Volume 3
Matthew - John
By John Nelson Darby
The
Gospel of John has a peculiar
character, as every Christian
perceives. It does not present
the birth of Christ in this
world, looked at as the Son of
David. It does not trace His
genealogy back to Adam, in order
to bring out His title of Son of
man. It does not exhibit the
Prophet who, by His testimony,
accomplished the service of His
Father in this respect here
below. It is neither His birth,
nor the commencement of His
gospel, but His existence before
the beginning of everything that
had a beginning. "In the
beginning was the Word." In
short it is the glory of the
Person of Jesus, the Son of God,
above all dispensation — a glory
developed in many ways in grace,
but which is always itself. It
is that which He is; but making
us share in all the blessings
that flow from it, when He is so
manifested as to impart them.
John 1 asserts what He was
before all things, and the
different characters in which He
is a blessing to man, being made
flesh. He is, and He is the
expression of, the whole mind
that subsists in God, the Logos.
In the beginning He was. If we
go back as far as is possible to
the mind of men, how far soever
beyond all that has had a
beginning, He is. This is the
most perfect idea we can form
historically, if I may use such
an expression, of the existence
of God or of eternity. "In the
beginning was the Word." Was
there nothing beside Him?
Impossible! Of what would He
have been the Word? "The Word
was with God." That is to say, a
personal existence is ascribed
to Him. But, lest it may be
thought that He was something
which eternity implies but which
the Holy Ghost comes to reveal,
it is said that He "was God." In
His existence eternal — in His
nature divine — in His Person
distinct, He might have been
spoken of as an emanation in
time, as though His personality
were of time, although eternal
in His nature: the Spirit
therefore adds, "In the
beginning he was with God." It
is the revelation of the eternal
Logos before all creation. This
Gospel therefore really begins
before Genesis. The Book of
Genesis gives us the history of
the world in time: John gives us
that of the Word, who existed in
eternity before the world was;
who — when man can speak of
beginning — was; and,
consequently, did not begin to
exist. The language of the
Gospel is as plain as possible,
and, like the sword of paradise,
turns every way, in opposition
to the thoughts and reasonings
of man, to defend the divinity
and personality of the Son of
God.
By Him also were all things
created. There are things which
had a beginning; they all had
their origin from Him: "All
things were made by him, and
without him was not any thing
made that was made." Precise,
positive, and absolute
distinction between all that has
been made and Jesus. If anything
has been made, it is not the
Word; for all that has been made
was made by that Word.
But there is another thing,
besides the supreme act of
creating all things (an act that
characterises the Word) — there
is that which was in Him. All
creation was made by Him; but it
does not exist in Him. But in
Him was life. In this He was in
relation with an especial part
of creation — a part which was
the object of the thoughts and
intentions of God. This "life
was the light of men," revealed
itself as a testimony to the
divine nature, in immediate
connection with them, as it did
not with respect to any others
at all.1 But, in fact, this
light shone in the midst of that
which was in its own nature2
contrary to it, and evil beyond
any natural image, for where
light comes, darkness is no
longer: but here the light came,
and the darkness had no
perception of it — remained
darkness, which therefore
neither comprehended nor
received it. These are the
relations of the Word with
creation and with man, seen
abstractedly in His nature. The
Spirit pursues this subject,
giving us details, historically,
of the latter part.
We may remark here — and the
point is of importance — how the
Spirit passes from the divine
and eternal nature of the Word
who was before all things, to
the manifestation, in this
world, of the Word made flesh in
the Person of Jesus. All the
ways of God, the dispensations,
His government of the world, are
passed over in silence. In
beholding Jesus on the earth we
are in immediate connection with
Him as existing before the world
was. Only He is introduced by
John, and that which is found in
the world is recognised as
created. John is come to bear
witness of the Light. The true
Light was that which, coming
into the world, shone for all
men, and not for the Jews only.
He is come into the world; and
the world, in darkness and
blind, has not known Him. He is
come unto His own, and His own
(the Jews) have not received
Him. But there were some who
received Him. Of them two things
are said: they have received
authority to become the
children3 of God, to take their
place as such; and, secondly,
they are, in fact, born of God.
Natural descent, and the will of
man, went for nothing here.
Thus we have seen the Word, in
His nature, abstractedly (v.
1-3); and, as life, the
manifestation of divine light in
man, with the consequences of
that manifestation (v. 4, 5);
and how He was received where it
was so (v. 10-13). This general
part, in regard to His nature,
ends here. The Spirit carries on
the history of what the Lord is,
manifested as man on earth. So
that, as it were, we begin again
here (v. 14) with Jesus on the
earth — what the Word became,
not what He was. As light in the
world, there was the unanswered
claim of what He was on man. Not
knowing Him, or rejecting Him
where He was dispensationally in
relationship was the only
difference. Grace in life-giving
power then comes in to lead men
to receive Him. The world did
not know its Creator come into
it as light, His own rejected
their Lord. Those who were born
not of man's will but of God
received Him. Thus we have not
what the Word was, but what He
became.
The Word was made flesh, and
dwelt among us in the fulness of
grace and truth. This is the
great fact, the source of all
blessing to us;4 that which is
the full expression of God,
adapted, by taking man's own
nature, to all that is in man,
to meet every human need, and
all the capacity of the new
nature in man to enjoy the
expression of all in which God
is suited to him. It is more
than light, which is pure and
shows all things; it is the
expression of what God is, and
God in grace, and as a source of
blessing. And note, God could
not be to angels what He is to
man — grace, patience, mercy,
love, as shown to sinners. And
all this He is, as well as the
blessedness of God, to the new
man. The glory in which Christ
was seen, thus manifested (by
those who had eyes to see), was
that of an only Son with His
Father, the one concentrating
object of His delight as Father.
These are the two parts of this
great truth. The Word, who was
with God and who was God, was
made flesh; and He who was
beheld on the earth had the
glory of an only Son with the
Father.
Two things are the result. Grace
(what greater grace? It is love
itself that is revealed, and
towards sinners) and truth, that
are not declared, but come, in
Jesus Christ The true relation
of all things with God is shown,
and their departure from it.
This is the groundwork of truth.
Everything takes its true place,
its true character, in every
respect; and the centre to which
all refers is God. What God is,
what perfect man, what sinful
man, what the world, what its
prince, Christ's presence brings
all out. Grace then and truth
are come. The second thing is,
that the only Son in the bosom
of the Father reveals God, and
reveals Him consequently as
known by Himself in that
position. And this is largely
connected with the character and
revelation of grace in John:
first, fulness, with which we
are in communication, and from
which we have all received; then
relationship.
But there are yet other
important instructions in these
verses. The Person of Jesus, the
Word made flesh, dwelling among
us, was full of grace and truth.
Of this fulness we have all
received: not truth upon truth
(truth is simple, and puts
everything exactly in its place,
morally and in its nature); but
we have received that which we
needed — grace upon grace, the
favour of God abundantly, divine
blessings (the fruit of His
love) heaped one upon another.
Truth shines — everything is
perfectly manifested; grace is
given.
The connection of this
manifestation of the grace of
God in the Word made flesh (in
which perfect truth also
displays itself) with other
testimonies of God is then
taught us. John bore witness to
Him; the service of Moses had
quite another character. John
preceded Him in his service on
earth; but Jesus must be
preferred before him; for
(humble as He might be) God
above all, blessed for ever, He
was before John, although coming
after him. Moses gave the law,
perfect in its place — requiring
from man, on God's part, that
which man ought to be. Then God
was hidden, and God sent out a
law showing what man ought to
be; but now God has revealed
Himself by Christ, and the truth
(as to everything) and grace are
come. The law was neither the
truth, full and entire,5 in
every respect, as in Jesus, nor
grace; it was no transcript of
God, but a perfect rule for man.
Grace and truth came by Jesus
Christ, not by Moses. Nothing
can be more essentially
important than this statement.
Law requires from man what he
ought to be before God, and, if
he fulfils it, it is his
righteousness. Truth in Christ
shows what man is (not ought to
be), and what God is, and, as
inseparable from grace, does not
require but brings to man what
he needs. If thou knewest the
gift of God, says the Saviour to
the Samaritan woman. So at the
end of the wilderness journey
Balaam has to say: "according to
this time it shall be said of
Jacob and of Israel, What has
God wrought?" The verb "came" is
in the singular after grace and
truth. Christ is both at once;
indeed, if grace were not there
He would not be the truth as to
God. To require from man what he
ought to be was righteous
requirement. But to give grace
and glory, to give His Son was
another thing in every respect;
only sanctioning the law as
perfect in its place.
We have thus the character and
the position of the Word made
flesh — that which Jesus was
here below, the Word made flesh;
His glory as seen by faith, that
of an only Son with His Father.
He was full of grace and truth.
He revealed God as He knew Him,
as the only-begotten Son in the
bosom of the Father. It was not
only the character of His glory
here below; it is what He was
(what He had been, what He ever
is) in the Father's own bosom in
the Godhead: and it is thus that
He declared Him. He was before
John the Baptist, although
coming after him; and He
brought, in His own Person, that
which was in its nature entirely
different from the law given by
Moses.
Here then is the Lord manifested
on earth. His relations with men
follow, the positions He took,
the characters He assumed,
according to the purposes of
God, and the testimony of His
word among men. First of all,
John the Baptist gives place to
Him. It will be remarked that he
bears testimony in each of the
parts6 into which this chapter
is divided — verse 6,7 in the
effect of the abstract
revelation of the nature of the
Word; as light verse 15, with
regard to His manifestation in
the flesh; verse 19, the glory
of His Person, although coming
after John; verse 29, respecting
His work and the result; and
verse 36, the testimony for the
time being, in order that He
might be followed, as having
come to seek the Jewish remnant.
After the abstract revelation of
the nature of the Word, and that
of His manifestation in the
flesh, the testimony actually
borne in the world is given.
Verses 19-28 form a kind of
introduction, in which, on the
inquiry of the scribes and
Pharisees, John gives account of
himself, and takes occasion to
speak of the difference between
himself and the Lord. So that,
whatever the characters may be
that Christ takes in connection
with His work, the glory of His
Person is ever first in view.
The witness is occupied
naturally, so to speak, with
this, before bearing his formal
testimony to the office which he
fulfilled. John is neither Elias
nor that prophet (that is, the
one of whom Moses spoke) nor the
Christ. He is the voice
mentioned by Isaiah, who was to
prepare the way of the Lord
before Him. It is not precisely
before the Messiah, although He
was that; neither is it Elias
before the day of Jehovah, but
the voice in the wilderness
before the Lord (Jehovah)
Himself. Jehovah was coming. It
is this consequently of which he
speaks. John baptised indeed
unto repentance; but there was
already One, unknown, among
them, who, coming after him, was
yet his superior, whose shoe's
latchet he was not worthy to
unloose.
We have next the direct
testimony of John, when he sees
Jesus coming to him. He points
Him out, not as the Messiah, but
according to the whole extent of
His work as enjoyed by us in the
everlasting salvation He has
accomplished, and the full
result of the glorious work by
which it was accomplished. He is
the Lamb of God, one whom God
alone could furnish, and was for
God, and according to His mind,
who takes away the sin (not the
sins) of the world. That is to
say, He restores (not all the
wicked, but) the foundations of
the world's relations with God.
Since the fall, it is indeed sin
— whatever may be His dealings8
— that God had to consider in
His relations with the world.
The result of Christ's work
shall be, that this will no
longer be the case; His work
shall be the eternal basis of
these relations in the new
heavens and the new earth, sin
being entirely put aside as
such. We know this by faith
before the public result in the
world.
Although a Lamb for the
sacrifice, He is preferred
before John the Baptist, for He
was before him. The Lamb to be
slain was Jehovah Himself.
In the administration of the
ways of God, this testimony was
to be borne in Israel, although
its subject was the Lamb whose
sacrifice reached to the sin of
the world, and the Lord,
Jehovah. John had not known Him
personally; but He was the one
and only object of his mission.
But this was not all. He had
made Himself man, and as man had
received the fulness of the Holy
Ghost, who had descended upon
Him and abode upon Him; and the
man thus pointed out, and sealed
on the part of the Father, was
Himself to baptise with the Holy
Ghost. At the same time He was
pointed out by the descent of
the Holy Ghost in another
character, to which John
therefore bears testimony. Thus
subsisting and seen and sealed
on the earth, He was the Son of
God. John recognises Him and
proclaims Him as such.
Then comes what may be called
the direct exercise and effect
of his ministry at that time.
But it is always the Lamb of
whom he speaks; for that was the
object, the design of God, and
it is that which we have in this
Gospel, although Israel is
recognised in its place; for the
nation held that place from God.
Upon this the disciples of John9
follow Christ to His abode. The
effect of John's testimony is to
attach the remnant to Jesus, the
centre of their gathering. Jesus
does not refuse it, and they
accompany Him. Nevertheless this
remnant — how far soever the
testimony of John might extend —
do not, in fact, go beyond the
recognition of Jesus as the
Messiah. This was the case,
historically;10 it but Jesus
knew them thoroughly, and
declares the character of Simon
as soon as he comes to Him, and
gives him his appropriate name.
This was an act of authority
which proclaimed Him the head
and centre of the whole system.
God can bestow names; He knows
all things. He gave this right
to Adam, who exercised it
according to God with regard to
all that was put under him as
well as in the case of his wife.
Great kings, who claim this
power, have done the same. Eve
sought to do it, but she was
mistaken; although God can give
an understanding heart which,
under His influence, speaks
aright in this respect. Now
Christ does so here, with
authority and with all
knowledge, the moment the case
presents itself.
Verse 43.11 We have next the
immediate testimony of Christ
Himself and of His followers. In
the first place, on repairing to
the scene of His earthly
pilgrimage, according to the
prophets, He calls others to
follow Him. Nathanael, who
begins by rejecting one who came
from Nazareth, sets before us, I
doubt not, the remnant of the
last days (the testimony to
which the gospel of grace
belongs came first, verses
29-34). We see him at first
rejecting the despised of the
people, and under the fig-tree,
which represents the nation of
Israel; as the fig-tree which
was to bear no more fruit,
represents Israel under the old
covenant. But Nathanael is the
figure of a remnant, seen and
known by the Lord, in connection
with Israel. The Lord who thus
manifested Himself to his heart
and conscience is confessed as
Son of God and King of Israel.
This is formally the faith of
the spared remnant of Israel in
the last days according to Psalm
2. But those who thus received
Jesus when He was on earth
should see yet greater things
than those which had convinced
them. Moreover thenceforth12
they should see the angels of
God ascending and descending
upon the Son of man. He who by
His birth had taken His place
among the children of men would,
by that title, be the object of
service to the most excellent of
God's creatures. The expression
is emphatic. The angels of God
Himself should be in the service
of the Son of man. So that the
remnant of Israel without guile
acknowledges Him to be the Son
of God and King of Israel; and
the Lord declares Himself also
to be the Son of man — in
humiliation indeed, but the
object of service to the angels
of God. Thus we have the Person
and the titles of Jesus, from
His eternal and divine existence
as the Word, to His millennial
place as King of Israel and Son
of man;13 which He already was
as born into this world, but
which will be realised when He
returns in His glory.
Before going farther, let us
review some points in this
chapter. The Lord is revealed as
the Word — as God and with God —
as light — as life: secondly, as
the Word made flesh, having the
glory of an only Son with His
Father — as such He is full of
grace and truth come by Him, of
His fulness we have all
received, and He has declared
the Father (compare John 14) —
the Lamb of God — the One on
whom the Holy Ghost could
descend, and who baptised with
the Holy Ghost — the Son of
God:14 thirdly, His work what He
does, Lamb of God taking away
sin, and Son of God and King of
Israel. This closes the
revelation of His Person and
work. Then verses 35-42 John's
ministry, but where Jesus, as He
alone could, becomes the
gathering centre. Verse 43,
Christ's ministry, in which He
calls to follow Him, which, with
verses 38, 39, give His double
character as the one attractive
point in the world; with this
His entire humiliation, but
owned through a divine testimony
reaching the remnant as
according to Psalm 2, but the
taking His title of Son of man
according to Psalm 8 — the Son
of man: we may say, all His
personal titles. His
relationship to the assembly is
not here, nor His function as
Priest; but that which belongs
to His Person, and the
connection of man with God in
this world. Thus, besides His
divine nature, it is all that He
was and will be in this world:
His heavenly place and its
consequences to faith are taught
elsewhere, and barely alluded
to, when necessary, in this
Gospel.
Observe that, in preaching
Christ, in a way to a certain
degree complete, the heart of
the hearer may truly believe and
attach itself to Him, though
investing Him with a character
which the condition of soul
cannot yet go beyond, and while
ignorant of the fulness in which
He has been revealed. Indeed
where it is real, the testimony,
however exalted in character,
meets the heart where it is.
John says, "Behold the Lamb of
God!" "We have found the
Messiah," say the disciples who
followed Jesus on John's
testimony.
Note also, that the expression
of what was in John's heart had
greater effect than a more
formal, more doctrinal
testimony. He beheld Jesus, and
exclaims, "Behold the Lamb of
God!" The disciples heard him,
and followed Jesus. It was, no
doubt, his proper testimony on
God's part, Jesus being there;
but it was not a doctrinal
explanation like that of the
preceding verses.
The two testimonies to Christ
that were to be borne in this
world, both gathering to Him as
centre, had been borne; that of
John, and that of Jesus taking
His place in Galilee with the
remnant — the two days of God's
dealings with Israel here
below.15 The third day we find in
chapter 2. A marriage takes
place in Galilee. Jesus is
there; and the water of
purification is changed into the
wine of joy for the
marriage-feast. Afterwards at
Jerusalem He cleanses the temple
of God with authority, executing
judgment on all those who
profaned it. In principle these
are the two things that characterise His millennial
position. Doubtless these things
took place historically; but, as
introduced here and in this
manner, they have evidently a
wider meaning. Besides, why the
third day? After what? Two days
of testimony had taken place —
that of John, and that of Jesus;
and now blessing and judgment
are accomplished. In Galilee the
remnant had their place; and it
is the scene of blessing,
according to Isaiah 9 —
Jerusalem is that of judgment.
At the feast He would not know
His mother: this was the link of
His natural relation with
Israel, which, looking at Him as
born under the law, was His
mother. He separates Himself
from her to accomplish blessing.
It is only in testimony
therefore in Galilee, for the
moment. It is when He returns
that the good wine will be for
Israel — true blessing and joy
at the end. Nevertheless He
still abides with His mother,
whom, as to His work, He did not
acknowledge. And this also was
the case with regard to His
connection with Israel.
Afterwards, in judging the Jews
and judicially cleansing the
temple, He presents Himself as
the Son of God. It is His
Father's house. The proof of
this which He gives is His
resurrection, when the Jews
should have rejected and
crucified Him. Moreover He was
not only the Son: it was God who
was there — not in the temple.
It was empty — that house built
by Herod. The body of Jesus was
now the true temple. Sealed by
His resurrection, the scriptures
and the word of Jesus were of
divine authority to the
disciples, as speaking of Him
according to the intention of
the Spirit of God.
This subdivision of the book
ends here. It closes the earthly
revelation of Christ including
His death; but even so it is the
sin of the world. John 2 gives
the millennium; John 3 is the
work in and for us which
qualifies for the kingdom on
earth or heaven; and the work
for us, closing Messiah's
connection with the Jews, opens
the heavenly things by the
lifting up of the Son of man —
divine love and eternal life.
The miracles that He wrought
convinced many as to their
natural understanding. No doubt
it was sincerely; but a just
human conclusion. But another
truth now opens. Man, in his
natural state,16 was really
incapable of receiving the
things of God; not that the
testimony was insufficient to
convince him, nor that he was
never convinced: many were so at
this time; but Jesus did not
commit Himself to them. He knew
what man was. When convinced,
his will, his nature, was not
altered. Let the time of trial
come, and he would show himself
as he was, alienated from God,
and even His enemy. Sad but too
true testimony! The life, the
death, of Jesus proves it. He
knew it when He began His work.
This did not make His love grow
cold; for the strength of that
love was in itself.
But there was a man (John 3) —
and that a Pharisee — who was
not satisfied with this
inoperative conviction. His
conscience was reached. Seeing
Jesus, and hearing His
testimony, had produced a sense
of need in his heart. It is not
the knowledge of grace, but it
is with respect to man's
condition a total change. He
knows nothing of the truth, but
he has seen that it is in Jesus,
and he desires it. He has also
at once an instinctive sense
that the world will be against
him; and he comes by night. The
heart fears the world as soon as
it has to do with God; for the
world is opposed to Him. The
friendship of the world is
enmity against God. This sense
of need made the difference in
the case of Nicodemus. He had
been convinced like the others.
Accordingly he says, "We know
that thou art a teacher come
from God." And the source of
this conviction was the
miracles. But Jesus stops him
short; and that on account of
the true need felt in the heart
of Nicodemus. The work of
blessing was not to be wrought
by teaching the old man. Man
needed to be renewed in the
source of his nature, without
which he could not see the
kingdom.17 The things of God are
spiritually discerned; and man
is carnal, he has not the
Spirit. The Lord does not go
beyond the kingdom — which,
moreover, was not the law — for
Nicodemus ought to have known
something about the kingdom. But
He does not begin to teach the
Jews as a prophet under the law.
He presents the kingdom itself;
but to see it, according to His
testimony, a man must be born
again. But the kingdom as thus
come in the carpenter's Son
could not be seen without a
wholly new nature, it struck no
chord of man's comprehension or
Jews' expectation, though
testimony to it was amply given
in word and work: as to entering
and having a part in it there is
more development as to the how.
Nicodemus sees no farther than
the flesh.
The Lord explains Himself. Two
things were necessary — to be
born of water, and of the
Spirit. Water cleanses. And,
spiritually, in his affections,
heart, conscience, thoughts,
actions, etc., man lives, and in
practice is morally purified,
through the application, by the
power of the Spirit, of the word
of God, which judges all things,
and works in us livingly new
thoughts and affections. This is
the water; it is withal the
death of the flesh. The true
water which cleanses in a
christian way came forth from
the side of a dead Christ. He
came by water and blood, in the
power of cleansing and of
expiation. He sanctifies the
assembly by cleansing it through
the washing of water by the
word. "Ye are clean through the
word which I have spoken unto
you." It is therefore the mighty
word of God which, since man
must be born again in the
principle and source of his
moral being, judges, as being
death, all that is of the
flesh.18 But there is in fact the
communication of a new life;
that which is born of the Spirit
is spirit, is not flesh, has its
nature from the Spirit. It is
not the Spirit — that would be
an incarnation; but this new
life is spirit. It partakes of
the nature of its origin.
Without this, man cannot enter
into the kingdom. But this is
not all. If it was a necessity
for the Jew, who already was
nominally a child of the
kingdom, for here we deal with
what is essential and true, it
was also a sovereign act of God,
and consequently it is
accomplished wherever the Spirit
acts in this power. "So is every
one that is born of the Spirit."
This in principle opens the door
to the Gentiles.
Nevertheless Nicodemus, as a
master of Israel, ought to have
understood this. The prophets
had declared that Israel was to
undergo this change, in order to
enjoy the fulfilment of the
promises (see Ezek. 36), which
God had given them with regard
to their blessing in the holy
land. But Jesus spoke of these
things in an immediate way, and
in connection with the nature
and the glory of God Himself. A
master in Israel ought to have
known that which the sure word
of prophecy contained. The Son
of God declared that which He
knew, and that which He had seen
with His Father. The defiled
nature of man could not be in
relationship with Him who
revealed Himself in heaven
whence Jesus came. The glory
(from the fulness of which He
came, and which formed therefore
the subject of His testimony as
having seen it, and from which
the kingdom had its origin)
could have nothing in it that
was defiled. They must be born
again to possess it. He bore
testimony therefore, as having
come from above and knowing that
which was suitable to God His
Father. Man did not receive His
testimony. Convinced outwardly
by miracles he might be; but to
receive that which was befitting
the presence of God was another
thing. And if Nicodemus could
not receive the truth in its
connection with the earthly part
of the kingdom, of which even
the prophets had spoken, what
would he and the other Jews do
if Jesus spoke of heavenly
things? Nevertheless no one
could learn anything about them
by any other means. No one had
gone up there and come down
again to bring back word. Jesus
only, in virtue of what He was,
could reveal them — the Son of
man on earth, existing at the
same time in heaven, the
manifestation to men of that
which was heavenly, of God
Himself in man — as God being in
heaven and everywhere — as the
Son of man being before the eyes
of Nicodemus and of all.
Nevertheless He was to be
crucified, and thus lifted up
from the world to which He had
come as the manifestation of the
love of God in all His ways and
of God Himself, and so only
could the door be opened for
sinful men into heaven, so only
a link formed for man with it.
For this brought out another
fundamental truth. If heaven was
in question, something more was
needed than being born again.
Sin existed. It must be put away
for those who should have
eternal life. And if Jesus,
coming down from heaven, was
come to impart this eternal life
to others, He must, in
undertaking this work, put sin
away — be thus made sin — in
order that the dishonour done to
God should be washed away, and
the truth of His character
(without which there is nothing
sure, or good, or righteous)
maintained. The Son of man must
be lifted up, even as the
serpent was lifted up in the
wilderness, that the curse,
under which the people were
dying, might be removed. His
divine testimony rejected, man,
as he was down here, showed
himself to be incapable of
receiving blessing from above.
He must be redeemed, his sin
expiated and put away; he must
be treated according to the
reality of his condition, and
according to the character of
God who cannot deny Himself.
Jesus in grace undertook to do
this. It was necessary that the
Son of man should be lifted up,
rejected from the earth by man,
accomplishing the atonement
before the God of righteousness.
In a word, Christ comes with the
knowledge of what heaven is and
divine glory. In order that man
might share it, the Son of man
must die — must take the place
of expiation — outside the
earth.19 Observe here the deep
and glorious character of that
which Jesus brought with Him, of
the revelation He made.
The cross, and the absolute
separation between man on earth
and God — this is the
meeting-place of faith and God;
for there is at once the truth
of man's condition, and the love
that meets it. Thus, in
approaching the holy place from
the camp, the first thing they
met on going through the gate of
the court was the altar. It
presented itself to every one
that quitted the world without,
and entered in. Christ, lifted
up from the earth, draws all men
to Him. But if (owing to man's
state of alienation and guilt)
it needed that the Son of man
should be lifted up from the
earth, in order that whosoever
believes in Him should have
everlasting life, there was
another aspect of this same
glorious fact; God had so loved
the world that He had given His
only begotten Son, that
whosoever believes in Him should
have everlasting life. On the
cross we see the necessity
morally of the death of the Son
of man; we see the ineffable
gift of the Son of God. These
two truths unite in the common
object of the gift of eternal
life to all believers. And if it
was to all believers, it was a
question of man, of God, and of
heaven, and went outside the
promises made to the Jews, and
the limits of God's dealings
with that people. For God sent
His Son into the world, not to
condemn it, but to save it. But
salvation is by faith; and he
who believes in the coming of
the Son, putting all things now
to the test, is not condemned
(his state is decided thereby);
he who believes not is condemned
already, he has not believed in
the only begotten Son of God, he
has manifested his condition.
And this is the thing that God
lays to their charge. Light is
come into the world, and they
have loved darkness because
their works were evil. Could
there be a more just subject of
condemnation? It was no question
of their not finding pardon, but
of their preferring darkness to
light that they might continue
in sin.
The rest of the chapter presents
the contrast between the
positions of John and of Christ.
They are both before the eye.
The one is the faithful friend
of the Bridegroom, living only
for Him; the other is the
Bridegroom, to whom all belongs:
the one, in himself, an earthly
man, great as might be the gift
he had received from heaven; the
other from heaven Himself, and
above all. The bride was His.
The friend of the Bridegroom,
hearing His voice, was full of
joy. Nothing more beautiful than
this expression of John the
Baptist's heart, inspired by the
Lord's presence, near enough to
Jesus to be glad and rejoice
that Jesus was all. Thus it ever
is.
With respect to the testimony,
John bore witness in connection
with earthly things. For that
end he was sent. He who Himself
came from heaven was above all,
and bore witness of heavenly
things, of that which He had
seen and heard. No one received
His testimony. Man was not of
heaven. Without grace one
believes according to one's own
thoughts. But in speaking as a
man on the earth, Jesus spoke
the words of God; and he who
received His testimony set to
his seal that God was true. For
the Spirit is not given by
measure. As a witness the
testimony of Jesus was the
testimony of God Himself; His
words, the words of God.
Precious truth! Moreover, He was
the Son,20 and the Father loved
Him, and had given all things
into His hand. This is another
glorious title of Christ,
another aspect of His glory. But
the consequences of this for man
were eternal. It was not
almighty help to pilgrims, nor
faithfulness to promises, so
that His people could trust in
Him in spite of all. It was the
quickening life-giving Son of
the Father. All was comprised in
it. "He who believes in the Son
has everlasting life, he who
believes not shall not see
life." He remains in his guilt.
The wrath of God abides on him.
All this is a kind of
introduction. The ministry of
the Lord, properly so called,
comes after. John (v. 24) was
not yet cast into prison. It was
not till after that event that
the Lord began His public
testimony. The chapter we have
been considering explains what
His ministry was, the character
in which He came, His position,
the glory of His Person, the
character of the testimony He
bore, the position of man in
connection with the things of
which He spake, beginning with
the Jews, and going on, by the
new birth, the cross, and the
love of God, to His rights as
come into the world, and the
supreme dignity of His own
Person, to His properly divine
testimony, to His relationship
with the Father, the object of
whose love He was, and who had
given all things into His hand.
He was the faithful witness, and
that of heavenly things (see
John 3:13), but He was also the
Son Himself come from the
Father. Everything for man
rested on faith in Him. The Lord
comes out from Judaism, while
presenting the testimony of the
prophets, and brings from heaven
the direct testimony of God and
of glory, showing the only
ground on which we can have a
part in it. Jew or Gentile must
be born again; and heavenly
things could only be entered by
the cross, the wondrous proof of
God's love to the world. John
gives place to Him, bringing out
— not in public testimony to
Israel but to his disciples —
the true glory of His Person and
of His work21 in this world. The
thought of the bride and
Bridegroom is, I believe,
general. John says indeed that
he is not the Christ, and that
the earthly bride belongs to
Jesus; but He has never taken
her; and John speaks of His
rights, which for us are realised in a better land and
another clime than this world.
It is, I repeat, the general
idea. But we have now entered on
the new ground of a new nature,
the cross, and the world and
God's love to it.
And now (John 4) Jesus, being
driven away by the jealousy of
the Jews, begins His ministry
outside that people, while still
acknowledging their true
position in the dealings of God.
He goes away into Galilee; but
His road led Him by Samaria, in
which dwelt a mingled race of
strangers and of Israel — a race
who had forsaken the idolatry of
the strangers, but who, while
following the law of Moses and
calling themselves by the name
of Jacob, had set up a worship
of their own at Gerizim. Jesus
does not enter the town. Being
weary He sits down outside the
town on the brink of the well —
for He must needs go that way;
but this necessity was an
occasion for the acting of that
divine grace which was in the
fulness of His Person, and which
overflowed the narrow limits of
Judaism.
There are some preliminary
details to remark before
entering on the subject of this
chapter. Jesus did not Himself
baptise, for He knew the whole
extent of the counsels of God in
grace, the true object of His
coming. He could not bind souls
by baptism to a living Christ.
The disciples were right in so
doing. They had so to receive
Christ. It was faith on their
part.
When rejected by the Jews, the
Lord does not contend. He leaves
them; and, coming to Sychar, He
found Himself in the most
interesting associations as
regards the history of Israel,
but in Samaria: sad testimony of
Israel's ruin. Jacob's well was
in the hands of people who
called themselves of Israel, but
the greater part of whom were
not so, and who worshipped they
knew not what, although
pretending to be of the stock of
Israel. Those who were really
Jews had driven away the Messiah
by their jealousy. He — a man
despised by the people — had
gone away from among them. We
see Him sharing the sufferings
of humanity, and, weary with His
journey, finding only the side
of a well on which to rest at
noon. He contents Himself with
it. He seeks nothing but the
will of His God: it brought Him
thither. The disciples were
away; and God brought thither at
that unusual hour a woman by
herself. It was not the hour at
which women went out to draw
water; but, in the ordering of
God, a poor sinful woman and the
Judge of quick and dead thus met
together.
The Lord, weary and thirsty, had
no means even to quench His
thirst. He is dependent as man,
on this poor woman to have a
little water for His thirst. He
asks it of her. The woman,
seeing that He is a Jew, is
surprised; and now the divine
scene unfolds itself, in which
the heart of the Saviour,
rejected by men and oppressed by
the unbelief of His people,
opens to let that fulness of
grace flow out which finds its
occasion in the necessities and
not in the righteousness of men.
Now this grace did not limit
itself to the rights of Israel,
nor lend itself to national
jealousy. It was a question of
the gift of God, of God Himself
who was there in grace, and of
God come down so low, that,
being born among His people, He
was dependent, as to His human
position, on a Samaritan woman
for a drop of water to quench
His thirst. "If thou knewest the
gift of God, and [not, who I am,
but] who it is that saith unto
thee, Give me to drink"; that is
to say, If thou hadst known that
God gives freely, and the glory
of His Person who was there, and
how deeply He had humbled
Himself, His love would have
been revealed to thy heart, and
would have filled it with
perfect confidence, in regard
even to the wants which a grace
like this would have awakened in
thy heart. "Thou wouldest have
asked," said the divine Saviour,
"and he would have given thee"
the living water that springs up
into everlasting life. Such is
the heavenly fruit of the
mission of Christ, wherever He
is received.22 His heart lays it
open (it was revealing Himself),
pours it out into the heart of
one who was its object;
consoling itself for the
unbelief of the Jews (rejecting
the end of promise) by
presenting the true consolation
of grace to the misery that
needed it. This is the true
comfort of love, which is pained
when unable to act. The
floodgates of grace are lifted
up by the misery which that
grace waters. He makes manifest
that which God is in grace; and
the God of grace was there.
Alas! the heart of man, withered
up and selfish, and pre-occupied
with its own miseries (the
fruits of sin), cannot at all
understand this. The woman sees
something extraordinary in
Jesus; she is curious to know
what it means — is struck with
His manner, so that she has a
measure of faith in His words;
but her desires are limited to
the relief of the toils of her
sorrowful life, in which an
ardent heart found no answer to
the misery it had acquired for
its portion through sin.
A few words on the character of
this woman. I believe the Lord
would show that there is need,
that the fields were ready for
the harvest; and that if the
wretched self-righteousness of
the Jews rejected Him, the
stream of grace would find its
channel elsewhere, God having
prepared hearts to hail it with
joy and thanksgiving, because it
answered their misery and need —
not the righteous. The channel
of grace was dug by the need and
the misery which the grace
itself caused to be felt.
The life of this woman was
shameful; but she was ashamed of
it; at the least her position
had isolated her, by separating
her from the crowd that forgets
itself in the tumult of social
life. And there is no inward
grief like an isolated heart;
but Christ and grace more than
meets it. Its isolation more
than ceases. He was more
isolated than she. She came
alone to the well; she was not
with the other women. Alone, she
met with the Lord, by the
wonderful guidance of God who
brought her there. The disciples
even must go away to make room
for her. They knew nothing of
this grace. They baptised indeed
in the name of a Messiah in whom
they believed. It was well. But
God was there in grace — He who
would judge the quick and the
dead — and with Him a sinner in
her sins. What a meeting! And
God who had stooped so low as to
be dependent on her for a little
water to quench His thirst!
She had an ardent nature. She
had sought for happiness; she
had found misery. She lived in
sin, and was weary of life. She
was indeed in the lowest depths
of misery. The ardour of her
nature found sin no obstacle.
She went on, alas! to the
uttermost. The will, engaged in
evil, feeds on sinful desires,
and wastes itself without fruit.
Nevertheless her soul was not
without a sense of need. She
thought of Jerusalem, she
thought of Gerizim. She waited
for the Messiah, who would tell
them all things. Did this change
her life? In no wise. Her life
was shocking. When the Lord
speaks of spiritual things, in
language well suited to awaken
the heart, directing her
attention to heavenly things in
a way that one would have
thought it impossible to
misunderstand, she cannot
comprehend it. The natural man
cannot understand the things of
the Spirit: they are spiritually
discerned.
The novelty of the Lord's
address excited her attention,
but did not lead her thoughts
beyond her waterpot, the symbol
of her daily toil; although she
saw that Jesus took the place of
one greater than Jacob. What was
to be done? God wrought — He
wrought in grace, and in this
poor woman. Whatever the
occasion might be as regards
herself, it was He who had
brought her thither. But she was
unable to comprehend spiritual
things though expressed in the
plainest manner; for the Lord
spoke of the water that springs
up in the soul unto everlasting
life. But as the human heart is
ever revolving in its own
circumstances and cares, her
religious need was limited
practically to the traditions by
which her life, as regarded its
religious thoughts and habits,
was formed, leaving still a void
that nothing could fill. What
then was to be done? In what way
can this grace act, when the
heart does not understand the
spiritual grace which the Lord
brings? This is the second part
of the marvellous instruction
here. The Lord deals with her
conscience. A word spoken by Him
who searches the heart, searches
her conscience: she is in the
presence of a man who tells her
all that ever she did. For, her
conscience awakened by the word,
and finding itself laid open to
the eye of God, her whole life
is before her.
And who is He that thus searches
the heart? She feels that His
word is the word of God. "Thou
art a prophet." Intelligence in
divine things comes by the
conscience, not by the
intellect. The soul and God are
together, if we may so speak,
whatever instrument is employed.
She has everything to learn, no
doubt; but she is in the
presence of Him who teaches
everything. What a step! What a
change! What a new position!
This soul, which saw no farther
than her waterpot and felt her
toil more than her sin, is there
alone with the Judge of quick
and dead — with God Himself. And
in what manner? She knows not.
She only felt that it was
Himself in the power of His own
word. But at least He did not
despise her, as others did.
Although she was alone, she was
alone with Him. He had spoken to
her of life — of the gift of
God; He had told her that she
had only to ask and have. She
had understood nothing of His
meaning; but it was not
condemnation, it was grace —
grace that stooped to her, that
knew her sin and was not
repelled by it, that asked her
for water, that was above Jewish
prejudice with regard to her, as
well as the contempt of the
humanly righteous — grace which
did not conceal her sin from
her, which made her feel that
God knew it nevertheless, He who
knew it was there without
alarming her. Her sin was before
God, but not in judgment.
Marvellous meeting of a soul
with God, which the grace of God
accomplishes by Christ! Not that
she reasoned about all these
things; but she was under the
effect of their truth without
accounting for it to herself;
for the word of God had reached
her conscience, and she was in
the presence of Him who had
accomplished it, and He was meek
and lowly, and glad to receive a
little water at her hands. Her
defilement did not defile Him.
She could, in fact, trust in
Him, without knowing why. It is
thus that God acts. Grace
inspires confidence — brings
back the soul to God in peace,
before it has any intelligent
knowledge, or can explain it to
itself. In this way, full of
trust, she begins (it was the
natural consequence) with the
questions that filled her own
heart; thus giving the Lord an
opportunity of fully explaining
the ways of God in grace. God
had so ordered it; for the
question was far from the
sentiments which grace
afterwards led her to. The Lord
replies according to her
condition: salvation was of the
Jews. They were the people of
God. Truth was with them, and
not with the Samaritans who
worshipped they knew not what.
But God put all that aside. It
was now neither at Gerizim nor
at Jerusalem, that they should
worship the Father who
manifested Himself in the Son.
God was a spirit, and must be
worshipped in spirit and in
truth. Moreover the Father
sought such worshippers. That is
to say, the worship of their
hearts must answer to the nature
of God, to the grace of the
Father who had sought them.23
Thus true worshippers should
worship the Father in spirit and
in truth. Jerusalem and Samaria
disappear entirely — have no
place before such a revelation
of the Father in grace. God no
longer hid Himself; He was
revealed perfectly in light. The
perfect grace of the Father
wrought, in order to make Him
known, by the grace that brought
souls to Him.
Now the woman was not yet
brought to Him; but, as we have
seen in the case of the
disciples and of John the
Baptist, a glorious revelation
of Christ acts upon the soul
where it is, and brings the
Person of Jesus into connection
with the need already felt. "The
woman saith unto him, I know
that Messias comes; and when he
is come, he will tell us all
things." Small as her
intelligence might be, and
unable as she was to understand
what Jesus had told her, His
love meets her where she can
receive blessing and life; and
He replies, "I, that speak unto
thee, am he." The work was done:
the Lord was received. A poor
Samaritan sinner receives the
Messiah of Israel, whom the
priests and the Pharisees had
rejected from among the people.
The moral effect upon the woman
is evident. She forgets her
waterpot, her toil, her
circumstances. She is engrossed
by this new object that is
revealed to her soul — by
Christ; so engrossed that,
without thinking, she becomes a
preacher; that is, she proclaims
the Lord in the fulness of her
heart and with perfect
simplicity. He had told her all
that she had ever done. She does
not think at that moment of what
it was. Jesus had told it her;
and the thought of Jesus takes
away the bitterness of the sin.
The sense of His goodness
removes the guile of heart that
seeks to conceal its sin. In a
word, her heart is entirely
filled with Christ Himself. Many
believed in Him through her
declaration — "He has told me
all that ever I did"; many more,
when they had heard Him. His own
word carried with it a stronger
conviction, as more immediately
connected with His Person.
Meanwhile the disciples come,
and — naturally — marvel at His
talking with the woman. Their
Master, the Messiah — they
understood this; but the grace
of God manifested in the flesh
was still beyond their thoughts.
The work of this grace was the
meat of Jesus, and that in the
lowliness of obedience as sent
of God. He was taken up with it,
and, in the perfect humility of
obedience, it was His joy and
His food to do His Father's
will, and to finish His work.
And the case of this poor woman
had a voice that filled His
heart with deep joy, wounded as
it was in this world, because He
was love. If the Jews rejected
Him, still the fields in which
grace sought its fruits for the
everlasting granary were white
already to harvest. He,
therefore, who laboured should
not fail of his wages, nor of
the joy of having such fruit
unto life eternal. Nevertheless,
even the apostles were but
reapers where others had sown.
The poor woman was a proof of
this. Christ, present and
revealed, met the need which the
testimony of the prophet had
awakened. Thus (while exhibiting
a grace which revealed the love
of the Father, of God the
Saviour, and coming out,
consequently, from the pale of
the Jewish system) He fully
recognised the faithful service
of His labourers in former days,
the prophets who, by the Spirit
of Christ from the beginning of
the world, had spoken of the
Redeemer, of the sufferings of
Christ and the glories that
should follow. The sowers and
the reapers should rejoice
together in the fruit of their
labours.
But what a picture is all this
of the purpose of grace, and of
its mighty and living fulness in
the Person of Christ, of the
free gift of God, and of the
incapability of the spirit of
man to apprehend it, preoccupied
and blinded as he is by present
things, seeing nothing beyond
the life of nature, although
suffering from the consequences
of his sin! At the same time, we
see that it is in the
humiliation, the deep abasement,
of the Messiah, of Jesus, that
God Himself is manifested in
this grace. It is this that
breaks down the barriers, and
gives free course to the torrent
of grace from on high. We see,
also, that conscience is the
doorway of understanding in the
things of God. We are brought
truly into relationship with God
when He searches the heart. This
is always the case. We are then
in the truth. Moreover God thus
manifests Himself, and the grace
and love of the Father. He seeks
worshippers, and that, according
to this double revelation of
Himself, however great His
patience may be with those who
do not see farther than the
first step of the promises of
God. If Jesus is received, there
is a thorough change; the work
of conversion is wrought; there
is faith. At the same time what
a divine picture of our Jesus —
humbled, indeed, but even
thereby the manifestation of God
in love, the Son of the Father,
He who knows the Father, and
accomplishes His work! What a
glorious and boundless scene
opens before the soul that is
admitted to see and to know Him!
The whole range of grace is open
to us here in His work and its
divine extent, in that which
regards its application to the
individual, and the personal
intelligence we may have
respecting it. It is not
precisely pardon, nor
redemption, nor the assembly. It
is grace flowing in the Person
of Christ; and the conversion of
the sinner, in order that he may
enjoy it in himself, and be
capable of knowing God and of
worshipping the Father of grace.
But how entirely have we broken
out in principle from the narrow
limits of Judaism!
Nevertheless in His personal
ministry, the Lord, always
faithful, putting Himself aside
in order to glorify His Father
by obeying Him, repairs to the
sphere of labour appointed Him
of God. He leaves the Jews, for
no prophet is received in his
own country, and goes into
Galilee, among the despised of
His people, the poor of the
flock, where obedience, grace,
and the counsels of God alike
placed Him. In that sense, He
did not forsake His people,
perverse as they were. There He
works a miracle which expresses
the effect of His grace in
connection with the believing
remnant of Israel, feeble as
their faith might be. He comes
again to the place where He had
turned the water of purification
into the wine of joy ("which
cheers God and man"). By that
miracle He had, in figure,
displayed the power which should
deliver the people, and by
which, being received, He would
establish the fulness of joy in
Israel, creating by that power
the good wine of the nuptials of
Israel with their God. Israel
rejected it all. The Messiah was
not received. He retired among
the poor of the flock in
Galilee, after having shown to
Samaria (in passing) the grace
of the Father, which went beyond
all promises to, and dealings
with, the Jew, and in the Person
and the humiliation of Christ
led converted souls to worship
the Father (outside all Jewish
system, true or false) in spirit
and in truth; and there, in
Galilee, He works a second
miracle in the midst of Israel,
where He still labours,
according to His Father's will,
that is to say, wherever there
is faith; not yet, perhaps, in
His power to raise the dead, but
to heal and save the life of
that which was ready to perish.
He fulfilled the desire of that
faith, and restored the life of
one who was at the point of
death. It was this, in fact,
which He was doing in Israel
while here below. These two
great truths were set forth —
that which He was going to do
according to the purposes of God
the Father, as being rejected;
and that which He was doing at
the time for Israel, according
to the faith He found among
them.
In the chapters that follow we
shall find the rights and the
glory shown forth that attach to
His Person; the rejection of His
word and of His work; the sure
salvation of the remnant, and of
all His sheep wherever they may
be. Afterwards — acknowledged by
God, as manifested on earth, the
Son of God, of David, and of man
— that which He will do when
gone away, and the gift of the
Holy Ghost, are unfolded; also
the position in which He placed
the disciples before the Father,
and with regard to Himself. And
then — after the history of
Gethsemane, the giving of His
own life, His death as giving
His life for us — the whole
result, in the ways of God,
until His return, is briefly
given in the chapter that closes
the book.
We may go more rapidly through
the chapters till the tenth, not
as of little importance — far
from it — but as containing some
great principles which may be
pointed out, each in its place,
without requiring much
explanation.
John 5 contrasts the quickening
power of Christ, the power and
the right of giving life to the
dead, with the powerlessness of
legal ordinances. They required
strength in the person that was
to profit by them. Christ
brought with Him the power that
was to heal, and indeed to
quicken. Further, all judgment
is committed to Him, so that
those who had received life
would not come into judgment.
The end of the chapter sets
forth the testimonies that have
been borne to Him, and the guilt
therefore of those who would not
come to Him to have life. One is
sovereign grace, the other
responsibility because life was
there. To have life His divine
power was needed; but in
rejecting Him, in refusing to
come unto Him that they might
have life, they did so in spite
of the most positive proofs.
Let us go a little into the
details. The poor man who had an
infirmity for thirty-eight years
was absolutely hindered, by the
nature of his disease, from
profiting by means that required
strength to use them. This is
the character of sin, on the one
hand, and of law on the other.
Some remains of blessing still
existed among the Jews. Angels,
ministers of that dispensation,
still wrought among the people.
Jehovah did not leave Himself
without testimony. But strength
was needed to profit by this
instance of their ministry. That
which the law could not do,
being weak through the flesh,
God has done through Jesus. The
impotent man had desire, but not
strength; to will was present
with him, but no power to
perform. The Lord's question
brings this out. A single word
from Christ does everything.
"Rise, take up thy bed and
walk." Strength is imparted. The
man rises, and goes away
carrying his bed.24
It was the Sabbath — an
important circumstance here,
holding a prominent place in
this interesting scene. The
Sabbath was given as a token of
the covenant between the Jews
and the Lord.25 But it had been
proved that the law did not give
God's rest to man. The power of
a new life was needed; grace was
needed, that man might be in
relationship with God. The
healing of this poor man was an
operation of this same grace, of
this same power, but wrought in
the midst of Israel. The pool of
Bethesda supposed power in man;
the act of Jesus employed power,
in grace, on behalf of one of
the Lord's people in distress.
Therefore, as dealing with His
people in government, He says to
the man, "Sin no more, lest a
worse thing come unto thee." It
was Jehovah acting by His grace
and blessing among His people;
but it was in temporal things,
the tokens of His favour and
lovingkindness, and in
connection with His government
in Israel. Still it was divine
power and grace. Now, the man
told the Jews that it was Jesus.
They rise up against Him under
the pretence of a violation of
the Sabbath. The Lord's answer
is deeply affecting, and full of
instruction — a whole
revelation. It declares the
relationship, now openly
revealed by His coming, that
existed between Himself (the
Son) and His Father. It shows —
and what depths of grace! — that
neither the Father nor Himself
could find their Sabbath26 in
the midst of misery and of the
sad fruits of sin. Jehovah in
Israel might impose the Sabbath
as an obligation by the law, and
make it a token of the previous
truth that His people should
enter into the rest of God. But,
in fact, when God was truly
known, there was no rest in
existing things; nor was this
all — He wrought in grace, His
love could not rest in misery.
He had instituted a rest in
connection with the creation,
when it was very good. Sin,
corruption, and misery had
entered into it. God, the holy
and the just, no longer found a
Sabbath in it, and man did not
really enter into God's rest
(compare Heb. 4). Of two things,
one: either God must, in
justice, destroy the guilty
race; or — and this is what He
did, according to His eternal
purposes — He must begin to work
in grace, according to the
redemption which the state of
man required — a redemption in
which all His glory is unfolded.
In a word, He must begin to work
again in love. Thus the Lord
says, "My Father works hitherto,
and I work." God cannot be
satisfied where there is sin. He
cannot rest with misery in
sight. He has no Sabbath, but
still works in grace. How divine
an answer to their wretched
cavils!
Another truth came out from that
which the Lord said: He put
Himself on an equality with His
Father. But the Jews, jealous
for their ceremonies — for that
which distinguished them from
other nations — saw nothing of
the glory of Christ, and seek to
kill Him, treating Him as a
blasphemer. This gives Jesus
occasion to lay open the whole
truth on this point. He was not
like an independent being with
equal rights, another God who
acted on His own account, which,
moreover, is impossible. There
cannot be two supreme and
omnipotent beings. The Son is in
full union with the Father, does
nothing without the Father, but
does whatsoever He sees the
Father do. There is nothing that
the Father does which He does
not in communion with the Son;
and greater proofs of this
should yet be seen, that they
might marvel. This last sentence
of the Lord's words, as well as
the whole of this Gospel, shows
that, while revealing absolutely
that He and the Father are one,
He reveals it, and speaks of it
as in a position in which He
could be seen of men. The thing
of which He speaks is in God;
the position in which He speaks
of it is a position taken, and,
in a certain sense, inferior. We
see everywhere that He is equal
to, and one with, the Father. We
see that He receives all from
the Father, and does all after
the Father's mind. (This is
shown very remarkably in John
17). It is the Son, but the Son
manifested in the flesh, acting
in the mission which the Father
sent Him to fulfil.
Two things are spoken of in this
chapter (v. 21, 22) which
demonstrate the glory of the
Son. He quickens and He judges.
It is not healing that is in
question — a work which, at
bottom, springs from the same
source, and has its occasion in
the same evil: but the giving of
life in a manner evidently
divine. As the Father raises the
dead and quickens them, so the
Son quickens whom He will. Here
we have the first proof of His
divine rights, He gives life,
and He gives it to whom He will.
But, being incarnate, He may be
personally dishonoured,
disallowed, despised of men.
Consequently all judgment is
committed unto Him, the Father
judging no man, in order that
all, even those who have
rejected the Son, should honour
Him, even as they honour the
Father whom they own as God. If
they refuse when He acts in
grace, they shall be compelled
when He acts in judgment. In
life, we have communion by the
Holy Ghost with the Father and
the Son (and quickening or
giving life is the work alike of
the Father and the Son); but in
the judgment, unbelievers will
have to do with the Son of man
whom they have rejected. The two
things are quite distinct. He
whom Christ has quickened will
not need to be compelled to
honour Him by undergoing
judgment. Jesus will not call
into judgment one whom He has
saved by quickening him.
How may we know, then, to which
of these two classes we belong?
The Lord (praised be His name!)
replies, he that hears His word,
and believes Him who sent Him
(believes the Father by hearing
Christ), has everlasting life
(such is the quickening power of
His word), and shall not come
into judgment. He is passed from
death into life. Simple and
wonderful testimony!27 The
judgment will glorify the Lord
in the case of those who have
despised Him here. The
possession of eternal life, that
they may not come into judgment,
is the portion of those who
believe.
The Lord then points out two
distinct periods, in which the
power that the Father committed
to Him as having come down to
the earth, is to be exercised.
The hour was coming — was
already come — in which the dead
should hear the voice of the Son
of God, and those that heard
should live. This is the
communication of spiritual life
by Jesus, the Son of God, to
man, who is dead by sin, and
that by means of the word which
he should hear. For the Father
has given to the Son, to Jesus,
thus manifested on earth, to
have life in Himself (compare 1
John 1:1-2). He has also given
Him authority to execute
judgment, because He is the Son
of man. For the kingdom and the
judgment, according to the
counsels of God, belong to Him
as Son of man — in that
character in which He was
despised and rejected when He
came in grace.
This passage also shows us that,
although He was the eternal Son,
one with the Father, He is
always looked upon as manifested
here in the flesh, and,
therefore, as receiving all from
the Father. It is thus that we
have seen Him at the well of
Samaria — the God who gave, but
the One who asked the poor woman
to give Him to drink.
Jesus, then, quickened souls at
that time. He still quickens.
They were not to marvel. A work,
more wonderful in the eyes of
men, should be accomplished. All
those that were in the grave
should come forth. This is the
second period of which He
speaks. In the one He quickens
souls; in the other, He raises
up bodies from death. The one
has lasted during the ministry
of Jesus and 1800 years since
His death; the other is not yet
come, but during its continuance
two things will take place.
There will be a resurrection of
those who have done good (this
will be a resurrection of life,
the Lord will complete His
quickening work), and there will
be a resurrection of those who
have done evil (this will be a
resurrection for their
judgment). This judgment will be
according to the mind of God,
and not according to any
separate personal will of
Christ. Thus far it is sovereign
power, and as regards life
sovereign grace — He quickens
whom He will. What follows is
man's responsibility as regards
the obtaining eternal life. It
was there in Jesus, and they
would not come to Him to have
it.
The Lord goes on to point out to
them four testimonies rendered
to His glory and to His Person,
which left them without excuse:
John, His own works, His Father,
and the scriptures.
Nevertheless, while pretending
to receive the latter, as
finding in them eternal life,
they would not come to Him that
they might have life. Poor Jews!
The Son came in the name of the
Father, and they would not
receive Him; another shall come
in his own name, and him they
will receive. This better suits
the heart of man. They sought
honour from one another: how
could they believe? Let us
remember this. God does not
accommodate Himself to the pride
of man — does not arrange the
truth so as to feed it. Jesus
knew the Jews. Not that He would
accuse them to the Father:
Moses, in whom they trusted,
would do that; for if they had
believed Moses, they would have
believed Christ. But if they did
not credit the writings of
Moses, how would they believe
the words of a despised Saviour?
In result, the Son of God gives
life, and He executes judgment.
In the judgment that He
executes, the testimony which
had been rendered to His Person
leaves man without excuse on the
ground of his own
responsibility. In John 5 Jesus
is the Son of God who, with the
Father, gives life, and as Son
of man judges. In John 6 He is
the object of faith, as come
down from heaven and dying. He
just alludes to His going on
high as Son of man.
In John 6, then, it is the Lord
come down from heaven, humbled
and put to death, not now as the
Son of God, one with the Father,
the source of life; but as He
who, although He was Jehovah and
at the same time the Prophet and
the King, would take the place
of Victim, and that of Priest in
heaven: in His incarnation, the
bread of life; dead, the true
nourishment of believers;
ascended again to heaven, the
living object of their faith.
But He only glances at this last
feature: the doctrine of the
chapter is that which goes
before. It is not the divine
power that quickens, but the Son
of man come in flesh, the object
of faith, and so the means of
life; and, though, as plainly
declared by the calling of
grace, yet it is not the divine
side, quickening whom He will,
but faith in us laying hold of
Him. In both He acts
independently of the limits of
Judaism. He quickens whom He
will, and comes to give life to
the world.
It was on the occasion of the
Passover, a type which the Lord
was to fulfil by the death of
which He spoke. Observe, here,
that all these chapters present
the Lord, and the truth that
reveals Him, in contrast with
Judaism, which He forsook and
set aside. John 5 was the
impotence of the law and its
ordinances; here it is the
blessings promised by the Lord
to the Jews on earth (Psalm
132:15), and the characters of
Prophet and King fulfilled by
the Messiah on earth in
connection with the Jews, that
are seen in contrast with the
new position and the doctrine of
Jesus. That of which I here
speak characterises every
distinct subject in this Gospel.
First, Jesus blesses the people,
according to the promise of that
which Jehovah should do, given
them in Psalm 132, for He was
Jehovah. On this, the people
acknowledge Him to be "that
Prophet," and desire by force to
make Him their King. But this He
declines now — could not take it
in this carnal way. Jesus leaves
them, and goes up by Himself
into a mountain. This was,
figuratively, His position as
Priest on high. These are the
three characters of the Messiah
in respect of Israel; but the
last has full and special
application to the saints now
also, as walking on the earth,
who continue as to this the
position of the remnant. The
disciples enter a ship, and,
without Him, are tossed upon the
waves. Darkness comes on (this
will happen to the remnant down
here), and Jesus is away.
Nevertheless He rejoins them,
and they receive Him joyfully.
Immediately the ship is at the
place to which they were going.
A striking picture of the
remnant journeying on earth
during the absence of Christ,
and their every wish fully and
immediately satisfied — full
blessing and rest — when He
rejoins them.28
This part of the chapter, having
shown us the Lord as already the
Prophet here below, and refusing
to be made King, and also that
which will yet take place when
He returns to the remnant on
earth — the historical framework
of what He was and will be — the
remainder of the chapter gives
us that which He is meanwhile to
faith, His true character, the
purpose of God in sending Him,
outside Israel, and in
connection with sovereign grace.
The people seek Him. The true
work, which God owns, is to
believe in Him whom He has sent.
This is that meat which endures
unto everlasting life, which is
given by the Son of man (it is
in this character we find Jesus
here, as in John 5 it was the
Son of God), for He it is whom
God the Father has sealed. Jesus
had taken this place of Son of
man in humiliation here below.
He went to be baptised of John
the Baptist; and there, in this
character, the Father sealed
Him, the Holy Ghost coming down
upon Him.
The multitude ask Him for a
proof like the manna. He was
Himself the proof — the true
manna. Moses did not give the
heavenly bread of life. Their
fathers died in the very
wilderness in which they had
eaten the manna. The Father now
gave them the true bread from
heaven. Here, observe, it is not
the Son of God who gives, and
who is the sovereign Giver of
life to whom He will. He is the
object set before faith; He is
to be fed upon. Life is found in
Him; he that eats Him shall live
by Him, and shall never hunger.
But the multitude did not
believe in Him; in fact, the
mass of Israel, as such, were
not in question. Those that the
Father gave Him should come unto
Him. He was there the passive
object, so to say, of faith. It
is no longer to whom He will,
but to receive those whom the
Father brought Him. Therefore,
be it who it might, He would in
no wise cast them out: enemy,
scoffer, Gentile, they would not
come if the Father had not sent
them. The Messiah was there to
do His Father's will, and
whomsoever the Father brought
Him He would receive for life
eternal (compare John 5:21). The
Father's will had these two
characters. Of all whom the
Father should give Him, He would
lose none. Precious assurance!
The Lord saves assuredly to the
end those whom the Father has
given Him; and then every one
that should see the Son and
believe on Him should have
everlasting life. This is the
gospel for every soul, as the
other is that which infallibly
assures the salvation of every
believer.
But this is not all. The subject
of hope was not now the
fulfilment on earth of the
promises made to the Jew, but
being raised from the dead,
having part in everlasting life
— in resurrection at the last
day (that is, of the age of the
law in which they were). He did
not crown the dispensation of
the law; He was to bring in a
new dispensation, and with it
resurrection. The Jews29 murmur
at His saying that He came down
from heaven. Jesus replies by
the testimony that their
difficulty was easy to be
understood: no one could come
unto Him except the Father
brought him. It was grace that
produced this effect; whether
they were Jews or not made no
difference. It was a question of
eternal life, of being raised
from the dead by Him; not of
performing the promises as
Messiah, but of bringing in the
life of a widely different world
to be enjoyed by faith — the
Father's grace having led the
soul to find it in Jesus.
Moreover, the prophets had said
they should all be taught of
God. Every one, therefore, who
had learned of the Father came
unto Him. No man, doubtless, had
seen the Father excepting Him
who was of God — Jesus; He had
seen the Father. He that
believed in Him was already in
possession of eternal life, for
He was the bread come down from
heaven, that a man might eat
thereof and not die.
But this was not only by the
incarnation, but by the death of
Him who came down from heaven.
He would give His life; His
blood should be taken from the
body which He had assumed. They
should eat His flesh; they
should drink His blood. Death
should be the believer's life.
And, in fact, it is in a dead
Saviour that we see the sin
taken away which He bore for us,
and death for us is death to the
sinful nature in which evil and
our separation from God lay.
There He made an end of sin — He
who knew no sin. Death, which
sin brought in, puts away the
sin that attached to the life,
which there comes to its end.
Not that Christ had any sin in
His own Person; but He took sin,
He was made sin, on the cross,
for us. And he who is dead is
justified from sin. I feed,
therefore, on the death of
Christ. Death is mine; it is
become life. It separates me
from sin, from death, from the
life in which I was separated
from God. In it sin and death
have finished their course. They
were attached to my life.
Christ, in grace, has borne
them, and He has given His flesh
for the life of the world; and I
am freed from them; and I feed
on the infinite grace that is in
Him, who has accomplished this.
The expiation is complete, and I
live, being happily dead to all
that separated me from God. It
is death as fulfilled in Him
that I feed upon, first for me,
and entering withal into it by
faith. He needed to live as man
in order to die, and He has
given His life. Thus His death
is efficacious; His love
infinite; the expiation total,
absolute, perfect. That which
was between me and God exists no
longer, for Christ died, and it
all passed away with His life
here on earth — life as He had
it before expiring on the cross.
Death could not hold Him. To
perform this work, He needed to
possess a power of divine life
which death could not touch; but
this is not the truth expressly
taught in the chapter before us,
although it is implied.
In speaking to the multitude,
the Lord, while rebuking them
for their unbelief, presents
Himself, come in the flesh, as
the object of their faith at
that moment (v. 32-35). To the
Jews, in laying open the
doctrine, He repeats that He is
the living bread come down from
heaven, of which if any man eat
he should live for ever. But He
makes them understand that they
could not stop there — they must
receive His death. He does not
say here, "he that eats me," but
it was to eat His flesh and
drink His blood, to enter fully
into the thought — the reality —
of His death; to receive a dead
(not a living) Messiah, dead for
men, dead before God. He does
not exist now as a dead Christ;
but we must acknowledge,
realise, feed upon, His death —
identify ourselves with it
before God, participating in it
by faith, or we have no life in
us.30
Thus it was for the world. Thus
they should live, not of their
own life, but by Christ, through
feeding on Him. Here He returns
to His own Person, faith in His
death being established.
Moreover, they should dwell in
Him (v. 56) — should be in Him
before God, according to all His
acceptance before God, all the
efficacy of His work in dying.31
And Christ should dwell in them
according to the power and grace
of that life in which He had
gained the victory over death,
and in which, having gained it,
He now lives. As the living
Father had sent Him, and He
lived, not by an independent
life which had not the Father
for its object or source, but by
reason of the Father, so he that
thus ate Him should live because
of Him.32
Afterwards, in reply to those
who murmured at this fundamental
truth, the Lord appeals to His
ascension. He had come down from
heaven — this was His doctrine;
He would ascend thither again.
Material flesh profited nothing.
It was the Spirit who gave life,
by realising in the soul the
mighty truth of that which
Christ was, and of His death.
But He returns to that which He
had told them before; in order
to come to Him thus revealed in
truth, they must be led of the
Father. There is such a thing as
faith that is ignorant perhaps,
although through grace real.
Such was that of the disciples.
They knew that He, and He only,
had the words of eternal life.
It was not only that He was the
Messiah, which they indeed
believed, but His words had laid
hold of their hearts with the
power of the divine life which
they revealed, and through grace
communicated. Thus they
acknowledged Him as the Son of
God, not only officially, so to
speak, but according to the
power of divine life. He was the
Son of the living God.
Nevertheless there was one among
them who was of the devil.
Jesus therefore, come down to
earth, put to death, ascending
again to heaven, is the doctrine
of this chapter. As come down
and put to death, He is the food
of faith during His absence on
high. For it is on His death we
must feed, in order to dwell
spiritually in Him and He in us.
In John 7 His brethren after the
flesh, still sunk in unbelief,
would have Him show Himself to
the world, if He did these great
things; but the time for this
was not yet come. At the
fulfilment of the type of the
feast of tabernacles He will do
so. The passover had its
antitype at the cross, pentecost
at the descent of the Holy
Ghost. The feast of tabernacles,
as yet, has had no fulfilment.
It was celebrated after the
harvest and the vintage, and
Israel joyfully commemorated, in
the land, their pilgrimage
before entering on the rest
which God had given them in
Canaan. Thus the fulfilment of
this type will be when, after
the execution of judgment
(whether in discerning between
the wicked and the good, or
simply in vengeance33), Israel,
restored to their land, shall be
in possession of all their
promised blessing. At that time
Jesus will show Himself to the
world; but at the time of which
we are speaking His hour was not
yet come. Meanwhile, having gone
away (v. 33, 34), He gives the
Holy Ghost to believers (v. 38,
39).
Remark here, there is no
pentecost brought in. We pass
from the passover in John 6 to
the tabernacles in John 7, in
lieu of which believers would
receive the Holy Ghost. As I
have remarked, this Gospel
treats of a divine Person on
earth, not of the man in heaven.
The coming of the Holy Ghost is
spoken of as substituted for the
last or eighth day of the feast
of tabernacles. Pentecost
supposes Jesus on high.
But He presents the Holy Ghost
in such a way as to make Him the
hope of faith at the time in
which He spoke, if God created a
sense of need in the soul. If
any one thirsted, let him come
to Jesus and drink. Not only
should his thirst be quenched,
but from the inner man of his
soul should flow forth streams
of living water. So that coming
to Him by faith to satisfy the
need of their soul, not only
should the Holy Ghost be in them
a well of water springing up
into everlasting life, but
living water should also flow
forth from them in abundance to
refresh all those who thirsted.
Observe here, that Israel drank
water in the wilderness before
they could keep the feast of
tabernacles. But they only
drank. There was no well in
them. The water flowed from the
rock. Under grace every believer
is not doubtless a source in
himself; but the full stream
flows from him. This however
would only take place when Jesus
was glorified, and in those who
were already believers, previous
to their receiving it. What is
spoken of here is not a work
that quickens. It is a gift to
those who believe. Moreover at
the feast of tabernacles Jesus
will show Himself to the world;
but this is not the subject of
which the Holy Ghost thus
received is especially the
witness. He is given in
connection with the glory of
Jesus, while He is hidden from
the world. It was also on the
eighth day of the feast, the
sign of a portion beyond the sabbath rest of this world, and
which began another period — a
new scene of glory.
Observe also that, practically,
although the Holy Ghost is
presented here as power acting
in blessing outside the one in
whom He dwells, His presence in
the believer is the fruit of a
personal thirst, of need felt in
the soul — need for which the
soul had sought an answer in
Christ. He who thirsts, thirsts
for himself. The Holy Ghost in
us, revealing Christ, becomes,
by dwelling in us when we have
believed, a river in us, and
thus for others.
The spirit of the Jews plainly
showed itself. They sought to
kill the Lord; and He tells them
that His relationship with them
on earth would soon be ended (v.
33). They need not hasten so
much to get rid of Him: soon
they would seek Him and not be
able to find Him. He was going
away to His Father.
We see clearly the difference
here between the multitude and
the Jews — two parties always
distinguished from each other in
this Gospel. The former did not
understand why He spoke of the
desire to kill Him. Those of
Judea were astonished at His
boldness, knowing that at
Jerusalem they were conspiring
against His life. His time was
not yet come. They send officers
to take Him; and these return,
struck with His discourse,
without laying hands on Him. The
Pharisees are angry, and express
their contempt for the people.
Nicodemus hazards a word of
justice according to the law,
and brings their contempt on
himself But each one goes away
to his home. Jesus, who had no
home until He went back to
heaven whence He came, goes to
the Mount of Olives, the witness
of His agony, His ascension, and
His return — a place which He
habitually frequented, when at
Jerusalem, during the time of
His ministry on earth.
The contrast of this chapter
with Judaism, even with its best
hopes in the future that God has
prepared for His earthly people,
is too evident to be dwelt upon.
This Gospel, throughout, reveals
Jesus outside all that belonged
to that earthly system. In John
6 it was death here below on the
cross. Here it is glory in
heaven, the Jews being rejected,
and the Holy Ghost given to the
believer. In John 5 He gives
life, as the Son of God; in
chapter 6 He is the same Son,
but not as divinely quickening
and judging as being Son of man,
but as come down from heaven,
the Son in humiliation here, but
the true bread from heaven which
the Father gave. But in that
lowly One, they must see the
Son, to live. Then, as so come,
and having taken the form of a
servant, and being found in
fashion as a man, He (v. 53)
humbles Himself, and suffers on
the cross, as Son of man; in
chapter 7 He, when glorified,
sends the Holy Ghost. Chapter 5
displays His titles of personal
glory; chapters 6, 7, His work
and the giving of the Spirit to
believers consequent on His
present glory in heaven,34 to
which the presence of the Holy
Ghost answers on earth. In
chapters 8, 935 we shall find
His testimony and His works
rejected, and the question
decided between Him and the
Jews. It will be observed also,
that chapters 5 and 6 treat of
the life. In John 5 it is given sovereignly and divinely by Him
who possesses it; in John 6, the
soul, receiving and being
occupied with Jesus by faith,
finds life, and feeds upon Him
by the grace of the Father: two
things distinct in their nature
— God gives; man, by grace,
feeds. On the other hand, John 7
is Christ's going to Him that
sent Him, and meanwhile the Holy
Ghost, who unfolds the glory He
is gone into, in us and by us,
in its heavenly character. In
chapter 5 Christ is the Son of
God, who quickens in abstract
divine power and will, what He
is, not the place He is in, but
alone judges, being Son of man;
in chapter 6, the same Son, but
come down from heaven, the
object of faith in His
humiliation, then the Son of
man, dying, and returning again;
in chapter 7, not yet revealed
to the world. The Holy Ghost is
given instead when He is
glorified above, the Son of man
in heaven — at least
contemplating His going there.
In John 8, as we have said, the
word of Jesus is rejected; and,
in chapter 9, His works. But
there is much more than that.
The personal glories of John 1
are reproduced and developed in
all these chapters separately
(leaving out for the moment from
verse 36 to 51 of chapter 1): we
have found again the verses
14-34 in chapters 5, 6, and 7.
The Holy Ghost now returns to
the subject of the first verses
in the chapter. Christ is the
Word; He is the life, and the
life which is the light of men.
The three chapters that I have
now pointed out speak of what He
is in grace for men, while still
declaring His right to judge.
The Spirit here (in chap. 8)
sets before us that which He is
in Himself, and that which He is
to men (thus putting them to the
test, so that in rejecting Him
they reject themselves, and show
themselves to be reprobate).
Let us now consider our chapter.
The contrast with Judaism is
evident. They bring a woman
whose guilt is undeniable. The
Jews, in their wickedness, bring
her forward in the hope of
confounding the Lord. If He
condemned her, He was not a
Saviour — the law could do as
much. If He let her go, He
despised and disallowed the law.
This was clever; but what avails
cleverness in the presence of
God who searches the heart? The
Lord allows them to commit
themselves thoroughly by not
answering them for awhile.
Probably they thought He was
entangled. At last He says, "He
that is without sin among you,
let him first cast the stone."
Convicted by their conscience,
without honesty and without
faith, they quit the scene of
their confusion, separating from
each other, each caring for
himself, caring for character
not conscience, and departing
from Him who had convicted them;
he who had the most reputation
to save going out first. What a
sorrowful picture! What a mighty
word! Jesus and the woman are
left together alone. Who can
stand unconvicted in His
presence? With regard to the
woman, whose guilt was known, He
does not go beyond the Jewish
position, except to preserve the
rights of His own Person in
grace.
This is not the same thing as in
Luke 7, plenary pardon and
salvation. The others could not
condemn her — He would not. Let
her go, and let her sin no more.
It is not the grace of salvation
that the Lord exhibits here. He
does not judge, He was not come
for this; but the efficacy of
the pardon is not the subject of
these chapters — it is the glory
here of His Person, in contrast
with all that is of the law. He
is the light, and by the power
of His word He entered as light
into the conscience of those who
had brought the woman.
For the Word was light; but that
was not all. Coming into the
world, He was (John 1:4-10) the
light. Now it was the life that
was the light of men. It was not
a law that made demands, and
condemned; or that promised life
on obedience to its precepts. It
was the Life itself which was
there in His Person, and that
life was the light of men,
convincing them, and, perhaps,
judging them; but it was as
light. Thus Jesus says here — in
contrast with the law, brought
by those who could not stand
before the light — "I am the
light of the world" (not merely
of the Jews). For in this Gospel
we have what Christ is
essentially in His Person,
whether as God, the Son come
from the Father, or Son of man —
not what God was in special
dealings with the Jews. Hence He
was the object of faith in His
Person, not in dispensational
dealings. Whoso followed Him
should have the light of life.
But it was in Him, in His
Person, that it was found. And
He could bear record of Himself,
because, although He was a man
there, in this world, He knew
whence He came and whither He
was going. It was the Son, who
came from the Father and was
returning to Him again. He knew
it, and was conscious of it. His
testimony, therefore, was not
that of an interested person
which one might hesitate to
believe. There was, in proof
that this man was the One whom
He represented Himself to be,
the testimony of the Son (His
own), and the testimony of the
Father. If they had known Him,
they would have known the
Father.
At that time — in spite of such
testimony as this — no one laid
hands on Him: His hour was not
yet come. That only was wanting;
for their opposition to God was
certain, and known to Him. This
opposition was plainly declared
(v. 19-24); consequently, if
they believed not, they would
die in their sins. Nevertheless
He tells them that they shall
know who He is, when He shall
have been rejected and lifted up
on the cross, having taken a
very different position as the
Saviour, rejected by the people
and unknown of the world; when
no longer presented to them as
such, they should know that He
was indeed the Messiah, and that
He was the Son who spoke to them
from the Father. As He spake
these words, many believed on
Him. He declares to them the
effect of faith, which gives
occasion to the true position of
the Jews being manifested with
terrible precision. He declares
that the truth would set them
free, and that if the Son (who
is the truth) should set them
free, they would be free indeed.
The truth sets free morally
before God. The Son, by virtue
of the rights that were
necessarily His, and by
inheritance in the house, would
place them in it according to
those rights, and that in the
power of divine life come down
from heaven — the Son of God
with power as resurrection
declared it. In this was the
true setting free.
Piqued at the idea of bondage,
which their pride could not
bear, they declare themselves to
be free, and never to have been
in bondage to any one. In reply,
the Lord shows that those who
commit sin are the servants
(slaves) of sin. Now, as being
under the law, as being Jews,
they were servants in the house:
they should be sent away. But
the Son had inalienable rights;
He was of the house and would
abide in it for ever. Under sin,
and under the law, was the same
thing for a child of Adam; he
was a servant. The apostle shows
this in Romans 6 (compare chap.
7 and 8) and in Galatians 4 and
5. Moreover, they were neither
really, nor morally, the
children of Abraham before God,
although they were so according
to the flesh; for they sought to
kill Jesus. They were not
children of God; had they been,
they would have loved Jesus who
came from God. They were the
children of the devil and would
do his works.
Observe here, that to understand
the meaning of the word is the
way to apprehend the force of
the words. One does not learn
the definition of words and then
the things; one learns the
things, and then the meaning of
the words is evident.
They begin to resist the
testimony, conscious that He was
making Himself greater than all
those whom they had leant upon.
They rail upon Him because of
His words; and by their
opposition the Lord is induced
to explain Himself more clearly;
until, having declared that
Abraham rejoiced to see His day,
and the Jews applying this to
His age as man, He announces
positively that He is the One
who calls Himself I am — the
supreme name of God, that He is
God Himself — He whom they
pretended to know as having
revealed Himself in the bush.
Wondrous revelation! A despised,
rejected man, despised and
rejected by men, contradicted,
ill-treated, yet it was God
Himself who was there. What a
fact! What a total change! What
a revelation to those who
acknowledged Him, or who know
Him! What a condition is theirs
who have rejected Him, and that
because their hearts were
opposed to all that He was, for
He did not fail to manifest
Himself! What a thought, that
God Himself has been here!
Goodness itself! How everything
vanishes before Him! — the law,
man, his reasonings. Everything
necessarily depends on this
great fact. And, blessed be His
name! this God is a Saviour. We
are indebted to the sufferings
of Christ for knowing it. And
note here, how the setting aside
formal dispensations from God,
if true, is by the revelation of
Himself, and so introduces
infinitely greater blessing.
But here He presents Himself as
the Witness, the Word, the Word
made flesh, the Son of God, but
still the Word, God Himself. In
the narrative at the beginning
of the chapter He is a testimony
to the conscience, the Word that
searches and convicts. Verse 18,
He bears testimony with the
Father. Verse 26, He declares in
the world that which He has
received of the Father, and as
taught of God He has spoken.
Moreover the Father was with
Him. Verses 32, 33, the truth
was known by His word, and the
truth made them free. Verse 47,
He spoke the words of God. Verse
51, His word, being kept,
preserved from death. Verse 58,
it was God Himself, the Jehovah
whom the fathers knew, that
spoke.
Opposition arose from its being
the word of truth (v. 45).
Opposers were of the adversary.
He was a murderer from the
beginning, and they would follow
him; but as the truth was the
source of life, so that which
characterised the adversary was,
that he abode not in the truth:
there is no truth in him. He is
the father and the source of
lies, so that, if falsehood
speaks, it is one belonging to
him that speaks. Sin was
bondage, and they were in
bondage by the law. (Truth, the
Son Himself, made free.) But,
more than that, the Jews were
enemies, children of the enemy,
and they would do his works, not
believing the words of Christ
because He spoke the truth.
There is no miracle here; it is
the power of the word, and the
living word is God Himself:
rejected by men, He is, as it
were, compelled to speak the
truth, to reveal Himself, hidden
at once and manifested, as He
was in the flesh — hidden as to
His glory, manifested as to all
that He is in His Person and in
His grace.
In John 9 we come to the
testimony of His works, but as
down here as a man in lowliness.
It is not the Son of God
quickening whom He will as the
Father, but by the operation of
His grace down here, the eye
opened to see in the lowly man
the Son of God. In John 8 it is
that which He is towards men; in
John 9 it is that which He does
in man, that man may see Him.
Thus we shall find Him presented
in His human character, and (the
word being received)
acknowledged to be the Son of
God; and in this way the remnant
separated, the sheep restored to
the good Shepherd. He is the
light of the world while He is
in it; but where, through grace
received in His humiliation, He
communicated the power to see
the light, and to see all things
by it.
Observe here, that when it is
the word (the manifestation in
testimony of what Christ is),
man is manifested as he is in
himself, a child — in his nature
— of the devil, who is a
murderer and a liar from the
beginning, the inveterate enemy
of Him who can say, "I am."36 But
when the Lord works, He produces
something in man that he had not
previously. He bestows sight on
him, attaching him thus to the
One who had enabled him to see.
The Lord is not here understood
or manifested in apparently as
exalted a manner, because He
comes down to the wants and
circumstances of man, in order
that He may be more closely
known; but, in result, He brings
the soul to the knowledge of His
glorious Person. Only, instead
of being the word and the
testimony — the Word of God — to
show as light what man is, He is
the Son, one with the Father,37
giving eternal life to His
sheep, and preserving them in
this grace for ever. For, as to
the blessing that flows from
thence, and the full doctrine of
His true position with regard to
the sheep in blessing, John 10
goes with John 9. Chapter 10 is
the continuation of the
discourse begun at the end of
chapter 9.
John 9 opens with the case of a
man that gives rise to a
question from the disciples, in
relation to the government of
God in Israel. Was it his
parents' sin that brought this
visitation on their child,
according to the principles God
had given them in Exodus? Or was
it his own sin, known to God
though not manifested to men,
that had procured him this
judgment? The Lord replies, that
the man's condition did not
depend on the government of God
with respect to the sin either
of himself or of his parents.
His case was but the misery
which gave room for the mighty
operation of God in grace. It is
the contrast that we have
continually seen; but here it is
in order to set forth the works
of God.
God acts. It is not only that
which He is, nor even simply an
object of faith. The presence of
Jesus on earth made it day. It
was therefore the time of work
to do the works of Him that sent
Him. But He who works here,
works by means that teach us the
union which exists between an
object of faith and the power of
God who works. He makes clay
with His spittle and the earth,
and puts it on the eyes of the
man who was born blind. As a
figure, it pointed to the
humanity of Christ in earthly
humiliation and lowliness,
presented to the eyes of men,
but with divine efficacy of life
in Him. Did they see any more?
If possible, their eyes were the
more completely closed. Still
the object was there; it touched
their eyes, and they could not
see it. The blind man then
washes in the pool that was
called "Sent," and is enabled to
see clearly. The power of the
Spirit and of the word, making
Christ known as the One sent by
the Father, gives him sight. It
is the history of divine
teaching in the heart of man.
Christ, as man, touches us. We
are absolutely blind, we see
nothing. The Spirit of God acts,
Christ being there before our
eyes; and we see plainly.
The people are astonished and
know not what to think. The
Pharisees oppose. Again the
Sabbath is in question. They
find (it is always the story)
good reasons for condemning Him
who bestowed sight, in their
pretended zeal for God's glory.
There was positive proof that
the man was born blind, that he
now saw, that Jesus had done it.
The parents testify to the only
thing that was important on
their part. As to who it was
that had given him sight, others
knew more than they; but their
fears bring out in evidence,
that it was a settled thing to
cast out, not only Jesus, but
all who should confess Him. Thus
the Jewish leaders brought the
thing to a decisive point. They
not only rejected Christ, but
they cast out from the
privileges of Israel, as to
their ordinary worship, those
who confessed Him. Their
hostility distinguished the
manifested remnant and put them
apart; and that, by using
confession of Christ as a
touchstone. This was deciding
their own fate, and judging
their own condition.
Observe, that proofs here went
for nothing; the Jews, the
parents, the Pharisees, had them
before their eyes. Faith came
through being personally the
subject of this mighty operation
of God, who opened the eyes of
men to the glory of the Lord
Jesus. Not that the man
understood it all. He perceives
that he has to do with some one
sent of God. To him Jesus is a
prophet. But thus the power
which He had manifested in
giving sight to this man enables
him to trust the Lord's word as
divine. Having gone so far, the
rest is easy: the poor man is
led much farther, and finds
himself on ground that sets him
free from all his former
prejudices, and that gives a
value to the Person of Jesus
which overcomes all other
considerations. The Lord
develops this in the next
chapter.
In truth, the Jews had made up
their mind. They would have
nothing to do with Jesus. They
were all agreed to cast out
those who believed in Him.
Consequently, the poor man
having begun to reason with them
on the proof that existed in his
own person of the Saviour's
mission, they cast him out. Thus
cast out, the Lord — rejected
before him — finds and reveals
Himself to him by His personal
name of glory. "Dost thou
believe on the Son of God?" The
man refers it to the word of
Jesus, which to him was divine
truth, and He proclaims Himself
to him as being Himself the Son
of God, and the man worships
Him.
Thus the effect of His power was
to blind those who saw, who were
full of their own wisdom, whose
light was darkness; and to give
sight to those who were born
blind.
In John 10 He contrasts Himself
with all those who pretended, or
had pretended, to be shepherds
of Israel. He develops these
three points; He comes in by the
door; He is the door; and He is
the Shepherd of the sheep — the
good Shepherd.
He comes in by the door. That is
to say, He submits to all the
conditions established by Him
who built the house. Christ
answers to all that is written
of the Messiah, and takes the
path of God's will in presenting
Himself to the people. It is not
human energy and power awakening
and attracting the passions of
men; but the obedient man who
bowed to Jehovah's will, kept
the lowly place of a servant,
and lived by every word that
proceeded out of the mouth of
God, bowed in lowliness to the
place in which Jehovah's
judgment had placed and viewed
Israel. All the Lord's
quotations in His conflict with
Satan are from Deuteronomy.
Consequently He who watches over
the sheep, Jehovah, acting in
Israel by His Spirit and
providence, and arranging all
things, gives Him access to the
sheep in spite of the Pharisees
and priests and so many others.
The elect of Israel hear His
voice. Now Israel was under
condemnation: He therefore
brings the sheep out, but He
goes before them. He leaves that
ancient fold, under reproach
doubtless, but going before His
sheep, in obedience according to
the power of God — a security to
every one who believed in Him
that it was the right road, a
warrant for their following Him,
come what might, meeting every
danger and showing them the way.
The sheep follow Him, for they
know His voice. There are many
other voices, but the sheep do
not know them. Their safety
consists, not in knowing them
all, but in knowing that they
are not the one voice which is
life to them — the voice of
Jesus. All the rest are the
voices of strangers.
He is the door for the sheep. He
is their authority for going
out, their means of entering in.
By entering in, they are saved.
They go in and out. It is no
longer the yoke of ordinances,
which, in guarding them from
those without, put them in
prison. The sheep of Christ are
free: their safety is in the
personal care of the Shepherd;
and in this liberty they feed in
the good and fat pastures which
His love supplies. In a word, it
is no longer Judaism; it is
salvation, and liberty, and
food. The thief comes to make
his profit on the sheep by
killing them. Christ is come
that they might have life, and
that abundantly; that is,
according to the power of this
life in Jesus, the Son of God,
who would soon have this life
(whose power was in His Person)
in resurrection beyond death.
The true Shepherd of Israel — at
least of the remnant of the
sheep — the door to authorise
their coming out of the Jewish
fold, and to admit them into the
privileges of God by giving them
life according to the abundance
in which He was able to bestow
it — He was also in special
connection with the sheep thus
set apart, the good Shepherd who
thus gave His life for the
sheep. Others would think of
themselves, He of His sheep. He
knew them, and they knew Him,
even as the Father knew Him, and
He knew the Father. Precious
principle! They could have
understood an earthly knowledge
and interest on the part of the
Messiah on earth with regard to
His sheep. But the Son, although
He had given His life and was in
heaven, knows His own, even as
the Father knew Him when He was
on the earth.
Thus He laid down His life for
the sheep; and He had other
sheep who were not of this fold,
and His death intervened for the
salvation of these poor
Gentiles. He would call them.
Doubtless He had given His life
for the Jews also — for all the
sheep in general, as such (v.
11). But He does not speak
distinctly of the Gentiles until
after He has spoken of His
death. He would bring them also,
and there should be but one
flock and one Shepherd (not "one
fold," there is no fold now).
Now this doctrine teaches the
rejection of Israel, and the
calling out of the elect among
that people, presents the death
of Jesus as being the effect of
His love for His own, tells of
His divine knowledge of His
sheep when He shall be away from
them, and of the call of the
Gentiles. The importance of such
instruction at that moment is
obvious. Its importance, thank
God! is not lost by the lapse of
time, and is not limited to the
fact of a change of
dispensation. It introduces us
into the substantial realities
of the grace connected with the
Person of Christ. But the death
of Christ was more than love for
His sheep. It had an intrinsic
value in the Father's eyes.
"Therefore doth the Father love
me, because I lay down my life
that I might take it again." He
does not say here for His sheep
— it is the thing itself that is
well-pleasing to the Father. We
love because God has first loved
us, but Jesus, the divine Son,
can furnish motives for the
Father's love. In laying down
His life, He glorified the
Father. Death was owned to be
the just penalty for sin (being
at the same time annulled and he
who had the power of it, 2 Tim.
1:10; Heb. 2:14), and eternal
life brought in as the fruit of
redemption — life from God. Here
also the rights of the Person of
Christ are set forth. No man
takes His life from Him: He lays
it down Himself. He had this
power (possessed by no other,
true only of Him who had divine
right) to lay it down, and power
to take it again. Nevertheless,
even in this, He did not depart
from the path of obedience. He
had received this commandment
from His Father. But who would
have been able to perform it
save He who could say, "Destroy
this temple, and in three days I
will raise it again"?38
They discuss what He had been
saying. There were some who only
saw in Him a man beside himself,
and who insulted Him. Others,
moved by the power of the
miracle He had performed, felt
that His words had a different
character from that of madness.
To a certain point their
consciences were reached. The
Jews surround Him, and ask how
long He would keep them in
suspense. Jesus answers that He
had already told them; and that
His works bore Him testimony. He
appeals to the two testimonies
which we have seen brought
forward in the previous chapter
(John 8 and John 9); namely, His
word and His works. But He adds,
they were not of His sheep. He
then takes occasion, without
noticing their prejudices, to
add some precious truths
respecting His sheep. They hear
His voice; He knows them; th ey
follow Him; He gives them
eternal life; they shall never
perish. On the one hand, there
shall be no perishing of life as
within; on the other, no one
shall pluck them out of the
Saviour's hand — force from
without shall not overcome the
power of Him who keeps them. But
there is another and an
infinitely precious truth which
the Lord in His love reveals to
us. The Father had given us to
Jesus, and He is greater than
all who would seek to pluck us
out of His hand. And Jesus and
the Father are one. Precious
teaching! in which the glory of
the Person of the Son of God is
identified with the safety of
His sheep, with the height and
depth of the love of which they
are the objects. Here it is not
a testimony which, as altogether
divine, sets forth what man is.
It is the work and the
efficacious love of the Son, and
at the same time that of the
Father. It is not "I am"; but "I
and the Father are one." If the
Son has accomplished the work,
and takes care of the sheep, it
was the Father who gave them to
Him. The Christ may perform a
divine work, and furnish a
motive for the Father's love,
but it was the Father who gave
it Him to do. Their love to the
sheep is one, as those who bear
that love are one.
John 8, therefore, is the
manifestation of God in
testimony, and as light; John 9
and John 10, the efficacious
grace which gathers the sheep
under the care of the Son, and
of the Father's love. John
speaks of God when he speaks of
a holy nature, and man's
responsibility — of the Father
and the Son, when he speaks of
grace in connection with the
people of God.
Observe, that the wolf may come
and catch39 the sheep, if the
shepherds are hirelings; but he
cannot catch39 them out of the Saviour's hands.
At the end of the chapter, the
Jews having taken up stones to
stone Him, because He made
Himself equal with God, the Lord
does not seek to prove to them
the truth of what He is, but
shows that, according to their
own principles and the testimony
of the scriptures, they were
wrong in this case. He appeals
again to His own words and
works, as proving that He was in
the Father and the Father in
Him. Again they take up stones,
and Jesus definitely leaves
them. It was all over with
Israel.
We come now to the testimony
which the Father renders to
Jesus in answer to His
rejection. In this chapter the
power of resurrection and of
life in His own Person are
presented to faith.40 But here it
is not simply that He is
rejected: man is looked upon as
dead, and Israel also. For it is
man in the person of Lazarus.
This family was blessed; it
received the Lord into its
bosom. Lazarus falls sick. All
the Lord's human affections
would be naturally concerned.
Martha and Mary feel this; and
they send Him word that he whom
He loved was sick. But Jesus
stays where He is. He might have
said the word, as in the case of
the centurion, and of the sick
child at the beginning of this
Gospel. But He did not. He had
manifested His power and His
goodness in healing man as he is
found on earth, and delivering
him from the enemy, and that in
the midst of Israel. But this
was not His object here — far
from it — or the limits of what
He was come to do. It was a
question of bestowing life, or
raising up again that which was
dead before God. This was the
real state of Israel; it was the
state of man. Therefore He
allows the condition of man
under sin to go on and manifest
itself in all the intensity of
its effects down here, and
permits the enemy to exercise
his power to the end. Nothing
remained but the judgment of
God; and death, in itself,
convicted man of sin while
conducting him to judgment. The
sick may be healed — there is no
remedy for death. All is over
for man, as man here below.
Nothing remains but the judgment
of God. It is appointed unto men
once to die, but after this the
judgment. The Lord therefore
does not heal in this instance.
He allows the evil to go on to
the end — to death. That was the
true place of man. Lazarus once
fallen asleep, He goes to awaken
him. The disciples fear the
Jews, and with reason. But the
Lord, having waited for His
Father's will, does not fear to
accomplish it. It was day to
Him.
In fact, whatever
might be His love for the
nation, He must needs let it die
(indeed it was dead), and wait
for the time appointed by God to
raise it up again. If He must
die Himself to accomplish it, He
commits Himself to His Father.
But let us follow out the depths
of this doctrine. Death has come
in; it must take effect. Man is
really in death before God; but
God in grace comes in. Two
things are presented in our
history. He might have healed.
The faith and hope of neither
Martha, Mary, nor the Jews, went
any farther. Only Martha
acknowledges that, as the
Messiah, favoured of God, He
would obtain from Him whatsoever
He asked. But He had not
prevented the death of Lazarus.
He had done so many times, even
for strangers, for whosoever
desired it. In the second place,
Martha knew that her brother
would rise again at the last
day; but true as it was, this
truth availed nothing. Who would
answer for man, dead through
judgment on sin? To rise again
and appear before God was not an
answer to death come in by sin.
The two things were true. Christ
had often delivered mortal man
from his sufferings in flesh,
and there shall be a
resurrection at the last day.
But these things were of no
value in the presence of death.
Christ was, however, there; and
He is, thanks be to God! the
resurrection and the life. Man
being dead, resurrection comes
first. But Jesus is the
resurrection and the life in the
present power of a divine life.
And observe that life, coming by
resurrection, delivers from all
that death implies, and leaves
it behind41 — sin, death, all
that belongs to the life that
man has lost. Christ, having
died for our sins, has borne
their punishment — has borne
them. He has died. All the power
of the enemy, all its effect on
mortal man, all the judgment of
God, He has borne it all, and
has come up from it, in the
power of a new life in
resurrection, which is imparted
to us; so that we are in spirit
alive from among the dead, as He
is alive from among the dead.
Sin (as made sin, and bearing
our sins in His own body on the
tree), death, Satan's power,
God's judgment, are all past
through and left behind, and man
is in a wholly new state, in
incorruption. It will be true of
us, if we die (for we shall not
all die), as to the body, or,
being changed, if we do not die.
But in the communication of His
life who is risen from the dead,
God has quickened us with Him,
having forgiven us all our
trespasses.
Jesus here manifested His own
divine power to this effect; the
Son of God was glorified in it,
for we know He had not yet died
for sin; but it was this same
power in Him that was
manifested.42 The believer, even
if he were dead, shall rise
again; and the living who
believe in Him shall not die.
Christ has overcome death; the
power for this was in His
Person, and the Father bore Him
witness of it. Are any that are
His alive when the Lord
exercises this power? They will
never die — death exists no more
in His presence. Have any died
before He exercises it? They
shall live — death cannot
subsist before Him. All the
effect of sin upon man is
completely destroyed by
resurrection, viewed as the
power of life in Christ. This
refers of course to the saints,
to whom life is communicated.
The same divine power is, of
course, exercised as to the
wicked; but it is not the
communication of life from
Christ, nor being raised with
Him, as is evident.43
Christ exercised this power in
obedience and in dependence on
His Father, because He was man,
walking before God to do His
will; but He is the resurrection
and the life. He has brought the
power of divine life into the
midst of death; and death is
annihilated by it, for in life
death is no more. Death was the
end of natural life to sinful
man. Resurrection is the end of
death, which has thus no longer
anything in us. It is our
advantage that, having done all
it could do, it is finished. We
live in the life44 that put an
end to it. We come out from all
that could be connected with a
life that no longer exists. What
a deliverance! Christ is this
power. He became this for us in
its full display and exercise in
His resurrection.
Martha, while loving Him and
believing in Him, does not
understand this; and she calls
Mary, feeling that her sister
would better understand the
Lord. We will speak a little of
these two presently. Mary, who
waited for the Lord's own
calling her to Him, modestly
though sorrowfully leaving the
initiative with Him, believing
thus that the Lord had called
her, goes to Him directly. Jews
and Martha and Mary all had seen
miracles and healings that had
arrested the power of death. To
this they all refer. But here
life had passed away. What now
could help? If He had been
there, His love and power they
could have counted on. Mary
falls down at His feet weeping.
On the point of resurrection
power she understood no more
than Martha; but her heart is
melted under the sense of death
in the presence of Him who had
life. It is an expression of
need and sorrow rather than a
complaint that she utters. The
Jews also weep: the power of
death was on their hearts. Jesus
enters into it in sympathy. He
was troubled in spirit. He sighs
before God, He weeps with man;
but His tears turn into a groan,
which was, though inarticulate,
the weight of death, felt in
sympathy, and presented to God
by this groan of love which
fully realised the truth; and
that in love to those who were
suffering the ill that His groan
expressed.
He bore death before God in His
spirit as the misery of man —
the yoke from which man could
not deliver himself, and He is
heard. The need brings His power
into action. It was not His part
now patiently to explain to
Martha what He was. He feels and
acts upon the need to which Mary
had given expression, her heart
being opened by the grace that
was in Him.
Man may sympathise: it is the
expression of his powerlessness.
Jesus enters into the affliction
of mortal man, puts Himself
under the burden of death that
weighs upon man (and that more
thoroughly than man himself can
do), but He takes it away with
its cause. He does more than
take it away; He brings in the
power that is able to take it
away. This is the glory of God.
When Christ is present, if we
die, we do not die for death,
but for life: we die that we may
live in the life of God, instead
of in the life of man. And
wherefore? That the Son of God
may be glorified. Death came in
by sin; and man is under the
power of death. But this has
only given room for our
possessing life according to the
second Adam, the Son of God, and
not according to the first Adam,
the sinful man. This is grace.
God is glorified in this work of
grace, and it is the Son of God
whose glory shines brightly
forth in this divine work.
And, observe, that this is not
grace offered in testimony, it
is the exercise of the power of
life. Corruption itself is no
hindrance to God. Why did Christ
come? To bring the words of
eternal life to dead man. Now
Mary fed upon those words.
Martha served — cumbered her
heart with many things. She
believed, she loved Jesus, she
received Him into her house: the
Lord loved her. Mary listened to
Him: this was what He came for;
and He had justified her in it.
The good part which she had
chosen should not be taken from
her.
When the Lord arrives, Martha
goes of her own accord to meet
Him. She withdraws when Jesus
speaks to her of the present
power of life. We are ill at
ease when, although Christians,
we feel unable to apprehend the
meaning of the Lord's words, or
of what His people say to us.
Martha felt that this was rather
Mary's part than hers. She goes
away and calls her sister,
saying, that the Master (He who
taught — observe this name that
she gives Him) was come, and
called for her. It was her own
conscience that was to her the
voice of Christ. Mary instantly
arises and comes to Him. She
understood no more than Martha.
Her heart pours out its need at
the feet of Jesus, where she had
heard His words and learnt His
love and grace; and Jesus asks
the way to the grave. To Martha,
ever occupied with
circumstances, her brother stank
already.
Afterwards (Martha served, and
Lazarus was present), Mary
anoints the Lord, in the
instinctive sense of what was
going on; for they were
consulting to put Him to death.
Her heart, taught by love to the
Lord, felt the enmity of the
Jews; and her affection,
stimulated by deep gratitude,
expends on Him the most costly
thing she had. Those present
blame her; Jesus again takes her
part. It might not be
reasonable, but she had
apprehended His position. What a
lesson! What a blessed family
was this at Bethany, in which
the heart of Jesus found (as far
as could be on earth) a relief
that His love accepted! With
what love have we to do! Alas,
with what hatred! for we see in
this Gospel the dreadful
opposition between man and God.
There is an interesting point to
be observed here before we pass
on. The Holy Ghost has recorded
an incident, in which the
momentary but guilty unbelief of
Thomas was covered by the Lord's
grace. It was needful to relate
it; but the Holy Ghost has taken
care to show us, that Thomas
loved the Lord, and was ready,
at heart, to die with Him. We
have other instances of the same
kind. Paul says, "Take Mark, and
bring him with thee; for he is
profitable to me for the
ministry." Poor Mark! this was
necessary on account of what
took place at Perga. Barnabas
also has the same place in the
apostle's affection and
remembrance. We are weak: God
does not hide it from us; but He
throws the testimony of His
grace over the feeblest of His
servants.
But to continue. Caiaphas, the
chief of the Jews, as high
priest, proposes the death of
Jesus, because He had restored
Lazarus to life. And from that
day they conspire against Him.
Jesus yields to it. He came to
give His life a ransom for many.
He goes on to fulfil the work
His love had undertaken, in
accordance with His Father's
will, whatever might be the
devices and the malice of men.
The work of life and Or death,
of Satan and of God, were face
to face. But the counsels of God
were being accomplished in
grace, whatever the means might
be. Jesus devotes Himself to the
work by which they were to be
fulfilled. Having shown the
power of resurrection and of
life in Himself, He is again,
when the time comes, quietly in
the place to which His service
led Him; but He no longer goes
in the same manner as before
into the temple. He goes thither
indeed; but the question between
God and man was morally settled
already.
His place (John 12) now is with
the remnant, where His heart
found rest — the house of
Bethany. We have, in this
family, a sample of the true
remnant of Israel, three
different cases with regard to
their position before God.
Martha had faith which, no
doubt, attached her to Christ,
but which did not go beyond that
which was needed for the
kingdom. Those who will be
spared for the earth in the last
days will have the same. Their
faith will at length acknowledge
Christ the Son of God. Lazarus
was there, living by that power
which could have also raised up
all the dead saints in the same
way,45 which, by grace, at the
last day, will call up Israel,
morally, from their state of
death. In a word, we find the
remnant, who will not die,
spared through true faith (but
faith in a living Saviour, who
should deliver Israel), and
those who shall be brought back
as from the dead, to enjoy the
kingdom. Martha served; Jesus is
in company with them; Lazarus
sits at the table with Him.
But there was also the
representative of another class.
Mary, who had drunk at the
fountain of truth, and had
received that living water into
her heart, had understood that
there was something more than
the hope and the blessing of
Israel — namely, Jesus Himself.
She does that which is suitable
to Jesus in His rejection — to
Him who is the resurrection
before He is our life. Her heart
associates her with that act of
His, and she anoints Him for His
burial. To her it is Jesus
Himself who is in question — and
Jesus rejected; and faith takes
its place in that which was the
seed of the assembly, still
hidden in the soil of Israel and
of this world, but which, in the
resurrection, would come forth
in all the beauty of the life of
God — of eternal life. It is a
faith that expends itself on
Him, on His body, in which He
was about to undergo the penalty
of sin for our salvation. The
selfishness of unbelief,
betraying its sin in its
contempt of Christ, and in its
indifference, gives the Lord
occasion to attach its true
value to this action of His
beloved disciple. Her anointing
His feet is pointed out here, as
showing that all that was of
Christ, that which was Christ,
had to her a value which
prevented her regarding anything
else. This is a we appreciation
of Christ. The faith that knows
His love which passes knowledge
— this kind of faith is a sweet
odour in the whole house. And
God remembers it according to
His grace. Jesus understood her:
that was all she wanted. He
justifies her: who should rise
up against her? This scene is
over, and the course of events
is resumed.
The enmity of the Jews (alas!
that of man's heart, thus given
up to itself, and consequently
to the enemy who is a murderer
by nature and the enemy of God —
an enemy that nothing merely
human can subdue) would fain
kill Lazarus also. Man is indeed
capable of this: but capable of
what? Everything yields to
hatred — to this kind of hatred
of God who manifests Himself.
But for this it would in fact be
inconceivable. They must now
either believe in Jesus or
reject Him: for His power was so
evident that they must do the
one or the other — a man
publicly raised from the dead
after four days, and alive among
the people, left no longer any
possibility of indecision. Jesus
knew it divinely. He presents
Himself as Ring of Israel to
assert His rights, and to offer
salvation and the promised glory
to the people and to Jerusalem.46
The people understand this. It
must be a deliberate rejection,
as the Pharisees are well aware.
But the hour was come: and
although they could do nothing,
for the world went after Him,
Jesus is put to death, for "he
gave himself."
The second testimony of God to
Christ has now been borne to
Him, as the true Son of David.
He has been witnessed to as the
Son of God in raising Lazarus
(John 11:4), and Son of David in
riding into Jerusalem on the
ass's colt. There was yet
another title to be
acknowledged. As Son of man He
is to possess all the kingdoms
of the earth. The Greeks47 come
(for His fame had gone abroad),
and desire to see Him. Jesus
says, "The hour is come for the
Son of man to be glorified." But
now He returns to the thoughts
of which Mary's ointment was the
expression to His heart. He
should have been received as the
Son of David; but, in taking His
place as the Son of man, a very
different thing necessarily
opens before Him. How could He
be seen as Son of man, coming in
the clouds of heaven to take
possession of all things
according to the counsels of
God, without dying? If His human
service on earth was finished,
and He had gone out free,
calling, if need were, for
twelve legions of angels, no one
could have had any part with
Him: He would have remained
alone. "Except the corn of wheat
fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone; if it die, it
bringeth forth much fruit." If
Christ takes His heavenly glory,
and is not alone in it, He dies
to attain it, and to bring with
Him the souls whom God has given
Him. In fact the hour was come:
it could no longer tarry.
Everything was now ready for the
end of the trial of this world,
of man, of Israel; and, above
all, the counsels of God were
being fulfilled.
Outwardly all was testimony to
His glory. He enters Jerusalem
in triumph — the multitude
proclaiming Him King. What were
the Romans about? They were
silent before God. The Greeks
came to seek Him. All is ready
for the glory of the Son of man.
But the heart of Jesus well knew
that for this glory — for the
accomplishment of the work of
God, for His having one human
being with Him in the glory, for
the granary of God to be filled
according to the counsels of
grace — He must die. No other
way for guilty souls to come to
God. That which Mary's affection
foresaw, Jesus knows according
to the truth; and according to
the mind of God He feels it, and
submits to it. And the Father
responds at this solemn moment,
by bearing testimony to the
glorious effect of that which
His sovereign majesty at the
same time required — majesty
which Jesus fully glorified by
His obedience: and who could do
this, excepting Him who, by that
obedience, brought in the love
and the power of God which
accomplished it?
In that which follows, the Lord
introduces a great principle
connected with the truth
contained in His sacrifice.
There was no link between the
natural life of man and God. If
in the man Christ Jesus there
was a life in entire harmony
with God, He must needs lay it
down on account of this
condition of man. Being of God,
He could not remain in
connection with man. Man would
not have it. Jesus would rather
die than not fulfil His service
by glorifying God — than not be
obedient unto the end. But if
any one loved his life of this
world, he lost it; for it was
not in connection with God. If
any one by grace hated it —
separated himself in heart from
this principle of alienation
from God, and devoted his life
to Him, he would have it in the
new and eternal state. To serve
Jesus therefore was to follow
Him; and where He was going,
there should His servant be. The
result of association of heart
with Jesus here, shown in
following Him, passes out of
this world, as He was indeed
doing, and Messiah blessings,
into the heavenly and eternal
glory of Christ. If any one
served Him, the Father would
remember it, and would honour
him. All this is said in view of
His death, the thought of which
comes over His mind; and His
soul is troubled. And in the
just dread of that hour which,
in itself, is the judgment of
God, and the end of man as God
created him here on earth, He
asks God to deliver Him from
that hour. And, in truth, He had
come — not then to be (although
He was) the Messiah, not then
(although it was His right) to
take the kingdom; but He had
come for this very hour — by
dying to glorify His Father.
This He desires, involve what it
may. "Father, glorify thy name,"
is His only prayer. This is
perfectness — He feels what
death is: there would have been
no sacrifice if He had not felt
it. But while feeling it, His
only desire was to glorify His
Father. If that cost Him
everything, the work was perfect
in proportion.
Perfect in this desire, and that
unto death, the Father could not
but answer Him In His answer, as
it appears to me, the Father
announces the resurrection. But
what grace, what marvel, to be
admitted into such
communications! The heart is
astounded, while filled with
worship and with grace, in
beholding the perfection of
Jesus, the Son of God, unto
death; that is to say, absolute;
and in seeing Him, with the full
sense of what death was, seeking
the sole glory of the Father;
and the Father answering — an
answer morally needful to this
sacrifice of the Son, and to His
own glory. Thus He said, "I have
both glorified it, and will
glorify it again." I believe
that He had glorified it in the
resurrection of Lazarus;48 He
would do so again in the
resurrection of Christ — a
glorious resurrection which, in
itself, implied ours; even as
the Lord had said, without
naming His own.
Let us now observe the
connection of the truths spoken
of in this remarkable passage.
The hour was come for the glory
of the Son of man. But, in order
to this, it needed that the
precious corn of wheat should
fall into the ground and die;
else it would remain alone. This
was the universal principle. The
natural life of this world in us
had no part with God. Jesus must
be followed. We should thus be
with Him: this was serving Him.
Thus also we should be honoured
by the Father. Christ, for
Himself, looks death in the
face, and feels all its import.
Nevertheless He gives Himself to
one only thing — the glory of
His Father. The Father answers
Him in this. His desire should
be fulfilled. He should not be
without an answer to His
perfection. The people hear it
as the voice of the Lord God, as
described in the Psalms. Christ
(who, in all this, had put
Himself entirely aside, had
spoken only of the glory of His
followers and of His Father)
declares that this voice came
for the people's sake, in order
that they might understand what
He was for their salvation. Then
there opens before Him, who had
thus put Himself aside and
submitted to everything for His
Father's sake, not the future
glory, but the value, the
import, the glory, of the work
He was about to do. The
principles of which we have
spoken are here brought to the
central point of their
development. In His death the
world was judged: Satan was its
prince, and he is cast out: in
appearance it is Christ who was
so. By death He morally and
judicially destroyed him who had
the power of death. It was the
total and entire annihilation of
all the rights of the enemy,
over whomsoever and whatsoever
it might be, when the Son of God
and Son of man bore the judgment
of God as man in obedience unto
death. All the rights that Satan
possessed through man's
disobedience and the judgment of
God upon it, were only rights in
virtue of the claims of God upon
man, and come back to Christ
alone. And being lifted up
between God and the world, in
obedience, on the cross, bearing
that which was due to sin,
Christ became the point of
attraction for all men living,
that through Him they might draw
nigh to God. While living, Jesus
ought to have been owned as the
Messiah of promise; lifted up
from the earth as a victim
before God, being no longer of
the earth as living upon it, He
was the point of attraction
towards God for all those who,
living on earth, were alienated
from God, as we have seen, that
they might come to Him there (by
grace), and have life through
the Saviour's death. Jesus warns
the people that it was only for
a little time that He, the light
of the world, would remain with
them. They should believe while
it was yet time. Soon would the
darkness come, and they would
not know whither they went. We
see that, whatever might be the
thoughts that occupy His heart,
the love of Jesus never grows
cold. He thinks of those around
Him — of men according to their
need.
Nevertheless they did not
believe according to the
testimony of the prophet, given
in view of His humiliation unto
death, given in sight of the
vision of His divine glory,
which could but bring judgment
on a rebellious people (Isa. 53
and 6).
Nevertheless, such is grace, His
humiliation should be their
salvation; and, in the glory
that judged them, God would
remember the counsels of His
grace, as sure a fruit of that
glory as was the judgment which
the Holy, Holy, Holy, Jehovah of
Hosts must pronounce against
evil — a judgment suspended, by
His longsuffering, during
centuries, but now fulfilled
when these last efforts of His
mercy were despised and
rejected. They preferred the
praise of men.
At last Jesus declares that
which His coming really was —
that in fact, they who believed
in Him, in the Jesus whom they
saw on the earth, believed in
His Father, and saw His Father.
He was come as the light, and
they who believed should not
walk in darkness. He did not
judge; He was come to save; but
the word which He had spoken
should judge those who heard,
for it was the Father's word,
and it was life everlasting.
John 13. Now, then, the Lord has taken
His place as going to the
Father. The time was come for
it. He takes His place above,
according to the counsels of
God, and is no longer in
connection with a world that had
already rejected Him; but He
loves His own unto the end. Two
things are present to Him: on
the one hand, sin taking the
form most painful to His heart;
and on the other, the sense of
all glory being given to Him as
man, and of whence He came and
whither He was going: that is,
His personal and heavenly
character in relationship with
God, and the glory that was
given Him. He came from God and
went to God; and the Father had
put all things into His hands.
But neither His entrance into
glory, nor the heartlessness of
man's sin, takes His heart away
from His disciples or even from
their wants. Only He exercises
His love, to put them in
connection with Himself in the
new position He was creating for
them by entering thus into it.
He could no longer remain with
them on earth; and if He left
them, and must leave them, He
would not give them up, but fit
them for being where He was. He
loved them with a love that
nothing stopped. It went on to
perfect its results; and He must
fit them to be with Him. Blessed
change that love accomplished
even from His being with them
here below! They were to have a
part with Him who came from God
and went to God, and into whose
hands the Father had put all
things; but then they must be
fit to be with Him there. To
this end He is still their
servant in love, and even more
so than ever. No doubt He had
been so in His perfect grace,
but it was while among them.
They were thus in a certain
sense companions. They were all
supping together here at the
same table. But He quits this
position, as He did His personal
association with His disciples
by ascending to heaven, by going
to God. But, if He does, He
still girds Himself for their
service, and takes water49 to
wash their feet. Although in
heaven, He is still serving
us.50 The effect of this service
is, that the Holy Ghost takes
away practically by the word all
the defilement that we gather in
walking through this world of
sin. On our way we come in
contact with this world that
rejected Christ. Our Advocate on
high (compare 1 John 2), He
cleanses us from its defilement
by the Holy Ghost and the word;
He cleanses us in view of the
relationships with God His
Father, unto which He has
brought us by entering into them
Himself as man on high.
A purity was needed that should
befit the presence of God, for
He was going there. However it
is only the feet that are in
question. The priests that
served God in the tabernacle
were washed at their
consecration. That washing was
not repeated. So, when once
spiritually renewed by the word,
this is not repeated for us. In
"he that is washed" it is a
different word from "save to
wash his feet." The first is
bathing the whole body; the
latter washing hands or feet. We
need the latter continually, but
are not, once born of water by
the word, washed over again, any
more than the priests' first
consecration was repeated. The
priests washed their hands and
their feet every time they
engaged in service — that they
drew near to God. Our Jesus
restores communion and power to
serve God, when we have lost it.
He does it, and with a view to
communion and service; for
before God we are entirely clean
personally. The service was the
service of Christ — of His love.
He wiped their feet with the
towel wherewith He was girded (a
circumstance expressive of
service). The means of
purification was water — the
word, applied by the Holy Ghost.
Peter shrinks from the idea of
Christ thus humbling Himself.
but we must submit to this
thought, that our sin is such
that nothing less than the
humiliation of Christ can in any
sense cleanse us from it.
Nothing else will make us really
know the perfect and dazzling
purity of God, or the love and
devotedness of Jesus: and in the
realisation of these consists
the having a heart sanctified
for the presence of God. Peter,
then, would have the Lord to
wash also his hands and his
head. But this is already
accomplished. If we are His we
are born again and cleansed by
the word which He has already
applied to our souls; only we
defile our feet in walking. It
is after the pattern of this
service of Christ in grace that
we are to act with regard to our
brethren.
Judas was not clean; he had not
been born again, was not clean
through the word Jesus had
spoken. Nevertheless, being sent
of the Lord, they who had
received him had received
Christ. And this is true also of
those whom He sends by His
Spirit. This thought brings the
treachery of Judas before the
Lord's mind; His soul is
troubled at the thought, and He
unburdens His heart by declaring
it to His disciples. What His
heart is occupied with here is,
not His knowledge of the
individual, but of the fact that
one of them should do it, one of
those who had been His
companions.
Therefore it was, because of His
saying this, that the disciples
looked upon one another. Now
there was one near Him, the
disciple whom Jesus loved; for
we have, in all this part of the
Gospel of John, the testimony of
grace that answers to the
diverse forms of malice and
wickedness in man. This love of
Jesus had formed the heart of
John — had given him
confidingness and constancy of
affection; and consequently,
without any other motive than
this, he was near enough to
Jesus to receive communications
from Him. It was not in order to
receive them that he placed
himself close to Jesus: he was
there because he loved the Lord,
whose own love had thus attached
him to Himself; but, being
there, he was able to receive
them. It is thus that we may
still learn of Him.
Peter loved Him: but there was
too much of Peter, not for
service, if God called him to it
— and He did in grace, when He
had thoroughly broken him down,
and made him know himself — but
for intimacy. Who, among the
twelve, bore testimony like
Peter, in whom God was mighty
towards the circumcision? But we
do not find in his epistles that
which is found in John's.51
Moreover each one has his place,
given in the sovereignty of God.
Peter loved Christ; and we see
that, linked also with John by
this common affection, they are
constantly together; as also at
the end of this Gospel he is
anxious to know the fate of
John. He uses John, therefore,
to ask the Lord, which it was
among them that should betray
Him, as He had said. Let us
remember that being near Jesus
for His own sake is the way of
having His mind when anxious
thoughts arise.
Jesus points out Judas by the
sop, which would have checked
any other, but which to him was
only the seal of his ruin. It is
indeed thus in degree with every
favour of God that falls upon a
heart that rejects it. After the
sop Satan enters into Judas.
Wicked already through
covetousness, and yielding
habitually to ordinary
temptations; although he was
with Jesus, hardening his heart
against the effect of that grace
which was ever before his eyes
and at his side, and which, in a
certain way, was exercised
towards him, he had yielded to
the suggestion of the enemy, and
made himself the tool of the
high priests to betray the Lord.
He knew what they desired, and
goes and offers himself. And
when, by his long familiarity
with the grace and presence of
Jesus while addicting himself to
sin, that grace and the thought
of the Person of Christ had
entirely lost their influence,
he was in a state to feel
nothing at betraying Him. The
knowledge he had of the Lord's
power, helped him to give
himself up to evil, and
strengthened the temptation of
Satan; for evidently he made
sure that Jesus would always
succeed in delivering Himself
from His enemies, and, as far as
power was concerned, Judas was
right in thinking that the Lord
could have done so. But what
knew he of the thoughts of God?
All was darkness, morally, in
his soul.
And now, after this last
testimony, which was both a
token of grace and a witness to
the true state of his heart that
was insensible to it (as
expressed in the Psalm here
fulfilled), Satan enters into
him, takes possession of him so
as to harden him against all
that might have made him feel,
even as a man, the horrid nature
of what he was doing, and thus
enfeeble him in accomplishing
the evil; so that neither his
conscience nor his heart should
be awakened in committing it.
Dreadful condition! Satan
possesses him, until forced to
leave him to the judgment from
which he cannot shelter him, and
which will be his own at the
time appointed of God — judgment
that manifests itself to the
conscience of Judas when the
evil was done, when too late
(and the sense of which is shown
by a despair that his link with
Satan did but augment) but which
is forced to bear testimony to
Jesus before those who had
profited by his sin and who
mocked at his distress. For
despair speaks the truth; the
veil is torn away; there is no
longer self-deception; the
conscience is laid bare before
God, but it is before His
judgment. Satan does not deceive
there; and not the grace, but
the perfection of Christ is
known. Judas bore witness to the
innocence of Jesus, as did the
thief on the cross. It is thus
that death and destruction heard
the fame of His wisdom: only God
knows it (Job 28:22-23).
Jesus knew his condition. It was
but the accomplishing that which
He was going to do, by means of
one for whom there was no longer
any hope. "That thou doest,"
said Jesus, "do quickly." But
what words, when we hear them
from the lips of Him who was
love itself! Nevertheless, the
eyes of Jesus were not fixed
upon His own death. He is alone.
No one, not even His disciples,
had any part with Him. These
could no more follow Him whether
He was now going, than the Jews
themselves. Solemn but glorious
hour! A man, He was going to
meet God in that which separated
man from God — to meet Him in
judgment. This, in fact, is what
He says, as soon as Judas is
gone out. The door which closed
on Judas separated Christ from
this world.
"Now," He says, "is the Son of
man glorified." He had said this
when the Greeks arrived; but
then it was the glory to come —
His glory as the head of all
men, and, in fact, of all
things. But this could not yet
be; and He said, "Father,
glorify thy name." Jesus must
die. It was that which glorified
the name of God in a world where
sin was. It was the glory of the
Son of man to accomplish it
there, where all the power of
the enemy, the effect of sin,
and the judgment of God upon
sin, were displayed; where the
question was morally settled;
where Satan (in his power over
sinful man — man under sin, and
that fully developed in open
enmity against God), and God
met, not as in the case of Job,
as an instrument in God's hand
for discipline, but for justice
— that which God was against
sin, but that in which, through
Christ's giving Himself, all His
attributes should be in
exercise, and be glorified, and
by which, in fact, through that
which took place, all the
perfections of God have been
glorified, being manifested
through Jesus, or by means of
that which Jesus did and
suffered.
These perfections had been
directly unfolded in Him, as far
as grace went; but now that the
opportunity of the exercise of
all of them was afforded, by His
taking a place which put Him to
the proof according to the
attributes of God, their divine
perfection could be displayed
through man in Jesus there where
He stood in the place of man;
and (made sin, and, thank God,
for the sinner) God was
glorified in Him. For see what
in fact met in the cross:
Satan's complete power over men,
Jesus alone excepted; man in
open perfect enmity against God
in the rejection of His Son; God
manifest in grace: then in
Christ, as man, perfect love to
His Father, and perfect
obedience, and that in the place
of sin, that is, as made it (for
the perfection of love to His
Father and obedience were when
He was as sin before God on the
cross); then God's majesty made
good, glorified (Heb. 2:10); His
perfect, righteous, judgment
against sin as the Holy One; but
therein His perfect love to
sinners in giving His
only-begotten Son. For hereby
know we love. To sum it up: at
the cross we find, man in
absolute evil — the hatred of
what was good; Satan's full
power over the world — the
prince of this world; man in
perfect goodness, obedience, and
love to the Father at all cost
to Himself; God in absolute,
infinite, righteousness against
sin, and infinite divine love to
the sinner. Good and evil were
fully settled for ever, and
salvation wrought, the
foundation of the new heavens
and the new earth laid. Well may
we say, "Now is the Son of man
glorified, and God is glorified
in him." Utterly dishonoured in
the first, He is infinitely more
glorified in the Second, and
therefore puts man (Christ) in
glory, and straightway, not
waiting for the kingdom. But
this requires some less abstract
words; for the cross is the
centre of the universe,
according to God, the basis of
our salvation and our glory, and
the brightest manifestation of
God's own glory, the centre of
the history of eternity.
The Lord had said, when the
Greeks desired to see Him, that
the hour was come for the Son of
man to be glorified. He spoke
then of His glory as Son of man,
the glory which He should take
under that title. He felt indeed
that in order to bring men into
that glory, He must needs pass
through death Himself. But He
was engrossed by one thing which
detached His thoughts from the
glory and from the suffering —
the desire which possessed His
heart that His Father should be
glorified. All was now come to
the point at which this was to
be accomplished; and the moment
had arrived when Judas
(overstepping the limits of
God's just and perfect patience)
was gone out, giving the reins
to his iniquity, to consummate
the crime which would lead to
the wonderful fulfilment of the
counsels of God.
Now, in Jesus on the cross, the
Son of man has been glorified in
a much more admirable way than
He will be even by the positive
glory that belongs to Him under
that title. He will, we know, be
clothed with that glory; but, on
the cross, the Son of man bore
all that was necessary for the
perfect display of all the glory
of God. The whole weight of that
glory was brought to bear upon
Him, to put Him to the proof,
that it might be seen whether He
could sustain it, verify, and
exalt it; and that by setting it
forth in the place where, but
for this, sin concealed that
glory, and, so to speak, gave it
impiously the lie. Was the Son
of man able to enter into such a
place, to undertake such a task,
and to accomplish the task, and
maintain His place without
failure to the end? This Jesus
did. The majesty of God was to
be vindicated against the
insolent rebellion of His
creature; His truth, which had
threatened Him with death,
maintained; His justice
established against sin (who
could withstand it?); and, at
the same time, His love fully
demonstrated. Satan having here
all the sorrowful rights that he
had acquired through our sin,
Christ — perfect as a man,
alone, apart from all men, in
obedience, and having as man but
one object, that is, the glory
of God, thus divinely perfect,
sacrificing Himself for this
purpose — fully glorified God.
God was glorified in Him. His
justice, His majesty, His truth,
His love — all was verified on
the cross as they are in
Himself, and revealed only
there; and that with regard to
sin.
And God can now act freely,
according to that which He is
consciously to Himself, without
any one attribute hiding, or
obscuring, or contradicting
another. Truth condemned man to
death, justice for ever
condemned the sinner, majesty
demanded the execution of the
sentence. Where, then, was love?
If love, as man would conceive
it, were to pass over all, where
would be His majesty and His
justice? Moreover, that could
not be; nor would it really then
be love, but indifference to
evil. By means of the cross, He
is just, and He justifies in
grace; He is love, and in that
love He bestows His
righteousness on man. The
righteousness of God takes the
place of man's sin to the
believer. The righteousness, as
well as the sin, of man vanishes
before the bright light of
grace, and does not becloud the
sovereign glory of a grace like
this towards man, who was really
alienated from God.
And who had accomplished this?
Who had thus established (as to
its manifestation, and the
making it good where it had
been, as to the state of things,
compromised by sin), the whole
glory of God? It was the Son of
man. Therefore God glorifies Him
with His own glory; for it was
indeed that glory which He had
established and made honourable,
when before His creatures it was
effaced by sin — it cannot be so
in itself. And not only was it
established, but it was thus
realised as it could have been
by no other means. Never was
love like the gift of the Son of
God for sinners; never justice
(to which sin is insupportable)
like that which did not spare
even the Son Himself when He
bore sin upon Him; never majesty
like that which held the Son of
God Himself responsible for the
full extent of its exigencies
(compare Heb. 2); never truth
like that which did not yield
before the necessity of the
death of Jesus. We now know God.
God, being glorified in the Son
of man, glorifies Him in
Himself. But, consequently, He
does not wait for the day of His
glory with man, according to the
thought of John 12. God calls
Him to His own right hand, and
sets Him there at once and
alone. Who could be there (save
in spirit) excepting He? Here
His glory is connected with that
which He alone could do — with
that which He must have done
alone; and of which He must have
the fruit alone with God, for He
was God.
Other glories shall come in
their time. He will share them
with us, although in all things
He has the pre-eminence. Here He
is, and must ever be, alone
(that is, in that which is
personal to Himself). Who shared
the cross with Him, as suffering
for sin, and fulfilling
righteousness? We, indeed, share
it with Him so far as suffering
for righteousness' sake, and for
the love of Him and His people,
even unto death: and thus we
shall share His glory also. But
it is evident that we could not
glorify God for sin. He who knew
no sin could alone be made sin.
The Son of God alone could bear
this burden.
In this sense the Lord — when
His heart found relief in
pouring out these glorious
thoughts, these marvellous
counsels — addressed His
disciples with affection,
telling them that their
connection with Him here below
would soon be ended, that He was
going where they could not
follow Him, any more than could
the unbelieving Jews. Brotherly
love was, in a certain sense, to
take His place. They were to
love one another as He had loved
them, with a love superior to
the faults of the flesh in their
brethren — brotherly love
gracious in these respects. If
the main pillar were taken away
against which many around it
were leaning, they would support
each other, although not by
their strength. And thus should
the disciples of Christ be
known.
Now Simon Peter desires to
penetrate into that which no
man, save Jesus, could enter —
God's presence by the path of
death. This is fleshly
confidence. The Lord tells him,
in grace, that it could not be
so now. He must dry up that sea
fathomless to man — death — that
overflowing Jordan; and then,
when it was no longer the
judgment of God, nor wielded by
the power of Satan (for in both
these characters Christ has
entirely destroyed its power for
the believer), then His poor
disciple might pass through it
for the sake of righteousness
and of Christ. But Peter would
follow Him in his own strength,
declaring himself able to do
exactly that which Jesus was
going to do for him. Yet, in
fact, terrified at the first
movement of the enemy, he draws
back before the voice of a girl,
and denies the Master whom he
loved. In the things of God,
fleshly confidence does but lead
us into a position in which it
cannot stand. Sincerity alone
can do nothing against the
enemy. We must have the strength
of God.
The Lord now (John 14) begins to
discourse with them in view of
His departure. He was going
where they could not come. To
human sight they would be left
alone upon the earth. It is to
the sense of this apparently
desolate condition that the Lord
addresses Himself, showing them
that He was an object for faith,
even as God was. In doing this,
He opens to them the whole truth
with respect to their condition.
His work is not the subject
treated of, but their position
by virtue of that work. His
Person should have been for them
the key to that position, and
would be so now: the Holy Ghost,
the Comforter, who should come,
would be the power by which they
should enjoy it, and indeed more
yet.
To Peter's question, "Whither
goest thou?" the Lord replies.
Only when the desire of the
flesh seeks to enter into the
path on which Jesus was then
entering, the Lord could but say
that the strength of the flesh
was unavailing there; for, in
fact, he proposed to follow
Christ in death. Poor Peter!
But when the Lord has written
the sentence of death upon the
flesh for us, by revealing its
impotency, He can then (John 14)
reveal that which is beyond it
for faith; and that which
belongs to us through His death
throws its light back, and
teaches who He was, even when on
earth, and always, before the
world was. He did but return to
the place from which He came.
But He begins with His disciples
where they were, and meets the
need of their hearts by
explaining to them in what
manner — better, in a certain
sense, than by following Him
here below — they should be with
Him when absent where He would
be. They did not see God
corporeally present with them:
to enjoy His presence they
believed in Him; It was to be
the same thing with regard to
Jesus. They were to believe in
Him. He did not forsake them in
going away, as though there were
only room for Himself in His
Father's house. (He alludes to
the temple as a figure.) There
was room for them all. The going
thither, observe, was still His
thought — He is not here as the
Messiah. We see Him in the
relationships in which He stood
according to the eternal truths
of God. He had always His
departure in view: had there
been no room for them, He would
have told them so. Their place
was with Him. But He was going
to prepare a place for them.
Without presenting redemption
there, and presenting Himself as
the new man according to the
power of that redemption, there
was no place prepared in heaven.
He enters it in the power of
that life which should bring
them in also. But they should
not go alone to rejoin Him, nor
would He rejoin them down here.
Heaven, not earth, was in
question. Nor would He simply
send others for them; but as
those He dearly valued, He would
come for them Himself, and
receive them unto Himself, that
where He was, there should they
be also. He would come from the
Father's throne: there, of
course, they cannot sit; but He
will receive them there, where
He shall be in glory before the
Father. They should be with Him
— a far more excellent position
than His remaining with them
here below, even as Messiah in
glory on the earth.
Now, also, having said where He
was going, that is, to His
Father (and speaking according
to the effect of His death for
them), He tells them that they
knew whither He was going, and
the way. For He was going to the
Father, and they had seen the
Father in seeing Him; and thus,
having seen the Father in Him,
they knew the way; for in coming
to Him, they came to the Father,
who was in Him as He was in the
Father. He was, then, Himself
the way. Therefore He reproaches
Philip with not having known
Him. He had been long with them,
as the revelation in His own
Person of the Father; and they
ought to have known Him, and to
have seen that He was in the
Father, and the Father in Him,
and thus have known where He was
going, for it was to the Father.
He had declared the name of the
Father; and if they were unable
to see the Father in Him, or to
be convinced of it by His words,
they ought to have known it by
His works; for the Father who
dwelt in Him He it was who did
the works. This depended on His
own Person, being still in the
world; but a striking proof was
connected with His departure.
After He was gone, they would do
even greater works than He did,
because they should act in
connection with His greater
nearness to the Father. This was
requisite to His glory. It was
even unlimited. He placed them
in immediate connection with the
Father by the power of His work
and of His name; and whatsoever
they should ask the Father in
His name, Christ Himself would
do it for them. Their request
should be heard and granted by
the Father — showing what
nearness He had acquired for
them; and He (Christ) would do
all they should ask. For the
power of the Son was not, and
could not be, wanting to the
Father's will: there was no
limit to His power.
But this led to another subject.
If they loved Him, it was to be
shown, not in regrets, but in
keeping His commandments. They
were to walk in obedience. This
characterises discipleship up to
the present time. Love desires
to be with Him, but shows itself
by obeying His commands; for
Christ also has a right to
command. On the other hand He
would seek their good on high,
and another blessing should be
granted them; namely, the Holy
Ghost Himself, who should never
leave them, as Christ was about
to do. The world could not
receive Him. Christ, the Son,
had been shown to the eyes of
the world, and ought to have
been received by it. The Holy
Ghost would act, being
invisible; for by the rejection
of Christ, it was all over with
the world in its natural and
creature relationships with God.
But the Holy Ghost should be
known by the disciples; for He
should not only remain with
them, as Christ could not, but
be in them, not with them as He
was. The Holy Ghost would not be
seen then or known by the world.
Until now, in His discourse, He
had led His disciples to follow
Him (in spirit) on high, through
the knowledge which acquaintance
with His Person (in which the
Father was revealed) gave them
of whither He was going, and of
the way. He was Himself the way,
as we have seen. He was the
truth itself, in the revelation
(and the perfect revelation) of
God and of the soul's
relationship to Him; and,
indeed, of the real condition
and character of all things, by
bringing out the perfect light
of God in His own Person who
revealed Him. He was the life,
in which God and the truth could
thus be known. Men came by Him;
they found the Father revealed
in Him; and they possessed in
Him that which enabled them to
enjoy, and in the reception of
which they came in fact to, the
Father.
But, now, it is not what is
objective which He presents; not
the Father in Him (which they
ought to have known) and He in
the Father, when here below. He
does not, therefore, raise their
thoughts to the Father through
Himself and in Himself, and He
in the Father in heaven. He sets
before them that which should be
given them down here — the
stream of blessing that should
flow for them in this world, by
virtue of that which Jesus was,
and was for them, in heaven. The
Holy Ghost once introduced as
sent, the Lord says, "I will not
leave you orphans, I will come
to you." His presence, in
spirit, here below, is the
consolation of His people. They
should see Him; and this is much
more true than seeing Him with
the eyes of flesh. Yes, more
true; it is knowing Him in a
much more real way, even though
by grace they had believed in
Him as the Christ, the Son of
God. And, moreover, this
spiritual sight of Christ by the
heart, through the presence of
the Holy Ghost, is connected
with life. "Because I live, ye
shall live also." We see Him,
because we have life, and this
life is in Him, and He in this
life. "This life is in the Son."
It is as sure as His duration.
It is derived from Him. Because
He lives, we shall live. Our
life is, in everything, the
manifestation of Himself who is
our life. Even as the apostle
expresses it, "That the life of
Jesus may be manifested in our
mortal bodies." Alas! the flesh
resists; but this is our life in
Christ.
But this is not all. The Holy
Ghost dwelling in us, we know
that we are in Christ.52 "At that
day ye shall know that I am in
my Father, and ye in me, and I
in you." It is not "the Father
in me [which, however, was
always true], and I in him" —
words, the first of which, here
omitted, expressed the reality
of His manifestation of the
Father here on earth. The Lord
only expresses that which
belongs to His being really and
divinely one with the Father —
"I am in my Father." It is this
last part of the truth (implied,
doubtless, in the other when
rightly understood) of which the
Lord here speaks. It could not
really be so; but men might
imagine such a thing as a
manifestation of God in a man,
without this man being really
such — so truly God, that is to
say, in Himself — that it must
also be said, He is in the
Father. People dream of such
things; they speak of the
manifestation of God in flesh.
We speak of God manifest in the
flesh. But here all ambiguity is
obviated — He was in the Father,
and it is this part of the truth
which is repeated here; adding
to it, in virtue of the presence
of the Holy Ghost, that while
the disciples should indeed
fully know the divine Person of
Jesus, they should moreover know
that they were themselves in
Him. He who is joined to the
Lord is one spirit. Jesus did
not say that they ought to have
known this while He was with
them on earth. They ought to
have known that the Father was
in Him and He in the Father. But
in that He was alone. The
disciples, however, having
received the Holy Ghost, should
know their own being in Him — a
union of which the Holy Ghost is
the strength and the bond. The
life of Christ flows from Him in
us. He is in the Father, we in
Him, and He also in us,
according to the power of the
presence of the Holy Ghost.
This is the subject of the
common faith, true of all. But
there is continual guardianship
and government, and Jesus
manifests Himself to us in
connection with, and in a manner
dependent on, our walk. He who
is mindful of the Lord's will
possesses it, and observes it. A
good child not only obeys when
he knows his father's will, but
he acquires the knowledge of
that will by giving heed to it.
This is the spirit of obedience
in love. If we act thus with
regard to Jesus, the Father, who
takes account of all that
relates to His Son, will love
us. Jesus will also love us, and
will manifest Himself to us.
Judas (not Iscariot) did not
understand this, because he saw
no farther than a bodily
manifestation of Christ, such as
the world also could perceive.
Jesus therefore adds, that the
truly obedient disciples (and
here He speaks more spiritually
and generally of His word, not
merely of His commandments)
should be loved of the Father,
and that the Father and Himself
would come and make their abode
with him. So that, if there be
obedience, while waiting for the
time when we shall go and dwell
with Jesus in the Father's
presence, He and the Father
dwell in us. The Father and the
Son manifest themselves in us,
in whom the Holy Ghost is
dwelling, even as the Father and
the Holy Ghost were present,
when the Son was here below —
doubtless in another way, for He
was the Son, and we only live by
Him — the Holy Ghost only
dwelling in us. But with respect
to those glorious Persons they
are not disunited. The Father
did the works in Christ, and
Jesus cast out devils by the
Holy Ghost; nevertheless, the
Son wrought. If the Holy Ghost
is in us, the Father and the Son
come and make their abode in us.
Only it will be observed here
that there is government. We
are, according to the new life,
sanctified unto obedience. It is
not here a question of the love
of God in sovereign grace to a
sinner, but of the Father's
dealings with His children.
Therefore it is in the path of
obedience that the
manifestations of the Father's
love and the love of Christ are
found. We love, but do not
caress, our naughty children. If
we grieve the Spirit, He will
not be in us the power of the
manifestation to our souls of
the Father and the Son in
communion, but will rather act
on our consciences in
conviction, though giving the
sense of grace. God may restore
us by His love, and by
testifying when we have
wandered; but communion is in
obedience. Finally, Jesus was to
be obeyed; but it was the
Father's word to Jesus, observe,
as He was here below. His words
were the words of the Father.
The Holy Ghost bears testimony
to that which Christ was, as
well as to His glory. It is the
manifestation of the perfect
life of man, of God in man, of
the Father in the Son — the
manifestation of the Father by
the Son who is in the bosom of
the Father. Such were the words
of the Son here below; and when
we speak of His commandments, it
is not only the manifestation of
His glory by the Holy Ghost,
when He is on high, and its
results; but His commandments
when He spoke here below, and
spoke the words of God; for He
had not the Holy Ghost by
measure, so that His words would
have been mingled, and partly
imperfect, or at least not
divine. He was truly man, and
ever man; but it was God
manifest in the flesh. The old
commandment from the beginning
is new, inasmuch as this same
life, which expressed itself in
His commandments, now moves in
and animates us — true in Him
and in us (compare 1 John 2).
The commandments are those of
the man Christ, yet they are the
commandments of God and the
words of the Father, according
to the life that has been
manifested in this world in the
Person of Christ. They express
in Him, and form and direct in
us, that eternal life which was
with the Father, and which has
been manifested to us in man —
in Him whom the apostles could
see, hear, and touch; and which
life we possess in Him.
Nevertheless the Holy Ghost has
been given us to lead us into
all truth, according to this
same chapter of John's Epistle —
"Ye have an unction from the
Holy One, and ye know all
things."
To direct life is different from
knowing all things. The two are
connected, because, in walking
according to that life, we do
not grieve the Holy Spirit, and
we are in the light. To direct
life, where it exists, is not
the same thing as to give a law
imposed on man in the flesh
(righteously, no doubt),
promising him life if he keep
these commandments. This is the
difference between the
commandments of Christ and the
law: not as to authority —
divine authority is always the
same in itself — but that the
law offers life, and is
addressed to man responsible in
flesh, offering him life as the
result; while the commandments
of Christ express and direct the
life of one who lives through
the Spirit, in connection with
his being in Christ, and Christ
in him. The Holy Ghost (who,
besides this, teaches all
things) brought to remembrance
the commandments of Christ — all
things that He had said to them.
It is the same thing in detail,
by His grace, with Christians
individually now.
Finally, the Lord, in the midst
of this world, left peace to His
disciples, giving them His own
peace. It is when going away,
and in the full revelation of
God, that He could say this to
them; so that He possessed it in
spite of the world. He had gone
through death and the drinking
of the cup, put away sin for
them, destroyed the power of the
enemy in death, made
propitiation by fully glorifying
God. Peace was made, and made
for them before God, and all
that they were brought into —
the light as He was, so that
this peace was perfect in the
light; and it was perfect in the
world, because it brought them
so into connection with God that
the world could not even touch
or reach their source of joy.
Moreover Jesus had so
accomplished this for them, and
He bestowed it on them in such a
way, that He gave them the peace
which He Himself had with the
Father, and in which,
consequently, He walked in this
world. The world gives a part of
its goods while not
relinquishing the mass; but what
it gives, it gives away and has
no longer. Christ introduces
into the enjoyment of that which
is His own — of His own position
before the Father.53 The world
does not and cannot give in this
manner. How perfect must that
peace have been which He enjoyed
with the Father — that peace He
gives to us — His own!
There remains yet one precious
thought — a proof of unspeakable
grace in Jesus. He so reckons
upon our affection, and this as
personal to Himself, that He
says to them, "If ye loved me ye
would rejoice, because I said, I
go unto the Father." He gives us
to be interested in His own
glory, in His happiness, and, in
it, to find our own.
Good and precious Saviour, we do
indeed rejoice that Thou, who
hast suffered so much for us,
hast now fulfilled all things,
and art at rest with Thy Father,
whatever may be Thine active
love for us. Oh that we knew and
loved Thee better! But still we
can say in fulness of heart,
Come quickly, Lord! Leave once
more the throne of Thy rest and
of Thy personal glory, to come
and take us to Thyself, that all
may be fulfilled for us also,
and that we may be with Thee and
in the light of Thy Father's
countenance and in His house.
Thy grace is infinite, but Thy
presence and the joy of the
Father shall be the rest of our
hearts, and our eternal joy.
Here the Lord closes this part
of His discourse.54 He had shown
them as a whole all that flowed
from His departure and from His
death. The glory of His Person,
observe, is always here the
subject; for, even with regard
to His death, it is said, "Now
is the Son of man glorified."
Nevertheless He had forewarned
them of it, that it might
strengthen and not weaken their
faith, for He would not talk
much more with them. The world
was under the power of the
enemy, and he was coming: not
because he had anything in
Christ — he had nothing —
therefore he had not even the
power of death over Him. His
death was not the effect of the
power of Satan over Him, but
thereby He showed the world that
He loved the Father; and He was
obedient to the Father, cost
what it would. And this was
absolute perfection in man. If
Satan was the prince of this
world, Jesus did not seek to
maintain His Messiah glory in
it. But He showed to the world,
there where Satan's power was,
the fulness of grace and of
perfection in His own Person; in
order that the world might come
from itself (if I may use such
an expression) — those at least,
who had ears to hear. The Lord
then ceases to speak, and goes
forth. He is no longer seated
with His own, as of this world.
He arises and quits it.
That which we have said of the
Lord's commandments, given
during His sojourn here below (a
thought to which the succeeding
chapters will give interesting
development) helps us much in
understanding the Lord's whole
discourse here to the end of
chapter 16. The subject is
divided into two principal
parts: The action of the Holy
Ghost when the Lord should be
away; and the relationship of
the disciples to Him during His
stay upon the earth. On the one
hand, that which flowed from His
exaltation to the right hand of
God (which raised Him above the
question of Jew and Gentile);
and, on the other, that which
depended on His presence upon
earth, as necessarily centering
all the promises in His own
Person, and the relations of His
own with Himself, viewed as in
connection with the earth and
themselves in it, even when He
should be absent. There were, in
consequence, two kinds of
testimony: that of the Holy
Ghost, strictly speaking (that
is, what He revealed in
reference to Jesus ascended on
high); and that of the disciples
themselves, as eye-witnesses to
all that they had seen of Jesus
on the earth (John 15:26-27).
Not that for this purpose they
were without the help of the
Holy Ghost; but the latter was
not the new testimony of the
heavenly glory by the Holy Ghost
sent down from heaven. He
brought to their remembrance
that which Jesus had been, and
that which He had spoken, while
on earth. Therefore, in the
passage we have been reading,
His work is thus described (John
14:26): "He shall teach you all
things, and bring all things to
your remembrance whatsoever I
have said unto you" (compare v.
25). The two works of the Holy
Ghost are here presented. Jesus
had spoken many things unto
them. The Holy Ghost would teach
them all things; moreover, He
would bring to their remembrance
all that Jesus had said. In John
16:12-13, Jesus tells them that
He had many things to say, but
that they could not bear them
then. Afterwards, the Spirit of
truth should lead them into all
truth. He should not speak from
Himself; but whatsoever He
should hear, that should He
speak. He was not like an
individual spirit, who speaks on
his own account. One with the
Father and the Son, and come
down to reveal the glory and the
counsels of God, all His
communications would be in
connection with them, revealing
the glory of Christ ascended on
high — of Christ, to whom
belonged all that the Father
had. Here it is no question of
recalling all that Jesus had
said upon earth: all is heavenly
in connection with that which is
on high, and with the full glory
of Jesus, or else relates to the
future purposes of God. We shall
return to this subject
by-and-by. I have said these few
words to mark the distinctions
which I have pointed out.
John 15. The beginning of this chapter,
and that which relates to the
vine, belongs to the earthly
portion — to that which Jesus
was on earth — to His
relationship with His disciples
as on the earth, and does not go
beyond that position.
"I am the true vine." Jehovah
had planted a vine brought out
of Egypt (Psalm 80:8). This is
Israel after the flesh; but it
was not the true Vine. The true
Vine was His Son, whom He
brought up out of Egypt —
Jesus.55 He presents Himself thus
to His disciples. Here it is not
that which He will be after His
departure; He was this upon
earth, and distinctively upon
earth. We do not speak of
planting vines in heaven, nor of
pruning branches there.
The disciples would have
considered Him as the most
excellent branch of the Vine;
but thus He would have been only
a member of Israel, whereas He
was Himself the vessel, the
source of blessing, according to
the promises of God. The true
Vine, therefore, is not Israel;
quite the contrary, it is Christ
in contrast with Israel, but
Christ planted on earth, taking
Israel's place, as the true
Vine. The Father cultivates this
plant, evidently on the earth.
There is no need of a husbandman
in heaven. Those who are
attached to Christ, as the
remnant of Israel, the
disciples, need this culture. It
is on the earth that
fruit-bearing is looked for. The
Lord therefore says to them, "Ye
are clean already, through the
word which I have spoken unto
you"; "Ye are the branches."
Judas, perhaps it may be said,
was taken away, so the disciples
who walked no more with Him. The
others should be proved and
cleansed, that they might bear
more fruit.
I do not doubt that this
relationship, in principle and
in a general analogy, still
subsists. Those who make a
profession, who attach
themselves to Christ in order to
follow Him, will, if there is
life, be cleansed; if not, that
which they have will be taken
away. Observe therefore here,
that the Lord speaks only of His
word — that of the true prophet
— and of judgment, whether in
discipline or in cutting off.
Consequently He speaks not of
the power of God, but of the
responsibility of man — a
responsibility which man will
certainly not be able to meet
without grace; but which has
nevertheless that character of
personal responsibility here.
Jesus was the source of all
their strength. They were to
abide in Him; thus — for this is
the order — He would abide in
them. We have seen this in
chapter 14. He does not speak
here of the sovereign exercise
of love in salvation, but of the
government of children by their
Father; so that blessing depends
on walk (v. 21, 23). Here the
husbandman seeks for fruit; but
the instruction given presents
entire dependence on the Vine as
the means of producing it. And
He shows the disciples that,
walking on earth, they should be
pruned by the Father, and a man
(for in verse 6 He carefully
changes the expression, for He
knew the disciples and had
pronounced them already clean) —
a man, any one who bore no
fruit, would be cut off. For the
subject here is not that
relationship with Christ in
heaven by the Holy Ghost, which
cannot be broken, but of that
link which even then was formed
here below, which might be vital
and eternal, or which might not.
Fruit should be the proof.
In the former vine this was not
necessary; they were Jews by
birth, they were circumcised,
they kept the ordinances, and
abode in the vine as good
branches, without bearing any
fruit at all. They were only cut
off from Israel for wilful
violation of the law. Here it is
not a relationship with Jehovah
founded on the circumstance of
being born of a certain family.
That which is looked for is the
glorifying the Father by
fruit-bearing. It is this which
will show that they are the
disciples of Him who has borne
so much.
Christ, then, was the true Vine;
the Father, the Husbandman; the
eleven were the branches. They
were to abide in Him, which is
realised by not thinking to
produce any fruit except as in
Him, looking to Him first.
Christ precedes fruit. It is
dependence, practical habitual
nearness of heart to Him, and
trust in Him, being attached to
Him through dependence on Him.
In this way Christ in them would
be a constant source of strength
and of fruit. He would be in
them. Out of Him they could do
nothing. If, by abiding in Him,
they had the strength of His
presence, they should bear much
fruit. Moreover, "if a man" (He
does not say "they"; He knew
them as true branches and clean)
did not abide in Him, he should
be cast forth to be burnt.
Again, if they abode in Him
(that is, if there was the
constant dependence that draws
from the source), and if the
words of Christ abode in them,
directing their hearts and
thoughts, they should command
the resources of divine power;
they should ask what they would,
and it should be done. But,
further, the Father had loved
the Son divinely while He dwelt
on earth. Jesus did the same
with regard to them. They were
to abide in His love. In the
former verses it was in Him,
here it is in His love.56 By
keeping His Father's
commandments, He had abode in
His love; by keeping the
commandments of Jesus, they
should abide in His. Dependence
(which implies confidence, and
reference to Him on whom we
depend for strength, as unable
to do anything without Him, and
so clinging close to Him) and
obedience, are the two great
principles of practical life
here below. Thus Jesus walked as
man: He knew by experience the
true path for His disciples. The
commandments of His Father were
the expression of what the
Father was; by keeping them in
the spirit of obedience, Jesus
had ever walked in the communion
of His love; had maintained
communion with Himself. The
commandments of Jesus when on
earth were the expression of
what He was, divinely perfect in
the path of man. By walking in
them, His disciples should be in
the communion of His love. The
Lord spoke these things to His
disciples, in order that His
joy57 should abide in them, and
that their joy should be full.
We see that it is not the
salvation of a sinner that is
the subject treated of here, but
the path of a disciple, in order
that he may fully enjoy the love
of Christ, and that his heart
may be unclouded in the place
where joy is found.
Neither is the question entered
on here, whether a real believer
can be separated from God,
because the Lord makes obedience
the means of abiding in His
love. Assuredly He could not
lose the favour of His Father,
or cease to be the object of His
love. That was out of the
question; and yet He says, "I
have kept my Father's
commandments, and abide in his
love." But this was the divine
path in which He enjoyed it. It
is the walk and the strength of
a disciple that is spoken of,
and not the means of salvation.
At verse 12 another part of the
subject begins. He wills (this
is His commandment) that they
should love one another, as He
had loved them. Before, He had
spoken of the Father's love for
Him, which flowed from heaven
into His heart here below.58 He
had loved them in this same way;
but He had also been a
companion, a servant, in this
love. Thus the disciples were to
love one another with a love
that rose above all the
weaknesses of others, and which
was at the same time brotherly,
and caused the one who felt it
to be the servant of his
brother. It went so far as to
lay down life itself for one's
friends. Now, to Jesus, he who
obeyed Him was His friend.
Observe, He does not say that He
would be their friend. He was
our friend when He gave His life
for sinners: we are His friends
when we enjoy His confidence, as
He here expresses it — "I have
told you all things that I have
heard of my Father." Men speak
of their affairs, according to
the necessity of doing so which
may arise, to those who are
concerned in them. I impart all
my own thoughts to one who is my
friend. "Shall I hide from
Abraham the thing that I will
do?" and Abraham was called the
"friend of God." Now it was not
things concerning Abraham
himself that God then told
Abraham (He had done so as God),
but things concerning the world
— Sodom. God does the same with
respect to the assembly,
practically with respect to the
obedient disciple: such a one
should be the depositary of His
thoughts. Moreover, He had
chosen them for this. It was not
they who had chosen Him by the
exercise of their own will. He
had chosen them and ordained
them to go and bring forth
fruit, and fruit that should
remain; so that, being thus
chosen of Christ for the work,
they should receive from the
Father, who could not fail them
in this case, whatsoever they
should ask. Here the Lord comes
to the source and certainty of
grace, in order that the
practical responsibility, under
which He puts them, should not
cloud the divine grace which
acted towards them and placed
them there.
They were therefore to love one
another.59 That the world should
hate them was but the natural
consequence of its hatred to
Christ; it sealed their
association with Him. The world
loves that which is of the
world: this is quite natural.
The disciples were not of it;
and, besides, the Jesus whom it
had rejected had chosen them and
separated them from the world:
therefore it would hate them
because so chosen in grace.
There was, besides, the moral
reason, namely, that they were
not of it; but this demonstrated
their relationship to Christ,
and His sovereign rights, by
which He had taken them to
Himself out of a rebellious
world. They should have the same
portion as their Master: it
should be for His name's sake,
because the world — and He
speaks especially of the Jews,
among whom He had laboured —
knew not the Father who had sent
Him in love. To make their boast
of Jehovah, as their God, suited
them very well. They would have
received the Messiah on that
footing. To know the Father,
revealed in His true character
by the Son, was quite a
different thing. Nevertheless
the Son had revealed Him, and,
both by His words and His works,
had manifested the Father and
His perfections.
If Christ had not come and
spoken unto them, God would not
have had to reproach them with
sin. They might still drag on,
even if in an unpurged state,
without any proof (though there
was plenty of sin and
transgression as men and as a
people under the law) that they
would not have God — would not
even by mercy return. The fruit
of a fallen nature was there, no
doubt, but not the proof that
that nature preferred sin to
God, when God was there in
mercy, not imputing it. Grace
was dealing with them, not
imputing sin to them. Mercy had
been treating them as fallen,
not as wilful creatures. God was
not taking the ground of law,
which imputes, or of judgment,
but of grace in the revelation
of the Father by the Son. The
words and works of the Son
revealing the Father in grace,
rejected, left them without hope
(compare John 16:9). Their real
condition would otherwise not
have been thoroughly tested, God
would have had still a means to
use; He loved Israel too much to
condemn them while there was one
left untried.
If the Lord had not done among
them the works which no other
man had done, they might have
remained as they were, refused
to believe in Him, and not have
been guilty before God. They
would have been still the object
of Jehovah's longsuffering; but
in fact they had seen and hated
both the Son and the Father. The
Father had been fully manifested
in the Son — in Jesus; and if,
when God was fully manifested,
and in grace, they rejected Him,
what could be done except to
leave them in sin, afar from
God? If He had been manifested
only in part, they would have
had an excuse; they might have
said, "Ah! if He had shown
grace, if we had known Him as He
is, we would not have rejected
Him." They could not now say
this. They had seen the Father
and the Son in Jesus. Alas! they
had seen and hated.60
The Lord now turns to the
subject of the Holy Ghost who
should come to maintain His
glory, which the people had cast
down to the ground. The Jews had
not known the Father manifested
in the Son; the Holy Ghost
should now come from the Father
to bear witness of the Son. The
Son should send Him from the
Father. In John 14 the Father
sends Him in Jesus' name for the
personal relationship of the
disciples with Jesus. Here
Jesus, gone on high, sends Him
the witness of His exalted
glory, His heavenly place. This
was the new testimony, and was
to be rendered unto Jesus, the
Son of God, ascended up to
heaven. The disciples also
should bear witness of Him,
because they had been with Him
from the beginning. They were to
testify with the help of the
Holy Ghost, as eyewitnesses of
His life on earth, of the
manifestation of the Father in
Him. The Holy Ghost, sent by
Him, was the witness to His
glory with the Father, whence He
Himself had come.
Thus in Christ, the true Vine,
we have the disciples, the
branches, clean already, Christ
being still present on the
earth. After His departure they
were to maintain this practical
relationship. They should be in
relationship with Him, as He,
here below, had been with the
Father. And they were to be with
one another as He had been with
them. Their position was outside
the world. Now the Jews had
hated both the Son and the
Father; the Holy Ghost should
bear witness to the Son as with
the Father, and in the Father;
and the disciples should testify
also of that which He had been
on earth. The Holy Ghost, and,
in a certain sense, the
disciples take the place of
Jesus, as well as of the old
vine, on the earth. The presence and testimony of
the Holy Spirit on earth
The presence and the testimony
of the Holy Ghost on earth are
now developed.
It is well to notice the
connection of the subjects in
the passages we are considering.
In John 14 we have the Person of
the Son revealing the Father,
and the Holy Ghost giving the
knowledge of the Son's being in
the Father and the disciples in
Jesus on high. This was the
personal condition both of
Christ and the disciples, and is
all linked together; only first
the Father, the Son being down
here, and then the Holy Ghost
sent by the Father. In John 15
and John 16 you get the distinct
dispensations — Christ the true
Vine on earth, and then the
Comforter come on earth sent
down by the exalted Christ. In
chapter 14 Christ prays the
Father, who sends the Spirit in
Christ's name. In chapter 15
Christ exalted sends the Spirit
from the Father, a witness of
His exaltation, as the
disciples, led by the Spirit,
were of His life of humiliation,
but as Son on earth.
Nevertheless there is
development as well as
connection. In John 14 the Lord,
although quitting the earth,
speaks in connection with that
which He was upon earth. It is
(not Christ Himself) the Father
who sends the Holy Ghost at His
request. He goes from earth to
heaven on their part as
Mediator. He would pray the
Father, and the Father would
give them another Comforter, who
should continue with them, not
leaving them as He was doing.
Their relationship to the Father
depending on Him, it would be as
believing in Him that He would
be sent to them — not to the
world — not upon Jews, as such.
It should be in His name.
Moreover the Holy Ghost would
Himself teach them, and He would
recall to their mind the
commandments of Jesus — all that
He had said unto them. For John
14 gives the whole position that
resulted from the manifestation61
of the Son, and that of the
Father in Him, and from His
departure (that is to say, its
results with regard to the
disciples).
Now, in John 15 He had exhausted
the subject of commandments in
connection with the life
manifested in Himself here
below; and at the close of this
chapter He considers Himself as
ascended, and He adds, "But when
the Comforter is come, whom I
will send unto you from the
Father." He comes, indeed, from
the Father; for our relationship
is, and ought to be, immediate
to Him. It is there that Christ
has placed us. But in this verse
it is not the Father who sends
Him at the request of Jesus, and
in His name. Christ has taken
His place in glory as Son of
man, and according to the
glorious fruits of His work, and
He sends Him. Consequently He
bears witness to that which
Christ is in heaven. No doubt He
makes us perceive what Jesus was
here below, where in infinite
grace He manifested the Father,
and perceive it much better than
they did, who were with Him
during His sojourn on earth. But
this is in John 14. Nevertheless
the Holy Ghost is sent by Christ
from heaven, and He reveals to
us the Son, whom now we know as
having perfectly and divinely
(albeit as man and amid sinful
men) manifested the Father. We
know, I repeat, the Son, as with
the Father, and in the Father.
From thence it is He has sent us
the Holy Ghost.
In John 16 a further step is
taken in the revelation of this
grace. The Holy Ghost is looked
upon as already here below. In
this chapter the Lord declares
that He has set forth all His
instruction with regard to His
departure; their sufferings in
the world as holding His place;
their joy, as being in the same
relationship to Him as that in
which He had been while on earth
to His Father; their knowledge
of the fact that He was in the
Father and they in Him, and He
Himself in them; the gift of the
Holy Ghost, in order to prepare
them for all that would happen
when He was gone, that they
might not be offended. For they
should be cast out of the
synagogues, and he who should
kill them would think that he
was serving God. This would be
the case with those who, resting
in their old doctrines as a
form, and rejecting the light,
would only use the form of truth
by which they accredited the
flesh as orthodox to resist the
light which, according to the
Spirit, would judge the flesh.
This would they do, because they
knew neither the Father nor
Jesus, the Son of the Father. It
is fresh truth which tests the
soul, and faith. Old truth,
generally received and by which
a body of people are
distinguished from those around
them, may be a subject of pride
to the flesh, even where it is
the truth, as was the case with
the Jews. But fresh truth is a
question of faith in its source:
there is not the support of a
body accredited by it, but the
cross of hostility and
isolation. They thought they
served God. They knew not the
Father and the Son.
Nature is occupied with that
which it loses. Faith looks at
the future into which God leads.
Precious thought! Nature acted
in the disciples: they loved
Jesus; they grieved at His going
away. We can understand this.
But faith would not have stopped
there. If they had apprehended
the necessary glory of the
Person of Jesus; if their
affection, animated by faith,
had thought of Him and not of
themselves, they would have
asked, "Whither goest thou?"
Nevertheless He who thought of
them assures them that it would
be gain to them even to lose
Him. Glorious fruit of the ways
of God! Their gain would be in
this, that the Comforter should
be here on earth with them and
in them. Here, observe, Jesus
does not speak of the Father. It
was the Comforter here below in
His stead, to maintain the
testimony of His love for the
disciples, and His relationship
to them. Christ was going away:
for if He went not away, the
Comforter would not come; but if
He departed, He would send Him.
When He was come, He would act
in demonstration of the truth
with regard to the world that
rejected Christ and persecuted
His disciples; and He would act
for blessing in the disciples
themselves.
With regard to the world, the
Comforter had one only subject
of testimony, in order to
demonstrate the sin of the
world. It has not believed in
Jesus — in the Son. Doubtless
there was sin of every kind,
and, to speak truth, nothing but
sin — sin that deserved
judgment; and in the work of
conversion, He brings these sins
home to the soul. But the
rejection of Christ put the
whole world under one common
judgment. No doubt every one
shall answer for his sins; and
the Holy Ghost makes me feel
them. But, as a system
responsible to God, the world
had rejected His Son. This was
the ground on which God dealt
with the world now; this it was
which made manifest the heart of
man. It was the demonstration
that, God being fully revealed
in love such as He was, man
would not receive Him. He came,
not imputing their trespasses
unto them; but they rejected
Him. The presence of Jesus was
not the Son of God Himself
manifested in His glory, from
which man might shrink with
fear, though he could not
escape; it was what He was
morally, in His nature, in His
character. Man hated Him: all
testimony to bring man to God
was unavailing. The plainer the
testimony, the more he turned
from it and opposed it. The
demonstration of the sin of the
world was its having rejected
Christ. Terrible testimony, that
God in goodness should excite
detestation because He was
perfect, and perfectly good!
Such is man. The testimony of
the Holy Ghost to the world, as
God's to Cain of old, would be,
Where is my Son? It was not that
man was guilty; that he was when
Christ came; but he was lost,
the tree was bad.62
But this was God's path to
something altogether different —
the demonstration of
righteousness, in that Christ
went to His Father, and the
world saw Him no more. It was
the result of Christ's
rejection. Human righteousness
there was none. Man's sin was
proved by the rejection of
Christ. The cross was indeed
judgment executed upon sin. And
in that sense it was
righteousness; but in this world
it was the only righteous One
condemned by man and forsaken by
God; it was not the
manifestation of righteousness.
It was a final judicial
separation between man and God
(see John 11 and John 12:31). If
Christ had been delivered there,
and had become the King of
Israel, this would not have been
an adequate consequence of His
having glorified God. Having
glorified God His Father, He was
going to sit at His right hand,
at the right hand of the Majesty
on high, to be glorified in God
Himself, to sit on the Father's
throne. To set Him there was
divine righteousness (see John
13:31-32, and John 17:1-5). This
same righteousness deprived the
world, as it is, of Jesus for
ever. Man saw Him no more.
Righteousness in favour of men
was in Christ at God's right
hand — in judgment as to the
world, in that it had lost Him
hopelessly and for ever.
Moreover Satan had been proved
to be the prince of this world
by leading all men against the
Lord Jesus. To accomplish the
purposes of God in grace, Jesus
does not resist. He gives
Himself up to death. He who has
the power of death committed
himself thoroughly. In his
desire to ruin man he had to
hazard everything in his
enterprise against the Prince of
Life. He was able to associate
the whole world with himself in
this, Jew and Gentile, priest
and people, governor, soldier,
and subject. The world was
there, headed by its prince, on
that solemn day. The enemy had
everything at stake, and the
world was with him. But Christ
has risen, He has ascended to
His Father, and has sent down
the Holy Ghost. All the motives
that govern the world, and the
power by which Satan held men
captive, are shown to be of him;
he is judged. The power of the
Holy Ghost is the testimony of
this, and surmounts all the
powers of the enemy. The world
is not yet judged, that is, the
judgment executed — it will be
in another manner; but it is
morally, its prince is judged.
All its motives, religious and
irreligious, have led it to
reject Christ, placing it under
Satan's power. It is in that
character that he has been
judged; for he led the world
against Him who is manifested to
be the Son of God by the
presence of the Holy Ghost
consequent on His breaking the
power of Satan in death.
All this took place through the
presence on earth of the Holy
Ghost, sent down by Christ. His
presence in itself was the
demonstration of these three
things. For, if the Holy Ghost
was here, it was because the
world had rejected the Son of
God. Righteousness was evidenced
by Jesus being at the right hand
of God, of which the presence of
the Holy Ghost was the proof, as
well as in the fact that the
world had lost Him. Now the
world which rejected Him was not
outwardly judged, but, Satan
having led it to reject the Son,
the presence of the Holy Ghost
proved that Jesus had destroyed
the power of death; that he who
had possessed that power was
thus judged; that he had shown
himself to be the enemy of Him
whom the Father owned; that his
power was gone, and victory
belonged to the Second Adam,
when Satan's whole power had
been arrayed against the human
weakness of Him who in love had
yielded to it. But Satan, thus
judged, was the prince of this
world.
The presence of the Holy Ghost
should be the demonstration not
of Christ's rights as Messiah,
true as they were, but of those
truths that related to man — to
the world, in which Israel was
now lost, having rejected the
promises, although God would
preserve the nation for Himself.
But the Holy Ghost was doing
something more than
demonstrating the condition of
the world. He would accomplish a
work in the disciples; He would
lead them into all truth, and He
would show them things to come;
for Jesus had many things to
tell them which they were not
yet able to bear. When the Holy
Ghost should be in them, He
should be their strength in them
as well as their teacher; and it
would be a wholly different
state of things for the
disciples. Here He is considered
as present on the earth in place
of Jesus, and dwelling in the
disciples, not as an individual
spirit speaking from Himself,
but even as Jesus said, "As I
hear I judge," with a judgment
perfectly divine and heavenly:
so the Holy Ghost, acting in the
disciples, would speak that
which came from above, and of
the future, according to divine
knowledge. It should be heaven
and the future of which He would
speak, communicating what was
heavenly from above, and
revealing events to come upon
the earth, the one and the other
being witnesses that it was a
knowledge which belonged to God.
How blessed to have that which
He has to give!
But, further, He takes here the
place of Christ. Jesus had
glorified the Father on earth.
The Holy Ghost would glorify
Jesus, with reference to the
glory that belonged to His
Person and to His position. He
does not here speak directly of
the glory of the Father. The
disciples had seen the glory of
the life of Christ on earth; the
Holy Ghost would unfold to them
His glory in that which belonged
to Him as glorified with the
Father — that which was His own.
They would learn "in part." This
is man's measure when the things
of God are in question, but its
extent is declared by the Lord
Himself: "He shall glorify me,
for he shall receive of mine,
and shall show it to you. All
that the Father has is mine:
therefore, said I, He shall take
of mine, and shall show it to
you."
Thus we have the gift of the
Holy Ghost variously presented
in connection with Christ. In
dependence on His Father, and
representing His disciples as
gone up from among them, on
their behalf, He addresses
Himself to the Father; He asks
the Father to send the Holy
Ghost (John 14:16). Afterwards
we find that His own name is all
powerful. All blessing from the
Father comes in His name. It is
on His account, and according to
the efficacy of His name, of all
that in Him is acceptable to the
Father, that good comes to us.
Thus the Father will send the
Holy Ghost in His name (John
14:26). And Christ being
glorified on high, and having
taken His place with His Father,
He Himself sends the Holy Ghost
(John 15:26) from the Father, as
proceeding from Him. Finally,
the Holy Ghost is present here
in this world, in and with the
disciples, and He glorifies
Jesus, and takes of His and
reveals it to His own (John
16:13-15). Here all the glory of
the Person of Christ is set
forth, as well as the rights
belonging to the position He has
taken. "All things that the
Father has" are His. He has
taken His position according to
the eternal counsels of God, in
virtue of His work as Son of
man. But if He has entered into
possession in this character,
all that He possesses in it is
His, as a Son to whom (being one
with the Father) all that the
Father has belongs.
There He should be hidden for a
while: the disciples should
afterwards see Him, for it was
only the accomplishment of the
ways of God; it was no question
of being, as it were, lost by
death. He was going to His
Father. On this point the
disciples understood nothing.
The Lord develops the fact and
its consequences, without yet
showing them the whole import of
what He said. He takes it up on
the human and historical side.
The world would rejoice at
having got rid of Him. Miserable
joy! The disciples would lament,
although it was the true source
of joy for them; but their
sorrow should be turned into
joy. As testimony, this took
place when He showed Himself to
them after His resurrection; it
will be fully accomplished when
He shall return to receive them
unto Himself. But when they had
seen Him again, they should
understand the relationship in
which He has placed them with
His Father, they should enjoy it
by the Holy Ghost. It should not
be as though they could not
themselves draw nigh to the
Father, while Christ could do so
(as Martha said, "I know that
whatsoever thou wilt ask of God,
he will give it thee"). They
might themselves go directly to
the Father, who loved them,
because they had believed in
Jesus, and had received Him when
He had humbled Himself in this
world of sin (in principle it is
always thus); and asking what
they would in His name they
should receive it, so that their
joy might be full in the
consciousness of the blessed
position of unfailing favour
into which they were brought,
and of the value of all that
they possessed in Christ.
Nevertheless the Lord already
declares to them the basis of
the truth — He came from the
Father, He was going away to the
Father. The disciples think they
understand that which He had
thus spoken without a parable.
They felt that He had divined
their thought, for they had not
expressed it to Him. Yet they
did not rise really to the
height of what He said. He had
told them that they had believed
in His having come "from God."
This they understood; and that
which had taken place had
confirmed them in this faith,
and they declare their
conviction with regard to this
truth; but they do not enter
into the thought of coming "from
the Father," and going away "to
the Father." They fancied
themselves quite in the light;
but they had apprehended nothing
that raised them above the
effect of Christ's rejection,
which the belief that He came
from the Father and was going to
the Father would have done.
Jesus therefore declares to
them, that His death would
scatter them, and that they
would forsake Him. His Father
would be with Him; He should not
be alone. Nevertheless He had
explained all these things to
them, in order that they should
have peace in Him. In the world
that rejected Him they should
have tribulation; but He had
overcome the world, they might
be of good cheer.
This ends the conversation of
Jesus with His disciples on
earth. In the following chapter
He addresses His Father as
taking His own place in
departing, and giving His
disciples theirs (that is, His
own), with regard to the Father
and to the world, after He had
gone away to be glorified with
the Father. The whole chapter is
essentially putting the
disciples in His own place,
after laying the ground for it
in His own glorifying and work.
It is, save the last verses, His
place on earth. As He was
divinely in heaven, and so
showed a divine heavenly
character on earth, so (He being
glorified as man in heaven)
they, united with Him, were in
turn to display the same. Hence
we have first the place He
personally takes, and the work
which entitles them to be in it.
John 17 is divided thus: Verses
1-5 relate to Christ Himself, to
His taking His position in
glory, to His work, and to that
glory as belonging to His
Person, and the result of His
work. Verses 1-3 present His new
position in two aspects:
"glorify thy Son" — power over
all flesh, for eternal life to
those given to Him; verses 4-5,
His work and its results. In
verses 6-13 He speaks of His
disciples as put into this
relationship with the Father by
His revealing His name to them,
and then His having given them
the words which He had Himself
received, that they might enjoy
all the full blessedness of this
relationship. He also prays for
them that they may be one as He
and the Father were. In verses
14-21 we find their consequent
relationship to the world; in
verses 20-21, He introduces
those who should believe through
their means into the enjoyment
of their blessing. Verses 22-26
make known the result, both
future, and in this world, for
them: the possession of the
glory which Christ Himself had
received from the Father — to be
with Him, enjoying the sight of
His glory — that the Father's
love should be with them here
below, even as Christ Himself
had been its object — and that
Christ Himself should be in
them. The last three verses
alone take the disciples up to
heaven as a supplemental truth.
This is a brief summary of this
marvellous chapter, in which we
are admitted, not to the
discourse of Christ with man,
but to hear the desires of His
heart, when He pours it out to
His Father for the blessing of
those that are His own.
Wonderful grace that permits us
to hear these desires, and to
understand all the privileges
that flow from His thus caring
for us, from our being the
subject of intercourse between
the Father and the Son, of their
common love towards us, when
Christ expresses His own desires
— that which He has at heart,
and which He presents to the
Father as His own personal
wishes! Some explanations may
assist in apprehending the
meaning of certain passages in
this marvellous and precious
chapter. May the Spirit of God
aid us!
The Lord, whose looks of love
had until then been directed
towards His disciples on the
earth, now lifts His eyes to
heaven as He addresses His
Father. The hour was come to
glorify the Son, in order that
from the glory He might glorify
the Father. This is, speaking
generally, the new position. His
career here was finished, and He
had to ascend on high. Two
things were connected with this
— power over all flesh, and the
gift of eternal life to as many
as the Father had given Him.
"The head of every man is
Christ." Those whom the Father
had given Him receive eternal
life from Him who has gone up on
high. Eternal life was the
knowledge of the Father, the
only true God, and of Jesus
Christ, whom He had sent. The
knowledge of the Almighty gave
assurance to the pilgrim of
faith; that of Jehovah, the
certainty of the fulfilment of
the promises of God to Israel;
that of the Father, who sent the
Son, Jesus Christ (the Anointed
Man and the Saviour), who was
that life itself, and so
received as a present thing (1
John 1:1-4), was life eternal.
True knowledge here was not
outward protection or future
hope, but the communication, in
life, of communion with the
Being thus known to the soul —
of communion with God Himself
fully known as the Father and
the Son. Here it is not the
divinity of His Person that is
before us in Christ, though a
divine Person alone could be in
such a place and so speak, but
the place that He had taken in
fulfilling the counsels of God.
That which is said of Jesus in
this chapter could only be said
of One who is God; but the point
treated is that of His place in
the counsels of God, and not the
revelation of His nature. He
receives all from His Father —
He is sent by Him, His Father
glorifies Him.63 We see the same
truth of the communication of
eternal life in connection with
His divine nature and His
oneness with the Father in 1
John 5:20. Here He fulfils the
Father's will, and is dependent
on Him in the place that He has
taken, and that He is going to
take, even in the glory, however
glorious His nature may be. So,
also, in John 5, He quickens
whom He will; here it is those
whom the Father has given Him.
And the life He gives is
realised in the knowledge of the
Father, and of Jesus Christ whom
He has sent.
He now declares the conditions
under which He takes this place
on high. He had perfectly
glorified the Father on earth.
Nothing that manifested God the
Father had been wanting,
whatever might be the
difficulty; the contradiction of
sinners was but an occasion of
so doing. But this very thing
made the sorrow infinite.
Nevertheless Jesus had
accomplished that glory on the
earth in the face of all that
opposed itself. His glory with
the Father in heaven was but the
just consequence — the necessary
consequence, in mere justice.
Moreover Jesus had had this
glory with His Father before the
world was. His work and His
Person alike gave Him a right to
it. The Father glorified on
earth by the Son: the Son
glorified with the Father on
high: such is the revelation
contained in these verses — a
right, proceeding from His
Person as Son, but to a glory
into which He entered as man, in
consequence of having, as such,
perfectly glorified His Father
on earth. These are the verses
that relate to Christ. This,
moreover, gives the relationship
in which He enters into this new
place as man, His Son, and the
work by which He does so in
righteousness, and thus gives us
a title, and the character in
which we have a place there.
He now speaks of the disciples;
how they entered into their
peculiar place in connection
with this position of Jesus —
into this relationship with His
Father. He had manifested the
Father's name to those whom the
Father had given Him out of the
world. They belonged to the
Father, and the Father had given
them to Jesus. They had kept the
Father's word. It was faith in
the revelation which the Son had
made of the Father. The words of
the prophets were true. The
faithful enjoyed them: they
sustained their faith. But the
word of the Father, by Jesus,
revealed the Father Himself, in
Him whom the Father had sent,
and put him who received them
into the place of love, which
was Christ's place; and to know
the Father and the Son was life
eternal. This was quite another
thing from hopes connected with
the Messiah or what Jehovah had
given Him. It is thus, also,
that the disciples are presented
to the Father; not as receiving
Christ in the character of
Messiah, and honouring Him as
possessing His power by that
title. They had known that all
which Jesus had was of the
Father. He was then the Son; His
relationship to the Father was
acknowledged. Dull of
comprehension as they were, the
Lord recognises them according
to His appreciation of their
faith, according to the object
of that faith, as known to
Himself, and not according to
their intelligence. Precious
truth! (compare John 14:7).
They acknowledged Jesus, then,
as receiving all from the
Father, not as Messiah from
Jehovah; for Jesus had given
them all the words that the
Father had given Him. Thus He
had brought them in their own
souls into the consciousness of
the relationship between the Son
and the Father, and into full
communion, according to the
communications of the Father to
the Son in that relationship. He
speaks of their position through
faith — not of their realisation
of this position. Thus they had
acknowledged that Jesus came
forth from the Father, and that
He came with the Father's
authority — the Father had sent
Him. It was from thence He came,
and He came furnished with the
authority of a mission from the
Father. This was their position
by faith.
And now — the disciples being
already in this position — He
places them, according to His
thoughts and His desires, before
the Father in prayer. He prays
for them, distinguishing them
completely from the world. The
time would come when (according
to Psalm 2) He would ask of the
Father with reference to the
world; He was not doing so now,
but for those out of the world,
whom the Father had given Him.
For they were the Father's. For
all that is the Father's is in
essential opposition to the
world (compare 1 John 2: 16).
The Lord presents to the Father
two motives for His request:
1st, They were the Father's, so
that the Father, for His own
glory, and because of His
affection for that which
belonged to Him, should keep
them; 2nd, Jesus was glorified
in them, so that if Jesus was
the object of the Father's
affection, for that reason also
the Father should keep them.
Besides, the interests of the
Father and the Son could not be
separated. If they were the
Father's they were, in fact, the
Son's; and it was but an example
of that universal truth — all
that was the Son's was the
Father's, and all that was the
Father's was the Son's. What a
place for us! to be the object
of this mutual affection, of
these common and inseparable
interests of the Father and the
Son. This is the great principle
— the great foundation of the
prayer of Christ. He prayed the
Father for His disciples,
because they belonged to the
Father; Jesus must needs,
therefore, seek their blessing.
The Father would be thoroughly
interested for them, because in
them the Son was to be
glorified.
He then presents the
circumstances to which the
prayer applied. He was no longer
in this world Himself. They
would be deprived of His
personal care as present with
them, but they would be in this
world, while He was coming to
the Father. This is the ground
of His request with regard to
their position. He puts them in
connection, therefore, with the
Holy Father — all the perfect
love of such a Father — the
Father of Jesus and their
Father, maintaining (it was
their blessing) the holiness
that His nature required, if
they were to be in relationship
with Him. It was direct
guardianship. The Father would
keep in His own name those whom
He had given to Jesus. The
connection thus was direct.
Jesus committed them to Him, and
that, not only as belonging to
the Father, but now as His own,
invested with all the value
which that would give them in
the Father's eyes.
The object of His solicitude was
to keep them in unity, even as
the Father and the Son are one.
One only divine Spirit was the
bond of that oneness. In this
sense the bond was truly divine.
So far as they were filled with
the Holy Spirit, they had but
one mind, one counsel, one aim.
This is the unity referred to
here. The Father and the Son
were their only object ; the
accomplishing their counsels and
objects their only pursuit. They
had only the thoughts of God;
because God Himself, the Holy
Ghost, was the source of their
thoughts. It was one only divine
power and nature that united
them — the Holy Ghost. The mind,
the aim, the life, the whole
moral existence, were
consequently one. The Lord
speaks, necessarily, at the
height of His own thoughts, when
He expresses His desires for
them. If it is a question of
realisation, we must then think
of man; yet of a strength also
that is perfected in weakness.
This is the sum of the Lord's
desires — sons, saints, under
the Father's care; one, not by
an effort or by agreement, but
according to divine power. He
being here, had kept them in the
Father's name, faithful to
accomplish all that the Father
had committed to Him, and to
lose none of those that were
His. As to Judas, it was only
the fulfilment of the word. The
guardianship of Jesus present in
the world could now no longer
exist. But He spoke these
things, being still here, the
disciples hearing them, in order
that they might understand that
they were placed before the
Father in the same position that
Christ had held, and that they
might thus have fulfilled in
themselves, in this same
relationship, the joy which
Christ had possessed. What
unutterable grace! They had lost
Him, visibly, to find themselves
(by Him and in Him) in His own
relationship with the Father,
enjoying all that He enjoyed in
that communion here below, as
being in His place in their own
relationship with the Father.
Therefore He had imparted to
them all the words that the
Father had given Him — the
communications of His love to
Himself, when walking as Son in
that place here below; and, in
the especial name of "Holy
Father," by which the Son
Himself addressed Him from the
earth, the Father was to keep
those whom the Son had left
there. Thus should they have His
joy fulfilled in themselves.
This was their relationship to
the Father, Jesus being away.
He turns now to their
relationship with the world, in
consequence of the former.
He gave them the word of His
Father — not the words to bring
them into communion with Him,
but His word — the testimony of
what He was. And the world had
hated them as it had hated Jesus
(the living and personal
testimony of the Father) and the
Father Himself. Being thus in
relationship with the Father,
who had taken them out from the
men of the world, and having
received the Father's word (and
eternal life in the Son in that
knowledge), they were not of the
world even as Jesus was not of
the world: and therefor the
world hated them. Nevertheless
the Lord does not pray that they
might be taken out of it; but
that the Father should keep them
from the evil. He enters into
the detail of His desires in
this respect, grounded on their
not being of the world. He
repeats this thought as the
basis of their position here
below. "They are not of the
world, even as I am not of the
world." What then were they to
be? By what rule, by what model,
were they to be formed? By the
truth, and the Father's word is
truth. Christ was always the
Word, but the living Word among
men. In the scriptures we
possess it, written and
stedfast: they reveal Him, bear
witness to Him. It was thus that
the disciples were to be set
apart. "Sanctify them by thy
truth: thy word is the truth."
It was this, personally, that
they were to be formed by, the
Father's word, as He was
revealed in Jesus.
Their mission follows. Jesus
sends them into the world, as
the Father had sent Him into the
world; into the world — in no
wise of the world. They are sent
into it on the part of Christ:
were they of it, they could not
be sent into it. But it was not
only the Father's word which was
the truth, nor the communication
of the Father's word by Christ
present with His disciples
(points of which from verse 14
till now Jesus had been
speaking, "I have given them thy
word"): He sanctified Himself.
He set Himself apart as a
heavenly man above the heavens,
a glorified man in the glory, in
order that all truth might shine
forth in Him, in His Person,
raised up from the dead by the
glory of the Father — all that
the Father is being thus
displayed in Him; the testimony
of divine righteousness, of
divine love, of divine power,
totally overturning the lie of
Satan, by which man had been
deceived and falsity brought
into the world; the perfect
model of that which man was
according to the counsels of
God, and as the expression of
His power morally and in glory —
the image of the invisible God,
the Son, and in glory. Jesus set
Himself apart, in this place, in
order that the disciples might
be sanctified by the
communication to them of what He
was; for this communication was
the truth, and created them in
the image of that which it
revealed. So that it was the
Father's glory, revealed by Him
on earth, and the glory into
which He had ascended as man;
for this is the complete result
— the illustration in glory of
the way in which He had set
Himself apart for God, but on
behalf of His own. Thus there is
not only the forming and
governing of the thoughts by the
word, setting us apart morally
to God, but the blessed
affections flowing from our
having this truth in the Person
of Christ, our hearts connected
with Him in grace. This ends the
second part of that which
related to the disciples, in
communion and in testimony.
In verse 20, He declares that He
prays also for those who should
believe on Him through their
means. Here the character of the
unity differs a little from that
in verse 11. There, in speaking
of the disciples, He says, "as
we are"; for the oneness of the
Father and the Son showed itself
in fixed purpose, object, love,
work, everything. Therefore the
disciples were to have that kind
of unity. Here those who
believed, inasmuch as receiving
and taking part in that which
was communicated, had their
oneness in the power of the
blessing into which they were
brought. By one Spirit, in which
they were necessarily united,
they had a place in communion
with the Father and the Son. It
was the communion of the Father
and of the Son (compare 1 John
1:3; and how similar the
language of the apostle is to
that of Christ!). Thus, the Lord
asks that they may be one in
them — the Father and the Son.
This was the means to make the
world believe that the Father
had sent the Son; for here were
those that had believed it, who,
however opposed their interests
and habits might be, however
strong their prejudices, yet
were one (by this powerful
revelation and by this work) in
the Father and the Son.
Here His prayer ends, but not
all His converse with His
Father. He gives us (and here
the witnesses and the believers
are together) the glory which
the Father has given Him. It is
the basis of another, a third,64
mode of oneness. All partake, it
is true, in glory, of this
absolute oneness in thought,
object, fixed purpose, which is
found in the oneness of the
Father and the Son. Perfection
being come, that which the Holy
Ghost had produced spiritually,
His absorbing energy shutting
out every other, was natural to
all in glory.
But the principle of the
existence of this unity, added
yet another character to that
truth — that of manifestation,
or at least of an inward source
which realised its manifestation
in them: "I in them," said
Jesus, "and thou in me." This is
not the simple, perfect oneness
of verse 11, nor the mutuality
and communion of verse 21. It is
Christ in all believers, and the
Father in Christ, a unity in
manifestation in glory, not
merely in communion — a oneness
in which all is perfectly
connected with its source. And
Christ, whom alone they were to
manifest, is in them; and the
Father, whom Christ had
perfectly manifested, is in Him.
The world (for this will be in
the millennial glory, and
manifested to the world) will
then know (He does not say,
"that it may believe") that
Jesus had been sent by the
Father (how deny it, when He
should be seen in glory?) and,
moreover, that the disciples had
been loved by the Father, even
as Jesus Himself was loved. The
fact of their possessing the
same glory as Christ would be
the proof.
But there was yet more. There is
that which the world will not
see, because it will not be in
it. "Father, I will that they
whom thou hast given me be with
me where I am." There we are not
only like Christ (conformed to
the Son, bearing the image of
the heavenly man before the eyes
of the world), but with Him
where He is. Jesus desires that
we should see His glory.65 Solace
and encouragement for us, after
having partaken of His shame:
but yet more precious, inasmuch
as we see that He who has been
dishonoured as man, and because
He became man for our sake,
shall, even on that account, be
glorified with a glory above all
other glory, save His who has
put all things under Him. For He
speaks here of given glory. It
is this which is so precious to
us, because He has acquired it
by His sufferings for us, and
yet it is what was perfectly due
to Him — the just reward for
having, in them, perfectly
glorified the Father. Now, this
is a peculiar joy, entirely
beyond the world. The world will
see the glory that we have in
common with Christ, and will
know that we have been loved as
Christ was loved. But there is a
secret for those who love Him,
which belongs to His Person and
to our association with Himself.
The Father loved Him before the
world was — a love in which
there is no question of
comparison but of that which is
infinite, perfect, and thus in
itself satisfying. We shall
share this in the sense of
seeing our Beloved in it, and of
being with Him, and of beholding
the glory which the Father has
given Him, according to the love
wherewith He loved Him before
the world had any part whatever
in the dealings of God. Up to
this we were in the world; here
in heaven, out of all the
world's claims or apprehension
(Christ seen in the fruit of
that love which the Father had
for Him before the world
existed). Christ, then, was the
Father's delight. We see Him in
the eternal fruit of that love
as Man. We shall be in it with
Him for ever, to enjoy His being
in it — that our Jesus, our
Beloved, is in it, and is what
He is.
Meantime, being such, there was
justice in the dealings of God
with regard to His rejection. He
had fully, perfectly, manifested
the Father. The world had not
known Him, but Jesus had known
Him, and the disciples had known
that the Father had sent Him. He
appeals here, not to the
holiness of the Father, that He
might keep them according to
that blessed name, but to the
righteousness of the Father,
that He might make a distinction
between the world on one side,
and Jesus with His own on the
other; for there was the moral
reason as well as the ineffable
love of the Father for the Son.
And Jesus would have us enjoy,
while here below, the
consciousness that the
distinction has been made by the
communications of grace, before
it is made by judgment.
He had declared to them the
Father's name, and would declare
it, even when He had gone up on
high, in order that the love
wherewith the Father had loved
Him might be in them (that their
hearts might possess it in this
world — what grace!) and Jesus
Himself in them, the
communicator of that love, the
source of strength to enjoy it,
conducting it, so to speak, in
all the perfection in which He
enjoyed it, into their hearts,
in which He dwelt — Himself the
strength, the life, the
competency, the right, and the
means of enjoying it thus, and
as such, in the heart. For it is
in the Son who declares it to
us, that we know the name of the
Father whom He reveals to us.
That is, He would have us enjoy
now that relationship in love in
which we shall see Him in
heaven. The world will know we
have been loved as Jesus when we
appear in the same glory with
Him; but our part is to know it
now, Christ being in us.
John 18. The history of our Lord's last
moments begins after the words
that He addressed to His Father.
We shall find even in this part
of it, the general character of
that which is related in this
Gospel (according to all that we
have seen in it), that the
events bring out the personal
glory of the Lord. We have,
indeed, the malice of man
strongly characterised; but the
principal object in the picture
is the Son of God, not the Son
of man suffering under the
weight of that which is come
upon Him. We have not the agony
in the garden. We have not the
expression of His feeling
Himself forsaken by God. The
Jews too are put in the place of
utter rejection.
The iniquity of Judas is as
strongly marked here as in John
13. He well knew the place; for
Jesus was in the habit of
resorting thither with His
disciples. What a thought — to
choose such a place for His
betrayal! What inconceivable
hardness of heart! But alas! he
had, as it were, given himself
up to Satan, the tool of the
enemy, the manifestation of his
power and of his true character.
How many things had taken place
in that garden! What
communications from a heart
filled with God's own love, and
seeking to make it penetrate
into the narrow and too
insensible hearts of His beloved
disciples! But all was lost upon
Judas. He comes, with the agents
employed by the malice of the
priests and Pharisees, to seize
the Person of Jesus. But Jesus
anticipates them. It is He who
presents Himself to them.
Knowing all things that should
come upon Him, He goes forth,
inquiring, "Whom seek ye?" It is
the Saviour, the Son of God, who
offers Himself. They reply,
"Jesus of Nazareth." Jesus says
unto them, "I am he." Judas,
also, was there, who knew Him
well, and knew that voice, so
long familiar to his ears. No
one laid hands on Him: but as
soon as His word echoes in their
hearts, as soon as that divine
"I am" is heard within them,
they go backward, and fall to
the ground. Who will take Him?
He had but to go away and leave
them there. But He came not for
this; and the time to offer
Himself up was come. He asks
them again, therefore, "Whom
seek ye?" They say, as before,
"Jesus of Nazareth." The first
time, the divine glory of the
Person of Christ must needs
display itself; and now His care
for the redeemed ones. "If ye
seek me," said the Lord, "let
these go their way" — that the
word might be fulfilled, "Of
those whom thou hast given me, I
have lost none." He presents
Himself as the good Shepherd,
giving His life for the sheep.
He puts Himself before them,
that they may escape the danger
that threatens them, and that
all may come upon Himself. He
yields Himself up. All is His
own free offering here.
Nevertheless, whatever might be
the divine glory that He
manifested, and the grace of a
Saviour who was faithful to His
own, He acts in obedience, and
in the perfect calmness of an
obedience that had counted the
whole cost with God, and that
received it all from His
Father's hand. When the carnal
and unintelligent energy of
Peter employs force to defend
Him, who, if He would, had only
needed to have gone away when a
word from His lips had cast down
to the ground all those who came
to take Him, and the word that
revealed to them the object of
their search deprived them of
all power to seize it. When
Peter smites the servant
Malchus, Jesus takes the place
of obedience. "The cup that my
Father has given me, shall I not
drink it?" The divine Person of
Christ had been manifested; the
voluntary offering of Himself
had been made, and that, in
order to protect His own; and
now His perfect obedience is at
the same time displayed.
The malice of a hardened heart,
and the want of intelligence of
a carnal though sincere heart,
have been brought to view. Jesus
has His place alone and apart.
He is the Saviour. Submitting
thus to man, in order to
accomplish the counsels and the
will of God, He allows them to
take Him whither they would.
Little of all that took place is
related here. Jesus, although
questioned, says scarcely
anything of Himself. There is,
before both the high priest and
Pontius Pilate, the calm though
meek superiority of One who was
giving Himself: yet He is
condemned only for the testimony
He gave of Himself. Every one
had already heard that which He
taught. He challenges the
authority which pursues the
inquiry, not officially, but
peacefully and morally; and when
unjustly struck, He remonstrates
with dignity and perfect
calmness, while submitting to
the insult. But He does not
acknowledge the high priest in
any way; while at the same time
He does not at all oppose him.
He leaves him in his moral
incapacity. The carnal weakness
of Peter is manifested; as
before his carnal energy.
When brought before Pilate
(although because of truth,
confessing that He was king),
the Lord acts with the same
calmness and the same
submission; but He questions
Pilate and instructs him in such
a manner that Pilate can find no
fault in Him. Morally incapable,
however, of standing at the
height of that which was before
him, and embarrassed in presence
of the divine prisoner, Pilate
would have delivered Him by
availing himself of a custom,
then practised by the
government, of releasing a
culprit to the Jews at the
passover. But the uneasy
indifference of a conscience
which, hardened as it was, bowed
before the presence of One who
(even while thus humbled) could
not but reach it, did not thus
escape the active malice of
those who were doing the enemy's
work. The Jews exclaim against
the proposal which the
governor's disquietude
suggested, and chose a robber
instead of Jesus.
Pilate gives way to his usual
inhumanity. In the account,
however, given in this Gospel,
the Jews are prominent, as the
real authors (as far as man was
concerned) of the Lord's death.
Jealous for their ceremonial
purity, but indifferent to
justice, they are not content to
judge Him according to their own
law;66 they choose to have Him
put to death by the Romans, for
the whole counsel of God must
needs be accomplished.
It is on the repeated demands of
the Jews that Pilate delivers
Jesus into their hands —
thoroughly guilty in so doing,
for he had openly avowed His
innocence, and had had his
conscience decidedly touched and
alarmed by the evident proofs
there were that he had some
extraordinary person before him.
He will not show that he is
touched, but he is so (John
19:8). The divine glory that
pierced through the humiliation
of Christ acts upon him, and
gives force to the declaration
of the Jews that Jesus had made
Himself the Son of God. Pilate
had scourged Him and given Him
up to the insults of the
soldiers; and here he would have
stopped. Perhaps he hoped also
that the Jews would be satisfied
with this, and he presents Jesus
to them crowned with thorns.
Perhaps he hoped that their
jealousy with regard to these
national insults would induce
them to ask for His deliverance.
But, ruthlessly pursuing their
malicious purpose, they cry out,
"Crucify him, crucify him!"
Pilate objects to this for
himself, while giving them
liberty to do it, saying that he
finds no fault in Him. Upon this
they plead their Jewish law.
They had a law of their own, say
they, and by this law He ought
to die, because He made Himself
the Son of God. Pilate, already
struck and exercised in mind, is
the more alarmed; and, going
back to the judgment hall again,
questions Jesus. He makes no
reply. The pride of Pilate
awakes, and he asks if Jesus
does not know that he has power
to condemn or to release Him.
The Lord maintains, in replying,
the full dignity of His Person.
Pilate had no power over Him,
were it not the will of God — to
this He submitted. It heightened
the sin of those who had
delivered Him up, to suppose
that man could do anything
against Him, were it not that
the will of God was thus to be
accomplished. The knowledge of
His Person formed the measure of
the sin committed against Him.
The not perceiving it caused
everything to be falsely judged,
and, in the case of Judas,
showed the most absolute moral
blindness. He knew His Master's
power. What was the meaning of
delivering Him up to man, if it
were not that His hour was come?
But, this being the case, what
was the betrayer's position?
But Jesus always speaks
according to the glory of His
Person, and as being thereby
entirely above the circumstances
through which He was passing in
grace, and in obedience to His
Father's will. Pilate is
thoroughly disturbed by the
Lord's reply, yet his feeling is
not strong enough to counteract
the motive with which the Jews
press him, but it has sufficient
power to make him throw back
upon the Jews all that there was
of will in His condemnation, and
to make them fully guilty of the
Lord's rejection.
Pilate sought to withdraw Him
from their fury. At last,
fearing to be accused of
infidelity to Caesar, he turns
with contempt to the Jews,
saying, "Behold your King";
acting — although unconsciously
— under the hand of God, to
bring out that memorable word
from their lips, their
condemnation, and their calamity
even to this day, "We have no
king but Caesar." They denied
their Messiah. The fatal word,
which called down the judgment
of God, was now pronounced; and
Pilate delivers up Jesus to
them.
Jesus, humbled and bearing His
cross, takes His place with the
transgressors. Nevertheless He
who would that all should be
fulfilled ordained that a
testimony should be rendered to
His dignity; and Pilate (perhaps
to vex the Jews, certainly to
accomplish the purposes of God)
affixes to the cross as the
Lord's title, "Jesus of
Nazareth, the King of the Jews":
the twofold truth — the despised
Nazarene is the true Messiah.
Here, then, as throughout this
Gospel, the Jews take their
place as cast off by God.
At the same time the apostle
shows — here, as elsewhere —
that Jesus was the true Messiah,
by quoting the prophecies which
speak of that which happened to
Him in general, with regard to
His rejection and His
sufferings, so that He is proved
to be the Messiah by the very
circumstances in which He was
rejected of the people.
After the history of His
crucifixion, as the act of man,
we have that which characterises
it in respect to what Jesus was
upon the cross. The blood and
water flow from His pierced
side.
The devotedness of the women who
followed Him, less important
perhaps on the side of action,
shines out in its own way
nevertheless in that
perseverance of love which
brought them nigh to the cross.
The more responsible position of
the apostles as men scarcely
allowed it to them,
circumstanced as they were; but
this takes nothing from the
privilege which grace attaches
to woman when faithful to Jesus.
But it was the occasion for
Christ to give us fresh
instruction, by showing Himself
such as He was, and by setting
His work before us, above all
mere circumstances, as the
effect and the expression of a
spiritual energy which
consecrated Him, as man,
entirely to God, offering
Himself also to God by the
eternal Spirit. His work was
done. He had offered Himself up.
He returns, so to speak, into
His personal relationships.
Nature, in His human feelings,
is seen in its perfection; and,
at the same time, His divine
superiority, personally, to the
circumstances through which He
passed in grace as the obedient
man. The expression of His
filial feelings shows, that the
consecration to God, which
removed Him from all those
affections that are alike the
necessity and the duty of the
man according to nature, was not
the want of human feeling, but
the power of the Spirit of God.
Seeing the women, He speaks to
them no longer as Teacher and
Saviour, the resurrection and
the life; it is Jesus, a man,
individually, in His human
relationship.
"Woman," He says, "behold thy
son!" — committing His mother to
the care of John, the disciple
whom Jesus loved — and to the
disciple, "Behold thy mother!"
and thenceforth that disciple
took her to his own home. Sweet
and precious commission! A
confidence which spoke that
which he who was thus loved
could alone appreciate, as being
its immediate object. This shows
us also that His love for John
had a character of human
affection and attachment,
according to God, but not
essentially divine, although
full of divine grace — a grace
which gave it all its value, but
which clothed itself with the
reality of the human heart. It
was this, evidently, which bound
Peter and John together. Jesus
was their only and common
object. Of very different
characters — and so much the
more united on that account —
they thought but of one thing.
Absolute consecration to Jesus
is the strongest bond between
human hearts. It strips them of
self, and they have but one soul
in thought, intent, and settled
purpose, because they have only
one object. But in Jesus this
was perfect, and it was grace.
It is not said, "the disciple
who loved Jesus"; that would
have been quite out of season.
It would have been to take Jesus
entirely out of His place, and
His dignity, His personal glory,
and to destroy the value of His
love to John. Nevertheless John
loved Christ, and consequently
appreciated thus his Master's
love; and, his heart attached to
Him by grace, he devoted himself
to the execution of this sweet
commission, which he takes
pleasure in relating here. It is
indeed love that tells it,
although it does not speak of
itself.
I believe that we again see this
feeling (used by the Spirit of
God, not evidently as the
foundation, but to give its
colour to the expression of that
which he had seen and known) in
the beginning of John's first
epistle.
We also see here that this
Gospel does not show us Christ
under the weight of His
sufferings, but acting in
accordance with the glory of His
Person as above all things, and
fulfilling all things in grace.
In perfect calmness He provides
for His mother; having done
this, He knows that all is
finished. He has, according to
human language, entire
self-possession.
There is yet one prophecy to be
fulfilled. He says, "I thirst,"
and, as God had foretold, they
give Him vinegar. He knows that
now there is not one detail left
of all that was to be
accomplished. He bows His head,
and Himself gives67 up His
spirit.
Thus, when the whole divine work
is accomplished the divine man
giving up His spirit, that
spirit leaves the body which had
been its organ and its vessel.
The time was come for so doing;
and by doing it, He secured the
accomplishment of another divine
word — "Not one of his bones
shall be broken." But everything
bore its part in the fulfilment
of those words, and the purposes
of Him who had pronounced them
beforehand.
A soldier pierces His side with
a spear. It is from a dead
Saviour that flow forth the
tokens of an eternal and perfect
salvation — the water and the
blood; the one to cleanse the
sinner, the other to expiate his
sins. The evangelist saw it. His
love for the Lord makes him like
to remember that he saw Him thus
unto the end; he tells it in
order that we may believe. But
if we see in the beloved
disciples the vessel that the
Holy Ghost uses (and very sweet
it is to see it, and according
to the will of God), we see
plainly who it is that uses it.
How many things John witnessed
which he did not relate! The cry
of grief and of abandonment —
the earthquake — the centurion's
confession — the history of the
thief: all these things took
place before his eyes, which
were fixed upon his Master; yet
he does not mention them. He
speaks of that which his Beloved
was in the midst of all this.
The Holy Ghost causes him to
relate that which belonged to
the personal glory of Jesus. His
affections made him find it a
sweet and easy task. The Holy
Ghost attached him to it,
employing him in that which he
was well suited to perform.
Through grace the instrument
lent itself readily to the work
for which the Holy Ghost set it
apart. His memory and his heart
were under the dominant and
exclusive influence of the
Spirit of God. That Spirit
employed them in His work. One
sympathises with the instrument;
one believes in that which the
Holy Ghost relates by his means,
for the words are those of the
Holy Ghost.
Nothing can be more touching,
more deeply interesting, than
divine grace thus expressing
itself in human tenderness and
taking its form. While
possessing the entire reality of
human affection, it had all the
power and depth of divine grace.
It was divine grace that Jesus
should have such affections. On
the other hand, nothing could be
farther from the appreciation of
this sovereign source of divine
love, flowing through the
perfect channel which it made
for itself by its own power,
than the pretension to express
our love as reciprocal; it would
be, on the contrary, to fail
entirely in that appreciation.
True saints among the Moravians
have called Jesus "brother," and
others have borrowed their hymns
or the expression; the word
never says so. "He is not
ashamed to call us brethren,"
but it is quite another thing
for us to call Him so. The
personal dignity of Christ is
never lost in the intensity and
tenderness of His love.
But the rejected Saviour was to
be with the rich and the
honourable in His death, however
despised He may previously have
been; and two, who dared not
confess Him while He lived,
awakened now by the greatness of
the sin of their nation, and by
the event itself of His death —
which the grace of God, who had
reserved them for this work,
made them feel — occupy
themselves with the attentions
due to His dead body. Joseph,
himself a counsellor, comes to
ask Pilate for the body of
Jesus, Nicodemus joining with
him to render the last honours
to Him whom they had never
followed during His life. We can
understand this. To follow Jesus
constantly under reproach, and
compromise oneself for ever on
His account, is a very different
thing from acting when some
great occasion happens in which
there is no longer room for the
former, and when the extent of
the evil compels us to separate
from it; and when the good,
rejected because it is perfect
in testimony, and perfected in
its rejection, forced us to take
a part, if through grace any
moral sense exists in us. God
thus fulfilled His words of
truth. Joseph and Nicodemus
place the Lord's body in a new
sepulchre in a garden near the
cross; for, on account of it
being the Jews' preparation,
they could do no more at that
moment.
In John 20 we have, in a summary
of several of the leading facts
among those which took place
after the resurrection of Jesus,
a picture of all the
consequences of that great
event, in immediate connection
with the grace that produced
them, and with the affections
that ought to be seen in the
faithful when again brought into
relationship with the Lord; and
at the same time, a picture of
all God's ways up to the
revelation of Christ to the
remnant before the millennium.
In John 21 the millennium is
pictured to us.
Mary Magdalene, out of whom He
had cast seven demons, appears
first in the scene — a touching
expression of the ways of God.
She represents, I doubt not, the
Jewish remnant of that day,
personally attached to the Lord,
but not knowing the power of
resurrection. She is alone in
her love: the very strength of
her affection isolates her. She
was not the only one saved, but
she comes alone to seek —
wrongly to seek, if you will,
but to seek — Jesus, before the
testimony of His glory shines
forth in a world of darkness,
because she loved Himself. She
comes before the other women,
while it was yet dark. It is a
loving heart (we have already
seen it in the believing women)
occupied with Jesus, when the
public testimony of man is still
entirely wanting. And it is to
this that Jesus first manifests
Himself when He is risen.
Nevertheless her heart knew
where it would find a response.
She goes away to Peter and to
the other disciple whom Jesus
loved, when she does not find
the body of Christ. Peter and
the other disciple go, and find
the proofs of a resurrection
accomplished (as to Jesus
Himself) with all the composure
that became the power of God,
great as the alarm might be that
it created in the mind of man.
There had been no haste;
everything was in order: and
Jesus was not there.
The two disciples, however, are
not moved by the same attachment
as that which filled her heart,
who had been the object of so
mighty a deliverance68 on the
Lord's part. They see, and, on
these visible proofs, they
believe. It was not a spiritual
understanding of the thoughts of
God by means of His word; they
saw and believed. There is
nothing in this which gathers
the disciples together. Jesus
was away; He had risen. They had
satisfied themselves on this
point, and they go away to their
home. But Mary, led by affection
rather than by intelligence, is
not satisfied with coldly
recognising that Jesus was again
risen.69 She thought Him still
dead, because she did not
possess Him. His death, the fact
of her not finding Him again,
added to the intensity of her
affection, because He Himself
was its object. All the tokens
of this affection are produced
here in the most touching
manner. She supposes that the
gardener must know who was in
question without her telling
him, for she only thought of one
(as if I inquired of a beloved
object in a family, "How is
he?"). Bending over the
sepulchre, she turns her head
when He approaches; but then the
Good Shepherd, risen from the
dead, calls His sheep by her
name; and the known and loved
voice — mighty according to the
grace which thus called her —
instantly reveals Him to her who
heard it. She turns to Him, and
replies, "Rabboni — my Master."
But while thus revealing Himself
to the beloved remnant, whom He
had delivered, all is changed in
their position and in His
relationship with them. He was
not going now to dwell bodily in
the midst of His people on
earth. He did not come back to
re-establish the kingdom in
Israel. "Touch me not," says He
to Mary. But by redemption He
had wrought a far more important
thing. He had placed them in the
same position as Himself with
His Father and His God; and He
calls them — which He never had,
and never could have done before
— His brethren. Until His death
the corn of wheat remained
alone. Pure and perfect, the Son
of God, He could not stand in
the same relationship to God as
the sinner; but, in the glorious
position which He was going to
resume as man, He could, through
redemption, associate with
Himself His redeemed ones,
cleansed, regenerated, and
adopted in Him.
He sends them word of the new
position they were to have in
common with Himself. He says to
Mary, "Touch me not; but go to
my brethren, and tell them that
I ascend to my Father and your
Father, to my God and your God."
The will of the Father —
accomplished by means of the
glorious work of the Son, who,
as man, has taken His place,
apart from sin, with His God and
Father — and the work of the
Son, the source of eternal life
to them, have brought the
disciples into the same position
as Himself before the Father.
The testimony borne to this
truth gathers the disciples
together. They meet with closed
doors, unprotected now by the
care and power of Jesus, the
Messiah, Jehovah on earth. But
if they had no longer the
shelter of the Messiah's
presence, they have Jesus in
their midst, bringing them that
which they could not have before
His death — "Peace."
But He did not bring them this
blessing merely as their own
portion. Having given them
proofs of His resurrection, and
that in His body He was the same
Jesus, He sets them in this
perfect peace as the starting
point of their mission. The
Father, eternal and infinite
fountain of love, had sent the
Son, who abode in it, who was
the witness of that love, and of
the peace which He, the Father,
shed around Himself, where sin
had no existence. Rejected in
His mission, Jesus had — on
behalf of a world where sin
existed — made peace for all who
should receive the testimony of
the grace which had made it; and
He now sends His disciples from
the bosom of that peace into
which He had brought them, by
the remission of sins through
His death, to bear testimony to
it in the world.
He says again, "Peace be unto
you," to send them forth into
the world clothed and filled
with that peace, their feet shod
with it, even as the Father had
sent Him. He gives them the Holy
Ghost for this end, that
according to His power they
might bear the remission of sins
to a world that was bowed down
under the yoke of sin.
I do not doubt that, speaking
historically, the Spirit here is
distinguished from Acts 2,
inasmuch as here it is a breath
of inward life, as God breathed
into the nostrils of Adam a
breath of life. It is not the
Holy Ghost sent down from
heaven. Thus Christ, who is a
quickening Spirit, imparts
spiritual life to them according
to the power of resurrection.70
As to the general picture
figuratively presented in the
passage, it is the Spirit
bestowed on the saints gathered
by the testimony of His being
risen and His going to the
Father, as the whole scene
represents the assembly in its
present privileges. Thus we have
the remnant attached to Christ
by love; believers individually
recognised as children of God,
and in the same position before
Him as Christ; and then the
assembly founded on this
testimony, gathered together
with Jesus in the midst, in the
enjoyment of peace; and its
members, individually
constituted, in connection with
the peace which Christ has made,
a witness to the world of the
remission of sins — its
administration being committed
to them.
Thomas represents the Jews in
the last days, who will believe
when they see. Blessed are they
who have believed without
seeing. But the faith of Thomas
is not concerned with the
position of sonship. He
acknowledges, as the remnant
will do, that Jesus is his Lord
and his God. He was not with
them in their first church
gathering.
The Lord here, by His actions,
consecrates the first day of the
week for His meeting together
with His own, in spirit here
below.
The evangelist is far from
exhausting all that there was to
relate of that which Jesus did.
The object of that which he has
related is linked with the
communication of eternal life in
Christ; first, that Jesus is the
Christ, the Son of God; and,
second, that in believing we
have life through His name. To
this the Gospel is consecrated.
The next chapter, while
rendering a fresh testimony to
the resurrection of Jesus, gives
us — to verse 13 — a picture of
the millennial work of Christ;
from thence to the end, the
especial portions of Peter and
John in connection with their
service to Christ. The
application is limited to the
earth, for they had known Jesus
on earth. It is Paul who will
give us the heavenly position of
Christ and the assembly. But he
has no place here.
John 21. Led by Peter, several
of the apostles go a fishing.
The Lord meets them in the same
circumstances as those in which
He found them at the beginning,
and reveals Himself to them in
the same manner. John at once
understands that it is the Lord.
Peter, with his usual energy,
casts himself into the sea to
reach Him.
Observe here, that we find
ourselves again upon the ground
of the historic Gospels — that
is to say, that the miracle of
the draught of fishes identifies
itself with the work of Christ
on earth, and is in the sphere
of His former association with
His disciples. It is Galilee,
not Bethany. It has not the
usual character of the doctrine
of this Gospel, which presents
the divine Person of Jesus,
outside all dispensation, here
below; raising our thoughts
above all such subjects. Here
(at the end of the Gospel and of
the sketch given in chapter 20
of the result of the
manifestation of His divine
Person and of His work) the
evangelist comes for the first
time on the ground of the
synoptics, of the manifestation
and coming fruits of Christ's
connection with earth. Thus the
application of the passage to
this point is not merely an idea
which the narrative suggests to
the mind, but it rests upon the
general teaching of the word.
Still there is a notable
difference between that which
took place at the beginning and
here. In the former scene the
ships began to sink, the nets
broke. Not so here, and the Holy
Ghost marks this circumstance as
distinctive: Christ's millennial
work is not marred. He is there
after His resurrection, and that
which He performs does not rest,
in itself, on man's
responsibility as to its effect
here below: the net does not
break. Also, when the disciples
bring the fish which they had
caught, the Lord has some
already there. So shall it be on
earth at the end. Before His
manifestation He will have
prepared a remnant for Himself
on the earth; but after His
manifestation He will gather a
multitude also from the sea of
nations.
Another idea presents itself.
Christ is again as in
companionship with His
disciples. "Come," says He, "and
dine." There is no question here
of heavenly things, but of the
renewing of His connection with
His people in the kingdom. All
this does not immediately belong
to the subject of this Gospel,
which leads us higher.
Accordingly it is introduced in
a mysterious and symbolical
manner. This appearance of
Christ's is spoken of as His
third manifestation. I doubt His
manifestation on earth before
His death being included in the
number. I would rather apply it
to that which, first, after His
resurrection, gave rise to the
gathering together of the saints
as an assembly; secondly, to a
revelation of Himself to the
Jews after the manner of that
which is presented in the Song
of Songs; and lastly here to the
public display of His power,
when He shall already have
gathered the remnant together.
His appearing like the lightning
is outside all these things.
Historically the three
appearances were — the day of
His resurrection; the following
first day of the week; and His
appearance at the sea of
Galilee.
Afterwards, in a passage full of
ineffable grace, He entrusts
Peter with the care of His sheep
(that is, I doubt not, of His
Jewish sheep; he is the apostle
of the circumcision), and leaves
to John an indefinite period of
sojourn upon earth. His words
apply much more to their
ministry than to their persons,
with the exception of one verse
referring to Peter. But this
demands a little more
development.
The Lord begins with the full
restoration of Peter's soul. He
does not reproach him with his
fault, but judges the source of
evil that produced it —
self-confidence. Peter had
declared, that if all should
deny Jesus, yet he at least
would not deny Him. The Lord
therefore asks him, "Lovest thou
me more than do these?" and
Peter is reduced to acknowledge
that it required the omniscience
of God to know that he, who had
boasted of having more love than
all others for Jesus, had really
any affection for Him at all.
And the question thrice repeated
must indeed have searched the
depths of his heart. Nor was it
till the third time that he
says, "Thou knowest all things;
thou knowest that I love thee."
Jesus did not let his conscience
go until he had come to this.
Nevertheless the grace which did
this for Peter's good — the
grace which had followed him in
spite of everything, praying for
him before he felt his need or
had committed the fault — is
perfect here also. For, at the
moment when it might be thought
that at the utmost he would be
re-admitted through divine
forbearance, the strongest
testimony of grace is lavished
upon him. When humbled by his
fall, and brought to entire
dependence upon grace,
all-abounding grace displays
itself. The Lord commits that
which He most loved to him — the
sheep whom He had just redeemed.
He commits them to Peter's care.
This is the grace which
surmounts all that man is, which
is above all that man is; which
consequently produces
confidence, not in self, but in
God, as One whose grace can
always be trusted in, as being
full of grace and perfect in
that grace which is above
everything, and is always
itself; grace which makes us
able to accomplish the work of
grace towards — whom? — man who
needs it. It creates confidence
in proportion to the measure in
which it acts.
I think that the Lord's words
apply to the sheep already known
to Peter; and with whom only
Jesus had been in daily
connection; who would naturally
be before His mind, and that in
the scene which we see this
chapter puts before us — the
sheep of the house of Israel.
It appears to me that there is
progression in that which the
Lord says to Peter. He asks,
"Lovest thou me more than do
these?" Peter says, "Thou
knowest that I have affection
for thee." Jesus replies, "Feed
my lambs." The second time He
says only, "Lovest thou me?"
omitting the comparison between
Peter and the rest, and his
former pretension. Peter repeats
the declaration of his
affection. Jesus says to him,
"Shepherd my sheep." The third
time He says, "Hast thou
affection for me?" using Peter's
own expression; and on Peter's
replying, as we have seen,
seizing this use of his words by
the Lord, He says, "Feed my
sheep." The links between Peter
and Christ known on earth made
him fit to pasture the flock of
the Jewish remnant — to feed the
lambs, by showing them the
Messiah as He had been, and to
act as a shepherd, in guiding
those that were more advanced,
and in supplying them with food.
But the grace of the loving
Saviour did not stop here. Peter
might still feel the sorrow of
having missed such an
opportunity of confessing the
Lord at the critical moment.
Jesus assures him that if he had
failed in doing so of his own
will, he should be allowed to do
it by the will of God; and as
when young he girded himself,
others should gird him when old
and carry him whither he would
not. It should be given him by
the will of God to die for the
Lord, as he had formerly
declared himself ready to do in
his own strength. Now also that
Peter was humbled and brought
entirely under grace — that he
knew he had no strength — that
he felt his dependence on the
Lord, his utter inefficiency if
he trusted to his own power —
now, I repeat, the Lord calls
Peter to follow Him; which he
had pretended to do, when the
Lord had told him he could not.
It was this that his heart
desired. Feeding those whom
Jesus had continued to feed
until His death, he should see
Israel reject everything, even
as Christ had seen them do; and
his own work end, even as Christ
had seen His work end (the
judgment ready to fall, and
beginning at the house of God).
Finally, what he had pretended
to do and could not, he would
now do — follow Christ to prison
and to death.
Then comes the history of the
disciple whom Jesus loved. John
having, no doubt, heard the call
addressed to Peter, follows also
himself; and Peter, linked with
him, as we have seen, by their
common love to the Lord,
inquires what should happen to
him likewise. The Lord's answer
announces the portion and
ministry of John, but, as it
appears to me, in connection
with the earth. But the Lord's
enigmatical expression is,
nevertheless, as remarkable as
it is important: "If I will that
he tarry till I come, what is
that to thee?" They thought, in
consequence, that John would not
die. The Lord did not say so — a
warning not to ascribe a meaning
to His words, instead of
receiving one; and at the same
time showing our need of the
Holy Spirit's help; for the
words literally might be so
taken. Giving heed myself, I
trust, to this warning, I will
say what I think to be the
meaning of the Lord's words,
which I do not doubt to be so —
a meaning which gives a key to
many other expressions of the
same kind.
In the narrative of the Gospel,
we are in connection with the
earth (that is, the connection
of Jesus with the earth). As
planted on earth at Jerusalem,
the assembly, as the house of
God, is formally recognised as
taking the place of the house of
Jehovah at Jerusalem. The
history of the assembly, as thus
formally established as a centre
on earth, ended with the
destruction of Jerusalem. The
remnant saved by the Messiah was
no longer to be in connection
with Jerusalem, the centre of
the gathering of the Gentiles.
In this sense the destruction of
Jerusalem put an end judicially
to the new system of God upon
earth — a system promulgated by
Peter (Acts 3); with regard to
which Stephen declared to the
Jews their resistance to the
Holy Ghost, and was sent, as it
were, as a messenger after Him
who was gone to receive the
kingdom and to return; while
Paul — elected from among those
enemies of the good news still
addressed to the Jews by the
Holy Ghost after the death of
Christ, and separated from Jews
and Gentiles, in order to be
sent to the latter — performs a
new work that was hidden from
the prophets of old, namely, the
gathering out of a heavenly
assembly without distinction of
Jew or Gentile.
The destruction of Jerusalem put
an end to one of these systems,
and to the existence of Judaism
according to the law and the
promises, leaving only the
heavenly assembly. John remained
— the last of the twelve — until
this period, and after Paul, in
order to watch over the assembly
as established on that footing,
that is, as the organised and
earthly frame-work (responsible
in that character) of the
testimony of God, and the
subject of His government on the
earth. But this is not all. In
his ministry John went on to the
end, to the coming of Christ in
judgment to the earth; and he
has linked the judgment of the
assembly, as the responsible
witness on earth, with the
judgment of the world, when God
shall resume His connection with
the earth in government (the
testimony of the assembly being
finished, and it having been
caught up, according to its
proper character, to be with the
Lord in heaven).
Thus the Apocalypse presents the
judgment of the assembly on
earth, as the formal witness for
the truth; and then passes on to
God's resumption of the
government of the earth, in view
of the establishment of the Lamb
upon the throne, and the setting
aside of the power of evil. The
heavenly character of the
assembly is only found there,
when its members are exhibited
on thrones as kings and priests,
and when the marriage of the
Lamb takes place in heaven. The
earth — after the Seven Churches
— has no longer the heavenly
testimony. It is not the
subject, either in the seven
assemblies, or in the properly
so-called prophetic part. Thus,
taking the assemblies as such in
those days, the assembly
according to Paul is not seen
there. Taking the assemblies as
descriptions of the assembly,
the subject of God's government
on earth, we have it until its
final rejection; and the history
is continuous, and the prophetic
part immediately connected with
the end of the assembly: only,
in place of it, we have the
world and then the Jews.71
The coming of Christ therefore,
which is spoken of at the end of
the Gospel, is His manifestation
on earth; and John, who lived in
person until the close of all
that was introduced by the Lord
in connection with Jerusalem,
continues here, in his ministry,
until the manifestation of
Christ to the world.
In John, then, we have two
things. On the one hand, his
ministry, as far as connected
with dispensation and with the
ways of God, does not go beyond
that which is earthly: the
coming of Christ, is His
manifestation to complete those
ways, and to establish the
government of God. On the other
hand, he links us with the
Person of Jesus, who is above
and outside all dispensations,
and all the dealings of God,
save as being the manifestation
of God Himself. John does not
enter upon the ground of the
assembly as Paul sets it forth.
It is either Jesus personally,
or the relations of God with the
earth.72 His epistle presents the
reproduction of the life of
Christ in ourselves, guarding us
thus from all pretensions of
perverse teachers. But by these
two parts of the truth, we have
a precious sustainment of faith
given to us, when all that
belongs to the body of testimony
may fail: Jesus, personally the
object of faith in whom we know
God; the life itself of God,
reproduced in us, as being
quickened by Christ. This is for
ever true, and this is eternal
life, if we were alone without
the assembly on earth: and it
leads us over its ruins, in
possession of that which is
essential, and of that which
will abide for ever. The
government of God will decide
all the rest: only it is our
privilege and duty to maintain
Paul's part of the testimony of
God, as long as through grace we
can.
Remark also that the work of
Peter and Paul is that of
gathering together, whether it
be in circumcision or the
Gentiles. John is conservative,
maintaining that which is
essential in eternal life. He
relates the judgment of God in
connection with the world, but
as a subject that is outside his
own relations with God, which
are given as an introduction and
exordium to the Apocalypse. He
follows Christ when Peter is
called, because, although Peter
was occupied, as Christ had
been, with the call of the Jews,
John — without being called to
that work — followed Him on the
same ground. The Lord explains
it, as we have seen.
Verses 24, 25 are a kind of
inscription on the book. John
has not related all that Jesus
did, but that which revealed Him
as everlasting life. As to His
works, they could not be
numbered.
Here, thanks be to God, are
these four precious books laid
open, as far as God has enabled
me to do so, in their great
principles. Meditation on their
contents in detail, I must leave
to each individual heart,
assisted by the mighty operation
of the Holy Ghost; for if
studied in detail, one might
almost say with the apostle that
the world would not contain the
books that should be written.
May God in His grace lead souls
into the enjoyment of the
inexhaustible streams of grace
and truth in Jesus which they
contain!
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
1) The form of expression in
Greek is very strong, as
identifying completely the life
with the light of men, as
co-extensive propositions.
2) It is not here my object to
develop the manner in which the
word meets the errors of the
human mind; but, in fact, as it
reveals truth on God's part, it
also replies, in a remarkable
way, to all the mistaken
thoughts of man. With respect to
the Lord's Person, the first
verses of the chapter bear
witness to it. Here the error,
which made of the principle of
darkness a second god in equal
conflict with the good Creator,
is refuted by the simple
testimony that the life was the
light, and the darkness a moral
condition, without power, and
negative, in the midst of which
this life was manifested in
light. If we have the truth
itself, we have no need to be
acquainted with error. The voice
of the Good Shepherd known, we
are sure that none other is of
Him. But, in fact, the
possession of the truth, as
revealed in the scripture, is an
answer to all the errors into
which man has fallen,
innumerable as they are. 3) Sons in Paul's writings is the place Christians have in connection with God into which Christ has brought them by redemption, that is, His own relative place with God according to His counsels. Children is that they are of the Father's family. (Both are found in Romans 8:14-16, and the force of both may there be seen. We cry Father, so are children, but by the Spirit we take up the place of grown up sons with Christ before God.) Up to the end of verse 13, we have abstractedly what Christ intrinsically was and from eternity, and what man was — darkness. This first to the end of verse 5. Then God's dealings John's place and service; then the Light came, came into the world He had made, and it did not know Him, to His own, the Jews, and they would not have Him. But there were those, born of God, who had authority to take the place of children, a new race.
4) It is indeed the source of
all blessing; but the condition
of man was such, that without
His death no one would have had
any part in the blessing. Unless
the corn of wheat fall into the
ground and die, it abides alone;
but if it die, it brings forth
much fruit.
5)
Indeed it told what man ought to
be, not what man or anything
actually was, and this is
properly truth.
6) It will be observed that the
chapter is thus divided: 1-18
(this part is subdivided into
1-5, 6-13, 14-18), 19-28, 29-34
(sub-divided into 29-31, 32-34),
35 to the end. These last verses
are subdivided into 35-42, and
42 to the end. That is, first,
what Christ is abstractedly and
intrinsically — John's testimony
to Him as light; when come, what
He is personally in the world —
John, only forerunner of
Jehovah, witness of Christ's excellency; the work of Christ
(Lamb of God, who takes away the
sin of the world, He baptises
with the Holy Ghost, and is Son
of God); John gathers to Him; He
gathers to Himself. This goes on
till the upright remnant of
Israel own Him Son of God, King
of Israel; then He takes the
larger character of Son of Man.
All the personal characters of
Christ, so to speak, are found
here and His work, but not His
relative characters, not Christ,
not Priest, not Head of the
assembly His body; but Word, Son
of God, Lamb of God, Baptiser
with the Holy Ghost; and,
according to Psalm 2, Son of
God, King of Israel; and Son of
man, according to Psalm 8, whom
the angels serve; God withal,
life, and the light of men.
7) The strictly abstract
statement ends in verse 5, and
goes by itself. The reception of
Christ as come into the world
as light introduces John. We are
no longer in what is strictly
abstract; though not developing
the object — what the Word
became — it is historical as to
the reception of the light, and
thus shows what man was, and
what he is by grace as born of
God, in respect of the object.
8) As
the flood, law, grace. There was
a paradise of innocence, then a
world of sin, by-and-by a
kingdom of righteousness,
finally a world (new heavens and
new earth) wherein dwelleth
righteousness. But it is
everlasting righteousness, and
founded on that work of the Lamb
of God which can never lose its
value. It is an immutable state
of things. The church or
assembly is something above and
apart from all this, though
revealed in it.
9) Note, it is not on his public
testimony, but on the expression
of his heart addressed to no
one, which they heard.
10)
A principle of the deepest
interest to us, as the effect of
grace. In receiving Jesus we
receive all that He is;
notwithstanding that at the
moment we may only perceive in
Him that which is the least
exalted part of His glory.
11) These verses 38 and 43 take
in the two characters in which
we have to do with Christ. He
receives them and they abide
with Him, and He calls upon them
to follow Him. We have no world
where we can abide, no centre in
it which gathers round itself
those rightly disposed by grace.
No prophet, no servant of God
could. Christ is the one centre
of gathering in the world. Then
following supposes that we are
not in God's rest. In Eden no
following was called for. In
heaven there will be none. It is
perfect joy and rest where we
are. In Christ we have a divine
object, giving us a clear path
through a world in which we
cannot rest with God, for sin is
there.
12) Not "hereafter."
13)
Except what concerns the
assembly and Israel. Here, He is
not High Priest, He is not Head
of the body, He is not revealed
as the Christ. John does not
give what shows man in heaven,
but God in man on earth — not
what is heavenly as gone up, but
what is divine here. Israel is
looked on all through as
rejected. The disciples own Him
as the Christ, but He is not so
proclaimed. 14) Here He is seen as the Son of God in this world; in verse 14, He is in the glory of an only Son with His Father; and verse 18, He is so in the bosom of His Father.
15)
Remark here, that Jesus accepts
the place of that centre round
which souls are to be gathered —
a very important principle. None
else could hold this place. It
was a divine one. The world was
all wrong, without God, and a
new gathering out of it was to
be made round Him. Next, He
furnishes the path in which man
was to walk — "Follow me." Adam
in paradise needed no path.
Christ gives a divinely ordered
one, in a world where of itself
there could not be a right one,
for its whole condition was the
fruit of sin. Thirdly, He
reveals man in His Person as the
glorious Head over all, whom the
highest creatures serve.
16) Observe, that the state of
man is here manifested fully and
thoroughly. Supposing him to be
outwardly righteous according to
the law, and to believe in Jesus
according to sincere natural
convictions, he clothes himself
with this, in order to hide from
himself what he really is. He
does not know himself at all.
What he is remains untouched.
And he is a sinner. But this
leads us to another observation.
There are two great principles
from Paradise itself —
responsibility and life. Man can
never disentangle them, till he
learns that he is lost, and that
no good exists in him. Then he
is glad to know that there is a
source of life and pardon
outside himself. It is this
which is shown us here. There
must be a new life; Jesus does
not instruct a nature which is
only sin. These two principles
run through scripture in a
remarkable way: first, as
stated, in Paradise,
responsibility and life in
power. Man took of one tree,
failing in responsibility, and
forfeited life. The law gave the
measure of responsibility when
good and evil were known, and
promised life on the ground of
doing what it required,
satisfying responsibility.
Christ comes, meets the need of
man's failure in responsibility,
and is, and gives, eternal life.
Thus, and thus only, can the
question be met, and the two
principles reconciled.
Moreover
two things are presented in Him
to reveal God. He knows man, and
all men. What a knowledge in
this world! A prophet knows that
which is revealed to him; he
has, in that case, divine
knowledge. But Jesus knows all
men in an absolute way. He is
God. But when once He has
introduced life in grace, He
speaks of another thing; He
speaks that which He knows, and
testifies that which He has
seen. Now He knows God His
Father in heaven. He is the Son
of man who is in heaven. He
knows man divinely; but He knows
God and all His glory divinely
also.
What a
magnificent picture, or, rather
should I say, revelation, of
that which He is for us! For it
is here as man that He tells us
this; and also, in order that we
may enter into it and enjoy it,
He becomes the sacrifice for sin
according to the eternal love of
God His Father.
17)
That is, as it was then come.
They saw the carpenter's Son. In
glory, of course, every eye on
earth shall see it.
18)
Observe here that baptism,
instead of being the sign of the
gift of life, is the sign of
death. We are baptised to His
death. In coming up out of the
water, we begin a new life in
resurrection (all that belonged
to the natural man being
reckoned to be dead in Christ,
and passed away for ever). "Ye
are dead"; and "he that is dead
is freed [justified] from sin."
But we live also and have a good
conscience by the resurrection
of Jesus Christ. Thus Peter
compares baptism to the deluge,
through which Noah was saved,
but which destroyed the old
world, that had, as it were, a
new life when it emerged from
the flood.
19)
On the cross, Christ is not on
the earth, but lifted up from
it, rejected ignominiously by
man, but withal through this
presented as a victim on the
altar to God.
20)
The question presents itself
naturally, where John's
testimony closes and the
evangelist's begins. The last
two verses, I apprehend, are the
evangelist's.
21) Observe here, that the Lord —
while not concealing (v. 11-13)
the character of His testimony,
as indeed He could not — speaks
of the necessity of His death,
and of the love of God. John
speaks of the glory of His
Person. Jesus magnifies His
Father by submitting to the
necessity which the condition of
men imposed on Him, if He would
bring them into a new
relationship with God. "God,"
said He, "has so loved." John
magnifies Jesus. All is perfect
and in place. There are four
points in that which is said
with regard to Jesus: His
supremacy; His testimony — this
is the Baptist's testimony to
Him. What follows (v. 35, 36) —
His having all things given to
Him by the Father who loved Him,
life everlasting in contrast
with the wrath that is the
portion of the unbeliever from
God — is rather the new
revelation; the purpose of God
giving all things to Him, and
His being Himself eternal life
come down from heaven, is that
of John the evangelist. 22) Note, too, here, that it is not as with Israel in the wilderness that there was water from the smitten rock to drink. Here the promise is of a well of water springing up unto everlasting life in ourselves.
23)
It will be found in John's
writings that, when
responsibility is spoken of, God
is the word used; when grace to
us, the Father and the Son. When
indeed it is goodness (God's
character in Christ) towards the
world, then God is spoken of.
24)
Christ brings the strength with
Him which the law requires in
man himself to profit by it.
25) The Sabbath is introduced,
whatever new institution or
arrangement is established under
the law. And in truth, a part in
the rest of God is, in certain
aspects, the highest of our
privileges (see Heb. 4). The
Sabbath was the close of the
first or this creation, and will
be so when fulfilled. Our rest
is in the new one, and that not
in the first man's creation
state but risen, Christ the
second Man being its beginning
and head. Hence the first day of
the week.
26)
God's Sabbath is a Sabbath of
love and holiness. 27) Remark how full the bearing of this is. If they do not come into judgment to settle their state, as man would put it, they are shown to be wholly dead in sin. Grace in Christ does not contemplate an uncertain state which judgment will determine. It gives life and secures from judgment. But while He judges as Son of man according to the deeds done in the body, He shows us here that all were dead in sin to begin with. 28) The direct application of this is to the remnant; but then, as hinted in the text, we, as to our path on earth, are, so to speak, the continuation of that remnant, and Christ is on high for us, while we are on the waves below. The subsequent part of the chapter, of the bread of life, is properly for us. The world, not Israel, is in question. Indeed though Christ is Aaron within the veil for Israel, while He is there the saints have properly their heavenly character.
29)
In John, the Jews are always
distinguished from the
multitude. They are the
inhabitants of Jerusalem and
Judea. It would, perhaps, be
easier to understand this
Gospel, if the words were
rendered "those of Judea," which
is the true sense.
30)
This truth is of vast importance
as regards the sacramental
question. Sacraments are
declared by the Puseyite school
to be the continuation of the
incarnation. This is in every
respect error, and, in truth, a
denial of the faith. Both
sacraments signify death. We are
baptised to Christ's death; and
the Lord's supper is confessedly
emblematic of His death. I say
"denial of the faith"; because,
as the Lord shows, if they do
not eat His flesh and blood,
they have no life in them. As
incarnate Christ is alone. His
presence in flesh on earth
showed that God and sinful men
could not be united. His
presence as man in the world
resulted in His rejection —
proved the impossibility of
union or fruit on that ground.
Redemption must come in, His
blood be shed, Himself lifted up
from the earth, and so draw men
to Him: death must come in, or
He abode alone. They could not
eat the bread unless they ate
the flesh and drank the blood. A
meat-offering without a bloody
offering was null, or rather a
Cain offering. Further, the
Lord's supper presents a dead
Christ, and a dead Christ only —
the blood apart from the body.
No such Christ exists; and
therefore transubstantiation and
consubstantiation and all such
thoughts are a blundering fable.
We are united to a glorified
Christ by the Holy Ghost; and we
celebrate that most precious
death upon which all our
blessing is founded, through
which we got there. We do it in
remembrance of Him, and in our
hearts feed on Him, so given,
and shedding His blood.
31) Abiding imports constancy of
dependence, confidence, and
living by the life in which
Christ lives. "Dwelling" and
"abiding," though the word be
changed in English, are the same
in the original: so in John 15
and elsewhere.
32) It may be well to note that in
the Greek in this passage, in
verses 51 and 53, eating
is in the aorist tense —
whosoever has done so. In verses
54, 56 and 57, it is the present
tense — a present continuous
action.
33)
The harvest is discriminating
judgment, there are tares and
wheat. The winepress is the
destructive judgment of
vengeance. In the former there
will be two in one bed, one
taken and another left, but the
winepress is simple wrath, as
Isaiah 63. So in Revelation 14.
34) This glory, however, is only
supposed, not taught. He cannot
be at the feast of tabernacles,
Israel's rest, nor show Himself,
as He will then, to the world;
but gives the Holy Ghost
instead. This we know supposes
His present position, just
referred to in chapter 6.
35)
The doctrine of John 9 continues
to John 10:30.
36) John 8 is practically John
1:5; only that there is, besides
that, enmity, hostility against
Him who was light.
37)
This distinction of grace and
responsibility (in connection
with the names Father and Son,
and God) has been already
noticed. See page 316 on John 4. 38) Love and obedience are the governing principles of divine life. This is unfolded in the First Epistle of John as to ourselves. Another mark of it in the creature is dependence, and this was fully manifested in Jesus as man. 39) The words catches and pluck in verses 12, 28 and 29 are the same in the original.
40)
It is very striking to see the
Lord in the lowliness of
obedient service, allowing evil
to have its full way in man's
failure (death) and Satan's
power, till His Father's will
called Him to meet it. Then no
danger hinders, and then He is
the resurrection and the life in
personal presence and power, and
then giving Himself — being
such, up to death for us.
41) Christ took
human life in grace and sinless;
and as alive in this life He
took sin upon Him. Sin belongs,
so to speak, to this life in
which Christ knew no sin, but
was made sin for us. But He dies
— He quits this life. He is dead
to sin; He has done with sin in
having done with the life to
which sin belonged, not in Him
indeed but in us, and alive in
which He was made sin for us.
Raised up again by the power of
God, He lives in a new
condition, into which sin cannot
enter, being left behind with
the life that He left.
It has been
pretended that these thoughts
affect the divine and eternal
life which was in Christ. But
this is all idle and evil cavil.
Even in an unconverted sinner,
dying or laying down life has
nothing to do with ceasing to
exist as to the life of the man
within. All live to God, and
divine life in Christ never
could cease or be changed. He
never laid that down, but in the
power of that, laid down His
life as He possessed it here as
man, to take it up in an
entirely new way in resurrection
beyond the grave. The cavil is a
very evil cavil. In this edition
I have changed nothing in this
note, but have added a few words
in the hope that it may be clear
to all. The doctrine itself is
vital truth. In the text I have
erased or altered a part for
another reason, namely, that
there was confusion between the
divine power of life in Christ,
and God's raising Him viewed as
a dead man from the grave. Both
are true and blessedly so, but
they are different and were here
confounded together. In
Ephesians Christ as man is
raised by God. In John it is the
divine and quickening power in
Himself.
42) Resurrection has a double
character: divine power, which
He could exercise and did
exercise as to Himself (John
2:19), and here as to Lazarus,
both the proof of divine sonship; and the deliverance of
a dead man from his state of
death. Thus God raised Christ
from the dead, so here Christ
raises Lazarus. In Christ's
resurrection both were united in
His own Person. Here, of course,
they were separate. But Christ
has life in Himself and that in
divine power. But He laid down
His life in grace. We are
quickened together with Him in
Ephesians 2. But it seems
avoided saying, He was
quickened, when speaking of Him
alone in Ephesians 1.
43)
The cavil I have referred to in
the note to page 345 sanctions
(most unwittingly, I gladly
admit) the pestiferous doctrine
of annihilation, as if laying
down life, or death, that is the
end of natural life, were
ceasing to exist. I notice it,
because this form of evil
doctrine is one very current
now. It subverts the whole
substance of Christianity.
44)
Observe the sense which the
apostle had of the power of this
life, when he says, "That
mortality might be swallowed up
of life." Consider, in this
point of view, 2 Corinthians
1-5.
45)
I speak only of the power needed
to produce this effect; for in
truth, the sinful condition of
man, whether Jew or Gentile,
required expiation; and there
would have been no saints to
call out from among the dead, if
the grace of God had not acted
by virtue, and in view, of that
expiation. I speak merely of the
power that dwelt in the Person
of Christ, that overcame all the
power of death, which could do
nothing against the Son of God.
But man's condition, which made
the death of Christ necessary,
was only demonstrated by His
rejection, which proved that all
means were unavailing to bring
back man, as he was, to God.
46)
In this Gospel the occasion of
the assembling of the crowd to
meet and to accompany Jesus, was
the raising of Lazarus — the
testimony to His being Son of
God.
47)
Greeks properly speaking: not
Hellenists, that is, Jews who
spoke the Greek language, and
belonged to foreign countries,
being of the dispersion.
48)
Resurrection follows the
condition of Christ. Lazarus was
raised while Christ was living
here in the flesh, and Lazarus
is raised to life in the flesh.
When Christ in glory raises us,
He will raise us in glory. And
even now that Christ is hid in
God, our life is hid with Him
there.
49) It is not blood here. That
assuredly there must be. He came
not by water only, but by water
and blood; but here the washing
is in every respect that of
water. The washing from sins in
His own blood is never repeated
at all in any way. Christ must
have suffered often in that
case. See Hebrews 9 and Hebrews
10. In respect of imputation,
there is no more conscience of
sins.
50)
The Lord in becoming a man took
on Him the form of a servant
(Phil. 2). This He never gives
up. It might have been thought
so when He went into glory, but
He is showing here that it is
not so. He is now as in Exodus
21 saying, I love my master, I
love my wife, I love my
children; I will not go out
free; and becoming a servant for
ever, even if He could have had
twelve legions of angels. Here
He is a servant to wash their
feet, defiled in passing through
this world. In Luke 12 we see
that He keeps the place of
service in glory. It is a sweet
thought that even there He
ministers heaven's best
blessedness to our happiness.
51) On the other hand, Peter died for the Lord. John was left to care for the assembly: it does not appear that he became a martyr.
52)
Note, this is individual, not
the union of the members of the
body with Christ; nor is union
indeed an exact term for it. We
are in Him. This is more than
union, but not the same thing.
It is nature and life, and
position in it, our place in
that nature and life. When He
was on earth, and they had not
the Holy Ghost, they should have
known that He was in the Father
and the Father in Him. When He
was in heaven, and they had the
Holy Ghost, they would know they
were in Him and He in them.
53)
This is blessedly true in every
respect, except of course
essential Godhead and oneness
with the Father: in this He
remains divinely alone. But all
He has as man, and as Son in
manhood, He introduces into, "My
Father and your Father, my God
and your God." His peace, His
joy, the words the Father gave
to Him, He has given to us; the
glory given to Him He has given
to us; with the love wherewith
the Father has loved Him we are
loved. The counsels of God were
not merely to meet our
responsibility as children of
Adam, but before the world to
put us into the same position
with the second Adam, His own
Son. And Christ's work has made
that to be righteousness.
54)
John 14 gives to us the Son's
personal relationship with the
Father, and our place in Him who
is in it, known by the Holy
Ghost given. In John 15 we have
His place and standing on earth,
the true Vine, and then His
state of glory as exalted and
sending the Comforter to reveal
that.
55)
Compare, for this substitution
of Christ for Israel, Isaiah 49.
He began Israel over again in
blessing, as He did man.
56) There are the three
exhortations: Abide in me; If ye
abide in Me and My words abide
in you ye shall ask what ye
will; Abide in My love.
57)
Some have thought that this
means the joy of Christ in the
faithful walk of a disciple: I
do not think so. It is the joy
He had down here, just as He
left us His own peace, and will
give us His own glory.
58)
He does not say "loves me," but
"has loved me"; that is, He does
not speak merely of the eternal
love of the Father for the Son,
but of the Father's love
displayed towards Him in His
humanity here on earth.
59)
By choosing them and setting
them apart to enjoy together
this relationship with Him
outside the world, He had put
them in a position of which
mutual love was the natural
consequence; and, in fact, the
sense of this position and love
go together. 60) Remark, that His word and His works are here again referred to. But this was only the fulfilment of that which was foretold of them in their law. As to the testimony borne to God by the people, and of a Messiah received by them, all was over. They had hated Him without a cause.
61)
Observe here the practical
development, with respect to
life, of this most deeply
interesting subject, in 1 John 1
and 2. The eternal life which
was with the Father had been
manifested (for in Him, in the
Son, was life, He was also the
Word of life, and God was light.
Compare John 1). They were to
keep His commandments (1 John
2:3-5). It was an old
commandment which they had had
from the beginning — that is,
from Jesus on earth, from Him
whom their hands had handled.
But now this commandment was
true in Him and in them: that is
to say, this life of love (of
which these commandments were
the expression) as well as that
of righteousness reproduced
itself in them, by virtue of
their union with Him, through
the Holy Ghost, according to
John 14:20. They also abode in
Jesus (1 John 2:6). In John 1 we
find the Son who is in the bosom
of the Father, who declares Him.
He reveals Him as He has thus
known Him — as that which the
Father was to Himself. And He
has brought this love (of which
He was the object) down into the
bosom of humanity, and placed it
in the heart of His disciples
(see John 17:26); and this is
known now in perfection by God
dwelling in us, and His love
being perfect in us, while we
dwell in brotherly love (1 John
4:12; compare John 1:18). The
manifestation of our having been
thus loved will consist in our
appearing in the same glory as
Christ (John 17:22-23). Christ
manifests this love by coming
from the Father. His
commandments teach it us; the
life which we have in Him
reproduces it. His precepts give
form to this life, and guide it
through the ways of the flesh,
and the temptations in the midst
of which He, without sin, lived
by this life. The Holy Ghost is
its strength, as being the
mighty and living link with Him,
and He by whom we are
consciously in Him and He in us.
(Union, as the body to the Head,
is another thing, which is never
the subject of John's teaching.)
Of His fulness we receive grace
upon grace. Therefore it is that
we ought to walk as He walked
(not to be what He was); for we
ought not to walk in the flesh,
although it is in us and was not
in Him.
62)
Man is judged for what he has
done; he is lost by what he is.
63)
The more we examine the Gospel
of John, the more we shall see
One who speaks and acts as a
divine Person — one with the
Father — alone could do, but yet
always as One who had taken the
place of a servant, and takes
nothing to Himself, but receives
all from His Father. "I have
glorified thee": "now glorify
me." What language of equality
of nature and love! but He does
not say, And now I will glorify
myself. He has taken the place
of man to receive all, though it
be a glory He had with the
Father before the world was.
This is of exquisite beauty. I
add, it was out of this the
enemy sought to seduce Him, in
vain, in the wilderness.
64)
There are three unities spoken
of. First of the disciples, "as
we are," unity by the power of
one Spirit in thought, purpose,
mind, service, the Holy Ghost
making them all one, their path
in common, the expression of His
mind and power, and of nothing
else. Then, of those who should
believe through their means,
unity in communion with the
Father and the Son, "one in us"
— still by the Holy Ghost but,
as brought into that, as already
said above, as in 1 John 1:3.
Then unity in glory, "perfect in
one," in manifestation and
descending revelation, the
Father in the Son, and the Son
in all of them. The second was
for the world's believing, the
third for its knowing. The two
first were literally
accomplished according to the
terms in which they are
expressed. How far believers are
departed from them since need
not be said.
65)
This answers to Moses and Elias
entering into the cloud, besides
their display in the same glory
as Christ, standing on the
mountain.
66)
It is said that their Jewish
traditions forbade their putting
any one to death during the
great feasts. It is possible
that this may have influenced
the Jews; but however that might
be, the purposes of God were
thus accomplished. At other
times the Jews were not so
prompt in submitting to the
Roman exigencies that deprived
them of the right of life and
death.
67)
This is the force of the
expression; which is quite
different from the word
translated expired. We learn
from Luke 23:46 that He did this
when He had said, "Father, into
thy hands I commend my spirit."
But in John, the Holy Ghost is
setting forth even His death as
the result of a voluntary act,
giving up His spirit, and not
saying to whom He committed (as
man with absolute and perfect
faith) His human spirit, His
soul, in dying. It is His divine
competency that is here shown,
and not His trust in His Father.
The word is never used in this
way but in this passage as to
Christ, in either the New
Testament or the LXX.
68) "Seven demons." This
represents the complete
possession of this poor woman by
the unclean spirits to whom she
was a prey. It is the expression
of the real state of the Jewish
people.
69) It is impossible to me, in
giving great principles for the
help of those who seek to
understand the word, to develop
all that is so deeply touching
and interesting in this
twentieth chapter, on which I
have often pondered with
(through grace) an ever-growing
interest. This revelation of the
Lord to the poor woman who could
not do without her Saviour, has
a touching beauty, which every
detail enhances. But there is
one point of view to which I
cannot but call the reader's
attention. There are four
conditions of soul presented
here which, taken together, are
very instructive, and each in
the case of a believer:
— 1st. John and Peter, who see
and believe, are really
believers; but they do not see
in Christ the only centre of all
the thoughts of God, for His
glory, for the world, for souls.
Neither is He so for their
affections, although they are
believers. Having found that He
was risen, they do without Him.
Mary, who did not know this, who
was even culpably ignorant,
could nevertheless not do
without Jesus. She must possess
Himself. Peter and John go to
their home; this is the centre
of their interests. They believe
indeed, but self and home
suffice them.
— 2nd. Thomas believes, and
acknowledges with true orthodox
faith, on incontestable proofs,
that Jesus is his Lord and his
God. He truly believes for
himself. He has not the
communications of the efficacy
of the Lord's work, and of the
relationship with His Father
into which Jesus brings His own,
the assembly. He has peace
perhaps, but he has missed all
the revelation of the assembly's
position. How many souls-saved
souls even — are there in these
two conditions!
These are the
communications of the efficacy
of His work, as He had given to
Mary that of the relationship to
the Father which resulted from
it. The whole is the answer to
Mary's attachment to Christ, or
what resulted from it. If
through grace there is
affection, the answer will
assuredly be granted. It is the
truth which flows from the work
of Christ. No other state than
that which Christ here presents
is in accordance with what He
has done, and with the Father's
love. He cannot, by His work,
place us in any other.
70)
Compare Romans 4-8 and
Colossians 2 and 3. Resurrection
was the power of life which
brought them out of the dominion
of sin, that had its end in
death, and that was condemned in
the death of Jesus, and they
dead to it, but not condemned by
it, sin having been condemned in
His death. This is a question,
not of guilt, but of state. Our
guilt, blessed be God, was put
away too. But here we die with
Christ, and resurrection
presents us (Romans, as quoted,
unfolds the side of death;
Colossians adds resurrection.
Romans is death to sin,
Colossians to the world) living
before God in a life in which
Jesus — and we by Him — appeared
in His presence according to the
perfection of divine
righteousness. But this supposed
His work also.
71) Thus we have in the
ministerial life, and in the
teaching, of Peter and John, the
whole religious earthly history
from the beginning to the end;
commencing with the Jews in
continuation of the relations of
Christ with them, traversing the
whole christian epoch, and
finding itself again, after the
close of the earthly history of
the assembly, on the ground of
God's relationship to the world
(comprising the Jewish remnant)
in view of the introduction of
the First-born into the world
(the last glorious event
terminating the history which
began with His rejection).
Paul is on very
different ground. He sees the
assembly, as the body of Christ,
united to Him in heaven.
72)
John presents the Father
manifested in the Son, God
declared by the Son in the bosom
of the Father, and that withal
as eternal life — God to us, and
life. Paul is employed to reveal
our presentation to God in Him.
Though each alludes in passing
to the other point, one is
characterised by the
presentation of God to us, and
eternal life given, the other,
by our presentation to God.
|