Chapter 4:
| 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 4
Verse 1. The Lord knew - Though none informed him of it.
Verse
3. He left Judea - To shun the effects of their resentment.
Verse
4. And he must needs go through Samaria - The road lying
directly through it.
Verse
5. Sychar - Formerly called Sichem or Shechem. Jacob gave - On
his death bed, Gen. xlviii, 22.
Verse
6. Jesus sat down - Weary as he was. It was the sixth hour - Noon;
the heat of the day.
Verse
7. Give me to drink - In this one conversation he brought her to
that knowledge which the apostles were so long in attaining.
Verse
8. For his disciples were gone - Else he needed not have asked
her.
Verse
9. How dost thou - Her open simplicity appears from her very first
words. The Jews have no dealings - None by way of friendship.
They would receive no kind of favour from them.
Verse
10. If thou hadst known the gift - The living water; and who it is -
He who alone is able to give it: thou wouldst have asked of him -
On those words the stress lies. Water - In like manner he draws
the allegory from bread, chap. vi, 27, and from light, viii, 12; the
first, the most simple, necessary, common, and salutary things in
nature. Living water - The Spirit and its fruits. But she might the
more easily mistake his meaning, because living water was a
common phrase among the Jews for spring water.
Verse
12. Our father Jacob - So they fancied he was; whereas they were,
in truth, a mixture of many nations, placed there by the king of
Assyria, in the room of the Israelites whom he had carried away
captive, 2 Kings xvii, 24. Who gave us the well - In Joseph their
supposed forefather: and drank thereof - So even he had no better
water than this.
Verse
14. Will never thirst - Will never (provided he continue to drink
thereof) be miserable, dissatisfied, without refreshment. If ever
that thirst returns, it will be the fault of the man, not the water. But
the water that I shall give him - The spirit of faith working by
love, shall become in him - An inward living principle, a fountain
- Not barely a well, which is soon exhausted, springing up into
everlasting life - Which is a confluence, or rather an ocean of
streams arising from this fountain.
Verse
15. That I thirst not - She takes him still in a gross sense.
Verse
16. Jesus saith to her - He now clears the way that he might give
her a better kind of water than she asked for. Go, call thy husband
- He strikes directly at her bosom sin.
Verse
17. Thou hast well said - We may observe in all our Lord's
discourses the utmost weightiness, and yet the utmost courtesy.
Verse
18. Thou hast had five husbands - Whether they were all dead or
not, her own conscience now awakened would tell her.
Verse
19. Sir, I perceive - So soon was her heart touched.
Verse
20. The instant she perceived this, she proposes what she thought
the most important of all questions. This mountain - Pointing to
Mount Gerizim. Sanballat, by the permission of Alexander the
Great, had built a temple upon Mount Gerizim, for Manasseh,
who for marrying Sanballat's daughter had been expelled from the
priesthood and from Jerusalem, Neh. xiii, 28. This was the place
where the Samaritans used to worship in opposition to Jerusalem.
And it was so near Sychar, that a man's voice might be heard from
the one to the other. Our fathers worshipped - This plainly refers
to Abraham and Jacob (from whom the Samaritans pretended to
deduce their genealogy) who erected altars in this place: Gen. xii,
6, 7, and Gen. xxxiii, 18, 20. And possibly to the whole
congregation, who were directed when they came into the land of
Canaan to put the blessing upon Mount Gerizim, Deut. xi, 29. Ye
Jews say, In Jerusalem is the place - Namely, the temple.
Verse
21. Believe me - Our Lord uses this expression in this manner but
once; and that to a Samaritan. To his own people, the Jews, his
usual language is, I say unto you. The hour cometh when ye -
Both Samaritans and Jews, shall worship neither in this mountain,
nor at Jerusalem - As preferable to any other place. True worship
shall be no longer confined to any one place or nation.
Verse
22. Ye worship ye know not what - Ye Samaritans are ignorant,
not only of the place, but of the very object of worship. Indeed,
they feared the Lord after a fashion; but at the same time served
their own gods, 2 Kings xvii, 33. Salvation is from the Jews - So
spake all the prophets, that the saviour should arise out of the
Jewish nation: and that from thence the knowledge of him should
spread to all nations under heaven.
Verse
23. The true worshippers shall worship the Father - Not here or
there only, but at all times and in all places.
Verse
24. God is a Spirit - Not only remote from the body, and all the
properties of it, but likewise full of all spiritual perfections,
power, wisdom, love, holiness. And our worship should be
suitable to his nature. We should worship him with the truly
spiritual worship of faith, love, and holiness, animating all our
tempers, thoughts, words, and actions.
Verse
25. The woman saith - With joy for what she had already learned,
and desire of fuller instruction.
Verse
26. Jesus saith - Hasting to satisfy her desire before his disciples
came. l am He - Our Lord did not speak this so plainly to the Jews
who were so full of the Messiah's temporal kingdom. If he had,
many would doubtless have taken up arms in his favour, and
others have accused him to the Roman governor. Yet he did in
effect declare the thing, though he denied the particular title. For
in a multitude of places he represented himself, both as the Son of
man, and as the Son of God: both which expressions were
generally understood by the Jews as peculiarly applicable to the
Messiah.
Verse
27. His disciples marvelled that he talked with a woman - Which
the Jewish rabbis reckoned scandalous for a man of distinction to
do. They marvelled likewise at his talking with a woman of that
nation, which was so peculiarly hateful to the Jews. Yet none said
- To the woman, What seekest thou? - Or to Christ, Why talkest
thou with her?
Verse
28. The woman left her water pot - Forgetting smaller things.
Verse
29. A man who told me all things that ever I did - Our Lord had
told her but a few things. But his words awakened her conscience,
which soon told her all the rest. Is not this the Christ? - She does
not doubt of it herself, but incites them to make the inquiry.
Verse
31. In the meantime - Before the people came.
Verse
34. My meat - That which satisfies the strongest appetite of my
soul.
Verse
35. The fields are white already - As if he had said, The spiritual
harvest is ripe already. The Samaritans, ripe for the Gospel,
covered the ground round about them.
Verse
36. He that reapeth - Whoever saves souls, receiveth wages - A
peculiar blessing to himself, and gathereth fruit - Many souls: that
he that soweth - Christ the great sower of the seed, and he that
reapeth may rejoice together - In heaven.
Verse
37. That saying - A common proverb; One soweth - The prophets
and Christ; another reapeth - The apostles and succeeding
ministers.
Verse
38. I - he Lord of the whole harvest, have sent you - He had
employed them already in baptizing, ver. 2.
Verse
42. We know that this is the saviour of the world - And not of the
Jews only.
Verse
43. He went into Galilee - That is, into the country of Galilee: but
not to Nazareth. It was at that town only that he had no honour.
Therefore he went to other towns.
Verse
44. Matt. xiii, 57.
Verse
47. To come down - For Cana stood much higher than
Capernaum.
Verse
48. Unless ye see signs and wonders - Although the Samaritans
believed without them.
Verse
52. He asked the hour when he amended - The more exactly the
works of God are considered, the more faith is increased.
Chapter 4:
| 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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