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 XIX
the contrast between
Christian
freedom and Jewish bondage, and
between the faith of Abraham and
the seeing of Christ
(Joh 8:31-59)
At once, then, Jesus now saw
Himself surrounded by a large
company of adherents who had
given Him their faith.1 But He
immediately knew that they had
become His disciples through a
misapprehension of their own.
Therefore He said to them, ‘If
ye will continue in My word,
then are ye My disciples
indeed.’ It still remained that
they should verify their
discipleship by subjecting
themselves to His word as He
meant it, and by persevering in
this obedience. He then added,
‘Then shall ye know the truth,
and the truth shall make you
free.’
Therewith He purposely hit the
diseased spot from which their
misapprehension had proceeded.
Free they certainly wished to be
made, but not through the truth,
but through worldly might
exercised by the Christ; free,
not from error,—from that they
thought themselves free
already,—but from the Romans.
‘The truth shall make you free:’
this word fell upon their minds
ungratefully. They now began to
perceive that they had
previously understood Him
falsely; yet they wished to hear
Him further, and to see more
distinctly what His meaning was.
They therefore answered, ‘We are
Abraham’s seed, and have never
been any one’s bondmen’ (have
never surrendered ourselves in
bondage to any one); ‘how canst
thou then say, Ye shall be
free?’2 As they perceived that
it was in a spiritual sense that
He was speaking of freedom, they
purposely threw themselves into
the sense of what He said, in
order to drive Him to the
confession that the freedom
which they needed to be
concerned about was another than
spiritual freedom. They use the
expression that they are
Abraham’s seed in proof of what
they say immediately after, and
the sense of their expression is
determined accordingly. They
have, to wit, always regarded
themselves inwardly as the free
sons in God’s house, nay, as the
heirs of the earth, although
they outwardly had been reduced
to slavery. It was with an
inward protest that they have
always submitted through mere
compulsion to external
subjugation, and have been as
little disposed to acknowledge
dependency upon Rome, as modern
Rome has been to acknowledge
worldly relations which
contradict her hierarchical
consciousness. In a spiritual or theocratical sense, therefore,
they assert themselves to have
been already free even from
Abraham’s time, nay, the
freeholders of the earth.3
Therefore they require Jesus to
explain more clearly what He
means by saying, Ye shall be
free, dropping the qualifying
sentiment, through the truth, we
doubt not, purposely. Now He
must explain Himself. The
question, whether He perhaps
might yet become their man, is
brought to the very crisis. But
at this moment He confronts them
just as solemnly with the
highest principle of freedom as
He once did Nicodemus with the
highest principle of knowledge:
‘Verily, verily, I say unto you,
Whosoever committeth sin is the
servant of sin.’ By bringing
forth sin, a man makes for
himself therein forthwith a
tyrant; she gains a power over
his whole being, in spirit,
soul, and body, although she is
an illusion, because in his life
he has placed this illusion in
the room of his God. That the
Jews who confront Him are
sinners, that their conscience
shall testify to them;
consequently they must now
acknowledge that they are
bondmen of sin. But if they are
servants of sin, then they are
servants absolutely, serfs;
consequently also in the house
of God—not in a good, but in a
bad sense. This conclusion Jesus
presupposes when adding further,
‘The servant abides not in the
house for ever, but the son abideth therein for ever.’ As
the Jews live in the family of
God not as children but as
servants, they have there no
rights as heirs, no right of
perpetual abiding in that house.
They are liable to be put out,
sold away, thrust off. And thus
it befell them later; they were
thrust forth, not only out of
Canaan, but also out of the
fellowship of God’s kingdom.
Only the son of a house is the
free subordinate therein, having
an inalienable right to the
house; and occupying this
position, he can then obtain
freedom even for the servants.
These principles of civil rights
Jesus applies to His own
relations to them, declaring,
‘If the Son shall make you free,
then will ye be free indeed.’ As
the Son in the Father’s house,
He can make them truly and
really free, and this liberation
He is fain to offer them.
‘We are Abraham’s seed!’ they
had proudly said. ‘I know that
ye are Abraham’s seed,’ answered
the Lord; ‘but—ye seek to kill
Me, because My word takes no
effect in you.’
The fleeting illusion which they
had indulged, that He might
perhaps be their man, is again
destroyed, and their former
hostile sentiments are resumed
with heightened rancour. He
cannot help telling them plainly
how the purpose of destroying
Him is now again glaring from
their very eyes. How ill that
agrees with their appeal to
Abraham! And the reason of their
wishing to kill Him is, because
His word makes no way with
them;—not, therefore, merely
because He healed the sick man
on the Sabbath-day.
When the word of Jesus is
utterly without any salutary
effect with men, and falls off
from their minds, gaining no
entrance, this is proof of a
decided hostility of the will
against the eternal truth which
dwells in His life, and this
hostility, even though it be
unconscious, is a design against
His life, since His life is one
with truth.
Yet, in such a case, it is
through the word which falls off
without gaining entrance that
hostility against Jesus is first
really quickened in the heart of
bad men. With the rejection of
His word is developed hatred
against Him, the disposition to
nail Him to the cross.
After saying this, Jesus seeks
to induce them to examine
themselves whether they can in
truth be reckoned as Abraham’s
children: He states the
position, ‘I speak what I have
seen with My Father, and ye
practise what ye have seen with
your father.’ This principle is
a very simple one. Genuine
children continue the work of
their fathers through word and
deed.
Now between God and Abraham
there subsisted the most
intimate friendship.
Consequently such friendship
must subsist also between the
genuine children of God and the
genuine children of Abraham. If,
then, they were as truly
Abraham’s sons as He was the Son
of God, they could not fail to
be thoroughly attached to Him.
But instead of this, they are
His deadly enemies. His word
finds no entrance at all into
the life of their spirit, while,
on the other hand, their looks
are bent upon Him like deadly
arrows. If they stand in this
position to one another, and if
He can appeal to the fact that
God is His Father, how can they
possibly affirm that their
father is Abraham?
They understand quite well that
the position which He states is
meant to drive them to this
inquiry; and therefore they
endeavour to turn the thrust
back upon Him by making the
decided affirmation, ‘Our father
is Abraham!’ As here spoken,
this sentence is not a mere
simple declaration, but an
argumentative position, with
some such meaning as this: Well,
sons are as their fathers; our
father is Abraham; if, then,
there is discord between us, see
to it who is Thy father.
But the affirmation which they
had stated Jesus cannot suffer
to hold good. ‘If ye were
Abraham’s sons (He says), ye
would do Abraham’s works; but
now ye seek to kill Me, a man
who has told you the truth which
I have heard of God.’ In a
threefold aspect is this lust
for His death to be regarded as
criminal,—as a crying opposition
to the spirit of Abraham: it is
a lust to kill a man; to kill
Him because He speaks the truth;
and, in fact, because He speaks
the highest truth which He
brings to them from the lips of
God Himself. ‘Thus did not
Abraham,’ He adds. And now that
it is made out that they cannot
be Abraham’s sons, His next
declaration must, of course,
seem to them very enigmatical
and insidious: ‘Ye do the works
of your father!’ Who then should
be this father of theirs? He
must needs be an adversary of
Abraham and an adversary of God,
according to the spiritual sense
in which Jesus has spoken of
him: they must be spiritual
bastards if they are not genuine
sons of Abraham: they must have
two fathers,—their natural
father, Abraham, and their
spiritual father who is not yet
named. In that case, they would
be begotten in real fornication,
first by reason of their impure
double-descent, and next also by
reason of their spiritual
degeneracy. With an abrupt fling
they endeavour to break off the
discussion, by affirming, ‘We be
not born of fornication;’ i.e.,
we are neither bastards, palmed
off upon Abraham by some
miscreant, nor yet fallen from
Abraham’s faith. But still, they
do not feel the blow which was
struck to have been warded off
by this affirmation: they feel
themselves in a disadvantageous
position if they continue
contrasted with Him as Abraham’s
sons; first, because He then
stands forth over against them
as the Son of God, and next,
because they have a dim feeling
that He is justified in
reproaching them with deflection
from Abraham’s character of
mind. Perplexed, therefore, and
defeated, they abandon the
position of their Jewish
hereditary pride, of their
historical claims, in order to
throw themselves into His higher
position: ‘We’ (as well as Thou)
‘have one Father’ (to whom
Abraham’s paternity brings us
back), ‘even God.’
As, on the one hand, they could
not at last have denied to Him
that He also was a son of
Abraham, namely, by virtue of
natural descent, so, on the
other, they consider that He
will not be able to dispute the
fact that God was their Father
as well as His, namely, not only
by virtue of creation, but also
by virtue of their Israelitish
calling. They also, no doubt,
consider that from this no
inference can be drawn affecting
the present debate. ‘God is our
Father!’ This sound from their
lips could not but awaken in the
heart of Jesus a variety of
feelings. ‘If God were your
Father, then would ye long since
have held Me dear;4 for from God
have I proceeded, and from Him I
am come hither’5 (in deepest
origin of being, that is, as
well as in most complete
manifestation, sent from God,
and by God). This He is certain
of, and this He must also now
again asseverate, that ‘He is
not come of Himself;’ that no
impulse of sinful self-will had
thrust Him forth upon this
course, nay, that no ingredient
of sin had mingled with this
course, but that He stands
before them a pure Mission of
God. Thus He is constrained to
represent Himself to them, but
on that account also to
complain, ‘Why do ye then not
understand my speech?’ Why is
the sound of My voice so strange
to you, that ye are not in a
condition to receive the
spiritual import of My word? It
is impossible that, under such
circumstances, they can be
children of God. This dark
enigma, Whose children are they?
He must now solve for them, to
rescue the honour of the Father
from the imputation of His being
the gloomy Father of such
bedarkened children. Therefore
He gives forth the word of
thunder, ‘Ye are of your father
the devil, and are minded to do
the lusts of your father. He was
a manslayer from the beginning,
and in the truth he has no
abiding-place, for truth is not
in him. When he speaketh a lie,
he speaketh of his own; for he
is the liar, and the liar’s
father.’
He now charges them with a
twofold guilt: not only with the
murderous mind with which they
have destined death for Him, but
also with the lying and
hypocrisy with which they seek
to deny this, and dare to
represent themselves as true
children of God. In both
respects He styles them
spiritual children of the devil.
It is evident that He describes
a personal being when He speaks
of the Liar who speaks a lie,
although He again almost
resolves his individuality into
the impersonality of wickedness
in saying, that in speaking a
lie, he speaks of his own. Man
knows of Satan from the
beginning only as manslayer and
liar; for Satan sought to
destroy our race through the
entanglement of the Fall,6 and
this object he attained through
the means of a lie, and that a
hypocritical lie. These
characteristic features of the
devil are therefore the
characteristic features of what
is devilish in the world; viz.,
the Hatred which grows till it
becomes a desire to murder, and
the Lie which dares to hide its
malignity under the hypocritical
guise of the fear of God and of
benevolence towards man. But the
two are ever producing each the
other. The Lie begets the
Hatred, and the Hatred the Lie.
Hatred converts what were
originally forms of life into
dark and gloomy caricatures, and
the Lie represents the false
caricatures of her own forming
as original forms: the former
dissolves personalities into
phantoms which are really
nonentities, the latter converts
phantom nonentities into living
beings.
Jesus immediately passes on to
make good His heavy charge. That
they wish to kill Him, and that
too with a spirit of rancorous
enmity, He needs not to prove to
them; their own conscience tells
them that. But that they are
also liars is a point which
shall now likewise be made good.
When a man is under the
direction of falsehood, he loses
ever more and more the sense of
truth, and, on the other hand,
is ever more and more disposed
to believe the arch-liar’s lie.
By any and every illusion he
becomes liable to be duped;
whilst everything that is real
becomes the object of his
aversion. Thus the gainsayers of
Christ, according to His
accusation of them, were
disposed to believe the devil.
Then He continued, ‘But me ye
believe not, even because I tell
you the truth.’ It was just the
truthfulness of His word (He
said) that was the reason that
they were not minded to believe
Him. The proof He then alleges
as follows: ‘Who of you
convinceth me of a
wrong-doing?’7
They had hitherto
repeatedly sought to do this,
but had never been able: all
their charges against Him He had
victoriously beaten down.
Therefore they could not help
allowing that He spake the
truth. ‘But if I speak the
truth’ (He adds), ‘why do ye not
believe me?’ This strange
phenomenon could only be
explained on the supposition,
that the spirit of lies animated
them as much as the spirit of
murder. It followed, then, that
they were not God’s children,
but children of darkness. He
lays down the canon, ‘He who is
of God, receiveth the words of
God;’ and draws from it the
conclusion, ‘Ye therefore
receive them not, because ye are
not of God.’
The Jews are coarse enough to be
now minded to treat the language
of lofty rebuke which Christ had
uttered, which rested entirely
upon actual fact, which had been
forced from Him, and which He
had made good by proof, as if it
were the language of mere abuse.
They will treat Him as if He had
been simply using words of
railing, and in the use of
railing they will quickly outdo
Him. ‘Do we not put our meaning
in a handsome form’ (they reply,
with a rabbinically polished
malignity, and with a
self-complacency which thinks it
is gilding over the coarseness
of the answer), ‘in saying that
thou art a Samaritan, and art
possessed by a demon?’ They
think they are outbidding Him in
two ways. He had given to
understand that they were no
genuine sons of
Abraham—spiritual bastards; in
return, they nickname Him a
Samaritan—a mongrel, who in
reality is a heathen, though
washed over as a Jew: He had
reproached them with being, in
the spirit of lying which
animated them, children of the
devil; in return He is told,
that as one possessed, He
carries a devil in Him bodily.
‘Lo the highest excitements of
passion, Jesus always opposes in
the most strongly marked
contrast the highest
tranquility; and thus He does
in the present instance. He
answers, ‘I have no demon’ (whom
I am to be supposed to serve),
‘but I honour My Father. This, He
says, is His simple and only
business, to honour the Father.
‘And ye’ (He adds) ‘dishonour
Me’—treat Me with insult.
They insulted Him now for
glorifying God,—they, the
fathers of Israel. ‘The feelings
of His heart at this horrible
contradiction He expresses in
short sentences, which, however,
say much.
“I seek not Mine own honour, He
first says. He is content to let
it come to pass that they shall
insult Him even to the death of
the cross.
‘But, He continues, ‘there is
one that seeketh it, and judgeth.’
Therewith stands before His soul
the whole dreadful future of
this infatuated people.
And therewith a strong feeling
of pity for the infatnated ones
likewise rises up in His mind;
and as if he would yet, with a
loud cry of warning and of
rescue, snatch them from the
flames of judgment, from death,
He suddenly breaks forth into
the compassionate call, ‘Verily, verily, I say unto you,
If any man will keep My word, he
shall never see death!’ This
great gospel reverberates into
the midst of that judgment which
already had begun, and which, in
its solemn future, stands so
plainly before His soul, in
order that at least He might by
this cry save some.8 But
confronting this solemn feeling
of pure Jove and sorrow, the
hardened heart of His enemies
disclosed itself in all its
horrible determination. They
fasten upon the burning word of
the compassionate One as a
senseless piece of heresy. ‘Now
we know that thou hast a demon.
Abraham is dead, and the
prophets; and thou sayest, If a
man will keep my word, he
shall never taste death.” Surely
it is not without a purpose
that they alter and heighten His
expression. And then they press
home upon Him the conclusion, ‘Art Thou greater than our father
Abraham, who is dead? And also
the prophets are dead.
Whom makest Thou Thyself?’
Abraham and the prophets then
behoved themselves to die, all
one after another; while He
promises that He would lift all,
one with another, for ever above
death who should keep His word.
This implies that He is at any
rate Himself altogether raised
above death. ‘Chey believe now
that they have completely got
hold of Him, in requiring Him to
explain whom He made Himself to
be, —to explain Himself, in
particular, in respect to His
relation to Abraham,
Jesus answered that He had no
wish to honour Himself. ‘If He
honoured Himself, His honour
would be nothing;’ He would
expect His glorification from
the Father. Names, appellatives,
assertions of His dignity, would
do no good—would in their
untimeonsness only do hurt; the
direction of His Father should
decide it all. He it was that
glorified Him, whom they
designated as their God.
Neverthless they knew Him not;
but he, however, knew Him—had
an assured acquaintance with
Him.
It is with Jesus so simple a
matter, that He must out of His
divine consciousness speak, and
work, and testify of the Father:
this work is so entirely the
soul of His life, that to Him
their gainsaying of His deeds
and doctrine seems a continual
demand that He should abdicate
His position in the truth,
should deny His innermost
consciousness, should lie as
they did. With this painful
feeling, He says, ‘And if I
should say, I know Him not, I
should be like unto you, a liar’
But no! speaks His whole being
decidedly in answer to this
demand: ‘I Know Him and keep
His
word.
This, then, is what they must
again hear in answer to their
question, Whom makest ‘Thou
Thyself? and no more. He will
confront them only as simply a
child of the truth, and as Son
of God in an exclusive sense;
the disclosure of His imperial
dignities He will await from His
Father. But in regard to His
relation to Abraham, that He
declares plainly: ‘Abraham your
father was transported with joy
(by the promise), that he should
see My day; and he saw it, and
was glad.’ Here a threefold
contrast is to be observed:
First, we must distinguish
Abraham as the father of the
Jews (ὑμῶν), and Abraham as
seeing the day of Christ; next,
the strong emotion of his soul
at the promise that He should
see the day of Christ, and that
beholding of His day itself; and
lastly, in the third place, the
inner being of Christ, and this
appearing of His day. Abraham
had also a natural aspect of
being, according to which he was
the progenitor of these Jews who
now were opposed to Jesus, as
formerly of Ishmael and of Esau.
But in this Abraham a change
took place; his soul bounded up
with transport towards God, when
the promise was given him that
he should see the day of
salvation. This promise he
received in visions accorded to
him.
But when were those visions
fulfilled to him 2) We might
think on some foresight of his
future relation to Christ,
imparted to him in vision, But
that is already indicated in the
first sentence : ‘he was
transported with joy. In
addition to this, it is stated
that he saw the day of Christ.
The day of Christ, then, is
surely to be regarded
as the coming forth of the
eternal being of Christ into the
light of the world, into the
sphere of phenomenal
manifestation.9
Jesus, therefore, in spirit
knows for certain that Abraham
in the higher world had
celebrated His entrance into the
world of men, His birth.10
But when Jesus here speaks of
His day, He does so in the
perfected certainty of that
consciousness of His, according
to which His present appearance
in the flesh stands contrasted
with the preceding process of
His becoming a man, which had
been going on from Abraham, and
from eternity, as the clear day
forms a contrast to the dawn
which precedes it.
At this juncture, the chasm
between Jesus and His opponents
has widened to the extremist
degree. In this reminiscence of
the patriarch Abraham, Jesus has
plunged with joyous
consciousness into the depths of
His essential being and of the
process which issued in His
coming in the flesh, and only
replies to them as if still His
Spirit were in that lofty and
far-off distance; while they
have gone down so very low in
the tone of their feeling, that
they can now catch no more than
the outermost sound of His
words, the outermost impression
of His personal form. Under
these circumstances, it appears
to them to be rank nonsense that
He would fain assert that
Abraham had rejoiced at His
appearing. Abraham (they think)
had lived many centuries before,
and this Jesus was now living;
how then should these two have
ever met? Nevertheless His
statement is not objectionable
enough as He had Himself given
it; they must yet give it a
little twist, in order that it
may have the perfect stamp of
heresy. Jesus had declared that
Abraham had seen Him; they
reverse His statement, and
charge Him with asserting that
‘He had seen Abraham.’ ‘And how
(they exclaim) should that be
possible, since thou art not yet
fifty years old?’ Why do they
estimate His age so great? Some
have said that Jesus really
looked older than He was,—that
through His labours and
journeyings He was aged early.
Others are of opinion that the
number fifty was here chosen to
indicate that He wanted years of
being half a century old, to say
nothing of that great number of
centuries which would be
required for Him to have seen
Abraham, But the probability is,
that these Rabbins really had a
peculiar predisposition to
confound with traces of age the
deep seriousness of the Spirit’s
consecration which was visible
in the appearance of Christ; as,
on the other hand, they without
question regarded the silvery
beard of a Rabbin as an evidence
of spiritual dignity. This
belongs to that dead,
coarse-minded way of viewing
things, into which these
hypocritical pretenders to
spiritual life were sunk, and
through which they were to such
a degree plunged in secularity
of mind, that they could think
of no other connection between
the days of Abraham and their
own than the long ladder of
centuries.
They might even now be reckoning
up, that more than seventeen
centuries were wanting, if we
subtract the age of Christ from
the time that had elapsed since
the death of Abraham, when Jesus
answered their objection with
that great word of His, ‘Before
Abraham came into being, I am!’
Seventeen centuries deficit
so it ran in their calculation
of His statement, made according
to their purely secularized
system of religion. On the
summit of secularized thought
they took their station,
confronting Him in triumph, and
believed that they were exposing
Him to ridicule, through that
enormous anachronism of which
they think He has made Himself
guilty. But Jesus was now, as it
were, poising Himself aloft in
the depths of eternity, hovering
far above the reach of their
attacks in awful joy, amid the
deeps of His own consciousness :
it was as out of eternity that
that blessed word of His pealed
forth, in which, indeed, they
deemed they discovered the most
enormous, the most senseless
heresy. With that word He
expressed the consciousness of
His eternity in God. This
eternity He expresses in the
contrast between His life and
the life of Abraham, in a
threefold relation; namely, as
an eternity before time, an
eternity within time, and an
eternity above time. If He was
before Abraham, then He was
before Him not in temporal
manifestation, but in eternal,
essential subsistence—in
eternity before time: He was
with God. But since He does not
say, I was before Abraham, but
I am before him, He therewith
expresses the eternity of His
being within time—an eternity
which runs through all time in a
perpetual presence with it. Yea,
this declaration, I am, proves
that He also, now and
continually, feels Himself,
according to His inner life
(resting in God), to he above
time. In the first respect,
Christ is the eternal Logos, who
upholds the world, whose
existence upholds all emergence
into being—the appearance of
Abraham as well. In the second
respect, He is the Angel of the
Covenant, who in Abraham’s faith
begins the process of His
becoming man, and continues it
until it is perfected in the
person of Jesus. In the third
form, He is the eternal Son,
whose consciousness, embracing
humanity, embraces in His
redeeming activity Abraham as
well.
As soon as Jesus had spoken this
word, His sentence in the court
of His adversaries was
pronounced. Forthwith ‘they took
up stones to stone Him.? But He
escaped from them, Without doubt
there arose the highest
excitement round about Him,
whilst He, on the other hand,
was asserting the heavenly
tranquility of His nature;
and therefore the uproar served
as a veiling cloud for Him. His
faithful ones also were probably
on the spot grouping themselves
around Him. Thus He went forth
out of the temple. ‘He
went through the midst of them,
and so passed by,’ we read in an
additional clause,
which is not sufficiently
authenticated, but which, no
doubt, gives us at
any rate the right explanation,
viz., that Jesus did not conceal
Himself
from them, but that He escaped
them, in their tumultuous
excitement, just by going
through the very midst of the
excited crowd.
───♦───
Notes
Strauss (i. 679) fancies he has
discovered that the discourses
of the fourth Evangelist move
‘in endless repetitions of the
same thoughts and expressions.’
This aspect they certainly wear
for him to whom it is not given
to press into their proper sense
and connection; by reason of the
peculiar simplicity of their
diction and colouring; by
reason of their setting forth
the richest revelations of the
inner life of Jesus in the most
delicate onward-movement through
circumstances of outward fact,
in a contemplative form of
language which is marked by the
extremest and most touching
simplicity.
In such a style of language it
can very well happen that, e.g.,
the verbal contradiction shall
arise: If I speak of Myself, My
witness is not true (ver. 31);
and, Though I speak of Myself,
yet is My witness true (viii.
14); whilst this seeming verbal
contradiction is perfectly
removed by considering the
context of the two passages.
And as it is with this seeming
contradiction, so also is it
with the cases of seeming
similarity or identity. The
‘endless repetitions of the same
thoughts’ develop themselves to
the understanding reader into a
grand succession of distinct
utterances, different from each
other’ of Christ’s God-manlike
consciousness. So, e.g., in John
vii.
17, Jesus sets forth the
relation of His doctrine to the
good behaviour of men who act
antecedently to their knowledge
of Christ according to their
best knowledge and conscience,
and at the same time teaches us
to regard His calling as Teacher
as a dignity committed to Him by
the Father, in contrast with the
character of teacher transmitted
by Rabbins to the pupils of
their schools. But in ver, 28,
the point in question is the
contrast between His external
descent and His essential
origination from the Father, as
that origination is impressed on
His consciousness and His whole
conduct.
In chap. viii. 28, again, we
have to do with quite another
contrast.
The Jews require Him to declare
Himself openly respecting His
relations to their expectations
of the Messias; He in return
assures them, that in word and
deed He takes only those steps
which are pointed out to Him by
the Father. In ver. 38 He then
declares, that (in His judgment
of them) He speaks what He has
seen with His Father; that thus,
as He in general only expresses
what God has really wrought, so
also, in His description of
their position, He only marks
the judgment which His Father
Himself passes upon them. This
judging according to the reality
of things, He puts in contrast
with their utterly null,
groundless, diabolical doings (Christ-murder),
which they have seen with their
father, the murderer of the
innocent man (Adam) and of the
pious man (Abel). But what He
before was saying (ver. 30) of
His speaking and judging, was
with especial reference to His
miraculous activity, to the
contrast between the quickening
and not quickening of the dead.
In ver, 43 of the same chapter,
in the assurance that He was
come in His Father’s name, He
marks the contrast between His
really Messianic life and the
rise of the false messiahs who
should come in their own name.
The passage vi. 388 expresses
the distinction between His
historical and His ideal
position in the world. We are
bound to compassionate a
criticism which, in this rich
world of the most delicate and
most deep-thoughted utterances
of distinct christological
truth, fancies that it finds
everywhere only the echo of the
same thought, and in its
self-conceit will burden the
exalted Evangelist with the
poverty of thought with which it
is itself oppressed.
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1) They are characterized πεπιστευκότες. 2) Others refer the sentence to the enjoyment of individual civil freedom. See Lücke, p. 320. 3) ʻThe commonest handicraftsman who is of Abraham s seed is the peer of kings, says the Talmud.ʼ See Tholuck, p. 231. 4)’Πγαπᾶτε. 5)’Εξἦλθον καὶ ἢκω. [On the controversial use made of these words by theologians, see the elaborate and useful notes of Lampe in loc. ED.] 6) It is surely not proper to lay it down as a dilemma, that this passage must either refer to the seducing of the first man to the Fall, or else to Cain’s fratricide. The passage evidently goes back to the first beginning of the world’s history, and therefore to the Fall, and this takes in the manslaying which Satan was guilty of at its first commencement, But as this manslaying first came into evident view in the deed of Cain, surely this also must be included as well in this reference to what Satan has been doing from the beginning. This proposed dilemma might be set aside by a second, which might stand quite parallel to it: we might ask, whether the reason why Christ charged the Jews with being children of Satan lay in the murderous thoughts against Him which were now stirring within them, or in His foresight that they would in the result crucify Him? Comp. Tholuck on the passage. 7) To explain this utterance of Jesus rightly, we must recollect the occasion of its being spoken. Jesus had to do with opponents who had repeatedly accused Him of a wrong-doing, a trespass against the theocratic law. They had accused Him, it is true, but they had not been able to convict Him of the charge; He had always beaten their accusations victoriously to the ground, To this fact Me makes His appeal. Therefore also the following words, But if I speak to you the truth, do not necessarily lead to the conclusion that the word ἀμαρτία is here to be understood as meaning error. On the other hand, it is not, cither, to be referred to sin simply, In reference to the sinfulness of Jesus in general, He could hardly constitute the Pharisees judges on that point; they surely were not in a position to estimate the reality of His inward righteousness, any more than they knew how to estimate trespasses of properly a spiritual character on their own part. Yet indirectly (as Lücke very rightly observes) the question does really express the sinlessness of Jesus; for, by virtue of ‘His insight into the real nature of sin, the conscientious Christ could only have ventured to utter such a challenge, if He knew Himself to be even before God really pure from sin.’ [The words of Tholuck should be remembered in this connection. ‘Since, in the theology of Schleiermacher, the doctrine of the sinlessness of Christ has taken the place of the Church's doctrine of His deity, a new effort has been manifest to retain for the doctrine of the Redeemer this grand dictum probans.’—ED.)
8) The connection between these
sentences, which seems a
difficult problem to exegesis,
comes out the more clearly in
proportion as we take the three
sentences in vers. 50, 51, quite
emphatically, supposing a pause
after each sentence.
9) See Luke xvii. 22. Comp.
Lücke on the passage before us,
10) [This is the interpretation
adopted by the best expositors.
A refutation of other meanings
will be found in Meyer on the
passage; and Aliord’s quotation
from Maldonatus gives the true
sense, though Lampe’s note (ii.
508) is still more accurate and
better expressed. As the basis
of every just interpretation
must lie his first position,
‘Bina gaudia de eo priedicantur,
alternm, quod praecessit,
alterum quod insecutum erat.
‘The ‘day of Christ’ he thus
defines: ‘Per diem Christi intelligimus tempus adventus et
commorationis ejus in mundo, ad
opus salutis consummandum,’ The
‘seeing’ of the day is ‘pereeptio temporis adventus
Christi tanquam as;’ and this
was enjoyed by Abraham and the
other celestial inhabitants —ED]
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