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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of John 11:46

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of John 11:46

But some of them went their ways to the Pharisees, and told them what things Jesus had done.

Some of them … – We see here the different effect which the word and works of God will have on different individuals. Some are converted and others are hardened; yet the evidence of this miracle was as clear to the one as the other. But they would not be convinced.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Verse 46. But some of them went their ways] Astonishing! Some that had seen even this miracle steeled their hearts against it; and not only so, but conspired the destruction of this most humane, amiable, and glorious Saviour! Those who obstinately resist the truth of God are capable of every thing that is base, perfidious, and cruel.

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

These Jews had the same means for believing the others had; they had heard the same words from Christ, they had seen the same miracle wrought by Christ. Whence is it that any of the other Jews believed? These, instead of believing, run to the Pharisees to accuse him. Can any account be given of this, unless from the freedom of Divine grace, showing mercy where God will show mercy? Though possibly the former wickedness, of these Jews was the cause of Gods not giving that grace to them which he gave to others.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

But some of them went their way to the Pharisees,…. At Jerusalem, who were members of the sanhedrim; so far were some of them from receiving any advantage by this miracle, that they were the more hardened, and filled with malice and envy to Christ, and made the best of their way to acquaint his most inveterate enemies:

and told them what things Jesus had done; at Bethany; not to soften their minds, and bring them to entertain a good opinion of him, but to irritate them, and put them upon schemes to destroy him; thus even miracles, as well as the doctrines of the Gospel, are to some the savour of death unto death, whilst to others the savour of life unto life.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

Went away to the Pharisees ( ). Second aorist active indicative of . This “some” () did who were deeply impressed and yet who did not have the courage to break away from the rabbis without consulting them. It was a crisis for the Sanhedrin.

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

Some of them. Not of the Jews who had come to Mary, but some of the Jews, some perhaps who had joined the crowd from curiosity.

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1 ) “But some of them,” (tines de eks auton) “However certain ones of them,” still blinded by prejudice, or fearful of publicly professing Him, loving the praise of men and their social and religious synagogue ties more than God, Joh 12:42-43.

2) “Went their ways to the Pharisees,” (apelthon pros tous Pharisaious) “Went away directly to the Pharisees,” to those who despised Jesus Christ, and had threatened to exclude any person from the synagogue who confessed He was the Christ, the Messiah, or Savior of Deu 18:15-19; Joh 9:22; Joh 9:34; Joh 16:22.

3) “And told them what things Jesus had done.” (kai eipan autois ha epoiesen lesous) “And related to them what Jesus had done,” Joh 5:15, of His weeping, His orders that the stone be taken away from Lazarus’ tomb, of His prayer in addressing God as His Father, of His calling Lazarus to come forth, of Lazarus’ response, of His orders that the graveclothes be removed, and that he was a live again, out there with his sisters, Martha and Mary, Joh 11:34-44.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

46. But some of them went away to the Pharisees. In those who accuse Christ we behold detestable ingratitude, or rather horrible rage, from which we infer how blind and mad is their impiety. The resurrection of Lazarus ought undoubtedly to have softened even hearts of stone; but there is no work of God which impiety will not infect and corrupt by the bitterness of its poison. So then, before men can profit by miracles, their hearts must be purified; for they who have no fear of God, and no reverence for him, though they saw heaven and earth mingled, will never cease to reject sound doctrine through obstinate ingratitude. Thus you will see in the present day many enemies of the Gospel, like fanatics, fighting with the open and visible hand of God. And yet they demand miracles from us, but it is for no other purpose than to show that, in stubborn resistance, they are monsters of men. As to the report being carried to the Pharisees rather than to any others, (327) it is because, in proportion to their hypocrisy, they were more fierce in opposing the Gospel. For the same reason he soon afterwards makes express mention of them, when he relates that the council was assembled. They were indeed a part of the priests, but are specially named by the Evangelist, because they served the purpose of bellows to kindle the rage of the whole council

(327) “ Plustost qu’a quelques autres.”

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

EXPLANATORY AND CRITICAL NOTES

Joh. 11:46. But some of them, etc.It is possible to misjudge their motives; but in view of Joh. 19:22 and Joh. 10:31 their action can hardly be viewed as friendly.

Joh. 11:48. The Romans, etc.If Christ were to be raised to the position of leader of the people the jealous Roman government might take away the last vestige of their power. They feared temporal loss and incurred eternal, and did not even escape the temporal (Augustine). Place.Their position probably as ecclesiastical rulers of the Jewish people. Thus both such political and religious privileges as they possessed might be endangered, they thought.

Joh. 11:49. Caiaphas.Joseph Caiaphas, son-in-law of Annas, who had been deprived of the priesthood by Valerius Gratus (Josephus, Ant., 18). To conciliate him the members of his family were elected in turn to the office. That same year.I.e. that memorable year.

Joh. 11:50. Caiaphas was politically an opportunist, and an unscrupulous one to boot. Justice, human life, he little regarded where his interests and those of his class were concerned. Expediency must rule.

Joh. 11:51. Prophesied.Like Balaam (Numbers 24).

Joh. 11:53. Then from that day, etc.The Pharisees had now overcome their last scruples, and united for evil with the sceptical Sadducees.

Joh. 11:54. Jesus therefore, etc.Ephraim is said by Robinson to be near Bethel; and he identifies it with Ephron (2Ch. 13:19), and this Ephron with Ophrah (Jdg. 18:23).

Joh. 11:55. Purify.2Ch. 30:16-20; Act. 21:24.

Joh. 11:56-57. Then sought they.The simple country folk would have heard Jesus gladly; and the commandment of the chief priests and Pharisees was no doubt given with the intention of making our Lord appear to be one unworthy of their regard.

MAIN HOMILETICS OF THE PARAGRAPH.Joh. 11:47-57

The unconscious prophecy of Caiaphas.The wonderful miracle at Bethany could not remain hid. Many of those who had seen it believed. Some of them, however, although they could not doubt the evidence of their senses in the matter of the miracle, appear not to have been drawn more closely to Christ. These went to the Pharisees with the news of the miracle and of the fact that many had believed on the Saviour. It does not seem necessary to seek for either a good or a bad motive in their action. They went with that eagerness to bear news, especially to such as will welcome it, which seems characteristic of some people. The tidings those men brought threw the dominant party into a state of perturbation. A crisis had arrived; and Pharisee and Sadducee were joined in an unholy league against Gods holy child, Jesus.

I. The perplexity of the Jewish leaders in council.

1. The opening scene in the council of Christs enemies reveals the unholy conspirators in a state of pitiful perplexity. They cannot deny Christs miracles. They see that if He continues His course a large following will gather around Him, which by ordinary methods they will be unable to control.

2. And then, in spite of all their proud boasts about their freedom (Joh. 8:33), they have to acknowledge the dominant power of Rome. They fear that powerfear that, if Jesus attracts a large band of followers, the Roman governor may step in to disperse it, and may tell them, the present religious rulers of the people, that, being incapable, apparently, of exerting any proper authority, they must in every department give up the reins of power.

3. This, no doubt, influenced some. But many of them must have known that the kingdom Christ spoke of setting up was no earthly dominion. There was another influence at the bottom of all this bitter enmity against Jesus. He had put the Sadducees more than once to silence. And this last miracle struck at one of the fundamental tenets of their sect, that the spirit of man is an emanation of the Deity, and after death returns to Him, so that there can be no resurrection of the body. Our Lords rebuke of this sect made them especially bitter, and indeed the leaders in the plot against Jesus.
4. While the council was in perplexity, and the more law-abiding no doubt shrinking from extreme measures, a man unscrupulous and able brought all to a speedy decision. Caiaphas, the high priest, owed his position to the intervention of the Roman governor, Valerius Gratus, and thus was interested in preventing anything which would arouse the jealousy of Rome. He evidently had sat silent in the council whilst the members were blindly and confusedly dubitating, with cynical scorn expressed in his look. At last he intervened, rating the council for their indecision and weakness, and impressing on them his idea as to what their line of action should be.

II. The counsel of Caiaphas.

1. He interpreted the desires of the majority of his colleagues which they themselves were afraid to give expression to, far less to carry into execution. His counsel was one of expediency pure and simple. Justice, righteousness, truth, were nothing to him.
2. The present danger must be averted by some means or other, if the position of the Jewish rulers, both toward the people and in relation to the Roman power, was to be maintained. If this Jesus continued to work and gain adherents as He had been doing, then farewell to their authority over the people as teachers and administrators of their lawfarewell also, perhaps, to the limited power they still possessed under Rome. Therefore said this bold and evil man, Ye know nothing at all, nor consider that it is expedient for us, etc. (Joh. 11:50). That was his decision: Remove this man by death, and your difficulties vanish.

3. A simple cutting of the knot, Caiaphas! No question as to the antecedents of this Jesus, as to the manner and substance of His teaching, as to the truth of His mighty works, as to whether He has encouraged any feeling of disloyalty among His followers toward the reigning powers. No! simply: This man stands in our way; remove Him, and we shall be able to advance: He seems to endanger our authority; let Him die, and we shall stand secure. It is a counsel which some would count worldly-wise, but its inspiration is from beneath, not from above. What is necessary is right; Necessity knows no law; The end justifies the means: such are Caiaphas counsels.

4. Swayed by this dominant mind, even those who had qualms of conscience seem to have yielded to this evil counsel (Joh. 11:53). How far had these formal adherents to the law of Moses fallen below its standard of justice between man and man! how far below those Roman conquerors whom they hated, and who prided themselves justly on the protection which their laws afforded to the citizens of the Roman State in all quarters of the world! Caiaphas must bow before the heathen who wrote, Fiat justitia, ruat clum.

5. And let thy counsel, Caiaphas, appear successful for the time: will it prove so in the end? Has ever true good come from unrighteousness? God, it is true, may and does bring good out of evil,

From seeming evil still educing good,

And better thence again.

Thomson.

But will it be for good to those who do the unrighteous deed, carry out the unrighteous plan? Never!

III. The unconscious prophecy of Caiaphas.

1. He was high priest. And even though one who was unworthy occupied the office, the office itself had a theocratic dignity, and served a divine purpose. And here God made use of the office. The high priest, who year by year entered into the Holiest of all, not without blood, which he offered for himself and the errors of the people (Heb. 9:7), is here led unwittingly to prophesy concerning the one offering which was to be made not only for the Jewish nation, but for all the children of God scattered abroad, who were thus to be brought into unity (Joh. 10:16).

2. Man proposes, but God disposes. Caiaphas and his fellow-councillors thought that by getting rid of Jesus they might preserve the small remnant of authority they possessed, and through it might yet regain their national power. In this view he appealed to the better part of the council and the national party, who may even yet have dreamed that Jesus might have some Messianic message for them, and many of whom believed Him to be a prophet. But the appeal of Caiaphas prevailed over their better feelings.

3. And yet by the divine guidance this evil counsel resulted in the true good of the spiritual Israel, in a wider blessing than any mere restitution of the Jewish nation, in the state in which it then was, would have been. It would result in the blessed unity of all peoples, which later Judaism had failed to pray and labour for (Joh. 12:32; Psalms 67; 1Jn. 2:2).

4. But although God could and did bring blessing to all men by the carrying out of the evil counsel of Caiaphas, no blessing, rather the reverse, would come on those who planned and carried it out. These men ostensibly based their action on the danger of the Romans interfering or taking away what power remained to them, etc. (Joh. 11:48). They thought to avert this danger by an unrighteous action. But from the moment they carried out their designs that which they feared began to come upon them.

5. The Sadducees sought to crush One who had brought their errors home to them, and had thus given opportunity for triumph to their opponents (Mat. 22:34). But lo! when He had been crucified, in place of One who taught the resurrection of the dead there arose multitudes who proclaimed the resurrection of that same Jesus whom they had crucified, and preached the Resurrection with amazing power and results (Act. 4:2; Act. 23:9).

6. And in the end the power of the Jewish rulers, their temple, their city, and the nation itself, passed away amid blood and fire. Unrighteousness may triumph for a time, yet in the end it shall not prevail.

Lessons.

1. Righteousness is the only safe principle to guide the activity both of governments and individuals. Such merely worldly-wise, unjust, and tyrannical modes of action as that of Caiaphas and all his kind will result only in disaster to those who adopt them. Unrighteousness carries within it the elements of its own punishment and final ruin here and hereafter. The Christian rule of action is:

Perish policy and cunning!

Perish all that fears the light!

Whether losing, whether winning,

Trust in God and do the right.

MacLeod.

2. What has been planned by evil men can in Gods hand be turned to good. He that sits in heaven laughs at their designs; and whilst they go on and often perish in their wickedness, He bends their actions to subserve His own eternal purposes.

ILLUSTRATION

Joh. 11:50. Hypocritical excuses for crime.The real ground of opposition was hatred of the light; the ostensible ground was patriotism, public zeal, loyalty, far-sighted policy. And such is life. The motive in which a deed of sin is done is not the motive which a man allows to others or whispers to himself. Listen to the criminal receiving sentence, and the cause of condemnation is not the enormity of the crime, but the injustice of the countrys law. Hear the man of disorderly life, whom society has expelled from her bosom, and the cause of the expulsion is not his profligacy, but the false slander which has misrepresented him. Take his own account of the matter, and he is innocent, injured, pure. For there are names so tender, and so full of fond endearment, with which this world sugars over its dark guilt towards God with a crust of superficial whiteness, that the sin, on which eighteen centuries have looked back appalled, was, to the doers of that sin, nothing atrocious, but respectable, defensible, nay even, under the circumstances, necessary.F. W. Robertson.

Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell

(46) But some of them went their ways to the Phariseesi.e., necessarily, some of those who had been with Mary, and had seen the things which Jesus did, and had believed. But why did they then go and tell the Pharisees? It is contrary to their position as believers to think that they did this as informers against Jesus. What they have seen has carried conviction to their own minds, and they report it to the Pharisees, either as a proof that He really was the Messiah, or in any case to demand from them a judgment on the facts which they report.

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

46 But some of them went their ways to the Pharisees, and told them what things Jesus had done.

Ver. 46. But some of them, &c. ] Lo, reprobates will not believe, though one rose from the dead to them.

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

46. ] Meyer, with his usual philological acumen, takes pains to set right the understanding of this. In the last verse, it is not , but : thus identifying the with those that came: ‘many to wit, those that came .’ All these (see a similar case in ch. Joh 8:30 ff.). Then, , viz. the , and , went, &c. The (see on Joh 11:37 ) certainly shews that this was done with a hostile intent: not in doubt as to the miracle, any more than in the case of the blind man, ch. 9, but with a view to stir up the rulers yet more against Him. This Evangelist is very simple, and at the same time very consistent, in his use of particles: almost throughout his Gospel the great subject, the manifestation of the Glory of Christ, is carried onward by , whereas as generally prefaces the development of the antagonist manifestation of hatred and rejection of Him. If it seem strange that this hostile step should be taken by , we at least find a parallel in the passage above cited, ch. Joh 8:30 ff.

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

Joh 11:46 . But of this number [it may be “of the Jews” generally, and not of those who had been at Bethany] some went away to the Pharisees and told them, His recognised enemies, what He had done. Whether they did this in good faith or not does not appear.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

But some. These were probably temple spies,

went, &a. = went off.

Pharisees. See App-120.

told = “informed”.

what things = the thing which, as in Joh 11:45. So LT Tr. WH.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

46.] Meyer, with his usual philological acumen, takes pains to set right the understanding of this. In the last verse, it is not , but : thus identifying the with those that came: many to wit, those that came. All these (see a similar case in ch. Joh 8:30 ff.). Then, , viz. the , and , went, &c. The (see on Joh 11:37) certainly shews that this was done with a hostile intent: not in doubt as to the miracle, any more than in the case of the blind man, ch. 9, but with a view to stir up the rulers yet more against Him. This Evangelist is very simple, and at the same time very consistent, in his use of particles: almost throughout his Gospel the great subject, the manifestation of the Glory of Christ, is carried onward by , whereas as generally prefaces the development of the antagonist manifestation of hatred and rejection of Him. If it seem strange that this hostile step should be taken by , we at least find a parallel in the passage above cited, ch. Joh 8:30 ff.

Fuente: The Greek Testament

Joh 11:46. , departed [went their ways]) as aliens to Him.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

Joh 11:46

Joh 11:46

But some of them went away to the Pharisees, and told them the things which Jesus had done.-The facts were told the Pharisees doubtless to see what explanation they would give of the occurrence. Many then as now exercise no faith of their own until their leaders tell them what to believe. The Pharisees themselves, instead of being softened in their feelings toward him by this manifestation of the presence of God with him, were hardened, and took counsel to kill him. “So from that day forth they took counsel that they might put him to death. Jesus therefore walked no more openly among the Jews, but departed thence into the country near to the wilderness, into a city called Ephraim; and there he tarried with the disciples. (Joh 11:53-54). This shows how much the fruits borne by the gospel depend upon the condition of the heart of him who hears it. It is to the one a savor from death unto death; to the other a savor from life unto life. While faith rests on testimony, testimony will not produce faith in all hearts alike. Some will not believe, though one arose from the dead. Much of unbelief arises from an evil heart.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

Joh 5:15, Joh 5:16, Joh 9:13, Joh 12:37, Luk 16:30, Luk 16:31, Act 5:25

Reciprocal: Jer 38:4 – thus Joh 12:17 – people

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

6

While many of the Jews believed, some of them did not. And of that class, some went to the Pharisees in the spirit of talebearers and reported the event of the resurrection of Lazarus.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Joh 11:46. But some of them went away to the Pharisees, and told them what things Jesus had done. It is impossible, we think, that what is here related can have been done with friendly motives, or from a mere sense of duty to men whose office made them spiritual guides of the people. The analogy of many passages in which John similarly records diverging opinions makes it plain that the giving of this information to the Pharisees was an act of hostility to Jesus. If so, the word them at the beginning of the verse must refer to the Jews in general, not to those who are described in the preceding verse. Some of the Jews may have been found amongst the multitude which, as we know, stood round (Joh 11:42), having no connection with the mourning of the sisters, and therefore not included in the description of Joh 11:45. At this period of our Lords history the Pharisees have as a body declared against Him; to this large and powerful sect, therefore, the news of the event is brought.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

11:46 {6} But some of them went their ways to the Pharisees, and told them what things Jesus had done.

(6) The last aspect of hard and ironlike stubbornness is to proclaim open war against God, and yet it does not cease to make a pretence both of godliness and of the profit of the nation.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes