By Johann Peter Lange
Edited by Rev. Marcus Dods
THE HISTORICAL DELINEATION OF THE LIFE OF JESUS.
THE TIME OF JESUS APPEARING AND DISAPPEARING AMID THE PERSECUTIONS OF HIS MORTAL ENEMIES.
SECTION III
Jesus’ discourse in the
synagogue at Capernaum
concerning the manna from heaven
(Joh 6:22-71)
Jesus had remained behind on the
north-eastern shore of the sea
for the express purpose of
dismissing or sending home the
people. If we bear this in mind,
we cannot possibly see in the
multitude which afterwards was
waiting for Him on the
sea-shore, and as soon as
possible followed Him to
Capernaum, the entire crowd of
people whom He had fed in the
wilderness. For in that case we
should have to suppose that the
words with which He dismissed
the people had been of no avail.
We surely have much more right
to suppose that His command was
obeyed by the more intelligent
and pious amongst them. And if
yet a crowd remained behind,
which hindered His free
movement, we must suppose that
this was only a remnant of that
multitude which had been fed,
and that, too, a crowd of the
most exalted fanatics, a rabble
of obtrusive Chiliasts, who
believed they had found in Him
the bread-king that they wanted.
Indeed, it is of such a crowd
that the Evangelist John makes
mention;—a crowd which had kept
its ground, remained firm
together, on the opposite shore
until the next morning after the
miraculous feeding. They then
get into a state of especial
excitement. They saw that the
disciples had set sail alone,
whilst Jesus had remained on
that side of the sea. And they
also know quite well that
yesterday evening only one
vessel had been there on the
shore, that one in which the
disciples had set sail.
Therefore, in their opinion,
Jesus must be still in that neighbourhood. And yet they can
nowhere find Him. Hence they at
length come to the conclusion,
that in some way or another He
must have followed His
disciples, and was again to be
found with them. And when,
towards morning, other vessels
from Tiberias arrived, not far
from where the miracle had taken
place, they perhaps imagined
that He had made use of one of
these ships. At any rate, they
themselves now made use of this
opportunity to cross over to
Capernaum. There is no
difficulty to be found in this
statement, unless we entertain
the notion, that that whole
multitude of five thousand men
must have rapidly crossed over
in ships. But that is not what
is said. The question is only
respecting transport-ships for a
body of men which had remained
behind.
These people found the Lord
really at Capernaum, and asked
Him when He had come thither.
Jesus found it necessary to
treat these vulgar intruders
quite differently from the way
in which He was usually wont to
treat the crowds who came to Him
needing help. The discourse
which followed upon this meeting
between Himself and a crowd of
unteachable hearers, is composed
of three very distinct parts,
which we must carefully observe
if we would rightly estimate the
full vividness and historical
truth of the train of thought
which runs through this
discourse. First of all, Jesus
dealt with the excited body of
Chiliasts which was persecuting
Him (25-40). But His last words
to them concerning the heavenly
manna, which in His person had
come down from heaven, caused a
murmuring and an angry feeling
amongst the Judaizing or
pharisaical party, so that He
was led further to explain
Himself in reference to His
words against these murmurers.
This explanation He gave to His
opposers in the synagogue at
Capernaum, in a discourse which
He held there (vers. 41-59). But
His explanation went so deep,
and uttered so concretely and
with such sharp distinctness the
truth, that He with His flesh
and blood is the world’s true
living Bread, that now many even
of His followers took offence at
His words, and left Him (vers.
60-66). But we see that this
turn in affairs was no matter of
surprise to the Lord. Rather it
now appeared to Him necessary to
make a severe sifting amongst
His followers, even down to the
Twelve, in order to obviate the
thrusting in upon Him of
insincere followers, in order to
accomplish the remainder of His
pilgrimage as noiselessly as
possible, and in order to
prepare a fitting foundation for
a holy Church. Hence He proved
even His disciples with strong
words (vers. 66-71). This
intention must explain the whole
character of the words of Jesus
which are here uttered.
To the question of these
impertinent vulgar intruders as
to when He had come to
Capernaum, Jesus returned no
answer. With solemn asseveration
He declared to them that He knew
that they had sought Him not
because His feeding of them was
a sign, but because that sign
had been a feeding; as He
sharply expressed it: ‘because
they did eat of the loaves, and
were filled.’ It is obvious to
suppose that these men, to whom
the Lord was constrained to
speak thus, could only have been
the refuse of the real family
which had been fed. He exhorts
them that they should not be so
concerned to seek for earthly,
perishable bread, meat which in
itself is perishing, but should
make it their aim to obtain meat
which endureth unto everlasting
life. If only they desire to
have that, He at once graciously
declared to them that He
Himself, as the Son of man, has
this meat to bestow. For, He
assures them, His Father, God
Himself, has put His seal upon
Him,—simply His seal; therefore,
surely, the seal of His own life
and being, the seal of the
eternal life contained in
Himself and giving life to the
world; not merely the seal (we
will say) of His Messianic
credentials. They now understand
that they are to attain the
right object by an act of proper
religious behaviour towards Him.
But now they want to make a
lawgiver of Him; He is to tell
them what they must do that they
may work the works which shall
be well-pleasing to God. But He
recalls them from the way of
many works to the way of the
one
work of God, from doing to
believing. They must believe on
Him whom God has sent. They, on
the contrary, now require that
He should accredit Himself by a
sign, by a miraculous sign,
which they could see with their
eyes. And thus they come back to
their bread interests. They give
Him plainly to understand what
it is they really want by the
remark: ‘Our fathers did eat
manna in the desert, as it is
written: He gave them bread from
heaven to eat’ (Psa 78:24). Some
have been surprised that they
could thus speak. Had not, then,
Christ given them a great sign
through His miraculous feeding
of them? Was not this a greater
sign than the providing of the
nation with manna? Those who
question thus quite forget the
account which Christ here gives
of the character of these
people. One plainly sees that
they really have been fed by Him
in a miraculous manner, for they
rely upon His supporting them
just as Moses did their fathers;
but the fact is, they will not
have anything less from Him. He
is only to continue in the path
on which He has entered, and
always to support them; and even
thus far He is to carry the
miracle, that He shall not
confine them to natural, earthly
bread, but shall cause bread to
come down from heaven, as Moses
did. This is what they are
aiming at; and from this Jesus
again leads them back to the
necessity of true life, by
declaring to them that Moses had
not given them bread from
heaven, namely, the real Bread
of life, but that this it was
which His Father was now meaning
to bestow upon them. The true
Bread of God is a bread coming
down from heaven, giving life to
the world. Now they are ready to
take Him at His word according
to their sense of it: they
immediately desire that He would
evermore give them this bread.
He, however, once for all closes
the way against their carnal
importunities by declaring: ‘I
am the Bread of life, the
nourishment of real life; he
that comes to Me shall never
hunger, ay, and he who believes
on Me shall never more be
tormented with thirst.’ Yet He
laments over them, that they
will not come to this feast of
life, since they have already
seen Him long enough (ἑωράκατέ
με), and yet would not believe.
Thereby they seem to be
frustrating His mission to be
the Bread of life to the world,
and they perhaps allow the idea
to rise up in their minds that
He is dependent upon them. But
they must not entertain such a
delusion as that. He declares to
them that, for all that, His
people will come to Him; all
that His Father has given or
assigned to Him shall safely
come to Him. God’s decree will
have its way. But they are not
to suppose that by this He
requires an unattainable state
of discipleship, lying beyond
human determination,
distinguished by fatalistic
predicates. Rather He declares
to them, that let a man only
come to Him, and he shall be
welcomed by Him; for, for this
cause has He come down from
heaven, has He quitted His
purely ideal position in the
universe, and entered into
historic rapport with humanity,
not to do His own will
(according to His position taken
in its supermundane idea), but
to do His Father’s will (in His
historic position). And just
this is His historic mission,
that He should lose nothing of
all that the Father has given
Him—that He should save all,
whatever is man or belongs to
the human race, even the least
and the most sinful, and at the
last day should produce it all
complete in the glory of the
resurrection. But from this
desire of God to save men from
destruction, there is further
unfolded the will to bestow
eternal life upon them through
their seeing the Son and
believing in Him. At the last
day, when the former fashion of
the world shall pass away, then
shall these saved ones rise
beyond all time into new
freshness of life for evermore.
These words of Christ’s were
quite adapted to these hearers,
hard and obscure though they
seem. For in their beggarly
pride they were intrusively
offering themselves as His
followers, who, under certain
conditions—that, for example, of
being daily fed with miraculous
bread—were willing to believe
and obey Him. It must be told
them, on the contrary, that He
receives His followers only at
the hand of His Father. If the
Father did not give them to Him,
that is, if they did not come to
Him by God’s pure inward
drawing, they could not become
His. Yet for all that, He would
not despise their poverty or
their wretchedness. Therefore He
expresses Himself strongly: ‘He
who will only come to Me, I will
in nowise cast out.’ Therein lay
the declaration, that it is not
exactly a question concerning
sanctifying and glorifying
according to His own ideal sense
of the beauty of men’s behaviour; rather, He has come
down from heaven in that deep
humiliation of His to fulfil His
mission of saving men; and
whatsoever will only allow
itself to be saved by Him (πᾶν
ὅ), that He will preserve to the
last day. But in this salvation
is contained eternal life. And
in this sense it is that He
desires to be their supporter,
their living bread; He Himself
desires to become their eternal
nourishment for eternal life, if
only they will receive Him.
It is possible that these words
of Jesus may have aroused to
anger the judaizing spirit even
amongst this vulgar herd. But
probably they were hierarchical
Jews, assembled in the synagogue
at Capernaum for the worship of
God, who now begin as listeners
to express in murmurs their
displeasure at His being the
true Bread come down from
heaven. This Jesus is the son of
Joseph, they say; His origin is
well known, both His father and
His mother. How, then, could
such an one assert that He was
come down from heaven? The
exhortation with which Jesus
rebukes these whispering
murmurers—ʻMurmur not among
yourselves!ʼ—is not, we may
imagine, merely a dissuasion
from the act of murmuring,
viewed in itself. Rather in
their whispering and murmuring
amongst themselves was shown
that narrow party spirit in
which one strengthens the other
in his bigotry, prejudice, and
fanatical excitement. If they
will let themselves be so
schooled and in fluenced by
party spirit, they cannot really
come to Him. He who is willing
to come to Him, He continues,
must allow Himself to be drawn
by His Father, and in the
resurrection He will restore to
him the glory of his life (even
though, through his devotion to
Him, he might perhaps have to
lose it now). Such an one must
not
allow himself to be fettered by
party spirit, but independently,
and individually, must allow
himself to be taught by God in
heaven, according to the meaning
of that prophecy: ‘They shall be
all taught of God’ (Isa.
54:13; Jer. 31:33, 34). For such
scholars of God among them He
looks round. Te who, as such a
scholar, hears low utterances of
the Father, He goes on to say,
and allows himself to be taught
by them, such an one, He is
sure, will come to Him, Amongst
these pious scholars of God, it
is true, there is not one who
has arrived at the sight of God.
''o One only is this given, to
Him who is ever with God, who
ever dwells in the perfect
consciousness of God. And
therefore it is that He is also
the Bread of life, the
Fountain-Head of life, through
whom all believers of God must
receive eternal life, even to
beholding God. In this sense, He
explains to them, He calls
Himself the Bread of life. This saying the Lord now desires to explain to them hy returning to the comparison between the power of life which He imparts, and the manna of their fathers, ‘Their fathers ate that manna, and yet they died.ʼ Consequently they had only eaten of the typical bread from heaven, and not of the true Bread from heaven. For the sign of the true Bread from heaven must be, that he who eats it is delivered from death. But His life, He tells them, has this effect. He is that life-giving Bread, He says, which is ever descending from the heaven of eternal, essential relations, and imparting itself to all who are fitted to receive it. He therefore who arrives at the participation in His life shall live for ever. Hitherto He had set forth His personal life itself as the principle of life to the world. But He had already declared that He imparts Himself to life-craving men by having come down from heaven, and ever continuing to come down, i.e., by continually entering into fellowship with the world and its sufferings. This thought He now further unfolds by pointing to the object of His self-devotion: ‘The bread that I shall give is My flesh, which I shall give for the life of the world’ This is evidently a reference to His death, in which His devotion of Himself to the world’s welfare finds its completion. In His life He is the Bread which the Father gives to those in the world who are fitted to receive it; in His death He gives Himself completely away to the world as its Bread of life. The world as a whole consumes Him, draws Him into her life of death ; but by that means His quickening flesh, which is one with His spirit, the energizing quickening being of His spirit and body, imparts itself to the world, and restores to her life. Christ’s last. expression excited the Jews afresh. They begin to dispute concerning the question, how far this word can possibly have a reasonable meaning. Some might be inclined to search out the deep meaning of the word; but others would fain have it at once regarded as nonsense, with the remark: ‘How can this man give us His flesh to cat?’ Upon this, Jesus saw fit to address to them words the strongest and most difficult. For that proud spirit which thinks it understands everything whilst it will and can understand nothing, He confronts, in conformity with His pure nature, with the most mysterious utterances. It is a false principle of weak or perverted philanthropy, that of desiring that matters of faith should be made acceptable to crooked, falsely critical minds, by every possible dilution and softening down of their meaning. ‘To such dispositions Truth, on the contrary, makes use of the strongest, loftiest expressions, in order to bring the process of mutual influence, which tends to no good, to a prompt conclusion. Mystery veils itself before the scorner, by confronting him in the richest gorgeousness of its symbolism, of its symbolic expression, and departing from him. Thus in the richest symbolical utterances Jesus now declares the truth that His life is the principle of life to the world. In the first proposition, Jesus, with His well-known asseveration, declares: ‘Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink His blood, ye have no life in you’—ye are already dead! This is the mark of a man’s being dead, when he cannot appropriate to himself the life of Jesus in its entire actuality as his spiritual or inward nourishment of life; or when, on the other hand, his life's nourishment does not become the body and blood of Christ through a reference to Him as the Principle of all life, of all ideal relations of the world. When a man lays hold of the world in its ideal nature, in the true essential relations of its being—therefore also in its highest relation, which is its relation to Christ,—then will it at once become to him the body and blood of Christ, and he partakes of that which nourishes true life. But in a more proper sense he actually partakes of the body and blood of Christ, when the whole personality of Christ, all the facts of His life, and especially His death, become the pure, spirit-quickening nourishment of his real being. And then, finally, he partakes of the body and blood of Christ in a determinate form, when the word concerning the life and death of Christ becomes to him one with the thus consecrated element of the real nourishment of life itself. In these several steps of partaking, he proves that he is alive in his soul; and through the quickening of such a partaking, he continues to live more and more. The second proposition is stronger still: ‘Whoso thus, strictly speaking, eateth (τρώγων) My flesh, and drinketh My blood, hath eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day. Here the partaking of the body and blood of Christ appears as a yet more distinct, and indeed as a continual partaking. It is the condition of all true life of man: eternal life now, and resurrection hereafter, proceeds directly from Him. Hereby it is declared that communion with the life of Jesus, the contemplation of His being, the consideration of His word, the entering into His death, becomes to the believer the highest and most especial nourishment of his life, so that the enjoyment of Christ glorifies every enjoyment of life, and becomes more and more identical therewith. And when his Christianity has thus become to the man his highest enjoyment of life, and all his nourishment of life has come to be connected with Christ, then he has the consciousness of eternal life; for he is one now with the Principle of life of the eternal world, and moves in the eternal relations of this life; his life continually proceeds from Christ and towards Christ, and moves around Him, just as the planet revolves round the sun. Therefore he is assured that out of all depths of physical death he will, by virtue of becoming one with Christ, be through Him drawn forth again into the light of life. The third proposition completes this declaration. Christ says: ‘My flesh is meat indeed, and My blood is drink indeed.’ Nothing but the one is meat in the true or real sense, namely, as imparting true life; nothing but the other is drink in eternal significance, refreshment of heavenly life. So long as a man does not partake of the body and blood of Christ,—that is, does not live, breathe, and ye receive health and strength, in the real ideal relations of the world to Christ, and through Christ to God,—his hunger of life must continue in spite of all earthly food, his thirst of life in spite of all drink, And the test proving that he really partakes of the body and blood of Christ, is, whether he abides in Christ, that is, in an inward, conscious relation of being to Him, and whether Christ abides in him—whether he confidently feels within him the priestly-royal presence of Christ, and allows it to govern. It is plain that Jesus has here shadowed forth in a symbolical form the eternal, ideal communion which begins with the Christian’s life of faith, but which will be fully realized only in His kingdom (Luke xxii. 16, 18, 30). In general, its first beginnings are everywhere to be where the real in the ideality of His life, where the ideal of His Gospel in the reality of man’s participation of it, where the conjunction of the Gospel with some sign exhibited in human action, forms a sacramental celebration. Such conjunctions between the spiritual and the sensuous, which give to the word of salvation a phenomenal representation in the element of a human participation, have from the very first taken place, because all along the word has belonged to the world, and the world to the word. ‘They have at all times set forth the second positive sacrament of the kingdom of God, the sacrament of life’s glorification,—such as attaches itself to the first or negative sacrament, the sacrament of life's sacrificing. ‘The positive sacrament of the first man was at first paradise ; afterwards it was the treading under his foot of the serpent’s seed. Noah found his positive sacrament in his deliverance from the flood, and in the rainbow; Abraham, in the stars of heaven, and in the sand of the sea-shore,—afterwards in receiving, and in then receiving back again, his son Isaac. The people of Israel found it in the Passover. ‘lhe Church of Christ finds it in the life and death of Christ, in His body and blood. But the participation of His body and blood may be spoken of in a threefold sense. First, it is the essential participation of all the fulness of spirit and life which lies in His life and death, Then it is the entrance into the world of relationship to Christ, in which world all sensuous experience becomes a participation of the body and blood of Christ—the mystical, eternal supper of believers. But, finally, it is especially also the participation of the holy Supper, which is appointed to show forth Christ's death, to foreshadow the ideal participation of His life, and which thus presents that fulness in symbolical distinctness. The holy Supper, it is true, was therefore afterwards brought prominently forward from out of this worldembracing feast of the kingdom, to be the more definite and the sacramental representation of it. But on this very account it is not the Lord's Supper in any particular sense of the term which is here spoken of, because the words relate to the whole form of the world as brought into relationship with Christ, out of which Christ at His death made to issue forth the institution of His Supper; or else there is only a reference here to the Lord’s Supper in the like sense as, in the history of the flood, there is a reference to the institution of baptism. In baptism there sounds a note responsive to the flood which buried the former race of men; and thus also, in the Lord’s Supper, there is a consonance with, and a foreshadowing sign of, that great communion, reaching beyond time into eternity, wherein Christ, as the Principle of life to the world, has changed all the human elements of the world into His flesh and blood, through the sanctifying power of His death, through the leaven of His body and blood ; and wherein every participation of it becomes a blessed consciousness of His God-man’s Being.1 We are forced to this explanation of the words of Christ, in their most comprehensive and deepest christological significance, by the doctrine concerning the Logos at the beginning of the Gospel, and by the analogies ‘of kindred passages. ‘hus, m the third chapter, Christ appears as the Principle of all human deliverance and renovation ; in the fourth, as the Principle of all human contentment ; in the fifth, as the Principle of all reanimation. Here He is the Principle of all true preservation and nourishment of life. Now Christ adds a short, but luminous word in explanation of His deep sayings. He says, that like as He derives the energy of His human life from the fact that He is sent by the life-giving Father, that He lives through Him—being purely by Him upheld and borne as the counterpart of His life, so likewise they who partake of His life as the truest nourishment of their life, are through Him upheld in life—are renewed and quickened by the principle of life in Him. As certainly as God is the Source of life, so also is Christ, inasmuch as He continues to be Himself the manifestation of God, the Fountain of life in the world, in which is concentrated all the revealed life-giving power of God. And as certainly as Christ is this Fountain of life, so surely must he who makes his life wholly dependent upon Him, and allows it to be penetrated by Him, abide in the kingdom of life. After this, Christ once more pronounces the word which He has explained, as the Gospel with which He invites to Himself hungry souls of every sort, which condemns in all its wretchedness and perversity every false pang of hunger, especially the chiliastic desire for a kingdom of a never-failing supply of fleshly bread and enjoyment: ‘This is the bread which cometh down from heaven,’ This bread is not like the manna which their fathers ate, and which could not prevent, them from dying, ‘He that eateth of this bread shall live for ever’ The Evangelist tells us that this discourse, which Jesus made in the synagogue of Capernaum, offended even many of His disciples ; the word disciples being here used in its wider sense. ‘This is a hard’—an offensive, objectionable— saying,’ they said; ‘who can hear it?’ What was it they found so unbearable in His statement? Was it this, that He set Himself forth as the centre of life to the world ? or was it that He spoke of His death, the dissolving of His life into flesh and blood? or finally, was it that He set forth His flesh and blood in seemingly so sensuous a meaning, as being the highest and most needful nourishment of life? The answer of Jesus must furnish us with the explanation. His spiritual ear perceived their murmuring. ‘Doth this offend you?’ He asked them. ‘What and if ye shall see the Son of man ascend up where He was before?’ This obscure saying has had quite opposite interpretations given to it. We must take into account, that here at last it is altogether the disciples of Jesus who are spoken of. Next, that Jesus assumes the ease that they will see Him ascend up to where He was before, therefore to the Father; a case which can only then be realized when they gaze after Him with the eyes of faith. From this it surely follows, that He does not mean that at that time they will be more offended, but that then they will cease to be offended. How shall they certainly know that He has ascended to the Father in heaven? Through the Spirit, through the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. Not until the outpouring of the Holy Spirit shall the disciples be quite sure of Christ’s having ascended up, of His having reached His Father in glory.2 Thus His Ascension to heaven, as confirmed by the Holy Spirit, is to be a key which shall explain His earlier words that had offended them, and do away with their offence. And how is it calculated to do that? When His Spirit is poured out, then shall they first know from experience that He is the centre of life, from which must proceed the quickening Spirit which restores to the flesh of the unspiritnalized world, which in itself profits nothing, the true life. But then also shall they know from experience this, that it was necessary that He should pass through death, and withdraw from them His sensible presence, in order by His Spirit to impart to them life. And finally, it shall become clear to them how it is His Spirit which, through His quickening, transforming power, shall prepare for them out of the elements of the earthly world, which without that would also be an unprofitable substance, the nourishment of His body and blood. This, then, they shall one day know, that He is the true Manna, that acts in a threefold way betwixt heaven and earth ; first descending, in the power of His God-man’s person, down to the deepest depths of the world’s distress, and offering Himself up for the world, even to the surrendering of His flesh and blood; then ascending in His glorified individuality; finally, returning again in the outpouring of the fulness of His Spirit, in order to glorify His life and death to be the true Bread of spirit and life to the world. This Bread of life is just what they are wanting in, what mankind is wanting in. Their spiritual being is void of life; their corporeal being is flesh, is unspiritual. When He next goes on to say, ‘It is the Spirit that quickencth,’ He thereby declares to them that His Spirit does not mercly as spirit nourish their spiritual life, but that it is a power which quickens the flesh, And when, on the other hand, He declares, ‘The flesh profiteth nothing,’ He cannot mean by that His flesh and blood, as it is, as it has been offered up to the world, and through that glorified, as it thus works in perpetual unity with His Spirit's life ; but He plainly gives them to understand that flesh in general, considered in itself, without reference to His Spirit’s life, is dead, profitless, and unavailing, and that therefore He could not dream of feeding them directly with the material substance of His bodily nature, with His flesh, such as it would be, if, for example, according to their chiliastic conception, He chose to abide with them in such a way that His personal presence would fall from the eternal ideality of His being and of His mission. They might now perhaps express the further scruple, that by this explanation of His dark saying He was referring them to an activity of His life which was not to be realized till a future time. Therefore He makes that future operation clear to them through His present operation by the remark: ‘The words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life.’ Surely they have seen and known how, even from the beginning, His words represented the living oneness of mental and bodily life! They worked as spirit, not as a dead letter, which may be compared to unprofitable flesh, But they also worked as life, setting forth His flesh and blood, and streaming through the flesh and blood of those who were capable of receiving them, quickening and renewing,—not as abstract intellectual words of school-learning. Thus He has long ago begun to feed them with His flesh and blood ; and if they had any faculty for receiving this bestowal of His, they could not but have some apprehension of His hereafter, in the power of His Spirit, making His flesh and blood into heavenly manna and living bread for the whole world. Thus His answer explains the offence which they had taken: they had not sufficiently honoured Him, neither as the Centre of life to the world, nor as the High Priest offering up His life for the salvation of the world, nor yet as the Prince of life, transforming earthly elements into heavenly bread; and therefore, with the sentiments of a nascent Ebionitism, they had found His saying unhearable. Hence He had reason to turn upon them with the reproach that their murmuring arose from this, that there were some among them who believed not. The Evangelist takes this opportunity to remark that Jesus knew from the beginning those amongst them who were unbelievers, and even the traitor himself, and that in this sense He declared: ‘Therefore said I unto you, that no man can come unto Me, except it were given unto him of My Father’ If, then, it is to be given to them, then they must plunge down to the very depths of their being, to the very depths of their destiny, to the appointment and guidance of the Father, in order that they may experience the drawing of the Father to the Son. But all do not submit to the rebuke of this word. Rather it seems that many find in it a new cause of offence. The word probably sounds to them of predestinarianism. First, they stumbled at the doctrine which was afterwards developed in the Lutheran dogma concerning Christ's flesh and blood. Then they stumbled at the doctrine which was brought prominently forward in the Reformed doctrine of predestination, Thus their falling off comes to a decision: ‘Many of His disciples,’ it is said, ‘ went back, and walked no more with Him, But He makes use of this opportunity in order to sift even the circle of the Twelve, as we have already seen. ‘ Will ye also go away ?’ He asked them, with a look searching into their very heart. Peter replied with a word full of glorious faith for himself, but which, having no apprehension of the real state of things, answered also for all the others : ‘Lord, to whom shall we go? ‘Thou hast the words of eternal life: and we believe and are sure that Thou art the Holy One of God’3 Upon this Jesus explains Himself more clearly concerning His question : ‘Have I not chosen you the Twelve? And one of you is a devil!’ John adds: ‘He spake of Judas Iscariot, ... one of the Twelve.’ He intimates that in this man there was already such a disposition of mind as would issue in the future treachery. ───♦─── Notes 1. According to Schweizer’s hypothesis (das Evang. Joh. p. 223), Jesus spoke the words from vers. 27-58 in Jerusalem, and in connection too with the discourse in the fifth chapter. But if we consider that He uttered that discourse (in chap. y.) during an examination before a judicial court at Jerusalem, it would follow, that in that case His judges must then have required of Him to give them manna from heaven. . 2. The offence which is still caused to many by the ‘ hard saying’ in this chapter has been repeated in many forms down to the most recent times. Strauss thinks (i. p. 678) we may ‘consider the going back of many disciples upon such a σκληρὸς λόγος as very intelligible,’ but supposes Jesus could not have brought about that result by uttering any such words. Weisse remarks (11, 231): It cannot be denied that in His thus repeatedly reverting to the similitude of the Bread of Life, and enlarging of the same into the detailed discourse concerning the eating and drinking of the flesh and blood of Christ, there is something in the highest degree startling to ourselves, and even repulsive and offensive. The writer alluded to is of opinion that these words originate with the apostle’s recollection of the words at the institution of the Lord's Supper. 3. Concerning the sense in which Christ calls Himself the food of the world, Von Ammon remarks (ii. p. 248): ‘He is heavenly Bread personified, not in a rhetorical, but in a grammatical sense, but yet still only in a figurative sense; just as He is virtually the real Way and Vine, yet still only in a figure, or according to an indirect and analogous view, but by no means in a direct or immediate one.’ It is not to be denied that Christ cannot have described Himself as the Bread from heaven in a literal sense, according to the world’s usual mode of viewing things. But at the same time it must be considered that, according to John’s view, the higher heavenly relations are not types of the earthly, but their antitypes Thus, therefore, Christ is the essential Vine, the essential Bread, whilst the earthly vine and earthly bread represent that essential significance of Christ in a type or figure. With this qualification, the following opinion of Von Ammon is to be recognized as just: ‘What is true of the Bread of heaven is true also of the flesh and blood of the Son of man; for these predicates are only substitutes for the original image of the Bread of life, and are subject to the same analogical explanation as this last is. [The above distinction is very well put by Trench, Parables, p. 13—ED.]
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1) Thus are set aside all the critical remarks which would fain discover here a sketch of the leading principles of the Lord's Supper, and therein a mark of the spuriousness of the Gospel. [On this much-controverted passage, see the long and satisfactory note of Lampe (in Joan. ii, 256 ff.) The best modern expositors follow the opinion of Bengel: ‘tota hie de carne et sanguine J. C. oratio passionem spectat, et cum ea S. Cœnam.’ Alford is scareely correct in numbering Calvin with those who find here no reference to the Supper. He does, no doubt, say, ‘Neque enim de Cœrna habetur concio, sed de perpetua communicatione, que extra Cœnæ usw nobis constat.” But on the next page’he says, ‘Simul tamen fateor nihil hic dici quod non in Ceena figuretur ac vere prestetur fidelibus: adeoque S. Cœnam Christus quasi hujus concionis sigillum esse voluit.’ And no one can read Calvin's interpretation of the whole passage without seeing that his view is really identical with Bengel’s—ED. ] 2) Lücke remarks in his above-cited work, p. 169, that the ascension was only beheld by the Twelve, but that here Christ speaks of something which all His disciples should be cognizant of. Yet, on the other hand, it must Le remembered that Jesus’ ascension was first fully confirmed to the disciples as an ascension into heaven through the Holy Ghost, and that this assurance was imparted also to those who had not been present at the ascension from the Mount of Olives. [Meyer (in loc.) objects to the author's interpretation of this passage, but apparently without sufficient reason, See especially Acts ii. 33, Eph, iv. 8. Throughout the 14th, 15th, and 16th chapters of John, the ascension and the gift of the Spirit are so bound together, that an interpretation is impossible if they be not reckoned one act.—ED.] 3) According to Lachmann,
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