Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of John 2:18
Then answered the Jews and said unto him, What sign showest thou unto us, seeing that thou doest these things?
18. the Jews ] See on Joh 1:19.
What sign shewest thou ] We have a similar question Mat 21:23, but the widely different answer shews that the occasion is not the same. Such demands would be made often.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
What sign … – What miracle dost thou work? He assumed the character of a prophet. He was reforming, by his authority, the temple. It was natural to ask by what authority this was done; and as they had been accustomed to miracles in the life of Moses, and Elijah, and the other prophets, so they demanded evidence that he had authority thus to cleanse the house of God.
Seeing that thou doest – Rather by what title or authority thou doest these things. Our translation is ambiguous. They wished to know by what miracle he had shown, or could show, his right to do those things.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Joh 2:18-22
What sign showest Thou?
Christ and the rulers
I. THE DISPUTE WHICH FOLLOWED HIS PROCEEDING IN THE TEMPLE.
1. The remonstrance addressed to Him by the Jews. The parties were the authorities of the Temple who, by their question, espoused the cause of the traffickers. The Jews require a sign, and for the want of one to their liking, the Gospel was here as ever a stumbling block. There was nothing unreasonable in the request. The cleansing bore a Messianic stamp; but the request was made in anger at the disappointment that their gains had been interfered with, and not with desire to receive information. The very cleansing ought to have been a sufficient sign.
2. The reply of Jesus might be understood to mean the Temple itself, or what He intended: the temple of His body. They misconstrued it into speaking against the sacred fabric, which became one of the fatal accusations against Him afterwards. In the true sense Christ only is the temple of God, although in a secondary sense believers are also, and the universe. The death and resurrection of this temple was to be the sign both for them and for believers. He was delivered for our offences an d rose again for our justification, by which He was declared to be the Son of God with power.
II. THE PRESENT AND REMOTE EFFECTS OF CHRISTS REPLY ON THE MINDS OF THE DISCIPLES.
1. As to the effect at the time there seems to have been none. Of many things, including Christs death and resurrection, they were ignorant, and remained so up to those events, and even then they were slow to believe. This was owing to their secular views of the Messiah. And how often is such obtuseness the case with believers now. Theirs was removed by experience, so must ours be.
2. The remote effect was on the fulfilment of His Word, most blessed (Joh 2:22). The spirit eventually quickened the seed sown in good ground Joh 14:26). Exactly similar is the experience of the Church at all times. The truth may lay dormant for years, but when the Spirit comes it germinates. What an argument for teaching the young whether they understand or not. (A. Beith, D. D.)
Christs sign
It would have been a great one in their sense of it. Zerubbabel and Herod had raised the Temple, and other great persons buildings as great. But the temple of the body, if ever that were down, all the temple builders that ever were would never get it up more. So great, indeed, was it that he in hell could not desire a greater (Luk 16:30).
I. CHRISTS BODY IS THIS TEMPLE. The Pharisees mistook the term. Christ could not have meant Gods house, the zeal of which consumed Him, and which He had just purged. Only polluted temples are destroyed. Christ, who knew His own meaning best, has interpreted it, and perhaps then pointed to His body.
1. A body a temple? How? Because God dwelleth there. There are temples of flesh and bone as well as of lime and stone. Our bodies are called houses because tenanted by souls, temples when tenanted by and used in the service of God.
2. Christs body a temple seems only such by some gift or grace, but in Christ dwelleth the fulness of the Godhead (1Co 2:9), and always pure and employed in the Fathers service.
3. Christs body this temple.
(1) The two temples began alike at Bethlehem (Psa 132:6; Mat 2:1).
(2) Both were destroyed and reared again. The Chaldees destroyed the one and Zerubbabel raised it. The Jews destroyed the other, and Christ Himself raised it.
(3) Both were consecrated to like uses. There, the only true holocaust of His entire obedience, which burnt in Him bright and clear all His life long Lev 6:9). There the only true trespass-offering of His death, satisfactory to the full for all the transgressions of the whole world Lev 5:6). There the meat and drink offering of His blessed body and blood (Lev 2:1).
II. THE DISSOLUTION OF IT BY DEATH.
1. The saying.
(1) Death is a dissolving, a loosing the cement with which body and soul are held together.
(2) This temple drops not down from age or weakness, dissolves not of itself, but by force and violence.
(3) Violent on their part, voluntary on His. He could have avoided it, and must have said it, or they could not have done it.
2. The saying no command, which would have been an order to commit sacrilege or murder; but
(1) A prediction to warn them of what they were now casting about.
(2) A permission which is always in the imperative; permitted for a greater good the destroying of sin by destroying this temple; for a greater good still to raise it again.
3. The doing. He said dissolve; they said crucify. The roof of this temple, His head, was loosed with thorns; the foundation, His feet, with nails; the side aisles, his hands, both likewise; the sanctum sanctorum, His heart, with a spear. They did more, they violently loosed the temple. And remember it was one of flesh and bone, not of lime and scone. Yet the ruins of a temple of senseless stone will excite pity; how much more the sensible temple of His body which, even before its dissolution, was strangely dissolved in bloody sweat, nor was it alone dissolved.
(1) The veil of the material temple split from top to bottom, as it were, for company, or in sympathy with Him.
(2) The great temple of the universe in a manner dissolved: its face black, the earth quaking, the stones rending, the graves opening.
III. THE REARING IT UP AGAIN BY HIS RESURRECTION. The saying was spoken by way of triumph over all they could do to Him.
1. The act.
(1) is a raising from sleep, and sleep we know is not destruction. It is to show us that He would turn death into a rest in hope, both His and ours.
(2) They should therefore miss their purpose. They reckoned to destroy Him, but would only prepare Him a short rest.
(3) The ease with which He would do it–with no more difficulty than waking from sleep, or tying an unloosed knot.
2. The person rising. Not destroy you and some other shall raise, but I will do it. An argument of His Divine nature. None could do it but God.
3. The thing raised. The same and no other.
(1) In substance.
(2) But not in quality; in a far better estate than before (Hag 2:9). In the morning after sleep the body riseth more fresh and full of vigour. So His body and ours (1Co 15:42-43) and henceforth this temple, dissolved in death, should be indissoluble by reason of resurrection.
IV. THE TIME TO DO IT IN. Within three days; and He did it within the time. Our duty then is
1. To rejoice. At Easter we celebrate the feast of dedication, which was ever a feast of great joy.
(1) His dissolution means the loosing us from our sins and their consequences.
(2) His resurrection is a promise of what He will do for another temple: the temple of His body mystical, of which we are parts–living stones.
2. To templify our bodies, which in many are far from temples; houses of trade, pleasure, idolatary, which must be dissolved to be made Gods houses. Then God must come in and sanctify them. (Bp. Andrewes.)
Christs sign
I. LIFE THROUGH DEATH.
II. CONSTRUCTION THROUGH DISSOLUTION. III. THE USE OF THE NEW THROUGH THE FALL OF THE OLD. (Bp. Westcott.)
The temple of Christs body
The metaphor was not dragged into conversation, but the temple He had just purged was shown to be a figure of something greater than itself.
I. THE ENIGMA. Christ cast a shadow over truths, the full disclosure of which might have altered the conduct of the Jews and the character of His mission. His hearers were puzzled and their after thoughts excited. What good man could propose such a destruction? What sane man could promise such a restoration? Yet it made such an impression that it was misquoted against Christ in the high priests palace, and as He hung upon the cross (Mat 26:60-61; Mar 14:57-58; Mar 15:29-30).
II. THE TYPE. The tabernacle and temple were significant preparations for the time when God would become flesh and tabernacle among men. Christ knew and proclaimed Himself to be the antitype; this new temple, in which the fulness of the godhead dwelt bodily, was consecrated when Jesus was anointed with the Holy Ghost.
III. THE LESSONS.
1. Christ foresaw clearly that the Jews would destroy this temple. To this He was reconciled and longed for it, inasmuch as His sphere of influence was now circumscribed; but the destroyed temple would be rebuilt on a scale more glorious, and all nations called to it.
2. The words, I will raise it again, are significant
(1) Of the identity of the body in which Christ rose with that in which He suffered. No doubt the transformation was great. The conditions of an incorruptible body are not known to us. But these words prove the link of continuity, and if there was such a link in the case of Christ, so also there will be one in the case of the saints whose bodies are to be like unto His.
(2) Of the power Christ had over His own future. His authority to cleanse the temple had been called in question. He affirmed that He had power not only to do this, but to raise up one which men could destroy but could not construct (Joh 10:18).
3. As He is risen Christ is a temple for all nations. In Him God dwells accessible to all: anywhere, irrespective of sacred times and places.
(1) The place of reconciliation, the refuge for sinners.
(2) The home of communion, the resort of saints; a temple that shall never be subverted.
4. The epistles carry this view of thought further.
(1) Every Christian is a temple of the living God; a motive for holiness far higher than moralists have dreamed of in their theories of the dignity of man, and the elevating power of self-respect (1Co 6:15; 1Co 6:19).
(2) More frequently Christians are living stones which collectively form a great temple or habitation of God in the Spirit.
5. A local church, also, as representing the Church Catholic, is also a temple of God (1Co 3:16; Eph 2:21-22; 1Pe 2:5).
6. The life which animates the stones, and so pervades the temple, emanates from the living foundation stone–the risen Christ. But this cannot now be fully manifest, just as our Lord was not understood at Jerusalem. The inner life of Christians is not seen. The Lords body is not discerned in the Church. But the temple is so being built that the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it.
7. In such a world as this the holy temple encounters risk.
(1) The traders desecrated the Temple, worldly Christians secularize and degrade the Church of God; but such, sooner or later, the Lord will drive out and disown.
(2) Greater still is the fault of those who by strife and schism tend to destroy the temple; against this Paul lifts a stern warning (1Co 3:17). (Donald Fraser, D. D.)
The mysterious sign
A word
I. ENIGMATICAL, conveying one thing to unbelief and another to faith. Under the figure of a destroyed and rebuilded temple Christ announced that His death, brought about by them and His resurrection effected by Himself, would legitimize His recent action and demonstrate who He was. The same sign was subsequently given in Galilee (Mat 12:40).
II. MISUNDERSTOOD.
1. By the Pharisees through
(1) Slavish adherence to the letter of Scripture (2Co 3:6).
(2) Spiritual blindness occasioned by hypocrisy (Mar 3:25; Rom 11:25).
(3) Positive aversion, arising from inward moral corruption (Joh 3:20; Joh 8:43-44).
2. By the disciples. They had begun to see the light, but, like men with eyes only just opened, they were unable to discern accurately the objects the light revealed (Mar 8:24).
III. MEMORABLE. Hid away, this word was never afterwards lost. It recurred after the Resurrection illuminated by the fact to which it pointed, and thus helped to seal their faith (Act 4:10; Act 26:23; Rom 1:4, 1Pe 1:3). Lessons:
1. The complete ability of Christ to justify all His ways to God and man. Christs readiness to furnish a sign.
2. The irrefragable certainty of Christs death and resurrection, attested by the knowledge and experience of His disciples.
3. The veiled secret of Holy Scripture; the testimony of Jesus.
4. The blessedness of faith, however immature. (T. Whitelaw, D. D.)
The temple of His body
I. THE DIGNITY OF OUR LORDS BODY. The bodies of believers are called temples because God dwells in them by a communication of grace, but the humanity of Christ is Gods temple by a substantial inhabitation, immediately and personally–In Him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead. God dwells in the Church as a King among His subjects, in Christs humanity as a King in His royal palace.
1. In the Epistle to the Hebrews Christ is the mystery shadowed forth by the outward sanctuary: The similitude will appear if we consider
(1) They were alike in building; both under the immediate and special direction of God.
(2) In the ornaments by which they were beautified.
(3) In Him the import of the sacred vessels is fulfilled.
(4) Christs body was like the Temple, as it regards those religious services which were performed in it.
(a) In the Temple was a standing oracle; in Christs humanity dwelt the true and living oracle of heaven.
(b) In the Temple was the altar of sacrifice and the atonement for sin. Both derived their efficacy from Him who His own self bore our sins.
(c) The Temple was the house of prayer: in the days of His flesh what prevailing supplications Christ offered, and He now even liveth to make intercession.
2. To this temple must every acceptable worshipper approach.
(1) The Spirit of Christ must inspire their prayers.
(2) His name must authorize them.
(3) His merit must perfume them.
(4) His advocacy must recommend them.
II. THE VIOLENCE AND DISHONOUR WHICH THE TEMPLE WAS DOOMED TO SUFFER AT THE HANDS OF HIS ENEMIES.
1. The nature of His passion was a dissolution, a full and complete death.
2. The extent of this passion. Death severed soul and body, but this was all–the union of the Godhead with the manhood was indestructible.
3. The circumstances by which this event was accomplished and wherein their aggravation consists.
(1) Violence and wickedness on mans part.
(2) Voluntariness and love on His.
III. THE GLORY TO WHICH IT WAS TO BE RAISED BY HIS ALMIGHTY POWER.
1. The agent, I. Dead men were raised by others. Christ by Himself. He is a quickening spirit for Himself and for us.
2. The subject–the self-same temple.
3. The state.
(1) Substantial–A spirit hath not flesh and bones, etc.
(2) Entire–nothing wanting to its perfection.
(3) Glorious. (J. Styles, D. D.)
Christs human body the temple of God
I. THE DWELLING-PLACE OF GOD. As soon as the first temple at Jerusalem was built. The glory of the Lord filled the house of the Lord. This splendid manifestation passed away, but the Lord did not depart. To the very moment when the building was destroyed a shining cloud constantly abode over the mercy-seat as a symbol of Jehovah. The second temple was without this, but still God was there, dwelling unseen within it. And this fact was in our Lords mind, for He calls the Temple His Fathers house. He dwells indeed in His Church and in every soul which He has redeemed, because He is continually acting by His Holy Spirit. But when He speaks of dwelling in the Man Christ Jesus, He means much more than this. There is an actual passing of the Godhead into that frame of dust, a union so close and entire, that wherever that human frame is, there is God. Is this mysterious to you? It was mysterious to Paul. Great is the mystery of godliness; to angels. We cannot explain it; but Scripture, which calls on you most plainly to believe it. God was in Christ. In Him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily, not by a figure; but really, substantially. God dwells in His Church as the light of day dwells in our houses; He dwells in Christ as the same light dwells in the sun. He dwells among His people as the ocean dwells in the rivers whither the swelling tide carries it; He dwells in the incarnate Jesus as that ocean dwells in its bed.
II. A MANIFESTATION OF GOD. And herein also the resemblance between Him and both the Jewish temples holds good. When God entered that, He entered not spiritually only, but visibly; a bright cloud was the symbol of His presence. To understand the application of all this to Christ we must bear in mind
1. Though we ourselves are spiritual beings, we can form no conception of any being that is purely spiritual. This incapacity arises from the constitution of our nature. God is a spirit. It will follow, then, that unless something is done to help us, we can never have any right idea of God. We may form some conceptions of His attributes; but as for God Himself, He can have no place in our minds. But He meets this weakness of our nature. We cannot get into that spiritual world which He inhabits; He comes, therefore, within our range, into the world of matter, and embodies Himself in the human nature of Christ, and then says to an astonished universe, Behold your God!
2. We can form no adequate idea of the character of any being, unless we see him in action, or are made acquainted with his actions. Now, had God merely embodied Himself in a human frame, and then just shown Himself to the earth and disappeared, we should not have been advanced materially in our knowledge of Him. Hence He dwelt among us, spoke and acted; and in so doing made a revelation of Himself. By the truths Christ taught, by the powers He exercised, by the dispositions He manifested, and above all, by His sufferings and death; He has unfolded to us the Divine character. Something was known of God before. The heavens had declared His glory. His law too had asserted His authority and holiness, and His providence had borne witness to His justice, His goodness and truth. But what was all this? Nothing, when compared with the person, and work, and cross of Christ.
III. A MONUMENT TO GODS PRAISE. We wonder not that lofty structures were raised to the gods of the heathen, and that the heathen thought they honoured their gods by raising them. They did honour them. Their gods were men like themselves. But as for building a temple to the living Jehovahs glory, the thought of it seems at first confounding. We think of Him who has heaven for His throne and the earth for His footstool Yet God did allow a temple to be built to Him, and that temple did show forth His praise. It was a public acknowledgment of Him. Christs human nature glorifies God while it reveals Him. He is the light of the knowledge of the glory of God, the brightness of the Fathers glory. (G. Bradley, M. A.)
The three temples of the one God
I. THEIR ONE PURPOSE (cf. Psa 68:29; 2Co 6:16)
. The essential idea of a temple is that of a place where God manifests Himself to man, and where man dedicates himself to God. The first of these is realized by the Shekinah; by the power and character of Christ; by the holiness Of Christly souls in each of the three temples respectively. The second is attained in each: by the altar of the Jewish Temple, by the cross, by consecration.
II. THEIR SIMILAR HISTORY. In their
1. Origin. There was silence and mystery in each. The temple noiselessly built, Christ obscurely born, the Christian spiritually quickened.
2. Materials: Glorious in each. In the Temple gold, precious stones, fragrant woods. In Christ a specially prepared sinless body. In Christians fearful and wonderful elements.
3. Sufferings. One besieged, the second crucified, the third hated by the world.
4. Divine desertion. The first was left desolate, the second forsaken, the third often loses God as in eclipse.
5. Destruction. The Temple was more than once destroyed; the Saviour gave up the Ghost; the Christian descends into the grave.
6. Restoration. The first was restored and may be again, Christ rose again the third day, Christians shall rise so that the temple shall be completed and the top stone laid with rejoicings. Grace, grace unto it.
Lessons:
1. For those who refuse to be identified with the Temple: What glory you lose; what a destiny you miss.
2. For those who are identified with the Temple: Be enduring; be pure; fulfil your high end. (U. R. Thomas.)
The crowning act
I. A CERTAIN DEMAND. It is shown
1. What they required–a sign, often requested in our Lords day and afterwards.
2. Why they required it–because of the extraordinary cleansing of the temple.
II. A SIGNIFICANT ANSWER. There is here
1. An exalted claim. The temple was the abode of God.
2. A striking prediction.
3. A wonderful declaration.
III. A GROSS MISREPRESENTATION.
1. How it originated; in applying literally what was only meant figuratively.
2. The feeling it produced–ridicule or contempt.
3. The explanation which the Evangelist supplies.
IV. AN IMPORTANT RESULT. When therefore, etc. From this we see
1. That the words of Christ were not forgotten.
2. The effect such remembrance produced. (Miracles of our Lord.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 18. What sign showest thou] See notes on Mt 12:38; Mt 16:1. When Moses came to deliver Israel, he gave signs, or miracles, that he acted under a Divine commission. What miracle dost thou work to show us that thou art vested with similar authority?
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Which of the Jews, whether some of the magistrates, or the priests, (who were more specially concerned for their profit), or the common people, or all together, is not said. They undertake not to justify their fact, nor could they deny it, but they ask him
what sign he could show them to justify his Divine authority. For this seemeth to have been their principle, that let corruptions and abuses in a church be never so great, yet they were not to be reformed, but either by the ordinary authority of the magistrate, or by all extraordinary authority from God. Such an extraordinary authority they would acknowledge in prophets; but they expected that those who pretended to such an extraordinary Divine mission, should be able to confirm that mission by some miraculous operations, as Moses did, Exo 4:30. They had had no prophets now for four hundred years amongst them; the Jews required therefore a sign, 1Co 1:22. The papists were at the same point with the first reformers; but they mistook, for they brought no new doctrine, but still cried, To the law and to the testimony; and where the true doctrine and sacraments are upheld, there is a true church, which hath power to call and send out preachers.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
18-22. What sign showest thou untous, seeing that thou doest these things?Though the actand the words of Christ, taken together, were sign enough,they were unconvinced: yet they were awed, and though at Hisvery next appearance at Jerusalem they “sought to kill Him”for speaking of “His Father” just as He did now (Joh5:18), they, at this early stage, only ask a sign.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Then answered the Jews, and said unto him,…. They did not lay hands on him, or offer any violence to him; they did not, as the inhabitants of Nazareth did, thrust him out, and lead him to a precipice, to cast him down headlong; nor did they take up stones to stone him, as they afterwards did, when he asserted his deity: and it is surprising, that they did not rise up and destroy him at once, a single man, unarmed, and without assistance, having so highly provoked them; the restraint upon them must be his almighty power: nor do they deny what he suggested, that they had made his Father’s house an house of merchandise; nor do they offer to vindicate their profanation of the temple, or object to the purging of it; only demand a proof of his right to do it: and which demand was made, not by the common people, or by the sellers of oxen, sheep, and doves, and the money changers, who were drove out, and had not spirit to rally again; but by the chief priests and elders, the sanhedrim of the nation, who had the care and government of the temple, and under whose authority the above persons acted; and whose gain and worldly interest were promoted hereby, as a like demand was afterwards made by the same persons; see Mt 21:23;
what sign shewest thou unto us, seeing thou dost these things? they argued, that either he did these things of himself, by his own authority, and then they must be deemed rash and unjustifiable; or he did it by the authority of others: they knew it was not by theirs, who were the great council of the nation, from whom he should have had his instructions and orders, if he acted by human authority; and if he pretended to a divine authority, as they supposed he did, then they insisted upon a sign or miracle to be wrought, to prove that God was his Father, as he suggested; and that he was the proprietor and owner of the temple, and had a right to purge it, as he had done; see 1Co 1:22.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
What sign shewest thou unto us? ( ;). They may have heard of the “sign” at Cana or not, but they have rallied a bit on the outside of the temple area and demand proof for his Messianic assumption of authority over the temple worship. These traders had paid the Sadducees and Pharisees in the Sanhedrin for the concession as traffickers which they enjoyed. They were within their technical rights in this question.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Answered. Often used in reply to an objection or criticism, or to something present in another’s mind, as Joh 19:7, or Joh 3:3, where Jesus answers with reference to the error in Nicodemus ‘ mind, rather than in direct reply to his address.
Destroy this temple [ ] . Destroy, Literally, loosen. Wyc., undo. See on Mr 13:2; Luk 9:12; Act 5:38. Notice that the word for temple is naon, sanctuary (see on ver. 14). This temple points to the literal temple, which is truly a temple only as it is the abode of God, hence sanctuary, but with a typical reference to Jesus ‘ own person as the holy dwelling – place of God who “was in Christ.” Compare 1Co 3:16, 17. Christ ‘s death was therefore the pulling down of the temple, and His resurrection its rebuilding. The imperative in destroy is of the nature of a challenge. Compare fill ye up, Mt 23:32.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “Then answered the Jews and said unto him,” (apekrithesan oun hoi loudaioi kai eipan auto) “Therefore the Jews responded and said to him,” in a defiant, challenging, and demanding manner.
2) “What sign shewest thou unto us,” (ti semeion deiknueis hemin) “What sign do you show to us,” or what miracle do you show us, to confirm that you are the Christ or Messiah of the trinitarian or Elohim God? Rather than accept the prophetic word they demanded more, see? 1Co 1:22.
3) “Seeing that thou doest these things?” (hoti tauta poieis) “Because that you do these things?” the things referred to in Joh 2:16. These administrative priests and scribes in apparent commercializing cohorts with the profiteering merchandisers, bankers, and cattlemen, had taught that the Messiah was to come, but they were caught unprepared, tolerating the profaning of God’s house for their own greedy gain; They were “shook up,” by the anger of an Holy Son who was offended at man’s abuse of His Father’s earthly residence.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
18. What sign showest thou to us? When in so large an assembly no man laid hands on Christ, and none of the dealers in cattle or of the money-changers repelled him by violence, we may conclude that they were all stunned and struck with astonishment by the hand of God. And, therefore, if they had not been utterly blinded, this would have been a sufficiently evident miracle, that one man against a great multitude, an unarmed man against strong men, all unknown man against so great rulers, attempted so great an achievement. For since they were far stronger, why did they not oppose him, but because their hands were loosened and — as it were — broken?
Yet they have some ground for putting the question; for it does not belong to every man to change suddenly, if any thing is faulty or displeases him in the temple of God. All are, indeed, at liberty to condemn corruptions; but if a private man put forth his hand to remove them, he will be accused of rashness. As the custom of selling in the temple had been generally received, Christ attempted what was new and uncommon; and therefore they properly call on him to prove that he was sent by God; for they found their argument on this principle, that in public administration it is not lawful to make any change without an undoubted calling and command of God. But they erred on another point, by refusing to admit the calling of Christ, unless he had performed a miracle; for it was not an invariable rule that the Prophets and other ministers of God should perform miracles; and God did not limit himself to this necessity. They do wrong, therefore, in laying down a law to God by demanding a sign. When the Evangelist says that the Jews asked him, he unquestionably means by that term the multitude who were standing there, and, as it were, the whole body of the Church; as if he had said, that it was not the speech of one or two persons, but of the people.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
EXPLANATORY AND CRITICAL NOTES
Joh. 2:18. The disciples saw in Christs action the fulfilment of the old Scripture, the Jews an excuse for a further demand for a sign.
Joh. 2:19. Destroy this temple, etc.The reference is at first sight mysterious, especially when taken in connection with the Evangelists explanation in Joh. 2:21. But the difficulty is, in part at least, cleared up when we remember that the actual temple which Jesus had just cleansed was the visible expression of the consecration of Gods ancient people to His service and worship, and of His dwelling with and in His people (Eze. 43:7). That ancient spiritual temple the Jews would destroy; but by His death and resurrection Jesus would found and raise, to be eternally enduring, His Church, which is indeed His mystical body. And it is this temple of which He speaksHis Church including that of patriarch and prophetbuilt now upon a foundation which cannot be moved (1Pe. 2:1-10; Mat. 22:2-14; Mat. 23:38). I will, etc. (Joh. 10:17-18, etc.).The Jews twisted this saying of our Lord, and accused Him of declaring that He would destroy the material temple. The utterance seems to have made a deep impression. It formed the basis of Christs accusation before Caiaphas (Mat. 26:61); and Stephens enemies accused him of repeating this saying (Act. 6:13-14). Thus the historical accuracy of the saying is established.
Joh. 2:20. The temple was not then completed; but it had taken forty-six years to bring it to the point of completion at which it then stood. Herod the Great began to restore the temple in B.C. 20 [Jos., B. J., i. 21
(16), i: comp. Antiq., xv. 11
(14), i.], and the design was completed by Herod Agrippa A.D. 64 (Westcott).
Joh. 2:21. He spake, etc.Not understood at first, the saying afterward became clear to the disciples (comp. Joh. 12:16). Heis emphatic. The temple of His body.I.e. the temple defined to be His body (Westcott) (1Co. 6:19, etc.).
Joh. 2:22. When therefore He was raised from the dead, etc.Raised by the power of God (Gal. 1:1, etc.). Remembered in accordance with the promise afterward given (Joh. 14:26). They believed the scripture, etc.Usually this phrase refers to some particular passage. Doubtless here the reference is to those passages in the writings of psalmists and prophets which foretold Christs sufferings and death, the glory of the Church of the latter days, etc., which the disciples were slow of heart to believe before the Resurrection and Pentecost (Luk. 24:25-27).
Joh. 2:23. Now when He was in Jerusalem at the passover, etc.The date of this passover is probably A.U.C. 781, i.e. A.D. 28. At the feast ( ),I.e. during the whole period of the feast of unleavened bread. Many believed on His name, etc.Belief in His Messiahship is evidently intended; but the reference to the signs which He did shows that their belief was probably not of a deep abiding nature. It was a Jewish faith, and was founded on that which will strengthen true faith, but will not beget it. Their faith rested on the outer acts merely, and was thus imperfect, and perhaps in many cases evanescent. The incidental notice of these signs (Joh. 7:31; Joh. 11:47, etc.) is an unquestionable proof that St. John does not aim at giving an exhaustive record of all he knew (Westcott). See also Mar. 3:10, etc.
Joh. 2:24. He knew.He is emphatic. He Himself knew, etc. He did not commit (, believe). As they did not give themselves morally to Him, He did not give Himself morally to them (Luthardt). He knew all, etc. As He read the heart of Nicodemus, so He read the hearts of these people.
Joh. 2:25. And because He needed not, etc.He did not require that men should bring Him testimonials of character, as it were, from their fellows before He would commit Himself to them. He Himself knew what was in man. He is, indeed, the searcher of hearts, etc. (Jer. 17:10, etc.).
MAIN HOMILETICS OF THE PARAGRAPH.Joh. 2:18-25
The sign Christ gave of His authority in cleansing the temple.The Jewish leaders could not bring any accusation against Christ for His zeal in vindicating the honour of His Fathers house. In their secret hearts they recognised the necessity for such an action, and they were no doubt well aware that the great body of the people would be in sympathy with Christs action. But unmoved themselves by the clear expression of divine power and activity manifested in the action of Jesus, they fell back on the device, so often resorted to by them, to demand outward signs and miracles in proof of Christs divine authoritysigns which, when given, only made their unbelief and hatred more conspicuous. Christ gave them an answer, although not that which they asked for. He well knew that no mere outward signs could remove unbelief, that miracle would be demanded to establish miracle, and that even the signs He wrought would be twisted, as they were afterward, to His prejudice by His enemies. But He gave a sign which would not only, when it occurred, vindicate His action in the eyes of all unprejudiced men, but would tend to strengthen the faith of His disciples. Destroy this temple, He said, and in three days I will raise it again. Consider:
I. The preparation for the sign.Destroy this temple. The Evangelist adds the explanation, He spake of the temple of His body. As we read these words there rises before us the view of the Redeemer with thorny crown on His head, tottering beneath the weight of His cross. We see Him hanging on that crossthe nails lacerating His hands and feet, the thorny crown pressed on His lacerated brow. And as we look at the fainting, bleeding form we seem to hear Him saying, Behold, and see if there be any sorrow like unto My sorrow. And yet again, as we hear the last voice, It is finished, and see the Roman soldier thrust his spear into the side of the Redeemer, we realise that the words Destroy this temple were a prophecy of what was to come to pass.
II. The sign itself is the Resurrection.In three days I will raise it up. This was the sign above all signs that testified to Christs divine Sonship, and His right to cleanse His Fathers house from defilement. And doubtless the Saviour signified by some gesture that He intended to refer this statement primarily to Himself. And it is noteworthy that He here claims power Himself to rise from the dead; whilst in various passages of the New Testament His rising is ascribed to the Father (Rom. 4:24; Rom. 6:4; 1Co. 15:15; 1Pe. 1:21, etc., etc.). But it must be remembered that the receptivity of Jesus in the act of His resurrection is not mere passivity (Godet). Jesus was one with the Father; and as it was by an act of His will that He submitted to the temple of His body being left in a measure to the power of the destroyer, so it was in accordance with His will and His Fathers will that His body was raised again on the third day. This is plainly shown in His own words, I lay down My life, that I might take it again. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again (Joh. 10:17-18). This sign was the seal of His authority, and would carry conviction to all believing hearts. It is the centre of our Christian faith. And from the beginning, and in all ages since, the Church has proclaimed Jesus and the Resurrection (Act. 17:18).
III. The reception of the proffered sign by those who heard it.
1. The Jews replied in wonder and scorn, Forty and six years, etc. Utterly unspiritual, they applied our Lords words to the material temple alone, which Jesus had just cleansed. More than that, they wilfully misunderstood His words to mean that He Himself would destroy the temple. The saying seems to have made a deep impression on all who heard it; and it was made use of in its perverted form by the false witnesses, who brought lying accusations against our Lord and the protomartyr of His Church (Mat. 26:61; Act. 6:14).
2. The disciples could not understand the full import of Christs words at the first. But they also treasured them up in their hearts, not like the Jewish rulers, but believingly. And then after the Resurrection the saying became more clear.
IV. The deeper meaning of the sign.
1. Not only is the body of the individual Christian likened to a temple, but the whole Church of Christ is His spiritual body (Eph. 1:23). In Him all the building fitly framed together groweth unto an holy temple in the Lord (Eph. 2:19-22).
2. And in this view our Lord might well include even the material temple in this dark saying. For was it not simply the symbol and representative of the whole nation, which was to be holiness to the Lord?
3. This old order the Jews did destroy when they rejected Jesus. Behold, your house is left unto you desolate (Mat. 23:38).
4. But the ancient Church of God was not utterly destroyed (Rom. 11:26). It was merged in a new and better building, founded on the man Christ Jesus (Eph. 2:22), a spiritual temple in which men should worship the Father in spirit and in truth (Joh. 4:20-24).
Joh. 2:19. Destroy this temple.Amid the intellectual strife of this age we often hear voices crying out, Destroy this temple. These voices sadden us, make us indignant, wound us. But it is in presence of such attackslight, frivolous, learned, passionate, or scornfulthat we must hear the voice of Jesus saying, I will raise up this temple in three days.
I. Consider first that voice which is the most coarse and clamorousthat of popular materialism.
1. The dominating passion of the hour may be called enjoyment. This feverish passion menaces both social and moral order. The thirst for riches, luxury, honour, devours this generation. Enjoy quickly, without dignity, without labour, without a care of honour or duty, in a merely individual and egoistic fashionthis seems to many the unique reality. And if there is no longer any moral sphere, no heaven, no God, why speak of duty, of adoration, of sacrifice, etc.? These things are chimericala faded superstition. Therefore what need of that temple which is the embodiment of such ideas? Destroy it, etc.
2. Unhappy men, take heed! Lay not your sacrilegious hands upon this temple. Who are you? Have you never loved, suffered, wept? Have you not had fathers, mothers, children? Does no voice speak to you when you consider your misery and the infinite greatness of the Highest? Have you never felt the holy tremblings of duty, sacrifice, etc., within you? If in some fatal day through the violence of passion this temple of Christs gospel should be for the moment overturned, it will be found of necessity that it should be raised up. For humanity, enlightened and sanctified by Jesus, cannot forsake this temple. Humanity must love, believe, pray, hope. This temple, for a moment overturned, will rise again and issue from the needs of the spirit of religion.
II. The second voice is that of positivism.
1. It loathes and is ashamed of the gross materialism just described. It desires that humanity should seek after truth, disinterestedly and nobly. But away with illusions! Let men seek for what is real and positive. And what is this? That which is in accordance with our immediate experience, and of which we can have direct experimental proof. Beyond this is the region of dreams; the pretended higher realities are inaccessible. Thus humanity in its infancy has passed through the religious period; in its adolescence through the philosophic; in its virile age it has accepted positivist science. What need now then of earlier dreamsa higher world, prayer, etc.? Destroy this temple.
2. In the name of positive science itself we protest against such desolating conclusions. Those higher instincts prove their existence within us, and obtrude themselves with authority on our consciousness. They are inherent in our nature, etc. I must love, believe, pray, raise myself nearer God, as much as I need to breathe, etc. By all means marshal your facts. Show us scientifically how the sap flows in the tree to nourish it, how the earth obeys the law of gravitation in its course round the sun, etc. These facts are real, positive. But that there is a sap which nourishes my spiritual life, that my heart gravitates toward God, that my whole being, drawn by some superior force, rises, is attracted (like the tides), toward heaven, are also facts that are positive and indisputable, as much as the realities of the material cosmos. To deny these moral facts is to mutilate and violate our humanity. And when you cry, Leave those chimeras, humanity will not listen. Its greatness, its true joy, its power, lies just in this spiritual, ideal world which you would deny. Humanity demands that the supreme needs of the soul should be satisfiedmen will pray, etc.and in spite of your attempts will raise again the temple you think you have destroyed.
III. The third voice is that of religious idealism and stheticism.
1. Those who uphold it agree in condemning this science misnamed positive, which misapprehends the ideal side of humanity. The world of the ideal is the true world, in which to live and dream with the divine Plato. And among those who exercise the highest influence here must be placed first of all the tender, divine dreamer Jesus, who has seized the imaginations of men in all ages and led them into the joy of the infinite. But we must stop here. No need to speak of conscience, duty, sin, redemption, etc. Religion is a grand dreamthe supreme charm. Poesy and art will suffice to express it. Therefore this old sanctuary, with its questions of sin, sacrifice, redemption, etc., what need for it? Destroy it.
2. Beware of this religious stheticism, which flatters the imagination and kills the conscience. All the tragic side of human existence in it is denied and scorned. But those great external realities, sin, repentance, sacrifice, redemption, correspond with realities within. History confirms this. What is the central fact of all ages and religions? Sacrifice. This is so because man feels himself miserable, guilty before God, and that he needs reconciliation. From all ages rises the cry, O wretched man, etc. (Rom. 7:24). Humanity needs a religion of mercy and grace; and however often that may seem destroyed, it will rise again.From Ariste Vigui.
Joh. 2:23-25. Jesus the searcher of hearts.Our Lords cold reception by the Jewish rulers led Him to confine His labours more to the city, among the general population and the many strangers gathered together during the passovertide. He did not compel men to accept him. He sought to win them to His kingdom through faith and love. Therefore, when rejected of the rulers, He taught those who listened to Him, and wrought miracles of beneficence.
I. The consequence of His activity.
1. Many believed in His name, when they saw the miracles which He did. Not only had His significant action in the temple drawn upon Him the gaze of many, but also the miracles, here unrecorded, which He did among the people.
2. And it must be noticed that Jesus here did not shun publicity. He must be known for mens salvation; and when He is made known it must be as He who is able to save to the uttermost, because the Sent of God. And in consequence of His activity many believed on Him.
II. His attitude toward those who thus believed on Him.
1. He did not commit Himself unto them, or He did not believe in their belief, had no faith () in their faith. Their faith, such as it was, was evoked by the outward signs, the miracles Jesus did.
2. But a faith founded on such external foundation is apt to be unstable and fleeting. The sign would require to be constantly repeated if the faith were to continue. But constantly repeated miracles would cease to be wonderful. They might be explained away or misinterpreted. Such a faith cannot claim affinity with that trust and confidence which Jesus requires of His true disciples.
III. The reason why our Lord adopted this attitude.
1. He knew all men, and needed not that any should testify of man, etc. This power had already been shown in the case of Nathanael, and startling instances of it are given in Johns Gospel. Christ knows and reads the human heart.
2. How little we know of our own heartshow difficult even for the most skilled observer of the phenomena of the intellectual and moral being to disentangle the various twisted threads of motive, emotion, feeling, etc.
3. But Jesus knows allevery stream of influence, every inception of thought or action, every spring of feeling and emotion, even when these are unperceived by men themselves. It could not be otherwise with Him of whom it is said, All things were made by Him (Joh. 1:3). He therefore can detect thought and motive in their most secret recesses. Thus He saw through the shallowness of those mens faith.
IV. Let us rejoice that Jesus thus knows men.
1. Because he is the loving, sympathising Saviour, and is therefore able and willing to winnow the false from the true in usa nominal from a real faith. Our only security, indeed, is that He does know us.
2. He knows full well each one of usour capacities as well as our weaknessesand how we can be best fitted for His kingdom.
3. Therefore our highest wisdom, remembering that He knows us altogether, is touched with the feeling of our infirmities, and can send us help in time of need, is to yield ourselves to Him submissively, saying, Lord, thou knowest all things; therefore work in us such faith that of us Thou mayest say, They are Mine: for I know My sheep, and am known of Mine (Joh. 10:14).
HOMILETIC NOTES
Joh. 2:18. The folly of unbelief.The same psalm which declared the moving cause of Christs action in the temple contains also these words: Because for thy sake I have borne reproach, etc. (Psa. 69:7-10).
1. That which was to the disciples for edification became a stumbling-block to the degenerate Jews. They assailed Jesus with the question, What sign? etc. Where is Thy authority? Thou art not a priest, temple guard, member of the Sanhedrin; and wilt Thou cleanse Gods holy threshing-floors? (Luk. 3:17). Dost Thou claim them as Thy Fathers possession?
2. How childish is this play of these opponents! how deceitful their actions! Their appearance of piety was simply piety in appearance! Were not they the sinners against the sanctuary?
3. Did not an action like that of the cleansing of the temple carry its authorisation within itself? Does the unfruitful fig-tree ask of the lightning-flash that lays it low, What doest thou? Does the thief who has been caught ask the officer, What right have you to seize me? Did the Gadarenes, as they saw their swine (possessed by them in opposition to the law) precipitated into the lake, ask for damages? Was not the cleansing of the temple a witness to the spirit and power of our Lord, a proof of His dignity, that He was the Son of God, the inheritor of Israel?
4. The more powerfully Jesus preached, and not as the scribes, the more angrily did those very scribes ask, By what authority? etc. The more their hearts were filled with envy and ambition, sins from which sprang the desecration of the temple, the carelessness of the people, the corruption of public affairs, the more jealously and with more pettiness did they lay stress on outward considerationtheir authority according to the letter.Abridged from Kgel.
Joh. 2:19. The foundation of the spirtual temple of God.
1. The temple was a house built of stone; but in the Lord was the fulness of the Godhead. The Jewish temple was a shadow; the Lord, the Spirit, substance, fulfilment. The temple was the place for typical offerings only; the Lord was sanctuary, offering, and high priest in one. On another occasion He could say of Himself: Here is One who is greater than the templehere is One who is Lord also of the Sabbath day.
2. Jesus saw from the hate in their eyes, etc., that His enemies would proceed from the profanation, at present stayed, of the outward sanctuary to an open act of violence against the Lord and heirthe Messiah.
3. But the more they prided themselves on the beauty and glory of the sanctuary which required forty-six years to build, the more they would harden themselves against the preaching of repentance. For sin is blind; therefore they did not see the judgment drawing near. Sin is deaf; therefore they did not hear the warning voice of Gods Son. The weight of guilt hastens the fall which precipitates into the abyss. Those who scorn the reformer must face the judge. Fill up the measure of your fathers; destroy this temple: just as at the last that terrible order was given to Judas, What thou doest, do quickly.Idem.
Joh. 2:22. The resurrection is the sign which includes all verification and authorisation.Jesus answered this question as to His authority for cleansing the temple, as once when the Pharisees asked Him, in spite of all His miracles, for a sign from heaven. He would point them to none but that of the prophet Jonahto the resurrection of the Son of man from the grave.Idem.
Joh. 2:23. Superficial faith.The original words imply that their faith was dependent upon the signs which they gazed upon, without entering into their deeper meaning. It was the impulsive response of the moment, not based upon a previous preparation, nor resulting in a present deep conviction. It came far short of the faith of the disciples, who passed from a true knowledge of Moses and the prophets to a true knowledge of Christ without a sign; but it came far above the disbelief of scribes and Pharisees, who after a sign rejected Him. It was not the prepared good ground bringing forth abundantly; but neither was it the hardened wayside, which did not receive seed at all.
Joh. 2:24. The deeper faith, the fuller blessing.But beneath this shallow surface there is the unbroken ledge of rock. They are easily moved just because they are not deeply moved. The eye which looked at, looked into, others (Joh. 1:47, etc.), saw to the very depth of their hearts too, and knew all. It saw in that depth that the true inner man did not believe, did not commit itself to Him; it found not the spiritual receptivity, and there could not therefore be the spiritual revelation. He on His part did not commit Himself unto them (Joh. 8:31).Archdeacon H. W. Watkins, M.A.
Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell
RESULTS OF THE CLEANSING
Text 2:18-22
18
The Jews therefore answered and said unto him, What sign showest thou unto us, seeing that thou doest these things?
19
Jesus answered and said unto them, Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up.
20
The Jews therefore said, Forty and six years was this temple in building, and wilt thou raise it up in three days?
21
But he spake of the temple of his body.
22
When therefore he was raised from the dead, his disciples remembered that he spake this; and they believed the scripture, and the word which Jesus had said.
Queries
a.
Why did the Jews ask the question (Joh. 2:20)?
b.
What is the meaning of Jesus answer in Joh. 2:19?
Paraphrase
The Jews said therefore to Jesus, What Messianic sign do you show us? do you have any credentials for these presumptuous actions in our temple? Jesus answered them, saying, Destroy this Sanctuary of God, the place where Gods Presence dwells, and I will raise it up in three days. The Jews therefore said, It has taken forty-six years to erect this Sanctuary, and do you claim to be able to re-erect it in three days? But Jesus was speaking of the Sanctuary of His body, and when He was raised from the dead His disciples remembered these words of Jesus and applied them to His resurrection. When the disciples had witnessed the Resurrection and had seen this prophecy fulfilled, they believed more firmly that the Old Testament Scriptures were fulfilled in Jesus, and that His Word was the Word of God.
Summary
Jesus authority to reform their Temple is challenged. The rulers demand from Him a wonderful sign of Messianic proportions. Jesus predicts a future sign. They are now destroying Gods typical Sanctuary by evil practices and will eventually seek to destroy the Incarnate Sanctuary of God by crucifying Him. But in three days He will raise the new Sanctuary up!
Comment
At every manifestation of Jesus glory the wheat is separated from the chaff. The cleansing of the Temple is no exception. Those of honest heart find spiritual nourishment for their faith (Joh. 2:17; Joh. 2:22). Those concerned with satisfying the vanities of life become more hardened in their carnality (Joh. 2:20). Here Jesus gave an answer at which the Jews scoffed and used to reject His authority. The disciples, however, laid His answer up in their hearts and later their faith was strengthened! Jesus often clothed His greatest spiritual lessons in enigma for the very purpose of separating the spiritual followers from the carnal followers (cf. Mat. 13:10-16; Joh. 6:60-65).
When they regained their composure, the Temple traders turned on this presumptuous Galilean (Joh. 2:18) and demanded that He show proper credentials for His reformatory actions. Undoubtedly some of the rulers of the Temple were among those asking for His authority. There seems to have been a general expectation that a prophet (Elijah or Jeremiah) would come to prepare for the Messiah by confirming present religious practices or changing them. Perhaps they even recognized that this Galilean might possibly be the Messiah Himself!! If so, they must have some amazing and extraordinary signs to confirm their suspicions. According to Jewish tradition, the arrival of the Messiah was to be heralded by great wonders and upheavals. These rulers are like the great multitudes of followers in Galilee (Joh. 6:1-71). Jesus told them that they were only following Him because He had filled their hungry stomachs. When He told the multitudes that He came to feed them on His Word (Joh. 6:63), they turned away from Him. These rulers in Jerusalem refused all the signs of His deity because He would not conform to their carnal ideas concerning the Messiah of the Jews. Christianity is not primarily concerned with relieving hunger or suffering. The New Testament church is not primarily concerned with national or international politics. Christianity IS concerned primarily with saving mens souls by bringing them to trustful obedience to the doctrines of Christ (Joh. 14:15; Joh. 14:21; Joh. 14:23; Joh. 15:1-6; Joh. 15:14; Heb. 5:9, etc.).
There is a tendency on the part of some interpreters to apply the answer of Jesus (Joh. 2:19) exclusively to His physical body. However, the context demands that a certain amount of literal application to the Jewish temple be included in His answer. As Wescott sees it, there are two distinct ideas which have to be brought into harmony here, Jesus is referring to both the actual Temple and the Sanctuary of His body. The Jews were at that very moment destroying Gods Temple, the place where the presence of God dwelt, by their unholy desecration of it. But this Sanctuary of stone was only a figure of the Person of Jesus Christthe Incarnate Presence of God dwelling among men (Joh. 1:14). They are now desecrating the typical Sanctuary and will eventually destroy the fulfillment, even Jesus.
When they shall have rejected and put to death the Christthe fulfillment of the typewhat further use will there be for the type (the Sanctuary of stone)? The crucifixion of Jesus, in Whom dwelt the fulness of God, brought with it necessarily the destruction of the Temple. Why should God allow a rebellious Israel to keep the type when they spurn the Antitype? Thus the Jews brought about the destruction of their Temple and the judgment of God upon themselves (cf. Mat. 27:25). When the Lord expired upon the cross, the veil of the Temple was torn in two, signifying that it was all over with Israel and their typical Sanctuary (Mat. 27:51). Henceforth God may be worshipped anywhere if the worship is in Spirit and in truth (cf. Joh. 4:23).
Jesus warned that the unfaithfulness of the Jews and their rejection of Him would end in terrible judgment upon the nation and complete destruction of their Temple (Mat. 23:37; Mat. 24:1-28). He intimated that these very rulers of the Jews would see such judgment come upon their nation (Mat. 26:64). As Lenski so aptly puts it, Thus the sign the Jews demanded will be theirs indeed . . . a sign of final judgment.
The Messiah perishesthe Temple and the Jewish economy fallsthe Presence of God is withdrawn from His people. The Messiah lives againthe true Sanctuary of God risesthe Presence of God is restored among His new people. Gods presence among men was restored by the glorification of Christ and the giving of the Holy Spirit to believers (Joh. 7:37-39; Act. 2:1-47). God does not dwell in temples made with hands (Act. 7:48; Act. 17:24), but the church (the universal body of Christ) is the temple of God. Every Spirit-filled believer is a living stone in Gods spiritual house (1Pe. 2:5; cf. also 1Co. 3:16; 2Co. 6:16; Eph. 2:21-22). Every Christians body is individually a temple of the Holy Spirit (1Co. 6:19-20).
The Jews scoffingly interpreted His words literally. It had taken them forty-six years to partially reconstruct the temple. Would this Galilean rebuild it in three days? Preposterous! The reconstruction of the Temple was begun by Herod the Great in about 20 B.C. This is forty-six years later, and it is still unfinished. It was not completed until 64 A.D., thirty years after the crucifixion of the Lord Jesus. And then, only six years after its completion (70 A.D.) it is so levelled by the Roman destruction that, according to the Jewish historian Josephus, one stone was not found upon another.
The Jews, their carnal minds closed to any spiritual comprehension of Christs words, scoff at Him for predicting that He will do in three days what they have not even finished in half a lifetime. When Jesus was on trial for His life, bribed witnesses brought lying testimony against Him by perverting these words of prophecy (cf. Mar. 14:57-58; Mar. 15:29-30).
Even the disciples did not then realize the significance of His words. John, writing years after His death and resurrection, records that the disciples remembered this prophecy after they had witnessed the resurrection. Their retrospective look at a fulfilled prophecy was spiritual foodnourishment for their faith.
Quiz
1.
Why did Jesus clothe His answer in enigma?
2.
What kind of sign did the Jews demand of Jesus?
3.
Is there any reference to the literal Temple of the Jews in Jesus answer? Explain!
4.
Give three Scripture references which show that the Jews brought about judgment upon themselves.
5.
Where is the Sanctuary of God today? Cite Scripture references to prove your answer.
6.
How long did it take to complete the Jewish temple? When was it destroyed?
7.
Was this prediction of Jesus ever repeated? Where?
Fuente: College Press Bible Study Textbook Series
(18) Then answered the Jews.Comp. for the meaning of the Jews Joh. 1:19; and for their question, Mat. 21:23. The Mosaic legislation contained a warning against the efficiency of the test by signs (Deu. 13:1-3), but it was of the essence of Pharisaism to cling to it (Mat. 12:38; 1Co. 1:22). It supplied an easy means of rejecting the moral conviction. A sign can only be evidence to the mind open to read the underlying truth. For an evil and adulterous generation it has no voice, and they can, after the feeding of the thousands, still demand What sign showest Thou? (Joh. 6:30). There are bigots of incredulity. Knowledge is dependent upon action and will (comp. Joh. 7:17). There is a mental condition which no evidence can convince, for it can always demand more. If they hear not Moses and the Prophets, neither will they be persuaded, though one rose from the dead (Luk. 16:31).
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
18. Answered the Jews Said in response to what he had done. For though he, an unarmed man, did all this, they did not, like the Nazarenes, rush upon him to cast him out; nor take up stones, as subsequently, to cast at him; nor send their officers to apprehend him, as at his last Passover They only came to ask for a sign (as Moses gave) attesting his authority to do these things. Plainly his display of might, and their paralysis, were of themselves a sign, had they not been too blind of heart to see it.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘The Judaisers therefore answered and said to him, “What sign do you show us that you do these things?” ’
Certain fervent Judaisers (men of religious dedication among the Jews) who had observed all this now came to Him, and they sought a sign from Him to justify what He had done. Let Him justify His prophetic act by giving a sign from God. This response in itself favours an early date at a time when they were still unsure about Jesus. As a reaction of some of the Jewish authorities it is interesting and significant. Those who were not directly affected by the act because it did not eat into their profits may well have thought like this, and have grudgingly admired what Jesus had done, because they also were not too happy about what was happening in the Temple. And we must remember that among the Jews it was a time of expectation. So they do not immediately react in hostile against what Jesus has done. As they had with John they rather question Him about Who He is. (This could not have happened at the end of His ministry when they were simply out to get Him).
After all, like others they eagerly awaited a unique figure who would aid their cause, for they too were sure that one day God would act as He had promised through such a unique figure, and the incident has done little harm. Indeed it is clear that they recognised that what He had done might well be a direct claim to having some kind of authority from God, and being aware that He already had some popularity, and was associated with miraculous events, they may well have been prepared at this stage to give Him a hearing. Thus rather than seeking His arrest they come to question Him. There was no love lost between the Pharisees and the Chief Priests. So if Jesus was amenable He could be useful. ‘What sign can you show us that demonstrates your right to do this?’ They are not sure how to view Him.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
The challenge of the Jews:
v. 18. Then answered the Jews and said unto Him, What sign showest Thou unto us, seeing that Thou doest these things
v. 19. Jesus answered and said unto them, Destroy this temple; and in three days I will raise it up.
v. 20. Then said the Jews, Forty and six years was this Temple in building, and wilt Thou rear it up in three days?
v. 21. But He spake of the temple of His body.
v. 22. When therefore He was risen from the dead, His disciples remembered that He had said this unto them; and they believed the Scripture, and the word which Jesus had said. The Jews resented the implication of authority; it meant that He claimed for Himself a supernatural origin or mission, either as a prophet or as still more. So they demanded some sign, some special manifestation, some extraordinary revelation, which would give evidence of His authority. “The blindness of the Jews is enough to put external evidence forever out of repute. They never will see the sign in the thing itself. The fact that Jesus by one blow accomplished a much-needed reform of an abuse over which devout men must often have sighed, and which perhaps ingenuous Levites had striven to keep within limits, fact that this unknown youth had done what none of the constituted authorities had been able to do, was surely itself the greatest sign. ” Jesus therefore gave them an answer which fitted their foolish demand. His saying was meant to be puzzling. Jesus always spoke in parables when He wished to be understood by the spiritual and to baffle the hostile. “Those who cross-question Him and treat Him as a subject to be investigated find no satisfaction. ” The sign which Jesus proposed to them was that they should destroy this temple, and in three days He would raise it up. See Joh 10:18. It was the Lord’s first reference to His death and resurrection. The Jews in their blindness did not understand the statement in its true sense, but supposed that He was referring to their sanctuary, to the wonderful Heroin Temple. They point to the fact that this great structure, with all its buildings, approaches, porticoes, and chambers, had been in course of construction for a matter of forty-six years at that time. Herod began work on the Temple in the year 20-19 B. C. “The old Temple was taken down and the new one erected in the course of eighteen months. But much remained to be done, and the work dragged along until after Herod’s death. It was finished only in 64 A. D. , six years before it was finally destroyed. ” To tear down this building and erect it anew in the short space of three days was obviously beyond human conception. But Jesus had stated correctly the great sign of His authority, His death and resurrection for the atonement of the world’s sin. Although Jesus, therefore, spoke of the temple of His body, which was in truth the temple of the living God for all times, though He Himself is the great sanctuary of mankind for all times and. His body comprises the mercy-seat and all the other sacrificial appointments of the true temple for the believers of all times, the Jews did not understand Him. They attempted to use this prophecy against Him two years later, upon the occasion of His trial before the high priests. Even the disciples did not understand the saying at that time; in a way they were just as ignorant as the Jews. But they remembered it after the Lord’s resurrection, and lot that time drew their conclusions correctly. Then they understood and believed also the corresponding Scripture-passages of the Old Testament. Mark: A Christian must never grow weary in comparing type and antitype, prophecy and fulfillment; for only in that way will he gain the full and firm conviction that Jesus Christ is truly the Messiah of promise, the Savior of the world.
Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann
Joh 2:18. Then answered the Jews, &c. A fact so public and remarkable as this, could not but immediately come to the knowledge of the priests and rulers of the Jews, whose supreme council sat in a magnificent chamber belonging to the temple; a fine rotunda, called from its beautiful pavement, Lishcath Hagazith, which stood on the wall of the temple, part of it within, and part of it without its sacred precincts. There seems to be no doubt that the Jews here mentioned were rulers; because we know that the great assembly of the Jewish rulers,the sanhedrim,sat in the temple. Christ’s driving out the buyers and sellers must undoubtedly have come to their knowledge; and as their office seemed to authorise them to call him to an account, we are sure that their prejudicesagainst him would incline them to do it. The truth is, this affair had the mark of anextraordinary zeal; a zeal nothing inferior to that for which the prophets were famed; and this was the reason why the rulers came to him, desiring to know by what authority he had undertaken singly to make such reformation in the house and worship of God, especially in reference to matters which had been declared lawful by the council, and by doctors of the greatest reputation: and if he had any real authority for doing such things, they required him to shew it them, by working a miracle for that purpose. See Joh 2:23.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Joh 2:18-19 . The same question as in Mat 21:23 , but how totally different an answer! It cannot therefore be used to confirm the supposed identity of the two events.
.] As in Mat 11:25 (which see), and often, denoting what is said upon occasion of Christ’s act, and with reference thereto .
] If what He had done was to he recognised as appropriate to Him, it must be based upon a really prophetic , and consequently upon divine authorization; in proof of this, they desired a special miraculous sign or act, accrediting Him as a divine messenger , and which was to be wrought by Him before their eyes, , , Euthymius Zigabenus; comp. Joh 6:30 .
] dost thou bring before us, lettest us see; comp. Hom. Il. v. 244:
. Od. . 174.
] , , on, Joh 9:17 , Joh 11:51 , Joh 16:9 ; Mar 16:14 ; 2Co 1:18 ; 2Co 11:10 . See Fritzsche ad Matt. p. 248. Consequently in the sense of quatenus, see Ast, Lex. Plat. II. 485.
] The present denotes the act just performed, but which is still regarded as present.
Joh 2:19 . , . . .] refers, according to the apostle’s explanation in Joh 2:21 , to the death and resurrection of Jesus, so that he consequently means His body as the dwelling-place of God, who was in Christ (Joh 10:38 , Joh 14:10-11 ; Joh 14:20 , Joh 17:21 , Joh 1:14 ), i.e. as the antitype of the temple, [142] and, in conformity with this, His violent death as the pulling down , and His resurrection as the rebuilding of it. We must therefore, according to John, suppose that Jesus, with the temple buildings before Him, to which He points ( this temple here ), sees in them the sacred type of His body, and with that directness of expression characteristic of the old prophets (such as we often see, e.g ., in Isaiah), straightway substitutes the image for that which it represented, so that these sharp, vivid strokes, dashed down without any explanation, contain, as in a pictorial riddle, a symbolic and prophetic announcement of His resurrection, [143] as in Mat 12:39 ; Mat 16:4 , and in keeping with what we are to assume throughout, viz. that He never foretold His resurrection in so many words, but only by figures and in obscure terms. The thought accordingly, divested of this figurative envelope, is, according to John, no other than this: kill me, and within three days ( , see Bernhardy, p. 209; Winer, p. 361 [E. T. p. 482]) I will rise again . The imperative in the protasis is not permissive merely, which weakens the emotion, but contains a challenge; it springs from painfully excited feeling, as He looks with heart-searching gaze upon that implacable opposition which was already beginning to show itself, and which would not be satisfied till it had put Him to death. Comp. , Mat 23:32 . John’s explanation is adopted by the ancients, and among modern expositors by Kuinoel, Tholuck, Hildebrand (in Hffell’s Zeitschr . II. 1), Kling (in d. Stud. u. Krit . 1836, p. 127), Krabbe, Klee, Olshausen (at least as to their inner meaning, while the words, he thinks, were apparently simply a repelling paradox), Maier, Hasert ( Ueb. d. Vorhersagungen Jesu von seinem Tode , Berlin 1839, p. 81), Hauff in the Stud. u. Krit . 1849, p. 106 ff.; Brckner (against De Wette), Laurillard, de locis ev. Joh. in quibus ipse auctor verba J. interpretat. est , Lugd. B. 1853, p. 1 ff.; Baumgarten, Maier, Baeumlein, Godet, even Luthardt (though bringing in a double meaning; by putting Jesus to death, Israel destroyed itself as the house of God, while the resurrection was the setting up of God’s spiritual house; comp. Ebrard, Lange, Riggenbach, Hengstenberg); similarly Baur, p. 137 ff., who, however (and with him Hilgenfeld), traces the expression to synoptic elements much later in point of time. But John’s explanation is abandoned, since the time of Herder ( vom Sohne Gottes ) and Henke ( Programm 1798, in Pott, Sylloge , I. p. 8 ff.), by Eckermann, Paulus, Lcke, Schweizer, Bleek, B. Crusius, Ammon, Strauss, Gfrrer, De Wette, Ewald, Weizsacker, Schenkel, Scholten, and many others, who, with various modifications, explain the pulling down of the temple of the decay of the old temple religion , and the setting up in three days of the new spiritual theocracy so soon to be established; thus the imperative is taken by some as a challenge (as above) (Herder, Henke, Ewald), by some again as a concession (Schenkel), and by some as an hypothesis (Lcke, B. Crusius, De Wette: “Granted that ye destroy”) according to De Wette, with allusion perhaps to the late partial pulling down of the temple by Herod. But (1) before we can assume that John of all men, who yet elsewhere was so deeply imbued with the mind of Jesus, wholly misunderstood Him, and that too at the time when he wrote his Gospel, when, consequently, the old degenerate religion had been long ago overthrown, and the new spiritual sanctuary long ago set up, the most decisive evidence of such a misunderstanding is requisite. If this be not forthcoming, we are bound to seek the true , interpretation of any saying of Jesus from him , and especially in this case , where he distinctly gives his own explanation in opposition to the misconception of the Jews, and gives it not only as his own , but as that of the rest of the disciples likewise. (2) The accusation in Mat 26:61 , Mar 14:58 (comp. Act 6:13 ) is no argument in favour of the modern interpretation, for it is based only upon the Jewish misunderstanding of the saying. (3) The place and occasion alike suggested the temple as an illustration , but they determined nothing as to the subject-matter of the comparison; a in general was asked for, not one bearing specially upon the temple . (4) The setting up of the spiritual temple was an event not at all dependent upon a previous of the old economy; on the contrary, a beginning had already been made, the further development of which was not the effect but the cause (the fermenting element) of the dissolution of the old theocracy: hence the relation of the protasis to the apodosis of the sentence would be neither logically nor historically correct. (5) This spiritual building up was so far from being a momentary act, and was to so great a degree a gradual development, that neither the conception of a in general, nor the words , which belong essentially to this conception, have any corresponding relation thereto; the latter expression, even if taken in a proverbial sense (Hos 6:2 , not Luk 13:32 ; but see Dissen ad Dem. de cor . p. 362), could only mean “ in a few days ,” and therefore would be quite unsuited to the comparison, and would even have the appearance of grandiloquence. Moreover, as the three days joined to the were always the fixed correlative of Christ’s resurrection , this ought itself to have excluded the modern explanation. (6) A new temple would of necessity have been spoken of as another (comp. Mar 14:58 ), but can only mean the same; and thus the Jews as well as John rightly understood it, for Jesus did not say or , or the like. [144] (7) It is only a seeming objection to John’s explanation, that according to N. T. theology Christ did not raise Himself from the dead, but was raised by the Father; comp. Joh 2:22 ; Act 2:24 ; Act 2:31 ff., Act 3:15 ; Act 4:10 ; Act 5:30 , al.; Rom 4:24 ; Rom 8:11 ; 1Co 6:14 ; 2Co 4:14 ; Gal 1:1 ; Eph 1:21 ; Col 2:12 ; 1Th 1:10 ; 1Pe 1:21 . Any such contradiction to the Christian mode of view, if real, must have prevented John himself above every one from referring the words to the resurrection. But the objection disappears if we simply give due weight to the figurative nature of the expression, which rests upon that visible contemplation of the resurrection , according to which the Subject that arises, whose resurrection is described as the re-erecting of the destroyed temple, must also be the Subject that erects the temple, without affecting the further doctrine, which, moreover, does not come under consideration, that the causa efficiens, i.e . the actual revivifying power, is the father. Christ receiving His life again from the Father (Joh 10:17 ) and rising again, Himself raises up by His very resurrection the destroyed temple. See, moreover, Brckner, p. 57, and Godet. Comp. Ignat. Smyrn . 2 : .
For as used of erecting buildings, see Sir 49:11 ; 3 Esdras 5:44, 8:81; Ael. V. H. 12, 23; Herodianus, 3, 15. 6; Jacobs ad Anthol . XII. p. 75
[142] Considering the oft-recurring representation of the indwelling of God in Christ, it is very far-fetched to derive the temple comparison here from the Valentinian Christology concerning a higher body of the Messiah appropriate for union with the Logos (in answer to Hilgenfeld, Lehrbegr . 247). Seeing, further, that Christ (ver. 16) calls the literal temple “ His Father’s house,” how can the Demiurge be conceived of as the God of the Jews? How can we reconcile with that expression even “a milder Gnosticism” (Hilgenfeld, in the Theol. Jahrb . 1857, p. 516)? Simply to admit that “a weak reference to the highest God was not wanting even in Judaism,” is both incorrect in itself, and altogether unsuited to solve the palpable contradiction.
[143] It is assumed (with Bengel) still in my 4th edition, that Jesus indicated the reference to His body “ nutu gestuve ,” but that the Jews did not notice it. This is inadmissible, because thus the would have no reference whatever to the temple of stone, whereas the entire scene in the temple court shows that this reference is contained in it. Besides, such a gesture would be inappropriate while using an enigmatical word, for it would at once give the key to its solution. The intellectual point would be quite lost.
[144] Appeal is wrongly made to Mat 10:39 , where denotes earthly life merely, and then life eternal . as well as there means nothing but the soul ; and the enigma of the expression lies not in a different sense being applied to these two words, but in the different meaning as respects duration of and .
Note .
It cannot perplex us in John’s explanation, that the answer which Jesus gave was rightly understood neither by the Jews nor by the disciples at the time. It was the manner of Jesus, as especially appears in John, to throw out seeds of thought for the future which could not take root at the time . Comp. Chrysostom: , . ; , . And that from His very first public appearance He foresaw the development of the opposition of this seemingly guileless party, onwards to its goal in the destruction of the temple of His body, can be regarded as an unhistorical presupposition of the Logos doctrine only by one who, on the one hand, can by critical doubts [145] get rid of the early references of Jesus to His death which are contained in the Synoptics ( e.g . Mat 10:38 ; Mat 12:39 ; Mat 10:23 ), and, on the other hand, does not sufficiently estimate Christ’s higher knowledge, and especially His acquaintance with the heart which John unfolds, by virtue of which He apprehends the full intent (Joh 6:64 ) of this seemingly justifiable requirement of a sign.
[145] Comp. Keim, Geschichtl. Christus , pp. 35, 36, Exo 3 .
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
DISCOURSE: 1607
THE RESURRECTION, A PROOF OF CHRISTS MESSIAHSHIP
Joh 2:18-19. Then answered the Jews and said unto him, What sign shewest thou unto us, seeing that thou doest these things? Jesus answered and said unto them, Destroy this Temple, and in three days I will raise it up.
THE work of reformation usually involves in difficulties those who undertake it. They who are the objects of it, however justly reproved, are sure to take offence, and to condemn the zeal which censures them. No one can doubt but that the turning of Gods House into a place of merchandize was a very shameful practice; or, that to suppress it was highly commendable: yet, when our blessed Lord exerted his authority to check this abuse, the people, instead of applauding his zeal, expressed great dissatisfaction, and demanded of him, what right he had to interfere in that matter. The very awe which was impressed on all their minds, whereby they were constrained to yield to the rebukes of a poor man unsupported by any human, authority, might have convinced them, that a power more than human existed in the person of the Lord Jesus: and, if they had taken occasion to make inquiries respecting him in a becoming spirit, he would no doubt have given them all reasonable satisfaction: but, as their demands arose from mere petulance, he declined satisfying them by any fresh miracle, and referred them to an event yet distant, which, when accomplished, should be a perfect answer to every inquiry.
To place this matter in a just point of view, we shall shew,
I.
To what event our Lord referred
The occasion on which the words were spoken, will reflect considerable light on the words themselves. It was common with our Lord to make the things which were immediately before him subservient to his purpose of conveying spiritual instruction: and this he did on the present occasion. He had purged the temple from the abuses to which it had been exposed. The act itself, all things considered, was miraculous. A miracle was required of him to prove his right to exercise such authority: but he, not choosing to gratify this unreasonable demand, told the Jews, that, as they had defiled the material temple, so they would destroy the temple of his body: and that, as he had purged the one, so he would in three days rebuild and restore the other: and that this latter miracle would abundantly vindicate his claim to the authority he used.
In this figurative prediction he intimated,
1.
That his own body was typically represented by the temple
[Both were formed, the one by man, and the other by God himself, as a residence for the Deity [Note: Heb 8:2.]; and in both God vouchsafed to dwell: in the one symbolically, by a visible cloud; in the other really, personally, bodily, even in all his fulness [Note: Col 2:9.] ]
2.
That they would in due time destroy it
[His words are not to be construed as a command or advice, but simply as a prediction. He knew what they would do: he knew what his heavenly Father had determined before to be done: he knew what he had undertaken both to do and suffer for us: and he frequently, from his very first entrance on his ministry to the close of it, foretold the precise manner of his death, together with the various circumstances which should accompany it ]
3.
That he, by his own power, would raise it up again in three days
[He had power to lay down his life, and power to take it again: and he declared that he would put forth this power to the confusion of all his enemies. He fixed the time of his resurrection, agreeably to the predictions of the prophets concerning it; a time amply sufficient for ascertaining the reality of his death, though not sufficient for his body to contract any corruption. On the accomplishment of this prophecy he rested all his pretensions to the Messiahship; and by it he would prove, that he was indeed the very Christ ]
The accomplishment of this event need not at this time to be insisted on: it is more to our purpose to shew,
II.
How it proved his Divine authority
We are told that Christ was declared to be the Son of God with power by his resurrection from the dead. If it be asked, How did his resurrection prove his Messiahship? we answer,
1.
No impostor would rest his pretensions on such an appeal as this
[An impostor would rather confirm his authority by an appeal to something which he might accomplish in his life-time, in order that his credit might be raised, and his hands be strengthened for the furtherance of his designs. At all events, he would not found his hopes of success on a matter so entirely out of the reach of all human power, where the failure might be so easily, so speedily, so demonstrably ascertained: to do this would be to counteract all his own wishes, and to expose himself and his adherents to utter contempt. Such conduct would be perfect madness: and therefore we cannot suppose that our blessed Lord, who on all occasions manifested such consummate wisdom, could have pursued it. Had he been an impostor, he would at least have selected some other test, more within the bounds of credibility, and less open to detection.]
2.
Supposing such an appeal made in support of an imposture, God would never work a miracle to sanction and confirm it
[That God has permitted wonderful things to be wrought by liars and impostors, is certain: but he has at the same time afforded means for discovering the imposture; or rather, he has permitted those very wonders for the purpose of manifesting his own superior power, and confirmed thereby the faith of his people, whilst his enemies were hardened in their own wilful delusions [Note: Exo 7:11-20; Exo 7:22; Exo 8:7-8; Exo 8:17-19. Act 8:9-11.]. But in raising up Jesus from the dead, he has not only given us no contrary testimony to counteract the impression, but has left us no room for doubt. This must have been done by himself alone: none but an Almighty power could effect it. On this one point the whole weight of our Lords pretensions rested. Our Lord was willing to be thought an impostor, if this miracle were not wrought in his favour. What shall we say then? If God knew him to be an impostor, he himself interposed to give weight and efficacy to his imposture: he interposed to deceive his own people, and to blind the eyes of those who were most desirous to serve him aright. But can this be true? Can we for a moment admit the thought? The inference then is clear and undeniable; that Jesus was indeed the Christ, the Saviour of the world ]
But it is not in speculative truths that we should rest. We proceed therefore to inquire,
III.
What practical instruction is to be gathered from it
In this part of our subject, we shall limit our observations to the event as it stands connected with the occasion on which it was foretold. We have before seen that it was referred to in confirmation of the authority which our Lord had exerted. It shews us therefore,
1.
That God is indignant with those who pollute his temple
[It is common to imagine, that the frequenting of the house of God at certain seasons must of necessity be a service pleasing and acceptable in the sight of God. But can our bodily presence there be pleasing to him, if our hearts be altogether occupied with the world? If our farms and our merchandize, our lusts and our pleasures, fill our minds, what will it profit us to bow our knees, or to repeat our forms of prayer? It is not thus that we are to worship God: we are to worship him in spirit and in truth; and our external services, while destitute of spiritual affections, are gross hypocrisy: and we, in presenting such services, are no better than those whom our Lord accused of turning his Fathers House into a house of merchandize.
But it is not from the outward temple only that evil should be expelled: our hearts are the temples of the Holy Ghost, and are therefore, at the peril of our souls, to be preserved pure: If any man defile the temple of God, says the Apostle, him shall God destroy [Note: 1Co 3:16-17.]. What reason have we all to tremble at this solemn declaration! Consider, brethren, what grievous abominations have been harboured there! what a mass of filthiness, filthiness both of flesh and spirit, has God seen in us! what pride, envy, malice, wrath! what worldliness! what sensuality! alas! alas! It is indeed of the Lords mercies that we are not consumed, even because his compassions fail not. We may plead custom, and a variety of other excuses, just as they did who defiled the material temple: but if our hearts be not now purged by the grace of God, it is in vain to hope that he will ever make them his residence in a future world. Let us then beg of him to drive out every hateful disposition: and, whatever scourge he may see fit to use for this purpose, let us never wish to be delivered from the pains it may inflict, till we have fully experienced its sanctified effects.]
2.
That whatever pollutes his temple shall yield to the almighty power of Christ
[When we see the extreme depravity of our hearts, and compare it with the purity of Gods holy law, we are ready to say, that it is impossible for us ever to become what God requires. But he who exerted such power over the minds of those who made the temple a den of thieves; who could literally have destroyed the temple and built it again in three days; and did actually raise to life again his own crucified body; He, I say, can easily effect the renovation of our hearts: with him all things are possible: whatever difficulties we may have to surmount, his grace is sufficient for us We need only look to his Apostles, who were men of like passions with us, and we may see what he can do for us. It was by the grace of God that they were what they. were: and God is still the same as in the days of old; his arm is not shortened that it cannot save; nor is his ear heavy that it cannot hear It is to carry on his work in our hearts that Jesus is risen: I, if I be lifted up, will draw all men unto me. Let us then pray that we may know him in the power of his resurrection, and be sanctified wholly; and that our whole spirit, soul, and body, may be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ [Note: 1Th 5:23.]. Faithful is He that hath called us, who also will do it [Note: 1Th 5:24.].]
Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)
Then answered the Jews, and said unto him, What sign shewest thou unto us, seeing that thou doest these things? (19) Jesus answered and said unto them, Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up. (20) Then said the Jews, Forty and six years was this temple in building, and wilt thou rear it up in three days? (21) But he spake of the temple of his body. (22) When therefore he was risen from the dead, his disciples remembered that he had said this unto them: and they believed the scripture, and the word which Jesus had said.
It really should seem, by the conduct of those men, and their asking Christ to shew them some sign, for such an exercise of his authority; as if for the moment, they had been overawed, and more than half convinced, who Christ was. Had this not been the case, one should have expected to have seen them to a man reddened with anger, and seizing Jesus, to bring him to punishment. Whereas, they never attempted to oppose what the Lord did; neither to gainsay what the Lord said. Jesus called God his Father; and in confirmation purged the Temple, which they had profaned. To all which; the whole body of them made no resistance; but after a pause, they asked him for some further sign in proof of his mission.
Doth my Reader also wonder in beholding them thus panic struck? Surely not. He, I hope, can well explain the cause. Did not the countenance of the Lord Jesus, as well as his actions, manifest somewhat both of his Almighty Person, and Power? If the zeal of his Father’s house had eaten him up; (as he himself expresses it;) did not his face bespeak it? Reader! think, I beseech you, if in the days of Christ’s flesh such glory occasionally broke forth, as in this, instance, to the confusion of all his enemies; (See also Joh 18:6 ) and as in another, to the joy of his friends; (See Mat 17:1-5 .) what will be his appearance in that day, when the ungodly shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of his power; and when he shall come to be glorified in his saints, and to be admired in all them that believe? 2Th 1:9-10 . Oh! the forbearance of our adorable Lord, when driving those buyers and sellers from the temple, that he drove them not into hell!
But I pray the Reader yet further to observe, the Lord’s grace to his Church and people, in the sign he gave, to the demand of his foes. It is his redeemed, and not others, for whom this precious sign was meant; and to whom it ministers blessedness. When Jesus thus spake of the destruction of the temple, the Holy Ghost would not leave the Church to make her own comment upon it; but by the mouth of the Apostles, taught his redeemed, that Jesus spake of the temple of his body. So that when Jesus arose from the dead, which was at the distance of three years after this conversation the Lord held with the Jews, they called to mind what had then passed, and felt as we now feel under the divine conviction, the blessed testimony to the whole; they believed the scripture, and the word which he had spoken.
I must not suffer the Reader to overlook the greatness and compleatness of this sign; which, while it acted to those blind Jews as a stone of stumbling, and rock of offence; to the enlightened believer, it becomes a blessed testimony to that glorious Rock which Jehovah laid in Zion. They made this sign of Jesus the great charge of blasphemy against Christ, when arraigned before Pilate. Mat 26:61 . And, Reader! you and I, if taught of God, make it a most precious evidence of his eternal Power, and Godhead. Destroy this temple, (said the Lord,) this temple of my body; and in three days I will raise it up! The former was done, when (as Peter under the Holy Ghost charged them) with wicked hands, Jesus was taken by them and crucified and slain. Act 2:23 . And Jesus accomplished the latter, when by his own Almighty Power, he arose from the dead. Observe the expression which Christ made use of, I will raise it up! And if you ask the cause? the Holy Ghost, by the mouth of Peter answers; having loosed (said he) the pains of death, because it was not possible that He should be holden of it. Act 2:24 . But it would not only have been possible, but certain and sure, that the pains of death, which are the wages of sin, would have held any man and every man a prisoner, which died for sin; had not the divine nature of Christ, been in this solemn transaction. But in the Person of Christ, God and Man in One, it became impossible. The Prophets which foretold his death, foretold at the same time, that his soul should not be left in hell; neither God’s holy one to see corruption. Psa 16:10 . Hence, as the Holy Ghost by Peter, in another scripture, hath said; Christ was put to death in the flesh, but quickened by the Spirit. 1Pe 3:18 . Reader! what are now your apprehensions of this blessed sign?
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
18 Then answered the Jews and said unto him, What sign shewest thou unto us, seeing that thou doest these things?
Ver. 18. What sign ] They might have seen sign enough, in his so powerful ejecting of those money merchants. But Church reformations are commonly thus diversely entertained. The disciples call it zeal, the Jews rashness.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
18. ] On the demand of the Jews, see Deu 13:1-3 . It was not only to justify His having driven out the abomination; this any one might have done; but to justify the mission and the whole course of action which the words implied. They used the same expression at the end of His ministry, Mat 21:23 .
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
answered . . . said. See note on Deu 1:41 and App-122.
sign. Same as “miracle”, Joh 2:11.
seeing, &c. Supply the Ellipsis (App-6) = “What sign shewest thou to us [that Thou art the Messiah], seeing that Thou doest these things? ”
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
18.] On the demand of the Jews, see Deu 13:1-3. It was not only to justify His having driven out the abomination; this any one might have done;-but to justify the mission and the whole course of action which the words implied. They used the same expression at the end of His ministry, Mat 21:23.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Joh 2:18. , what sign) And yet this very act was a , sign, which Jesus had miraculously wrought. [Of how great a number do you imagine there would be need, if all the buyers and sellers had to be immediately driven out of any market-place!-V. g. And on that account, indeed, that act was the more marvellous, inasmuch as Jesus, having just come from His baptism, had not yet ceased to be a stranger to the inhabitants of Jerusalem.-Harm., p. 161.] They require signs, to be proved by signs. They showed the same perversity, ch. Joh 6:30, [After His miracle of feeding 5000, they said] What sign showest Thou then, that we may see and believe Thee? Mat 21:23, The chief priests came unto Him, as He was teaching in the temple, and said, By what authority doest Thou these things? and who gave Thee this authority?-) seeing that, since.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Joh 2:18
Joh 2:18
The Jews therefore answered and said unto him, What sign showest thou unto us, seeing that thou doest these things?-This seemed to use violence more than any other act save a similar one repeated on a similar occasion in his attendance of the last Passover of his ministry. (Mat 21:12; Luk 19:45). Jesus no doubt in doing it claimed he did it by the authority of God whom he represented. The Jews complained that he should exercise such authority yet work no miracles or give no proof of the authority by which he did these things.
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
What: Joh 6:30, Mat 12:38-42, Mat 16:1-4, Mar 8:11, Luk 11:29
seeing: Joh 1:25, Mat 21:23, Mar 11:27, Mar 11:28, Luk 20:1, Luk 20:2, Act 4:7, Act 5:28
Reciprocal: Exo 7:9 – Show 1Ki 13:3 – General Mat 21:10 – Who Mar 14:57 – and bare Mar 15:29 – Ah Joh 4:48 – Except Rom 1:4 – the Son 1Co 1:22 – the Jews
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
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The Jews were questioning the right of Jesus to “take the law into his own hands,” so to speak, and inflict this physical punishment on the dealers in necessary articles for the service of God. They challenged Him to stake his standing as an unusual person by uttering some sign, which means some kind of event that was to come.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Then answered the Jews and said unto him, What sign showest thou unto us, seeing that thou doest these things?
[What sign showest thou unto us?] “Noah, Hezekiah, etc., require a sign; much more the wicked and ungodly.”
Since there had been so many, no less than four hundred years past, from the time that the Holy Spirit had departed from that nation, and prophecies had ceased, in which space there had not appeared any one person that pretended to the gift either of prophesying or working miracles, it is no wonder if they were suspicious of one that now claimed the character, and required a sign of him.
Fuente: Lightfoot Commentary Gospels
Joh 2:18. The Jews therefore answered. The effect on the disciples has been related; what will be the response of the rulers to the self-revelation of Jesus? The word therefore answers to the Evangelists knowledge of the fact. Their position of inward antagonism is present to his thought, though it has not yet found expression in their deeds.
And said unto him, What sign shewest thou unto us because thou doest these things?This answer (replying to the act rather than the words) is in the tone of indignation, not of sincere inquiry: Because Thou doest these things Thou art bound to show a sign, a sign that shall justify such actions. The effectual cleansing was the sign, but as such they would not receive it. Their question is a token of the failure (so far as the nation was concerned) of the manifestation which Jesus had given of Himself as Son of God. Both in the question and in the response of our Lord we have a dear parallel in the earlier Gospels: see Mat 12:38-40.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Observe here, 1. How exceedingly offended the Jews were at the reformation which our Saviour had made in the house of God; they were awed indeed with the majesty of this great work, and durst not openly oppose, but secretly malign it.
Thence note, That redress of abuses in God’s worship, especially if it crosses our ease, and controls our profit, (as this did), is usually distasted.
Observe, 2. How these Jews discover their old inveterate disease of infidelity; they require a sign, and call for a miracle to justify Christ’s commission. Why! had they not a miracle before their eyes? Was not the work of purging the temple a wonderful miracle? Yet they demanded another miracle to make this good.
Learn thence, That obstinate infidelity will not be satisfied with the most sufficient means for satisfaction, but still object and oppose against the clearest, the fullest, and most convincing evidence. What sign showest thou us? says the Jews, when they had so many signs and wonders daily before their eyes.
Observe, 3. The Jews demanding a sign. our Saviour grants them one; he remits them to his death and resurrection, to prove that he was the true Messiah. Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up. That is, “I know you will destroy this temple of my body, by putting me to deaeth; but I will raise myself again from the grave the third day.” Christ did not command them to destroy his body, but only foretold that they would do it. Non est verbum Praecepti, sed Praedictionis: “The words are not imperative, but only predictive and permissive.” Christ did not bid them destroy his body, but foretells what they would do. “Ye will destroy this temple, but after three days I will raise it up.”
Where note, That Christ asserts his own power in raising his own body from the dead. True! The Father is often said to raise him, and it is necessary that it be so said, that it might appear that divine justice was fully satisfied for our sins, in that he was by him delivered from that death which he underwent for us.
But yet it is often asserted, That Christ raised himself, and that he was quickened by the Spirit, which was as well the Spirit of the Son, as of the Father, dwelling essentially in him.
Now from Christ’s foretelling his passion and resurrection, learn thence, that all our Saviour’s sufferings wee foreknown unto him, were foretold by him; he would not prevent them, but willingly permitted them, and cheerfully underwent them. Destroy this temple.
Note here, 1. The state and dignity of Christ’s holy body: ‘Tis a temple. He spake of the temple of his body. The saints’ bodies are temples by special sanctification: Christ’s body was a temple by substantial inhabitation. The divinity of Christ dwelt in his humanity personally and immediately. God dwells in saints by regal authority; he dwelt in Christ’s humanity by personal residence.
Note, 2. The violence and indignity offered to this holy temple at our Saviour’s death, it was pulled down and destroyed; death dissolved the union betwixt our Saviour’s soul and body; but there was a closer union, which no violence of death could dissolve: namely, the union of his godhead with his manhood; this was incapable either of dissolution or destruction.
Note, 3. The repairing, restoring, and raising up of this temple out of the ruins of it, by our Saviour’s resurrection. In three days I will raise it up.
Observe, A full proof of our Saviour’s divinity. To raise a dead man exceeds the power of nature; but for a dead man to raise himself, requires the power of God. We read of dead men raised by others; but none but Christ ever raised himself. The Jews could not say, he raised others from the grace, himself he could not raise.
Inference, 1. Was Christ’s body a temple? so shall ours be too; temples for the Holy Ghost to dwell in. Temples by special appropriation, temples by solemn consecration, temples by actual employment: If any man defile this temple, him will God destroy.
2. Was the temple of Christ’s body pulled down by death, and destroyed; so must also the temples of our bodies ere long. The temple of his body was pulled down for our sin; the temples of our bodies ruined by our sin. Sin brought mortality into our natures, and the wages of our sin is death.
3. Was the temple of Christ’s body repaired in the morning of the resurrection? So shall the temple of our bodies also, if we be the members of Christ by a vital union. Thy dead men, O blessed redeemer! shall live; together with thy dead body shall they arise. Awake then and sing, ye that dwell in the dust, for the dew is as the dew of herbs, and the earth shall cast out the dead, Isa 26:19
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
Joh 2:18-22. Then answered the Jews A fact so public and remarkable as that just mentioned, could not but immediately come to the knowledge of the priests and rulers of the Jews, whose supreme council sat in a magnificent chamber belonging to the temple; some of them, therefore, said unto him, What sign showest thou unto us, seeing thou doest these things That is, to prove thyself authorized and commissioned to do them? This they ask because it belonged only to the magistrate, as being Gods minister and vicegerent, or to a prophet, to reform abuses in Gods worship. The authority of the magistrate they knew Christ had not, for acting as he had done; and if he alleged that he acted as a prophet, they require him to give them proof of his being such, by some miracle or prediction, to be accomplished before their eyes. But was not the thing itself a sufficient sign? His ability to drive so many from their posts, without opposition, was surely a proof of his authority to do it: he that was armed by such a divine power, must have been armed with a divine commission. The truth is, they required a miracle to confirm a miracle! This unreasonable demand Jesus did not think proper to grant them; but refers them to the miracle of his resurrection: which, however, he does in such obscure terms, as prejudiced minds could not understand, till the prediction was cleared and explained by the event. Jesus answered, Destroy this temple Pointing probably to his body, which, with the greatest propriety, he called a temple, on account of the divinity residing in it. By a like figure of speech, the apostle calls the bodies of believers the temples of God. When Christ said, Destroy this temple, he meant, You will be permitted to destroy it, and you will destroy it: for at the very beginning of his ministry he had a clear foresight of all his sufferings, and of his death at the end of it; and yet he went on cheerfully in his work. Observe, reader, our Lord spake thus to them in parables because they were willingly ignorant, and shut their eyes against the clear light issuing from his life, his doctrine, and his miracles. For they that will not see shall not see; but shall stumble and fall, and be broken, and snared, and taken, Isa 8:14-15. Accordingly, the figurative speech here used by our Lord, proved such a stumbling-block to them, that it was produced in evidence against him at his trial, to prove him a blasphemer, Mat 26:60-61. Had they, in humility, asked him the meaning of what he said, he would have informed them, and it would have been a savour of life unto life to them; but they resolved to cavil, and it proved a savour of death unto death. They that would not be convinced were hardened, and the manner of the expression of this prediction occasioned the accomplishment of the prediction itself. In his saying, In three days I will raise it up Our Lord not only foretold his resurrection, but that it should he effected by his own power. There were others that were raised at different times from the dead, but Christ was the only person that ever raised himself! They, supposing that he spake of the temple in which they were standing, replied, Forty and six years was this temple in building Dr. Lightfoot computes that it was just forty-six years from the founding of Zerubbabels temple, in the second year of Cyrus, to the complete settlement of the temple service, in the thirty- second year of Artaxerxes. The original expression, however, , instead of, was this temple in building, is translated by Doddridge, Heylin, and Worsley, hath been building, proceeding on the supposition, that those who made this reply alluded to the additional buildings which the temple had received, and which had been begun by Herod, and continued by those who succeeded him in the government of Judea, to the time then present. But let it be observed, that the Jews never did, nor do to this day, speak of more than two temples possessed by their fathers; the first built by Solomon, the second by Zerubbabel. The great additions made by Herod, were considered as intended only for decorating and repairing the edifice, not for rebuilding it; for, in fact, Zerubbabels temple had not then been destroyed. Nor need we, I think, puzzle ourselves to make out exactly the forty-six years spoken of. Those men were evidently in the humour of exaggerating, in order to represent to the people as absurd what they had immediately heard advanced by our Lord. In this disposition, we may believe, they would not hesitate to include the years in which the work was interrupted, among the years employed in building. Campbell. But he spake of the temple of his body And therefore they were entirely mistaken as to the sense of what he said; When, therefore, he was risen from the dead Just on the third day after his crucifixion; his disciples remembered that he had said this Which, when they heard him utter it, they did not at all understand; and they believed the Scripture, &c. As they believed the Scriptures, which predicted the Messiahs death, so they believed the more firmly in their Master on account of this prophecy, which, by foretelling his resurrection so long beforehand, rendered that event, when it happened, a most illustrious proof of his mission from God. Dr. Campbell translates the clause, They understood the Scripture, and the word which Jesus had spoken; observing, that the word , in the sacred writers, sometimes signifies, not so much to believe, as to apprehend aright. In this sense, it is once and again employed by this writer in particular. It is not intimated here, that the disciples did not, before this time, believe the Scriptures, or their Masters word: but that they did not, till now, rightly apprehend the meaning of either, in relation to this subject. Another instance of this application of the verb , we have Joh 3:12.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Ver. 18. The Jews, therefore, answered and said unto him: What sign showest thou unto us, that thou doest these things?
The particle, therefore, connects again with Joh 2:16, after the interruption in Joh 2:17. The expression the Jews designates here especially the authorities charged with the care of the temple, with the shade of hostility which attaches to this term in our Gospel (see Joh 1:19). Riggenbach (Leben des Herrn Jesu, p. 382) observes that it is, indeed, the method of Pharisaism to demand a , an external sign, to legitimate an act which commends itself to the conscience by itself alone, because, once on this path, one can cavil about the nature and value of the sign, can move on indefinitely from demand to demand, and can ask finally, after a multiplication of loaves: What sign doest thou then? does not signify here, any more than elsewhere, to take up the discourse (Ostervald, Rilliet, Arnaud). This word always contains the idea of reply; only the reply is sometimes addressed to the conduct or the feeling of the interlocutor. Here the Jews’ question is an answer to the act of Jesus; Jesus had just addressed an appeal to the religious sentiment of the people. The attitude of the people, thus called upon to declare themselves, in some sort decided fatally their future. The reply was significant. The nineteenth verse will show us that Jesus immediately penetrated its whole meaning. : What sign showest thou (to explain) thatthou art doing… Meyer: .
Fuente: Godet Commentary (Luke, John, Romans and 1 Corinthians)
Verse 18
What sign; what proof that you are entitled to the authority of a prophet, which you assume.
Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament
2:18 {5} Then answered the Jews and said unto him, What {h} sign shewest thou unto us, seeing that thou doest these things?
(5) Against those who so bind God to an ordinary calling, which they themselves most shamefully abuse, that they will not admit of an extraordinary calling, which God confirms from heaven (and they would have it extinguished, although in vain) unless it is sealed with outward and bodily miracles.
(h) With what miracle do you confirm it, that we may see the heavenly power and strength which gives you authority to speak and to act in this manner?
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
The spokesmen for the Jews present in the courtyard wanted Jesus to perform some miraculous sign (Gr. semeion, cf. Joh 2:11). They wanted Him to indicate that He possessed divine authority to do what He did (cf. Exo 4:1-9; Mat 12:38; Mat 16:1; Mar 8:11; Luk 11:16; 1Co 1:22). The sin of these Jewish leaders is apparent in that they did not deal with the question of the justice of Jesus’ criticism. They only inquired about His authority to act as He did.