Robertson Word Pictures - John 4:1 - 4:1

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Robertson Word Pictures - John 4:1 - 4:1


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This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

When therefore (Hōs oun). Reference to Joh 3:22. the work of the Baptist and the jealousy of his disciples. Oun is very common in John’s Gospel in such transitions.

The Lord (ho Kurios). So the best manuscripts (Neutral Alexandrian), though the Western class has ho Iēsous. Mark usually has ho Iēsous and Luke often ho Kurios. In the narrative portion of John we have usually ho Iēsous, but ho Kurios in five passages (Joh 4:1; Joh 6:23; Joh 11:2; Joh 20:20; Joh 21:12). There is no reason why John should not apply ho Kurios to Jesus in the narrative sections as well as Luke. Bernard argues that these are “explanatory glosses,” not in the first draft of the Gospel. But why? When John wrote his Gospel he certainly held Jesus to be Kurios (Lord) as Luke did earlier when he wrote both Gospel and Acts This is hypercriticism.

Knew (egnō). Second aorist active indicative of ginōskō. The Pharisees knew this obvious fact. It was easy for Jesus to know the attitude of the Pharisees about it (Joh 2:24). Already the Pharisees are suspicious of Jesus.

How that (hoti). Declarative hoti (indirect assertion).

Was making and baptizing more disciples than John (pleionas mathētas poiei kai baptizei ē Iōanēs). Present active indicative in both verbs retained in indirect discourse. Recall the tremendous success of John’s early ministry (Mar 1:5; Mat 3:5; Luk 3:7, Luk 3:15) in order to see the significance of this statement that Jesus had forged ahead of him in popular favour. Already the Pharisees had turned violently against John who had called them broods of vipers. It is most likely that they drew John out about the marriage of Herod Antipas and got him involved directly with the tetrarch so as to have him cast into prison (Luk 3:19.). Josephus (Ant. XVIII. v. 2) gives a public reason for this act of Herod Antipas, the fear that John would “raise a rebellion,” probably the public reason for his private vengeance as given by Luke. Apparently John was cast into prison, though recently still free (Joh 3:24), before Jesus left for Galilee. The Pharisees, with John out of the way, turn to Jesus with envy and hate.