Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of John 13:20
Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that receiveth whomsoever I send receiveth me; and he that receiveth me receiveth him that sent me.
20. He that receiveth, &c.] The connexion of this saying, solemnly introduced with the double ‘verily,’ with what precedes is not easy to determine. The saying is one with which Christ had sent forth the Apostles in the first instance (Mat 10:40). It is recalled at the moment when one of them is being denounced for treachery. It was natural that such an end to such a mission should send Christ’s thoughts back to the beginning of it. Moreover He would warn them all from supposing that such a catastrophe either cancelled the mission or proved it to be worthless from the first. Of every one of them, even of Judas himself, the saying still held good, ‘he that receiveth whomsoever I send, receiveth Me.’ The unworthiness of the minister cannot annul the commission.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
He that receiveth … – This sentiment is found in the instructions which Jesus gave to his disciples in Mat 10:40. Why he repeats it at this time cannot now be known. It is certain that it is not closely connected with the subject of his conversation. Perhaps, however, it was to show how intimately united he, his Father, his apostles, and all who received them were. They who received them received him, and they who received him received God. So he who betrayed him, betrayed, for the same reason, God. Hence Judas, who was about to betray him, was also about to betray the cause of religion in the world, and to betray God and his cause. Everything pertaining to religion is connected together. A man cannot do dishonor to one of the institutions of religion without injuring all; he cannot dishonor its ministers or the Saviour without dishonoring God. And this shows that one prominent ground of the Saviours solicitude was that his Father might be honored, and one source of his deep grief at the treason of Judas was that it would bring injury upon the whole cause of religion in the world.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Verse 20. He that received whomsoever I send] See similar words, Mt 10:40, c. Our Lord spoke this to comfort his disciples: he showed them that, although they should be rejected by many, they would be received by several and that whoever received them should reap the utmost benefit by it.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
See Poole on “Mat 10:24“, the words of which place are but here repeated; either to commend to them brotherly love, and offices of love, which he had before recommended to them under the notion of washing one anothers feet; or else to comfort his disciples, who might think that this treacherous villany of Judas would make them odious to the whole world: No, saith our Saviour, you are my messengers, persons sent by me; I will provide for you, there shall be those who will receive you. And I declare to all the world to encourage them, that I shall take their receiving of you as kindly as if they received me, and it shall turn to the same account, and that is all one as if they had received my Father himself, for he sent me. Some think that by these words Christ aggravates the sin of Judas, as being committed against the Father as well as against Christ; and a most treacherous failure as to the duty of an apostle, or one dignified so much as to be sent out by Christ.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
20. He that receiveth whomsoever Isend, receiveth me, &c.(See on Mt10:40). The connection here seems to be that despite the dishonordone to Him by Judas, and similar treatment awaiting themselves, theywere to be cheered by the assurance that their office, even as Hisown, was divine.
Joh13:21-30. THE TRAITORINDICATEDHELEAVES THE SUPPERROOM.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Verily, verily, I say unto you,…. You may assure yourselves of the truth of what I am going to say, and which I say for your comfort and encouragement:
he that receiveth whomsoever I send, receiveth me, and he that receiveth me, receiveth him that sent me; I have sent you in my name to preach the Gospel; you are my ambassadors, and you will be honourably received by many; and which I shall regard and take notice of, and esteem, as though they had received me; even as my Father has sent me into this world, as a Saviour and Redeemer, a prophet, priest, and King; and as many as have received me, are looked upon by my Father, as having received him: in short, such as cordially receive and embrace the ministers of the Gospel, receive Christ, in whose name they come, and whom they preach; and such who receive Christ, as preached and held forth in the everlasting Gospel, receive the Father of Christ; and partake of his love, grace, and kindness, shown forth in the mission and gift of Christ to them: Christ, as Mediator, represented his Father that sent him; and the ministers of Christ represent him; so that what is done to them, either in a way of reception or rejection, he takes as done to himself: it is a common saying among the Jews c,
, “that the messenger of a man is as himself”.
c T Bab. Beracot, fol. 34. 2. Kiddushin, fol. 41. 9. & 42. 1. & 43. 1. Bava Metzia, fol. 96. 1.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Whomsoever I send ( ). More precisely, “If I send any one” (third-class condition, = and , indefinite pronoun accusative case, object of , first aorist active subjunctive of , to send). This use of or (if any one) is very much like the indefinite relative and (or ), but the idiom is different. In Mr 8:34f. we have both and while in Joh 14:13f. we find and (Robertson, Grammar, p. 956).
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
1 ) “Verily, verily, I say unto you,” (pisteuete hoti ego eimi) “Truly, truly, I tell you,” as a solemn and serious matter I assure you all.
2) “He that receiveth whomsoever I send receiveth me;- (ho lambanon an tina pempsa eme lambanei) “The one who receives whoever I send, he receives me;” He who receives my witness, my lightbearers, or my ambassadors of Redemption and service, receives me, Act 1:8; Mat 5:15-16; 2Co 5:20.
3) “And he that receiveth me,” (ho de eme lambanon) “Then the one who receives me,” as his Savior and Lord, Joh 1:12; as the one whom the Father sent, gave for mankind, Joh 1:14; Joh 3:16-17; Gal 4:4-5.
4) “Receiveth him that sent me.” (lambanei ton pempsanta me) “He receives the one who sent me,” that is, he receives my heavenly Father, Joh 10:27-29; Mar 9:37; Luk 9:48.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
20. Verily, verily, I tell you. In these words either the Evangelist relates a discourse on a different subject, and in a broken and imperfect state, or, Christ intended to meet the offense which was likely to arise from the crime of Judas; for the Evangelists do not always exhibit the discourses of Christ in unbroken succession, but sometimes throw together, in heaps, a variety of statements. It is more probable, however, that Christ intended to provide against this scandal. There is too good evidence that we are very ready to be wounded by bad examples; for, in consequence of this, the revolt of one man inflicts a deadly wound on two hundred others, while the steadiness of ten or twenty pious men hardly edifies a single individual. On this account, while Christ was placing such a monster before the eyes of his disciples, it was also necessary that he should stretch out his hand to them, lest, struck by the novelty, they should fall back. Nor was it only on their account that he said this, but he also consulted the advantage of those who should come after; for, otherwise, the remembrance of Judas might, even at the present day:, do us grievous injury. When the devil cannot estrange us from Christ by hatred of his doctrine, he excites either dislike or contempt of the ministers themselves.
Now this admonition of Christ shows that it is unreasonable that the impiety of any whose conduct is wicked or unbecoming their office, should at all diminish the apostolical authority. The reason is, we ought to contemplate God, the Author of the ministry, in whom, certainly, we find nothing which we have a right to despise; and next, we ought to contemplate Christ, who, having been appointed by the Father to be the only Teacher, speaks by his apostles. Whoever, then, does not deign to receive the ministers of the Gospel, rejects Christ in them, and rejects God in Christ.
The Papists act a foolish and ridiculous part, when they endeavor to obtain this applause for themselves, in order exhibit their tyranny. For, in the first place, they adorn themselves with begged and borrowed feathers, having no resemblance to the apostles of Christ; and, secondly, granting that they are apostles, nothing was farther from Christ’s intention, in this passage, than to transfer his own right to men; for what else is it to receive those whom Christ sends, but to give place to them, that they may fulfill the office which has been committed to them?
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(20) He that receiveth whomsoever I send receiveth me.The thoughts presented to their minds in the preceding verses are(1) their mission as His servants; (2) the betrayal by one of their own number; (3) the announcement of this beforehand that in the event it may be a confirmation of their faith. They are to go forth, then, and to be content if their path is as that which their Master has trodden. They are not to be disheartened by treachery even in their midst, for this He had foreseen. The words spoken when they were called to be Apostles still hold true. Their honour and encouragement is in the fact that they are Apostles from Him, as He is an Apostle from the Father. This truth is one of those solemn utterances on which He would have them dwell, and is therefore introduced by Verily, verily. (Comp. Note on Joh. 1:51.) For the words, which are exactly the same as those of the first commission, comp. Note on Mat. 10:40.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
20. Receiveth whomsoever I send, receiveth me The fulfilment of my prediction, in the treason of Judas, proves that your commission is from the Son of God; and the truth remains sure, that he who receiveth you whom I send, receiveth the Son of God; and receiveth the Father who sent him.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘When Jesus had spoken thus he was troubled in spirit and testified saying, “I emphatically inform you that one of you will betray me”.’
Jesus now confirms that he knew at this point that Judas had made his final decision. That he had hardened his heart and was now beyond helping. But this was not something that was easy for Jesus to accept. He had clearly loved Judas and felt deeply betrayed. Thus His spirit was troubled within Him, and this forced out of Him the anguished words ‘one of you will betray me’. The plain truth could be held back no longer.
Betrayals, however, are of many different kinds, and there would not have dawned on the disciples either the nature of the betrayal, the closeness timewise of its occurrence, nor its dark consequences. They did not know what we know. Indeed we learn from the other Gospels that each thought that it might be him. They were thinking in terms of a slip up (like that of Peter later) rather than of a catastrophe.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Joh 13:20 . And for the furtherance and confirmation of this your fidelity in the faith, which, in spite of the treason arising from your midst, must not vacillate, I say to you, that ye may confidently go forward to meet your calling as my ambassadors (Joh 20:21 ). The high and blessed position of my ambassadors remains so unimpaired, that whoever accepts them accepts me , etc. The more, however, that Jesus could not but apprehend a disheartening impression from the treason on the rest of the disciples, the more earnestly ( , .) does He introduce this encouragement. Comp. Calvin: Christ would “ offendiculo mederi ;” and Grotius: “ostendit ministeria ipsis injuncta non caritura suis solatiis .” The antithesis of the treason to the dignity of the apostolic circle (Hilgenfeld) He certainly does not mean to assert, so self-evident was this antithesis. But neither do the words serve to confirm the ., (Ebrard); to this the first half of the verse is not appropriate, in which, indeed, Godet, without any justification, would wish to give to the simple the limiting sense: He among you, who is really my ambassador. Further: to join Joh 13:20 with Joh 13:16-17 (Lampe, Storr, Klee, Maier, Hengstenberg, comp. Brckner) is an arbitrary construction, which Kuinoel aggravates by explaining the words as a gloss from Mat 10:40 , added to Joh 13:16 , and which subsequently entered the text in the wrong place, as Lcke also has revived the suspicion of a gloss (from Luk 9:48 ). The absence of connection, employed by Strauss as an argument against the originality, is external, but not in the sequence of the thought itself; and besides, the emotion and agitation of Jesus are here to be taken into consideration. Only in view of the manifest identity of the saying with that of Mat 10:40 , we are not to explain it in an essentially different sense (Luthardt explains of the sending of those needing the ministry of love to the disciples). But to drag in here the dispute about rank, which Luk 22:24 ff. places after the supper (Baeumlein), is groundless, and of no use in the way of explanation.
NOTE.
The story of the feet-washing, Joh 13:1-20 , after 13 retschneider, Fritzsche, and Strauss had rejected it as a mythical invention, whilst Weisse had recognised only individual portions in it as genuine, has been justly defended by Schweizer, p. 164 ff., in conformity with its stamp of truth and originality, which throughout indicates the eye-witness; in opposition to which, Baur can only recognise a free formation out of synoptical material (see on Joh 13:2-5 ) in the service of the idea, as also Hilgenfeld, comp. Scholten. The non-mention of the occurrence in the Synoptics is explained from the fact that with them the situation is quite different, and the main point is the institution of the Supper.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
20 Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that receiveth whomsoever I send receiveth me; and he that receiveth me receiveth him that sent me.
Ver. 20. Verily, verily I say, &c. ] Here our Saviour seems to go on where he left, Joh 13:17 , that between being a digression. Digressions, saith one, are not always and absolutely unlawful. (Bifield on the Colos.) God’s Spirit sometimes draws aside the doctrine to satisfy some soul, which the preacher knows not; and sparingly used, it quickeneth the attention. But God may force it, yet man may not frame it; and it is a most happy ability to speak punctually, directly to the point.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
20. ] See Mat 10:40 . The connexion is very difficult, and variously set down.
It has been generally supposed (Euthym [175] , &c.) that the words were to comfort the Apostles for the disgrace of their order by Judas, or in prospect of their future labours. But then would not . have been expressed by ? Another view is to refer back to Joh 13:16-17 , and suppose the connexion to have been broken by the allusion to Judas. But is this likely, in a discourse of our Lord? I rather believe that the saying sets forth the dignity of that office from which Judas was about to fall: q. d. ‘not only was he in close intercourse with Me ( Joh 13:18 ), but invested with an ambassadorship for Me, and in Me, for the Father; and yet he will lift up his heel against Me.’ And the consideration of this dignity in all its privileges, as contrasted with the sad announcement just to be made, leads on to the . of the next verse.
[175] Euthymius Zigabenus, 1116
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Joh 13:20 . But lest this announcement should weaken their confidence in one another and in their own call to the Apostolate (“probabile est voluisse Christum offendiculo mederi”. Calvin) He hastens to add: [ better than ]. He gives the assurance that those whom He sends as His apostles will be identified with Himself and with God.
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
20.] See Mat 10:40. The connexion is very difficult, and variously set down.
It has been generally supposed (Euthym[175], &c.) that the words were to comfort the Apostles for the disgrace of their order by Judas, or in prospect of their future labours. But then would not . have been expressed by ? Another view is to refer back to Joh 13:16-17, and suppose the connexion to have been broken by the allusion to Judas. But is this likely, in a discourse of our Lord? I rather believe that the saying sets forth the dignity of that office from which Judas was about to fall: q. d. not only was he in close intercourse with Me (Joh 13:18), but invested with an ambassadorship for Me, and in Me, for the Father; and yet he will lift up his heel against Me. And the consideration of this dignity in all its privileges, as contrasted with the sad announcement just to be made, leads on to the . of the next verse.
[175] Euthymius Zigabenus, 1116
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Joh 13:20. , , verily, verily) Jesus, after having imbued His disciples, in Joh 13:1 and following verses, with His own disposition, and His own purity, with a view to their sanctification, now also graces them with His own authority. He who has beautiful [] feet, Joh 13:5 [as were the disciples feet, when washed by Jesus]-Rom 10:15, How beautiful () are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace-and who humbles himself-Joh 13:14, Ye ought to wash one anothers feet; Mat 18:4-5, Whosoever shall humble himself as this little child, the same is greatest in the kingdom of heaven; and whoso shall receive one such little child in My name receiveth Me,-the same [and he alone] can act as an ambassador of Christ, Joh 13:16, [for such is Christs own character] The servant is not greater than his Lord.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Joh 13:20
Joh 13:20
Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that receiveth whomsoever I send receiveth me; and he that receiveth me receiveth him that sent me.-In connection with the assertion of his authority he tells them that those he might send out would go clothed with his authority as he was clothed with the authority of him who sent him, and the treatment given them and their message would be received as done to himself. [Those who received the apostles not only received the messengers of Christ, but Christ himself. To receive Christ would be to receive the Father who sent him.]
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
He: Joh 12:44-48, Mat 10:40-42, Mat 25:40, Mar 9:37, Luk 9:48, Luk 10:16, Gal 4:14, Col 2:6, 1Th 4:8
Reciprocal: Exo 16:8 – but against Num 16:11 – against 1Ki 13:4 – Lay hold 2Ki 5:11 – went away 2Ch 20:20 – believe his Mal 2:7 – the messenger Mat 5:18 – verily Mat 10:14 – whosoever Mat 13:37 – is Mat 18:5 – receiveth Luk 10:8 – and Joh 1:51 – Verily Joh 20:21 – as Act 10:22 – and to Rom 14:1 – receive Phi 2:29 – Receive Heb 6:10 – For 1Jo 4:6 – he that knoweth
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
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This verse teaches the relation between God, his Son and the apostles. They all are so connected in the divine plan, that no man can either accept or reject either part of the group, without doing the same thing to the others. Jesus taught this same great truth in Mat 10:40, which was just after selecting his 12 apostles and was giving them their “first commission.”
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Joh 13:20. Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that receiveth whomsoever I send receiveth me; and he that receiveth me receiveth him that sent me. The difficulty of tracing the connection of these words with the rest of our Lords discourse at this time has been felt by all commentators. Let us observe that they are introduced by Verily, verily, and that we are thus taken back to Joh 13:16 with the expectation that the thought here will closely correspond, although in a deepened form, to the thought there. There, however, the distinct reference had been to that work of lowly love which in the form of a servant Jesus had just performed for His disciples. What, therefore, He had done for them, they are now to do for one another, and for the world. Laying aside all thought of earthly preeminence, seeking only the glory of God and not their own, they are to go out, like their Master, in the form of a servant, and in a spirit of self-sacrificing love like His to be His representatives to men. As they do so, they will experience the same reception as He had done. Some will receive them,that is, will not merely view with favour their general work, but will accept them when they come, and because they come, to them in the same spirit as that which Jesus had displayed in the act which He had just performed towards them. Others, it is implied, will reject them; will accept indeed the outward service, the external rite; but, yielding to the evil suggestions of Satan, and so proving themselves his children instead of the children of God, will cast away from them the precious truth of which the service and the rite were only the symbolical expression. Men will thus divide themselves into two classes which will take up towards the apostles doing the work of Jesus the same position as that which the eleven on the one hand, and Judas on the other, had now taken up towards Jesus Himself. It is important to keep this thought of Judas as well as of the others prominently in view in the verses before us. Just as Joh 13:1; Joh 13:3 constitute a parallel to Joh 13:19, and there is One behind Jesus who is received when Jesus is received (Joh 13:20), so Joh 13:2 constitutes a parallel to the implied thought of Judas, and there is one behind the traitor whose children the rejectors of Jesus, as He acts in the apostles, show themselves to be. Nor is this all; for, while the thought of which we speak binds the whole passage, Joh 13:1-20, into one, it also explains the apparently sudden transition to the powerful emotions stirred in the Redeemers breast by the thought of Judas at Joh 13:21, as well as the emphatic Now of Joh 13:31,now, when the last who would resist that true glory which consists in self-sacrificing love has been expelled. The last clause of Joh 13:20 is explained by chap. Joh 1:12.
It is desirable to pause here for a moment, and to ask as to the real meaning of the wonderful scene, the details of which we have been considering. It is not a mere lesson of humility. The lesson is far deeper. It is the completing act of that great work of self-sacrificing love in which Jesus was engaged. He even includes in the thought of it the thought of the crucifixion now so near; and, as then He shall depart unto the Father, He affords now the most touching, the culminating, illustration of the fact that the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister. That is the very essence of His glory, a glory so different from that of the world, so different even from that upon which the thoughts of His disciples were yet fixed. Therefore He humbles Himself anew. Laying aside His glory He takes up His cross, not that He may justify disciples who are already His, who are clean, but that He may bring them ever and again to Himself the source of all true spiritual nourishment, and may wash away any fresh stains of defilement which they have contracted in their work in the world.
That is His part, What is ours? It springs from the consideration that, exalted in glory, He really labours and suffers no more. His disciples take His place and carry on His work, constantly leading one another back to Him, and washing away those weaknesses of faith, those defects of love, which their work in the world brings with it. Thus they fill up what is behind of the sufferings of Christ for His bodys sake, which is the Church (Col 1:24); and it is thus only that, suffering with Him, they shall at last be glorified with Him (Joh 13:8) in His glory.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Lest his apostles should think that, for the treachery of one of them, they should all become odious and abominable to the world, our Saviour encourages and gives them an assurance, that there should be those that should receive them, and that would take it as kindly as if they received himself; He that receiveth you, receiveth me.
Learn hence, That it is a sweet encouragement to the ministers of Christ unto a faithful discharge of their duty, that Christ and the Father account that respect paid to the minsters of the gospel, is paid to themselves: and on the contrary, that all the contempt cast upon them, reflects upon themselves: He that receiveth you receiveth me: and he that receiveth me, receiveth him that sent me.
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
Ver. 20. Verily, verily, I say unto you: He that receives him whom I shall send, receives me, and he that receives me, receives him that sent me.
The relation between this saying and those which precede is so far from clear that Kuinoel and Lucke proposed to consider this verse as a gloss derived from Mat 10:40. Meyer andHengstenberg think that, in the presence of the treachery of Judas, Jesus wished to encourage His apostles by reminding them of the greatness of their mission. Baumlein says: A fragment from a larger whole, to which perhaps the institution of the Holy Supper belonged. Luthardt and Keil place this saying in connection with the washing of the feet; the disciples must learn from Jesus to render the same service to those whom He shall send to them. But, as we have seen, the meaning of the act of washing was altogether different, and this saying is too far separated from that Acts Vv18, 19, are a simple digression occasioned by the contrast between the fate of Judas and the happiness of the faithful disciples (Joh 13:17). Joh 13:20 is immediately connected with the idea of this happiness declared in Joh 13:16-17. The one sent by Jesus, humble and faithful, who serves like Him, bears with him his Master, and, in His Master, God Himself. Jesus had just said: The servant is not greater than the Master; He now seems to say: And he is not less great than He. To receive him is, consequently, to receive in him Jesus, and in Jesus God Himself; comp. Mat 18:4-5, and the parallels. In Luk 22:29-30, Jesus, after having said: Behold, I am among you as he that serves, adds: I give you the kingdom as my Father has given it to me. To give the kingdom, in its true spiritual formis it not to bear God in oneself and communicate Him to the one who receives you? This saying, therefore, accords perfectly, as to its meaning, with our Joh 13:20.
Bretschneider and Strauss regarded this story of the washing of the feet as a legendary creation which emanated from the consciousness of the Church. But, as Baur observed with respect to the resurrection of Lazarus, if such a fictitious story had been the product of the Christian consciousness and had been circulated in the Church, it could not have failed to appear also in the Synoptics. Baur therefore regards this incident as consciously invented by the evangelist to serve the moral idea. But it is difficult to explain in this way the production of so simple and life-like a scene, and especially the composition of the inimitable conversation between Jesus and Peter. EvenSchweizer has admirably brought out the stamp of historical truthfulness impressed upon this whole story. Keimthinks that Jesus would not on this evening have come so directly into collision with the feeling of the disciples. But it was a matter of inculcating upon them ineffaceably the spirit of His work and of their future mission; and this was the last moment for doing this. The omission of this incident in the Synoptics is made an objection.
Probably the institution of the Lord’s Supper, that fact of capital importance for the Church, eclipsed this one in the oral tradition relative to this last meal. Hilgenfeld surmises that the evangelist meant to substitute this narrative, imagined by him, for that of the institution of the Lord’s Supper which he designedly omitted (Einl., p. 711), as too distinctly recalling the Jewish Paschal supper. But what result could be attained by this means in the second century, when the Lord’s Supper was celebrated throughout the whole Church, unless that of rendering his Gospel liable to suspicion? The discourse directed against false greatness, which is added by Luke to the narrative of the supper, naturally implies a fact of this kind. There was nothing to prevent the author from placing the two stories in juxtaposition. The better known story would have confirmed the one which was less known. It is very evident that John desired to rescue from oblivion what the tradition had neglected, and that he omitted what was sufficiently well known and what had no particular connection with the principal aim of his work.
Fuente: Godet Commentary (Luke, John, Romans and 1 Corinthians)
Another strong asseveration underlined the statement that followed. In view of Jesus’ claim to be the "I am," the disciples needed to appreciate that they enjoyed an intimate relationship with Jesus as His messengers. This relationship was similar to the one that Jesus enjoyed with His Father (cf. Joh 5:19). Jesus was preparing them for the Great Commission (Joh 20:21; cf. Joh 13:16). He was also warning Judas of the greatness of the sin that he anticipated committing.