Chapter 1:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| McGee
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Luke Acts
John 1
Verse 1. In the beginning - (Referring to Gen. i, 1, and Prov. viii, 23.)
When all things began to be made by the Word: in the beginning
of heaven and earth, and this whole frame of created beings, the
Word existed, without any beginning. He was when all things
began to be, whatsoever had a beginning. The Word - So termed
Psalm xxxiii, 6, and frequently by the seventy, and in the Chaldee
paraphrase. So that St. John did not borrow this expression from
Philo, or any heathen writer. He was not yet named Jesus, or
Christ. He is the Word whom the Father begat or spoke from
eternity; by whom the Father speaking, maketh all things; who
speaketh the Father to us. We have, in the 18th verse, both a real
description of the Word, and the reason why he is so called. He is
the only begotten Son of the Father, who is in the bosom of the
Father, and hath declared him. And the Word was with God -
Therefore distinct from God the Father. The word rendered with,
denotes a perpetual tendency as it were of the Son to the Father, in
unity of essence. He was with God alone; because nothing beside
God had then any being. And the Word was God - Supreme,
eternal, independent. There was no creature, in respect of which
he could be styled God in a relative sense. Therefore he is styled
so in the absolute sense. The Godhead of the Messiah being
clearly revealed in the Old Testament, (Jer. xxiii, 7; Hosea i, 6;
Psalm xxiii, 1, ) the other evangelists aim at this, to prove that
Jesus, a true man, was the Messiah. But when, at length, some
from hence began to doubt of his Godhead, then St. John
expressly asserted it, and wrote in this book as it were a
supplement to the Gospels, as in the Revelation to the prophets.
Verse
2. The same was in the beginning with God - This verse repeats
and contracts into one the three points mentioned before. As if he
had said, This Word, who was God, was in the beginning, and
was with God.
Verse
3. All things beside God were made, and all things which were
made, were made by the Word. In the first and second verse is
described the state of things before the creation: verse 3, In the
creation: verse 4, In the time of man's innocency: verse 5, In the
time of man's corruption.
Verse
4. In him was life - He was the foundation of life to every living
thing, as well as of being to all that is. And the life was the light
of men - He who is essential life, and the giver of life to all that
liveth, was also the light of men; the fountain of wisdom,
holiness, and happiness, to man in his original state.
Verse
5. And the light shineth in darkness - Shines even on fallen man;
but the darkness - Dark, sinful man, perceiveth it not.
Verse
6. There was a man - The evangelist now proceeds to him who
testified of the light, which he had spoken of in the five preceding
verses.
Verse
7. The same came for (that is, in order to give) a testimony - The
evangelist, with the most strong and tender affection, interweaves
his own testimony with that of John, by noble digressions,
wherein he explains the office of the Baptist; partly premises and
partly subjoins a farther explication to his short sentences. What
St. Matthew, Mark, and Luke term the Gospel, in respect of the
promise going before, St. John usually terms the testimony,
intimating the certain knowledge of the relator; to testify of the
light - Of Christ.
Verse
9. Who lighteth every man - By what is vulgarly termed natural
conscience, pointing out at least the general lines of good and evil.
And this light, if man did not hinder, would shine more and more
to the perfect day.
Verse
10. He was in the world - Even from the creation.
Verse
11. He came - In the fulness of time, to his own - Country, city,
temple: And his own - People, received him not.
Verse
12. But as many as received him - Jews or Gentiles; that believe
on his name - That is, on him. The moment they believe, they are
sons; and because they are sons, God sendeth forth the Spirit of
his Son into their hearts, crying, Abba, Father.
Verse
13. Who were born - Who became the sons of God, not of blood -
Not by descent from Abraham, nor by the will of the flesh - By
natural generation, nor by the will of man - Adopting them, but of
God - By his Spirit.
Verse
14. Flesh sometimes signifies corrupt nature; sometimes the body;
sometimes, as here, the whole man. We beheld his glory - We his
apostles, particularly Peter, James, and John, Luke ix, 32. Grace
and truth - We are all by nature liars and children of wrath, to
whom both grace and truth are unknown. But we are made
partakers of them, when we are accepted through the Beloved.
The whole verse might be paraphrased thus: And in order to raise
us to this dignity and happiness, the eternal Word, by a most
amazing condescension, was made flesh, united himself to our
miserable nature, with all its innocent infirmities. And he did not
make us a transient visit, but tabernacled among us on earth,
displaying his glory in a more eminent manner, than even of old
in the tabernacle of Moses. And we who are now recording these
things beheld his glory with so strict an attention, that we can
testify, it was in every respect such a glory as became the only
begotten of the Father. For it shone forth not only in his
transfiguration, and in his continual miracles, but in all his
tempers, ministrations, and conduct through the whole series of
his life. In all he appeared full of grace and truth: he was himself
most benevolent and upright; made those ample discoveries of
pardon to sinners, which the Mosaic dispensation could not do:
and really exhibited the most substantial blessings, whereas that
was but a shadow of good things to come.
Verse
15. John cried - With joy and confidence; This is he of whom I
said - John had said this before our Lord's baptism, although he
then knew him not in person: he knew him first at his baptism,
and afterward cried, This is he of whom I said. &c. He is
preferred before me - in his office: for he was before me - in his
nature.
Verse
16. And - Here the apostle confirms the Baptist's words: as if he
had said, He is indeed preferred before thee: so we have
experienced: We all - That believe: have received - All that we
enjoy out of his fulness: and in the particular, grace upon grace -
One blessing upon another, immeasurable grace and love.
Verse
17. The law - Working wrath and containing shadows: was given
- No philosopher, poet, or orator, ever chose his words so
accurately as St. John. The law, saith he, was given by Moses:
grace was by Jesus Christ. Observe the reason for placing each
word thus: The law of Moses was not his own. The grace of
Christ was. His grace was opposite to the wrath, his truth to the
shadowy ceremonies of the law. Jesus - St. John having once
mentioned the incarnation (ver. 14,) no more uses that name, the
Word, in all his book.
Verse
18. No man hath seen God - With bodily eyes: yet believers see
him with the eye of faith. Who is in the bosom of the Father - The
expression denotes the highest unity, and the most intimate
knowledge.
Verse
19. The Jews - Probably the great council sent.
Verse
20. I am not the Christ - For many supposed he was.
Verse
21. Art thou Elijah? - He was not that Elijah (the Tishbite) of
whom they spoke. Art thou the prophet - Of whom Moses speaks,
Deut. xviii, 15.
Verse
23. He said - I am that forerunner of Christ of whom Isaiah
speaks. I am the voice - As if he had said, Far from being Christ,
or even Elijah, I am nothing but a voice: a sound that so soon as it
has expressed the thought of which it is the sign, dies into air, and
is known no more. Isaiah xl, 3.
Verse
24. They who were sent were of the Pharisees - Who were
peculiarly tenacious of old customs, and jealous of any innovation
(except those brought in by their own scribes) unless the
innovator had unquestionable proofs of Divine authority.
Verse
25. They asked him, Why baptizest thou then? - Without any
commission from the sanhedrim? And not only heathens (who
were always baptized before they were admitted to circumcision)
but Jews also?
Verse
26. John answered, I baptize - To prepare for the Messiah; and
indeed to show that Jews, as well as Gentiles, must be proselytes
to Christ, and that these as well as those stand in need of being
washed from their sins.
Verse
28. Where John was baptizing - That is, used to baptize.
Verse
29. He seeth Jesus coming and saith, Behold the Lamb - Innocent;
to be offered up; prophesied of by Isaiah, Isaiah liii, 7, typified by
the paschal lamb, and by the daily sacrifice: The Lamb of God -
Whom God gave, approves, accepts of; who taketh away -
Atoneth for; the sin - That is, all the sins: of the world - Of all
mankind. Sin and the world are of equal extent.
Verse
31. I knew him not - Till he came to be baptized. How surprising
is this; considering how nearly they were related, and how
remarkable the conception and birth of both had been. But there
was a peculiar providence visible in our saviour's living, from his
infancy to his baptism, at Nazareth: John all the time living the
life of a hermit in the deserts of Judea, Luke i, 80, ninety or more
miles from Nazareth: hereby that acquaintance was prevented
which might have made John's testimony of Christ suspected.
Verse
34. I saw it - That is, the Spirit so descending and abiding on him.
And testified - From that time.
Verse
37. They followed Jesus - They walked after him, but had not the
courage to speak to him.
Verse
41. He first findeth his own brother Simon - Probably both of
them sought him: Which is, being interpreted, the Christ - This the
evangelist adds, as likewise those words in ver. 38, that is, being
interpreted, Master.
Verse
42. Jesus said, Thou art Simon, the son of Jonah - As none had
told our Lord these names, this could not but strike Peter. Cephas,
which is Peter - Moaning the same in Syriac which Peter does in
Greek, namely, a rock.
Verse
45. Jesus of Nazareth - So Philip thought, not knowing he was
born in Bethlehem. Nathanael was probably the same with
Bartholomew, that is, the son of Tholomew. St. Matthew joins
Bartholomew with Philip, Matt. x, 3, and St. John places
Nathanael in the midst of the apostles, immediately after Thomas,
chap. xxi, 2, just as Bartholomew is placed, Acts i, 13.
Verse
46. Can any good thing come out of Nazareth? - How cautiously
should we guard against popular prejudices? When these had once
possessed so honest a heart as that of Nathanael, they led him to
suspect the blessed Jesus himself for an impostor, because he had
been brought up at Nazareth. But his integrity prevailed over that
foolish bias, and laid him open to the force of evidence, which a
candid inquirer will always be glad to admit, even when it brings
the most unexpected discoveries. Can any good thing - That is,
have we ground from Scripture to expect the Messiah, or any
eminent prophet from Nazareth? Philip saith, Come and see - The
same answer which he had received himself from our Lord the
day before.
Verse
48. Under the fig tree I saw thee - Perhaps at prayer.
Verse
49. Nathanael answered - Happy are they that are ready to believe,
swift to receive the truth and grace of God. Thou art the Son of
God - So he acknowledges now more than he had heard from
Philip: The Son of God, the king of Israel - A confession both of
the person and office of Christ.
Verse
51. Hereafter ye shall see - All of these, as well as thou, who
believe on me now in my state of humiliation, shall hereafter see
me come in my glory, and all the angels of God with me. This
seems the most natural sense of the words, though they may also
refer to his ascension.
Chapter 1:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Lightfoot
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| McGee
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Luke Acts
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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