Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of John 14:3
And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am, [there] ye may be also.
3. And if I go ] The ‘if’ does not here imply doubt any more than ‘when’ would have done: but we have ‘if’ and not ‘when’ because it is the result of the departure and not the date of it that is emphasized (see on Joh 12:32).
I will come again, and receive ] Literally, I am coming again and I will receive (see on Joh 1:11 and Joh 19:16). There is no doubt about the meaning of the going away; but the coming again may have various meanings, and apparently not always the same one throughout this discourse; either the Resurrection, or the gift of the Paraclete, or the death of individuals, or the presence of Christ in his Church, or the Second Advent at the last day. The last seems to be the meaning here (comp. Joh 6:39-40).
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Verse 3. And if I go] And when I shall have gone and prepared a place for you – opened the kingdom of an eternal glory for your reception, and for the reception of all that shall die in the faith, I will come again, after my resurrection, and give you the fullest assurances of this state of blessedness; and confirm you in the faith, by my grace and the effusion of my Spirit. Dr. Lightfoot thinks, and with great probability too, that there is an allusion here to Nu 10:33: And the ark of the Lord went before therm to search out a resting place for them.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
The particle if in this place denotes no uncertainty of the thing whereof he had before assured them; but in this place hath either the force of although, or after that: When, or after that, I have died, ascended, and by all these acts, as also by my intercession, shall have made places in Heaven fully ready for you, I will in the last day return again, as Judge of the quick and the dead, and take you up into heaven, 1Th 4:16,17; that you may be made partakers of my glory, Joh 17:22. This is called, Rom 8:17, a being glorified together with him; and elsewhere, a reigning with him. So as this is a third argument by which our Lord comforteth his disciples as to their trouble conceived for the want of His bodily presence with them, from the certainty of his return to them, and the end and consequent of his return: the end was to receive them to himself; the consequent, their eternal abiding with Christ where he was.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
3. I will come again and receive youunto myselfstrictly, at His Personal appearing; but ina secondary and comforting sense, to each individually. Mark againthe claim made:to come again to receive His people to Himself,that where He is there they may be also. He thinks it oughtto be enough to be assured that they shall be where He is and in Hiskeeping.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And if I go and prepare a place for you,…. Seeing I am going to prepare, and will prepare a place for you, of the truth of which you may be fully assured:
I will come again; either by death or in person a second time, here on earth:
and receive you unto myself; I will take you up with me to heaven; I will receive you into glory;
that where I am there you may be also: and behold my glory, and be for ever with me, and never part more.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
If I go ( ). Third-class condition ( and first aorist passive subjunctive of ).
And prepare ( ). Same condition and first aorist active subjunctive of the same verb .
I come again ( ). Futuristic present middle, definite promise of the second coming of Christ.
And will receive you unto myself ( ). Future middle of . Literally, “And I shall take you along (–) to my own home” (cf. 13:36). This blessed promise is fulfilled in death for all believers who die before the Second Coming. Jesus comes for us then also.
That where I am there ye may be also ( ). Purpose clause with and present active subjunctive of . This the purpose of the departure and the return of Christ. And this is heaven for the believer to be where Jesus is and with him forever.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
If I go [ ] . Poreuomai, go, of going with a definite object. See on 8 21.
I will come again [ ] . The present tense; I come, so Rev. Not to be limited to the Lord ‘s second and glorious coming at the last day, nor to any special coming, such as Pentecost, though these are all included in the expression; rather to be taken of His continual coming and presence by the Holy Spirit. “Christ is, in fact, from the moment of His resurrection, ever coming into the world and to the Church, and to men as the risen Lord” (Westcott).
And receive [] . Here the future tense, will receive. Rev., therefore, much better : I come again and will receive you. The change of tense is intentional, the future pointing to the future personal reception of the believer through death. Christ is with the disciple alway, continually “coming” to him, unto the end of the world. Then He will receive him into that immediate fellowship, where he “shall see Him as He is.” The verb paralambanw is used in the New Testament of taking along with (Mt 4:5; Mt 17:1; Act 16:33, on all which see notes) : of taking to (Mt 1:20; Joh 14:3) : of taking from, receiving by transmission; so mostly in Paul (Gal 1:12; Colossians. Gal 2:6; Gal 4:17; 1Th 2:13, etc. See also Mt 24:40, 41). It is scarcely fanciful to see the first two meanings blended in the use of the verb in this passage. Jesus, by the Spirit, takes His own along with Him through life, and then takes them to His side at death. He himself conducts them to Himself.
I am. See on 7 34.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1 ) “And if I go and prepare a place for you,” (kai ean poreutho kai hetoimaso topon humin) “And if I go and prepare a place for you all,” or as surely as I go, I will not desert you, abandon you to find your own way to my Father’s house, and the resting station for you in eternity.
2) “I will come again,” (palin erchomai) “I come again,” of my own will, choice, or accord. This is an assurance from Jesus Himself, certifying that as surely as He went away on a mission for His own, He would come in a special way to receive His own. That He went into heaven with outstretched hands blessing His own indicates that the same purpose exists as a priority of purpose in His return, Luk 24:50-53; Act 1:10-11.
3) “And receive you unto myself,” (kai poreuomai humus pros emauton) “And I will receive you alongside and to myself,” in an intimate way, as certainly as if it were already done. He departed for a little while that He might be with His own forever, 1Th 4:17; Joh 12:26; Joh 17:24.
4) “That where I am there ye maybe also.” (hina hopou eimi ego kai humeis ete) “In order that where I exist you all may also be,” be united, exist or reside forever. As also certified Act 1:10-11; Heb 10:36-37; 1Th 4:17; 2Co 5:8; Php_1:21.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
3. And if I go away. The conditional term, if, ought to be interpreted as an adverb of time; as if it had been said, “After that I have gone away, I will return to you again. ” This return must not be understood as referring to the Holy Spirit, as if Christ had manifested to the disciples some new presence of himself by the Spirit. It is unquestionably true, that Christ dwells with us and in us by his Spirit; but here he speaks of the last day of judgment, when he will, at length, come to assemble his followers. And, indeed, if we consider the whole body of the Church, he every day prepares a place for us; whence it follows, that the proper time for our entrance into heaven is not yet come.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(3) And if I go and prepare . . .For the form of the expression, comp. Notes on Joh. 12:32, and 1Jn. 2:28. It does not imply uncertainty, but expresses that the fact is in the region of the future, which is clear to Him, and will unfold itself to them.
I will come again, and receive you unto myself.This clause has been variously explained of the resurrection; of the death of individual disciples; of the spiritual presence of our Lord in the Church; of the coming again of the Lord in the Parousia of the last day, when all who believe in Him shall be received unto Himself. The difficulty has arisen from taking the words I will come again, as necessarily referring to the same time as those which followI will receive you unto Myself, whereas they are in the present tense, and should be literally rendered, I am coming again. They refer rather, as the same words refer when used in Joh. 14:18, to His constant spiritual presence in their midst; whereas the reception of them to Himself is to be understood of the complete union which will accompany that spiritual presence; a union which will be commenced in this life, advanced by the death of individuals, and completed in the final coming again. (Comp. Joh. 17:24.)
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
3. Go and prepare a place Through his death he would open a new and living way (Heb 10:20) into the heaven which his merit had purchased.
I will come again According to the law of prophetic perspective, to which we have so often referred, the Second Advent of our Lord is beheld with clear distinctness in the near distance. For this reason we reject here, as elsewhere, all reference of the coming of the Son of man to the period of death. Nor does the Saviour here refer, as many commentators imagine, to a general spiritual coming, extending along the entire interval to the end of time. The day in which Christ shall come again to take believers home is the day of judgment described in Matthew 24, 25.
Unto myself where I am ye also Emphatically does our Lord in these terms indicate that the happiness of heaven, both of Christ and his redeemed, will consist in their reunion in love.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Joh 14:3. I will come again, and receive you The idea of a fore-runner is preserved, who, after he had prepared for the entertainment of a guest, used to return, in order to introduce him into the house where the preparations were made for him. This coming ultimately refers to Christ’s solemn appearance at the last day, to receive at his servants to glory; yet it is a beautiful circumstance, that the death of every particular believer, considering the universal power and providence of Christ, may be regarded as Christ’s coming to fetch him home. See the note on Luk 12:37 –
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
3 And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye may be also.
Ver. 3. I will come again, &c. ] Oh, look up and long for this “consolation of Israel;” say as Sisera’s mother, “Why are his chariots” (those clouds) “so long in coming?”
” Heu pietas ubi prisca? profana o tempora! Mundi
Fax! Vesper! prope Nox! o mora! Christe veni.
There may ye be also ] Christ counts not himself full till he have all his members about him: hence the Church is called “the fulness of him that filleth all things,” Eph 1:23 .
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
3. ] On (not ‘ when ,’ here or any where), see note, ch. Joh 12:32 . Here there is no translation of feeling: only in the extract from Hermann there, we may read ‘experienti (vestr) cognos cetur .’
In order to understand this, we must bear in mind what Stier well calls the ‘perspective’ of prophecy. The coming again of the Lord is not one single act, as His resurrection, or the descent of the Spirit, or His second personal advent, or the final coming to judgment; but the great complex of all these, the result of which shall be, His taking His people to Himself to be where He is. This , is begun ( Joh 14:18 ) in His Resurrection carried on ( Joh 14:23 ) in the spiritual life (see also ch. Joh 16:22 f.), the making them ready for the place prepared; – further advanced when each by death is fetched away to be with Him ( Php 1:23 ); fully completed at His coming in glory, when they shall for ever be with Him ( 1Th 4:17 ) in the perfected resurrection state.
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Joh 14:3 . Neither will He prepare a place and leave them to find their own way to it. . “ If I go”; that is, the commencement of this work as their forerunner was the pledge of its completion. And its completion is effected by His coming again and receiving them to Himself, or “to His own home,” . Cf. Joh 20:10 . , “I come again and will receive”. The present is used in as if the coming were so certain as to be already begun, cf. Joh 5:25 . For see Son 8:2 . The promise is fulfilled in the death of the Christian, and it has changed the aspect of death. The personal second coming of Christ is not a frequent theme in this Gospel. The ultimate object of His departure and return is , . Cf. 1Th 4:17 , 2Co 5:8 , Phi 1:23 . The object of Christ’s departure is permanent reunion and the blessedness of the Christian.
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
John
THE FORERUNNER
Joh 14:2 – Joh 14:3
What divine simplicity and depth are in these words! They carry us up into the unseen world, and beyond time; and yet a little child can lay hold on them, and mourning hearts and dying men find peace and sweetness in them. A very familiar image underlies them. It was customary for travellers in those old days to send some of their party on in advance, to find lodging and make arrangements for them in some great city. Many a time one or other of the disciples had been ‘sent before His face into every place where He Himself should come.’ On that very morning two of them had gone in, at His bidding, from Bethany to make ready the table at which they were sitting. Christ here takes that office upon Himself. The emblem is homely, the thing meant is transcendent.
Not less wonderful is the blending of majesty and lowliness. The office which He takes upon Himself is that of an inferior and a servant. And yet the discharge of it, in the present case, implies His authority over every corner of the universe, His immortal life, and the sufficiency of His presence to make a heaven. Nor can we fail to notice the blending of another pair of opposites: His certainty of His impending death, and His certainty, notwithstanding and thereby, of His continual work and His final return, are inseparably interlaced here. How comes it that, in all His premonitions of His death, Jesus Christ never spoke about it as failure or as the interruption or end of His activity, but always as the transition to, and the condition of, His wider work? ‘I go, and if I go I return, and take you to Myself.’
So, then, there are three things here, the departure with its purpose, the return, and the perfected union.
I. The Departure.
He prepares a place for us by His death. The High Priest, in the ancient ritual, once a year was privileged to lift the heavy veil and pass into the darkened chamber, where only the light between the cherubim was visible, because he bore in his hand the blood of the sacrifice. But in our New Testament system the path into ‘the holiest of all,’ the realisation of the most intimate fellowship with heavenly things and communion with God Himself, are made possible, and the way patent for every foot, because Jesus has died. And as the communion upon earth, so the perfecting of the communion in the heavens. Who of us could step within those awful sanctities, or stand serene amidst the region of eternal light and stainless purity, unless, in His death, He had borne the sins of the world, and, having ‘overcome’ its ‘sharpness’ by enduring its blow, had ‘opened the Kingdom of Heaven to all believers’?
Old legends tell us of magic gates that resisted all attempts to force them, but upon which, if one drop of a certain blood fell, they flew open. And so, by His death, Christ has opened the gates and made the heaven of perfect purity a dwelling-place for sinful men.
But the second stage of His departure is that which more eminently is in Christ’s mind here. He prepares a place for us by His entrance into and His dwelling in the heavenly places. The words are obscure because we have but few others with which to compare them, and no experience by which to interpret them. We know so little about the matter that it is not wise to say much; but though there be vast tracts of darkness round the little spot of light, this should only make the spot of light more vivid and more precious. We know little, but we know enough for mind and heart to rest upon. Our ignorance of the ways in which Christ by His ascension prepares a heaven for His followers should neither breed doubt nor disregard of His assurance that He does.
If Christ had not ascended, would there have been ‘a place’ at all? He has gone with a human body, which, glorified as it is, still has relations to space, and must be somewhere. And we may even say that His ascending up on high has made a place where His servants are. But apart from that suggestion, which, perhaps, is going beyond our limits, we may see that Christ’s presence in heaven is needful to make it a heaven for poor human souls. There, as here Scripture assures us, and throughout eternity as to-day, Jesus Christ is the Mediator of all human knowledge and possession of God. It is from Him and through Him that there come to men, whether they be men on earth or men in the heavens, all that they know, all that they hope, all that they enjoy, of the wisdom, love, beauty, peace, power, which flow from God. Take away from the heaven of the Christian expectation that which comes to the spirit through Jesus Christ, and you have nothing left. He and His mediation and ministration alone make the brightness and the blessedness of that high state. The very glories of all that lies beyond the veil would have an aspect appalling and bewildering to us, unless our Brother were there. Like some poor savages brought into a great city, or rustics into the presence of a king and his court, we should be ill at ease amidst the glories and solemnities of that future life unless we saw standing there our Kinsman, to whom we can turn, and who makes it possible for us to feel that it is home. Christ’s presence makes heaven the home of our hearts.
Not only did He go to prepare a place, but He is continuously preparing it for us all through the ages. We have to think of a double form of the work of Christ, His past work in His earthly life, and His present in His exaltation. We have to think of a double form of His present activity-His work with and in us here on earth, and His work for us there in the heavens. We have to think of a double form of His work in the heavens-that which the Scripture represents in a metaphor, the full comprehension of which surpasses our present powers and experiences, as being His priestly intercession; and that which my text represents in a metaphor, perhaps a little more level to our apprehension, as being His preparing a place for us. Behind the veil there is a working Christ, who, in the heavens, is preparing a place for all that love Him.
II. In the next place, note the Return.
Now that return of our Lord, like His departure, may be considered as having two stages. Unquestionably the main meaning and application of the words is to that final and personal coming which stands at the end of history, and to which the hopes of every Christian soul ought to be steadfastly directed. He will ‘so come in like manner as’ He has gone. We are not to water down such words as these into anything short of a return precisely corresponding in its method to the departure; and as the departure was visible, corporeal, literal, personal, and local, so the return is to be visible, corporeal, literal, personal, local too. He is to come as He went, a visible Manhood, only throned amongst the clouds of heaven with power and great glory. This is the aim that He sets before Him in His departure. He leaves in order that He may come back again.
And, oh, dear friends! remember-and let us live in the strength of the remembrance-that this return ought to be the prominent subject of Christian aspiration and desire. There is much about the conception of that solemn return, with all the convulsions that attend it, and the judgment of which it is preliminary, that may well make men’s hearts chill within them. But for you and me, if we have any love in our hearts and loyalty in our spirits to that King, ‘His coming’ should be ‘prepared as the morning,’ and we should join in the great burst of rapture of many a psalm, which calls upon rocks and hills to break forth into singing, and trees of the field to clap their hands, because He cometh as the King to judge the earth. His own parable tells us how we ought to regard His coming. When the fig-tree’s branch begins to supple, and the little leaves to push their way through the polished stem, then we know that summer is at hand. His coming should be as the approach of that glorious, fervid time, in which the sunshine has tenfold brilliancy and power, the time of ripened harvests and matured fruits, the time of joy for all creatures that love the sun. It should be the glad hope of all His servants.
We have a double witness to bear in the midst of this as of every generation. One half of the witness stretches backwards to the Cross, and proclaims ‘Christ has come’; the other reaches onwards to the Throne, and proclaims ‘Christ will come.’ Between these two high uplifted piers swings the chain of the world’s history, which closes with the return, to judge and to save, of the Lord who came to die and has gone to prepare a place for us.
But do not let us forget that we may well take another point of view than this. Scripture knows of many comings of the Lord preliminary to, and in principle one with, His last coming. For nations all great crises of their history are ‘comings of the Lord,’ the Judge, and we are strictly in the line of Scripture analogy when, in reference to individuals, we see in each single death a true coming of the Lord.
That is the point of view in which we ought to look upon a Christian’s death-bed. ‘The Master is come, and calleth for thee.’ Beyond all secondary causes, deeper than disease or accident, lies the loving will of Him who is the Lord of life and of death. Death is Christ’s minister, ‘mighty and beauteous, though his face be dark,’ and he, too, stands amidst the ranks of the ‘ministering spirits sent forth to minister to them that shall be heirs of salvation.’ It is Christ that says of one, ‘I will that this man tarry,’ and to another, ‘Go!’ and he goeth. But whensoever a Christian man lies down to die, Christ says, ‘Come!’ and he comes. How that thought should hallow the death-chamber as with the print of the Master’s feet! How it should quiet our hearts and dry our tears! How it should change the whole aspect of that ‘shadow feared of man’! With Him for our companion, the lonely road will not be dreary; and though in its anticipation, our timid hearts may often be ready to say, ‘Surely the darkness shall cover me,’ if we have Him by our sides, ‘even the night shall be light about us.’ The dying martyr beneath the city wall lifted up his face to the heavens, and said, ‘Lord Jesus, receive my spirit!’ It was the echo of the Master’s promise, ‘I will come again, and receive you to Myself.’
III. Lastly, notice the Perfected Union.
Christ, as I have been saying, is Heaven. His presence is all that we need for peace, for joy, for purity, for rest, for love, for growth. To be ‘with Him,’ as He tells us in another part of these wonderful last words in the upper chamber, is to ‘behold His glory.’ And to behold His glory, as John tells us in his Epistle, is to be like Him. So Christ’s presence means the communication to us of all the lustre of His radiance, of all the whiteness of His purity, of all the depth of His blessedness, and of a share in His wondrous dominion. His glorified manhood will pass into ours, and they that are with Him where He is will rest as in the centre and home of their spirits, and find Him all-sufficient. His presence is my Heaven.
That is almost all we know. Oh! it is more than all we need to know. The curtain is the picture. It is because what is there transcends in glory all our present experience that Scripture can only hint at it and describe it by negations-such as ‘no night,’ ‘no sorrow,’ ‘no tears,’ ‘former things passed away’; and by symbols of glory and lustre gathered from all that is loftiest and noblest in human buildings and society. But all these are but secondary and poor. The living heart of the hope, and the lambent centre of the brightness, is, ‘So shall we ever be with the Lord.’
And it is enough. It is enough to make the bond of union between us in the outer court and them in the holy place. Parted friends will fix to look at the same star at the same moment of the night and feel some union; and if we from amidst the clouds of earth, and they from amidst the pure radiance of their heaven, turn our eyes to the same Christ, we are not far apart. If He be the companion of each of us, He reaches a hand to each, and, clasping it, the parted ones are united; and ‘whether we wake or sleep we live together,’ because we both live with Him.
Brother! Is Jesus Christ so much to you that a heaven which consists in nearness and likeness to Him has any attraction for you? Let Him be your Saviour, your Sacrifice, your Helper, your Companion. Obey Him as your King, love Him as your Friend, trust Him as your All. And be sure that then the darkness will be but the shadow of His hand, and instead of dreading death as that which separates you from life and love and action and joy, you will be able to meet it peacefully, as that which rends the thin veil, and unites you with Him who is the Heaven of heavens.
He has gone to prepare a place for us. And if we will let Him, He will prepare us for the place, and then come and lead us thither. ‘Thou wilt show me the path of life’ which leads through death. ‘In Thy presence is fullness of joy, and at Thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore.’
Fuente: Expositions Of Holy Scripture by Alexander MacLaren
if. App-118.
I will come, &c. = again I am coming, and I will receive you.
unto. Greek. pros. App-104.
that = in order that. Greek hires.
yemay be also = ye also may be.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
3.] On (not when, here or any where), see note, ch. Joh 12:32. Here there is no translation of feeling: only in the extract from Hermann there, we may read experienti (vestr) cognoscetur.
In order to understand this, we must bear in mind what Stier well calls the perspective of prophecy. The coming again of the Lord is not one single act,-as His resurrection, or the descent of the Spirit, or His second personal advent, or the final coming to judgment; but the great complex of all these, the result of which shall be, His taking His people to Himself to be where He is. This , is begun (Joh 14:18) in His Resurrection-carried on (Joh 14:23) in the spiritual life (see also ch. Joh 16:22 f.), the making them ready for the place prepared;–further advanced when each by death is fetched away to be with Him (Php 1:23); fully completed at His coming in glory, when they shall for ever be with Him (1Th 4:17) in the perfected resurrection state.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Joh 14:3. , if) A mild particle, used for , when.-, I come [am coming]) The Present, as concerning His speedy coming: Joh 14:18, I will not leave you comfortless; I come to you. It is a peculiar idiom of speech, that the Lord is not wont to say, I will come, but I come, even when another verb in the future tense is added. Comp., however, also Mat 17:11 concerning the forerunner [ , ], and the LXX., 2Sa 5:3 [- – ].-, and) The end of My departure infers [carries with it] this very consequence, that I am to come again.- , to Myself) An expression full of majesty. The house of the Father is the house of the Son: ch. Joh 16:15, All things that the Father hath are Mine;
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Joh 14:3
Joh 14:3
And if I go and prepare a place for you,-[What a thought is this that beautiful as the mansions of God must be, they are not beautiful enough; that Jesus goes to prepare them, make them fit for his followers! What must a home be when prepared by omnipotence and omniscience, moving at the dictate of infinite love.]
I come again,-[(See Act 1:11; Acts 3; Acts 21; 1Th 4:13-17). Let no one rob you of your confidence in the return of your Lord in glory. Some refer this coming to the resurrection of Christ; others refer it to the death of the believer as in the case of Stephen; and still others refer it to the coming of the Holy Spirit. We think these positions inadmissible. The reference is not to Christs return from the grave, but a return from heaven, the second coming of the Lord, which is a part of the Christian faith.]
and will receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye may be also.-[Connected directly with the coming again. Evidently the condition of final glory. Evidently, also, heaven is a locality as well as a state, and we have the most substantial joys to which to look forward. To be so purified as to be able to dwell where Jesus is, and to be so ennobled as to share his life and glory is to reach the most exalted destiny of which created intelligences are capable.] He would go as their forerunner to make ready for them. He would come again before the close of the earthly affairs. God always fits his creatures with honor suited for them. When the disciples were fitted to dwell with Jesus, they would have a home with him.
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
receive you unto myself
This promise of a second advent of Christ is to be distinguished from His return in glory to the earth; it is the first intimation in Scripture of “the day of Christ”. (See Scofield “1Co 1:8”). Here He comes for His saints 1Th 4:14-17 there Mat 24:29; Mat 24:30. He come to judge the nations, etc.
Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes
I will: Joh 14:18-23, Joh 14:28, Joh 12:26, Joh 17:24, Mat 25:32-34, Act 1:11, Act 7:59, Act 7:60, Rom 8:17, 2Co 5:6-8, Phi 1:23, 1Th 4:16, 1Th 4:17, 2Th 1:12, 2Th 2:1, 2Ti 2:12, Heb 9:28, 1Jo 3:2, 1Jo 3:3, Rev 3:21, Rev 21:22, Rev 21:23, Rev 22:3-5
Reciprocal: Gen 45:10 – be near Exo 23:20 – prepared Lev 16:16 – an atonement Jos 3:6 – Take up Jos 19:51 – These are Psa 15:1 – Lord Psa 45:15 – they shall Psa 49:15 – shall Psa 73:24 – receive Psa 84:7 – in Zion Psa 101:6 – that they Psa 140:13 – the upright Ecc 3:21 – knoweth Son 1:4 – the king Son 6:2 – and to Isa 64:4 – seen Mat 25:21 – enter Mat 25:34 – prepared Luk 5:35 – when Luk 23:43 – with Joh 7:34 – General Joh 10:4 – he goeth Joh 16:7 – It Act 7:55 – standing 1Co 11:26 – till 2Co 5:1 – a building 2Co 5:8 – present Eph 2:6 – sit Col 3:4 – ye 2Th 2:14 – to Heb 6:20 – the forerunner Heb 9:23 – the heavenly Rev 2:25 – till
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
3
This verse sets forth the following truths. Jesus was going away from the world to his Father’s house to prepare a place for his apostles. After making that preparation he was coming to get his apostles. The purpose for coming after his apostles was that they might be with Him in the place prepared for them in his Father’s house. All of this allows but one conclusion, namely, the mansions promised in verse 2 are in Heaven and not on the earth.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Joh 14:3. And if I shall have gone and prepared a place for you, I come again, and will receive you unto myself, that where I am there ye also may be. All that has preceded these words has rested upon the idea that, although Jesus is now going away to the Father, He is not really forsaking His disciples. Even when in one sense separated from them, in another He will still be with them; and this latter presence will in due time, when they like Him have accomplished their work, be followed by their receiving again that joy of His immediate presence which they are now to lose. This double thought seems to explain the remarkable use of two different tenses of the verb in the second clause of the verse,I come, I will receive. He is wherever His people are: they shall be, when their toils are over, wherever He is (comp. chap. Joh 12:26). The Second Coming of the Lord is not, therefore, resolved by these words into a merely spiritual presence in which He shall be always with His people. The true light in which to look at that great fact is as the manifestation of a presence never far away from us (comp. Joh 14:18). Our Lord is always with us, though (as we have yet to see) it is in the power of the Spirit that He is so now. He will again Himself, in His own person, be with us, and we with Him, when our work is finished.
Observe also the change of order in the original in the case of the words I am and ye may be, the effect being to bring the I and the ye into the closest juxtaposition (comp. on Joh 14:1).
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Ver. 3. And if I shall have gone and prepared a place for you, I will come again and take you to myself, that where I am, there you may be also.
The place being once assured and prepared for them, they must be brought to reach it. It is He who will also charge Himself with this office. The rejection of , and, before in some MSS. (and when I shall have gone, I will prepare) would introduce an unnatural and even absurd asyndetonbetween the idea of preparing and that of returning which follows, and would at the same time lead to a complete tautology with the preceding sentence. The reading , to prepare, is a further correction which was rendered almost indispensable by the rejection of the .
To the two verbs: when I shall have gone and shall have prepared, correspond the two verbs of the principal clause: I will come again (literally, I come again) and I will take you to myself. The present I come again indicates imminence. Notwithstanding this, Origen and other Fathers, Calvin, Lampe, and, among the moderns, Hofmann, Luthardt, Meyer, Weiss, and Keil, refer this term to the final and glorious coming of the Lord. Undoubtedly this promise is addressed to believers in general, but it has in view, nevertheless, first of all, the disciples personally, whom Jesus wishes to strengthen in their present disheartenment; and He consoles them, it is said, by means of an event which no one of them has seen and which is still future at this hour! In thus explaining the word I come, it is forgotten that Jesus never affirmed the nearness of His Parousia, and that, indeed, He rather gave an indication of the opposite: As the bridegroom delays his coming (Mat 25:5); If the master comes in the second watch, or if he comes in the third (Luk 12:38); At evening or at midnight or at the cock-crowing or in the morning (Mar 13:35); comp. also the parables of the leaven and the grain of mustard seed. Moreover, we have the authentic explanation of this word come in Joh 14:18, where, as Weiss acknowledges, it cannot be applied to the Parousia.
Ebrard thinks that the point in question is theresurrection of Jesus. But the true reunion, after the separation caused by the death of Jesus, did not yet take place at the resurrection. The appearances of the Lord were transient; their design was simply, through faith in the resurrection, to prepare for the coming of the Spirit. Grotius, Reuss, Lange, Hengstenberg, and Keil refer the wordcome to the return of Jesus at the death of each believer; comp. the vision of Stephen. But in Joh 14:18 this sense is altogether impossible, and no example can be cited, not even Joh 21:23, where it would lead to an intolerable tautology. This coming refers, therefore, as has been recognized by Lucke, Olshausen, Neander, to the return of Jesus through the Holy Spirit, to the close and indissoluble union formed thereby between the disciple and the glorified person of Jesus; comp. all that follows in Joh 14:17; Joh 14:19-21; Joh 14:23; especially Joh 14:18, which is the explanation of our: I come again. Weiss alleges against our view that the question here is of a personal return. We defer this to Joh 14:18.The following verb: I will take you to myself, indicates another fact, which will be the result of this spiritual preparation.
This is the introduction of the believer into the Father’s house, at the end of his earthly career, either at the moment of his death, or at that of the Parousia, if he lives until that time. , and, has the sense of and consesequently, or of, and afterwards, as is indicated by the contrast between the present (I come) and the future (I will take). This will be the entrance of the believer, prepared by spiritual communion with Jesus, into the abode secured for him by the mediation of this same Jesus. , to myself (Joh 12:32); He presses him to His heart, so to speak, while bearing him away. There is an infinite tenderness in these last words. It is for Himself that He seems to rejoice in and look to this moment which will put an end to all separation: That where I am, there you may be also; comp. Joh 17:24. The community of place (there where) implies that of state.Otherwise the return of Jesus in spirit would not be necessary in order to prepare in each particular case this reunion. What touching simplicity and what dramatic vivacity in the expression of these ideas, so profound and so new! The Father’s house, the preparation of the dwelling-place, the coming to find, finally the taking to Himself, this familiar and almost childlike language resembles sweet music by which Jesus seeks to alleviate the agony of separation in the minds of the apostles. Thus ends the first conversation, called forth by the question of Peter: Why cannot I follow thee? Answer: Even thy martyrdom would not be sufficient to this end; my return in the Spirit into thy heart: this is the condition of thy entrance into my heavenly glory. Comp. Joh 3:5.
But Jesus observes that many questions were still rising in their minds, that their hearts were a prey to many doubts, and, in order to incite them to ask Him, He throws out to their ignorance a sort of challenge, by saying to them:
Fuente: Godet Commentary (Luke, John, Romans and 1 Corinthians)
14:3 {2} And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will {c} come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am, [there] ye may be also.
(2) Christ did not go away from us with the intent of forsaking us, but rather that he might eventually take us up with him into heaven.
(c) These words are to be understood as being said to the whole Church, and therefore the angels said to the disciples when they were astonished, “Why do you stand gazing up into heaven? This Jesus will so come as you saw him go up”, Act 1:11 . And in all places of the Scripture the full comfort of the Church is considered to be that day when God will be all in all, and is therefore called the day of redemption.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
The commentators noted that Jesus spoke of several returns for His own in this Gospel. Sometimes Jesus meant His return to the disciples following His resurrection and before His ascension (Joh 14:18-20; Joh 21:1). Other times He meant His coming to them through the Holy Spirit after His ascension and before His bodily return (Joh 14:23). [Note: R. H. Gundry, "’In my Father’s House are many Monai’ (John 14 2)," Zeitschrift für die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft 58 (1967):68-72.] Still other times He meant His eschatological return at the end of the inter-advent age. Some interpreters view this return as the Rapture and others believe Jesus was referring to the Second Coming. Another view is that Jesus was really speaking about the believer’s death figuratively. [Note: E.g., R. H. Lightfoot, pp. 275-76.] Many interpreters believe some combination of the above views is most probable. [Note: E.g., Barrett, p. 457; R. H. Strachen, The Fourth Gospel: Its Significance and Environment, p. 280; and Westcott, The Gospel . . . Greek Text . . ., 2:168.]
Since Jesus spoke of returning from heaven to take believers there, the simplest explanation seems to be that He was referring to an eschatological bodily return (cf. Act 1:11). Though these disciples undoubtedly did not realize it at the time, Jesus was evidently speaking of His return for them at the Rapture rather than His return at the Second Coming.
"Joh 14:3 is the only verse in the Gospels that is commonly accepted by contemporary pretribulationists and posttribulationists alike as a reference to the rapture." [Note: Wayne A. Brindle, "Biblical Evidence for the Imminence of the Rapture," Bibliotheca Sacra 158:630 (April-June 2001):139.]
Other Scripture clarifies that when Jesus returns at the Rapture it will be to call His own to heaven immediately (1Th 4:13-18). Joh 14:1-3 is one of three key New Testament passages that deal with the Rapture, the others being 1Co 15:51-53 and 1Th 4:13-18. In contrast, when Jesus returns at the Second Coming it will be to remain on the earth and reign for 1,000 years (Rev 19:11 to Rev 20:15).
". . . it is important to note that Jesus did not say that the purpose of this future coming to receive believers is so that He can be where they are-on the earth. Instead, He said that the purpose is so that they can be where He is-in heaven." [Note: Renald E. Showers, Maranatha: Our Lord, Come! A Definitive Study of the Rapture of the Church, p. 158. Cf. 1 Thessalonians 4:17. His entire eighth chapter, pp. 154-75, deals with this passage and various interpretations of it.]
". . . here in John xiv the Lord gives a new and unique revelation; He speaks of something which no prophet had promised, or even could promise. Where is it written that this Messiah would come and instead of gathering His saints into an earthly Jerusalem, would take them to the Father’s house, to the very place where He is? It is something new. . . . He speaks then of a coming which is not for the deliverance of the Jewish remnant, not of a coming to establish His kingdom over the earth, not of a coming to judge the nations, but a coming which concerns only His own." [Note: Arno C. Gaebelein, The Gospel of John, p. 268.]
The emphasis in this prediction is on the comfort that reunion with the departed Savior guarantees (cf. 1Th 4:18). Jesus will personally come for His own, and He will receive them to Himself. They will also be with Him where He has been (cf. Joh 17:24). Jesus was stressing His personal concern for His disciples’ welfare. His return would be as certain as His departure. The greatest blessing of heaven will be our ceaseless personal fellowship with the Lord Jesus there, not the splendor of the place.