Verse 1
John 14:1. Let not your hearts
be troubled — At the thoughts of
my departure from you, and
leaving you in a world where you
are likely to meet with many
temptations, trials, and
troubles, and to become a
helpless prey to the rage and
power of your enemies. Ye
believe in God — The Almighty
Preserver and Governor of the
universe, who is able to support
you under, and deliver you out
of, all your distresses; believe
also in me — Who am sent by God,
not only to teach, but to redeem
and save you; and who can both
protect you from evil, and
reward you abundantly for
whatever losses and sufferings
you sustain on my account. But
the original words, πιστευετε
εις τον θεον και εις εμε
πιστευετε, it seems, ought
rather to be rendered, Believe
in God, believe also in me; that
is, Confide in the being,
perfections, and superintending
providence of God: or, Rely on
the great acknowledged
principles of natural religion,
that the glorious Maker and
Governor of the world is most
wise, mighty, holy, just, and
good, and the sovereign disposer
of all events; and comfort
yourselves likewise with the
peculiar doctrines of that holy
religion which I have taught
you. Or, as Dr. Doddridge
interprets the clause, “Believe
in God, the Almighty Guardian of
his faithful servants, who has
made such glorious promises to
prosper and succeed the cause in
which you are engaged; and
believe also in me, as the
promised Messiah, who, whether
present or absent in body, shall
always be mindful of your
concerns, as well as ever able
to help you.” It appears most
natural, as he justly observes,
to render the same word,
πιστευετε, alike in both places;
and it is certain an exhortation
to faith in God and in Christ
would be very seasonable,
considering how weak and
defective their faith was. Thus
Dr. Campbell: “The two clauses
are so similarly expressed and
linked together by the
copulative [ και, and, or also]
that it is, I suspect,
unprecedented, to make the verb
in one an indicative, and the
same verb repeated in the other
an imperative. The simple and
natural way is, to render
similarly what is similarly
expressed: nor ought this rule
ever to be departed from, unless
something absurd or incongruous
should follow from the
observance of it, which is so
far from being the case here,
that by rendering both in the
imperative, the sense is not
only good, but apposite.”
Verses 2-4
John 14:2-4. In my Father’s
house — From whence I came,
whither I am going, and to which
place I am conducting you; are
many mansions — or apartments
(he alludes to the palaces of
kings) sufficient to receive the
holy angels, your predecessors
in the faith, and all that now
believe, or shall hereafter
believe, even a great multitude,
which no man can number. Our
Lord means by the expression,
different states of felicity in
which men shall be placed,
according to their progress in
faith and holiness. If it were
not so — If there were no state
of felicity hereafter, into
which good men are to be
received at death, I would have
told you so, and not have
permitted you to impose upon
yourselves by a vain expectation
of what shall never exist; much
less would I have said so much
as I have done to confirm that
expectation: but as it is in
itself a glorious reality, so I
am now going, not only to
receive my own reward, but to
prepare a place for you there.
By passing into the heavens, as
your great High-Priest, through
the merit of my sacrifice, and
by appearing in the presence of
God as your Advocate and
Intercessor, I shall procure for
you an entrance into that place,
which otherwise would have been
inaccessible to you. And if I
then go and prepare a place for
you — You may depend upon it
that this preparation shall not
be in vain; but that I will
certainly act so consistent a
part as to come again and
receive you to myself, that
where I am — And shall for ever
be; ye — After a short
separation; may be also — To
dwell for ever with me, and
partake in my felicity. And —
Surely I may say in the general,
after all the instructions I
have given you; that whither I
go ye know, &c. — That ye cannot
but know the place to which I am
going, and the way that leads to
it; for I have told you both
plainly enough.
Verse 5-6
John 14:5-6. Thomas saith —
Taking him in a gross sense;
Lord, we know not whither thou
goest — “As their thoughts
turned very much on a temporal
kingdom, they might imagine that
their Master intended to remove
to some splendid palace on
earth, which he was to prepare
for their reception, making it
the seat of his court.” Jesus
saith, I am the way, the truth,
and the life — Christ was his
own way to the Father, inasmuch
as by his own blood he entered
into the holy place, Hebrews
9:12; and he is our way, in that
we enter by him. By his doctrine
and example he teaches us our
duty; by his merit and
intercession he procures for us
our happiness; and in these
respects he is the way. In him
God and man meet and are brought
together, and by him a way of
intercourse is appointed and
kept up between heaven and
earth; our prayers ascend to
God, and his blessings descend
to us by him. He is the truth,
1st, As truth is opposed to
figure and emblem: he is the
substance of all the Old
Testament types and shadows,
which are therefore said to be
figures of the true things. He
is the true manna, (John 6:32,)
the true tabernacle, Hebrews
8:2. 2d, As truth is opposed to
falsehood and error, the
doctrine of Christ is infallibly
true doctrine; the truth as it
is in Jesus. 3d, As truth is
opposed to fallacy and deceit;
he is true and faithful to all
that trust in him, and will
assuredly make good all his
declarations and promises, 2
Corinthians 1:20. He is the
life, for we are made alive unto
God here, and brought to eternal
life hereafter, only in and
through him, who is the
resurrection and the life,
Romans 6:11. For as God hath
given to believers eternal life,
this life is in his Son, and
only he that hath the Son hath
life, John 5:11-12. No man
cometh unto the Father but by me
— Fallen man may, and must come
to God as a judge, but cannot
come to him as a Father,
otherwise than by Christ as a
Mediator, Redeemer, and Saviour;
for through him alone, through
his merits and Spirit, his
doctrine and grace, can we be
pardoned and renewed, justified,
sanctified, and glorified.
Verse 7
John 14:7. If ye had known me —
As ye might and ought to have
known me. If ye had earnestly
sought and obtained that
knowledge of me which is
communicated by the Spirit of
wisdom and revelation,
(Ephesians 1:17,) ye would have
known my Father also — In his
various perfections, and in
those blessed relations in which
he stands to such as believe on
Christ with a living faith, and
are accepted through him, the
beloved. “If you had had an
adequate idea of my character,
from the miracles I have
performed, and from the marks of
goodness, justice, and wisdom,
which have manifested themselves
in my life and doctrine; you
could not have been ignorant of
my Father; because his
attributes are the same.” And
from henceforth ye know him, and
have seen him — As it may be
truly affirmed, considering the
discoveries that I have made of
him, and the manifestation of
the divine perfections which you
have seen in me.
Verses 8-11
John 14:8-11. Philip — One of
the apostles, hearing these
words; saith unto him — With a
pious ardour becoming his
character; Lord, show us the
Father — Do but bring us to the
sight and enjoyment of him; and
it sufficeth us — It is
happiness enough for us; we
desire no more, and resign every
other hope in comparison of
this. “It is hard to say,
whether Philip as yet understood
who the Father was, of whom his
Master spake. If he did, we
cannot suppose that he asked a
sight of the divine essence,
which in itself is invisible,
but, like Moses, he desired to
see the inaccessible light
wherein God dwells, it being the
symbol of his presence in
heaven.” Jesus saith, Have I
been so long time with you — Now
about three years conversing
with you in a familiar manner;
and hast thou not known me,
Philip — In my person and
offices, my spirit and conduct,
who I am, and what I teach and
practise? Observe, reader, the
longer we enjoy the means of
knowledge and grace, the more
inexcusable we are, if we be
found deficient in grace and
knowledge: Christ expects that
our proficiency should be, in
some measure, in proportion to
our advantages, and the time
that we have enjoyed them. He
that hath seen me, hath seen the
Father — For I am the image of
the invisible God; and the
wisdom of the Father hath shone
forth in my discourses, his
power in my miracles, his
holiness in my spotless life,
and his mercy, love, and
goodness, in all my tempers,
words, and works, and in all my
proceedings day by day. And how
sayest thou — What reason hast
thou to say; Show us the Father?
— As if I had not been showing
him continually, from the time
of my first entering upon my
public ministry, to all that had
the eyes of their understanding
opened. Believest thou not —
Dost thou then call in question
what I have before affirmed
expressly; that the Father is in
me, and I in him, (John 10:38,)
by such an intimate union as
sufficiently warrants such
language as this? The words that
I speak unto you — From time to
time; I speak not of myself —
That is, not merely; and the
Father that dwelleth in me — In
all his fulness; he doeth the
works — Namely, the miraculous
works that you have so often
seen, works sufficient to
demonstrate the truth of this
assertion, mysterious as it is,
and incredible as it might
otherwise seem: for I speak and
act not separate from, but in
union with the Father, with whom
I am one in essence and
operation. Believe me, that I am
in the Father, and the Father in
me — And that there is such a
union between us, that as the
Father knows all the thoughts of
the Son, so the Son revealeth to
men all the thoughts of the
Father, respecting their
salvation; and is vested with
his power and authority. This
thou must acknowledge, if thou
considerest the miracles whereby
my mission is established.
Verses 12-14
John 14:12-14. Verily, he that
believeth on me, &c. — Having
mentioned his miracles, Jesus
proceeds to promise, that he
would endow his apostles with a
power of performing even greater
wonders than any they had ever
seen him do. He made them this
promise to animate them in their
work, and that they might not
despond in his absence, when
they received such tokens of his
remembering them, and such
proofs of his power with the
Father. “How fully,” says
Macknight, “Jesus performed this
promise, is plain from the
history of the Acts throughout,
particularly John 5:15, where we
find, that the very shadow of
Peter, passing by, cured the
sick on whom it fell, and who
were laid in the streets for
that purpose: also from John
19:12, which informs us, that
handkerchiefs and aprons, which
had touched the body of Paul,
being applied to the sick and
possessed, banished both the
diseases and the devils. Nor
should we, on this occasion,
forget the gift of languages
bestowed on the apostles, and
which they were enabled to
communicate unto others. Yet if
these miracles are not thought
to show greater power than
Christ’s, we may refer the
greatness, whereof he speaks, to
the effect which they were to
produce on the minds of men.
For, in that respect, the
apostles’ miracles were vastly
superior to Christ’s; converting
more people in one day, than was
done by all the miracles that
Jesus performed during the
course of his ministry. They
converted thousands at once,
made the gospel to fly like
lightning through the world, and
beat down every thing that stood
in opposition to the faith of
their Master.” And whatsoever ye
shall ask — Under the influence
of my Spirit, and subservient to
the great end of your life and
ministry; that will I do —
Although the promise is here
conceived in general terms, yet
the subject treated of directs
us to understand it especially
of miracles wrought in
confirmation of the gospel; that
the Father may be glorified in
the Son — Who, when he is
ascended up to heaven, will from
thence be able to hear and
answer prayer, and, even in his
most exalted state, will
continue to act with that
faithful regard to his Father’s
honour, which he has shown in
his humiliation on earth. If ye
ask any thing, &c. — I repeat
it, for the encouragement of
your faith and hope, that I will
be as affectionate and constant
a friend to you in heaven, as I
have ever been on earth.
Verses 15-17
John 14:15-17. If ye love me —
As ye profess to do, keep my
commandments — For that will be
a surer test and more acceptable
expression of your regard for me
than all your trouble and
concern at parting with me.
Keeping Christ’s commandments is
evidently here put for the
practice of godliness in
general, and for the faithful
and diligent discharge of their
office as apostles in
particular. And I will pray the
Father — Here we see, that he
required a steady obedience to
his commands, as the condition
on which their prayers would be
heard; (see John 15:7; 1 John
3:22;) and assured them, on
their complying with that
condition, he would send them
another comforter, advocate,
monitor, encourager, or
intercessor, as the word
παρακλητος may be properly
rendered; another — For Christ
himself was one: that he may
abide with you for ever —
With you and your followers in
faith, unto the end of the
world; to supply the want of my
bodily presence. Even the Spirit
of truth — Who has, reveals,
testifies, and defends the
truth, and whose office it is to
guide my disciples into every
branch of divine and sacred
truth. Whom the world — Carnal
and worldly people, who do not
love or fear God; cannot receive
— Except in the way of
repentance and faith, in which
way they will not be persuaded
to walk; because it seeth him
not — Having no spiritual
senses, no internal eye, to
discern the nature, necessity,
or utility of his influences;
nor consequently knoweth him.
But ye know him — Namely, in
some measure, even now, by his
powerful operation in you and by
you; for he dwelleth — Greek,
μενει, abideth; with you — In
part, helping your infirmities,
awakening your minds to a sense
of the certainty and importance
of things spiritual and eternal,
and exciting in you sincere and
earnest desires to know and do
the will of God; and shall be in
you — By a much more ample
communication, both of his gifts
and graces: constituting you the
temples of God, and a habitation
of his holiness.
Verses 18-24
John 14:18-24. I will not leave
you comfortless — Greek,
ορφανους, orphans: a word
elegantly applied to those who
have lost any dear friend; I
will come to you — By my
spiritual presence. The Greek,
ερχομαι, is literally, I come to
you; for what was certainly and
speedily to be, our Lord speaks
of as if it were already. Yet a
little while and the world —
Which only sees by bodily eyes;
seeth me no more — In the sense
it has done for some time past,
though it knows me not; but ye
see me — That is, ye certainly
shall see me; for, after I have
done conversing with the world,
I will appear again to you, and
give you distinguishing marks of
my regard for you; because I
live, ye shall live also —
Because I am the living One, in
my divine nature, and shall rise
again in my human nature, and
live for ever in heaven;
therefore, ye shall live the
life of faith and love on earth,
and hereafter the life of glory.
At that day — When I fulfil this
promise to you; when ye see me
after my resurrection; but more
eminently at the day of
pentecost, John 14:21. He that
hath my commandments — Written
in his heart; and keepeth them —
Makes them the continual rule of
his conduct; he it is that
loveth me — And none else have
any title to this character,
whatever specious pretences they
may make to it. And he that
loveth me shall be loved of my
Father — With a peculiar love, a
love of approbation and delight;
and I will love him — In an
especial manner; and will
manifest myself to him — More
abundantly. Judas saith — Being
much surprised to hear our Lord
speak as he had done; not Judas
Iscariot — For he, as it was
said before, was gone out before
our Lord began this discourse;
but another apostle of that
name, who was also called
Thaddeus and Lebbeus, the son of
Alpheus, and the brother of
James the less. This Judas, upon
hearing Christ express himself
in such a way, said, Lord, how
is it that thou wilt manifest
thyself to us, &c. — Dost thou
not intend to make a public
appearance, which will be
obvious to the eyes of all? For,
according to the notions they
had conceived of the Messiah, he
was to appear unto all the Jews,
nay, to the whole world, and was
to take unto himself universal
empire. Jesus answered, If a man
love me — It may be sufficient
to tell you, that, as I said
before, (John 14:21,) If a man,
in deed and in truth, love me,
he will keep my words, in an
humble, obedient, and
conscientious manner; and my
Father will love him — Will
still more approve of, and take
complacency in him, for the more
any one loves and obeys God, the
more God will love him; and we
will come unto him — By still
larger communications of the
Spirit of truth wisdom,
holiness, and comfort; and make
our abode with him —
Continually. If our Lord had
been a mere creature, though of
the highest rank, it would have
been blasphemy in him to have
joined himself in this manner
with God. This promise implies
such a large manifestation of
the divine presence and love as
far exceeds the former, given
when a person is justified and
first obtains peace with God. He
that loveth me not — Though he
may profess to do it; keepeth
not my sayings — With any
constancy and resolution, and
thereby shows that his
professions of loving me are not
sincere; and, therefore, he must
expect no such spiritual and
eternal blessings, whatever
outward privileges he may enjoy.
See to it, therefore, that you
diligently hearken and attend to
what I say; for the word which
ye hear me speak is not mine —
Originally or merely; but the
Father’s which sent me — Who has
particularly given it in charge
to me, that I should thus insist
on practical and universal
holiness as one great end of my
appearance.
Verses 25-27
John 14:25-27. These things have
I spoken, being yet present — I
have spoken these things during
my personal presence with you
briefly, because my time with
you is short. But the Comforter,
whom the Father will send in my
name — For my sake, in my room,
and as my agent; he shall teach
you all things — Necessary for
you to know; as if he had said,
Though you may not now
understand many of the
particulars mentioned by me, you
shall have a perfect knowledge
of them afterward. For my Father
will give you the Holy Spirit to
supply my place, and he shall be
a Comforter to you, teaching you
every article of the Christian
faith, and bringing to your
remembrance all the things I
have ever said to you in the
course of my ministry. Here is a
clear promise to the apostles,
and their successors in the
faith, that the Holy Ghost
should teach them all that truth
which was needful for their
salvation. Peace I leave with
you — Peace in general, peace
with God, and with your own
consciences. My peace — In
particular, that peace which I
enjoy, and which I create; I
give — At this instant. Not as
the world giveth — Unsatisfying,
unsettled, transient; but
filling the soul with constant,
even tranquillity. Lord,
evermore give us this peace! How
serenely may we pass through the
most turbulent scenes of life,
when all is quiet and harmonious
within! Thou hast made peace
through the blood of thy cross.
May we give all diligence to
preserve the inestimable gift
inviolate till it issue in
everlasting peace!
Verses 28-31
John 14:28-31. If ye loved me —
With a wise and rational
affection, it would allay your
sorrows in the mean time, and
howsoever you might have a
mournful sense of your own loss;
you would rejoice on my account,
because I said, I go unto the
Father: for my Father — Whose
servant I am, as Mediator; is,
in this respect, greater than I
— Consequently, it must be my
honour and happiness to be in a
state of greater nearness to him
than the present world will
admit. “These words,” as Dr.
Macknight justly remarks,
“afford a strong argument for
the proper divinity of our Lord.
For had he been a mere man, or
even a mere creature of the
highest order, the comparison
would have been foolish and
impertinent.” And now I have
told you before it come to pass,
&c. — I have foretold my
sufferings and death, in order
that, when they happen, your
faith, instead of being shaken,
may be confirmed. Hereafter I
will not talk much with you — I
shall not have much opportunity
to talk with you after this; for
the prince of this world cometh
— To make his grand assault. The
devil will stir up wicked men to
kill me; but he hath nothing in
me — No right, no claim, no
power. There is no guilt in me
to give him power over me; no
corruption to take part with his
temptation. Be assured,
therefore, that I shall undergo
the punishment of death, not
because I deserve it; but that
the world may know — On the most
substantial evidence; that I
love the Father — I suffer Satan
thus to assault me, and I
undergo death, to show the world
how much I love the Father: for
it is the Father’s will that I
should thus act; and as the
Father gave me commandment — Or,
commission; (see John 10:18;)
even so I do — Because I can
refuse no act of obedience to
him, (how painful or expensive
soever it may be,) whereby his
glory may be advanced. Arise,
&c. — And therefore, that we may
be prepared for this hour of
trial that is coming upon us,
let us go hence — And retire to
a place where we may more
conveniently give ourselves to
prayer, and where I may be
ready, when my cruel enemies
shall come to apprehend me, to
yield myself into their hands,
and to submit to what my Father
has appointed for me. |