which his testimony tickled them.
36-38. I have greater witness--rather, "The
witness which I have is greater."
the works . . .
bear witness of me--not simply as miracles nor
even as a miracle of mercy, but these miracles, as
He did them, with a will and a power, a majesty
and a grace manifestly His own.
37. the Father himself . . . hath borne witness
of me--not referring, probably, to the voice of His
baptism, but (as seems from what follows) to the testimony
of the Old Testament Scripture [CALVIN, LUCKE, MEYER,
LUTHARDT, &c.].
neither heard his voice,
&c.--never recognized Him in this character. The words
are "designedly mysterious, like many others which our
Lord uttered" [STIER].
38. not his word abiding in you--passing now from the
Witness to the testimony borne by Him in
"the lively oracles" (@Ac
7:38): both were alike strangers to their breasts, as
was evidenced by their rejecting Him to whom all that
witness was borne.
39-42. Search the scriptures, &c.--"In the
Scriptures ye find your charter of eternal life; go search
them then, and you will find that I am the Great Burden of
their testimony; yet ye will not come to Me for that life
eternal which you profess to find there, and of which they
tell you I am the appointed Dispenser." (Compare @Ac
17:11,12). How touching and gracious are these last
words! Observe here (1) The honor which Christ gives to the
Scriptures, as a record which all have a right and are
bound to search--the reverse of which the Church of Rome
teaches; (2) The opposite extreme is, resting in the mere Book
without the living Christ, to direct the soul to whom
is its main use and chiefest glory.
41. I receive not honour from men--contrasting His
own end with theirs, which was to obtain human applause.
42. not the love of God in you--which would inspire
you with a single desire to know His mind and will, and
yield yourselves to it, in spite of prejudice and regardless
of consequences.
43-47. if another shall come, &c.--How strikingly
has this been verified in the history of the Jews!
"From the time of the true Christ to our time,
sixty-four false Christs have been reckoned by whom they
have been deceived" [BENGEL].
44. How can ye believe, &c.--(See on Joh
5:40,41). The "will not" of @Joh
5:40, and "cannot" here are just
different features of the same awful state of the human
heart.
45. Do not think I will accuse you to the Father--"My
errand hither is not to collect evidence to condemn you at
God's bar."
one that accuseth
you, even Moses, &c.--"Alas! that will
be too well done by another, and him the object of all your
religious boastings--Moses," here put for "the
Law," the basis of the Old Testament Scriptures.
46. he wrote of me--"an important testimony to
the subject of the whole Pentateuch--'of Me'" [ALFORD].
47. If ye believe not--(See @Lu
16:31).
his writings
. . . my words--a remarkable contrast, not absolutely
exalting Old Testament Scripture above His own words, but
pointing to the office of those venerable documents to prepare
Christ's way, to the necessity universally felt for documentary
testimony in revealed religion, and perhaps (as STIER adds)
to the relation which the comparative "letter"
of the Old Testament holds to the more flowing
"words" of "spirit and life" which
characterize the New Testament.
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