Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
2:23-25 Our Lord knew all men, their nature, dispositions, affections, designs, so as we do not know any man, not even ourselves. He knows his crafty enemies, and all their secret projects; his false friends, and their true characters. He knows who are truly his, knows their uprightness, and knows their weaknesses.
- 24 Commentaries
(24) But beneath this shallow surface there is the unbroken...
- John 3
John 20:16 Jesus saith unto her, Mary. She turned herself,...
- Parallel Commentaries
John 2:20. The Jews naturally saw no reference to His own...
- 24 Commentaries
However, it is clear that he wrote last of the four evangelists, and, comparing his gospel with theirs, we may observe, 1. That he relates what they had omitted; he brings up the rear, and his gospel is as the rearward or gathering host; it gleans up what they has passed by.
Containing twenty or thirty gallons apiece: Spurgeon saw significance for preachers in John’s approximate number. “Let us always speak correctly; sometimes, ‘almost’ or ‘thereabouts’ will be words that will just save our truthfulness.
Jesus Changes Water Into Wine - On the third day a wedding took place at Cana in Galilee. Jesus’ mother was there, and Jesus and his disciples had.
John 2:20. The Jews naturally saw no reference to His own body or to its resurrection, and replied to the letter of His words, τεσσεράκοντα .… The Temple was begun to be rebuilt in the eighteenth year of Herod’s reign that is the autumn of 734–735.
(John 2:23-25) Jesus does not entrust Himself to the many who believe. Now when He was in Jerusalem at the Passover, during the feast, many believed in His name when they saw the signs which He did. But Jesus did not commit Himself to them, because He knew all men , and had no need that anyone should testify of man, for He knew what was in man.
When therefore he was risen from the dead, his disciples remembered that he had said this unto them; and they believed the scripture, and the word which Jesus had said. (22) That he had said this unto them. —The better texts omit “unto them.”