Verse 1
John 10:1. Verily, &c. — The
Pharisees supported themselves
in their opposition to Christ
with this principle, that they
were pastors of the church; and
that Jesus, having no commission
from them, was an intruder and
an impostor, and that,
therefore, the people were bound
in duty to adhere to them
against him. In opposition to
this, Christ here describes who
were the false shepherds and who
were the true, leaving them to
infer what they were. He
introduces his discourse with,
Verily, verily, I say unto you —
To show, not only the certain
truth, but the deep importance
of what he uttered. He speaks by
way of parable or similitude,
taken from the customary way of
managing sheep in that country.
It is supposed that he was now
in the outer court of the
temple, near the sheep which
were there exposed to sale for
sacrifice, the sight of which
reminded him of the language of
the ancient prophets, “who often
compared the teachers of their
own time to shepherds, and the
people to sheep. Accordingly, in
describing the characters of the
scribes and Pharisees, he made
use of the same metaphor,
showing that there are two kinds
of evil shepherds, pastors, or
teachers; one, who, instead of
entering in by the door to lead
the flock out and feed it, enter
in some other way, with an
intention to kill and destroy;
another, who, though they may
have entered in by the door,
feed their flocks with the
dispositions of hirelings; for
when they see the wolf coming,
or any danger approaching, they
desert their flocks, because
they love themselves only. The
Pharisees plainly showed
themselves to be of the former
character, by excommunicating
the man that had been blind,
because he would not act
contrary to the dictates of his
reason and conscience to please
them. But though they cast him
out of their church, Christ
received him into his, which is
the true church, the spiritual
enclosure, where the sheep go in
and out and find pasture.” He
that entereth not by the door
into the sheep-fold, &c. — “I
assure you, that whosoever, in
any age of the church, assumed
the office of a teacher, without
commission from me, and without
a sincere regard to the
edification and salvation of
men’s souls, was a thief and a
robber; and in the present age,
he is no better who assumes that
office without my commission,
and particularly without
believing on me, and without
intending my honour and the good
of the church.” — Macknight. Add
to this, those do not enter in
by Christ, and indeed can have
no authority from him, nor
ability to become pastors of his
flock, who do not first take
care to secure, by faith working
by love, an interest in, and
union with him, or, to be found
in him, not having their own
righteousness which is of the
law, but that which is through
the faith of Christ, the
righteousness which is of God by
faith; to be in him new
creatures: Philippians 3:9; 2
Corinthians 5:17. But climbeth
up some other way — Enters the
sheep-fold as a pastor of
Christ’s flock, without the
necessary prerequisites and
qualifications, without first
obtaining a saving acquaintance
with Christ, and genuine love to
him; without being called to,
and qualified for the work by
him, and of consequence, without
authority from him; who,
influenced by unworthy motives,
by a view to wealth, or honour,
or ease, or a maintenance, or
some secular employment or
advantage, gets himself
appointed a minister of Christ’s
church, through the interest of
rich and powerful friends and
connections, or the aid of
natural abilities, and mere
human learning; or some
endowment or accomplishment
which is not connected with, and
does not imply true piety, and a
manifest call from the Lord
Jesus; the same is a thief and a
robber — In God’s account;
entering the fold “to fleece and
butcher, not to feed the flock;
robbing Christ of his honour,
and starving the souls of his
people, in order to enrich
himself, and aggrandize his
family.” — Scott.
Verses 2-5
John 10:2-5. He that entereth in
by the door is the shepherd, &c.
— “This mode of speaking, with
us, conveys the notion that the
shepherd is the only person who
enters by the door; yet the
door-keeper, and the sheep
themselves, enter also the same
way. The original expression is
manifestly intended to denote
the constant, not the peculiar,
use which the shepherd makes of
the door, as opposed to the
constant use of thieves and
robbers, to force their entrance
by breaking or climbing over the
fence. The comparison is made,
not to the folds used by the
common people in remote parts of
the country, but to those
belonging to the rich in the
neighbourhood of a populous
city, where the walls and other
fences need to be stronger, and
the entrance more carefully
kept, on account of the greater
danger from thieves.” —
Campbell. To him the porter
openeth — As the shepherd will
always choose to enter in by
that which is the regular
appointed way, so, as soon as he
approaches, the door-keeper
opens the fold; that is, God in
his providence, and by the
influence of his Spirit, makes
way for such a one to exercise
his ministry among his people,
and gives success to it. For as
it is not unworthy of Christ to
be styled the door, by which
both the sheep and the true
pastors enter, so neither is it
unworthy of God the Father to be
styled the door-keeper. See Acts
14:27; and Acts 16:14;
Colossians 4:3; Revelation 3:8.
It was supposed by Sir Isaac
Newton, that as the words were
spoken near the temple, where
sheep were kept in folds to be
sold for sacrifices, Christ here
alludes to what was peculiar in
those folds; that as they were
kept locked, they not only
excluded the thief, but the
shepherd, till the door-keeper
opened them. “But I cannot
think,” says Dr. Doddridge,
“whatever occasion Christ might
take from the sight of sheep to
represent his people under that
image, and himself as a
shepherd, he would describe them
like sheep shut up in a pen to
be sold for sacrifice: nor does
the shepherd’s leading them out,
&c., agree with this
circumstance. In countries where
there were so many savage
beasts, it might be ordinarily
necessary to have the folds
better secured than among us;
and the chief shepherd might
often leave a servant to watch
them while thus shut up, and
come himself to lead them out to
pasture in the morning.” And the
sheep hear his voice — The
people of God, knowing him to be
a true pastor, hearken unto him.
All the circumstances here
mentioned exactly agree with the
customs of the ancient eastern
shepherds. They called their
sheep by name, went before them,
and the sheep followed them. So
real Christians hear, attend to,
understand, and obey the voice
of a shepherd whom Christ hath
sent: and he counteth them his
own, dearer than any friend or
brother; calleth them by name —
That is, instructs, advises,
directs, encourages each by
name, and leadeth them out in
the paths of righteousness,
beside the waters of comfort.
And when he putteth forth his
own sheep — Leads them out into
the pastures of the ordinances,
invites them to the enjoyment of
the privileges, and urges them
to the practice of the duties of
true Christianity; he goeth
before them — In all these
particulars, and in all the ways
of God, teaching them in every
point by example, as well as by
precept; and the sheep follow
him — They tread in his steps;
for they know his voice — Having
the witness in themselves, that
his words are the truth, the
wisdom, and the power of God.
Reader, art thou a shepherd of
souls? Then answer to God: is it
thus with thee and thy flock?
And a stranger will they not
follow — One whom Christ hath
not sent, who does not answer
the preceding description. Him
they will not follow; and who
can constrain them to it? But
will flee from him — As from the
plague. For they know not the
voice of strangers — They cannot
relish it. It is harsh and
grating to them. They find
nothing of God therein. In other
words, as sheep will not follow
a strange shepherd, so the
people of God will not hearken
to false teachers, or to such as
do not declare, plainly, fully,
and with a divine unction, the
very word of the truth of the
gospel: but will avoid them, for
they can easily distinguish them
from the true messengers of God
by their fruits, that is, by
their doctrine and practice, and
the inefficacy of their
preaching to convert, sanctify,
and save the souls of men.
Verses 6-8
John 10:6-8. This parable spake
Jesus: but they understood not,
&c. — In this symbolical way
Jesus taught the Pharisees the
difference between true and
false teachers; but they did not
understand the meaning of what
he said: therefore he added, by
way of explication, Verily,
verily, I say unto you — I
solemnly assure you of it, as an
undoubted and most momentous
truth; I am the door of the
sheep — That is, the door by
which the sheep- fold is
entered. Or his meaning may be,
I am not only the door by which
the shepherds must enter; not
only the person whose right
alone it is to admit men to the
office of shepherds, and who
alone can qualify them for that
office and dignity, but I am
also the door of the sheep; it
is by the knowledge of, and
faith in me, by an interest in
my merits, and by a
participation of my Spirit, and
in no other way, that men must
or can enter into the truly
spiritual enclosure of my
church. All that ever came
before me — Assuming the
character of the Messiah, or any
part thereof, or pretending,
like your elders and rabbis, to
a power over the consciences of
men, attempting to make laws in
and for the church, and teaching
their own traditions as
necessary to be observed, or
other methods of obtaining
salvation than by me; all those,
who in former times assumed the
character of teachers of
religion, without a commission
from me, and all those teachers
and preachers of God’s word that
enter not by the door into the
sheep-fold, but run before I
send them by my Spirit, and
before they themselves are my
true disciples, subjects, and
servants, or are in me new
creatures; (our Lord seems in
particular to speak of those
that had undertaken this office
since he began his ministry;)
are thieves and robbers —
Persons influenced by improper
motives, who had and have no
warrant from above for assuming
any such character, pretending
to any such power, or
undertaking any such office, and
whatsoever their pretences have
been or are, the administration
of such persons had, and always
will have, a tendency to destroy
the souls they should watch over
and feed: for they are not only
thieves, stealing temporal
profit to themselves, but
robbers, plundering and
murdering the sheep. But the
sheep — My true people; did not
hear them — Did not attend upon,
relish or regard their doctrine.
Verse 9-10
John 10:9-10. I am the door — I
therefore repeat it again, as a
most important truth, that I
myself am the only right door of
entrance into the church of God;
if any one, as a sheep, enter in
— By me, through faith; he shall
be saved — Now and hereafter; or
rather, he shall be safe, like a
sheep in its fold, safe from the
wolf, and from those murdering
shepherds; and shall go in and
out — Under my care and
guidance, and that of the
shepherds whom I have sent,
whose instructive voice he shall
hear, and whose holy example he
shall follow; and shall find
pasture — Food for his soul in
all circumstances: in
consequence of his regard to me,
his waiting upon me in mine
ordinances, and his attendance
on the ministry of those whom I
appoint to dispense to him the
word of life, he shall be fed
and nourished with true
doctrine, and shall obtain
substantial happiness. The thief
cometh not but for to kill, &c.
— That is, nothing else can be
the consequence of a shepherd’s
coming, who does not enter in by
me. Such assume the character of
teachers divinely commissioned,
for no other reason but to
promote their own interest at
the expense of men’s salvation;
I am come that they might have
life — Life spiritual and
eternal; the life of grace and
the life of glory. Christ came
to quicken his church in
general, which was rather like a
valley filled with dry bones,
than a pasture filled with
grazing flocks. He came to
vindicate divine truths, to
purify divine ordinances, to
correct men’s errors, to renew
their hearts, to reform their
lives, to redress their
grievances, to sanctify and
support them under their trials
and troubles, to seek that which
was lost, bind up that which was
broken, strengthen that which
was weak; and this, to his
church, was as life from the
dead. He came, that men might
have life, as a criminal has
when he is pardoned; a sick man
when he is cured; a dead man
when he is raised; that we might
be justified, sanctified, and at
last glorified. And that they
might have it more abundantly —
A life more abundant than that
which was lost and forfeited by
sin; more abundant than that
which was promised by the law of
Moses; more abundant than could
have been reasonably expected,
or than we are able to ask or
think; that whatever measure of
spiritual life in union with
God, through Christ, of
conformity to his image, or
participation of his nature, we
may have received, we may still
desire and expect larger
measures thereof; or to whatever
degrees of holiness and
usefulness we may have attained
and manifested, we may still
proceed to higher degrees,
preparing and qualifying us for
still higher degrees of future
glory.
Verses 11-15
John 10:11-15. I am the good
shepherd — Jesus, having
represented himself as the door
of the sheep, and intimated the
regards which ought to be
maintained to him as such,
particularly by those that
professed to be teachers of
others, now changes the
similitude, and represents
himself, by way of eminence, the
good shepherd, namely, the
person frequently foretold in
Scripture under that character,
(see the margin,) and the
proprietor of the sheep. The
good shepherd giveth his life
for the sheep — win expose
himself to any danger for their
safety, because they are his own
property; but he that is a
hireling — Who attends the sheep
merely for hire, who is employed
as a servant, and paid for his
pains; whose own the sheep are
not — Who has neither profit nor
loss by them, and proposes
nothing to himself but his own
gain; seeth the wolf — Or some
other savage beast; coming, and
leaveth the sheep, and fleeth —
Deserts them; because, instead
of loving them, he loves
himself, and therefore will not
expose himself to any danger on
their account; in consequence of
which, the beast of prey,
meeting with no resistance,
catcheth, and scattereth the
sheep — Seizes on some and
disperses the rest; the two ways
of hurting the flock of Christ.
The wolf signifies an enemy who
by force or fraud attacks the
Christian’s faith, liberty, or
life. Observe, reader, it is not
the bare receiving hire, which
denominates a man a hireling,
(for the labourer is worthy of
his hire, Jesus Christ himself
being judge: yea, and the Lord
hath ordained that they who
preach the gospel should live by
the gospel,) but the loving
hire; the loving the hire more
than the work; the working for
the sake of the hire. He is a
hireling who would not work were
it not for the hire; to whom
this is the great, if not only,
motive of working. O God! if a
man who works only for hire is
such a wretch, a mere thief and
a robber; what is he who
continually takes the hire, and
yet does not work at all! The
hireling fleeth, because he is a
hireling — Because he loves the
hire, not the sheep; and takes
the work upon him merely for the
wages he is to receive. From
what our Lord here says, it
plainly appears to be the duty
of every minister of the gospel,
intrusted with the care of a
flock, to reside ordinarily
among them. For, if approaching
danger to himself, or them, is
no excuse for his fleeing away
and leaving them, far less will
interest, or pleasure, or any
lesser matter, be an excuse for
such unfaithfulness. I am the
good shepherd, and know my sheep
— With a tender regard and
special care. Being the good
shepherd, and the owner of the
sheep, I pay such earnest and
constant attention to my flock,
and take such care of it, that I
not only know every particular
sheep, but I know every thing
relating to each. I know the
circumstance, wherein they are
placed, am well acquainted with
their wants, and can judge what
aids they stand in need of.
Besides, I love them all with an
ardent affection, and approve of
their obedience to me, because,
though it is imperfect, it is
sincere. And am known of mine —
With a holy confidence and
affection. As I know, love, and
approve my sheep, so I am known
and beloved of them in return,
for they have just apprehensions
of my dignity and character; in
particular, they know that I am
their Shepherd and Saviour, sent
from God, and that I am able to
feed them with knowledge, and to
deliver them from the punishment
of sin, and to bestow on them
everlasting life. As the Father
knoweth me, &c. — That is, I
know my sheep, and am known of
mine, even as the Father knoweth
me, and I know the Father; for
so the passage ought to be
rendered, and construed in
connection with the foregoing
verse; as if he had said, The
mutual knowledge subsisting
between me and my sheep, is like
that which subsists between the
Father and me. It is a knowledge
which implies an inexpressible
union. See John 17:21-22. And I
lay down my life for the sheep —
He speaks of the present time:
for his whole life was only a
going unto death. I show the
greatness of the love which I
bear to my sheep by dying for
them, which no hireling did, or
ever will do.
Verses 16-18
John 10:16-18. And other sheep
have I — Whom I foreknow as
repenting and believing in me;
which are not of this fold — Not
of the Jewish Church or nation,
but Gentiles. Some, indeed,
understand by these the Jews
living out of the land of
Canaan; but certainly they could
not with propriety be said not
to belong to the fold of Israel.
The incorporating the believing
Gentiles into one church with
the Jews was a grand event,
worthy of such particular
notice. Them also I must bring —
Namely, into my church, the
general assembly of those whose
names are written in heaven. And
they shall hear my voice — The
voice of my gospel, calling them
to repentance, and inviting them
to believe in me as their
Redeemer and Saviour. And there
shall be one fold — Greek, μια
ποιμνη, one flock, though in
different folds, no corrupt or
divided flocks remaining; and
one shepherd — Who laid down his
life for the sheep, and will
leave no hireling among them.
This unity, both of the flock
and the Shepherd, shall be
completed in its season. The
shepherds shall bring all into
one flock, and the whole flock
shall hear the one Shepherd.
Therefore doth my Father love me
— He loves me more especially on
this account, approving it as an
act of eminent duty and love to
him; because I lay down my life
— That I am come into the world
with this design, to give my
life for the redemption of my
sheep, which are dear to him, as
well as to me; that I might take
it again — And possess it for
ever, to be employed for his
glory and for the happiness of
my people. In other words, I
cheerfully die to expiate the
sins of mankind, to the end I
may rise again for their
justification. No man taketh it
from me — “This,” says Dr.
Campbell, “can hardly be said
with propriety, since he
suffered by the hands of others.
The English verb take, does not
express the full import of the
Greek, αιρεω, [here used.] In
this place it is evidently our
Lord’s intention to inform his
hearers, that his enemies could
not by violence take his life,
if he did not voluntarily put
himself in their power.” Hence
he translates the clause, No one
forceth it from me, but I give
it up of myself — By my own free
act and deed; I have power to
lay it down, and I have power to
take it again — I have an
original power and right of
myself, both to lay it down as a
ransom, and to take it again
after full satisfaction is made
for the sins of the whole world.
I am able to raise myself from
the dead! nay, I can do it as
easily as I can die!
Nevertheless, I do not lay down
my life, nor rise from the dead,
without the appointment of my
Father. In both I act wisely,
and agreeably to the divine
will. This commandment — Or,
this commission, as the word
εντολη may be rendered; have I
received of my Father — Which I
readily execute. Our Lord’s
receiving this commission as a
Mediator, is not to be
considered as the ground of his
power to lay down and resume his
life, for this he had in
himself, as having an original
right to dispose thereof
antecedent to the Father’s
commission. But this commission
was the reason why he thus used
his power in laying down his
life: he did it in obedience to
his Father.
Verses 19-21
John 10:19-21. There was a
division among the Jews — These
sayings of our Lord “affected
the minds of the Jews
differently, for some of them
cried out that he was possessed
and mad, and that it was folly
to hear him; others, judging
more impartially of him and his
doctrine, declared that his
discourses were not the words of
a lunatic, nor his miracles the
works of a devil. Moreover, they
asked his enemies if they
imagined any devil was able to
impart the faculty of sight to
one that was born blind alluding
to the astonishing cures which
Jesus had lately performed.” —
Macknight.
Verse 22-23
John 10:22-23. And it was at
Jerusalem the feast of the
dedication — Or, as εγενετο δε
τα εγκαινια may be rendered, Now
the feast of dedication came on
at Jerusalem: for it does not
appear that the preceding
discourses, from John 7:14, were
delivered at this feast, but at
the feast of tabernacles. Dr.
Campbell reads, Once, when they
were celebrating the feast of
dedication, it being winter, as
Jesus walked, &c. This festival,
which, according to the meaning
of the Greek term, might be more
properly called the feast of
renovation, was instituted by
Judas Maccabæus, (1 Maccabees
4:59,) in memory of their
pulling down the altar of
burnt-offerings, which had been
profaned by the Pagans, and
building a new one, dedicated to
the true God, and of their
purifying the temple from the
pollutions and idolatries of
Antiochus Epiphanes. “This
restoration of the worship of
God was a very joyful event to
every religious Israelite; and
being considered as a new
dedication of the temple, great
regard was paid to the festival
instituted in remembrance of it.
See Joseph. Antiq., John 12:11.
Accordingly, though it was of
human institution, our Lord did
not scruple being present at it.
The Jews celebrated this feast
for eight days successively,
beginning on the 25th of Casleu.
But the latter half of that
month falling in with the first
half of our December, it was
winter, and commonly bad weather
at this feast. Wherefore, to
avoid the inclemency of the
season, Jesus walked in
Solomon’s portico.” Josephus
informs us, that when Solomon
built the temple, he filled up a
part of the adjacent valley, and
built a portico over it toward
the east. This was a noble
structure, supported by a wall
four hundred cubits high; and
continued even to the time of
Albinus and Agrippa, which was
several years after the death of
Christ.
Verses 24-26
John 10:24-26. Then came the
Jews round about him, &c. — Here
the Jews came and required him
to put them out of doubt, by
telling them plainly, whether he
was the Messiah or not: Jesus
knowing that it was not
information they were seeking,
but an opportunity of accusing
him to the Romans, as a
seditious person, who aspired to
be a king, directed them, as
before, to form a judgment of
him from his actions. Jesus
answered, I told you, and ye
believed not — What our Lord had
been lately saying of himself,
(see the preceding verses,) as
the good shepherd, was
equivalent to a declaration of
his being the Messiah. Besides,
he had already performed those
miracles which were to
characterize and distinguish the
Messiah, such as cleansing the
lepers, giving sight to the
blind, &c.; and if they had but
followed the dictates of their
own rabbis, or of their own
unprejudiced reason, they must
have acknowledged that he had
sufficiently established his
claim to the title of the
Messiah. But ye believe not,
because ye are not of my sheep —
Because ye do not, will not
follow me: because ye are proud,
unholy, lovers of praise, lovers
of the world, lovers of
pleasure, not lovers of God. The
reason why ye do not believe in
me is not that the proofs of my
mission are insufficient, but
because ye are not of an humble
and teachable disposition, free
from worldly passions, and
willing to receive the doctrine
that comes from God. Persons of
this character easily know, by
the nature of my doctrine and
miracles, who I am, and
consequently readily believe in
and follow me.
Verses 27-31
John 10:27-31. My sheep hear my
voice, &c. — Our Lord still
alludes to the discourse he had
had before this festival. As if
he had said, My sheep are those
who, 1st, Hear my voice by
faith; 2d, Are known (that is,
approved) by me as loving me;
and, 3d, Follow me, keep my
commandments, with a believing,
loving heart. And to those who,
1st, Truly believe, (observe
three promises annexed to three
conditions,) I give eternal
life. He does not say, I will
give, but I give. For he that
believeth, hath everlasting
life. Those whom, 2d, I know
truly to love me, shall never
perish, provided they abide in
my love. 3d, Those who follow
me, neither men nor devils can
pluck out of my hand. My Father
— Who hath, by an unchangeable
decree, given me all that
believe, love, and obey, is
greater than all in heaven or
earth, and none is able to pluck
them out of his hand. I and the
Father are one — Not by consent
of will only, but by unity of
power, and consequently of
nature. Are — This word confutes
Sabellius, proving the plurality
of persons; one — This word
confutes Arius, proving the
unity of nature in God. Never
did any prophet before, from the
beginning of the world, use any
one expression of himself which
could possibly be so
interpreted, as this and other
expressions were, by all that
heard our Lord speak. Indeed,
his hearers were provoked to
such a degree by what he now
said, that they took up stones,
and were going to kill him
outright, imagining that he had
spoken blasphemy.
Verses 32-36
John 10:32-36. Jesus answered,
Many good works have I showed
you from my Father — That is, in
confirmation of my mission from
my Father I have wrought many
miracles, all of a beneficent
kind, and most becoming the
perfections of my Father, who
sent me. I have fed the hungry,
I have healed the lame, I have
cured the sick, I have given
sight to the blind, I have cast
out devils, and I have raised
the dead: for which of all these
are you going to stone me? The
Jews answered, For a good work
we stone thee not — We are going
to punish thee with death, not
for a good work, but for
blasphemy; for, though thou art
a man, weak and mortal as we
ourselves are, thou arrogantly
assumest to thyself the power
and majesty of God; and by
laying claim to the
incommunicable attributes of the
Deity, makest thyself God. This
they took to be the plain
meaning of his assertion, that
he and the Father were one.
Jesus — Not judging it proper,
at that time, to bring the
sublime doctrine of his Deity
into further debate; answered
them, Is it not written in your
law — Or, in those sacred books
which you own to be of divine
original, (see Psalms 82:6,)
where it is plain the persons
that are spoken of are princes
and magistrates; I said, Ye are
gods? — “The Jewish magistrates
were God’s deputies in an
especial manner, because the
people whom they governed were
his peculiar people, and
because, in many instances, they
were expressly called by him to
undertake the fatigues of
government, and had an afflatus,
or inspiration of the Spirit,
for that end. Thus the
high-priests derived their
dignity from God, and were
possessed of the Urim and
Thummim, by which they inquired
of the Lord. When Moses chose
the seventy elders to assist him
in the distribution of justice,
God put his Spirit upon them,
and they prophesied, Numbers
11:17. Joshua, who succeeded
Moses by divine appointment, is
said to have been a man in whom
was the Spirit, Numbers 27:18.
Many of the judges were raised
up by God, and had his Spirit.
When Saul was anointed, the
Spirit of God came upon him, and
he prophesied, 1 Samuel 10:6; 1
Samuel 10:10.” — Macknight. If
he (God) called them gods, to
whom the word of God came — That
is, to whom God was then
speaking; and the Scripture
cannot be broken — That is,
nothing that is written therein
can be censured or rejected. Dr.
Campbell translates this clause,
And if the language of Scripture
is unexceptionable; observing,
“Our Lord defends what he had
said from the charge of
blasphemy, by showing its
conformity to the style of
Scripture in less urgent cases;
insomuch, that if the propriety
of Scripture language were
admitted, the propriety of his
must be admitted also.” “This,”
adds he, “is one of those
instances wherein, though it is
very easy for the translator to
discover the meaning, it is very
difficult to express it in words
which shall appear to correspond
to those of his author.” Say ye
of him whom the Father hath
sanctified — Hath set apart for
the great work of redeeming and
saving the human race; and sent
into the world — For that
purpose; Thou blasphemest,
because I said, I am the Son of
God? — If the Scripture, which
cannot err, gives the title of
gods to mortal and sinful men,
why should you reckon guilty of
blasphemy, me, whom the Father
hath sanctified, and sent into
the world on so grand a design,
because I assume to myself a
title which so justly belongs to
me, namely, that of the Son of
God? Some set the argument in
another light, thus: If they, to
whom the word of God, and the
revelation of his will came, are
called gods in Scripture, how
dare you say to the Word of God
himself, by whom all the various
revelations of the divine will
have been made to men; how dare
you say to such a person, on
such an occasion, Thou
blasphemest! Jesus, it must be
observed, was charged here by
the Jews with ascribing divinity
to his human nature; and in
reply to this he shows, that,
calling himself the Son of God,
did not imply that, and that his
works proved such a union of the
human nature with the divine as
he had before asserted, than
which no answer could have been
more wise and pertinent.
Verses 37-39
John 10:37-39. If I do not the
works of my Father, &c. — When I
claim the character of the Son
of God, I do not expect to be
credited merely on my own
affirmation: if I do not such
glorious works as could not be
performed by any but a divine
agent, believe me not: but if I
do — If it be apparent that I do
such works, though you believe
not me, and are regardless of my
own testimony in the case, yet,
at least, believe the works; and
let their evidence remove the
prejudices you have entertained;
that ye may know, &c., that the
Father is in me, and I in him —
Namely, by such a union as
abundantly justifies the
expression which seems to give
you such peculiar offence. In
other words, Though ye do not
believe what I say concerning my
personal dignity, on my own
authority, you ought to believe
it on account of my miracles,
which are plainly of such a
kind, that it is impossible for
any deceiver to perform them;
they are the works of God
himself, and therefore you ought
to consider them as such.
Therefore they sought again to
take him — For this defence was
so far from pacifying them, that
they were rather the more
enraged at him through it. But
he escaped out of their hand —
Withdrew himself, as he had done
before, in an extraordinary
manner. See John 8:59; Luke
4:30.
Verses 40-42
John 10:40-42. And, presently
departing from Jerusalem, he
went again beyond Jordan — Into
Perea, a country for the most
part desert and rocky; the place
where John at first baptized —
Called Bethabara, John 1:28; and
there he abode — Probably till
he came into Judea, to raise
Lazarus from the dead, that
being the next particular
mentioned by this evangelist. If
so, the time of his abode in
these parts must have been
considerable: and, as appears
from what follows, was not spent
there in vain. For many of the
inhabitants of that place, who
had been formerly acquainted
with John the Baptist, and
remembered the strong and
repeated testimonies which he
had borne to Jesus, resorted
unto him — To attend his
ministry; and said, John did no
miracle — For it seems John was
not endued with the power of
working miracles, that the
authority of Jesus might be more
conspicuous and unquestionable;
but all things that John spake
of this man were true — The
character which John gave of one
that was to come after him, is
completely verified by the
doctrine and miracles of this
person. And many believed on him
there — Believed him to be the
Messiah, the Son of God. And
thus they happily improved this
season of Christ’s recess among
them, as the means of their
instruction, and establishment
in piety. Thus we see the
testimony of John the Baptist
was recollected to excellent
purposes, while he himself was
mouldering in his tomb. And what
can a faithful minister account
a greater happiness, or more
earnestly desire, than that,
even while he is dead, he may
yet speak for the honour of
Christ, and the salvation of
souls? |