Bible Commentary

John 8:38

The Pulpit Commentary on John 8:38

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

I speak the things £ which I have seen with the (my) Father: £ and do you therefore the things which ye heard £ from the £ (your) father; or, and you therefore do the things which ye heard from your father.

We need not, with Meyer, limit the Lord's vision of the Divine things which he saw with the Father to his premundane Personality. He describes himself in constant communion with the Father. The Father is with him.

He knows the mind and will and good pleasure of the Father. His is the perfectly pure heart, which is as an eye forevermore beholding the Father. That the Only Begotten sees and knows what no other sees, is constantly taught in this Gospel (see ; ).

In Christ, moreover, the disciple may verily see the Father (, ; ). The probable textual reading given above would draw a species of contrast between Christ's "seeing" ( παρὰ τῷ) with the Father, and the Jews' "hearing" ( παρὰ τοῦ) from the Father, as though such communication were less intimate than "seeing."

This must not be pressed (see ). If the ποιεῖτε be imperative, the language would be an appeal to the Jews to act out that which, from prophets and teachers and interpreters of the Divine will, they had heard.

Moulton treats the clause as one more, one last, exhortation. The word of Christ had not advanced within them—it remained as a barren formula; let them give it free course now. Their opposition had not as yet been malignant or hopeless; one more chance is given them.

The more ordinary interpretation is to make the ποιεῖτε indicative. If it be so, and still more if the ὑμῶν (omitted by B, L, P) be genuine, "the father" to whom reference is made as theirs, is in contrast with the Father of Christ, and, without pointedly saying so, Jesus implies that it is another father altogether.

In Christ does indeed declare that the father with whom they are in ethical relation and sympathy is not God, but the devil—the very opposite of the God of Abraham, the very antithesis of the Father of infinite love.

At this point he simply suggests, "Therefore the things which ye heard from your father ye do," ye habitually do, ye are now doing in your hatred and murderous sentiments towards myself. Surely this implies a severity which is hardly compatible with an address to Jews who believed him.

The interpretation of the following verse is governed by that of this.

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