Verse 1-2
John 2:1-2. And the third day —
Namely, after Christ’s coming
into Galilee, and discoursing
there with Nathanael, as related
above; there was a marriage in
Cana — A town which originally
belonged to the tribe of Asher,
Joshua 19:28. There were two
other towns of the same name,
one in the tribe of Ephraim, the
other in Cœlo-Syria; and the
mother of Jesus was there — It
being probably a marriage of a
near relation, or an intimate
friend of hers. This may be
inferred from Mary’s being not
only present at the feast, but
concerned about supplying the
company with wine. As Mary here
is spoken of alone, it may be
reasonable to conclude that
Joseph was now dead, and that he
did not live to the time when
Jesus entered on his public
ministry, especially as he is
nowhere mentioned in the gospel
history afterward. And both
Jesus was called — That is, was
invited to the marriage; and his
disciples — Namely, the two that
had followed him from the banks
of Jordan, with Peter, Philip,
and Nathanael. And Jesus, not
affecting the austerities which
became the character and
ministry of John the Baptist,
freely accepted of the
invitation. For he did not come
to take away human society, but
to sanctify it.
Verse 3-4
John 2:3-4. And when they wanted
wine — It is probable that, in
consequence of its being known
that Jesus would be present at
this feast, a greater resort of
company came than was expected,
and that this occasioned a
failure of the wine. The mother
of Jesus saith unto him, They
have no wine — Some infer from
this application which she made
to Jesus, that she had either
seen some of his miracles in
private, or had received from
him some hint of his intentions
of working one now. For, without
supposing the one or the other
of these, one can hardly imagine
why she should thus apply to him
on this occasion: for,
doubtless, she knew, both that
he had not money to buy a
quantity of wine, and that if he
had, it would not have been
proper for him to have done it,
as it must have been interpreted
as an affront to the bridegroom.
But the supply that she expected
from him was undoubtedly by his
working of a miracle; and it is
plain, from her direction to the
servants afterward, that,
notwithstanding the rebuke she
justly met with, yet she had
still a view to this. Jesus
saith unto her, Woman — Using a
plainness of language, suited to
the simplicity of those ages and
countries. For that this
compellation was not in those
days accounted disrespectful,
has been fully evinced by
critics from the best
authorities. We find in this
gospel, (John 19:26,) our Lord
addressing his mother by this
title, on a very moving
occasion, on which he showed her
the most tender affection and
regard. What have I to do with
thee? — Or rather, What hast
thou to do with me? namely, to
direct me when and how my
miracles are to be wrought. The
original expression, τι εμοι και
σοι, is rendered by some, What
is this to me and thee? namely,
that they want wine: What
concern is it of ours? it does
not belong to us to provide
necessaries for this feast. But
Jesus, says Dr. Doddridge: “was
of so benevolent a temper, and
Mary seems to have been so far
concerned as a relation, that it
does not appear this would have
been a proper reply. The words
seem rather to be intended as a
rebuke to Mary, and it was
surely expedient she should know
that Jesus was not, upon such
occasions, to be directed by
her. And nothing is more evident
than that the phrase, in other
places, has the meaning that our
version gives it.” Thus also Dr.
Campbell: “It was, no doubt, our
Lord’s intention in these words
gently to suggest, that in what
concerned his office, earthly
parents had no authority over
him. In other things he had been
subject to them.” To translate
the clause, What is it to me and
thee? “at first sight appears
preferable to other versions,
because the most literal. But,
as Bishop Pearce well observes,
had that been the evangelist’s
meaning, he would have written,
τι προς εμε και σε; as in John
21:23, τι προς σε, what is that
to thee? and Matthew 27:4, τι
προς ημας, what is that to us?”
He observes, further, that the
common version suits the phrase
in every place where it occurs;
and that the other conveys a
worse sense, a sense not
suitable to the spirit of our
Lord’s instructions, as “not
favouring that tender sympathy,
which his religion so warmly
recommends, whereby the
interests and the concerns of
others, their joys and their
sorrows, are made our own.” Mine
hour is not yet come — “The
season of my public ministry in
this country is not yet come.
Before I work miracles in
Galilee, I must go into Judea
and preach, where the Baptist,
my forerunner, has been
preparing my way.” So Macknight.
Or, he may speak of the time
when he intended to perform the
miracle desired by his mother;
for which the proper moment,
though very near, was not yet
quite come. Some translate the
clause interrogatively, Is not
mine hour come? the season of my
public ministry, at which period
thy authority over me ends? Upon
the whole, our Lord’s answer to
his mother was not in the least
disrespectful, nor did she
consider it as implying a denial
of her request, as is evident
from the temper with which she
received it, and from her
desiring the servants (John 2:5)
to wait on him, and to execute
his orders punctually. Many
writers have interpreted this
rebuke of our Lord as being
given in his prophetic spirit,
as a standing testimony against
that idolatry which he foresaw
after ages would superstitiously
bestow upon his mother, even to
the robbing him of the right and
honour of his alone mediatorship
and intercession.
Verse 5
John 2:5. His mother — Either
gathering from his answer, or
from something he said to her
which the evangelists have not
recorded, that he would perform
something extraordinary; saith
unto the servants, Whatsoever he
saith unto you, do it — Obey his
orders immediately and exactly,
for he may have reasons for them
beyond what you imagine. Hereby
she declares her expectation of
his performing some mighty work,
in answer to what she had
suggested to him; and prescribes
a rule, which it would be well
if every servant of Christ would
invariably observe, Whatsoever
he saith unto you, do it, not
questioning the reasonableness
of the command, or its fitness
to accomplish the end proposed,
but implicitly obeying whatever
is manifestly a precept of
Christ.
Verse 6
John 2:6. There were six
water-pots of stone — Which were
placed there, some of them for
the cleansing of cups and
tables, &c., and others for such
purifications as required the
immersion of the whole body;
after the manner of the
purifying of the Jews — Who were
accustomed to purify themselves
by frequent washings,
particularly before eating;
containing two or three firkins
apiece — A large quantity, but
exactly how much, is not now
easy to be ascertained. The
original word, μετρητας, here
used, is translated by Dr.
Campbell baths, because the
Hebrew measure, bath, is thus
rendered in the Septuagint, 2
Chronicles 4:5. He acknowledges,
however, that this is not a
decisive proof that it ought to
be so rendered: but says, “I
have not found any thing better
in support of a different
opinion. Some think, that as
μετρητης was also the name of an
Attic measure, the evangelist
(most of whose readers were
probably Greeks) must have
referred to it, as best known in
that country. There are other
suppositions made, but hardly
any thing more than conjecture
has been advanced in favour of
any of them. It ought not to be
dissembled, that in most of the
explanations which have been
given of the passage, the
quantity of liquor appears so
great as to reflect an
improbability on the
interpretation.” The doctor
observes, however, that the
English translation is more
liable to this objection than
his version, the firkin
containing nine gallons, whereas
the bath is commonly rated at
seven and a half, and, according
to some, but four and a half; in
which case the amount of the
whole is but half of what the
English translation makes it.
The quantity thus reduced, he
thinks, will not be thought so
enormous, considering 1st, The
length of time, commonly a week,
spent in feasting on such
occasions, and the great
concourse of people which they
were wont to assemble. To this
may be added, that whatever the
quantity of water contained in
these water-pots might be, there
is no proof that our Lord turned
the whole of it into wine, or
that he turned into wine any of
it, any otherwise than as it was
drawn out.
Verses 7-10
John 2:7-10. Jesus saith unto
them — After some convenient
pause, that the failing of the
wine might be the more observed;
Fill the water-pots with water —
Choosing, for wise reasons, to
make use of these rather than
the vessels in which the wine
had before been contained: one
of which reasons might be to
prevent any suspicion that the
tincture or taste of the water
was in any degree derived from
any remainder of wine in the
vessels. Draw out now, and bear
unto the governor — “Among the
Greeks, Romans, and Jews, it was
usual, at great entertainments,
especially marriage-feasts, to
appoint a master of ceremonies,
who not only gave directions
concerning the form and method
of the entertainment, but
likewise prescribed the laws of
drinking. Jesus, therefore,
ordered the wine which he had
formed to be carried to the
governor of the feast, that by
his judgment passed upon it, in
the hearing of all the guests,
it might be known to be genuine
wine of the best kind.” When the
ruler of the feast had tasted
the water that was made wine,
&c. — The governor of the feast,
on tasting the wine, being
highly pleased with its flavour
and richness, but not knowing
how it had been procured,
addressed himself to the
bridegroom, in the hearing of
all the guests, and, commending
the wine, as far preferable to
what they had been drinking,
praised him for the elegance of
his taste, and for his civility,
in giving the company better
wine during the progress of the
entertainment than at the
beginning of it, which showed
that he did not grudge the
quantity they might use. This
declaration of the governor, no
doubt, surprised the bridegroom,
who knew nothing of the matter,
and occasioned an inquiry to be
made about it. It is reasonable,
therefore, to suppose, that the
servants were publicly examined,
and the company received an
account of the miracle from
them. For it is expressly said,
that by it Jesus manifested his
glory, that is, demonstrated his
power and character, to the
conviction of the disciples, and
of all the guests. The
expression in the tenth verse,
οταν μεθυσθωσι, here rendered,
when men have well drunk, though
it may sometimes signify to
drink to excess, yet frequently
in Scripture, and sometimes in
other writings, denotes no more
than to drink sufficiently, or
to satisfaction: and “it would
be very unjust and absurd to
suppose it implies here, that
these guests had already
transgressed the rules of
temperance. None can seriously
imagine the evangelist to be so
destitute of common sense as to
represent Christ as displaying
his glory by miraculously
furnishing the company with wine
to prolong a drunken revel. It
is much more reasonable to
conclude, that it signifies
here, (as it does Genesis 43:34;
Song of Solomon 5:1; Haggai 1:6,
in the Septuagint,) only to
drink so freely as innocently to
exhilarate the spirit. And even
this, perhaps, might only be the
case with some of them, and
particularly not of those who,
drawn by a desire to converse
with Jesus, might be but lately
come in.” — Doddridge.
Verse 11
John 2:11. This beginning of
miracles did Jesus, &c. —
Grotius supposes the meaning to
be, that this was the first
miracle wrought at Cana, another
being afterward mentioned, John
4:46. But it is plain there must
have been a long series of
miracles wrought here to justify
such a manner of speaking, which
doth not at all appear to have
been the case. The sense of the
expression seems much rather to
be, that this was the first of
Christ’s public miracles; for
probably the necessities of the
family might sometimes have
engaged him to have done
something miraculous in private
for its relief. And manifested
forth his glory — And that in
such an illustrious manner, that
his fame was spread over all the
neighbouring country; and his
disciples believed on him —
Namely, more steadfastly than
before. Being the first miracle
they had ever seen Jesus
perform, it tended not a little
to the confirmation of their
faith.
Verse 12-13
John 2:12-13. After this he went
down to Capernaum — A city that
lay near the north part of the
sea of Galilee, and on the south
border of the land of Naphthali.
See note on Matthew 4:13. Here
Christ and his disciples
continued but a short time, the
passover of the Jews being at
hand, which Jesus, who was made
under the law, and maintained a
religious regard to its
ceremonial, as well as its moral
precepts, would not neglect
attending: thus teaching us by
his example a strict observance
of all divine institutions, and
a diligent attendance on
religious assemblies. As the
evangelists have not informed us
how many passovers happened
between the baptism and death of
Christ, or during the course of
his public ministry, learned men
have been much divided in their
opinions on the subject. But by
far the greater part have
supposed there were four,
reckoning this the first; the
feast mentioned John 5:1, the
second; the passover spoken of
John 6:4, as the third; and that
at which Christ suffered, the
fourth. But there are others of
a different opinion. The
celebrated Sir Isaac Newton
reckons five; the first, this
which is now before us; the
second, according to him,
happened four months after
Christ’s discourse with the
woman of Samaria, John 4:35; the
third, a few days before the
story of the disciples rubbing
the ears of corn, Luke 6:1; the
fourth, a little after the
feeding of the five thousand;
and the last, at the time of our
Lord’s crucifixion.
Verse 14
John 2:14. And found in the
temple those that sold oxen, &c.
— Used for sacrifice. It seems
the officers, whose province it
was to take care of the temple,
permitted a market of these
animals, and other things
necessary for sacrifice, to be
kept in the court of the
Gentiles, in order that the
worshippers might be supplied
with victims requisite for the
altar. The consequence of which
was, that there was often such a
bustle and confusion there, that
the proselytes who came to
worship could not but be much
disturbed in their devotions; as
the reader will easily believe,
when he is informed that,
according to Josephus, “no fewer
than two hundred and fifty-six
thousand five hundred victims
were sometimes offered at one
passover. But the abuse did not
rest here; for it is generally
supposed that the priests let
out this part of the temple for
profit, and that the sellers, to
enable themselves to pay the
rent of their shops and stalls,
demanded an exorbitant price for
their commodities. Nay, it is
said that the priests and
Levites very often sold the
animals they had received for
sacrifices to the dealers in
cattle, at a lower rate, that
they might sell them again with
profit; so that the same
sacrifices were often sold to
different persons, and the
spoils, or gain of them, were
divided between the priests and
the salesmen. In order to
expedite this traffic, there
were money-changers at hand, who
gave the Jews who came from
foreign countries the current
money of Judea, in lieu of the
money of the countries from
whence they came; and for this
service they took a premium,
which, upon the whole, became
very considerable. Thus was the
temple profaned by the avarice
of the priests, and literally
made a den of thieves. When our
Lord viewed this scene of
iniquity, we need not wonder at
his indignation; for it was an
honest zeal, which showed his
high regard to religion, and his
implacable enmity to vice;
while, at the same time, it
illustrated the character given
of him by Malachi, (Malachi
3:1,) and established the
pretensions he made of being the
messenger mentioned by that
prophet.” See Josephus, Bell.,
John 6:9, and note on Matthew
21:12-13.
Verses 15-17
John 2:15-17. And when he had
made a scourge of small cords —
εκσχοινιων, of rushes, rather,
which he found strewed on the
ground. This circumstance,
seemingly slight, was inserted
to show that the instrument
could not be the cause of so
wonderful an effect as is here
mentioned. He drove them all out
— Namely, out of the court of
the temple; both the sheep and
the oxen — Though it does not
appear that he struck even them,
much less any of the men. But a
terror from God, it is evident,
fell upon them. And poured out
the changers’ money — Upon the
ground; and overthrew the tables
— At which they were sitting.
And said to them that sold
doves, Take these things hence —
Greek, ταυτα, the cages wherein
the pigeons were exposed to
sale, pointing to them. Make not
my Father’s house a house of
merchandise — Make not the
temple, which is dedicated to
the worship of God, a place for
carrying on low traffic. It is
remarkable, that the guilty
persons did not offer to make
the least resistance; probably,
a consciousness of guilt
restrained them, or the
wonderful things which Jesus had
performed at this festival,
though not recorded, with the
influence of Christ’s miraculous
power on their minds, made them
afraid to resist him.
Nevertheless, in the
apprehension of the disciples,
he exposed him self to great
danger, by turning out a body of
factious men, whom the priests
and rulers supported. On this
occasion, therefore, they called
to mind, Psalms 69:10, The zeal
of thy house hath eaten me up —
Imputing their Master’s action
to such a concern for the purity
of God’s worship, as the
psalmist of old was animated by.
The truth is, it certainly was
an evidence of a very
extraordinary zeal indeed; a
zeal nothing inferior to that
for which the prophets were
famed.
Verses 18-22
John 2:18-22. Then answered the
Jews — “A fact so public and
remarkable as that just
mentioned, could not but
immediately come to the
knowledge of the priests and
rulers of the Jews, whose
supreme council sat in a
magnificent chamber belonging to
the temple;” some of them,
therefore, said unto him, What
sign showest thou unto us,
seeing thou doest these things —
That is, to prove thyself
authorized and commissioned to
do them? This they ask because
it belonged only to the
magistrate, as being God’s
minister and vicegerent, or to a
prophet, to reform abuses in
God’s worship. The authority of
the magistrate they knew Christ
had not, for acting as he had
done; and if he alleged that he
acted as a prophet, they require
him to give them proof of his
being such, by some miracle or
prediction, to be accomplished
before their eyes. But was not
the thing itself a sufficient
sign? His ability to drive so
many from their posts, without
opposition, was surely a proof
of his authority to do it: he
that was armed by such a divine
power, must have been armed with
a divine commission. The truth
is, they required a miracle to
confirm a miracle! This
unreasonable demand Jesus did
not think proper to grant them;
but refers them to the miracle
of his resurrection: which,
however, he does in such obscure
terms, as prejudiced minds could
not understand, till the
prediction was cleared and
explained by the event. Jesus
answered, Destroy this temple —
Pointing probably to his body,
which, with the greatest
propriety, he called a temple,
on account of the divinity
residing in it. By a like figure
of speech, the apostle calls the
bodies of believers the temples
of God. When Christ said,
Destroy this temple, he meant,
You will be permitted to destroy
it, and you will destroy it: for
at the very beginning of his
ministry he had a clear
foresight of all his sufferings,
and of his death at the end of
it; and yet he went on
cheerfully in his work. Observe,
reader, our Lord spake thus to
them in parables because they
were willingly ignorant, and
shut their eyes against the
clear light issuing from his
life, his doctrine, and his
miracles. For they that will not
see shall not see; but shall
stumble and fall, and be broken,
and snared, and taken, Isaiah
8:14-15. Accordingly, the
figurative speech here used by
our Lord, proved such a
stumbling-block to them, that it
was produced in evidence against
him at his trial, to prove him a
blasphemer, Matthew 26:60-61.
Had they, in humility, asked him
the meaning of what he said, he
would have informed them, and it
would have been a savour of life
unto life to them; but they
resolved to cavil, and it proved
a savour of death unto death.
They that would not be convinced
were hardened, and the manner of
the expression of this
prediction occasioned the
accomplishment of the prediction
itself. In his saying, In three
days I will raise it up — Our
Lord not only foretold his
resurrection, but that it should
he effected by his own power.
There were others that were
raised at different times from
the dead, but Christ was the
only person that ever raised
himself! They, supposing that he
spake of the temple in which
they were standing, replied,
Forty and six years was this
temple in building — Dr.
Lightfoot computes that it was
just forty-six years from the
founding of Zerubbabel’s temple,
in the second year of Cyrus, to
the complete settlement of the
temple service, in the thirty-
second year of Artaxerxes. The
original expression, however,
ωκοδομηθη ο ναος ουτος, instead
of, was this temple in building,
is translated by Doddridge,
Heylin, and Worsley, hath been
building, “proceeding on the
supposition, that those who made
this reply alluded to the
additional buildings which the
temple had received, and which
had been begun by Herod, and
continued by those who succeeded
him in the government of Judea,
to the time then present. But
let it be observed, that the
Jews never did, nor do to this
day, speak of more than two
temples possessed by their
fathers; the first built by
Solomon, the second by
Zerubbabel. The great additions
made by Herod, were considered
as intended only for decorating
and repairing the edifice, not
for rebuilding it; for, in fact,
Zerubbabel’s temple had not then
been destroyed. Nor need we, I
think, puzzle ourselves to make
out exactly the forty-six years
spoken of. Those men were
evidently in the humour of
exaggerating, in order to
represent to the people as
absurd what they had immediately
heard advanced by our Lord. In
this disposition, we may
believe, they would not hesitate
to include the years in which
the work was interrupted, among
the years employed in building.”
— Campbell. But he spake of the
temple of his body — And
therefore they were entirely
mistaken as to the sense of what
he said; When, therefore, he was
risen from the dead — Just on
the third day after his
crucifixion; his disciples
remembered that he had said this
— Which, when they heard him
utter it, they did not at all
understand; and they believed
the Scripture, &c. — As they
believed the Scriptures, which
predicted the Messiah’s death,
so they believed the more firmly
in their Master on account of
this prophecy, which, by
foretelling his resurrection so
long beforehand, rendered that
event, when it happened, a most
illustrious proof of his mission
from God. Dr. Campbell
translates the clause, They
understood the Scripture, and
the word which Jesus had spoken;
observing, that the word
πιστευειν, in the sacred
writers, sometimes signifies,
not so much to believe, as to
apprehend aright. “In this
sense, it is once and again
employed by this writer in
particular. It is not intimated
here, that the disciples did
not, before this time, believe
the Scriptures, or their
Master’s word: but that they did
not, till now, rightly apprehend
the meaning of either, in
relation to this subject.
Another instance of this
application of the verb πιστευω,
we have John 3:12.”
Verses 23-25
John 2:23-25. When he was in
Jerusalem, in the feast-day — Or
rather, during the feast, as εν
τη εορτη, should undoubtedly be
translated: that is, during all
the days of the solemnity; many
believed in his name — Were
inwardly persuaded that he was
the Messiah, or, at least, that
he was a teacher sent from God;
when they saw the miracles which
he did — This, as well as John
3:2; John 4:45, plainly refers
to some miracles wrought by
Christ, the particulars of which
are not transmitted to us. But
Jesus did not commit himself
unto them — Did not repose such
confidence in the sincerity of
their profession of faith in
him, or in their fidelity,
courage, or wisdom, as to
discover himself to be the
Messiah. Because he knew all men
— Had perfect knowledge of their
dispositions; and needed not
that any should testify of man —
To give him any information
concerning the character of any
man, though ever so much a
stranger to him; for he knew
what was in man — By an
immediate and unerring
penetration, he knew what was in
the heart of every man; and
consequently knew, that those
people had such gross notions of
the Messiah’s kingdom, that
there was no room for him to
confide in them: or, he knew
that the faith of many of them
had not yet advanced to a full
conviction; and foresaw that
they would quickly fall off,
when they found he was rejected
by the great men, and did not
erect a secular empire. Let us
learn hence, not rashly to put
ourselves into the power of
others. Let us study a wise and
happy medium, between universal
suspiciousness, and that
easiness and openness of temper
which would make us the property
of every pretender to kindness
and respect. |