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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of John 16:32

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of John 16:32

Behold, the hour cometh, yea, is now come, that ye shall be scattered, every man to his own, and shall leave me alone: and yet I am not alone, because the Father is with me.

32. the hour cometh ] Better (as in Joh 16:25), there cometh an hour.

yea, is now come ] Omit ‘now;’ the expression is not the same as Joh 4:23.

that ye shall be scattered ] Rather, that ye may be scattered. ‘That’ = ‘ in order that,’ expressing the Divine purpose (comp. Joh 16:2). This part of the allegory of the sheep-fold is to be illustrated even in the shepherds themselves (Joh 10:12).

to his own ] ‘To his own home,’ as the margin has it here and the text of Joh 19:27; or more generally ‘to his own property and pursuits,’ his belongings and surroundings. Comp. Joh 1:11. The Greek in all three passages is the same, ‘his own’ being neuter plural.

shall leave ] Rather, may leave, depending upon ‘in order that.’

and yet ] The ‘yet’ is not expressed in the Greek, but implied, as often in S. John, in the collocation of the sentences. Comp. Joh 1:10-11, Joh 3:19; Joh 3:32, Joh 6:70, Joh 7:4; Joh 7:26, Joh 8:20, Joh 9:30. Our translators have as a rule wisely omitted the ‘yet,’ leaving S. John’s simple constructions to tell their own meaning. Here the ‘yet’ is almost necessary.

the Father is with me ] The Divine background (as it seems to us) of Christ’s life was to Him a Presence of which He was always conscious (Joh 8:29), with the awful exception in Mat 27:46.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

The hour cometh – To wit, on the next day, when he was crucified.

Ye shall be scattered – See Mat 26:31.

Every man to his own – That is, as in the margin, to his own home. You shall see me die, and suppose that my work is defeated, and return to your own dwellings. It is probable that the two disciples going to Emmaus were on their way to their dwellings, Luke 24. After his death all the disciples retired into Galilee, and were engaged in their common employment of fishing, Joh 21:1-14; Mat 28:7.

Leave me alone – Leave me to die without human sympathy or compassion. See the notes at Mat 26:31, Mat 26:56.

Because the Father is with me – His Father was his friend. He had all along trusted in God. In the prospect of his sufferings he could still look to him for support. And though in his dying moments he suffered so much as to use the language, Why hast thou forsaken me? yet it was language addressed to him still as his God – My God, my God. Even then he had confidence in God – confidence so strong and unwavering that he could say, Into thy hands I commend my spirit, Luk 23:46. In all these sufferings he had the assurance that God was his friend, that he was doing his will, that he was promoting his glory, and that he looked on him with approbation. It matters little who else forsakes us if God be with us in the hour of pain and of death; and though poor, forsaken, or despised, yet, if we have the consciousness of his presence and his favor, then we may fear no evil. His rod and his staff, they will comfort us. Without his favor then, death will be full of horrors, though we be surrounded by weeping relatives, and by all the honor, and splendor, and wealth which the world can bestow. The Christian can die saying, I am not alone, because the Father is with me. The sinner dies without a friend that can alleviate his sufferings – without one source of real joy.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Joh 16:32

Ye shall leave Me alone: and yet I am not alone, because the Father is with Me

Solitude

1.

There are two kinds of solitude–visible and inward. When we are not seen, we say that we are alone; however, it is not always a true isolation. The fisherman does not feel himself alone when he passes his nights on the immense ocean; he thinks of his family quietly sheltered; it is for them he is working, their love fills his heart. The watching soldier, in the lonely picket, does not feel himself alone; for he feels that on him rests the honour of the flag and the safety of his fellow-soldiers. The workwoman, in her garret, is not alone, for the work which she will finish before dawn will procure for those she loves the next days bread.

2. One can, on the contrary, be surrounded by the busiest crowd, and feel more isolated than in a desert. There are persons whose contact causes no sympathetic cord to vibrate in the soul. There have been days in which, coming back from the cemetery where you have buried a part of your heart and your life, the noise, the movement of the world seemed empty, cold and derisive.

3. Of these two solitudes I need not say which is the hardest to bear. To feel oneself lost in this vast universe, knowing that there is no one to whom we are dear, is there a more miserable condition? Nevertheless, it must be acknowledged there is a class of men who would willingly take their part in it. To have nothing in common with others, to climb a summit inaccessible, to sit there in pride, is a destiny which attracts them. Such is the greatness of selfishness, of Satan! But the gospel offers us in Christ a greatness of another nature. It does not tread sympathy under foot; it lays claim to it, it needs it. Look at Gethsemane; the Son of Man going three times to His disciples and asking them to watch with Him. How small the solitary pride of the egoist is beside that greatness!


I.
WHAT THE CAUSES OF CHRISTS SOLITUDE ARE.

1. When a man wishes to serve truth or righteousness, he must expect sooner or later to be lonely. Every truth has begun by being misunderstood; it has been a subject of reproach to those who have been its first apostles. This is above all realized in religious truth, which, by its very holiness, humiliates and bruises our pride, and consequently all human passions are leagued against it. The witnesses of eternal righteousness here below have all been at times lonely, misconstrued, slighted. Moses, Elijah, Isaiah, John the Baptist, and St. Paul. Imagine, then, the holy and the just One and you may well divine that He will be lonely amongst men. He is alone when seeking the glory of God amid people who are forgetting Him; when preaching His spiritual law in the midst of a nation attached to forms; when denouncing iniquity and hypocrisy amid a crowd whom the Pharisees dominate; amongst His disciples who do not understand His sublime mission; and in the last hour. Now, what happens to the Leader must happen to all His disciples.

2. Now, this inevitable solitude brings with it

(1) Temptations from doubt: to be alone in believing a truth, and in proclaiming it, is a formidable trial. When we feel ourselves lost in the midst of that crowd whose thronging waves environ us, there are moments when a secret voice says to us: Art thou certain of having the truth thyself?

(2) To that temptation add a temptation of barrenness for the heart. The heart lives by sympathy. But to be alone in loving an absent God, to appeal to a sympathy which is wanting, what a subject for sadness! There is a risk then of the heart being thrown back on itself, and of being consumed in melancholy.

(3) How should not this double trial of the intellect and of the heart, exercise a baleful influence on life! We must be understood in order to act. The idea of having spectators or witnesses doubles our natural energy. The most impossible works have been accomplished by united men.

(4) What will it be then if to this general trial are added still more special trials, if sickness and death come and make a void around us and render that solitude more complete.


II.
HIS CONSOLATION. I am not alone, &c. There is what made the strength of Jesus. What are all the desertions of earth in presence of communion with God? He might well feel that precious communion, for He only wanted, loved, accomplished the Fathers will; but can we forget that there was a mysterious, dreadful day when the Father Himself failed Him? But if Jesus has known that terrible forsaking, it was that we should never know it. When faith united us to Him we obtained the right to come to God, and to call Him our Father; then in our turn we could repeat those words. That is what constitutes the Christians strength and consolation.

1. You are alone, and perhaps are doubting. Who are you to oppose your thought to the thoughts of the crowd, to believe what others deny? In that sorrowful anxiety, I know of only one refuge; it is this thought: The Father is with me. If it was your thought only the waves of doubt would soon carry you away; but when you have God for you nothing should stop you. It was that which made all Gods prophets strong, when they had to protest against some dominant iniquity? Neither Moses, nor Elijah, nor St. Paul have drawn from their own character that superhuman energy which made them giants in the moral order; they themselves tell us that it is God who calls them and sends them. So Luther. To divine the secret of his strength, he should be seen on his knees before going to the Diet of Worms, saying: My God, Thou dost know well that I do not wish to resist such great lords, but it is Thy cause not mine. And behold, he, the son of a peasant, overthrew in his weakness the secular yoke of Rome which philosophy had not been able to move!

2. There is that barrenness which isolation produces. Ah! if the affection of men fail us, do you not believe that the love of God is infinite enough to fill our heart? Is not God the very source of love? Do you believe that God would leave empty, arid, and barren, a heart which the world forsakes?

3. As opposed to discouragement nothing is more powerful than the thought that the Father is with us. My right is with the Lord, and my work is with my God; yes, his work, small, hidden, obscure as it may be, if that work is only a prayer, a sigh, a tear, which seems lost. What immense encouragement such a thought is! If I am alone, that work will not perish with me, I have brought my stone to an eternal building which is continued along the centuries; for it is Gods work. (E. Bersier, D. D.)

Loneliness

Many a one is cast down and weary because he feels alone; nought so dispirits as loneliness; add yet one may be more alone in a crowd than anywhere when all unknown and uncured for. All must feel it in some shape: the old who sit and gaze in the fire, and see many a cherished scheme lying in the dull white ash; old friends, loved ones, gone, one by one; new faces and new ways, belonging to a new generation, cluster round, and loneliness pours in upon the soul–a loneliness too deep for human words to describe. When you have a sorrow, you feel that he that hath known a little sorrow will give the warmest sympathy. The memory of the trial, illumined by the after-knowledge of its blessing, will give a loving, tender power to the counsel of the friend. Whose sorrow like that sorrow! Whose loneliness as that of Jesus, when His bitter cry startled the assembled throng! He knows it all. Bring, then, thy care here, and gather comfort. Not very long ago one of our English officers, when riding full speed across the sand after the enemy, saw one of his men laid on the ground with his side torn open by a shell, and fast sinking. Reining up his horse he said, My lad, you must not think me unkind if I leave you alone in your agony; but you know I must ride on, Duty commands me! I shall never forget, said that officer, the answer I got. Sir, said he, I am not alone. I have with me the Friend that sticketh closer than a brother! That brave English soldier knew the glorious truth of the ever-present Jesus, who, by the memory of that bitter cry, would never leave a child of His to be alone in the hour of need. Oh, Jesus, let me glean and keep that precious thought. I am not left as an orphan alone to fight and struggle in the great battle of life. The fierceness of the pain full often makes men long for something to lull the pain; the heart gives way before the long future that seems to stretch on and on without a ray of hope. Face it, says the doctor, the pain may be for a time the fiercer, but the operation will relieve. Or if it be a soul-agony, and sin to crucify, nails to be driven through our tenderest places. Face it, cries the Great Physician, suffer, but win! Deluded souls fly to the giddy throng, and try by pleasures to drown thought, or by the fatal wine cup to forget in a momentary false excitement, the hard facts of every-day life. Let us at least meet our trials awake. Meet them in the power of the Crucified and His example. A great Italian bishop was noted for his calm resignation, and when asked how it was, replied, I look around and think how many are worse off than I am; I look down and think how soon it will all be over; I look up and think how happy it will be there! (W. H. Jones.)

Charms of solitude

Charles the Fifth, after a life spent in military exploits and the active and energetic prosecution of ambitious projects, resigned, as is well known, his crown, sated with its enjoyment. He left these words, as a testimony behind him: I have tasted more satisfaction in my solitude in one day than in all the triumphs of my former reign. The sincere study, profession, and practice of the Christian religion have in them such joy as is seldom found in courts and grandeur.

The loneliness of Christ

1. There are two kinds of solitude: that of insulation in space, and that of isolation of spirit.

(1) The first is simply separation by distance. This is not real solitude: for sympathy can people that with a crowd. The traveller is not alone when the faces which will greet him on his arrival seem to beam upon him as he trudges on–the solitary student is not alone when he feels that human hearts will respond to the truths which he is preparing to address to them.

(2) The other is loneliness of soul. There are times when hands touch ours, but only send an icy chill of unsympathizing indifference to the heart: when words pass from our lips, but only come back as an echo without reply: when the multitude throng and press us, and we cannot say, as Christ said, Somebody hath touched Me.

2. And there are two kinds of men who feel this last solitude.

(1) The men of self-reliance: who can go sternly through duty, and scarcely shrink let what will be crushed in them such men are invaluable in all those professions in which sensitive feeling would be a superfluity; they make iron commanders and surgeons, and statesmen who do not flinch for the dread of unpopularity. But mere self-dependence is weakness: and the conflict is terrible when a human sense of weakness is felt by such men. Jacob was alone when he slept in his way to Padan Aram, and Elijah in the wilderness. But the loneliness of the tender Jacob was very different from that of the stern Elijah. To Jacob the sympathy he yearned for was realized. A ladder raised from earth to heaven figured the possibility of communion between the spirit of man and the Spirit of God. In Elijahs case, the storm, the earthquake, and the fire did their convulsing work in the soul, before a still, small voice told him that he was not alone.

(2) The men who live in sympathy. These tremble at the thought of being alone, not from want of courage but from the intensity of their affections. They want not aid, nor even countenance: but only sympathy. And the trial comes to them when they are called upon to perform a duty on which the world looks coldly. It is to this latter class that we must look if we would understand the spirit of the text. The deep humanity of the soul of Christ was gifted with those finer sensibilities of affectionate nature which stand in need of sympathy. He who selected the gentle John to be His friend–who found solace in female society–who in the trial hour could not bear even to pray without the human presence, had nothing in Him of the hard, merely self-dependent character. Note, then


I.
THE LONELINESS OF CHRIST.

1. This loneliness was caused by the Divine elevation of His character.

(1) There is a second-rate greatness which the world can comprehend. Contrast the Son of Man and John the Baptist. Johns life had a rude, rugged goodness, on which was written, in characters which required no magnifying-glass to read, spiritual excellence. The world on the whole accepted him, and if he had not crossed the path of a weak prince and a revengeful woman, John might have finished his course with joy, recognized as irreproachable. Why did the world accept John and reject Christ? In physical nature, the naturalist finds no difficulty in comprehending the simple structure of the lowest organizations of animal life. But when he comes to study the complex anatomy of man, he has the labour of a lifetime before him. It is not difficult to master the constitution of a single country; but when you try to understand the universe, you find infinite appearances of contradiction. That which the structure of man is to the structure of the limpet: that which the universe is to a single country, the complex and boundless soul of Christ was to the souls of other men. Therefore, to the superficial observer, His life was a mass of inconsistencies and contradictions. And hence that acceptance which had marked the earlier stage of His career melted away. First the Pharisees took the alarm: then the Sadducees: then the Herodians: then the people. That was the most terrible of all: for the enmity of the upper classes is impotent; but when that cry of brute force is stirred from the deeps of society, the heart of mere earthly oak quails before it. The apostles, at all events, did quail. One denied: another betrayed: all deserted. They were scattered each to his own: and the Truth Himself was left alone in Pilates judgment-hall.

(2):Now learn from this a very important distinction. To feel solitary is no uncommon thing. In every place victims of diseased sensibility are to be found, and they might find a weakening satisfaction in observing a parallel between their own feelings and those of Jesus. But before that, be sure that it is the elevation of your character which severs you from your species. The world has small sympathy for Divine goodness: but it also has little for a great many other qualities which are disagreeable to it. You find yourself unpopular. Well? Is that because you are above the world offending it by your purity and unworldliness? Or is it that you are wrapped up in self–cold, disobliging, sentimental?

(3) The first time Christ felt this loneliness was when He was but twelve years old, amongst the doctors and asking them questions. High thoughts were in the Childs soul: larger views of duty and destiny. There is a moment in every true life–to some it comes very early–when the old routine of duty is not large enough–when the parental roof seems too low, because the Infinite above is arching over the soul–when the old formulas seem to be narrow, and they must either be thrown aside or else transformed into living and breathing realities–when the earthly fathers authority is being superseded by the claims of a Father in heaven.

2. That solitude was felt by Christ in trial. In the desert, in Pilates judgment-hall, in the garden, He was alone–and alone must every son of man meet his trial-hour. The individuality of the soul necessitates that. Each mans temptations are made up of a host of peculiarities which no other mind can measure. You are tried alone–alone you pass into the desert–alone you must bear and conquer in the agony–alone you must be sifted by the world. And there are trials more terrible. A temptation, in which the lower nature struggles for mastery, can be met by the whole united force of the spirit. But it is when obedience to a heavenly Father can be only paid by disobedience to an earthly one: or fidelity to duty can be only kept by infidelity to some entangling engagement: or the straight path must be taken over the misery of others: or the counsel of the affectionate friend must be met with a Get thee behind Me, Satan. It is then, when human advice is unavailable, that the soul feels what it is to be alone.

3. The Redeemers soul was alone in dying. The hour had come–they were all gone, and He was, as He predicted, left alone. All that is human drops from us in that hour. I shall die alone–yes, and alone you live. No atom in creation touches another–they only approach within a certain distance; then the attraction ceases, and an invisible something repels–they only seem to touch. No soul touches another soul except at one or two points; and those chiefly external. Death only realizes that which has been the fact all along. In the central deeps of our being we are alone.


II.
THE SPIRIT OR TEMPER OF THAT SOLITUDE.

1. Observe its grandeur. I am alone, yet not alone. There is a feeble and sentimental way in which we speak of the Man of sorrows. We turn to the cross and the loneliness to arouse compassion. You degrade that loneliness. Compassion for Him! Adore if you will; but no pity: let it draw out the firmer and manlier graces of the soul. Even in human things, the strength that is in a man can be only learnt when he is thrown upon his own resources and left alone. It is one thing to defend the truth when you know that your audience are already prepossessed, and another to hold it when met by unsympathizing suspicion, It is one thing to rush on to danger with the shouts of numbers, and another when the lonely captain of the sinking ship sees the last boatful disengage itself, and folds his arms to go down into the majesty of darkness, crushed, but not subdued. Such and greater far was the strength and majesty of the Saviours solitariness. It was not the trial of the lonely hermit. There is a certain pleasing melancholy in his life. But there are the forms of nature to speak to him, and he has not the positive opposition of mankind if he has the absence of actual sympathy. But the solitude of Christ was the solitude of a crowd. In that single human bosom dwelt the thought which was to be the germ of the worlds life: a thought unshared, misunderstood, or rejected.

2. Learn from these words self-reliance. Alone the Son of Man was content to be. He threw Himself on His own solitary thought: did not go down to meet the world; but waited, though it might be for ages, till the world should come round to Him. This is self-reliance–to believe that what is truest in you is true for all: to abide by that, and not be over-anxious to be understood, or sympathized with, certain that at last all must acknowledge the same, and that while you stand firm, the world will come round to you. There is a cowardice in this age which is not Christian. We shrink from the consequences of truth. We ask what men will think–what others will say. He who is calculating that will accomplish nothing. The Father–the Father who is with us and in us–what does He think?

3. Remark the humility of this loneliness. Had the Son of Man simply said, I can be alone, He would have said no more than any proud man can say. But when he added, because the Father is with Me, that independence assumed another character, and self-reliance became only another form of reliance upon God. Distinguish between genuine and spurious humility. There is a false humility which says, It is my own poor thought, and I must not trust it. Is not trust in self the great fault of our fallen nature? Very well. Now remember something else. There is a Spirit which beareth witness with our spirits–there is a Light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world. The thought of your mind perchance is the thought of God. To refuse to follow that may be to disown God. To take the judgment and conscience of other men to live by–where is the humility of that? From whence did their conscience and judgment come? Was the fountain from which they drew exhausted for you? (F. W. Robertson, M. A.)

Cure of loneliness

A poor woman living alone in a small cottage in the forest was asked if she did not feel the loneliness of the place. Oh no, was her reply, for Faith closes the door at night, and Mercy opens it in the morning. (Sunday at Home.)

Alone, yet not alone


I.
WE HAVE NO REASON TO SAY THAT IT IS WRONG TO RECOIL FROM BEING ALONE.

1. Adam was unfallen when God saw that it was not good for him to be alone. Sin has always a tendency to isolate–grace to draw out the social affections. Whoever thinks of solitude in heaven?

2. Therefore, it is nothing strange that Christ should place solitude among His sorrows. The desire which brought Him down here was a longing to have a people with Him. He could not be that grain of wheat which abideth alone. No wonder, then, that the first act of His public life was to secure companionship. And there is not a more touching trait of His whole life than that yearning after human sympathy, in the agony of Gethsemane. And, plainly, it was not for His disciples sake that He loved to take them about with Him everywhere. Even the transfiguration would have been incomplete without the three. And after the resurrection, the only thought on which we know that He dwelt with pleasure is, I will meet you in Galilee. And do you think that it was only for us He said it, I go to prepare a place for you, that where I am, there ye may be also? We can quite understand, therefore, that in the enumeration of His sorrows, such stress was laid upon the fact that He trod the wine-press alone;–and how that desertion of His friends struck so cold and so painfully, that He at once looked out for a refuge, Ye shall leave Me alone, and yet I am not alone, for the Father is with Me. And then, you remember, presently came that passage which was the most tremendous of all solitude My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me? I say, then, that we have the highest warrant to affirm that solitude is to be deprecated, and that one great end of our religion is to provide the exemption.


II.
THE GREATEST PART OF HIS LIFE EVERY MAN IS ALONE.

1. Count up the hours of life, and most of them are passed alone. Besides, there is a moral solitude far greater than physical. Who has not felt the deep solitude of a crowd?

2. The most dangerous, because the most subtle, temptations come to us when we are alone. An unoccupied state is sure to foster what is bad in us, and our lonely hours are generally our most unoccupied ones. It was in a solitude that even our Lord had His fiercest attacks. See how it is.

(1) You are by yourself–you look into yourself, and you get morbid. Things unreal take possession of your mind.

you become dreamy, unpractical–an easy prey to cankerous thought, delusion, doubt, and all unhealthy things

(2) Or, the mind, alone, having no present, goes back into the past–you re-live it–old sorrows, which were healed, open again–old sins, which were forgiven, rise up–you doubt whether you have ever been pardoned–and you are most unprofitably and injuriously wretched.

(3) Or, some future, which, when it really comes, will come minute by minute, now swells before you all in one black mass, casting its big, dark shadow upon the path, and you feel quite overwhelmed by it, simply because you are merely passive. As soon as you only become active the passive pain will be almost gone.


III.
IT IS OF IMMENSE IMPORTANCE TO HAVE A REMEDY FOR SOLITUDE. If Jesus Himself, in His perfect innocence, felt it–how much we? What shall we do?

1. Occupy solitude. Never allow sheer solitude for solitudes sake. Let there, for instance, be a distinct subject of thought. Solitude should always be preparatory to something which is to follow it–never an end, always a means. Jesus solitudes appear to have been always preparatory to work.

2. People your solitudes with realized presences; bring in the communion of saints. It is not necessary that they be actually there. And that will make solitude more than safe–holy, helpful.

3. Far more than both, feel the close presence of a living Saviour. Christians do not attach sufficient weight to the actual presence of Christ as a brother. Most minds are occupied with the death of Christ, but it is the few who think as they ought of the actual, living, present Christ. Then, where is solitude? What the Father was to Jesus, that, Jesus, or rather the Father in Jesus, is to you.


IV.
LIFE WILL BE A VERY DIFFERENT THING TO YOU FROM THE TIME THAT YOU HAVE LEARNT THIS SECURITY OF SOLITUDE.

1. Your own room will then be another place to you. To go up there will not be to go up to be alone. Rather, no other place upon this whole earth so sweetly full–no company so good, no fellowship so rich. It will not be dull, it will not be unwholesome, it will not be perilous, to be there. And it will be a very poor thing, in comparison, to go down from angels, and from saints, and from Jesus, to the common-places, the presences of life.

2. And yet, even in these common-places, the presences will be there.

3. And in things more testing still. If there be a desolating moment, it is when you are first called to do alone something which you have been wont to do with one with whom you can never do that thing again. The pleasant part is gone, for that dear one is gone. But those spirits are not gone–Jesus is not gone. It is a true word–you are alone; but it is truer still, not alone.

4. And presently you will have to die. And it is a very solitary thing to die. Those who love you may go with you to the brink, but they cannot cross with you. I shudder to think of the solitariness of the feeling of the death of the man of the world. But you will not be alone–never so tended, never so encompassed with the loving, the lovely, and the true–Alone, yet not alone, for the Father is with you. (J. Vaughan, M. A.)

Alone, yet not alone


I.
THE LONELINESS OF JESUS.

1. In the mystery of His person.

2. In the elevation of His Spirit.

3. In the intensity of His suffering.

4. In the character of His work.

5. In the extent of His influence.


II.
THE SOCIETY OF JESUS. The Father was with Christ

1. In personal union with His Godhead.

2. In active co-operation with His Divine manhood.

3. In the exercise of spiritual communion.

4. In the manifestation of paternal sympathy. (T. Whitelaw, D. D.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 32. The hour cometh] Ye shall shortly have need of all the faith ye profess: ye now believe me to be the Omniscient; but ye will find difficulty to maintain this faith when ye see me seized, condemned, and crucified as a malefactor. Yea, your faith will be then so shaken that ye shall run away, each striving to save himself at his own home, or among his kindred.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

Though you profess that now you do believe, you had need look to your faith; there is yet a trying time coming upon you, when your faith will waver, and you, who have been so long my followers, will leave me to shift for myself, and every one of you shift for yourselves: this came to pass presently after, Mat 26:56. Those who think they stand, had need take heed lest they fall; those who think their faith strongest, ought to be thinking with themselves, what they shall do, how they shall be able to stand, in a day of sharp trial. Many in a calm time appear to be professors and believers, who, when affliction and persecution ariseth for the gospels sake, will fall away, and leave Christ alone.

Yet (saith our Saviour) I am not alone, because the Father is with me. No man is alone who hath the presence of God with him. Christ knew that in all his sufferings he should have the presence and assistance of his heavenly Father.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

Behold the hour cometh, yea, is now come,…. The time is at hand, yea, it may, in a sense, be said to be already come, it was within an hour: and indeed the following prayer might be delivered in less than an hour’s time; when he went immediately into the garden, and was apprehended; or at least in a very little while it would come to pass,

that ye shall be scattered, every man to his own; to his own friends, relations, and acquaintance; to his own house and home; to his own country, Galilee, whither they all went, and to their trade of fishing again; see Joh 21:3; and so was fulfilled the prophecy in Zec 13:7;

and shall leave me alone; as they did in the hands of his enemies; for they all forsook him and fled, some one way, some another; though one or two of them, Peter and John, followed him at a distance; and all came together again, but not to Christ, until his resurrection from the dead.

And yet I am, not alone; he was not alone at this time; and his meaning is, that he should not be alone then when they should be scattered from him:

because the Father is with me; not only as the Son of God, by virtue of union to him, and as one with him; but as Mediator, in consequence of his promise to uphold him, and assist him in his human nature; and though he withdrew his gracious and comforting presence from him, he bearing the sins, and standing in the room and stead of his people, yet not his powerful and supporting presence.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

Cometh (). Futuristic present middle indicative of .

Yea, is come ( ). Explanatory use of and the perfect active indicative as in 12:23. The long-looked-for hour () is so close that it has virtually begun. The time for the arrest of Jesus is near. See also 17:1.

That (). See verse 2 for this same use of (not ) with .

Ye shall be scattered (). First aorist passive subjunctive of , used in 10:12 of sheep scampering from the wolf. Cf. Matt 12:30; Luke 11:33.

To his own ( ). “To his own home” as in John 1:11; John 19:27. So Appian VI. 23.

Shall leave (). Second aorist subjunctive of with .

And yet (). Clear case of in adversative sense, not just “and.”

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

That [] . See on ver. 2, and Joh 14:12. In the divine counsel the hour cometh that ye may be scattered, and may leave, etc.

To his own [ ] . To his own home. See on 1 11.

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1) “Behold, the hour cometh,” (idou erchetai hora) “Behold, there comes an hour,” a time that is at hand, Joh 17:1.

2) “Yea, is now come,” (kai eleluthen) “And it has arrived,” is upon you all. These words were spoken during or shortly after the last Passover our Lord ate with His disciples in the upper room.

3) “That ye shall be scattered, every man to his own,” (hina skorpisthete hekastos eis ta idia) “in order that (that will cause) each one of you all to be scattered to his own things,” as prophesied, Zec 13:7; Mat 26:31; Mat 26:56; To be scattered as the hireling deserts his sheep when the wolf approaches, Joh 10:12.

4) “And shall leave me alone:” (kame monon aphete) “And you all will leave me alone,” or you will all desert me, as even the Father also did for a moment, Mat 27:46; Mar 14:27; Mar 14:50. While alone, for a temporary time, while He vanquished sin, conquered death, hell, and the grave, bearing our sins in His body, on the accursed tree, Gal 3:13; 1Pe 2:24; Psa 22:3; Mat 27:46.

5) “And yet I am not alone,” (kai ouk eimi monos) “And (yet) I am (exist) not alone,” as Paul alone, was not alone, 2Ti 1:15; 2Ti 4:16-17; Heb 13:5.

6) “Because the Father is with me.” (hoti ho pater met’ mou estin) “Because the Father is (exists) with me,” right now and the Father’s being with Him was more than any or all who could be against Him, for He is “greater than all,” Joh 14:28.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

32. Yet I am not alone. This correction is added, in order to inform us that, when Christ is forsaken by men, he loses nothing of his dignity. For since his truth and his glory are founded on himself, and. do not depend on what the world believes, if it happen that he is forsaken by the whole world, still he is in no degree impaired, because he is God, and needs not any assistance from another.

Because my Father is with me. When he says that the Father will be with me, the meaning is, that God will be on his side, so that he will have no need to borrow anything from men. Whoever shall meditate on this in a proper manner will remain firm, though the whole world should be shaken, and the revolt of all men will not overturn his faith; for we do not render to God the honor which is due to him, if we are not satisfied with having God alone.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(32) Behold, the hour cometh, yea, is now come.Comp. Notes on Mat. 26:31; Mat. 26:56.

Every man to his own.Or, his own lodging in Jerusalem, which must be here intended. That is, as the margin renders it, to his own home. (Comp. Note on Joh. 1:11.)

And yet I am not alone, because the Father is with me.They would each flee to his own place of sojourn. He, too, though apparently left alone, had His own home in the presence of the Father, which was ever with Him. The fact of their leaving Him could not in truth have added to His sense of loneliness. He must, even when surrounded by them, have always been alone. The thoughts of His mind were so infinitely beyond them, that the true sympathy which binds souls in companionship could never have had place. And yet He was never alone, for His life was one of constant communion with the Father. (Comp. the consciousness of this in Joh. 8:29.) Once only do we find the vision of the Fathers presence eclipsed for a moment by the thick darkness of the worlds sin; but the wail of agony, My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me? (Mat. 27:46) is straightway followed by the assurance of His presence, Father, into Thy hands I commend My spirit (Luk. 23:46.)

Alone and not alone. It was so in the human life of our Lord; it is so in the life of His followers. There is a sense in which each one is alone; and there is a depth of being into which no human friend can ever enter. There is a loneliness which of itself would lead to despair, were it not that its very existence tells of and leads to the never-failing communion with God:

Who hath the Father and the Son
May be leftbut not alone.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

32. The hour cometh The hour of high faith is the proper time to prepare for danger. Jesus therefore seizes the present moment to warn them of their coming peril. Yet he assures them that abandonment by man is not abandonment by God the Father is with me.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Joh 16:32. Every man to his own, : To his own habitation and employment. Dr. Heylin renders it, Every man to take care of himself.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

32 Behold, the hour cometh, yea, is now come, that ye shall be scattered, every man to his own, and shall leave me alone: and yet I am not alone, because the Father is with me.

Ver. 32. Behold, the hour cometh, &c. ] So bladder-like is the soul, that filled with earthly vanities, though but wind, it grows great and swells in pride; but if pricked with the least pin of piercing grief, it shriveleth to nothing.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

32. ] See Mat 26:31 , to which same prophecy the reference here is.

., “qu antea propter Me reliquistis.” Bengel: see Luk 18:28 .

. ] and (not but: it is a pathetic use of the copulative, and a favourite one with St. John: cf., besides ref., ch. Joh 3:11 ; Joh 3:32 ; Joh 6:70 ; Joh 7:19 ; Joh 8:38 ; Joh 8:49 ; Joh 10:25 ; Joh 13:33 ; Joh 14:30 ; Joh 17:11 ; Joh 17:14 ; Joh 17:25 ) I am not alone: the Father can never leave the Son, even in the darkest hour of His human suffering: the apparent desertion implied in the cry “Why hast Thou forsaken me?” being perfectly consistent with this, see note, Mat 27:46 .

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

Behold. Greek. idou. App-133.

the hour = an hour (no art.) All the texts omit “now”.

shall be scattered = should be dispersed. Greek. skorpieo. Occurs elsewhere Joh 10:12. Mat 12:30. Luk 11:23. 2Co 9:9. A stronger word in Joh 11:52. Mat 26:31.

every man = each.

to = unto. Greek. App-104.

his own = his own (home). Greek. to idia. Compare Joh 1:11, where it means his own possessions.

and yet = and.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

32.] See Mat 26:31, to which same prophecy the reference here is.

., qu antea propter Me reliquistis. Bengel: see Luk 18:28.

.] and (not but: it is a pathetic use of the copulative, and a favourite one with St. John: cf., besides ref., ch. Joh 3:11; Joh 3:32; Joh 6:70; Joh 7:19; Joh 8:38; Joh 8:49; Joh 10:25; Joh 13:33; Joh 14:30; Joh 17:11; Joh 17:14; Joh 17:25) I am not alone: the Father can never leave the Son, even in the darkest hour of His human suffering:-the apparent desertion implied in the cry Why hast Thou forsaken me? being perfectly consistent with this, see note, Mat 27:46.

Fuente: The Greek Testament

Joh 16:32. , behold) The Saviour fortifies the faith of the disciples against the impending storm.- , to His own) which previously ye have left for My sake. The treachery of Judas, who had carried the purse, was added to the other greater causes of their being scattered.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

Joh 16:32

Joh 16:32

Behold, the hour cometh, yea, is come, that ye shall be scattered, every man to his own, and shall leave me alone:-He here presents the trials that they would be called upon to undergo by which their faith would be tested. They would forsake him-all of them leave him alone. The feeling of loneliness seems to creep over him.

and yet I am not alone, because the Father is with me.-He was not alone, for God never forsakes his children that are faithful to him in the darkest hour.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

the hour: Joh 4:21, Joh 4:23, Joh 5:25, Joh 5:28, Joh 12:23

that: Zec 13:7, Mat 26:31, Mat 26:56, Mar 14:27, Mar 14:50, Act 8:1, 2Ti 4:16, 2Ti 4:17

every: Joh 20:10

own: or, own home

yet: Joh 8:16, Joh 8:29, Joh 14:10, Joh 14:11, Isa 50:6-9

Reciprocal: Job 6:15 – My brethren Psa 22:11 – Be not Psa 27:10 – the Lord Psa 38:11 – lovers Psa 69:20 – but there Psa 91:15 – I will be Psa 94:17 – Unless Psa 142:5 – Thou art Isa 42:1 – whom I Isa 63:5 – looked Dan 10:8 – I was Joh 17:1 – the hour Joh 18:8 – let Joh 19:27 – his Act 2:25 – for Act 10:38 – for Act 21:6 – they

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

2

Every man to his own. The margin adds the word “home” to the pronoun, and Moffatts translation does the same. Jesus predicted that the apostles would desert him In his hour of trial, and Mar 14:50 states the fulfillment of the prediction. Leave me alone meant as far as the apostles were concerned Jesus would be alone, but he would still have the comfort of his Father.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Vv. 32 reassures the disciples as to the person of their Master; Joh 16:33 tranquillizes them for themselves. Everything that Jesus has said to them on this last evening should breathe into them a complete quietness, resting upon the foundation of the faith which they have in Him (Joh 14:1). No doubt, He could not conceal from them that they would have to sustain a struggle with the world (Joh 15:18 to Joh 16:4). But in the presence of the tribulations which this struggle will bring, it is necessary that their peace should take the character of assurance and become courage, .

There is an opposition between the two limiting terms: in me and in the world; the first designates the sphere from which peace is drawn; the other, the domain whence anguish arises. , I, brings out with force the unique personality of Him who, having already overcome for Himself, makes His victory that of His followers. Thevictory which Jesus has already gained is, above all, internal; He has resisted the attractions of the world and surmounted its terrors. But there is more: this moral victory is about to be realized externally in the consummation of the redemptive work, on the cross accepted in advance, which will be henceforth the cause and the monument of the world’s defeat. This victory will be continued by means of the Eleven, who will be the bearers of it here on earth.

Fuente: Godet Commentary (Luke, John, Romans and 1 Corinthians)

Verse 32

The event corresponded with this prediction, as recorded Matthew 26:56.

Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament

16:32 {10} Behold, the hour cometh, yea, is now come, that ye shall be scattered, every man to his own, and shall leave me alone: and yet I am not alone, because the Father is with me.

(10) Neither the wickedness of the world, neither the weakness of his own, can diminish anything of the virtue of Christ.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes