-
Verse John 1:16. This verse should be put in place of the _fifteenth_,
and the 15th inserted between the 18th and 19th, which appears to be
its proper place: thus John's testimony is properly connecte...
-
OF HIS FULNESS - In John 1:14 the evangelist has said that Christ was
“full of grace and truth.” Of that “fullness” he now says that
all the disciples had received; that is, they derived from his
abun...
-
ANALYSIS AND ANNOTATIONS
I. The Only-begotten, the Eternal Word;
His Glory and His Manifestation
-- Chapter 1:1-2:22
CHAPTER 1
__
1. The Word: the Creator, the Life and the Light. (John 1:1 .)...
-
THE FULL AND FINAL REVELATION. The work of the Logos culminated in
what alone could give to men a complete and intelligible revelation,
so far as man can grasp it, of the nature and being of God. The...
-
OUT OF HIS FULNESS HAVE WE ALL RECEIVED.
It is John, the apostle, who speaks. The thought refers to the two
preceding verses. John had seen the glory of Christ, who was "full" of
grace and truth, and...
-
John was his witness and his statement still sounds out: "This is he
of whom I said to you, he who comes after me has been advanced before
me, because he was before me." On his fullness we all of us h...
-
THE WORD (John 1:1-18)...
-
When the world had its beginning, the Word was already there; and the
Word was with God; and the Word was God. This Word was in the
beginning with God. He was the agent through whom all things were
ma...
-
AND. The texts read "For", but not the Syriac.
FULNESS. Greek _pleroma._
ALL the. The Evangelist speaks here, not the Baptist.
GRACE FOR GRACE. grace in place of grace; new grace, continuous, and
u...
-
The testimony of the Baptist to the incarnate Word is confirmed by the
experience of all believers. The Evangelist is the speaker.
_And_ The true reading gives BECAUSE.
_fullness_ The Greek word, _pl...
-
John 1:1-18. The Prologue or Introduction
That the first eighteen verses are introductory is universally
admitted: commentators are not so unanimous as to the main divisions
of this introduction. A d...
-
1–18. The Prologue or Introduction in three parts. 1–5: The Word
in His own nature. 6–13: His Revelation to men and rejection by
them. 14–18: His Revelation of the Father. The three great
characterist...
-
THE INCARNATE WORD’S REVELATION OF THE FATHER...
-
ὍΤΙ with אBC1DLX for καί of T. R. with Acts 3, perhaps to
avoid ὅτι thrice in three lines.
16. The Baptist’s witness to the incarnate Logos confirmed by the
experience of all believers. The Evangelis...
-
VER 16. AND OF HIS FULLNESS HAVE ALL WE RECEIVED, AND GRACE FOR GRACE.
17. FOR THE LAW WAS GIVEN BY MOSES, BUT GRACE AND TRUTH CAME BY JESUS
CHRIST.
ORIGEN; This is to be considered a continuation of...
-
_THE ETERNAL "WORD" OF GOD IS JESUS-- JOHN 1:1-18:_ Jesus is pictured
as "the Word" who was in the beginning with God. "In the beginning was
the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God....
-
ΠΛΗΡΏΜΑΤΟΣ _gen. sing. от_ ΠΛΉΡΩΜΑ (G4138)
полнота; то, что наполнено, — в
пассивном плане — или то, что
наполняет, — в активном плане (Morris; TDNT).
ΚΑΊ (G2532) даже, обобщающее,
ΆΝΤ (G473) вместо...
-
DISCOURSE: 1599
THE BELIEVER’S INTEREST IN CHRIST’S FULNESS
John 1:16. _Of his fulness have all we received, and grace for grace_.
THE sacred writers never seem to be afraid lest they should exalt
Ch...
-
AND OF HIS FULNESS, &C.— _"And_ I, (John the apostle) who had the
honour of being numbered among his most intimate friends, would with
pleasure, in my own name, and that of my brethren; add my testimo...
-
EXPOSITORY SERMON NO. 1
THE BIRTH OF CHRIST INTERPRETED
John 1:1-18
_Introduction_
I.
TELL BIRTH STORY BRIEFLY (Luke 2:1-52).
A.
John's Prologue gives the definition of Christmas.
B.
Especiall...
-
THE WORD MANIFESTED TO OTHERS AND THEIR ACCEPTANCE OF HIM
_Text 1:12-18_
12
But as many as received him, to them gave he the right to become
children of God, even to them that believe on his name:...
-
EXPOSITION OF THE GOSPEL OF JOHN
John 1:14-18
We first submit a brief Analysis of the passage which is to be before
us—John 1:14-18. We have here:—
1. Christ’s Incarnation—"The word became flesh":...
-
And of his fulness have all we received, and grace for grace.
AND OF HIS FULLNESS - that is, of grace and truth; resuming the
thread of John 1:14, which had only been interrupted for the purpose
o...
-
As God always was, there is no absolute beginning brought before us in
the Scriptures. Both here and in Gen.11 the article _ the _ is lacking
in the originals, showing that it refers to the commenceme...
-
THE DIVINITY AND INCARNATION OF THE WORD. WITNESS OF JOHN. THE FIRST
DISCIPLES
1-18. Preface, declaring (1) that the Word was God, (2) that He was
made man, (3) that He revealed the Father.
This subl...
-
OF HIS FULNESS] 'Fulness' (_pleroma_) was a word much used (and
abused) by the Gnostics against whom St. John contended. Here it
means, (1) the fulness of the divine attributes which dwelt in Christ
...
-
THE PREFACE CONCLUDED. The 'we' of John 1:16 shows that these vv. are
not words of the Baptist, but that they express the spiritual
experience of Christ's disciples, in whose name the evangelist speak...
-
JOHN TELLS THE GOOD NEWS ABOUT JESUS
GOSPEL OF JOHN
_MARION ADAMS_
THE AUTHOR
Most people agree that John, Jesus’ *disciple, wrote the 4th
*Gospel. John’s father was called Zebedee. And John had...
-
AND OF HIS FULNESS. — Not a continuance of the witness of John, but
the words of the evangelist, and closely connected with John 1:14.
This is seen in the “all we,” and in “fulness” (“full”)
and “grac...
-
CHAPTER 2
RECEPTION CHRIST MET WITH.
John 1:1.
In describing the Word of God, John mentions two attributes of His by
which His relation to men becomes apparent: “All things were made by
Him,” and “t...
-
John 1:15
CHAPTER 3
THE BAPTIST'S TESTIMONY.
“There came a man, sent from God, whose name was John. The same came
for witness, that he might bear witness of the light, that all might
believe throug...
-
ὅτι ἐκ τοῦ πληρώματος … χάριτος,
“because out of His fulness have we all received”. The ὅτι
does not continue the Baptist's testimony, but refers to πλήρης
in John 1:14. In Colossians 2:9 Paul says th...
-
_The manifestation of the Logos defined as Incarnation_....
-
THE VOICE OF PROMISE
John 1:14-28
Note that the Revised Version changes the words was _made_ to
_became,_ John 1:14. Evidently Jesus had existed before this becoming;
and evidently there was a proces...
-
The Gospel of John brings us into the profoundest facts concerning the
Person of Jesus. The first eighteen verses constitute the introduction
to the whole Book. The main declaration is found by bringi...
-
(9) And of his fulness have all we received, and (d) grace for grace.
(9) Christ is the most plentiful fountain of all goodness, but he gave
out his gifts most bountifully at that time when he exhibi...
-
And of his fulness we all have received; not only Jews, but also all
nations. --- And grace for grace. [5] It may perhaps be translated
grace upon grace, as Mr. Blackwall observes, and brings a parall...
-
TESTIMONY OF JOHN THE BAPTIST
John 1:6-51. _“There was a man sent from God, whose name was John.
The same came for a witness, that he may testify concerning the Light,
in order that all may believe th...
-
[See also the "General Considerations on the Prologue" in the comments
of John 1:18.]
VER. 16. “ _And of his fullness we have all received, and grace for
grace._ ”
By that first feature of the divine...
-
PROLOGUE: 1:1-18.
EACH evangelist begins his book in a manner appropriate to the aim of
his narrative. Matthew proposes to prove the _right_ of Jesus to the
Messianic throne. He opens his story with H...
-
THIRD SECTION: FAITH, 1:12-18.
[See also the "General Considerations on the Prologue" in the comments
of John 1:18.]
The appearance of the Word, therefore, did not succeed in scattering
the darkness...
-
John bare witness of him, and cried, saying, This was he of whom I
spake, He that cometh after me is preferred before me: for he was
before me. (16) And of his fulness have all we received, and grace...
-
The opening verses (John 1:1-18) introduce the most glorious subject
which God Himself ever gave in employing the pen of man; not only the
most glorious in point of theme, but in the profoundest point...
-
16._And out of his fullness_. He begins now to preach about the office
of Christ, that it contains within itself an abundance of all
blessings, so that no part of salvation must be sought anywhere els...
-
The first chapter asserts what He was before all things, and the
different characters in which He is a blessing to man, being made
flesh. He is, and He is the expression of, the whole mind that
subsis...
-
AND OF HIS FULNESS HAVE ALL WE RECEIVED,.... These are the words not
of John the Baptist; but of the evangelist carrying on his account of
Christ, after he had inserted the testimony of the Baptist, i...
-
John 1:16. "And of his fulness have all we received, and grace for
grace;" that is, he has a fullness of grace, and we receive grace from
him, answerable to his grace - grace _for_ grace, that is grac...
-
_And of his fulness have all we received_ These are not the words of
the Baptist, as the expression, _we all_, shows; for those to whom he
addressed himself do not appear to have received grace from C...
-
ALL WE; disciples of Christ.
GRACE FOR GRACE; the fuller grace of the gospel for the less grace of
the law; or, as some understand the words, continually new and larger
measures of grace-all needed v...
-
The closing testimony of the prologue:...
-
AND OF HIS FULLNESS HAVE ALL WE RECEIVED, AND GRACE FOR GRACE....
-
CHRIST THE LIVING WORD
(vs.1-5)
Revelation 19:13, speaking of the Lord Jesus, says, "His name is
called the Word of God." As such He had no beginning: in the beginning
He was there. In person He is...
-
15-18 As to the order of time and entrance on his work, Christ came
after John, but in every other way he was before him. The expression
clearly shows that Jesus had existence before he appeared on e...
-
AND OF HIS FULNESS HAVE ALL WE RECEIVED; of that plenty of grace which
Christ hath, (who hath not the Spirit given him _by measure,_ 1
THESSALONIANS 3:34, as other saints have, ACTS 2:4,6,8), we who b...
-
Clement of Alexandria Stromata Book I
For of the prophets it is said, "We have all received of His
fulness,"[197]
Tertullian On Baptism
as figurative of things spiritual. And thus, when the grace o...
-
John 1:16 And G2532 of G1537 His G846 fullness G4138 we G2249 have
G2983 all G3956 received G2983 ...
-
‘For of his fullness we have all received, and grace upon grace, for
the Law (the Torah) was given by Moses, grace and truth came by Jesus
Christ.'
The author now stresses the overflowing wonder of wh...
-
The content of Jonah's prophecy, which is described in the usual terms
of ‘the word of YHWH', is depicted as being that YHWH wanted the
wickedness of Nineveh to be brought to the attention of its peop...
-
THE WORD WAS GOD (JOHN 1:1).
John commences his Gospel by speaking of ‘the Word' (i.e. the One
through Whom God has acted and spoken'), and later he adds, ‘all
things were made by Him' (John 1:3) and...
-
The Prologue of the Gospel of John stands in the most intimate
connection with the plan and purpose of the Gospel as a whole. It is
not to be regarded as a philosophical speculation to which the
histo...
-
John 1:16. BECAUSE OUT OF HIS FULLNESS WE ALL RECEIVED, AND GRACE FOR
GRACE. In order to understand this verse, and especially the very
difficult word ‘because,' with which the true read ing of the ve...
-
FOR
(οτ). Correct text (Aleph B C D L) and not κα (and) of the Textus
Receptus. Explanatory reason for verse John 1:14.OF HIS FULNESS
(εκ του πληρωματος). The only instance of
πληρωμα in John's wr...
-
John 1:16
From this passage some lessons of great importance come to us. As
I. That we should not try to live in the past, or by means of the
past. As distinct from the present, we should not try to...
-
John 1:1. _In the beginning was the Word,_
Christ the Word has existed from all eternity. He is the eternal Son
of the eternal Father; he is really what Melchisedec was
metaphorically, «having neithe...
-
May the Holy Spirit, who inspired these words, inspire us through them
as we read them!
John 1:1. _In the beginning was the Word._
The divine Logos, whom we know as the Christ of God. «In the
beginn...
-
John is the majestic Evangelist; he is the high-soaring eagle with the
piercing eye. His is the Gospel of the Son of God.
John 1:1. _In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God,
and the...
-
John 1:15. _John bare witness of him, and cried, saying, This was he
of whom I spake, He that cometh after me is preferred before me: for
he was before me._
He was not before John in the order of hum...
-
CONTENTS: Deity of Christ. Ministry of John the Baptist. Jesus
announced as the Lamb of God, and the first converts to Him.
CHARACTERS: God, Jesus, John the Baptist, Moses, Elias, Isaiah,
Pharisees,...
-
John 1:1. _In the beginning was the Word._ Εν αρχη ο
λογος. John begins the new creation with the words of Moses of
the old creation, and continues to speak of Christ in the running
language of all th...
-
OUT OF THE FULNESS OF HIS GRACE. See Colossians 1:19. His "grace and
truth" bless all who _belong_ to him. GIVING US ONE BLESSING AFTER
ANOTHER. He is a _"stream of water, flowing ever deeper!"_...
-
_Of His fulness have all we received_
THE FULNESS OF CHRIST
The word “fulness” is given to vessels that are brimful of liquor,
and so is metaphorically applied to Christ, who is brimful of grace.
I...
-
_John bare witness of Him_
THE PRE-EMINENCE OF CHRIST
I. CHRIST’S SUPERIORITY TO JOHN THE BAPTIST.
1. John refers to and repeats previous testimonies, applying them to
Him whom the congregation had...
-
JOHN—NOTE ON JOHN 1:16 In the LAW, God graciously revealed his
character and the things he required of his people. JESUS, however, is
the final, definitive revelation of God’s grace and truth
-
JOHN 1:1 Prologue: The Incarnate Word. John presents Jesus as the
eternal, preexistent, and now incarnate Word (vv. John 1:1, John
1:14). Jesus is the one-of-
-
THE
HOLY GOSPEL OF JESUS CHRIST,
ACCORDING TO JOHN.
T
HIS is the title in the Greek and Latin codices. In the Syriac it is
as follows, _The Holy Gospel, the Preaching of Jouchanon_ (John),
_which...
-
_ Was made_ : not that the Word was changed into flesh, or flesh into
the Word, for, as S. Chrysostom says, "far from that immortal nature
is transmutation." For how could flesh become God, that is, h...
-
_For the law was given by Moses_, &c. He gives the reason why through
Christ we have received _grace for grace_. It is because Moses, who
was the Jews' greatest prophet and lawgiver, could only give a...
-
_EXPLANATORY AND CRITICAL NOTES_
John 1:1. IN THE BEGINNING, etc.—ἐν�. The
בְּרֵאשִׁית etc., of Genesis 1 denotes the beginning of
that movement of the divine creative energy from which sprang the
vis...
-
EXPOSITION
THE title of the book is differently given in the manuscripts and
ancient versions, and the differences are so considerable that they
cannot be referred to the original text. The simplest f...
-
Shall we turn in our Bibles to the gospel according to John.
The gospel of John was the last of the gospels that were written. It
was written towards the close of that first century, written by John,...
-
1 Corinthians 1:4; 1 Corinthians 1:5; 1 Peter 1:11; 1 Peter 1:2;...
-
SEEING CHRIST IN JOHN
John 1:1
INTRODUCTORY WORDS
It is not difficult for us to find the Lord Jesus in the Book of John.
We have always been told that John, by the Holy Ghost, sets forth the
Deity...
-
VISIONS OF THE LORD JESUS CHRIST
John 1:1
INTRODUCTORY WORDS
The Four Gospels present the Lord Jesus Christ under four distinct
aspects. The Gospel of John tells us of Christ, in His all-glorious
D...
-
And — Here the apostle confirms the Baptist's words: as if he had
said, He is indeed preferred before thee: so we have experienced: We
all — That believe: have received — All that we enjoy out of his...