Chapter 8:
| 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 8
Verse 5. Moses hath commanded us to stone such - If they spoke
accurately, this must have been a woman, who, having been
betrothed to a husband, had been guilty of this crime before the
marriage was completed; for such only Moses commanded to be
stoned. He commanded indeed that other adulteresses should be
put to death; but the manner of death was not specified. Deut.
xxii, 23.
Verse
6. That they might have to accuse him - Either of usurping the
office of a judge, if he condemned her, or of being an enemy to
the law, if he acquitted her. Jesus stooping down, wrote with his
finger on the ground - God wrote once in the Old Testament;
Christ once in the New: perhaps the words which he afterward
spoke, when they continued asking him. By this silent action, he,
1, fixed their wandering, hurrying thoughts, in order to awaken
their consciences: and, 2, signified that he was not then come to
condemn but to save the world.
Verse
7. He that is without sin - He that is not guilty: his own conscience
being the judge) either of the same sin, or of some nearly
resembling it; let him - as a witness, cast the first stone at her.
Verse
9. Beginning at the eldest - Or the elders. Jesus was left alone -By
all those scribes and Pharisees who proposed the question. But
many others remained, to whom our Lord directed his discourse
presently after.
Verse
10. Hath no man condemned thee? - Hath no judicial sentence
been passed upon thee?
Verse
11. Neither do I condemn thee - Neither do I take upon me to pass
any such sentence. Let this deliverance lead thee to repentance.
Verse
12. He that followeth me shall in nowise walk in darkness - In
ignorance, wickedness, misery: but shall have the light of life -He
that closely, humbly, steadily follows me, shall have the Divine
light continually shining upon him, diffusing over his soul
knowledge, holiness, joy, till he is guided by it to life everlasting.
Verse
13. Thou testifiest of thyself; thy testimony is not valid - They
retort upon our Lord his own words, chap. v, 31; if I testify of
myself, my testimony is not valid. He had then added, There is
another who testifieth of me. To the same effect he replies here,
verse 14, Though I testify of myself, yet my testimony is valid;
for I am inseparably united to the Father. I know - And from firm
and certain knowledge proceeds the most unexceptionable
testimony: whence I came, and whither I go - To these two heads
may be referred all the doctrine concerning Christ. The former is
treated of verse 16, &c., the latter ver. 21, &c. For I know whence
I came - That is, For I came from God, both as God and as man.
And I know it, though ye do not.
Verse
15. Ye judge after the flesh - As the flesh, that is, corrupt nature
dictates. I judge no man - Not thus; not now; not at my first
coming.
Verse
16. I am not alone - No more in judging, than in testifying: but I
and the Father that sent me - His Father is in him, and he is in the
Father, chap. xiv, 10, 11; and so the Father is no more alone
without the Son, than the Son is without the Father, Prov. viii, 22,
23, 30. His Father and he are not one and another God, but one
God, (though distinct persons,) and so inseparable from each
other. And though the Son came from the Father, to assume
human nature, and perform his office as the Messiah upon earth,
as God is sometimes said to come from heaven, for particular
manifestations of himself; yet Christ did not leave the Father, nor
the Father leave him, any more than God leaves heaven when he
is said to come down to the earth.
Verse
17. Deut. xix, 15.
Verse
19. Then said they to him, Where is thy Father? Jesus answered -
Showing the perverseness of their question; and teaching that they
ought first to know the Son, if they would know the Father.
Where the Father is - he shows, ver. 23. Meantime he plainly
intimates that the Father and he were distinct persons, as they
were two witnesses; and yet one in essence, as the knowledge of
him includes the knowledge of the Father.
Verse
23. Ye are - Again he passes over their interruption, and proves
what he advanced, ver. 21. Of them that are beneath - From the
earth. I am of them that are above - Here he directly shows
whence he came, even from heaven, and whither he goes.
Verse
24. If ye believe not that I AM - Here (as in ver. 58) our Lord
claims the Divine name, I AM, Exod. iii, 14. But the Jews, as if he
had stopped short, and not finished the sentence, answered, Who
art thou?
Verse
25. Even what I say to you from the beginning - The same which I
say to you, as it were in one discourse, with one even tenor from
the time I first spake to you.
Verse
26. I have many things to say and to judge of you - I have much to
say concerning your inexcusable unbelief: but he that sent me is
true - Whether ye believe or no. And I speak the things which I
have heard from him - I deliver truly what he hath given me in
charge.
Verse
27. They understood not - That by him that sent him he meant
God the Father. Therefore in ver. 28, 29 he speaks plainly of the
Father, and again claims the Divine name, I AM.
Verse
28. When ye shall have lifted up - On the cross, ye shall know -
And so many of them did, that I AM - God over all; and that I do
nothing of myself - Being one with the Father.
Verse
29. The Father hath not left me alone - Never from the moment I
came into the world.
Verse
32. The truth - Written in your hearts by the Spirit of God, shall
make you free - From guilt, sin, misery, Satan.
Verse
33. They - The other Jews that were by, (not those that believed,)
as appears by the whole tenor of the conversation. We were never
enslaved to any man - A bold, notorious untruth. At that very time
they were enslaved to the Romans.
Verse
34. Jesus answered - Each branch of their objection, first
concerning freedom, then concerning their being Abraham's
offspring, ver. 37, &c. He that committeth sin, is, in fact, the slave
of sin.
Verse
35. And the slave abideth not in the house - All sinners shall be
cast out of God's house, as the slave was out of Abraham's: but I,
the Son, abide therein for ever.
Verse
36. If I therefore make you free, ye - shall partake of the same
privilege: being made free from all guilt and sin, ye shall abide in
the house of God for ever.
Verse
37. I know that ye are Abraham's offspring - As to the other
branch of your objection, I know that, ye are Abraham's offspring,
after the flesh; but not in a spiritual sense. Ye are not followers of
the faith of Abraham: my word hath no place in your hearts.
Verse
41. Ye do the deeds of your father - He is not named yet. But
when they presumed to call God their Father, then he is expressly
called the devil, ver. 44.
Verse
42. I proceeded forth - As God, and come - As Christ.
Verse
43. Ye cannot - Such is your stubbornness and pride, hear -
Receive, obey my word. Not being desirous to do my will, ye
cannot understand my doctrine, chap. vii, 17.
Verse
44. He was a murderer - In inclination, from the beginning - Of
his becoming a devil; and abode not in the truth - Commencing
murderer and liar at the same time. And certainly he was a killer
of men (as the Greek word properly signifies) from the beginning
of the world: for from the very creation he designed and contrived
the ruin of men. When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own -
For he is the proper parent, and, as it were, creator of it. See the
origin not only of lies, but of evil in general!
Verse
45. Because I speak the truth - Which liars hate.
Verse
46. Which of you convicteth me of sin? - And is not my life as
unreprovable as my doctrine? Does not my whole behaviour
confirm the truth of what I teach?
Verse
47. He that is of God - That either loves or fears him, heareth -
With joy and reverence, God's words - Which I preach.
Verse
48. Say we not well - Have we not just cause to say, Thou art, a
Samaritan - An enemy to our Church and nation; and hast a devil?
-Art possessed by a proud and lying spirit?
Verse
49. I honour my Father - I seek his honour only.
Verse
50. I seek not my own glory - That is, as I am the Messiah, I
consult not my own glory. I need not. For my Father consulteth it,
and will pass sentence on you accordingly.
Verse
51. If a man keep my word - So will my Father consult my glory.
We keep his doctrine by believing, his promises by hoping, his
command by obeying. He shall never see death - That is, death
eternal. He shall live for ever. Hereby he proves that he was no
Samaritan; for the Samaritans in general were Sadducees.
Verse
54. If I honour myself - Referring to their words, Whom makest
thou thyself?
Verse
56. He saw it - By faith in types, figures, and promises; as
particularly in Melchisedec; in the appearance of Jehovah to him
in the plains of Mamre, Gen. xviii, 1; and in the promise that in
his seed all the nations of the earth shall be blessed. Possibly he
had likewise a peculiar Revelation either of Christ's first or second
coming.
Verse
57. Thou art not yet fifty years old - At the most. Perhaps the
gravity of our Lord's countenance, together with his afflictions
and labours, might make him appear older than he really was.
Hast thou seen Abraham - Which they justly supposed must have
been, if Abraham had seen him.
Verse
58. Before Abraham was I AM - Even from everlasting to
everlasting. This is a direct answer to the objection of the Jews,
and shows how much greater he was than Abraham.
Verse
59. Then they took up stones - To stone him as a blasphemer; but
Jesus concealed himself - Probably by becoming invisible; and so
passed on - With the same ease as if none had been there.
Chapter 8:
| 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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