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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of John 11:9

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of John 11:9

Jesus answered, Are there not twelve hours in the day? If any man walk in the day, he stumbleth not, because he seeth the light of this world.

9. Are there not twelve hours in the day ] As so often, Christ gives no direct answer to the question asked, but a general principle, involving the answer to the question. Comp. Joh 2:6; Joh 2:19, Joh 3:5; Joh 3:10, Joh 4:13; Joh 4:21, Joh 6:32; Joh 6:52, Joh 8:7; Joh 8:25; Joh 8:54, Joh 10:25. The meaning seems to be, ‘Are there not twelve working-hours in which a man may labour without fear of stumbling? I have not yet reached the end of My working-day, and so can safely continue the work I came to do. The night cometh, when I can no longer work; but it has not yet come.’ Comp. Joh 9:4. Thus it is practically equivalent to ‘Mine hour is not yet come;’ it is still safe for Him to work: but the figure here adopted is of wider application, and contains a moral for the disciples and all Christians as well as an application to Christ. The expression throws no light on S. John’s method of reckoning time. See on Joh 19:14.

the light of this world ] The sun.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Twelve hours – The Jews divided the day from sunrise to sunset into twelve equal parts. A similar illustration our Saviour uses in Joh 9:4-5. See the notes at that place.

If any man walk – If any man travels. The illustration here is taken from a traveler. The conversation was respecting a journey into Judea, and our Lord, as was his custom, took the illustration from the case before him.

He stumbleth not – He is able, having light, to make his journey safely. He sees the obstacles or dangers and can avoid them.

The light of this world – The light by which the world is illuminated that is, the light of the sun.

In the night – In darkness he is unable to see danger or obstacles, and to avoid them. His journey is unsafe and perilous, or, in other words, it is not a proper time to travel.

No light in him – He sees no light. It is dark; his eyes admit no light within him to direct his way. This description is figurative, and it is difficult to fix the meaning. Probably the intention was the following:

  1. Jesus meant to say that there was an allotted or appointed time for him to live and do his Fathers will, represented here by the 12 hours of the day.
  2. Though his life was nearly spent, yet it was not entirely; a remnant of it was left.
  3. A traveler journeyed on until night. It was as proper for him to travel the twelfth hour as any other.
  4. So it was proper for Jesus to labor until the close. It was the proper time for him to work. The night of death was coming, and no work could then be done.
  5. God would defend him in this until the appointed time of his death. He had nothing to fear, therefore, in Judea from the Jews, until it was the will of God that he should die. He was safe in his hand, and he went fearlessly into the midst of his foes, trusting in him. This passage teaches us that we should be diligent to the end of life: fearless of enemies when we know that God requires us to labor, and confidently committing ourselves to Him who is able to shield us, and in whose hand, if we have a conscience void of offence, we are safe.



Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Joh 11:9-10

Are there not twelve hours in the day?

–What does this sentence mean here, following Joh 11:7-8? Why was it introduced? I do not know that we who are living easy and comfortable lives can quite solve that question. But many a patriot and confessor who has been concealing himself from the anger of those whom he wished to bless has learned its meaning and felt its support. If he had tried to rush forth into danger, merely in obedience to some instinct or passion of his own, he was walking in the night and was sure to stumble. If he heard a voice in his conscience bidding him go and do some work for God–go and aid some suffering friend–he would be walking in a track of light; it signified not what enemies might be awaiting him, what stones might be cast at him, he could move on fearlessly and safely. The sun was in the heavens–the stones would miss till his hour was come. If it was come, the sooner they struck the better. (F. D. Maurice, M. A.)

Twelve hours in the day


I.
THE PREDESTINATION OF LIFE. God has marked out beforehand the length of the life. This was true of the life of Christ. He was in daylight till the twelfth hour. He could not die. His time was not yet come. It is true of us. God knows exactly the length of our day, and therefore of our hour. The day shall run its course, whether the season be winter or summer, whether the hour be thirty minutes or sixty. This is a call to confidence. Be not afraid to go at the summons of duty, in spite of snare, terror, accident or infection. The day will have its twelve hours.


II.
THE COMPLETENESS OF LIFE. We speak of a child or young mans life as prematurely closed. Isaiah speaks of the longevity of the time when a child shall die hundred years old. Certainly there have been children whose little life has been well completed–their innocence and death testifying powerfully for Christ. Their day has had its twelve hours, though the constituent hour was less than a year. We must cast away the common measurement of time. Christs life was a short one, and how large a part was spent in preparation? No time is less wasted than that given to preparation. Christs three years of speech had in them the whole virtue, for the world, of two eternities. Christs thirty years of listening were not the prelude only, but the condition of the three. Each life, the shortest not least, is complete. Mans work depends not on his longevity. Many a young man sleeping in the churchyard sends forth the fragrance of a perpetual sanctity. Use well your time, longer or shorter, and the hours shall be twelve, and the component hour shall have its constituent moments sure.


III.
THE UNITY OF LIFE. We would fain divorce hour from hour, and never recognize their bearing upon each other and the day. And it is true that repentance severs one part of the day from another, and make old age–and therefore eternity–diverse from the boyhood. It is also true that a Christian does well to take his years, months, days, one by one and to live each as if it were the only one. Nevertheless, we cannot disguise the unity of this being. We may wish we had not done that wicked thing, fallen into that evil habit, but it is there: we cannot cut off the entail. God sees the day as one: and when He writes an epitaph He does so in one of two lines. He did that which was good. He did that which was evil–the identification is complete, the character one.


IV.
THE DISTRIBUTION OF LIFE. God sees it in its unity. He bids us see it in its manifoldness; in its variety of opportunity and capability of good. Where is the moment which might not contribute something? Economize. Give up some fragment to God. (Dean Vaughan.)

The twelve hours of the day; or, lifetime and lifes duty in their indissoluble unity


I.
THE CERTAINTY OF LIFE WITHIN THE BOUNDS OF DUTY.


II.
THE SACREDNESS OF DUTY WITHIN THE BOUNDS OF LIFE. (J. P.Lange, D. D.)

Life the golden opportunity


I.
THE WISDOM OF KNOWING OUR OPPORTUNITY. This chiefly depends on

1. Our walking.

2. Our working while it is light.


II.
THE DANGER OF NEGLECTING IT

1. For vain amusements.

2. In the eager pursuit of trifles. (R. Cecil, M. A.)

God takes care of His workers

The Rev. T. Charles had a remarkable escape in one of his journeys to Liverpool. His saddlebag was by mistake put into a different boat from that in which he intended to go. This made it necessary for him to change his boat, even after he had taken his seat in it. The boat in which he meant to go went to the bottom, and all in it were drowned. Thus did God in a wonderful way preserve His servant–immortal till his work was done. God had a great work for this His servant, and He supported and preserved him till it was completed.

The providential care of life

When I was stationed in Swanson, in the year 1836, I was appointed delegate to the district meeting held at St. Ives, Cornwall. One Captain Gribble offered me a passage in his vessel. I accepted the offer, and said, When are you going out? He replied, We have got our cargo, and shall go tomorrow if the wind is fair. I went to the dock on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday; the wind was still against him. He then advised me to take the packet to Bristol, as he said it was quite uncertain when he should be able to go to sea. I took the packet on the Thursday morning. We had a very rough passage; through mercy we arrived safe in Bristol next morning. I arrived at Hayle between one and two oclock on Sunday morning. I then walked to St. Ives, a distance of five miles. I went to Mr. Driffields. When he saw me he said, Is Joseph yet alive? I answered, Yes. He further said, We were informed you were coming with a sailing vessel, and it appears she is lost, for some of the wreck is come on shore. We have gone through the stationing and left you without a station. I was given to understand that on the morning I left for Bristol the vessel went out. The wind was fair, but after being a few hours at sea all went to the bottom, captain and crew. What a providence it appears that the vessel could not go out until I was gone! (J. Hibbs.)

The contemplated journey


I.
OPPOSED BY THE DISCIPLES as

1. Dangerous (Joh 11:8).

2. Unnecessary (Joh 11:12-13). Hence

3. Imprudent, if not also

4. Wrong.


II.
JUSTIFIED BY JESUS. As

1. Imperative, being undertaken at the call of His Father.

2. Safe, since He could not stumble in the path of duty.

3. Merciful, inasmuch as He went to comfort the sisters and raise Lazarus.

4. Profitable, even for those who were so strongly against it. (T. Whitelaw, D. D.)

Light and loyalty

The disciples were amazed when Jesus proposed to go to Bethany, and remonstrated with Him. Christ takes this opportunity of explaining the great principle on which He worked. I walk in Gods light which shines upon My path during the time He has fixed for My ministry. Wherever that light shines, I go, regardless of everything but it. Do you the same, My disciples. Your path of duty will be clear. Without that light you will be as men walking in the dark and meeting disaster. We are thus led up to the question of the simplicity of duty. Somehow duty has come to be to many a complicated matter. That it presents problems every one of us knows, but does the problem lie in the duty or in us? Do we not complicate the problem by adding factors of our own. The oculist says that there is a blind spot in every eye: possibly when we think duty obscure we have brought the duty into line with the blind spot. As a matter of precept, duty being a thing of universal obligation must be simple. To make it a matter of subtle casuistry or painful research would limit it. And men stumble none the less because of this simplicity. Christ does not put the blame of stumbling on the law or on the complication of duty. It is not the geological structure of the stone that makes men stumble, but darkness or blindness. And so morally. Our Lord asserts elsewhere that the lamp of the body is the eye: When thine eye is single thy whole body is full of light, etc. When a man sees two trees when there is only one, or prismatic colours in a house that is white, we do not blame the tree etc., but the mans vision, A sound moral vision recognizes duty under every shape. Hence the truth of our text is that the recognition of duty, and the practical solution of its problems, lie in the principle of loyalty to Christ. A Divinely enlightened conscience and an obedient will, not only push, but lead. See this illustrated here. Going to Bethany involved a question of duty for Christ. To one who had no thought but to do the Fathers will, the case was simple. But the disciples, in their natural timidity, put another element into the question, which complicated it–personal safety. If Jesus entertained the suggestion, He would have been diverted from the plain duty. A new question would have been raised which God had not raised. Gods commission said nothing about danger–only Go. If He meant to do right the decision presented no difficulty; if He meant to save Himself, He would have walked in darkness. Is not singleness of purpose an element of all heroism? Was there ever a great general whose thought was divided between victory and personal safety? The men who have moved society have seen nothing but the end to be won. When a physician enters on his profession, he does so with the knowledge that he must ignore contagion. That makes his duty very simple–to relieve disease wherever he finds it. The moment he begins to think about exposure to fever, etc., his usefulness is over. Luther at Worms had a terrible danger to face, but a very easy question to solve; but his inability to do anything but the one right thing (I can do no otherwise) carried the Reformation, and this singleness is the very essence of Christianity. Its first law is, treat self, as though it were not Follow Me. It is not always easy to follow Christ; but the way at least is plain. A greater difficulty arises when the question becomes one of compromising between Christ and self. The only way in which self can be adjusted to the Cross is by being nailed to it. Duty is a fixed fact. It does not adjust itself to us. There is a nebulous mass in the depths of space. The problem before the astronomer may be difficult to work out, but its nature is simple. He is to resolve that mist into its component stars. If he is bent on bringing the facts discovered by his telescope into harmony with some theory of his own, he complicates his task at once: or let the glass be cracked or the mirror dirty, and his observation only results in guess work. But, with an unprejudiced mind and a good telescope, his eye penetrates the veil and brings back tidings which enrich the records of science. So when men look at duty with loyal and obedient hearts, its lines come out sharply. Let self put a film over the spirit, duty remains unchanged, but the man sees only a mist. When the engineer decided that his railroad had to go through Mont Cenis, he had a difficult task but a simple one; and in addressing himself wholly to that solution of his problem, he at once got rid of a thousand questions as to other routes, etc. No one ever had so clear a perception of the hardness of His mission as Christ. And yet the closest study reveals not a shadow of hesitation. He goes to the Cross saying, The Scripture must be fulfilled. He comes back from the dead with, Thus it behoved Christ to suffer. His motto was, My meat is to do the will of Him that sent Me, etc. He admitted no question of stoning or crucifying, and hence it is that His life while it is the most tremendous tragedy in history is the most purely simple. Suppose duty costs popularity, etc., Christ does not promise that the man who walks in the light shall have an easy walk. He promises that he shall not stumble: but Christ did not stumble because He was crucified, nor Stephen because stoned, nor Paul because beheaded. The stumbling would have been in Christ accepting Satans offer, in Stephens keeping silence, in Paul making terms with Nero or the Jewish leader. Popularity, etc., won by evasion of duty are not gains.
Better that Christ should have gone than that the world should have lost the lesson of the Resurrection. Better all that agony than that the world should have missed a Saviour. But this steadfast light giving principle is not a mere matter of human resolve. Christ is in the soul as an inspiration and not merely before the eye as an example. And remember that though Christ in setting you on that well-lighted track of duty does not allow you to take account of the hardness, He takes account of it. You cannot live a life so hard that Christ has not lived a harder. His word is Follow Me. Do that and you cannot go wrong. (M. R. Vincent, D. D.)

If a man walk in the day, he stumbleth not

Oriental streets

are not as safe as Occidental streets, nor are Oriental roads as safe as Occidental roads. Setting aside all other differences, both streets and roads are in a chronic state of disrepair. The streets are narrow, and not too clean; the roads are often composed of nothing more than loose stones lying upon each other as chance sets them. The consequence is that it is a work of strategy to thread ones way through Oriental streets, avoiding at the same time the filth of the street and the crowding of burdened donkeys or camels, and a work of art to ride or walk over an Oriental road without coming occasionally to the ground, or having ones flesh torn by the thorns on either side. This is during the day; but at night the difficulty is increased a hundred fold; thus it is that if a man walk in the night, he stumbleth. Jesus felt that He was walking in the day, because He saw the danger, and knew how to avoid it. (S. S. Times.)

The walk of duty

It is a walk


I.
of LIGHT. Walk in the day. The man who, from proper motives and with a single eye, pursues his mission in life, moves in open day. No dark cloud shadows his path, no haze hangs over him, he knows what he is about. His course lies clearly before him, and he sees the goal


II.
Of SAFETY. Stumbleth not. He who moves within the bounds of duty makes no false steps, for the will of God enlightens him. But he who walks outside the limits of his vocation will err in what he does, since, not the will of God, but his own pleasure is his guide.


III.
THAT MUST BE PURSUED. Though Christ was warned of the probable consequences He felt that He had to go. (D. Thomas, D. D.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 9. Are there not twelve hours in the day?] The Jews, as well as most other nations, divided the day, from sun-rising to sun-setting, into twelve equal parts; but these parts, or hours, were longer or shorter, according to the different seasons of the year. See Clarke on Joh 1:39.

Our Lord alludes to the case of a traveller, who has to walk the whole day: the day points out the time of life-the night that of death. He has already used the same mode of speech, Joh 9:4: I must work the works of him that sent me, while it is day: the night cometh when no man can work. Here he refers to what the apostles had just said-The Jews were but just now going to stone thee. Are there not, said he, twelve hours in the day? I have not travelled these twelve hours yet-my last hour is not yet come; and the Jews, with all their malice and hatred, shall not be able to bring it a moment sooner than God has purposed. I am immortal till my work is done; and this, that I am now going to Bethany to perform, is a part of it. When all is completed, then their hour, and that of the power of darkness, shall commence. See Lu 22:53.

If any man walk in the day, he stumbleth not] A traveller should use the day to walk in, and not the night. During the day he has the sun, the light of this world: he sees his way, and does not stumble: but, if he walk in the night, he stumbleth, because there is no light in it, Joh 11:10; i.e. there is no sun above the horizon. The words , Joh 11:10, refer not to the man, but to the world, the sun, its light, not being above the horizon. Life is the time to fulfil the will of God, and to prepare for glory. Jesus is the light of the world; he that walks in his Spirit, and by his direction, cannot stumble – cannot fall into sin, nor be surprised by an unexpected death. But he who walks in the night, in the darkness of his own heart, and according to the maxims of this dark world, he stumbles-falls into sin, and at last falls into hell. Reader! do not dream of walking to heaven in the night of thy death. God has given thee the warning: receive it, and begin to live to him, and for eternity.

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

Look as in the day there are twelve hours, in which the sun shineth, and by giving its light directs men in their courses; so as they know how to guide their feet, and do not stumble, because they have the light of the sun, which God hath ordained, to direct men that walk up and down in the world.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

9. Jesus answered, Are there nottwelve hours in the day?(See on Joh9:4). Our Lord’s day had now reached its eleventh hour, andhaving till now “walked in the day,” He would not mistimethe remaining and more critical part of His work, which would be asfatal, He says, as omitting it altogether; for “if a man(so He speaks, putting Himself under the same great law of duty asall other menif a man) walk in the night, he stumbleth, becausethere is no light in him.”

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

Jesus answered, are there not twelve hours in the day?…. So the Jews reckoned, and so they commonly say a,

, “twelve hours are a day”, or a day consists of twelve hours, which they divided into four parts, each part consisting of three hours this was a matter well known, and Christ puts the question as such, it being what might be easily answered, and at once assented to:

if any man walk in the day: within any of the twelve hours, even in the last of them,

he stumbleth not, at any stone or stumbling block in the way,

because he seeth the light of this world; the sun in the horizon not being as yet set, by the light of which he sees what is before him, and avoids it; [See comments on Joh 8:12]. So our Lord intimates, that as yet it was day with him, his time of life was not expired; and so, as yet, it was a time of walking and working; nor did he fear any danger he was exposed to, or any snares that were laid for him, since he could not be hurt by any, nor his life taken from him before his time.

a T. Bab Sanhedrin, fol. 88. 2. Avoda Zara, fol. 3. 2. Vid. Philo. de Somniis, p. 1143.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

In the day ( ). Genitive of time, within the day, the twelve-hour day in contrast with night. The words of Jesus here illustrate what he had said in 9:4. It is not blind fatalism that Jesus proclaims, but the opposite of cowardice. He has full confidence in the Father s purpose about his “hour” which has not yet come. Jesus has courage to face his enemies again to do the Father’s will about Lazarus.

If a man walk in the day ( ). Condition of the third class, a conceived case and it applies to Jesus who walks in the full glare of noonday. See 8:12 for the contrast between walking in the light and in the dark.

He stumbleth not ( ). He does not cut (or bump) against this or that obstacle, for he can see. is to cut and pros, against.

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

Walk [] . Walk about, in the pursuit of his ordinary business. Wyc., wander.

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1 ) “Jesus answered,” (apekrithe lesous) “Jesus responded,” to them, to their anxiety over both His welfare and their own.

2) “Are there not twelve hours in the day?” (ouchi dodeka horai eisin tes hemeras) “Are there not twelve hours of the day?” Of the day-light when men are to work, to pursue livelihood, in spite of his environment and dangers in pursuit of his labors, Joh 9:4-5.

3) “If any man walketh in the day, he stumbleth not,” lean tis peripate en te hemera ou proskoptei) “If anyone walks around in the daylight hours, he does not stumble.” If he walks 1 ) First, at the proper time, while it is light, a time one is less likely to stumble, and 2) Second, while he yet has opportunity to choose and to serve. The time for our Lord’s doing good was while He had opportunity and men cried out to Him for help, Joh 12:35.

4) “Because he seeth the light of this world.” (hoti to phos tou kosmou toutou blepei) “Because he sees the light of this world,” of this world order or arrangement, the sun which lights the day, Gen 1:16. This is the natural order of a physical walk and daily service for one’s own good and that of his fellowman. The light of daytime, of this world order of service, is a parallel to Jesus Christ who was and is the true Light of the world, Joh 1:4-6.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

9. Are there not twelve hours in the day? This passage has been explained in various ways. Some have thought the meaning of these words to be, that men sometimes adopt a new and different resolution every hour. This is very far from Christ’s meaning; and indeed I would not have reckoned it worthy of being mentioned, had it not been that it has passed into a common proverb. Let us therefore be satisfied with the simple and natural meaning.

First, Christ borrows a comparison from Day and Night. For if any man perform a journey in the dark, we need not wonder if he frequently stumble, or go astray, or fall; but the light of the sun by day points out the road, so that there is no danger. Now the calling of God is like the light of day, which does not allow us to mistake our road or to stumble. Whoever, then, obeys the word of God, and undertakes nothing but according to his command, always has God to guide and direct him from heaven, and with this confidence he may safely and boldly pursue his journey. For, as we are informed,

Whosoever walketh in his ways hath angels to guard him, and, under their direction, is safe, so that he cannot strike his foot against a stone, (Psa 91:11.)

Relying on this protection, therefore, Christ advances boldly into Judea, without any dread of being stoned; for there is no danger of going astray, when God, performing the part of the sun, shines on us, and directs our course.

We are taught by these words, that whenever a man allows himself to be guided by his own suggestions, without the calling of God, his whole life is nothing else than a course of wandering and mistake; and that they who think themselves exceedingly wise, when they do not inquire at the mouth of God, and have not his Spirit to govern their actions, are blind men groping in the dark; that the only proper way is, to be fully assured of our divine calling, and to have always God before our eyes as our guide. (310) This rule of regulating our life well is followed by a confident expectation of a prosperous result, because it is impossible that God shall not govern successfully. And this knowledge is highly necessary to us; for believers can scarcely move a foot to follow him, but Satan shall immediately interpose a thousand obstructions, hold out a variety of dangers on every side, and contrive, in every possible way, to oppose their progress. But when the Lord invites us to go forward, by holding out, as it were, his lamp to us, we ought to go forward courageously, though many deaths besiege our path; for he never commands us to advance without at the same time adding a promise to encourage us, so that we may be fully convinced, that whatever we undertake agreeably to his command will have a good and prosperous issue. This is our chariot, and whoever betakes himself to it will never fail through weariness; and even though the obstacles were so formidable that we could not be conveyed through them by a chariot, yet, furnished with these wings, we shall always succeed, till we reach the goal. Not that believers never meet with any adversity, but because adverse occurrences are aids to their salvation.

It amounts to this, that the eyes of God will always be attentive to guard those who shall be attentive to his instructions. Hence we learn also that, whenever men overlook and disregard the word of God, and consequently indulge themselves foolishly, and undertake whatever they think right, the whole course of their life is accursed by God, and vengeance is always ready to punish their presumption and their blind passions. Again, Christ here divides the day into twelve hours, according to ancient custom; for though the days are longer in summer and shorter in winter, (311) yet they had always twelve hours of the day, and twelve of the night.

(310) “ Quand nous avons tousjours Dieu devant nos yeux pour nostre guide.”

(311) “ Combien que les jours soyent plus grands en este, et plus petits en hyver.”

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(9) Are there not twelve hours in the day?Or more exactly, Are not the hours of the day twelve? They had expressed their fears that danger and death would be the result of going into Juda. His answer would say that the darkness of the night which they dreaded could not come yet. The natural night would come not until its appointed hour, until the twelve hours of the day had run their course. The day of His life is marked out by limits no less sure. The night indeed cometh, but it is as yet full day, and in that day He and they must do the work which is appointed of the Father. (Comp. Joh. 11:6; and Notes on Joh. 2:4; Joh. 7:30; Joh. 8:20; Joh. 9:4; Joh. 12:27; Joh. 17:1.)

Incidentally these words bear on the question of St. Johns method of counting the hours of the day, and support the view which from other passages seems quite evident that he follows the ordinary Babylonian numeration. (Comp. Notes on Joh. 1:40; Joh. 4:6; Joh. 4:52; Joh. 19:14.)

Because he seeth the light of this worldi.e., the natural light of the sun. While the earth is illumined by it, men follow the course of their work without danger of stumbling. In the application to their own position, the truth holds good. The day of His work is illumined by the light of heaven, and for Him and them there is safety.

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

9. Twelve hours As precisely as the sun measures off the twelve hours, so does God mark out for him his exact time and mission; and clear as the world-light, the sun, over the path and the hours of that mission shines the divine light of duty. In that mission he is divinely safe; for death itself, being in the mission, would be true safety. A man is “immortal until his work is done.”

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

‘Jesus answered, “Are there not twelve hours in the day? If anyone walks in the day he does not stumble, because he sees the light of this world. But if anyone walks in the night, he stumbles, because the light is not in him”.’

Here He was basically saying that there is a time when it is right to act, even when it is dangerous to do so, as long as it is in accordance with God’s clear prompting. In His case the ‘daytime’ was still here (compare Joh 9:4) and it was not yet the twelfth hour, thus He could safely go forward and would not stumble because He was walking in His Father’s light.

But the thought is also being applied to mankind as a whole as a general principle. Those who know and follow Him as the light of the world (Joh 8:12) will not stumble (unless of course they allow darkness to come because they take their eyes off Him). They will be like those who walk during the light of day. But those who walk in the night, who walk in darkness because their eyes are not on the Light of the world, will stumble constantly because they walk in darkness. They have no light to guide.

There are times when it is day, when God has shown us the way and we can act without fear, and there are times when it is night, and we must act accordingly. In those times we must be cautious. In His case He knows that His timing is right, because He walks under guidance from the One Who is the light of this world, as He is. There are other times, He implies, when it is not right to act so, and only those who walk in darkness will do it. Foolhardiness is never spiritual.

‘The light of this world’ may here specifically refer to the sun. But even if it does so, in the spiritual application the One Who is Light (1Jn 1:5) is also in mind.

Thus we learn that there are times when it is right to act, and times when it is right not to act. Each of us needs to be sure that we make our decisions in accordance with His enlightening, but we must be careful that it is genuine enlightenment and not just a matter of following our own wishes and ideas. The emphasis is on the need to keep their eyes on the Light Who will guide them on their way.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

Joh 11:9-10. Jesus answered, &c. In answer to the fears and remonstrances of his disciples, Jesus replies, That as the hours of the day are appointed for the various works necessary to human life, and as he who travels in the daytime need not be afraid of stumbling, because he has the sun, the light of this world, to shew him the way; even so the manwho has a season allotted him for performing God’s works, and at the same time the light of the divine call requiring him to engage in them, need not be afraid of any danger to which he is exposed in the performance of them; God, whom he serves, being always ready to preserve him: but if any man undertakes God’s work at an improper season, or without a call, Joh 11:10 he may justly be afraid of the danger that he exposes himself to thereby. “By these words,” says Cocceius, “our Lord reminds his disciples, that he is the Light of the world, and that, as long as he is in the world, he must necessarily shine; and that there is no danger if they walk with him.”

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Joh 11:9-10 . The sense of the allegorical answer is this: “ The time appointed to me by God for working is not yet elapsed; as long as it lasts, no one can do anything to me; but when it shall have come to an end, I shall fall into the hands of my enemies , like him who walketh in the night, and who stumbleth, because he is without light.” In this way Jesus sets aside the anxiety of His disciples, on the one hand, by directing their attention to the fact that, as His time is not yet expired, He is safe from the apprehended dangers; and, on the other, by reminding them (Joh 11:10 ) that He must make use of the time apportioned to Him, before it come to an end. [72] So substantially Apollinaris ( , , , ), Ruperti (only partially), Jansen, Maldonatus, Corn.a Lapide, Wolf, Heumann, and several others; also Maier and B. Crusius; comp. Ewald and Hengstenberg. On individual points, note further: (1) is placed emphatically at the beginning, signifying that the day referred to is still running on , and that anxiety is still premature (not: only twelve hours; Bengel correctly remarks: “jam multa erat hora, sed tamen adhuc erat dies”). The supposition that Jesus spoke the words early in the morning, at sunrise (Godet, Gumlich), is as arbitrary as it is unnecessary. (2) . . is the light of the sun , so designated in harmony with the elevated tone which marks the entire saying; the words belong merely to the details of the picture, and are not intended to be specially interpreted (for example, of the guidance of the divine will, as Godet thinks, following older commentators). (3) Applying the figure to Jesus, night (Joh 11:10 ) commenced with the , Joh 17:1 (comp. Joh 12:27 ); the with its twelve hours was then over for Him, and, according to the divine decree, the in His path which, with the close of the twelfth hour, had become dark, must now follow, [73] in that He fell into the hands of His enemies; till then, however, , Joh 7:30 , Joh 8:20 . (4) The expression , which is also a detail not intended for interpretation, is not equivalent to: he has not , etc. (Ewald; it is also inadmissible to take this view of Psa 90:10 ), but is an outflow of the notion that, in the case of a man walking in the night, it is dark in him , i.e . his representation of his surroundings is dark and without light, so that he cannot discover his whereabouts in his consciousness of that which is round about him. Grotius: “in oculis ejus;” but the expression suggests the inner intuition and representation. (5) Substantially the same, and decisive for the view which the disciples would take, are the thought and figure in Joh 9:3 f.; hence also here neither is to be taken as an image of tempus opportunum (Morus, Rosenmller, Paulus, Kuinoel), nor of tempus importunum ; nor is it any more allowable to say, with Gumlich and Brckner (comp. Melanchthon, Beza, and Calvin), that . . is God , who shows the Son the way, so that this latter thus walks in the day , and His person and work remain unendangered ( [74] ); similarly Baeumlein; Lcke, on the other hand, rightly refers to the “ day’s work ” of Christ, which has its definite limit (its twelve hours); but then he explains of fulfilling the duties of His calling (comp. Melanchthon), which is always the way of safety, and takes as an image of unfaithfulness to one’s calling , which leads to destruction. In this way, however, two totally different meanings are assigned to the figurative term , the second of which is the more decidedly to be rejected, as the mention of twelve hours is evidence that the temporal explanation alone is correct. For this reason, further, we must reject not only the view taken by De Wette, who regards the day as the image of “ upright, innocent, clear action ,” the twelve hours, as the ways and means of action, and the night as the lack of prudence and singlemindedness; but also that of Luthardt: “He who keeps within the limits of his calling will not strike against anything, will not make false steps, for the light of the world, i.e . the will of God, gives him light; he, however, who passes beyond the limits of his calling will go wrong in his doings, seeing that he is guided, not by God’s will, but by his own pleasure.” Tholuck also diverges from the consistent carrying out of the temporal view; for, though understanding the twelve hours of the day of the fixed time of the vocation, he afterwards introduces the calling itself: “Whoso abides not by his calling will come to damage.” Comp. Schweizer, p. 106; also Lange, who combines several very different views. According to Chrysostom, Theophylact, and Euth. Zigabenus, the walking in the day denotes either a blameless walk , in which a man has no need to be afraid; or fellowship with Christ (so also Erasmus: “quamdiu vobis luceo, nihil est periculi; veniet nox, quando a me semoti conturbabimini.” [75] Vatablus, Clarius, Lampe, Neander). Both are incorrect, for the simple reason that the disciples had expressed concern, not for themselves , but for Christ , by their question in Joh 11:8 (Chrysostom and his followers arbitrarily remark that they had been more in anxiety, ); and because the former of these views would furnish no explanation of the mention of the hours , which is just the key to the figure. This objection holds good also against Hilgenfeld, Lehrbegr . p. 263, who brings out as the meaning of Jesus: He has the light absolutely in Himself, and for Him, therefore, no dark point can exist in His earthly course. On this view, moreover, Joh 11:10 remains without explanation. Olshausen, adopting the second view of Chrysostom, is prepared to accept an unhermeneutical double meaning of ; in the one case, mindful of His near brotherly relationship to men, Jesus regarded Himself as accomplishing His ordained day’s work; but, in the other case, He had in view His higher dignity as the spiritual enlightener , in the rays of whose brightness the disciples would have nothing to fear. [76] Comp. Bengel, who thinks that . . signifies the “providentia Patris respectu Jesu , et providentia Christi respectu fidelium .

[72] Not, as Godet interprets: that He dare not lengthen the working time appointed to Him by the divine will, that He may not venture to add to it as it were a thirteenth hour . Such a thought was totally foreign to the minds of the disciples in giving their warning. All that they desired was, that He should not shorten His life by exposing Himself to the threatening danger of death.

[73] The idea set forth is therefore not “the wish to be active beyond the ordained goal and limit of life ,” which would, indeed, be absurd (Tholuck’s objection); but to be set free of activity on the attainment of the ordained goal of life . When the twelfth hour has passed, night falls on the wanderer, and he stumbles.

[74] Ver. 10. is then explained by Brckner, after Mat 6:22 f., to mean that the eye, which has received the light, becomes itself a lamp, and so the whole man is illumined. But how could Jesus expect the disciples to understand so far-fetched an illusion? If such had been His meaning, He must have used, in agreement with Mat 6:23 , some such words as: .

[75] So in the Paraphr. But in the Annotat. he takes substantially our view: “Dies habet suas horas, nec is nostro arbitrio fit brevior aut longior; et ego tempus habeo praescriptum, quo debeam redimendi orbis negotium peragere, id Judaeorum malitia non potest anticipari: proinde nihil est, quod mihi timeatis.”

[76] Ebrard adopts Olshausen’s view in the following more definite shape: “The day has its determinate measured duration. If a man use the day as day, i.e. the time for working given him by God as a time of working , he needs to be in no fear that his working will bring him mischief, for the light of the mundane sun illumines him. But he who walks as though it were night, i.e. without working the will of God , would procure for himself eternal mischief, because he had not in him the light (in the absolute sense, Joh 1:5 ).” In this way the essential elements are read into the passage; and what a strange difference in the conceptions found in the same expressions! How could the disciples have possibly understood their Master!

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

9 Jesus answered, Are there not twelve hours in the day? If any man walk in the day, he stumbleth not, because he seeth the light of this world.

Ver. 9. Are there not twelve hours? ] q.d. Is there not an appointed time to man upon earth?Job 7:1Job 7:1 . Shall I not live out my stint? The Turks shun not the company of those that have the plague; but, pointing upon their foreheads, say, It was written there at their birth when they should die. (Blount’s Voyage into Levant.) A priest, indeed, might enter without danger into a leprous house, because he had a calling from God so to do. A man may follow God dryshod through the Red Sea. This our Saviour calls here “to walk in the day,” by an excellent and elegant similitude. But he that keeps not within God’s precincts may not look for his protection. I commend the charity, but I question the discretion, of Mr Stafford, public professor of divinity in Cambridge, who, hearing that a certain priest, called Sir Henry Conjuror (in King Henry VIII’s days), lay sore sick of the plague, was so moved with pity to the poor priest’s soul, that he came to him, exhorted, and so laboured him, that he would not leave him before he had converted him, and saw his conjuring books burnt before his face. Which being done, Mr Stafford went home, and immediately sickened, and shortly after most Christianly deceased. He might have, I confess, an extraordinary call to his work. But Zanchius somewhere maketh mention of a colleague of his in the ministry, that by the like means took his death, and much bewailed upon his death bed that he had not yielded to Zanchius advising him to the contrary.

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

9, 10. ] Our Lord’s answer is first general, Joh 11:9-10 , then particular, Joh 11:11 .

. ] See on ch. Joh 9:4 , where the same thought is expressed. But here it is carried further, ‘I have a fixed time during which to work, appointed me by my Father; during that time I fear no danger, I walk in His light, even as the traveller in the light of this world by day: and (by inference) ye too are safe, walking in this light, which light to you is Myself, walking with Me: whosoever walks without this light, without Me, without the light of the divine purpose illumining the path of duty, stumbles, because he has no light in him.’ In him, for ‘the light of the body is the eye,’ and the light must be in us in order to guide us. Shut it out by blinding the eyes, and we are in darkness. So too of spiritual light.

The twelve-hour division of the day was common among the Jews by this time, being probably borrowed from Babylon ( , Herod. ii. 109). As the day in Palestine varied in length from 14h. 12m. in summer to 9h. 48m. in winter, these hours must also have varied considerably in length at the different seasons (see Winer, Realwrt. art. ‘Tag’). I may remark that this verse refutes the fancy of Townson and others, also upheld by Bp. Wordsworth (who passes this verse without remark), that St. John adopts the so-called Asiatic method of reckoning time: see on ch. Joh 1:40 ; Joh 4:6 alli [154] .

[154] alli = some cursive mss.

Notice emphatically prefixed, implying (as Bengel, “jam multa erat hora, sed tamen adhuc erat dies”) that though the conflict was far spent, there were yet more hours of daylight, and it could not yet be said , ch. Joh 17:1 . Cf. ch. Joh 7:30 ; Joh 8:20 ; Joh 12:27 : and consult Meyer’s able and exhaustive note.

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

Joh 11:9 . , i.e. , each man’s day, or term of work, is a defined quantity. [ , Herod., ii. 109; and see Rawlinson’s Appendix to his Translation .] . So long as this day lasts, a man may go confidently forward to the duties that call him; “he does not stumble,” he can walk erect and straight on amid dangers, cf. Mat 4:6 , “because he sees the light of the world”; as the sun makes all causes of stumbling manifest and saves the walker from them, so the knowledge of God’s will, which is man’s moral light, guides him; and to follow it is his only safety.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

twelve hours; reckoning from sunrise to sunset, 6am to 6pm.

If. App-118.

any man. App-123.

seeth. App-133. the light, &c., i.e. the sun naturally, the Sun of righteousness metaphorically,

light. Greek. phos. App-130.

world, Greek. kosmos. App-129.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

9, 10.] Our Lords answer is first general, Joh 11:9-10,-then particular, Joh 11:11.

.] See on ch. Joh 9:4, where the same thought is expressed. But here it is carried further,-I have a fixed time during which to work, appointed me by my Father; during that time I fear no danger, I walk in His light, even as the traveller in the light of this world by day: and (by inference) ye too are safe, walking in this light, which light to you is Myself,-walking with Me:-whosoever walks without this light,-without Me,-without the light of the divine purpose illumining the path of duty, stumbles,-because he has no light in him. In him, for the light of the body is the eye, and the light must be in us in order to guide us. Shut it out by blinding the eyes, and we are in darkness. So too of spiritual light.

The twelve-hour division of the day was common among the Jews by this time, being probably borrowed from Babylon ( , Herod. ii. 109). As the day in Palestine varied in length from 14h. 12m. in summer to 9h. 48m. in winter, these hours must also have varied considerably in length at the different seasons (see Winer, Realwrt. art. Tag). I may remark that this verse refutes the fancy of Townson and others, also upheld by Bp. Wordsworth (who passes this verse without remark), that St. John adopts the so-called Asiatic method of reckoning time: see on ch. Joh 1:40; Joh 4:6 alli[154].

[154] alli = some cursive mss.

Notice emphatically prefixed, implying (as Bengel,-jam multa erat hora, sed tamen adhuc erat dies) that though the conflict was far spent, there were yet more hours of daylight, and it could not yet be said , ch. Joh 17:1. Cf. ch. Joh 7:30; Joh 8:20; Joh 12:27 : and consult Meyers able and exhaustive note.

Fuente: The Greek Testament

Joh 11:9. , hours) The course of Jesus was now far advanced; it was now a late hour in His day: but it was however still day.- ) of the day, or else in the day. The whole course of life, in all its parts, is compared to the day. The standing [state] is presupposed: one standing or state in one, another in another, regarded as the Subject; to walk is the Predicate.-, any one) Again used indefinitely. Comp. ch. Joh 9:4, I must work, etc.: the night cometh, when no man can work. This applies to the disciples, who were afraid, even for themselves.- , he does not stumble) in the midst of snares of the world lying in his way.- , the light of this world) beaming out from the sun. The providence of the Father, in respect to Jesus, is intimated; and the providence of Christ in respect to believers.-, He seeth) Understand, and there is light in him: and in the following verse understand, and he seeth not the light of this world. But in both instances the clause, which is expressed, is especially suited to its own passage respectively: for during the day, the light of the world, which each one sees, as it were absorbs the sense of the light which he has in himself. By night the light of the world, being not seen, increases the sense of his defect in the case of him who hath no light in himself.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

Joh 11:9

Joh 11:9

Jesus answered, Are there not twelve hours in the day? If a man walk in the day, he stumbleth not, because he seeth the light of this world.-To walk in the day here means to walk in the allotted time.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

Are: Joh 9:4, Luk 13:31-33

he stumbleth not: Joh 12:35, Pro 3:23, Jer 31:9

Reciprocal: Job 7:1 – Is there Job 33:28 – see Pro 4:12 – thou shalt Isa 59:10 – grope Mat 20:5 – sixth Luk 11:33 – may see Joh 4:6 – the sixth Joh 7:30 – but Joh 8:20 – and no Joh 13:1 – knew Act 27:24 – thou

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

LIFE AND WORK

Jesus answered, Are there not twelve hours in the day? If any man walk in the day, he stumbleth not, because he seeth the light of this world.

Joh 11:9

God has marked out beforehand the length of the life. This was true, first and foremost, of the life of Christ. His day had its twelve hours. In the way in which He walked, He was in daylight till the twelfth hour. It is true of us. God knows exactly the length of our day, and therefore of our hour. Is not this an encouragementa call to confidence?

I. The completeness of life.We must cast away the common measurement of time. Christs life on earth was a short life. His hour was but of the length of two or three years. God counts not, but weighs the hours. Christs three years of speech had in them the whole virtue for the world of two eternities. Christs thirty years of listening were not the prelude only, they were the condition of the three.

II. The unity of life.God sees the day as one; when God writes an epitaph He does so in one line, in one of two lines. He did that which was evil, or, He did that which was good. The identification is complete, and the character is one, not two, and not ambiguous. There were twelve hours in the mans day, but the day was one.

III. The distribution of life.God sees it in its unity; He bids us see it rather in its manifoldness; in its variety of opportunity and in its capacity and capability of good. Economisedetermine to economise time. Give up something, some fragment, some particle of one of these twelve hours, to God and Christ, to thy soul and eternity.

Dean Vaughan.

Illustration

Father, I know that all my life

Is portiond out for me;

And the changes that are sure to come

I do not fear to see:

But I ask thee for a present mind,

Intent on pleasing Thee.

I would not have the restless will

That hurries to and fro,

Seeking for some great thing to do,

Or secret thing to know;

I would be treated as a child,

And guided where I go.

So I ask Thee for the daily strength,

To none that ask denied,

And a mind to blend with outward life

While keeping at Thy side;

Content to fill a little space,

If Thou be glorified.

In a service which Thy love appoints

There are no bonds for me,

For my inmost heart is taught the truth

That makes Thy children free;

And a life of self-renouncing love

Is a life of liberty.

Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary

9

Jesus used the hours of literal daylight to illustrate the idea of acting according to the light of truth and right doing. It was necessary for him to go even into Judea, in order to perform the righteous deed of raising Lazarus in the presence of witnesses. That being a proper act, it would be like a man working while he had the light of day so that he could see what he was doing. It would follow, then, that the Father would see after the safety of his Son.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Joh 11:9-10. Jesus answered, Are there not twelve hours of the day? If a man walk in the day he stumbleth not, because he seeth the light of this world. But if a man walk in the night he stumbleth, because the light is not in him. This is the parable of chap. Joh 9:4 in an expanded form. By the light which God makes to shine in the world, He marks out twelve hours as the appointed time for walking, for active work; by the absence of this light, the night is marked out as the time when there can be no such work. So is the life of every man ordered by God. There is the appointed time for work, indicated by the Providence of God: in following the intimations of His will the man will not stumble, will take no false step. He will not shorten the proper time for walking; for throughout the appointed twelve hours the finger of God will show the appointed work. It is only when man misses the Divine guidance, doing what no providential teaching has marked out, that he stumbleth: then he may well stumble, for the light (which during the day shines round him and entering the eye becomes within him light for guidance) is no longer in him. As applied to Himself the words of Jesus mean: Following the will of God which leads Me into Judea again, I am walking in the light, I cannot stumble whatever may befell Me there.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

Verse 9

Are there not twelve hours, &c. The meaning seems to be that man may go forward in the discharge of his duty, at the proper time for its performance, safely and without fear. There is a light which will protect and guide him. It is when he attempts to walk in the night,–that is, to go where, or to do what, he ought not,–that he must expect to stumble and fall.

Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament

11:9 Jesus answered, Are there not {c} twelve hours in the day? If any man walk in the day, he stumbleth not, because he seeth the light of this world.

(c) All things happen in a proper way and are brought to pass in their due time.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

The Jews and the Romans commonly regarded the daylight hours as 12 and the nighttime hours as the other 12. Literally Jesus was referring to the daylight hours. Metaphorically the daylight hours represented the Father’s will. Jesus was safe as long as He did the Father’s will. For the disciples, as long as they continued to follow Jesus, the Light of the World, they would not stumble. Walking in the night pictures behaving without divine illumination or authorization. Living in the realm of darkness (i.e., evil) is dangerous (cf. 1Jn 1:6).

"When there is darkness in the soul, then we will stumble indeed." [Note: Morris, p. 481.]

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)