
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.
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												SECTION XX 
												
												the cure of the man born blind 
												
												(John 9) 
												On His way from the temple, as 
												He was threading His course (παράγων) 
												through the crowds, Jesus came 
												by a man that had been born 
												blind, who sat by the wayside 
												begging. Jesus ‘saw’ him; 
												thereby is expressed that His 
												eye fastened upon Him, that He 
												showed him sympathy, and soon 
												learned that he had been born 
												blind.1 
												The disciples, of whom we thus 
												learn in this passage that they 
												formed a body of attendants 
												round Jesus, asked Him, ‘Master, 
												who hath sinned, this man or his 
												parents, that he was born 
												blind?’
												The disciples believe for 
												certainty, and with reason, the 
												doctrine, that God visits the 
												misdoing of fathers upon their 
												children until the third and 
												fourth generation; that 
												therefore, surely, in general, 
												guilt on the part of parents 
												admits of being punished in 
												their children. Therefore they 
												might be led to think, whether 
												perhaps this man might not have 
												been for some transgression of 
												his parents struck with natural 
												blindness. But it might again 
												appear to them a harsh 
												supposition, that for some 
												possible guilt of his parents 
												the poor man should have to make 
												atonement with blindness all his 
												life through. 
												Therefore another thought might 
												offer itself to their mind, 
												originating out of views which 
												at that time were beginning to 
												engage the Jewish people. Even 
												if we must not look to find the 
												doctrine of the transmigration 
												of souls prevailing as a popular 
												notion among the Jews, at least 
												at this time and in this 
												neighbourhood, yet the notion 
												that a man may perhaps have 
												incurred sin in the 
												pre-existence of his soul, 
												before it came into his body, or 
												perhaps also, the other notion, 
												that he may have incurred it 
												when an unborn child in his 
												mother’s body,2 may very 
												possibly have been known to 
												them, and have come to their 
												minds on the present occasion. 
												But then they also, no doubt, 
												felt that this supposition was 
												even a more difficult one than 
												the first. 
												Thus this blind man with his 
												suffering proved an enigma to 
												them, which they confessed 
												themselves unable to solve. But 
												the solution which they expected 
												from Jesus would also (they 
												thought) be likely to afford 
												them light in reference to the 
												mysterious relations subsisting 
												between hereditary ills 
												affecting men and former sins. 
												We must repeat our words, they 
												thought; for if we imagine to 
												ourselves the scene in which the 
												disciples proposed the question, 
												we can hardly suppose that they 
												could just now have had any 
												great interest in a mere 
												theoretical inquiry. 
												It is, we suppose, plain that 
												the proceeding took place on the 
												same day that Jesus was 
												threatened with stoning in the 
												court of the temple; nay, that 
												it took place in the vicinity of 
												the temple, and on the road by 
												which Jesus was leaving the 
												temple. For it is still the 
												Sabbath-day, and surely not yet 
												a returning Sabbath. Jesus is 
												still on the road of the 
												temple-hill; and there, in the 
												vicinity of the temple, beggars 
												used to station themselves. 
												Also, the Evangelist expressly 
												links the scene immediately on 
												to the preceding.3 
												On this very account the calm 
												mind with which Jesus, who has 
												only just now escaped from the 
												tumult of the deadly enemies who 
												were pursuing Him, stops by the 
												blind man, is calculated in two 
												ways to raise our astonishment 
												and to command our reverential 
												awe. But the disciples would 
												hardly be in an equally composed 
												frame of mind. They had, no 
												doubt, all of them shared the 
												expectation of the brothers of 
												Jesus, that Jesus, on publicly 
												presenting Himself at Jerusalem, 
												would meet with the best 
												possible reception; and in this 
												expectation they had found 
												themselves fearfully 
												disappointed. It must needs have 
												come hard to them to be obliged 
												to leave the courts of the 
												temple with their Master in such 
												a fashion, as persecuted and 
												driven forth. How readily they 
												might think that their 
												persecutors might soon be behind 
												them! Can we imagine that in 
												such a frame of mind they would 
												be disposed to take up difficult 
												questionings relative to the 
												pre-existence of the soul, or 
												even respecting the connection 
												between sin and evil? We might 
												surely suppose the very reverse: 
												we may naturally conjecture 
												that, in their present state of 
												excitement, they may have fallen 
												back into the common popular 
												notion for the purpose of 
												suggesting to our Lord, whether 
												He should now detain Himself 
												with a man who was so seriously 
												marked by Heaven itself. 
												At all events, the answer of 
												Jesus enters into no particulars 
												relative to the inquiry which 
												they had proposed. He declares 
												that ‘neither the man himself 
												nor his parents had sinned,’ to 
												bring upon him this evil. 
												Further than this He will not 
												have the source of this mark of 
												obloquy which was laid upon the 
												man and his parents inquired 
												after,—an investigation reaching 
												back to its dark origin, where 
												it certainly must be connected 
												with the general sinfulness of 
												mankind. Rather He at once 
												fastens His eye upon the ends 
												contemplated in this affliction, 
												and above all its chief end. He 
												was destined to suffer it ‘that 
												the works of God should be made 
												manifest in him.’ In the most 
												general sense, this end is at 
												all times contemplated in all 
												sufferings: God means to glorify 
												Himself in those who suffer. The 
												obscure causes of human 
												sufferings often recede beyond 
												our ken, but the Divine end is 
												always clear. But in the present 
												case this held good in an 
												especial measure. 
												That is, it was to the Lord 
												already a clear point, that His 
												miraculous power was able to 
												prove itself in this man’s case 
												in an especial degree, and not 
												only (we may be sure) in his 
												body, but also in his soul. What 
												He further said appears to have 
												been particularly aimed against 
												an ill-concealed disposition on 
												the part of the disciples to 
												hurry on, and therefore to 
												dissuade Him from attending to 
												the case. ‘I must work the works 
												of Him that sent Me while it is 
												day: the night cometh, when no 
												man can work.’ He knows, and 
												tells them, that the bright day 
												of His life is still secured; 
												and that, therefore, He can 
												fearlessly tarry for this work, 
												even in the very vicinity of His 
												persecutors. No doubt He had a 
												forefeeling that His night of 
												death would come soon, to put an 
												end to this form of His 
												working.4 But on that account He 
												is also disposed still to turn 
												this opportunity to account, and 
												to give light to this blind 
												man’s eyes. ‘As long as I am in 
												the world,’ He says, ‘I am the 
												light of the world.’ He speaks 
												this, we may believe, in the 
												particular sense, that during 
												His sojourn in the midst of the 
												world, He was for the world, not 
												only spiritually but also 
												corporeally, its mightiest, 
												eye-awakening Light-Fountain, 
												and that He would prove Himself 
												to be such to the end. 
												And already He was busy with 
												helping the patient. He spat on 
												the ground, and made clay with 
												His spittle, and with the clay 
												He besmeared the eyes of the 
												blind man, and said to him, ‘Go 
												thy way, and wash thyself in the 
												pool of Siloam.’5 
												‘That, translated, is, The 
												Sent,’ remarks the Evangelist. 
												We have already been taught to 
												recognize the well of Siloah, 
												which was the proper 
												temple-spring at the foot of the 
												temple-hill outside the 
												sanctuary, as a symbol of the 
												blessing of the Spirit, the 
												fulness of which has appeared in 
												the Messias. So, without doubt, 
												the Evangelist regarded it. 
												Therefore the word of Jesus 
												appeared to him so significant; 
												the patient was, by the Sent One 
												of God, sent to the well of the 
												Sent One.6 Go thy way to the 
												pool of Siloah! This word had, 
												indeed, from the lips of Christ, 
												a significance, which was 
												intended to rouse into intense 
												action the spirit of this gifted 
												blind man, and to excite his 
												believing anticipations. He 
												followed out the directions 
												which Jesus had given him. A 
												guide to direct his steps would 
												be easily found. He went, washed 
												himself, and came back seeing. 
												The miraculous cure soon got 
												wind. Those who before had known 
												the blind beggar, and now saw 
												him go about seeing, were 
												astonished. Some doubted whether 
												he were the same as they had 
												known in the person of that 
												blind man; others would not 
												believe their eyes, and affirmed 
												he was only like him; others, 
												again, declared that it must be 
												the same person. He himself 
												corroborated the affirmation of 
												these last. And now he was 
												required to tell how he had got 
												to see. He related to them in 
												what manner the ‘man who was 
												called Jesus’ had healed him. 
												Thereupon they asked him where 
												Jesus was. He did not know. Next 
												they brought him to the 
												Pharisees, and this, as it 
												should seem, simply on the 
												ground that the cure had taken 
												place on the Sabbath-day. 
												Without question, among these 
												people who took him before the 
												Pharisees, were some who were 
												themselves pharisaical spirits. 
												By these he was passed over into 
												the hands of the Pharisees, and 
												subjected to a judicial 
												investigation. 
												It is probable that this hearing 
												did not take place till the day 
												after the Sabbath on which the 
												man was healed. But if we were 
												disposed to assume that it took 
												place on that Sabbath, or, more 
												accurately, on that eighth day 
												of the feast, yet that would not 
												infer the difficulty which some 
												have found in this supposition. 
												For even if we do not admit the 
												hypothesis that it is only an 
												occasional private process which 
												is here spoken of (see Ebrard, 
												p. 318), yet certainly a 
												distinction is to be made 
												between regular judicial 
												processes, which ordinarily did 
												not take place on the Sabbath, 
												and a hearing such as was 
												probably held in a little 
												Sanhedrim (of twenty-three 
												assessors), or in a synagogue 
												court (see Lücke, ii. p. 383). 
												At this hearing the healed man 
												was required once more to relate 
												the whole story, as it had 
												already been told to the 
												Pharisees. Thereupon a 
												discussion arose respecting the 
												Doer of the miracle. The 
												sentiments of the board were 
												divided: there were members 
												present who were friendly to 
												Jesus, or, at any rate, thought 
												more reasonably about Him than 
												the majority. Even His opponents 
												were thrown into perplexity 
												through the striking miracle 
												which He had wrought; but they 
												sought to embolden their own 
												spirits again, and to dishearten 
												the well-disposed in their body 
												by bringing into prominence His 
												desecration of the Sabbath,—for 
												such was the construction which 
												they contrived to put upon the 
												work. ‘This man is not of God’ 
												(they said), ‘for He keepeth not 
												the Sabbath-day.’7 But those 
												others who were better-minded 
												answered, ‘How can a man who is 
												alleged to be a sinner’ (i.e., 
												one who sets at naught the law, 
												and ought to be excommunicated) 
												‘do such great miracles?’ Thus 
												there arose a division in the 
												judicial board. Yet we plainly 
												see from the result that the 
												opponents of Jesus had decidedly 
												the preponderance. 
												The deposition of the healed man 
												placed them in a painful 
												dilemma. If they would admit the 
												fact, they would have, in 
												conjunction with Jesus’ alleged 
												violation of the Sabbath, to 
												acknowledge also the great 
												miracle which had been wrought; 
												and they saw plainly enough that 
												the effect of the miracle only 
												too strongly outshone that slur 
												of violating the Sabbath which 
												they so skilfully endeavoured to 
												cast upon Him. If, on the other 
												hand, they chose to deny the 
												miracle, then they would have 
												also to give up the new charge 
												which they were alleging against 
												Him. In this embarrassment, they 
												now, as it should seem, sought 
												to give such a turn to the 
												transaction, as that they should 
												either hold fast to this charge, 
												without however acknowledging 
												the miracle, or be able to 
												regard the whole matter as a 
												criminal imposture framed by 
												Jesus, or that, lastly, if other 
												courses fail, at least the 
												effect of the circumstance, 
												operating so strongly in favour 
												of Jesus, should be beaten down 
												with the strong hand of power. 
												To this end they instituted a 
												succession of hearings. 
												In the first place, they resumed 
												their dealing with the blind man 
												(who, in all probability, had 
												been made to withdraw),8 and 
												asked him, ‘What sayest thou of 
												Him because He hath opened thine 
												eyes?’ The healed man, in whom 
												we may recognize an honest, 
												prudent, strong-minded, and 
												spirited character, whose 
												natural abilities have just at 
												this time, with his healing, 
												been brought out into new play 
												and stimulated into unusual 
												activity, answers boldly, ‘He is 
												a prophet.’ ‘The Jews 
												therefore,’ observes the 
												Evangelist, with sharp emphasis, 
												‘would not believe concerning 
												the man himself that he had been 
												blind, and had recovered his 
												sight, until they called the 
												parents of him that had 
												recovered his sight.’ It is 
												indeed conceivable, that, in 
												consequence of their unbelief, a 
												real suspicion had arisen in 
												their minds, after the healed 
												man had declared that Jesus was 
												a prophet, that there might be 
												some deception in the business. 
												The parents were confronted with 
												the man whose sight was 
												restored. ‘Is this your son?’ 
												they were asked; ‘and do ye 
												affirm of him that he was born 
												blind? How is he now in the 
												possession of sight?’ They 
												declared, ‘We know that this is 
												our son, and that he was horn 
												blind; but how he has got his 
												sight we know not.’ They then 
												add, of their own accord, the 
												significant words, ‘Or who hath 
												opened his eyes we know not: he 
												himself has the requisite age, 
												ask himself; he will (can) speak 
												for himself.’ From the manner in 
												which they gave their deposition 
												there appeared plainly enough 
												the consciousness that they had 
												to do with dangerous people in 
												the bench before whom they 
												stood. With extreme cautiousness 
												they pointed to a man who had 
												miraculously opened their son’s 
												eyes; but they had no wish, and 
												perhaps were not able, to say 
												anything more definite 
												concerning Him. Altogether, they 
												did not wish to see themselves 
												any further mixed up with the 
												business. One might think that 
												they were somewhat unamiably 
												willing before the magistrates 
												to leave their son to bear the 
												whole brunt of this encounter; 
												but, as it seems, they feel 
												confident in his possessing an 
												especial savoir faire or 
												sagacity, such as would be 
												necessary to get out of such an 
												inquisition with success. John 
												says expressly, ‘These things spake his parents for fear of 
												the Jews;’ and adds the 
												explanation, ‘For the Jews had 
												already agreed in the 
												resolution, that if any one did 
												confess that He was the Messias, 
												he should be thrust out of the 
												synagogue.’ This resolution of 
												the Sanhedrim was in perfect 
												harmony with the despatching the 
												officers to seize Jesus,—a 
												measure which had been taken at 
												about the middle of the feast.9 
												As soon as it was believed to be 
												necessary to take steps against 
												Jesus Himself, consistency would 
												prompt a hierarchical government 
												to warn also the people against 
												Him. This was done by the 
												prohibition of acknowledging 
												Jesus as the Messias, under pain 
												of excommunication from the 
												synagogue. The hierarchs would 
												feel concerned to spread the 
												knowledge of this prohibition as 
												widely among people as possible; 
												it was therefore now already a 
												matter of public notoriety. 
												Upon this, the healed man (who 
												in the meanwhile had again been 
												ordered to go aside, or to 
												withdraw) was once more summoned 
												before the court. The endeavour 
												was now made to intimidate him, 
												and in a shamefully hypocritical 
												manner to lead him to depose 
												something to the prejudice of 
												Jesus. ‘Give God the glory,’ 
												they said, as if they would bind 
												him to the strictest 
												truthfulness; but the object of 
												their fanatical earnestness, 
												even if they were not distinctly 
												conscious of it, was falsehood. 
												‘We know,’ they then said, ‘that 
												this man is a sinner.’ There now 
												awoke in the bosom of the healed 
												man a feeling of righteous 
												displeasure, which, with a 
												really noble superiority, began 
												to unveil the badness of their 
												proceedings in a sort of 
												ironical banter. ‘If He is a 
												sinner,’ he said, ‘I do 
												not know 
												it; but one thing I know, that I 
												was blind, and now am seeing.’ 
												With intended and pointed 
												distinctness he opposes to their 
												knowing-not and knowing, his 
												knowing-not and knowing, and 
												therewith already shows that he 
												was not minded to bow to their 
												authority against his own better 
												knowledge and conscience. They, 
												on the other hand, with 
												increased inquisitorial 
												strictness, revert once more to 
												the question, what Jesus had 
												done to him? how He had opened 
												his eyes? Despising as he did 
												their whole proceeding, there is 
												at the same time decidedly 
												conspicuous in his answer a 
												spirit of humour. ‘I have told 
												you already, and ye would 
												pretend that ye did not hear it. 
												Why will ye hear it again? Will 
												ye too, I wonder, become His 
												disciples?’ Now they went beside 
												themselves, and began to rail on 
												him. ‘Thou art His disciple,’ 
												they said, ‘but we are Moses’ 
												disciples. We know that God 
												spake to Moses; but for this 
												fellow, we know not whence He 
												is.’ They are not here thinking 
												of the question as to His 
												earthly origin, but simply mean, 
												that it is very much a question 
												with them whether Jesus with His 
												works originated with God or 
												not. This point, however, the 
												healed beggar tries to make 
												clear to them. ‘There is 
												something surprising,’ he says, 
												‘in this, that ye’ (the knowing 
												ones, the great divines) ‘know 
												not from whence He is, and yet 
												He has opened my eyes. We know, 
												however, that God heareth not 
												sinners: but if any man is 
												God-fearing, and doeth His will, 
												him He heareth. From eternity it 
												has never been heard that one 
												has opened the eyes of one 
												blind-born. If this man were not 
												from God, He could do nothing. 
												Thus did the healed beggar, in 
												the hall of justice, with a tone 
												of rebuke and displeasure, 
												preach to the enemies of Jesus 
												of the certainty of His divine 
												mission. This was more than they 
												could endure. They felt not the 
												eminence of his position as over 
												against themselves. ‘Thou wast 
												born in sins whole and entire’ 
												(ὅλος, not only in body, as 
												being blind, but also in soul, 
												as being heretical), ‘and wilt 
												thou be teaching us?’ With these 
												words they thrust him out of the 
												hall. Therewith, however, was 
												also, in all probability, 
												accomplished in fact and deed 
												his thrusting out of the 
												synagogue. 
												Jesus heard of his being thrust 
												out. It was a token to Himself 
												how strong the hostility against 
												Him was growing. It pained Him 
												doubly, that the man should 
												already have been excommunicated 
												as His disciple, whilst he yet 
												had not the joy and peace of 
												believing in Him. Therefore, as 
												soon as He found him again, He 
												asked him, ‘Dost thou believe on 
												the Son of God?’ The man turned 
												on Him the animated 
												counter-question, ‘And who then 
												is that?’ declaring himself at 
												the same time ready to believe 
												in His direction where to find 
												Him. That he, then, had 
												recognized his Deliverer by the 
												tones of His voice, and perhaps 
												also by other signs is clear. 
												Jesus meets his animation with 
												answering animation, to give 
												him, as it should seem, a gentle 
												rebuke, that with all this 
												vivacity he yet had not been 
												more concerned about the person 
												who had healed him. To his 
												impetuous question, ‘And who 
												then is that?’ He replied, ‘And 
												thou hast (long ago) seen Him;10 
												and He that talketh with thee is 
												He!’ With all the fresh and 
												noble decision which marked his 
												character, the man exclaimed: ‘I 
												believe, Lord!’ and full of 
												reverence, cast himself down 
												before Him, adoring. Then the 
												Lord uttered that deeply 
												significant word: ‘For judgment 
												I am come into this world, that 
												they who see not may see, and 
												that they who see may be made 
												blind!’ This judgment had even 
												now in the most striking manner 
												been accomplished. 
───♦─── 
Notes   
												1. On the source and the pool of 
												Siloah, see above, p. 234; 
												Robinson, i. 335. The pool is ‘a 
												small, deep reservoir in the 
												mouth of the Tyropon, into 
												which the water flows from a 
												smaller basin (the well) 
												excavated in the solid rock a 
												few feet higher up.’ From the 
												pool downwards goes ‘the little 
												channel through which the stream 
												is led off along the base of the 
												steep rocky point of Ophel, to 
												irrigate the terraces and 
												gardens extending into the 
												valley of Jehoshaphat below.’ As 
												the well of Siloah stands in 
												connection with the source of 
												the pool of Bethesda, which lies 
												higher, the two wells have the 
												same qualities. Comp. Sepp, iii. 
												87. 
												2. On the different degrees of 
												Jewish excommunication, see 
												Lücke, 387; Sepp, iii. 91 [or 
												Alford in loc.; or more fully, Jahn’s
												Antiq. p. 131]. That 
												there were at least two degrees 
												of excommunication among the 
												Jews, is shown by the 
												distinction between the 
												excommunication of Christ and 
												that which here befell the man 
												who was restored to sight, and 
												later, no doubt, also the 
												disciples of Jesus. This 
												distinction is, no doubt, the 
												contrast between the 
												excommunication of the synagogue 
												and the exclusion by the 
												Sanhedrim, through which a man 
												was rejected for all Israel.11 
												As, then, the excommunication of 
												the synagogue had several steps, 
												so also, no doubt, had the great 
												excommunication of the 
												Sanhedrim, which was connected 
												with a heavy anathema. First 
												there came the maltreatment and 
												execration of the individual on 
												whom the sentence was laid (see 
												Act 5:40): the punishment of 
												death might be inflicted either 
												later, or even at once (see Acts 
												7.) 
												It might well then lie in the 
												nature of the case, that the 
												supposed straying one should 
												first be visited with the simple 
												exclusion from the synagogue for 
												thirty days. But when the 
												punishment of excommunication 
												was publicly denounced against 
												an offence, no doubt the whole 
												succession of the different 
												degrees of infliction ensuing 
												thereupon was held out to the 
												view of offenders. 
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| 
 1) It is characteristic, that criticism could come to such a pitch of scepticism as to find a difficulty in the mention of the circumstance that the man had been born blind. Cf. Ebrard, p. 316. 2) See Lücke, ii. p. 372. [Lampe shows that there is no ground for supposing that the Pharisees believed in the transmigration of souls. Josephus speaks of the souls of the good passing into other bodies, but this refers to the resurrection. ED.] 3) [No Olshausen, Stier, Meyer, and Tench; on the other hand, Lücke, Tholuck, and Alford suppose an interval between the attempt at stoning and this miracle. ‘The difficulty in the arrangement adopted by the author is, that Jesus, leaving the temple in secrecy, Would neither immediately perform a miracle which was sure to attract attention, nor would so soon be rejoined by His disciples, Also the note of time in ver. 14 is decidedly against, and not in favour of this view. For the Evangelist has already (vii. 37) made us aware that the day on which the stoning happened was a Sabbath ; and if this miracle were performed on the same day, it was needless to intimate a second time that it was the Sabbath, When the author says, ‘Surely not yet a returning Sabbath,’ he overlooks that it night be next day when the weekly Sabbath came round, the former being only a festal Sabbath. "But the author's explanation of the calmness of the Lord and the question of the disciples must be allowed to be admirably skilful and instructive —ED.] 4) The referring of this day and night immediately to the contrast between bright times of salvation and gloomy hours in which the powers of darkness have their way, which several commentators (Baumgarten-Crusius, Comment, zu Joh, ii, 3, and others) have proposed, is surely not justified. We find that the contrast between day and night (chap, xi. 9; 10), in an utterance very kindred to the one before us, must be referred to the time of life and the hour of death, We grant, however, that the day of Christ’s life is His assigned duration of life proceeding from the continuance of a favourable time of salvation in the world, while, on the other hand, the night of His death tallies with the hour and power of darkness. 5) On the natural effect of this treatment, see Lücke, p. 876 ; Von Ammon, ii, 422. On the union of the miraculous power with the clay, see above, vol. i. p. 429, It is questionable how tar healing powers belonging to the water of Siloam may be taken into consideration as helping the cure. But, at any rate, the blind man's going in faith to the well of Siloah had to do with it—Tholuck, p. 248. [Tholuck thinks the washing was only to cleanse the eyes after the application had done its work ; but if this had been all, such prominence would scarcely have been given to it—ED.] 6) That שִֹילוֺחַ may mean the Sent One, is now, since this rendering has been cursorily called in question, generally acknowledged. See Hitzig, Comment. on Isaiah, p. 97; Ebrard, p. 317; Tholuck, p. 240; Baumgarten-Crusius, ii 4, Cp. Lücke, p. 880, 7) Some of the Jewish Rabbins even forbade a man to besmear his eyes with bare saliva on the Sabbath-day. See Tholuck, p. 250; Sepp, iii. 87 [after Lightfoot and Lauipe in loc.] 8) Comp. Acts iv. 7, 15. 9) See John vii. 32. Lücke remarks very justly, that the word of the Evangelist (συνετέθειντο, &c.) cannot be referred to a private determination of the Pharisee-party, but only to a measure formally passed in the Sanhedrim, such as was gene rally known and dreaded. Commentators are doubtful as to the occasion on which this measure was resolved on. But if we take into consideration the consequences of a public interference of a hierarchy with an individual, the required occasion is surely found in that which is above indicated. 10) This is no doubt the sense which the perfect ἑώρακας takes, from the animated character of the dialogue. 11) [It is to be remarked that it does not appear that there was any excommunication which prohibited access to the temple ; nay, a separate entrance was provided for the excommunicated, though this may have been for the use of those under the first excommunication.—ED.] 
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