Cambridge Greek Testament for Schools and Colleges - John 12:23 - 12:23

Online Resource Library

Commentary Index | Return to PrayerRequest.com | Download

Cambridge Greek Testament for Schools and Colleges - John 12:23 - 12:23


(Show All Books | Show All Chapters)

This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

23. ὁ δὲ Ἰ. ἀποκρίνεται. He anticipates the Apostles and addresses them before they introduce the Greeks. We are left in doubt as to the result of the Greeks’ request. Nothing is said to them in particular, though they may have followed and heard this address to the Apostles, which gradually shades off into soliloquy.

These men from the West at the close of Christ’s life set forth the same truth as the men from the East at the beginning of it—that the Gentiles are to be gathered in. The wise men came to His cradle, these to His cross, of which their coming reminds Him; for only by His death could ‘the nations’ be saved.

ἐλήλυθεν ἡ ὥρα. The phrase is peculiar to S. Joh 7:30; Joh 8:20; Joh 13:1; Joh 17:1 : contrast Mat 26:45; Luk 22:14. The verb first for emphasis (Joh 4:21; Joh 4:23), ‘it hath come—the fated hour.’ see on Joh 7:6, Joh 13:1. The ἵνα indicates the Divine purpose (Joh 13:1, Joh 16:2; Joh 16:32; Joh 11:50); see Winer, p. 576. Δοξασθῇ, by His Passion and Death, through which He must pass to return to glory (Joh 7:39, Joh 11:4; Joh 1:51).

ἀμὴν ἀμήν. Joh 1:51. Strange as it may seem that the Messiah should die, yet this is but the course of nature: a seed cannot be glorified unless it dies. A higher form of existence is obtained only through the extinction of the lower form that preceded it. Except the grain of wheat fall into the earth and die it abideth by itself alone.